Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Skip to main content
Advertisement

Subscription-based solar energy coming soon to Northwest Florida

Gulf Power's new solar program offers renewable energy to customers, even if they rent instead of own their home.

After getting unanimous approval from the Florida Public Service Commission, Gulf Power is launching a community solar program, Gulf Solar Energy Share.

Gulf Solar is a way Gulf Power customers can play an active role in pioneering solar energy use in Northwest Florida. It’s also a more affordable alternative for customers who want to support solar energy, but can’t for reasons such as cost, renting instead of owning a home, or having a shaded roof.

“Gulf Solar is for customers who are passionate about the environment and want to be a pioneer in developing renewable energy in Northwest Florida,” said Rick DelaHaya, Gulf Power spokesperson.

“Gulf Solar makes solar energy accessible to all of our customers whether they rent or own their residence. And customers who participate in this program will receive a monthly credit on their bill — a reminder of their personal commitment to developing renewable energy.”

Gulf Solar Energy Share gives all customers, including business owners, the opportunity to subscribe for only $99 a year.

With a subscription, customers can offset a portion of their traditional energy —approximately 750 kilowatt-hours per subscription — with solar energy. Subscribers will receive a monthly credit on their bill — between $2 and $2.50 for 2016. In addition, if participants agree to a five-year commitment, they will receive a reduced annual fee of $89.

There are no additional installation fees or maintenance costs and customers may purchase multiple subscriptions up to their total monthly use.

Subscriptions will be available on a first come, first serve basis. As program demand grows, additional panels could be installed in various areas around the region.

The solar farm will be built near Milton.

“We are getting considerable interest from our customers for renewable programs like Gulf Solar,” added DelaHaya. “Now customers can be part of the solar movement — even if they are not able to install solar panels on their homes or businesses.”

Customers interested in Gulf Solar Energy Share can visit Gulf Power's GulfSolar website at http://bit.ly/1VQDS6F for more information and express interest in the Community Solar program.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Subscription-based solar energy coming soon to Northwest Florida

Okaloosa Status of Women commission installs new officers

The Okaloosa County Commission on the Status of Women has selected new officers for 2016. They are, from left, Historian Jeanne Rief, Vice Chair Mary Florence, Secretary Amy McBride, Chair Dawn Johnson and Okaloosa County Commissioner Kelly Windes. The treasurer, Ester Hemphill, is not pictured.

FORT WALTON BEACH — The Okaloosa County Commission on the Status of Women welcomes five new members as it installs a new board of officers. 

2016 officers, sworn in by Okaloosa Commissioner Kelly Windes, are Chair Dawn Johnson, Vice Chair Mary Florence, Secretary Amy McBride, and Historian Jeanne Rief.  Treasurer Ester Hemphill was inducted during the OCCSW's February meeting. 

New members are DeAndrea Y. Haynes, representing District 1; Tammy McGee, District 2; Patricia Payne, the American Business Women’s Association Emerald Coast; Rachel Winkler, League of Women Voters; and Kathy Foster, Republican Women Okaloosa Federated.

During the installation ceremony, the OCCSW presented $100 donations to Shelter House, the Ronda Coon Women's Home and Opportunity Place.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Okaloosa Status of Women commission installs new officers

Crestview road to close for sewer construction

CRESTVIEW — The north end of Pearl Street between Jeff Drive and Phillips Drive will be closed for sewer construction, weather permitting.

The closure is set for 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. March 8. If weather is inclement, the construction will be done 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. March 9.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Crestview road to close for sewer construction

Major shopping center proposed for south Crestview

This wooded site on the corner of Live Oak Church Road and State Road 85, stretching almost a quarter-mile north, is the planned location for Crestview Narrows, a 37-acre shopping center with three anchor stores.

CRESTVIEW — The Live Oak Church Road-State Road 85 intersection in south Crestview could be much busier if a proposed 37-acre shopping center opens.

Click here to see the site plan

The Crestview Narrows center, proposed by Birmingham, Alabama-based Blackwater Resources, would have 184,600 square feet of retail space including:

●A 22,000-square-foot and 55,000-square-foot anchor store

●A free-standing 45,600-square-foot anchor store

●A 6,000-square-foot section that could contain up to five 1,200-square-foot shops

●Three 8,000-square-foot stores

●Two 10,000-square-foot stores

●One 12,000-square-foot-store

The project would extend more than a quarter-mile along S.R. 85, and includes 840 parking spaces, plus five undeveloped “future outparcels” available for lease to builders and retailers.

A Crestview Narrows marketing flier states 35,000 vehicle trips per day pass the development’s site, which is located outside Crestview city limits in Okaloosa County.

Access points would include an entrance drive off Live Oak Church Road and three entrances from State Road 85, including one each across from Lee Chrysler and Southview Drive that cross the highway median.

A right-turn lane is indicated north of the Live Oak Church-S.R. 85 intersection. Blackwater Resources proposes adding a traffic signal at the development entrance opposite Lee Chrysler.

County Growth Management Department planner Tim Durbin in the department’s Crestview office said the project’s development order has been reviewed and is close to being approved. “We’re waiting for documents to come in from other agencies,” he said. “It’s close.”

Durbin said how soon construction begins is up to the developer and their contractor.

Blackwater development director and President John Abernathy said the project is still in the proposal and marketing phase. He said the company is not ready to provide information about potential tenants nor a construction timeline.

“We don’t have a break-ground date yet,” Abernathy said. “We’re marketing it right now. It is still a proposal.”

Birmingham, Ala.-based Blackwater Resources, which proposes a 37-acre shopping center in southeast Crestview, was formed in 2010 by former AIG Baker Shopping Center Properties L.L.C. executives. During their real estate careers, Blackwater Resources executives developed, leased and managed more than 25 million square feet of property in 36 states. In Florida, the company owns Shoreline Village in Destin, The Center of Tallahassee and Mitchell Ranch Plaza in New Port Richey.

Source: Blackwater Resources

THE DEVELOPER

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Major shopping center proposed for south Crestview

Crestview connector road awaits hospital's final approval

This parking lot lane through the Crestview Corners shopping center would become a connector road between Hospital Drive and Redstone Avenue East, with planted, curbed islands defining it from parking aisles on either side.

CRESTVIEW — Like rush-hour State Road 85 traffic, receiving the final approval for a proposed connector road at the Crestview Corners shopping center has become a sit-and-wait situation.

PROJECT'S BACKGROUND

At an Aug. 11, 2014, City Council meeting, then-city planner Eric Davis introduced the proposal to use the existing north-south lane through the shopping center’s parking lot to bypass congestion on S.R. 85. The mall’s businesses include Big Lots, Bealls Outlet and Bamboo Sushi.

The proposed two-lane, low-speed connector would link Hospital Drive and Redstone Avenue East, removing some local traffic from S.R. 85.

The road — which would have regulation striping and parking islands to help define its parameters, and “stop” signs at the east-west parking lanes — would begin behind Advance Auto Parts and Payless Shoe Source, linking behind Taco Bell with the current driving lane and running behind Krystal and Regions Bank before connecting to Redstone Avenue.

Traffic impact fees, collected before the city placed a moratorium on such collections, would finance the project.

North Okaloosa Medical Center, along with Krystal, suggested the project. Today, all affected businesses, except NOMC, have approved the cut-through plans and required easements, Public Works Director Wayne Steele said.

CURRENT STATUS

So, what's with the holdup?

“It’s not the local board, but the board of directors for all the hospitals owned by that company,” Steele said, during a Feb. 22 city council meeting, referring to Community Health Systems, NOMC’s parent company.

Members rotate on and off CHS’s board of directors, so the board’s composition is different now than when the proposal was first raised, Steele said. New members must re-evaluate the project.

“It’s a little bit complicated,” Steele said, adding he had a meeting Feb. 22 with local hospital officials. The city has been waiting for the hospital’s approval since October, but following the recent meeting, he believes it is coming soon.

“We want to help facilitate the city’s proposed easement,” hospital CEO Ronnie Daves said. “However, we …cannot grant access without fully understanding the legal rights of other property owners. We are working with them to see if an agreement can be reached so necessary approvals can be obtained for the city to move forward with development.”

But, Steele said, “They were very optimistic and felt they would achieve getting the easement signed once the board of the directors were able to get the doctors that are now currently owners in that partnership to sign the documents,” Steele said.

 “They didn’t give us a timeline but they felt very optimistic, so we’re glad of that."

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Crestview connector road awaits hospital's final approval

Your guide to Okaloosa County's Presidential Preference Primary

CRESTVIEW — Registered Democrat and Republican voters may vote early for the 15th Presidential Preference Primary.

Early voting is available from 10 a.m. to 6  p.m. Saturday, March 5 through Saturday, March 12.

CRESTVIEW EARLY VOTING LOCATIONS

●Supervisor of Elections Office, 302 Wilson St., Suite 102. Phone: 689-5600.

●Crestview Public Library, 1445 Commerce Drive. Phone: 682-4432.

Okaloosa voters may also vote early at any of these locations:

●Destin Community Center, 101 Stahlman Ave, Destin

●Niceville City Hall, 208 Partin Drive N., Niceville

●County Administration Building, 1250 Eglin Parkway, Shalimar.

 ELECTION DAY VOTING

Polls will be open 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 15 for the Presidential Preference Primary and municipal election.

On election day, voters must vote in their precinct as follows:

 CRESTVIEW

 Precinct 7, Dorcas: Dorcas Baptist Church, Education Building, 5880 McCallum Road, Dorcas

Precinct 8, Honey Creek: Emmanuel Baptist Church, 3252 James Lee Blvd E., Crestview

Precinct 9, Yellow River: New Beginnings Church, 412 James Lee Blvd. W., Crestview. This replaces the Charles Walthall Building.

Precinct 6, Garden City: Auburn Pentecostal Church, 6144 US Highway 85 N., Crestview

Precinct 11, East Crestview: Lifepoint Church, 400 Ferdon Blvd. S., Crestview

Precinct 12, West Crestview: Carver-Hill School, 461 School Ave. W., Crestview

Precinct 13, North Crestview: Woodlawn Baptist Church, 824 Ferdon Blvd. N., Crestview

Precinct 51, Airport Road: Airport Road Church of Christ, 2845 Airport Road, Crestview

Precinct 52, Live Oak: Live Oak Baptist Church, 4565 Live Oak Church Road, Crestview

MILLIGAN

Precinct 13: Milligan Assembly of God Church, 5408 U.S. Highway 4, Milligan

HOLT

Precinct 4: First Baptist Church of Holt, 532 U.S. Highway 90 W., Holt

LAUREL HILL

Precinct 5: First Baptist Church of Laurel Hill, 3972 2nd Ave., Laurel Hill

For more information, contact the Supervisor of Elections at 689-5600 or 651-7272, or visit the website, http://www.govote-okaloosa.com/.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Your guide to Okaloosa County's Presidential Preference Primary

Crestview meet and greet with candidate Mel Ponder is tonight

CRESTVIEW — Allen Bell of Legacy Insurance in Crestview is hosting a two-hour meet and greet today with Mel Ponder, R-Destin.

The former Destin mayor is a candidate for the District 4 seat in the Florida House.

The session is 4-6 p.m. Feb. 25 at Legacy Insurance, 301 Ferdon Blvd. N., Crestview.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Crestview meet and greet with candidate Mel Ponder is tonight

Crestview rail fans hopeful for passenger train restoration — with improvements (PHOTOS, VIDEO)

A number of residents and public officials see the benefits of returning passenger rail to Crestview and neighboring communities, but only if changes are made to the old Amtrak model.

CRESTVIEW — An Amtrak passenger train's Feb. 19 arrival, even if for 10 minutes, has train travel supporters hoping the whistle stop is a sign of things to come.

“We used to have the best train service in the world in the U.S.,” Austin Hobart said. “Then we dismantled it.”

Hobart wants his kids to experience the sort of fun he had growing up in the northeast, where he and his family and friends would take the train into “the city” for cultural pursuits and shopping.

But only if they could catch the train at a “decent hour.”

“Who wants to go to the station at 3 in the morning?” Hobart said. “And it has to be faster than driving. If it takes two hours to get to Pensacola, you might as well just drive.”

NOT EURAIL

Like Hobart, Karsten Magee, whose father is German, also traveled by Eurail with his family, and would welcome a comparable passenger train service in north Florida.

“In Europe, you'll find passenger service used on a daily basis to quickly get from place to place, all without the hassles of driving, dealing with traffic, or driving in inclement weather,” Magee said.

Amtrak cautions against comparing European and American trains.

“That’s apples and oranges,” Amtrak Government Affairs south district Senior Manager Todd Stennis said. “It’s an entirely different culture.”

Hobart agreed.

“We Americans would have to learn to leave our cars at home, which is what people in Europe are used to doing," he said.

That would require residents to see rail travel's benefits, State Rep. Doug Broxson, District 3, said.

 “We’ve got to move from having one person in every car,” he said. “The economy of doing this (traveling by train) is really incredible. "I think it is a great opportunity for our families to go places without having to take the car.”

DIFFERENT MODEL

Amtrak officials said Gulf Coast rail passengers wouldn’t suffer the notoriously poor Miami to Los Angeles Sunset Limited service. The train served Crestview until Hurricane Katrina infrastructure damage caused its indefinite suspension.

Amtrak itself is among the train’s critics.

“Tri-weekly service and historically poor on-time performance have turned away potential customers,” a 2010 Amtrak service improvement plan stated, noting the train’s on-time rate was less than 5 percent.

“It can’t stop here at 3 a.m. and expect to attract passengers,” Crestview Mayor David Cadle said of the proposed new service.

But the Sunset Limited and its challenges are not part of the Gulf Coast rail service restoration evaluation, Stennis said.

“That is not going to be a model for this service,” he said.

MAKING CONNECTIONS

“Reintroducing passenger rail service is about connecting our region and its many attractions together, helping to make the entire region even more competitive nationally and globally,” Southern Rail Commission spokesman Dan Dealy stated in an email to Northwest Florida mayors.

“We want to add opportunities to be connected with the rest of the nation, for people to come visit us and enjoy our wonderful Gulf Coast hospitality, our beaches, resorts, diverse entertainment, culture, food and music."

To do that, connecting public transportation to those attractions from the train stations is needed, Hobart said.

“We will need the connectivity from Crestview down to the south end of the county, but I’m optimistic we can fill that gap and provide that service,” Okaloosa County District 3 Commissioner Nathan Boyles said.

Railroading enthusiast Cal Zethmayr of WAAZ-WJSB radio said connecting from a train is no different than arriving by plane.

“You do the same thing,” Zethmayr said. “You rent a car or take a taxi.”

ON (CSX) TRACK

Like the Sunset Limited, a restored Gulf Coast rail service, would use track owned by freight railroad CSX, which rebuilt damaged lines and bridges after Katrina, but, according to Amtrak, not up to passenger rail standards.

“Re-introducing passenger rail along this line would involve extensive computer-based modeling to assess capacity on this route, identification of infrastructure improvements needed to support the proposed service, potential additional safety requirements and funding considerations for operating and capital costs,” CSX corporate communications spokeswoman Kristin Seay stated in a media release.

Seay stated CSX would participate in the passenger rail restoration venture if it had “adequate funding requiring no subsidy by CSX shareholders, and reasonable liability protection against new risks.”

Local and regional officials believe the proposed rail service can be a success if challenges like scheduling, track sharing with freight trains and connections at the stations can be conquered.

“Intercity passenger rail service will help make our Gulf Coast an even better place to live for all of our citizens, young and old, rich and poor, retirees, millennials, and everyone in between,” Dealy wrote.

Before Amtrak began operations in 1971, Southern Pacific, a predecessor of Union Pacific, provided passenger rail service between New Orleans and Los Angeles.

The Sunset Limited is the oldest named train in the United States still operating, having held the name since its inauguration in 1894. Until Hurricane Katrina, it stopped three times weekly in Crestview.

In April of 1993, Amtrak’s tri-weekly Sunset Limited was extended east from New Orleans to Miami and Sanford, by way of Jacksonville and Orlando.

Sunset Limited on-time performance declined in the mid-1990s due to increased freight train interference. In fiscal year 2004, the train’s on-time performance dipped to 4.3 percent. Scheduled running time between Los Angeles and Orlando was eight hours longer westbound and more than 11 hours longer eastbound, than it had been prior to 2000.

Poor train performance, undesirable service times, lengthened layovers, and the loss of east-of-New Orleans service caused train ridership to fall from 105,033 in 2003 to 71,719 in 2008.

Source: Amtrak

THE NEED FOR PROFIT

While there are many more steps to take before Gulf Coast passenger rail service is restored, the Feb. 19 inspection train run shows Amtrak is taking the project seriously, Amtrak Government Affairs south district Senior Manager Todd Stennis said.

When then-President George W. Bush withdrew a veto threat, the Railroad Safety Enhancement Act of 2008, cosponsored by Rep. Allen Boyd, D-North Florida, passed Congress and became law. The act included a requirement that Amtrak submit a plan to Congress for restoring passenger rail service between New Orleans and Sanford.

Rep. Jeff Miller, R-Chumuckla, originally opposed the act, but reversed his decision after Bush lifted his veto threat, and voted in favor of it. Crestview Mayor David Cadle wrote a letter of support to Miller at the time.

“I have contacted Rep. Miller and told him that I support resumption of service but that it needs to be a profitable run to resume that service,” Cadle told the News Bulletin at the time. “I also stated as long as the train was stopping at 3 a.m., it wouldn’t be profitable. But we are ready and willing to reopen our station.”

THE 'SUNSET LIMITED'

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Crestview rail fans hopeful for passenger train restoration — with improvements (PHOTOS, VIDEO)

New Hampton Inn planned in Crestview

This site plan depicts a Hampton Inn planned for the 2-acre site between La Rumba and Samuel's Roadhouse restaurants on John King Road.

CRESTVIEW — The City Council has approved Crestview's newest business site construction plans.

Trident Hospitality Group has proposed constructing an 80-room, four-story Hampton Inn hotel on the nearly 2-acre John King Road site between La Rumba and Samuel's Roadhouse restaurants on South Ferdon Boulevard.

"The development will be connecting to the city's water and sanitary sewer systems and capacity is available for this project," growth Management Director Teresa Gaillard stated in a brief to the council.

City engineer Fred Cook approved a submitted traffic impact analysis, according to Gaillard's brief. The hotel will provide parking for 83 vehicles and will have an outdoor swimming pool.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: New Hampton Inn planned in Crestview

Retiring Crestview library director honored at special council meeting

Incoming Crestview Public Library Director Marie Garcia chats with her retiring predecessor, Jean Lewis, at a special City Council meeting held in Lewis' honor Monday night.

CRESTVIEW — Friends, family and colleagues paid tribute Monday to retiring Library Director Jean Lewis at a special City Council meeting.

But, Lewis said, though she's retiring, neither the Crestview Public Library nor the community has seen the last of her.

"I'm going to continue my summer reading program at Carver-Hill, and I'm going to continue volunteering at No Child Left Behind," Lewis said. "My library days are not over. I'm going to continue to be a library patron and maybe a volunteer."

Spending more time with her family is also high on her list.

"My great granddaughter is going to be 1 year old so I'm definitely going to be visiting Baltimore," Lewis said. "And I definitely want to do some traveling."

Lewis was librarian at the Eglin Air Force Base Library until the city hired her more than 10 years ago.

Colleagues from the Okaloosa County Public Library Cooperative and member libraries took turns praising Lewis.

"It's tough for us to say good bye, but we're library folks and we're very flexible and we embrace change," Mary Esther Library Director Sheila Ortyl said. "I've learned so much from Jean …. Her work and good humor inspire us to revel in our accomplishments. We're grateful for her wisdom."

Lewis' colleagues praised her dignity and gentle demeanor.

"She's been a very calming effect on this old scallywag," Fire Chief Joe Traylor said self-deprecatingly. "Every now and then she has to kick me in the shin and say, 'Maybe you shouldn't say that."

"I'm going to really miss your calming character," Public Works Director Wayne Steele said. "Especially during the sometimes heated moments of budget planning."

"She is a true professional," Mayor David Cadle said.

Lewis' daughter, Jill Lewis-Daggs, said her mother poured her heart into improving the city's library.

"She gave you guys everything, because she loves the library and she loves Crestview," Lewis-Daggs said.

"There is always so much happening at the Crestview library," Ortyl said. "You have made that place a lively center of learning."

"I'm really, really proud to be your librarian," Lewis said.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Retiring Crestview library director honored at special council meeting

error: Content is protected !!