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Dolly Parton-backed development may serve up cowboy/pirate dinner theater

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DESTIN — While lips are tight regarding a large project along Commons Boulevard and U.S. Highway 98, Okaloosa County property records suggest a Dolly Parton-backed development is in the works.

“I cannot disclose the intended use of the property,” said Realtor John Paul Somers, who is involved in the deal. However, “there is some exciting news that will be issued in the next few weeks,” he added.

While Somers said he can’t discuss details, county planners say they have met with representatives of the project, although no formal plans have been filed.

Records show that over the past year, four parcels of land have been purchased by two companies, CF SYN LLC and World Choice Investments LLC. The parcels range from 2.34 acres to 6.99 acres.

World Choice Investments is affiliated with The Dollywood Co., which operates the Dixie Stampede and Pirates Voyage dinner theaters in Pigeon Forge, Tenn., Myrtle Beach, S.C., and Branson, Mo.

A LinkedIn profile for World Choice Investments also shows that it does business as Dixie Stampede LLC, Pirates Voyage LLC and Great Choice Investments LLC.

“Sold” signs from John Paul Somers and Co. surround the parcels, which show a sales price of $4.25 million. One of those properties was sold to World Choice by CF SYN LLC in December.

According to the Dixie Stampede website, “Dolly Parton’s Dixie Stampede Dinner Shows are wonderful programs for all ages. The fabulous four-course feast and great entertainment makes it the most fun place to eat.”

Guests at the Pirate’s Voyage “begin their voyage at the Pirate Village for a fun and interactive experience. They will then ship off to the main arena sectioned into Crimson and Sapphire pirate crew-quarters. As the experience continues, each side will compete to win the treasure of Davey Jones himself.”

Okaloosa County Growth Management Director Elliot Kampert said he and Destin officials have met with representatives for the project.

“We talked about everything from parking to storm water,” said Kampert, who noted that part of the proposed development would fall under city and county jurisdiction because of its location.

Given that, Kampert said the county and Destin will have to work through things such as taxes, traffic surveys and who would take the lead on what aspects of the project.

Destin Community Development Director Ken Gallander said specifics of the project are confidential, but parts of the talks were based around the idea of annexing the property into the city. He said there would be “hurdles” involved with such a move.

Much like any other business that looks to locate in Destin, Gallander said the developers are studying their options.

“From my perspective, they are interested, but they are also looking at other areas,” he said.

Kampert said more details will be forthcoming as the proposal moves forward.

“As of right now we are in wait mode; the ball is in their court,” he said.

Messages left for the Dixie Stampede marketing team were not immediately returned.


The cost of a crime

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Nine months ago, Doris Guthrie hadn’t thought much about what happens to victims of violent crimes.

She was still mourning the loss of her only son in a car accident and coping with the illness of her 87-year-old husband, Paul, who was battling cancer and dementia.

They both had worked hard to be financially secure in their retirement, and were enjoying their peaceful and orderly life.

But on March 22, 2012, a man broke into their home on Coral Drive in Fort Walton Beach, beat them, robbed them and changed their lives forever.

“You don’t just have a home invasion and that’s it,” said Doris, who is 83. “Once you’re a victim, things do change. We lost a lot — our savings, our money, our automobile, our quality of life.”

Doris also lost Paul. They celebrated their 65th wedding anniversary in a hospital just days before his death June 23.

Although the medical examiner did not link Paul’s death to the beating he had received three months earlier, Doris is convinced that the events of that March night shortened Paul’s life by a year or more.

Certainly, they tainted his remaining weeks and months. He had a broken jaw, broken nose and broken arm.

Doris took him back to the emergency room three times for bleeding on his brain. His wounds healed slowly, requiring near-daily visits to doctors and therapists.

The Air Force veteran spent the last weeks of his life in hospice care at Eglin Regional Hospital.

“We just took care of what we had to,” Doris said of their last months together. “Paul was more angry, I think, than I was. He was beat up more.”

Four light knocks
The man accused of breaking into their house was arrested that same night.

Jonathan Edward Fennell, a 34-year-old Georgia man, was charged with home invasion robbery, false imprisonment, aggravated battery on persons over 65, motor vehicle theft and aggravated fleeing and eluding.

He had been hanging around the neighborhood for several days before the robbery, trying to sell small appliances and asking for money, according Doris and other neighbors.

Paul and Doris had helped him, too. Doris gave him some cash, while Paul gave him cash and a ride.

She described Fennell as clean-cut and well-spoken, although she was suspicious of him by the third day. When he asked for a glass of water and returned it half-full, she put the glass in a plastic bag, planning to take it to the police the next day.

Instead, he returned to their house that night and knocked on the door leading from the carport to the living room.

Doris was sitting alone in the living room watching television when she heard four light knocks, and then another four.

She peeked through the drapes and recognized him.

“I thought something is not quite right,” she said.

She put her hand on the knob and turned it slightly. He burst in, grabbed Doris’ slight frame and put her into a rough headlock.

Using the cord from a clock radio, he tied her hands tightly behind her back and then tied her to the coffee table.

She didn’t resist.

“I remember thinking, ‘Curl up and get loose. It can’t hurt you as much,’ ” she recalls. “I wasn’t afraid of him. He didn’t threaten to kill us. He didn’t have a knife or a gun.”

But when Paul came out of the bedroom and saw his wife being tied up, the frail older man yelled at the intruder.

“He knocked Paul down, screaming at him,” she said. “He beat him till he got him beat down so he could tie him up. Paul never quit. He kept yelling. He kept kicking. At one point he told him, ‘You should be ashamed of yourself.’ ”

After the attacker got Paul tied up, he allegedly took money out of Doris’ purse and Paul’s wallet, then grabbed keys and left in the couple’s van.

Doris managed to free herself from the coffee table and made her way to Paul, where she shouted at him to untie her. He was in and out of consciousness by then, she said.

She went to the phone and tried to dial 911 without being able to see the keypad.

Hands still tied, she backed up to the door, turned the knob and ran across the street to a neighbor’s. There, she rang the doorbell with her chin.

“Paul was tied up, blood everywhere,” she said. “You do anything to survive.”

She turned to see a police cruiser coming down the street. The Fort Walton Beach police officer detailed the encounter in the incident report attached to Fennell’s arrest report.

“Doris had her hands tied behind her back and advised she had just been robbed,” he wrote. “A radio electrical cord, with radio still attached, was used to tie Doris’ hands behind her back.”

She led officers back to their house, where they discovered Paul tied up and bleeding from lacerations to his head and arms, the report said.

They were taken to the hospital.

Fennell, officers reported, ran over something with the stolen van and blew the engine up. He ditched the vehicle and took off on foot. He was taken into custody shortly after, reports said.

The price of being a victim
Although the emotional toll has been the heaviest burden, Doris said crime victims pay in countless other ways.

They were billed twice to have their car towed — first to the police station and later to their home.

“It’s unfair,” acknowledged Fort Walton Beach Police Chief Ted Litschauer. “It is also unfair that they were the victims of a crime.”

But, he asked, who should pay for towing stolen cars?

“It should go to the perpetrator, but you have no means of collecting it unless they’re convicted and the judge orders them to,” he said. “It’s part of the cost of crime.”

Although close to $100 was taken from their home that night, Fennell only had a few dollars in his pocket when he was caught, reports said.

Doris would like to get the full amount back. So far, she hasn’t even gotten the few dollars that the police recovered.

Their medical bills have easily topped $1 million, paid for almost exclusively by taxpayers.

None of the repairs on their van were covered by insurance because Paul had changed the policy just before the break-in.

It took Doris three days to get her purse back from the Police Department, which kept her from getting onto Eglin Air Force Base to see her own doctors.

And it took her six months to get a copy of her husband’s death certificate, which she needed to file forms with the military.

Those are just a few of the tasks she has struggled with over the last few months.

“I thought everything would be really easy to do, but it hasn’t turned out that way,” she said.

Fennell’s court date has been pushed back several times. His next appearance is scheduled for Feb. 8.

At first, Doris had worried about a young man like him spending the rest of his life in jail. That has passed.

“He violated our house,” she said. “I don’t know why a young person like that would think that he had the right to come in and demand my money and my car.

“So now I want to see him go to jail.”

‘Everything is in turmoil’
Over the last nine months, Doris has been overwhelmed. When Paul died, she lost the person who shared her life and helped make decisions.

She had thought they had their affairs in order. After the break-in, she realized she was wrong.

“I thought my life would be planned and peaceful,” she said. “Now everything is in turmoil. I’m here with all these problems I can’t solve.”

Decisions big and small overwhelm her these days, and she isn’t sure how to handle them or who to ask for help.

And it’s hard for her to accept help, even when it’s offered.

Assistant State Attorney Angela Mason and her husband have been very kind to her in spite of her hesitation, she said.

They even came over and washed her dog one weekend.

Her grandson, who lives in Tennessee, calls her every day, but she doesn’t share with him all the worries in her life because it’s not her way.

She and Paul were always independent and that’s how she still wants to be.

“I’m not afraid,” she said. “I’m not traumatized. He didn’t leave me afraid, a nervous old woman.”

Contact Daily News Staff Writer Wendy Victora at 850-315-4478 or wvictora@nwfdailynews.com. Follow her on Twitter @WendyVnwfdn.

Convention offers outlet for fans of anime, role playing and gaming

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OKALOOSA ISLAND —Some heated debates took place at Destination Anime on Saturday.

Which anime series is better, Gundam or Macross? Who would win a fight — Batman or Kal-El? Would Chuck Norris be able to beat the rabid fans of My Little Pony, also called Bronys?

“Anytime you get a group of men together for something so sparkly, it’s a force to be reckoned with,” joked a judge at The Ultimate Showdown discussion.

Hundreds of visitors descended on the Emerald Coast Convention Center to enjoy gaming, anime TV shows, panels on cosplay (costume) makeup, karaoke and more. Locals and out-of-towners came together to make new friends, learn more about their hobby or lifestyle, or just to have a good time.

View a slideshow of the convention. >>


Alex Myers came from Mississippi with friends to help host panels on Steampunk, a community that melds Victorian era aesthetic and science fiction into their dress. There aren’t any big conventions in Mississippi, Myers said, so his group —the Mississippi Steampunk Society — travels to as many nearby gatherings as possible to spread the word about Steampunk.

The group explained the Steampunk community to visitors, describing how to develop their own characters and start role playing games in their areas.

Many members of the Steampunk community make their own costumes to go with their character, said Kevin Ready, also of Mississippi. Ready, whose character name is Alistair, wore an intricate red leather mask he made.

“I just liked the idea of learning to make stuff,” Ready said of why he got into Steampunk. “Just using the old methods like leather working.”

A number of vendors showed off their wares at the convention. Everything from Steampunk accessories to swords to anime memorabilia was sold.

For Damiana MacCrone of Pensacola, shopping was one reason she attended Destination Anime. Finding anime gear is difficult locally and expensive online, she said.

“It’s kid in a candy store stuff,” she said of the shopping at the convention.

Minutes earlier, a girl complimented MacCrone on her “Yuki Cross” costume and gave her a hug.

Moments like that are common at anime conventions, MacCrone said. Most visitors are introverted and don’t have a lot of outlets to enjoy their love of anime with others.

“This gives us a chance to be around people who like what we like,” she said.

WANT TO ATTEND? Destination Anime continues from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. today at the Emerald Coast Convention Center. Admission is $50.

Contact Daily News Staff Writer Lauren Delgado at 850-315-4445 or ldelgado@nwfdailynews.com. Follow her on Twitter @LaurenDnwfdn.

NYC iPhone owner tricks thief using dating app

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NEW YORK (AP) — A New York City musician used a combination of technology, seduction, brute force and a bribe to reclaim his missing iPhone from a confused crook.

Jazz trombonist Nadav Nirenberg (NAH'-dav NEEH'-run-berg) tells the New York Post (http://bit.ly/WhFlST ) that he left his iPhone in a livery cab on New Year's Eve.

The next morning, the 27-year-old learned via email that someone was sending creepy messages to women using a dating app on the phone.

So he logged on to the service and offered the man a date — posing as a woman. He even sent a picture of a pretty girl.

When the culprit arrived at Nirenberg's Brooklyn apartment with wine, the musician jumped out brandishing a hammer.

But he also offered $20.

The thief handed him the iPhone and bolted.

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Information from: New York Post, http://www.nypost.com

Cat used in Brazil prison smuggling try

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SAO PAULO (AP) — Guards thought there was something suspicious about a little white cat slipping through a prison gate in northeastern Brazil. A prison official says that when they caught the animal, they found a cellphone, drills, small saws and other contraband taped to its body.

Alagoas state prisons spokeswoman Cinthya Moreno says that the cat was caught New Year's Eve at the medium-security prison in the city of Arapiraca.

The O Estado de S. Paulo newspaper reported Saturday that all of the prison's 263 inmates are suspects in the smuggling attempt, though it says a prison spokesman said "It will be hard to discover who is responsible since the cat does not speak."

Some gun shows canceling after Conn. mass shooting

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SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y. (AP) — Several gun shows, all about an hour's drive from Newtown, Conn., have been canceled.

A show in White Plains, N.Y. — brought back a few years ago after being called off for a decade because of the Columbine shooting — is off because officials decided it didn't seem appropriate now, either. In Danbury, Conn. — about 10 miles west of Newtown — the venue backed out. Same with three other shows in New York's Hudson Valley, according to the organizer.

Gun advocates aren't backing down from their insistence on the right to keep and bear arms. But heightened sensitivities and raw nerves since the Newtown shooting have led to toned-down displays at gun shows and prompted some officials and sponsors to cancel the well-attended exhibitions altogether.

Some of the most popular guns will be missing from next weekend's gun show in Saratoga Springs, N.Y., after show organizers agreed to bar the display and sale of AR-15 military-style semiautomatic weapons and their large-clip magazines.

"The majority of people wanted these guns out of the city," said Chris Mathiesen, Saratoga Springs' public safety commissioner. "They don't want them sold in our city, and I agree. Newtown, Conn., is not that far away."

The mayor of Barre, Vt., wants a ban on military-style assault weapons being sold at an annual gun show in February. Mayor Thom Lauzon says he supports responsible gun ownership but is making the request "as a father." The police chief in Waterbury, Conn., just a few miles from Newtown, has halted permits for gun shows, saying he was concerned about firearms changing hands that might one day be used in a mass shooting.

In White Plains, in New York's suburban Westchester County, Executive Rob Astorino had brought back the show in 2010 after a ban of more than a decade following the 1999 Columbine High School shooting in Colorado, but he said the show would be inappropriate now. The shows in the Hudson Valley and Danbury were listed as canceled on the website for Big Al's Gun Shows. A man who answered the site's contact number said it was the venues that canceled the shows, not the promoter.

In Houston, transportation officials temporarily stopped using electronic freeway signs to give directions to gun shows amid complaints following such a show the day after the Dec. 14 school shooting. State-level transportation officials overruled the decision. The signs are routinely used to direct traffic or tell visitors where to exit freeways for rodeos, sporting events and gun shows.

On Wednesday, the City Council in Saratoga Springs urged organizers of a downtown gun show Jan. 12-13 not to display military-style weapons and the high-capacity magazines "of the type used in the Newtown tragedy." About a dozen people gave impassioned pleas at the meeting.

Show organizer David Petronis of New Eastcoast Arms Collectors Associates agreed to the limit.

"I don't think it's fair that we're taking the brunt of the problem," Petronis said, "but I can understand the reaction of people in doing so."

Petronis said his group is a "nice, clean family-oriented ... arms fair" that brings in thousands of visitors and a lot of money for the city. He stressed that buyers at his show undergo background checks, as per New York state law.

The gunman in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in December used an AR-15 to kill 20 first-graders and six educators in the school. The gun belonged to the shooter's mother, but it's not clear where it was bought. The shooting has led to calls for stricter regulation of assault weapons, though the National Rifle Association has steadfastly opposed such measures.

Gun dealers around the country are reporting a spike in sales of semiautomatic rifles amid renewed talk of a federal ban on assault weapons. The possibility of tighter gun control has also pumped up attendance at gun shows in several states.

Marv Kraus, who helped organize a weekend gun show in Evansville, Wis., said business has been especially strong lately.

Kraus said there was never any reason to consider postponing or canceling the Wisconsin event, which was scheduled for Friday through Sunday. One of the few vendors there with semiautomatic weapons, Scott Kuhl of Janesville, Wis., bristled at any suggestion that he temporarily stop selling semiautomatic weapons because of the Connecticut shooting.

"When a plane crashes, should they shut down the airline for six months?" Kuhl said. "This is my business; this is my livelihood."

Jared Hook, 40, who came to the show looking for a .223-caliber gun for coyote hunting, said he was glad vendors did not back away after Newtown.

"If anything, there's a lot more interest in guns now because of the shooting," Hook said. "People want them for protection, and it's good that they still have access to them."

Joel Koehler, a Pennsylvania gun dealer, said a few dealers have dropped out of a show this weekend in the Pocono Mountains, but only "because they have nothing to sell. They are out of inventory."

"The gun sales have been crazy. They are going through the roof," he said.

Koehler said he has felt no pressure to cancel his shows in Pennsylvania.

"The shows are going on," he said. "Nobody's said to us that we can't have them."

President Barack Obama has urged Congress to vote rapidly on measures that he says a majority of Americans support: a ban on the sale of military-style assault weapons; a ban on the sale of high-capacity magazines; and required criminal background checks for all gun buyers by removing loopholes that cover some sales, such as at gun shows in states that don't currently require checks.

Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett on Friday said he would consider a radio-show caller's suggestion that gun shows be banned on publicly owned property, such as the Pennsylvania Farm Show Complex in Harrisburg. But he also noted that the complex is open to all businesses.

While government officials take a harder look at gun shows, organizers remain adamant that they run safe, legal businesses. There is no central government database on how guns used in crimes are obtained.

The Brady Campaign, which advocates for stricter state and federal gun laws, has long pushed to close the so-called "gun show loophole" by forcing every state to require background checks of buyers at the shows. They note that three of the weapons used in the Columbine attack were bought by someone who went to a gun show that didn't require a background check. Seventeen states require an extensive background check, according to the campaign.

And in the wake of Newtown is an emboldened group of advocates, like Susan Steer of Saratoga Springs, a 46-year-old married mother of three who started a petition seeking to cancel the local gun show. Steer said she'll continue to push for banning gun shows at the taxpayer-supported venue.

"For many of us," she said, "the shooting in Sandy Hook was the tipping point for taking some action."

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Hill reported from Albany, N.Y. Contributing to this report were Dinesh Ramde in Evansville, Wis.; Michael Rubinkam in Allentown, Pa.; Peter Jackson in Harrisburg, Pa.; and Lisa Rathke in Montpelier, Vt.

Fire destroys house; no injuries reported

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FREEPORT - A fire destroyed a home on Cypress Street Saturday morning, according to Walton County Fire Rescue.

The residents were not at home and no one was injured. A neighbor reported the fire must after 10 a.m. 

The state Fire Marshal’s Office is investigating the cause.

Firefighters from Freeport and North Bay and an emergency crew from the Walton County Sheriff’s Office assisted at the scene.

Detour set for South Bay Grove Road

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FREEPORT - Crews from Anderson Columbia will close a section of South Bay Grove Road in Walton County on Monday for drainage work, according to the state Department of Transportation.

Signs will be placed to detour motorists to Short Avenue and State Street to avoid the construction.

The work is anticipated to take three days to complete. 

The drainage job is part of a project to widen 4.6 miles of U.S. Highway 331 from the north end of the Choctawhatchee Bay relief bridge to south of State Road 20.

The project also features new traffic signals, a new bridge over Ramsey Branch, storm water retention areas, water and sewer relocation, drainage, and other improvements.

Work began last fall and is expected to be compete by the summer of 2015.


Activities planned to honor Martin Luther King

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FORT WALTON BEACH — The Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration Committee will present three events this month to honor the civil rights icon.

This year’s theme is “Living the Legacy.”

The celebration begins with an Oratorical and Poster Contest at Fort Walton Beach High School at 10 a.m. Saturday. It will feature students’ ideas of freedom, peace, equality and justice, according to a news release from the committee.

The Annual MLK Memorial program also will be held at the high school at 5:30 p.m. Jan. 20. This year’s keynote speaker is Gregg Seaton, an associate professor at the College of New Jersey. According to the news release, Seaton’s area of interest is in the development and academic achievement of minority youth.

The 27th Annual Martin Luther King Jr. Parade/March will be at 10 a.m. Jan. 21. It will begin at Fort Walton Beach Municipal Auditorium and end with a pep rally at Fort Walton Beach High. The parade lineup begins at 8 a.m.
 

TO LEARN MORE:

For more information about the events, contact the Rev. Tommye
Walker at 863-4755 or at 218-0103.

Destin shooting range proposal dead

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DESTIN — A “For Sale” sign is up again at the abandoned Club Overboard/Twisted Palm building on U.S. Highway 98.

“ … the deal is now dead,” local developer Damon Becnel said in a text message.

The proposed development that was tabbed as the Family Hunt Club, would have been a “multi-function entertainment complex,” Becnel said previously. The project would have brought a combination Italian pizza kitchen, motorcycle sales, accessories and repairs, and an indoor archery and shooting range to the building that has sat empty since December 2010.

The project had been approved by Okaloosa County planners. Paperwork on file in Destin showed the property and the building would be sold for $1.5 million. A closing was expected Dec. 20, but that wasn’t the case, according to Damon Becnel, son of Sandestin owner Tom Becnel.

Becnel said the deal fell through after the property owner, Rick Olson, decided to raise the price.

A message left for Olson was not immediately returned.

John Paul Somers, a local Realtor and broker who is trying to sell the property, said things are still up in the air.

“The status is yet undetermined,” he said.

The building has seen many uses over the years. Club Overboard/Twisted Palm was mired by controversy after a rash of incidents led military brass to prohibit service members from attending the club. Before that it was home to the PunchLine Comedy Club, LaRocco’s Italian restaurant and bocce bar, and Nigel Manley’s World Grill and Microbrewery.
 

Destin Log Staff Writer Matt Algarin can be reached at 850-654-8446 or malgarin@thedestinlog.com. Follow him on Twitter @DestinLogMatt.

Laurel Hill to plan for proposed dissolution

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LAUREL HILL— Officials on Tuesday will move toward placing an ordinance dissolving the city on an election ballot in 2014.

Two items on the meeting agenda pertain to the ordinance that would allow Laurel Hill residents to vote whether or not to dissolve the city.

One item involves discussing a fact sheet that would list pros and cons of dissolving Laurel Hill.

City Council Chairman Larry Hendren is working on the fact sheet, which would be mailed to residents after he gets approval from fellow city and Okaloosa County officials.

“This will give the citizens insight before they make a decision on whether or not they want a dissolution,” Hendren said.

Residents would receive the information in advance of a referendum in March 2014.

Also Tuesday, the council will discuss developing a timeline for placing the ordinance on next year’s ballot. It would include circulating the fact sheet and scheduling the ordinance’s first and second readings before a council vote.

Officials heard residents’ input at a town hall meeting last month. Most of the people who spoke favored dissolution.

Supporters hope that dissolving Laurel Hill will lead improvements to local roads, particularly Steel Mill Creek Road and portions of New Ebenezer Road.

The timeline will include possibly applying for federal and state grants that would help fund road repairs.

The council on Tuesday also will discuss possibly applying for a $600,000 Small Cities Community Development Block Grant for the repairs, Hendren said.

The council has been turned down for the grant for the past two years.

If the application is approved, “that money could provide a lot of street repair,” Hendren said. “I think everyone in the council will be for it.”

Should the city get the grant, Hendren suggested it would provide timelier road improvements than the county could provide.  

County officials cautioned residents at the town hall meeting not to assume that roads would be repaired immediately Laurel Hill is dissolved.

WANT TO ATTEND?

The Laurel Hill City Council will meet at 6 p.m. Tuesday at City Hall.
 

Crestview News Bulletin Staff Writer Matthew Brown can be reached at 850-682-6524 or matthewb@crestviewbulletin.com. Follow him on Twitter @cnbMatthew.

New hospital CEO likes what he sees

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FORT WALTON BEACH — Mitch Mongell has spent much of the past 25 years along Florida’s eastern seaboard.

If the new chief executive officer of Fort Walton Beach Medical Center has his way, he’ll spend the next 25 years on the Emerald Coast.

Mongell was hired recently to replace John Deardorff as the hospital’s CEO. His first day on the job was Jan. 2.

“It’s quite enjoyable to come to a new place and to meet new people,” Mongell said. “It’s exciting because I hear about all of the good things that are happening and some of the challenges we have to overcome.

“I’ve heard so many great things about the area. I can’t wait to explore it,” he added.

Deardorff resigned at the end of 2012 after about 2½ years at Fort Walton Beach Medical Center to become president and CEO at Reston Hospital Center and serve as lead executive of HCA Virginia’s Northern Virginia market.

Mongell received his Bachelor of Science and a Master of Business Administration degrees from Florida Atlantic University.

He has worked for HCA, the parent company of the Fort Walton Beach Medical Center, for 17 years. He previously worked at several Florida hospitals in administrative roles, including Lawnwood Regional Medical Center in Fort Pierce, Atlantic Medical Center in Ormond Beach and Memorial Hospital in Jacksonville.

He spent the past five years as the CEO of the Colleton Medical Center in Walterboro, S.C.

Mongell spent his first few days on the job getting to know his staff. He said his initial goals are to learn more about what the hospital has done well to be successful in the past and find out where it can improve.

Mongell wants to improve marketing efforts and re-establish a good community stewardship. He also said he enjoys building satisfaction with physicians, patients and employees.

“I’m very impressed (with the Fort Walton Beach Medical Center),” Mongell said. “I believe it has a wonderful opportunity. We have good leadership here, good physicians, we have good quality metrics. I think it’s a wonderful opportunity. I believe it fits me quite well.

“I love being involved in the community,” he added.

Mongell and his wife Beth have been married for 27 years. They have two sons, Chris, a junior at the University of South Carolina, and Nick, a recent graduate from there. Beth will move to the area soon while their sons plan to remain in South Carolina for now.
 

Contact Daily News Business Editor Dusty Ricketts at 850-315-4448 or dricketts@nwfdailynews.com. Follow him on Twitter @DustyRnwfdn.

New application filed for Landmark Center

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FORT WALTON BEACH — Ft. Walton Development Partners has submitted an application for a new development agreement with the city for the Landmark Center.

The first of two public hearings on the development agreement has been scheduled for the Jan. 22 Fort Walton Beach City Council meeting.

“(City staff is) going through the agreement and we’re formulating our recommendation,” said City Manager Michael Beedie.

Consideration of the development agreement is a quasi-judicial process, so details about the application cannot be released until after the meeting agenda and background documents are published. That is expected about Jan. 15, when the staff’s recommendation to the council also will be released.

The Landmark Center is a 122,000-square-foot mixed-use project pro-posed for the corner of Perry Avenue and U.S. Highway 98 downtown. It would boast 90 hotel rooms, 15 corporate apartments, a swimming pool, 31,000 square feet of restaurant and retail space, and a 343-space parking garage.

The City Council approved Landmark’s original development agreement in December 2007. It called for the developers that to build a 343-space parking garage on land owned by the developers and the city. After the garage was built, the city was to purchase 107 parking spaces for $1.5 million to be used by the public.

However, downturns in the economy prevented the developers from moving forward, and the City Council voted to declare the development agreement in default in September of 2010.

Earlier this year, Ft. Walton Development Partners proposed a new agreement that called for numerous subsidies from the city worth an estimated $5 million. The council rejected that proposal.
 

Contact Daily News Business Editor Dusty Ricketts at 850-315-4448 or dricketts@nwfdailynews.com. Follow him on Twitter @DustyRnwfdn.

'World guy' walks for diabetes awareness (VIDEO, SLIDESHOW)

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NICEVILLE — On Sunday a 50-year-old man from Kentucky and his dog had the world on a string and were rolling it down State Road 85.

Erik Bendl and Nice the Dog pushed their world – an inflatable ball about six feet in diameter - down the shoulder of the highway as they have done for over 6,000 miles across 39 states since 2007 in order to raise awareness about diabetes.

Bendl’s mother and brother-in-law both died in their 50s after suffering from the disease. His uncle, now in his 80s, was also diagnosed with the disease, but is managing it and has lived to meet his grandchildren, unlike Bendl’s own mother.

“That’s a good reason for anybody to be inspired,” he said.

View a slideshow from the road.

Watch an interview with Bendl.

Bendl started this trek in Florida - his ninth trip with the world - on Wednesday in Pensacola. He thought he might walk about 13 miles south down SR 85 on Sunday and then hitch a ride back to his van, which was parked at a gas station.

He, Nice the Dog and the ball average about one mile in 30 to 40 minutes, but it’s not about speed, he said.

“After 6,000 of those, who cares?” he said.

His time depends greatly on how often he’s stopped to talk.

“One day I’ll talk to five people all day and have meaningful, great, memorable meetings with people,” he said. “Other days dozens and dozens stop. It’ll take five hours to go two miles.”

The world is painted blue and green and emblazoned with Bendl’s website – worldguy.org. He’s recently started a foundation to raise money for diabetes research and people can read about his travels at the website.

The prop is an eye-catcher.

Doug Wilson, 32 of Crestview, had seen Bendl and the world going down U.S. Highway 90 days before and visited his website. He spotted him again on his way to work Sunday and on the way home he pulled over to stop and talk.

“I think this is great,” Wilson said.

He said his mother had been diagnosed with diabetes but was able to manage her condition with diet and exercise, and he knew a child who was recently diagnosed with the disease.

Bendl’s cheeks were rosy in the brisk wind Sunday as he stood next to the world with his walking stick to chat with Wilson. His face is lightly lined from weathering the elements over the years.

He described one particularly harrowing day in Nebraska with 40-mile-per hour winds blowing hard in his face making it difficult to push the world forward.

Ice is another obstacle. It quickly tatters the canvas wrapped around the ball.

Bendl inherited the ball from a friend who worked at a school in the late 1990s and he estimates that it’s over 30 years old.

“It had been retired from the school system long before I met it,” he said.

Bendl tries not to deflate the world during his treks unless absolutely necessary. Nice the Dog has taken to protecting it from people who might mistake it for a toy.

These days, now that Bendl has a van, his walks require he carry only the day’s essentials: dog food, patchwork and glue, a battery-powered air pump, cell phone and radio.

He said walking with the world was a natural fit for him. His mother was a state representative and public servant and both his parents were in the theater.

“I sort of have it in my bones,” he said.

Visit Bendl’s website to donate and receive updates from his travels at www.worldguy.org.
 

Contact Daily News Staff Writer Lauren Sage Reinlie at 850-315-4443 or lreinlie@nwfdailynews.com. Follow her on Twitter @LaurenRnwfdn.

Residents plan to protest 'racist' signs on Beal Parkway

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FORT WALTON BEACH — Some residents plan to show their opposition later this month to a series of signs posted on private property along Beal Parkway.

About 100 people are expected to gather Jan. 26 to respond to signs posted by Larry Ford on his property that they perceive as racist.

Fort Walton Beach United Against Racism is a loosely organized group that hopes to make it clear to everyone that the community as a whole is against racism, said Mikey Noechel, who is the moderator of a Facebook page for the event.

“So many people have been so supportive,” he said “It is something that so many people just want to jump in full force.”

The demonstration will be the first large protest against Ford’s signs since they began appearing after Barack Obama was elected president in 2008, but it is not the first public stance taken against them.

On Dec. 22, Melanie Alexander stood on the sidewalk in front of the signs that say, among other things, “Blacks take jobs from whites,” and held a poster asking drivers to “honk if you hate racism.”

Noechel said Alexander’s action, combined with conversations among several residents earlier that month, culminated in the Jan. 26 event.

 “I’m hopeful that we’ll just get out there and celebrate unity,” Noechel said. “They can take it where they want to go, just as long as they stay in the boundaries of non-violence and respect.”

On the Facebook event page, Noechel and others repeatedly state that it will be a peaceful protest with no intent to hinder Ford’s First Amendment right.

The demonstrators will remain on the sidewalks, will not block access to any business and will not tolerate violence of any kind, he said.

Alexander said this is the type of response she was hoping to inspire when she held her sign last month.

“I’m glad that it maybe got people to say out loud what they’ve been saying in private,” she said. “I know there’s a lot of like-minded people out there. It’s just a matter of doing something.”

Ford declined to comment when contacted by the Daily News.

WANT TO ATTEND?

The demonstration will be Jan. 26 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Beal Parkway near the intersection of Yancey Street. For more information, visit the Facebook page FWB Stands United Against Racism.
 

Contact Daily News Staff Writer Katie Tammen at 850-315-4440 or ktammen@nwfdailynews.com. Follow her on Twitter @KatieTnwfdn.


Eglin conducts prescribed burn (SLIDESHOW)

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Eglin's Jackson Guard burned 2,000 acres of prescribed woodlands on the west side of State Road 123 in Okaloosa County. 

View a slideshow by Daily News photographer Nick Tomecek. 

Helen Back owner to be honored at Pentagon

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Helen Back owner Chris Sehman was asked recently if his bar would host a fundraiser for an EOD technician who had been severely injured.

Sehman’s response, like it is to so many other requests for military fundraisers, was an immediate “Hell, yeah.”

That willingness to help the military has earned Sehman this year’s Zachary and Elizabeth Fisher Distinguished Civilian Humanitarian Award. Sehman will be presented the award at a ceremony Friday morning at the Pentagon.

“I’m honored when they want to come throw their party, their informal side of it, on my deck,” Sehman said. “It’s my way of saying, ‘absolutely, I’m there with you.’ I want to have them there just because they’re my neighbors. I’m not in there in the plane with them or carrying an M-16, but I feel like they’re a part of my community. There’s almost a fundraiser every week of some sort at one of my stores.

“I try not to say no to 5K runs and golf tournaments in some way or fashion where I can at least donate pizzas or donate my time or help promote it,” he added.

The Zachary and Elizabeth Fisher Distinguished Civilian Humanitarian Award is named for the military philanthropists who founded the Fisher House Foundation.

The secretaries of the Army, Navy and Air Force created it in 1996 to recognize individuals or organizations that demonstrate exceptional patriotism and humanitarian concern for service members and their families.

Sehman was nominated for the award by the 36th Electronic Warfare Squadron at Eglin Air Force Base. He served as the unit’s honorary commander in 2011.

Sehman was never in the military, but when he was in grade school he became fascinated with World War II. His grandfather told him about his experiences as a civilian during the war and being asked to save metal, scrap and even butter for military use.

When American troops were deployed to Afghanistan in 2001, Sehman remembered his grandfather’s lessons and began to offer free pizza to military personnel on Mondays. He has continued that service and gives away as many as 80 pizzas on some days.

“Offering a 10 percent discount just wasn’t enough. In today’s era, although noble, it just seemed not enough,” Sehman said. “The response I got was just awesome. I got a lot of sincere thank yous, saying that was just a neat thing to do.”

Sehman also has helped organize or participate in more than 100 military fundraisers that have raised more than $250,000.

“It’s just been a privilege from my point of view as just a bar owner to kind of be involved,” Sehman said. “I’ve been fortunate to have something they like, which is pizza and beer, and I think it’s made a happy marriage, but I’ve enjoyed the ride tremendously getting to know some of the people.

“It really educated me on what the military means, not only on a national level to all of us but really what it means here on the Emerald Coast.”
 

Contact Daily News Business Editor Dusty Ricketts at 850-315-4448 or dricketts@nwfdailynews.com. Follow him on Twitter @DustyRnwfdn.

Matt Gaetz spars with League of Women Voters (SLIDESHOW)

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FORT WALTON BEACH — For 50 years, the League of Women Voters of Okaloosa County has been holding political feet to the fire.

It was Republican state Rep. Matt Gaetz’s turn Tuesday to face a group that doesn’t always lean in the same political direction he does.

Gaetz attended a league luncheon at the Fort Walton Yacht Club to present some items on his agenda for the upcoming legislative session.

View a slideshow of the event. >>

Gaetz, “an unapologetic supporter of FCAT,” debated school testing and teacher tenure with a couple of former educators in the audience.

One of them, Pat Burrough, said she couldn’t understand why the state would authorize an exam like Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test that she contended focused only on math and reading.

“I never saw it as a real good test for students,” Burrough said.

Gaetz predicted that legislation will trend more this year toward “de-emphasizing portions of the FCAT people find troublesome.”

The move in education, he said, would be “more toward end-of-course” testing.

“We shouldn’t take the scoreboard down in the classroom,” and a competitive world demands measurable standards for students, he said.

Gaetz called teacher tenure “an immoral concept.” He said he favors removing teachers found to be “chronically underperforming” after a period of three years.

“Too often we allow teachers who shouldn’t be there to stay in the classroom,” he said.

Gaetz also said he favors legislation that would charge college students majoring in STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) fields less than those majoring in subjects like psychology, which he claimed was the No. 1 degree achieved in Florida.

“If a bright young person wants to get a biochemistry degree, it should not cost the same amount of money as someone who wants a psychology degree,” he said.

He said incentivizing students to achieve in STEM classes will ultimately lure high-paying businesses seeking a well-trained workforce to Florida.

Gaetz and league members clearly differed on the issues of prison overcrowding and felony amnesty.

Gaetz said there are “private sector vendors” quietly pushing early prison release proposals.

“Their goal to grow their market is to let people out of jail sooner,” he said.

He said he wouldn’t support such proposals.

“I will stand in the breach, opposing letting people out of jail before they serve 85 percent of their sentence,” he declared.

Mary Blackwell, the local league’s president, said this year the state organization again will push to restore voting and other rights to residents with felony convictions in their past.

“If you’re not willing to restore their rights, their debt is never paid,” she said. “Once you’re done, if you’re going to just pay and pay, you’re going to go back to doing what you were doing before. You’re damned if you do and damned if you don’t.”

Gaetz saw things differently.

“If someone is a felon they surrender their ability to elect our leaders,” he said.

While the league has battled for more hours for early voting, Gaetz suggested increases could actually benefit candidates with deep pockets.

Wealthy candidates could pummel potential voters with mailings and other campaign material over an extended period if the number of days allowed for voting were increased, he said.

Gaetz said gun control is sure to come up in this legislative session and should produce interesting, even “zany proposals,” from each side of the issue.

He said he supports the “stand your ground” law and told a questioner he didn’t believe that it made sound constitutional sense to administer psychological tests to potential gun buyers.

He said he also would not favor the unrestricted arming of teachers.

“We have teachers in our schools who suffer bipolar disorders and mental disorders,” he said. “We don’t need to put weapons in the hands of more people with mental illness.”

After the meeting Gaetz said he enjoyed the back and forth with league members.

“I’m a lawyer and a former high school debater,” he said. “I see this group as a part of the 155,000 I represent. Not everyone is going to agree on every issue.”

Blackwell said although “oftentimes we are on opposite sides of an issue” she could not fault Gaetz’s work ethic as a legislator.

She said she actually was hoping for “more back and forth” at the meeting attended by just 12 league members.

“It was important to have him here,” she said.
 

Contact Daily News Staff Writer Tom McLaughlin at 850-315-4435 or tmclaughlin@nwfdailynews.com. Follow him on Twitter @TomMnwfdn.

Shalimar students shine in national math contest

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SHALIMAR — Some students at Shalimar Elementary School were skeptical when their teacher told them they were competing in a math contest.

Then the fifth-graders tried the online program and ended up winning a county and then a national competition.

“I didn’t know how she could make it fun,” said 9-year-old Brooke Geissel, recalling the day the idea was introduced.

But once she got her hands on the program, which makes students solve math programs in order to progress in computer games, she was hooked.

“I liked everything,” she said two days after learning Shalimar had beat out 1,002 other schools in the contest on the Sumdog website.

The 39 students had to answer 1,000 questions each from Dec. 14 to Dec. 20, said teacher Christine Galloway. When the final statistics were in, they had answered 34,324 of the questions they were asked correctly, she said. 

The best performing student at Shalimar answered 987 out of 1,000 correct, she added. That landed him in the 47th spot out of 73,011 students in kindergarten through 8th grade who participated.  

“This isn’t anything I did. This is teaching coming together from kindergarten to fifth grade,” Galloway said. “This is everybody’s success.”

The students had a week to finish answering the questions. They got progressively harder if they were answering them correctly.

“One of my students got a square root question and he was like, ‘You never taught us that,’ ” Galloway said with a laugh.

Ben George, who was the first student at Shalimar to try the program, said it’s a fun way to test and expand math skills.

“I think kids are learning sometimes and not knowing it,” the 10-year-old said as he focused on simplifying equations for the game he was playing.

Alexia Jones, 11, said it took awhile to understand how to play all the games, but once she did the math questions weren’t too bad.

“They give you a lot of questions in one group,” she said.

Since the competition ended, the students have continued to use the website at home, but Galloway said it likely will be awhile before they compete again on a national level. Right now they have a lot of important tests coming up, including the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test, she said.
 

Contact Daily News Staff Writer Katie Tammen at 850-315-4440 or ktammen@nwfdailynews.com. Follow her on Twitter @KatieTnwfdn.

Scientists say U.S. was 'off the charts' hot in 2012

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WASHINGTON — America set an off-the-charts heat record in 2012.

A brutal combination of a widespread drought and a mostly absent winter pushed the average annual U.S. temperature last year up to 55.32 degrees Fahrenheit, the government announced Tuesday. That's a full degree warmer than the old record set in 1998.

Breaking temperature records by an entire degree is unprecedented, scientists say. Normally, records are broken by a tenth of a degree or so.

"It was off the chart," said Deke Arndt, head of climate monitoring at the National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, N.C., which calculated the temperature records.

Last year, he said, will go down as "a huge exclamation point at the end of a couple decades of warming."

The data center's figures for the entire world won't come out until next week, but through the first 11 months of 2012, the world was on pace to have its eighth warmest year on record.

Scientists say the U.S. heat is part global warming in action and natural weather variations. The drought that struck almost two-thirds of the nation and a La Nina weather event helped push temperatures higher, along with climate change from man-made greenhouse gas emissions, said Katharine Hayhoe, director of the Climate Science Center at Texas Tech University. She said temperature increases are happening faster than scientists predicted.

"These records do not occur like this in an unchanging climate," said Kevin Trenberth, head of climate analysis at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo. "And they are costing many billions of dollars."

Global warming is caused by the burning of fossil fuels — coal, oil and natural gas — which sends heat-trapping gases, such as carbon dioxide, into the air, changing the climate, scientists say.

What's happening with temperatures in the United States is consistent with the long-term pattern of "big heat events that reach into new levels of intensity," Arndt said.

Last year was 3.2 degrees warmer than the average for the entire 20th century. Last July was the hottest month on record. Nineteen states set yearly heat records in 2012, though Alaska was cooler than average.

U.S. temperature records go back to 1895 and the yearly average is based on reports from more than 1,200 weather stations across the Lower 48 states.

Several environmental groups, including the World Wildlife Fund, took the opportunity to call on the Obama Administration to do more to fight climate change.

According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, 2012 also had the second-most weather extremes on record after hurricane-heavy 1998, based on a complex mathematical formula that includes temperature records, drought, downpours, and land-falling hurricanes.

Measured by the number of high-damage events, 2012 ranked second after 2011, with 11 different disasters that caused more than $1 billion in damage, including Superstorm Sandy and the drought, NOAA said.

The drought was the worst since the 1950s and slightly behind the Dust Bowl of the 1930s, meteorologists said. During a drought, the ground is so dry that there's not enough moisture in the soil to evaporate into the atmosphere to cause rainfall, which leads to hotter, drier air. This was fed in the U.S. by La Nina, which is linked to drought.

Scientists say even with global warming, natural and local weather changes mean that temperatures will go up and down over the years. But overall, temperatures are climbing. In the United States, the temperature trend has gone up 1.3 degrees over the last century, according to NOAA data. The last year the U.S. was cooler than the 20th-century average was 1997.

The last time the country had a record cold month was December 1983.

What has scientists so stunned is how far above other hot years 2012 was. Nearly all of the previous 117 years of temperature records were bunched between 51 and 54 degrees, while 2012 was well above 55.

"A picture is emerging of a world with more extreme heat," said Andrew Dessler, a Texas A&M University climate scientist. "Not every year will be hot, but when heat waves do occur, the heat will be more extreme. People need to begin to prepare for that future."

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