Archive for July 2011

Attempted Murder, Aggravated Battery and Attempted Armed Robbery

The City of Madison Police Department is investigating an Attempted Murder, Aggravated Battery and Attempted Armed Robbery that occurred between 5 and 6 am on Friday July 29th, at Wells Fargo Bank ATM on Orange Ave. The Suspect was described as a Black, Male with a short afro style haircut and was between 5’9” and 6’, wearing a light colored shirt, dark colored shorts with a dark colored bandana over his face. The suspect was armed with a black semi-automatic pistol, and is considered armed and dangerous. The suspect reportedly fled from the scene on foot, headed north on Orange Ave.
Investigator Ebberson collected numerous items as evidence and is awaiting Forensic analysis.

The Victim was treated and released by Madison County Emergency Medical Services.

The Police Department urges anyone with any information concerning this investigation to call Madison Police Department at 973-5077 and speak with an officer.

Sgt. Benton S. Ebberson
Criminal Investigator
Madison Police Department
310 S. W. Rutledge St.
Madison, FL 32340
(850) 973-5077 ext. 303 Office

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Armed Robbery

There was an armed robbery this morning at Wells Fargo Bank (formerly Wachovia). It happened early this morning before the bank was open. We are waiting for the Madison Police Department to send a press release.

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Update: Paul Pitts To Perform Aug. 3 At Madison First Baptist

Paul Pitts

Paul Pitts

By Jacob Bembry
Greene Publishing, Inc.

“Mr. Pitts has one of the most beautiful voices in existence today with impeccable diction and admirable declamatory skills. In short, he is the Canio of our time.” Nino Pantano, a critic, reviewing Paul Pitts’ performance of Pagliacci.

Paul Pitts will bring his beautiful voice to Madison to perform The Scribe for the audience at the First Baptist Church on Wednesday evening, Aug. 3.

The two-act performance begins with the “Introduction of Andronicus” in Romans 16:7 where Paul urges the Romans to “Salute Andronicus and Junia, my kinsmen, and my fellow-prisoners, who are of note among the apostles, who also were in Christ before me.” (KJV) Paul was often in prison for preaching the Good News of Jesus Christ’s resurrection from the dead and Andronicus and Junia were probably there with him at some point.

Scenes that follow in the first act include “The Baptism of John,” found in Matthew 3:13-17; “Shepherd’s Story,” found in Luke 2:1-8; “Lord, Teach Us to Pray,” Matthew 6:5-15; “Sinner and the Saint,” from John 8:3-11; and “Triumphal Entry” from Matthew 21:1-11.

The second act begins with “The Centurion at Calvary” from Matthew 27:1-11. This is followed by “The Empty Tomb,” found in John 20:1-54. “House of Cornelius” follows from Acts 10:1-48. The play concludes with an invitation to accept Christ as Lord and Savior, found in Romans 1:16: “For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth; to the Jew first, and also to the Greek.”

Powerful songs are interspersed throughout the play, including “The Stranger of Galilee,” “O, Holy Night,” “The Lord’s Prayer,” “He Has Forgiven Me,” “The Holy City,” “They Could Not,” “It is Finished,” “O Glorious Morning” and “I Believe in a Hill Called Mount Calvary.”

A former winner of the “Outstanding Young Men of America Award,” Pitts has shared the stage with Zig Ziglar and John Maxwell. He has also sang at a Billy Graham Crusade in Indianapolis, Ind. He has performed at the Crystal Cathedral, Alamo Dome, T.D. Waterhouse Arena, Cypress Gardens and Opryland USA.

Pitts was chosen as the soloist for the “Concert of Peace,” held in Belfast, Ireland, to unite North and South Ireland. He has sung for the President of the United States, the Queen of England and members of the Royal Family. In 2008, he was the soloist for a TV special celebrating Israel’s 60 years of statehood.

An invitation to sing at the Summer Olympics in London, England in 2012 has gladly been accepted by him.

Pitts has sung to over five billion people by television, radio and personal appearances on seven continents during over 5,500 performances in his career.

Pitts said, “I gave my heart to the Lord, and I’ve never turned back. I have received God’s wonderful forgiveness and such a peace in my heart that I want to share with everyone. This has become my passion and purpose in life. If I can touch someone’s heart with the love of God, I will have lived out my purpose for living.”

Pitts’ one-man performance of The Scribe begins at 6 p.m.

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Madison County’s Unemployment Woes Continue

Madison County looks to processing plant to halt unemployment slide

By Jacob Bembry
Greene Publishing, Inc.

When the Agency on Workforce Innovation released its unemployment figures for June, they peppered their press release with some positive news.

The positive news was the U.S. Chamber of Commerce recognizing Florida as the top station in the nation for workforce training programs. They garnered the top spot after being ranked number two in 2010.

Overall, the state’s unemployment rate was 10.6 percent with 982,000 people jobless, out of a work force of 9,234,000. The rate remained unchanged since May but was eight-tenths of a point lower than June 2010.

While Madison County did not have the highest unemployment rate in the state, it was the county with the highest unemployment rate in the Suwannee River Valley.

Madison County ranked eighth in the state with 12.2 percent unemployment.

The county hopes to get a small respite soon, when Ferris-Stahl-Meyer begins accepting applications for its meat processing plant towards the middle or end of August. The plant hopes to be in full production by late October. Plans are for the plant to hire 70 people at the start and then gradually hire more.

The processing plant will occupy the old Dixie Packers and Smithfield plant in the industrial park.

Sherilyn Lightcap, administrative assistant to County Coordinator Allen Cherry, said that it appears that Ferris-Stahl-Meyer is committed to hiring people locally.

Hamilton County, Madison County’s neighbor to the northeast, was right on Madison’s heels with 12.1 percent unemployment. Dixie County ranked number 12 with 12.0 percent unemployment. Taylor County was 33rd in the state with 10.5 percent unemployment. Suwannee County was 41st with a 9.9 percent jobless rate. Jefferson County ranked 53rd with a 8.5 percent jobless rate. Lafayette County ranked 63rd with 7.4 percent unemployment.

The top three counties with the highest unemployment rates were Hendry (16.2 percent), Flagler (14.6 percent) and Miami-Dade (13.9 percent).

 

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Get Your Cowboy Cards And Season Tickets Today

Members of the Madison County High School football team were selling their cards in McDonald’s Wednesday afternoon and thinking about upcoming football camp for the next three weekends.  They’ll be selling their cards in a “blitz” until August 11.  Front row, left to right:  Jason Hayling, #16, WR; D.J. McKnight, #8, starting QB; second row, Neal Brown, #19, WR; Trent Robinson, #20, CB; third row, Tommie Young, #9, FB; back row, Gerard Brown, #55, LG.

Members of the Madison County High School football team were selling their cards in McDonald’s Wednesday afternoon and thinking about upcoming football camp for the next three weekends. They’ll be selling their cards in a “blitz” until August 11. Front row, left to right: Jason Hayling, #16, WR; D.J. McKnight, #8, starting QB; second row, Neal Brown, #19, WR; Trent Robinson, #20, CB; third row, Tommie Young, #9, FB; back row, Gerard Brown, #55, LG.

By Jacob Bembry
Greene Publishing, Inc.

It may still be in the summer, where everyone suffers from heat exhaustion and high electric bills from running the air conditioning too much, but it’s never too early to start dreaming about football. The Madison County High School Cowboys are selling are selling their famous football cards, offering bargains at Madison businesses and businesses in Valdosta, Ga.

Season tickets for the Cowboys’ football games are also available by calling Lee Anne Hall at (850) 464-0321.

Most of the offers are for 10 percent off at restaurants locally and in Valdosta, Ga. There are a few other businesses participating. Local patrons featured on the card include: Denny’s, Burger King, Madison Sporting Goods, Rainbow Garden, Waffle House, Subway, Hungry Howie’s, Pizza Hut, O’Neal’s, Madison Florist, Rancho Grande, El Carrisal, Madison Sports Grill and T.T.’s Cakes and More.

The Madison County High School Cowboys football players are busy this week selling the cards in front of local businesses. People can get their cards from any of the Cowboy players or coaches. The players and coaches appreciate your support of the team in their quest for a state championship.

Cowboy cards are available through Aug. 11.

The Madison County High School football schedule is as follows:

  • Madison County High School at Colquitt County, Ga. on Aug. 26 in the Kickoff Classic
  • Home against Suwannee High School on Sept. 2
  • At Jefferson County Middle/High School on Sept. 9
  • Home against Trinity Christian Academy on Sept. 16.
  • At Taylor County High School on Sept. 23
  • Home against Providence School on Sept. 30
  • Home against Pine Forest High School on Oct. 7
  • Home against Pensacola Catholic High School on Oct. 21
  • At GHS on Oct. 28
  • At Florida High School on Nov. 4

Please go out and show your support for the team. Go, Cowboys!

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High Tech Redneck

Jacob’sLadder
Jacob Bembry – Columnist

Emails. Text messages. Tweets. Almost forgot phone calls and definitely almost forgot letters – you know the things that you stick a stamp to and send.

There is so much information out there that it’s hard to process some of it. This past week, I learned from information stuck in with a letter to the editor that Utah has the highest percentage of Internet porn subscribers of any state. I learned from a tweet that one of the people who follows me finished a cardio workout up in New Hampshire and has a new workout buddy. I also learned from a tweet that I missed seeing Maryse Oullett on TMZ. Of course, I never watch TMZ. I am too busy trying to process the information that is overloading my brain.

Tweets and emails I get from Poynter.org and Al Tompkins give information about the news business, as well as story ideas.

Some of my tweets, texts, emails and Facebook messages are uplifting. Tom Ziglar always sends uplifting quotes that his father, Zig, has either said or written in his books. Benjie Dyal, the pastor at New Home Baptist Church, sends an uplifting text message at least once a week. Delbert Redditt, the Faith Baptist pastor, sends a daily devotional by email and Judy Dean sends prayer requests and Bible verses.

Being a high tech redneck, I try to process what information I can and store it for future use. I try to apply the uplifting messages and prayers when I get them. It’s a crazy world when we get bombarded with information, but, being the geek that I am, I would not have it any other way.

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Becky’s Dancers And Amber Abbott To Perform At All Stars Baseball League

Amber Abbott

Amber Abbott

By Kristin Finney
Greene Publishing, Inc.

“For its one, two, three strikes, your out, at the old ball game.” Come out and join in the celebration this weekend at the All Star Florida and Georgia Men’s Adult Baseball League. The League will be Rookies vs. Veterans and will include several players who have made a great name for themselves in baseball.

The game begins at 7 p.m. Sunday, July 31, but events begin at 6 p.m. The cost of admission will be one canned food item or a $1 donation for the Second Harvest Food Bank. The teams will be playing at the Lowndes High School baseball field, which is located on Norman Drive in Valdosta.

Amber Abbott, Madison local and very talented singer, will begin the baseball game by singing the National Anthem. She will begin singing at 6:45 p.m.

Who would have thought to combine baseball and dancing? While this combination may seem unusual, the dancers at Becky’s will be doing just that. The group of girls will be showing off their talents in front of the stands before the beginning of the seventh inning. Their dance is a little different than the flowing and graceful numbers that are usually seen from Becky’s Dance Step Studios. The group will be dressed in their best country attire and will be dancing to Luke Bryan’s “Country Girl.”

The girls will also be selling raffle tickets for American Aluminum. The cost for one ticket is $5 or a person can purchase five tickets for $20. The winner of the raffle will get a chrome toolbox or dog box for their truck. The toolbox or dog box can be customized any way they want. It is valued at $369.

Greg Vickers, League President, would like to ask the community to, “Come out and support not just baseball but also the other events that are included in this.

The girls from Madison, the Second Harvest, they are all really good things to come out and support them. It would be really positive to get the public from Madison to come support this event.”

Come out and show your support for the players, the dancers and Amber Abbott this Sunday.

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Overseas Military Members Need Your Expired Coupons

By Kristin Finney
Greene Publishing, Inc.

Have a coupon but it’s expired? Before throwing it away, consider this…Military members who are serving overseas can use expired coupons for up to six months after their expiration date. For many military families that are stationed overseas, their household income comes from one person. This can put those families on a very tight budget. However, there is a way for people back home to help.

There are a few limitations on this deal. The coupons must be Manufacturer Coupons, which means that store or restaurant coupons are out. When the coupons are sent they can’t be more than 30 days past their expiration date. Also when they are sent, the coupons must be clipped together and sorted into “Food” and “Non-food” categories.

It is easy to determine if a coupon is “Food” or “Non-food.” “Food” items are things that people can eat, and would normally eat, that provide calories. So things such as gum, mints, meal drinks, cereal and anything else that is normally eaten, fall into that category. As for “Non-food,” these would be things like cat or dog food, dish detergent, soap, etc.

The coupons can be separated into plastic bags and labeled as “Food” or “Non-food” to make distribution easier. There is no limit to the amount of coupons you can send. People are asked to collect their coupons throughout the month and then send any they collect after the month is up. They ask that you not send more than once a month because it makes distributing them easier.

Families and communities can work together to send coupons overseas as well as individuals. Joyce Bethea is working with local businesses such as the Library to get drop off locations set up in Madison. However, until that time, coupons can be sent to

Coupon Chix Overseas Coupon Program
1260 Conference Road
Cantonment, FL 32533.

 

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Kurt LaBouve To Appear In Concert At Greenville Baptist Church

Kurt LaBouve, pictured with his wife, Dale, will appear in concert Sunday evening at Greenville Baptist Church.

Kurt LaBouve, pictured with his wife, Dale, will appear in concert Sunday evening at Greenville Baptist Church.

By Jacob Bembry
Greene Publishing, Inc.

Evangelist Kurt LaBouve, of Bowdon, Ga., will be in concert Sunday evening, July 31, at Greenville Baptist Church.

According to his website, www.kurtlabouve.com: “Evangelist Kurt LaBouve was born in a Catholic home and soon after losing his sight to a hereditary disease, he left home to attend a school for the blind. At the age of 18 he accepted Jesus Christ by faith as his personal Savior. In 1982, he recorded his first gospel song ‘I Just Want To Thank You Jesus’ in Nashville. Three years later, being heavily burdened to be used of God, he wrote a song entitled ‘Send Me’ not realizing that in just a few weeks God would call him to preach the gospel of Jesus Christ. Kurt LaBouve has been serving the Lord with his wife, Dale, since 1988 as a Baptist preacher in evangelism, songwriting and singing for the glory of God.”

Pastor Tony Hill cordially welcomes everyone to the gospel sing at his church.

Each fifth Sunday, a group of Baptist churches, including Greenville Baptist, come together to celebrate the evening with a sing.

The concert will begin at 6 p.m.

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Remembrance Of Things Past: Jenythel W. Woods

Jenythel W. Woods is 78 years old. She has spent her entire life in Madison, and though things weren’t always easy, she says that her life was, “real good.”

Jenythel W. Woods is 78 years old. She has spent her entire life in Madison, and though things weren’t always easy, she says that her life was, “real good.”

By Kristin Finney
Greene Publishing, Inc.

Jenythel W. Woods did not grow up surrounded by fortune or fame. Her family didn’t spend their evenings around the TV or going out to eat. But, when asked about her life, she would say, “It was really good.” Woods is 78 years old and spent her entire life in Madison.

Woods attended Midway school until the fourth grade. After the fourth grade she had to go work. While she was in school, she didn’t participate in sports or anything like that. One thing she did spend a lot of time doing during school, was reading. “I liked it all. I loved to read,” said Woods.

After school got out, Woods didn’t go home and play video games or check her Facebook like many kids do now. She and her siblings spent their evenings working out in the field at the farm. They were responsible for picking cotton, tobacco, sweet potatoes and corn. “We did it all. But it was good,” said Woods of working out in the fields.

When they weren’t working in the fields, Woods and her siblings helped their mom around the house. “We helped her with everything she had to do. We helped with the wash and cleaning. We helped her cook supper, too.” When she thinks about children now, and how much work they have to do, she said, “Things have changed a lot. I loved doing all of that. I loved it all.”

Woods’ family did not have a lot of money. They couldn’t go out to eat. They did all of their eating at home. “But it was OK, I liked being at home,” she said. For fun they would listen to the news on the radio. Their home did not have a TV. They would also go to church EVERY Sunday. “We had to go to church,” she said.

One of her fondest memories of her childhood was going to the grocery store with her mom on the weekends. “We rode a mule and wagon up town to the grocery store. But, they weren’t like the grocery stores we have now. These are all new grocery stores. Then, on Wednesday, the rollin’ store would come by, and Mama would buy us Silver Bells, Johnny Crackers and cheese.”

After the fourth grade, Woods began her first job. She worked in the homes of people in Madison, and continued to do that for a long time during her life. She also worked as a homemaker at the Madison Senior Citizen’s Center for 14 years.

At the age of 15 she married the love of her life, Artis Woods, Sr., who passed away four years ago. The two were married for 60 years, “I was married my whole life,” explained Woods.

They had seven beautiful children together.

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U-Pick Tuten Farming

By Jacob Bembry
Greene Publishing, Inc.

On Tuten Farming’s Facebook page, there is a request from a former resident of Madison, now living in Auburn, Ala. Vicki Brown writes: “I’ll pay double for some Tuten acre peas…just sayin.’”

The reply comes from Sharon Underhill, who keeps the page updated for her family’s business. “Ms. Vicki, as much as we love yah, we refuse to deliver that far away.”

Underhill extends an invitation for Brown herself to travel back to Madison to come get the vegetables.

In addition to acre peas, there are requests for zipper peas and other vegetables that the Tuten family grows.

The orders are filled on a first-come, first-served basis. Some may choose to go to the Tuten Farm, on Highway 14 South and pick the vegetables themselves or some may choose to pay a little extra and have the Tutens gather the food for them. If you are fortunate, you may just catch up with Lisa Tuten, wife of Timmy, on a day when she has some farm fresh vegetables on the back of her pickup.

Friends and neighbors have come from miles and miles to buy some food grown by the Tutens. This summer, the Tutens offered fresh cantaloupes, as well as those peas that people are pining for in northern Alabama.

The peas will be gone by the end of this week, but the Tutens will still have boiling peanuts. Tomatoes and sweet potatoes will be among the produce harvested in the fall.

In addition to Tuten’s U-Pick, Timmy and Mickey Tuten, who operate the farm with the aide of other family members, also truck farmed watermelons. The melons went to Browning & Sons for shipment to grocery stores.

Timmy and Mickey have been farming all of their lives and got into the U-pick business about 20 years ago.

If you want to visit Tuten Farms, go Highway 360 South for 13 miles. To place an order, call (850) 251-5463 or visit the Tuten Farming Facebook page.

 

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Dilan Lawson Plays On Dizzy Dean World Series Championship Team

Congratulations to Dilan Lawson, who played on the 10 and under Dizzy Dean World Series Championship baseball team. The team won the tournament in Mississippi. Way to go, Dilan!

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Additional Unemployment Compensation Reforms to Take Effect August 1

TALLAHASSEE – Beginning Monday, August 1, 2011, several changes to Florida’s Unemployment Compensation program that were signed into law last month will take effect. These reforms will save the state money, reduce taxes on employers and help get Floridians back to work.

Changes taking effect August 1 include:

· Internet Filing and Certification of Weeks – Initial and continued claims must be filed over the Internet. The change will improve government efficiency and provide a projected $4.7 million savings annually in administrative costs. AWI’s unemployment compensation hotline will be available to answer questions about the filing process.

· Work Search – Claimants are required to contact at least five potential employers per week and provide this information over the Internet during their bi-weekly certification for benefits. A quick, efficient way to contact employers is by using the Employ Florida Marketplace at employflorida.com, the state’s online job matching system where you can search thousands of job postings and apply for jobs.

If a claimant is not able to make at least five employer contacts in a week, meeting with a representative at a local One-Stop Career Center for reemployment services will satisfy this requirement for that week.

· Skills Review – In order to receive benefits, claimants filing new claims must complete an initial skills review over the Internet. The results of the review will be used by local One-Stop Career Centers to assist claimants with job searches.

· Severance Pay – If a claimant’s severance pay per week is equal to or greater than the claimant’s weekly benefit amount, the claimant is not entitled to benefits for that week. Severance pay does not impact the total amount of benefits that can be paid on the claim.

For more information, please visit www.floridajobs.org.

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Christmas In July Special

ChristmasJ

Special expires 8/5/11

 

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High School Volleyball Physicals Set For Next Thursday

Submitted by Mike Coe, MCHS Athletic Director
Any young lady interested in playing volleyball at Madison County High School during the 2011-2012 school year needs to obtain an EL2 and EL3 form from the main office and obtain a physical next Thursday, August 4, at 7 p.m. at the Madison County High School Main Office.

Physicals are free on this date only and participation in a FHSAA recognized sport is not allowed without both forms being completely filled out and signed by a parent or guardian.

For any other questions, please contact MCHS at 850-973-5061.

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Update: Two Wanted by Madison County Crime Stoppers

Microsoft Word - wanted3.docx

Update: Crime Stoppers reports that Baynard has been in custody in a Fulton County, Ga. jail since April 2010.

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Sheriff’s Office To Move To FHP Building

Sheriff Ben Stewart stands in front of his soon-to-be office. The Sheriff was able to obtain a 56-year lease on the building that was dedicated to his friend Jimmy Fulford, who was killed by a bomb on Feb. 1, 1992. (see insets).

Sheriff Ben Stewart stands in front of his soon-to-be office. The Sheriff was able to obtain a 56-year lease on the building that was dedicated to his friend Jimmy Fulford, who was killed by a bomb on Feb. 1, 1992.

By Jacob Bembry
Greene Publishing, Inc.

Sheriff Ben Stewart and Trooper Jimmy Fulford had many things in common. Like Stewart, Fulford was a devout Christian, a family man and a law officer. They both looked up to their neighbors and followed them into law enforcement. Stewart’s neighbor was former Madison County Sheriff Joe Peavy; Fulford’s neighbor was Trooper B.W. McDaniel.

Because of their common interests and upbringing, Stewart and Fulford became friends. That is one of the reasons that Stewart pursued obtaining a lease on the former Florida Highway Patrol station, which was named in honor of Fulford.

Both Fulford and Stewart worked for the FHP. Stewart, who had worked as a dispatcher for the Highway Patrol, left the year before Fulford began as a trooper. Fulford began with FHP right out of Florida State University, with a degree in criminology. Stewart left to return to work as a dispatcher for Madison County. On Feb. 1, 1992, Fulford’s leaving was far more sudden and unplanned. He was the victim of a bomb that had been planted in a microwave. The bomb was intended for someone else.

It was cold that day when Fulford arrived at work at 3 p.m. at the Madison FHP station. He went on a call to the rest area on Interstate 10 where he helped a woman who had locked the keys in her car. He then spotted a car headed west at 85 miles per hour and stopped the Mitsubishi Gallant in Jefferson County.

Fulford discovered that Lester Watson, the man driving the car, did not have a driver’s license. Fulford arrested Watson on charges of driving without a license and Watson was booked into the Jefferson County Jail. Watson’s passenger, Leroy Williams, asked if he could accompany Watson to the jail.

Fulford discovered that the car had been rented to Paul Howell, of Miami. He had the dispatcher call Howell, who said that he had given Watson permission to drive the car but had not told him to head north with it. During the phone call, Howell never told them that the package contained a bomb that he had intended to send to Marianna to silence a witness who could tie him to a murder.

At the Aucilla exit on Interstate 10, Fulford and Jefferson County deputies Wallace Blount and Robert Harrell searched the car.

Fulford looked through the trunk and saw an empty baby’s bottle and a gift-wrapped package. While waiting for the wrecker to come pick up the car, he searched the Mitsubishi again. He opened the package with his penknife and the bomb exploded, killing Jimmy Fulford.

Fulford’s lieutenant, B.J. Tinney noted that when officers were moving the car away from the blaze so that it would not catch fire, that Fulford’s radio was set to WAFT, a Christian music station in Valdosta, Ga. Officers also noted that Fulford’s watch had stopped at 4:34 p.m.

At Fulford’s funeral, a tape was played of him singing gospel music the First Baptist Church in Monticello, where he served as deacon.

Lester Watson was convicted of second degree murder and sentenced to 40 years in prison. Patrick Howell was sentenced to 40 years in prison without possibility of parole for 25 years. Other members of the Jamaican drug posse involved in the murder coverup were sentenced to extensive prison terms. Paul Howell was sentenced to die for Fulford’s death.

The FHP building where Fulford was stationed was later named after the fallen trooper. Built in 1967, closed in 2011, Stewart feels that the building will be a perfect fit for the Sheriff’s Office.

Privacy and security concerns were two of the biggest factors motivating Stewart’s pursuit of getting the building. Added bonuses are that the office will be closer to the high school and to Greenville, if law enforcement is needed in those areas.

The Sheriff’s Office is located in the part of the Courthouse Annex that used to house Western Auto. Although they are losing some square footage, for Stewart, it’s quite a step up from the current location.

“The original plans had called for the office we’re using now to be a courtroom and boardroom,” Stewart said. “Plans were for the current boardroom to eventually become a driver’s license office.”

Stewart noted that the lease he had signed was for 57 years and the building is rent free.

“The only thing we will have to pay is the electric bill,” he said.

Somewhere in Heaven, Jimmy Fulford must be looking down with a smile because the building where he used to report for duty will still be used for law enforcement today.

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Can You Explain How The Bidding Process Works For New Hospital Construction?

Hot Questions, Hot Topics
By David Abercrombie, MCMH CEO

The process of selecting a general contractor to build the new hospital is somewhat long.  First, the District board had to decide whether to use a Lump Sum bid process (the conventional method) or go with a Contractor at Risk (C@R) process. They chose the C@R process because it guarantees a maximum price (GMP). If the project goes over the GMP the contractor “eats” the difference. But really the C@R method of construction has several advantages.

With the conventional Lump Sum approach, the contractor is selected based on low price bid. There is no open book budget and if there is any savings it goes to the contractor, not the owner. In my way of thinking, this can encourage a company to cut corners with quality. Another disadvantage of the Lump Sum Approach is that the owner has no control over subcontractor qualifications; nor does the owner have the ability to fast track the project.

With the C@R process, the Hospital District board selects the contractor based on qualifications and a negotiated fee. There is also the advantage of open book accounting. There is the ability to pre-purchase building supplies and services so if there is a saving on the project it is returned to the owner. There is also much greater owner input into the construction schedule.

The USDA approved using the C@R construction method on March 3, 2011, pending their approval of a selection process based on free and open competition and agreement by the USDA in the actual selection of the contractor.

The District sent out a Request for Proposals (RFP) to find construction companies interested in building the new hospital. Seven major general contracting firms from around the state responded. They were from Tallahassee and surrounding area, Gainesville, Orlando and Jacksonville. The companies submitted very detailed proposals. There were nine key parts to each proposal. An example of a key part is: how the contractor intends to advertise for, qualify, and use subcontractors.

A meeting was then set up with the USDA at their Lake City office to discuss the qualification of the contracting firms who submitted proposals, and to go over the process that would be used to select the contractor. The USDA brought in the head of their architectural office from Gainesville, as well as their regional director, to go over the materials and participate in the discussion. The USDA approved all the companies who submitted proposals. The head USDA architect told hospital representatives that the process was proceeding exactly right.

The District board then spent about 10 days reading the seven proposals. A selection grid was developed to score each key part of each proposal. On May 17, a quorum of board members met in an open meeting and participated in the scoring. The key parts of each proposal were given a number from lowest to highest. Each Board member scored all nine key parts included in all seven different proposals. These scores were counted and the contractor with the highest number of points was put at the top of the list. The contractor with the second highest number was put at number two, and so on.

The Board decided to interview those companies with the four highest scores. The four companies were (in alphabetical order) Ajax, Batson-Cook, Childers/Culpepper and Robbins & Morton.

Representatives from each of these four companies were asked to attend a face-to-face interview to defend their proposals. Another scoring grid was developed. A quorum of district board members participated in the open interview on June 6th and once again gave numeric scores, this time based on the key parts of their proposal defense.

The two total scores (from the proposal and from the interview) were added together to get a total score for each company. The four companies were listed from the highest total score to the lowest total score. The interview questions and other materials and documents were then hand-carried (for the purpose of speed) to the USDA in Lake City for their review.

On July 6, the USDA sent the Hospital District a letter stating that “…the USDA/RD concurs that the selected CM [construction management] firm is qualified for the job and the hospital has gone through the appropriate process and proper due diligence for the selection as required by RD [Rural Development] instructions.”  The District immediately began negotiations with the high scoring company, Culpepper/Childers of Tallahassee. Culpepper/Childress is a joint venture between two big and stable companies with 80 and 47 years’ building experience respectively. Their projects encompass nearly 80 healthcare projects, including work for Tallahassee Memorial Healthcare System, Capital Regional Medical Center, and Archbold Memorial Hospital.

The negotiations with Culpepper/Childress are not yet complete, but are expected to be completed this week. Should negotiations not be successful, then negotiations will begin with the contracting company with the second highest total points scored. As you see, the process is a highly weighted process performed at arms-length with the oversight of the USDA. It’s a good process and I think the Board has selected an excellent company to build your new hospital.

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Emerald’s Gem Box: Today’s Youth Have It Too Easy

Emerald’s Gem Box
Emerald Greene – Publisher

We’ve all heard the stories that our parents and grandparents would tell of how hard life was when they were young; having to walk to school, having to salt-pack food because there were no freezers, having to cover meat in lard in order to keep it from spoiling, having to milk the cow every morning for fresh milk to drink and/or having to travel by mule for days to get to “market” to buy something they needed. Those stories never meant much to me when I was a kid.  In fact, it did nothing but make my parents seem even older than what I thought they already were.

But I watch today’s youth, and listen to the complaints of “how hard life is” and I just have to laugh.  At my ripe old age of “40-something,” just comparing my childhood to theirs seems insanely incomparable.

First and foremost – The majority of today’s youth do not know what a hard day of work is. The majority of them come home from school and sit on the couch and watch TV or play their electronic games all night.  The majority of them feel the world has come to an end if their parents make them get a job when they turn 16 or 18.  In our day, when we got home from school, regardless of our age, we worked.  When work was finished, THEN you went home and you did your homework.  IF there was time left over before bedtime, then you got to sit and watch TV. In my household, we either worked at the office supply store, the newspaper, the farm or were planting pine trees till dark.

We didn’t have computers. We had to write everything longhand.  We balanced our checkbooks via a paper statement, we paid our bills with a check and envelope, we did our business bookkeeping longhand on those 40-column pads, we had to handwrite school term papers or type them on a typewriter (without a delete key – we had to use correction tape and white-out).

We didn’t have the Internet.  If we wanted to know something, or write a school paper, we had to go to the library and search through encyclopedias. Of course, we couldn’t just use one source, so we had to get several different encyclopedias AND look up several books on the subject, too by using the card catalog and searching through thousands of books to find that one book.

We didn’t have satellites and cable television. We had ONE channel – Channel 6.  Some of the lucky people got channels 6 and 10; and if you were really lucky, you got Channel 27 on good days (but possibly by putting aluminum foil on the rabbit ears to get it – and then you still had to watch the station through the “snow.”) If the President was on that night – he was on all three stations; and the Jerry Lewis Telethon – that made television unwatchable for 24 hours. We didn’t have 100+ channels to switch between.

Which leads in to “Where is the remote?” As children, we didn’t have a remote. If you were one of the lucky households to have two or three channels and you wanted to see something different, you GOT UP and went and changed channels yourself.

Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon didn’t exist.  We got cartoons on Saturday mornings ONLY.  We waited all week just to watch Bugs Bunny, the Roadrunner, the Smurfs, Scooby Doo and Speed Buggy.

We didn’t have email, texting, unlimited long distance or Facebook.  If we wanted to talk to somebody, we had to write them a letter – with a pen and piece of paper. Then we had to put it in the envelope, go to the post office, buy a stamp and mail it. Then it would take a week to get to them, a few days for them to write back, and a week for them to mail it back to us. If we wanted to talk to someone on the telephone, long distance, our parents would time us so that the phone call wouldn’t cost them a fortune.

We didn’t have cell phones. If we left the house, we just didn’t get to talk to any of our friends, until we came back home (and that was after school, work and homework was finished.)

We didn’t have PlayStation, Xbox or Wii. We had Atari with about two games; Asteroids and Space Invaders. No high resolution graphics, no killing other people, no digital surround sound. We shot at rocks or aliens, in black and white, and it was the same game over and over and over and over.

We didn’t have PSP’s, iPhones, Gameboys, ipads, or iPods to play with in the car, on road trips; and we sure didn’t have portable or built-in DVD players in the car to watch movies on.  We actually had to read a book, talk with the family or play games like: searching for every alphabet letter on billboards and signs, trying to find all 50 states on car tags, or playing the “I’m going on a trip” game.  When things got really boring on a long road trip we could always revert to singing “100 bottles of beer on the wall.”

We didn’t have iPods to download thousands of songs onto.  We had 45 and 33 1/3 RPM records, which we had to be very careful with as to not scratch them or we could never hear that song all the way through again. We had 8-track tapes and then cassette tapes. If we wanted to hear a particular song then we had to hit the fast forward button, click play, click fast forward, click play, click fast forward, click play…… oooppps too far…… click rewind, click play, click rewind, click play. But, the worst of it all was when your tape got “eaten” by the player. The tape would wrap around the player and we would spend 30 minutes very carefully unwinding the mess from the player and then keeping the tape straight as we would roll it back into the cassette with a pencil. If we didn’t have an 8-Track or cassette with a song we wanted then we had to call it in to the radio station and sit by the radio all day with our tape recorder, ready to mash “record” when the song finally came on; and then the DJ would usually talk during the first part of the song and ruin it.

We didn’t have the luxury of complaining about our household chores with sayings such as “I don’t want to load/unload the dishwasher.”  “I don’t want to unload the dryer”…… we didn’t have dishwashers and dryers; we actually had to wash dishes by hand and hang clothes on a clothesline.

And there was no such thing as calling HRS if our parents spanked us.  If we did wrong, we got beat for it. If we did wrong at school, then the principal beat us and when we got home we would get beat again. Discipline was actually accepted back then and was considered a good thing. The saying, “it takes a village to raise a child” was alive and well because all of our friends’ parents had permission to beat us if we did wrong at their house, also.

As I sit here, in my “mid-life” age, I might not have had to walk to school “uphill in the snow, both ways” but I think my life was pretty dang “hard” compared to what today’s youth is “suffering” through.

And if you think your kids don’t think you’re too old as it is, turn on some black and white re-runs of Andy Griffith or Lucile Ball and see what kind of looks they give you then.

Until then….see you around the town.

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Kiwanis Club Presentations Go From Local To Global

Casey Flanagan discusses the goals of his recent trip to Rwanda with Global Peace Exchange, and what the group accomplished while he was there.
By Lynette Norris
Greene Publishing, Inc.

After calling the July 21 meeting to order, Kiwanis Club President Willie Gamalero spoke words of praise and congratulations for Madison’s 12 and Under Babe Ruth Baseball Team, and urged everyone’s support for the young team members he had just seen gathered along the Base Street edge of Four Freedoms Park, soliciting donations.  Having won the Babe Ruth Baseball State Tournament for their age group, the team will now travel to South Carolina to play regional, said Gamalero, and with a week’s worth of hotel stays and meals, “they do need funds to get up there, and it’s not a cheap trip.  If you can, make it by there and drop a couple of bucks in their helmet.”

The team will leave for the trip July 28, at 7 a.m.

Next up was Doug Freer, who introduced one of the guest speakers for the day, Samantha Shivers of the Madison County Health Department.

Shivers will soon be taking up a new responsibility when school starts back, doing a teen outreach program with the ninth graders of Madison County High School. She will be teaching them healthy behaviors, life skills and community service.

It is a program that aims to help teenagers form stronger bonds with the community they live in by teaching them to help others, said Shivers.

Another goal is to reduce teen pregnancies by engaging them in other activities, showing them they can make a difference in the lives of others and empowering them with the skills they need to make their projects come to fruition.

Sometimes the teens will be planning their own projects and ideas, learning how to set goals and then come up with a budget, utilize resources, and develop a plan that will “make a difference.”  Other times, they will be helping out with big community projects that are already planned and in place, like Relay 4 Life.

Once the school year starts, when the teens are not planning projects of their own, they will be seeking out other community events.  Shivers encouraged everyone present to contact her during the school year if they had a community service event going on that could use a few helping hands.

Samantha Shivers of the Madison County Health Department addressed the Kiwanis Club about the new classes she will be teaching at Madison County High School this fall.

Following Shivers, Casey Flanagan, a graduate student from Florida State University, majoring in international affairs, took the audience halfway around the world, via a PowerPoint slide presentation, to Rwanda, a tiny East African country about the size of Rhode Island.  A largely mountainous country, Rwanda has a mild climate despite being situated close to the equator, and is home to hundreds of tea and coffee plantations.  In fact, tea and coffee are its two major exports.

Flanagan had just returned from two months in Rwanda, where he had been working with a group called Global Peace Exchange.  GPE is a group that fosters sustainable development in poverty-stricken areas of the world, helping people help themselves.

“It’s a real ‘teach a man to catch a fish’ thing,” said Flanagan.  While direct charity does have a place, he said, sometimes it makes more sense to create something that will have a lasting effect.

In 1994, Rwanda – the “Land of a Thousand Hills” with a lush green scenic beauty of mountains, valleys, rivers and waterfalls rarely equaled anywhere – erupted into massive bloodshed.  A long-brewing rivalry between the Hutu and the Tutsi people exploded, resulting in unimaginable violence – the organized, mass killings of between 500,000 and 1,000,000 people, or nearly 20% of Rwanda’s population, in about 100 days.

Today, 17 years later, the country is calmer, stabilized, and largely peaceful, but the after-effects of the Rwandan Genocide, as it came to be known, are still felt by the survivors.

There are families still dealing with losses.  Genocide orphans, some as young as 17 or 18, are now heads of households that are on their own, with no extended-family support systems.  Monuments erected around the town of Kigali record the heartbreaking statements of eyewitnesses who were young children at the time.

In Kigali itself, there is no industry and little means of making a living.  With only about $10,000 to work with, the GPE group had decided upon starting a cleaning business in the town; it would require only a modest capital outlay for purchasing a few pieces of equipment (floor scrubbers, pressure washers, etc.) and training about 30 people how to use them.

Since the cleaning business start-up didn’t take nearly as long as the group had thought, they spent the rest of their time working in local schools teaching English, another vital skill needed for economic success in Rwanda; passing an entry exam in English is a requirement for admittance to universities there.

Teaching the English classes proved to be much, much harder than starting up a business from scratch, Flanagan found, because for many Rwandans, English is a third language, after Kinyarwanda, their native tongue, and French.  Also, because of the country’s history of violence, many of the children’s education had been interrupted or spotty.

However, at the end of their time in Kigali, the dean of the school told the group he had seen a remarkable improvement in many students’ English skills.  Flanagan’s group had even taught them the FSU War Chant.

But the most important thing to Flanagan, is that now 30 people have the opportunity and skills to feed themselves for the rest of their lives; perhaps they will be able to teach others to do the same, as the effect of that initial business project ripples outward and onward into the future.  “I get chills just thinking about that sometimes,” he said.

After the presentation, there were a few questions about the country’s economic state (the U.S. dollar is strong there) and how GPE raises the money for its projects (grants, year-round fundraising by the students, and “just plain begging sometimes”).

Just before the meeting adjourned, there was one final question from the audience:  “Any chance FSU will beat Florida this year?”

“I think it is almost certain,” Flanagan smiled.

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