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Allegiant Air begins Okaloosa County service in May

Allegiant Air and Destin-Fort Walton Beach Airport announced Jan. 12 that service from Okaloosa County's commercial airport and Cincinnati and St. Louis will begin in May. Allegiant will be the fourth airline operating from Destin-Fort Walton Beach Airport. The new airline will operate 156-seat Airbus A319 jets flying twice-weekly flights to the two new hubs.

CRESTVIEW — North Okaloosa County travelers anticipate expanded opportunities after the Jan. 12 announcement of a new airline serving Destin-Fort Walton Beach Airport.

Las Vegas-based Allegiant Air will offer direct flights to and from Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky Airport beginning May 20 and MidAmerica St. Louis Airport in Belleville, Illinois, beginning June 2. Service will be seasonal at first, with introductory fares beginning at $39 each way.

Allegiant has been flying since 1997 using a low-fare formula that has allowed it to dodge legacy carriers’ financial challenges, Okaloosa County Airports officials said.

“They’re a very successful, ultra low-cost carrier,” Interim Airports Director Tracy Stage said.

Allegiant’s à-la-carte services selection model cuts fares by allowing passengers to choose just the services they need. The carrier’s specialty is marketing vacation packages, which drew Allegiant to the Emerald Coast.

“They partner with the community in selling hotel rooms, rental cars and tours,” Deputy Airports Director Mike Stenson said. “To be profitable, they rely on ancillary revenue.”

For local travelers, Allegiant’s arrival adds two more direct destinations, supplementing Atlanta, Charlotte, Dallas and Houston hubs now served by American, Delta and United Airlines.

$6 MILLION IMPACT

Local business leaders lauded the opportunities Allegiant’s arrival brings, both for expanded outbound destinations and for attracting more visitors.

“It can only be good for our area,” Crestview Area Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Valerie Lott said. “It’s a no-brainer. It brings more people in and gives local residents and businesses quicker access to more airports. That is always advantageous.”

“St. Louis and Cincinnati have always looked upon us as their no. 1 beach for vacations and getaways,” Emerald Coast Convention and Visitors Bureau Director Ed Schroeder said. “Now, they’ll have a great alternative to the 12-hour drive. That allows them to enjoy two extra days on the beach.”

“In the first year, we’re looking at economic impacts of over $6 million to our communities, and it can just compound from there,” Stage said.

More than half that estimate comes from tourists, Allegiant stated in a press release.

“The new flights will operate twice weekly and will bring more than 12,000 additional visitors each year to the Destin/Fort Walton Beach area and generate an estimated $3.5 million annually in total visitor spending,” the release stated.

MORE TO COME

From Allegiant’s St. Louis and Cincinnati hubs, local travelers can connect with nationwide and worldwide destinations on flights operated by Allegiant and other airlines.

“It would be outstanding for the Okaloosa community because of the fact that we have so many retired and active duty military people with spouses of European descent,” said Jim Mills, a Navy veteran whose wife, Isabelle, is French. “They are constantly looking forward to flying back to see their families.”

Direct flights from Cincinnati to Paris Charles de Gaulle will expand currently limited connection opportunities for student and adult Sister City Program members, Mills, the program’s former president, said.

“It’ll be a great opportunity for Northwest Florida State College and Crestview High School, which have large programs active with Noirmoutier,” Mills said. “It can save adults and students a lot of money.”

Crestview real estate agent Dino Sinopoli, who frequently travels for business and pleasure, said he’s excited about the local airport’s expanded options.

“The better the value in airline seats, the more you can enjoy travel,” he said. “For our economy, the benefit is getting the people down from the north to enjoy our beaches and amenities.

“For us, we can zip up there and connect to some more locations. I’ve got family all over the place. It’s good to have a cheaper airline that services our area.”

A NINE-YEAR EFFORT

Attracting Allegiant Air to Destin-Fort Walton Beach has been a nine-year process involving intense competition from neighboring airports such as Panama City and Pensacola, Stenson said.

“They didn’t just come knocking on the door to tell us they were flying from VPS,” Stage said. “We had a very competitive effort to bring them here, and we won it.

"It is all due to our low operating costs and how we manage our airports.”

“One of the reasons we’re able to keep our airport costs low is because of our partnership with Eglin Air Force Base,” Stenson said.

For local flyers, St. Louis and Cincinnati are just the beginning, he said. Allegiant plans to grow its Okaloosa service to other destinations.

“All the cities they have service from is just amazing,” Stenson said. “What they do is start with service to a couple airports and incrementally add new cities every year. For instance, Myrtle Beach started a few years ago with two cities, like we are, and now has service to 14 cities.”

Stenson said bringing Allegiant Air to VPS should affect the airport’s other three carriers.

“Having a low-cost carrier is going to lower fares across the board,” he said. “You may not see it in year one, but you’ll be seeing it across the board for the other airlines.”

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Allegiant Air begins Okaloosa County service in May

Some court functions to remain in Crestview (VIDEO)

Court meets in Courthouse A in the soon-to-be-demolished Okaloosa County Courthouse. Some court services will remain in Crestview, Board of County Commissioners chairman Nathan Boyles said.

CRESTVIEW — The City Council has unanimously approved an interlocal agreement with the Okaloosa County Board of Commissioners to replace the county courthouse.

Fire Chief Joe Traylor had approved the revised agreement after discussion at the council's December 2015 meeting.

County Commissioner Nathan Boyles said he hopes the old downtown courthouse will be vacated by the end of February, with Crestview retaining some functions during the new courthouse's demolition and construction.

Preparing temporary facilities has delayed vacating the current courthouse, he said.

Boyles said he had originally hoped the current courthouse would've been vacated by the end of 2015.

"We're having to renovate the space at the Old Bethel Road facility, and renovate some of the space in the old hospital to move clerk staff in there," Boyles said.

The former county hospital, on the corner of State Road 85 and U.S. Highway 90, now houses the Crestview Manor nursing home and several county services.

During construction, which is expected to last 16 to 18 months after demolition, county commissioners will have their Crestview meetings in the City Council chamber.

Boyles also said the county may help celebrate Crestview's centennial with related events.

"I hope there would be a ground-breaking ceremony (for the new courthouse) for the city centennial in April," Boyles said.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Some court functions to remain in Crestview (VIDEO)

Crestview council OKs car show, new subdivision

CRESTVIEW — Meeting for the first time in 2016, the Crestview City Council rapidly worked its way through a relatively short agenda.

During the Monday evening meeting, city leaders:

• Distributed awards for parade entries and business window decorations for the Main Street Crestview Association's annual Christmas parade.

"It's one of the greatest events we do as a city and we have to keep expanding it," Mayor David Cadle said. "This year we added another block, and it was lined with people all the way."

• Amended the council's Rules of Procedure to allow the administrative assistant to the council to receive requests for special meetings in the city clerk's absence.

The order of business was also amended to include "opening of the meeting" and provision for old business unresolved from previous meetings to be discussed.

• Unanimously approved providing support for the Spanish Trail Cruisers Club's annual car show, which this year will be April 16 and will include the city's official centennial birthday party.

• Unanimously approved plans for the Camille Cove subdivision on Live Oak Church Road. Developer Paul Cassidy agreed to pay a $3,191.12 recreation fee as the lot available for park use was less than half an acre and too small to turn into a city-maintained park.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Crestview council OKs car show, new subdivision

Okaloosa commissioners mull hiring legislative aides

Commissioner Nathan Boyles

CRESTVIEW — Some Okaloosa County commissioners are calling for a staff reorganization that would provide each of the board’s five members a legislative aide.

County Administrator John Hofstad — who says he’s working with his staff to draft a proposal that could go before the board in February — said commissioners are getting by with “shared resources” and he wants to look at better serving their needs.

Since 2008, the county has cut dozens of positions, leaving it with a lean administrative staff compared to other counties its size, he said. Currently, three positions in Hofstad’s office directly serve the commissioners, with one located in Crestview and two in Fort Walton Beach.

Read more from the Northwest 

Florida Daily News>>

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Okaloosa commissioners mull hiring legislative aides

Okaloosa GOP dinner to feature former Secret Service agent, decorated Pentagon survivor

Sen. Brian Birdwell, left, and Dan Bongino

FORT WALTON BEACH — Former Secret Service agent, security consultant, radio host and Fox News contributor Dan Bongino will be the keynote speaker at the Okaloosa County Republican Executive Committee’s March 12 Reagan Dinner.

Bongino, an agent under Presidents George W. Bush and Obama, is the author of the New York Times bestseller, "Life Inside the Bubble," and just released "The Fight — A Secret Service Agent’s Inside Account of Security Failings and the Political Machine."

Texas Sen. and retired Army Lt. Col. Brian Birdwell, a decorated survivor of the 9/11 Pentagon attack and author of "Refined by Fire: A Family's Triumph of Love and Faith," will also speak. He and his wife founded Face the Fire Ministries to support critically burned and wounded service personnel.

The fundraiser is set for 5-9 p.m. Saturday, March 12 at Ramada Plaza Beach Resort, 1500 Miracle Strip Parkway in Fort Walton Beach. Dinner begins at 6 p.m.; silent and live auctions will be held.

Tickets are $60 per person through Feb. 15; $50 for students. For silent auction pick-up, or to reserve a sponsored table, call 863-2301 or 512-584-4589 before Feb. 15.

See registration and complete details at OkaloosaGOP.com.

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Okaloosa GOP dinner to feature former Secret Service agent, decorated Pentagon survivor

Here's what the Crestview City Council will meet about Jan. 11

CRESTVIEW — The City Council will meet 6 p.m. Jan. 11 at city hall, 198 Wilson St., N.

Here is the meeting's agenda.

1. Call to Order

2. Invocation and Pledge of Allegiance 26— Pastor Darlene Haynes-Sherman, Kingdom Life Ministries

3. Open Policy making and legislative session

4. Special Presentations

a. Centennial Presentation – City Clerk

b. Christmas Parade Award presentations – Main Street.

5. Approval of Minutes

Approval of the Dec. 14 workshop and council meeting minutes.

6. Public Hearings

7. Public Opportunity on Council propositions

8. Consent Agenda

a. Approval of invoice from Ben Holley

b. Approval for Trainer Certification of CDL.

9. Resolutions

a. Resolution 16-03 – Council Rules and Regulations

10. Committee reports

11. Scheduled presentations from the public

a. Request from Spanish Trailer Cruisers for Annual Car Show (This year will also be the centennial birthday celebration.)

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Here's what the Crestview City Council will meet about Jan. 11

House of Representatives District 4 candidate forum scheduled

OKALOOSA ISLAND — A candidate forum for the Florida House of Representatives, District 4, is set for 6-7:30 p.m., Jan. 20, in El Matador condo's Fiesta Room, 909 Santa Rosa Blvd., on Okaloosa Island. 

A candidate meet-and-greet is set for 5:30-6 p.m. followed by the forum and straw poll. 

Candidates Laurie Bartlett, Wayne Harris, Armand Izzo, Mel Ponder and Jonathan Tallman plan to participate.

The forum, co-sponsored by Florida Panhandle Patriots, is free and open to the public. Light refreshments will be provided.  

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: House of Representatives District 4 candidate forum scheduled

Here's what the Crestview Redevelopment Agency will meet about Jan. 11

CRESTVIEW —  The Crestview Redevelopment Agency will meet 5 p.m. Jan. 11 at city hall, 198 Wilson St., N.

Here is the meeting's agenda.

1. Call to Order

2. Pledge of Allegiance

3. Open Policy making and legislative session

4. Approval of the Oct. 12 and Nov. 30, 2015 CRA minutes.

5. Presentation of CRA Legal Council Report — Carol A. Leone, P.L.L.C.

6. Ordinance 1598, Amending Chapter 2, Division 4 CRA — CRA Director

7. Comments from the audience

8. Adjournment

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Here's what the Crestview Redevelopment Agency will meet about Jan. 11

Last call for North Okaloosa voters to change party preference

CRESTVIEW — Crestview has no municipal elections March 15, but North Okaloosa County voters can register their preference for presidential candidates eight months before voting for the new chief executive.

In addition, south county residents in Cinco Bayou, Destin, Mary Esther and Valparaiso can choose city council members and Destin's and Mary Esther’s mayors.

Throughout the county, voters can let their parties know whom they want on the November presidential ballot.

“It’s the presidential preference primary, so members of the parties will be voting on who they want to represent them for their party,” Okaloosa County Supervisor of Elections public information officer Bridget Richard said.

March has the first of three local elections in Okaloosa County. In August, voters will select county commissioners, school board members and a superintendent of schools.

Among state, federal and county elections, voters will also choose First Judicial circuit and county judges, a state senator in district 1 and a state representative in districts 3 and 4.

In August, voters go to the polls in the primary election; the general election is Nov. 8.

“The important thing there is, since it’s the primary, only Democrats can vote the Democrat ballot and only Republicans can vote the Republican ballot,” Richard said.

“If they want to vote for the other party, they’re going to have to change their party preference.”

Voters’ last day to change their party preference, or for new voters to register for the March presidential primary election, is Feb. 16.

These candidates have pre-filed for Okaloosa County offices. Candidate qualifying week is June 20-24. (* means candidate is incumbent)

Clerk of Circuit Court and Comptroller:

JD Peacock*

Sheriff:

Larry Ashley*

Property Appraiser:

John Holguin

Tax Collector:

Ben Anderson*

Superintendent of Schools:

Marline Sue Van Dyke

Mary Beth Jackson*

Supervisor of Elections:

Paul Lux*

Board of County Commissioners, District 1

Graham Fountain

Board of County Commissioners, District 5

Kelly Windes*

School Board, District 4

Charles Cawthon

Tim Bryant

Source: Okaloosa County Supervisor of Elections

●●●●● 

2016 ELECTION CALENDAR

Presidential preference primary and municipal election: March 15

Last day to register or change party: Feb. 16

Primary election: Aug.  30

Last day to register or change party: Aug. 1

General election: Nov. 8

Last day to register: Oct. 11

Source: Okaloosa County Supervisor of Elections

PREFILED CANDIDATES AND ELECTION DATES

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Last call for North Okaloosa voters to change party preference

Laurel Hill council seeks students' help to design city's official website

Laurel Hill City Councilwoman Debra Adams listens as Councilman Travis Dewrell explains his ideas for having a local student design the city's website in exchange for community service hours.

LAUREL HILL — Technology or web design students at Laurel Hill School or Northwest Florida State College may get the opportunity to design the city's official website.

Councilman Travis Dewrell suggested letting a student gain practical experience and earn community service hours by designing by designing Laurel Hill's web presence.

At Thursday evening's council meeting, Dewrell received unanimous approval from his fellow council members to approach school officials for their suggestions.

"Maybe we'd get an idea and bring it back to the council and say, 'Hey, this is what the IT instructor at the school has to say,'" Dewrell said.

Councilwoman Debra Adams, a teacher at Laurel Hill School, said the proposal may have some flaws, most notably the fact that the school currently has no information technology teacher.

COMMUNITY SERVICE

Undeterred, Dewrell said another idea could be to open the project up to anyone in the community, but he'd like to see a student receive the project.

"Students have to have a certain number of community service hours on projects," he said. "Maybe somebody would like to earn community service hours doing this."

Councilman Scott Moneypenny, who first broached the idea of establishing an official city website, said Ray Howell, the owner of www.LaurelHillNow.com, has offered the site to the city provided its archives of cemetery records, history and area family genealogy remain part of it.

Moneypenny said Howell has used NWFSC student interns to build and maintain the site, and might be open to doing so again to convert it into the city's official site.

NO PERSONAL DATA

Former mayor Joan Smith asked if the site would be secure, given Dewrell's suggestion that photos of community events could be uploaded in a gallery section.

Dewrell said that as he envisions the city's site, while it should include a link to a private vendor's site from which city water customers can pay their bills, it would not collect personal data.

"What I am proposing is something that we wouldn't have to take secure information," Dewrell said. "It would be as secure as any other website. But I don't want to be responsible for accepting anyone's private information."

Upon the council's unanimous approval of Dewrell's request to approach Laurel Hill School officials, Council Chairman Larry Hendren turned to him and said, "Go to school, Travis."

This article originally appeared on Crestview News Bulletin: Laurel Hill council seeks students' help to design city's official website

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