This chart, above, was provided to commissioners late last week by staff. It shows the stark challenges we face with staffing multiple county departments...... |
Monday, February 28, 2022
Help Wanted!
Friday, February 25, 2022
We'll Finally, After Nearly 9-Years, #OpenOurBeach Next Friday at 9:30!
Perdido Key Beach Access #4 to Open on March 4 Escambia County will host a grand opening
ceremony for the new Public Beach Access #4 at 16470 Perdido Key Drive on
March 4, 2022 at 9:30 a.m. The new beach access will be open sunrise to
sunset and features a permeable concrete parking lot with 35 parking spots,
an ADA-compliant AccessMat dune walkover and educational signage about
protected wildlife. The site will add an additional 300 feet of public beach
access on the western side of Perdido Key, adjacent to the Crab Trap
restaurant. “A lot of
folks have worked very hard for eight long years to see this project come to
fruition—and on March 4th --this beach access will finally be
available for public use! A HUGE thank you goes out to all the staff and
citizens who worked to make this day a reality! This new access point will
allow us to more than double the existing amount of free public beach access
on Perdido Key for all the citizens of Escambia County to enjoy—which in and
of itself is a remarkable accomplishment. But this is only the beginning of
the work our office plans to pursue to create more free access points on
Perdido Key for our citizens’ use in the years to come. I look forward to
aggressively moving in that direction—but in the meantime, I look forward to
utilizing this newly completed beach access #4 very frequently-- along with
all the citizens of Escambia County—and it will be open just in time for
Spring Break! This is a great day for Escambia County!” The site was
acquired in 2014 in part with a grant from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
to provide public beach access and conserve critical habitat for threatened
and endangered species. It was the former site of the Sundown Condominium
which was destroyed by Hurricane Ivan in 2004. The original concrete pad and
building debris were removed in the summer of 2020 and the prior parking
lot’s shell base was reutilized for the new public access. Funds for
construction were provided by the Tourism Development Tax (TDT). The site is
also home to designated Perdido Key Beach Mouse habitat and the site will be
managed in accordance with the Perdido Key Habitat Conservation Plan. Fencing
will prevent pedestrian and vehicular trespass into protected habitat areas,
while signage will educate visitors about threatened and endangered species that
utilize the site, including beach mice, nesting shorebirds and sea turtles. Escambia
County would like to thank the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission and US
Fish and Wildlife service for their cooperation in the acquisition and
development of the project. For more
information, please contact the Office of Community and Media Relations
at 850-595-1647 or email cmr@myescambia.com.
|
Thursday, February 24, 2022
It's Official: We're Out of the Lawsuit--the Other 4 Escambia County Commissioners Are........Underhill Remains in the Litigation, Though
Wednesday, February 23, 2022
How Did the Beulah D1 Townhall Audience Feel About Various Topics?
Instant "Polling" of a town hall audience:
Yes, it is probably completely unscientific.
Yes, it is probably not statistically valid at all.
Nevertheless--It does give me a sense of where those that are concerned about local issues are leaning on particular topics of interest to District 1 Escambia County Residents.
And there are some striking commonalities between the audience responses in both of my recent town halls.
--100% agreement on term limits for all politicians.
--100% agreement on Sheriff as person who should run the jail.
--100% agreement on economic development as a valuable function of the county commission.
--100% DISAGREEMENT on the statement that "The Pensacola News Journal" is in step with our community's values....
Lots of areas of agreement.
So, even with the structural shortcomings of such an instant opinion poll--there is value in it and there is a viewpoint that I glean from these sessions.
With that in mind-----see the below sheet for how the residents at the Beulah town hall last night felt on each topic:
Florida Power and Light Representatives Speak at Last Night's D1 Townhall in Beulah
Tuesday, February 22, 2022
On "Real News with Rick Outzen" later this Morning on 1370 WCOA-the Area's #1 News Talk Station!
I'll be the 7:30 guest this morning on the area's #1 news talk station, 1370 WCOA and the morning drive's #1 rated morning news program--"Real News with Rick Outzen" |
Going to County Jail: Facility Condition is Unacceptable and Will Be Addressed
Yesterday, I went to jail again.
I spent nearly three hours there, touring the facilities with a number of staff members.
I went to phase I and II of the old jail, and then we walked through the new facility. All over it.
Given the recent focus on safety, facility, and staffing issues--I felt it was past time to go and look over the situation again, firsthand.
While we have concentrated on and continue to work on the personnel side of the jail woes issue--it is past time for us to focus on the maintenance and facilities side of the problem. Because what I saw was and is, in a word, unacceptable.From mold growing on walls in multiple rooms, to cracked floors leaking and fixtures coming out of the walls, to cracked windows that have gone unreplaced, to a rustic and odd "McGuyver" roof leak system that is failing in multiple rooms, to a sink that has had the hot water running, I am told, nonstop for a year that goes unrepaired.
"Tickets are put in to maintenance, then they are closed and come back as 'having been repaired' --yet the problems are not fixed" stated one of the escorts when I asked why these issues had not been addressed by maintenance crews.
The only good news is that the worst areas that I saw, with the worst of the worst conditions, are not currently occupied by staff or prisoners. But there are areas occupied that are substandard, borderline unacceptable.
In our brand new, $142 Million Dollar jail--one of the three elevators is already inoperable, the pipes are leaking like a sieve, and we have significant issues already brewing that are apparently not being fixed. This cannot be the course we take, lest we have what we now see with our last facility.
The original jail was built in 1981. Phase II in 1984. Both are in an absolutely abyssimal state of repair at the present time so far as I can see. If I had my way--we would immediately demo that structure and start plans for a new wing for addition to the new jail.But it isn't that simple.
We don't have that luxury as we simply have too many prisoners; our new correctional facility cannot accommodate the 1500 or so prisoners we have day in and day out. It can hold just over half of that number.
And there are other issues as well.We have a brand new jail that has several pods complete and ready for use--but due to manpower shortages, they are not being utilized currently. You see, at the old jail the efficiency with respect to guard to prisoner ratio was and is better than twice as good juxtaposed with the new facility--meaning the old jail takes less staff to operate than the new, modern, expensive facility.
And that is diametrically opposed to what the board members were told as the new facility was being designed. All of us requested design for efficiency--less staff and fewer FTE's to operate. We all wanted efficiency. What we got was, well, less than half as efficient as the OLD jail. More on that later in a follow on post.
But it's not all bleak, and there are some bright spots. Our intake area and sallyport are first rate. We have technology that scans new prisoners for contraband, and it works. We have a dog I met named Spartan who is specifically trained to sniff out electronics and contraband. And finally, we have people--lots of good people that work at this facility and care about it. These are the bright spots. But, unfortunately, there are problems, too. Lots.So who is to blame for this cascade to facility failure? The easy targets would be the current staff and administration.
But they inherited a problem that has been percolating for, apparently, 3-4 decades. Staff turnover and attrition has exacerbated the problem over the last 10 years. It has festered.
So the blame has to fall on us--the elected commissioners. We have to own it.
And we have to solve it.And we will.
That is going to start with some frank, behind the scenes conversations with staff about our maintenance program at this
facility over the last 20 years. Why have tickets been allowed to be closed when the problems at issue are not solved? Who allowed this? We can spend a fortune in taxpayer money on building something nice--but if it is not maintained properly it will not last and will end up costing more in the long run. Someone will have to provide me an explanation about this maintenance ticket churning.
And then it is going to require an action plan to fix these issues immediately and appropriately so that the usable portions of our large and aging facilities can be occupied once again. And so that areas that are currently occupied but are in a deplorable state of repair can be, at a minimum, remediated to a point where occupation of such spaces isn't akin to a punishment of our staff.
I'm meeting with staff tomorrow and this topic will be an intense area of my focus going forward.
Action plan, cost, timeframe to operability.What Questions will I Poll the Audience With at Tonight's Town Hall Meeting?
As I typically do during my town hall meetings, I ask the audience their opinions on various topics of interest to the citizens and constituents of Escambia County. Not necessarily scientific, It is always very interesting. Here are the questions, below, that I intend to ask at tonight's D1 Townhall in Beulah.
Sunday, February 20, 2022
Facts about the County's Franchise Fees.....they're Capped and Have NOT been Increased in Nearly 30 Years
The county charges utility providers franchise fees. The rates have been static for nearly 30 years. The fees are charged to utility providers in exchange for such providers' use of the various public rights of way needed by these companies to service their customers. This practice is ubiquitous throughout the state and in counties throughout the country. Moreover, it is an important revenue source for the county.
Unlike the city of Pensacola--our County's rates are derived as a percentage of the utility commodity utilized by the consumer--currently 5% of the bill, capped at $10.00.
The rate paid by utility consumers within the city limits of Pensacola are 6% of the utility commodity utilized--without any cap on the total amount.
This distinction is important.
It means, in a nutshell, that the recent utility bill spike in FPL bills that is hurting individuals is much more acute in the city of Pensacola---as their franchise fee increases proportionately as the bills increase (according to staff familiar with this matter)---whereas in the county this fee is capped at $10--regardless of how high a bill gets we are capped for a residential customer at $10.
In 2012, the county commission attempted to raise the, at that time nearly 20 year old, franchise fee cap by 50%--from $10 to $15 dollars--which would have raised a considerable, additional amount of revenue for the county as it continued to struggle to pull out of the Great Recession.
That 2012 initiative failed by a 2-3 vote, with Grover Robinson and Marie Young voting for the increase, and Commissioners White, Valentino, and Robertson voting no.
Read the 1994 Escambia County Franchise Fee agreement here.
Read the 2012 agenda item, suggested revision, and vote tally here
Friday, February 18, 2022
What Were the Causes/Costs/Explanations for each of the Bellview Library Change Orders?
Wednesday, February 16, 2022
What has Escambia County Collected in Franchise Fees from the County's Electric Utility Provider over the Last 5 Years?
Actuals |
Actuals |
Actuals |
Actuals |
Actuals |
|
General Fund: |
FY21 |
FY20 |
FY19 |
FY18 |
FY17 |
Electric
Franchise Fee |
12,303,490.47 |
11,998,982.63 |
11,813,944.03 |
11,877,215.44 |
11,353,718.47 |
"My power bill jumped from 160 to 292 in 1 month I went back and checked my power bill in January has been a little over 200 till this year upon going back and looking at my old bills I had never been charged something called a Fuel Charge and it was 67.45 what are the people of this county supposed to do allow Florida Power to do what they want when they want I'm confined to a hospital bed living on limited income has escambia county become a prisoner to a utility service that our county commissioners should have a say in thank you for listening..after spending over a hour with Florida Power today I learned you are charged one rate for 1000 kilowatt hours or less but when you go over the 1000kw hrs your charged 22% more for your power but nobody seems to answer why this is what difference does it make if I use 1000kw hrs or 3000kw hrs shouldn't everyone pay the same amount for power some things just aren't fair"
District 1 Townhall Meeting this Tuesday in Beulah
Tuesday, February 15, 2022
So What is Going On With This Economy Locally?
Ahead of my 69th Coffee with the Commissioner event Tomorrow Morning, I have been researching issues related to the economy which I'll be discussing with my guest Todd Thomson, President and CEO of the Chamber of Commerce.
One of the issues I will discuss with him is the labor participation rate and how it is impacting the workforce locally.
In Thomson's op-ed from a few weeks back, he brings this issue up as a problem for local businesses: they can't find employees to fill the positions they have for their business operations locally.
But why? That's the million dollar question.
According to Jeff Dyer, workforce development specialist with Florida West, with whom I have been speaking on this topic, the total labor force is actually at an all-time high with 147,000 citizens employed in Escambia County currently.
And, according to Dyer, the participation rate is actually up to around 61% locally--a figure that has remained relatively constant over the last 10 years--with the exception of 2020 when the pandemic first hit and the resultant recession spiked unemployement to 12% locally and created a dip in participation down to 58.83%.
These numbers mirror what is happening nationally, according to the labor participation rate chart on the Federal Bureau of Labor Statistics website.
So with unemployment locally hovering at about 3.7%, with 147,000 citizens working, and only about 5,500 citizens unemployed and actively seeking work-----why are so many jobs---especially the jobs that require very little skill---going unfilled locally?
I mean, even with 147,000 working--many (tens of thousands) of those citizens are commuters from Santa Rosa and Baldwin Counties. Okaloosa probably as well. So with a population of 320,000---how many Escambians are not working "by choice?"
Are federal entitlement policies that paid/are paying folks to not work hurting our employers locally?
These are the questions I want to ask Todd Thomson tomorrow and are among several I will throw his way.
What is going on with this economy locally--and why are so many NOT re-entering the workforce?
Monday, February 14, 2022
Delivering the Mail
Opinion Host Andrew "Tallman" McKay Weighs In on Upcoming BCC "Resign to Run" Ordinance
Friday, February 11, 2022
Massive $1.45 Million Sidewalk Project through the Heart of Bellview in District 1 Commences February 28th!
The caption from the front page of the plans, above, shows the project's path along Saufley Field road in Bellview |
Typical section of the project--showing the 5-foot sidewalks on both the north and south side of Saufley Field road from Saufley Field over to Denver Avenue east of Mobile Hwy. |
69th Coffee with the Commissioner this Wednesday!
Join us this Wednesday for our virtual 69th Coffee with the Commissioner event. The live stream will take place from 6:30-7:30 a.m. To join the meeting, visit our Facebook site here: www.facebook.com/CommissionerBergosh/.
Attendees will include Interim County Administrator Wes Moreno, Public Safety Director Eric Gilmore and Greater Pensacola Chamber President and CEO Todd Thompson. Moreno will give an update on county business and Gilmore will share the latest public safety information for Escambia County. Thompson will join Commissioner Bergosh for a discussion about new business and community growth along with the chamber's involvement in areas including advocacy at the state level, legislative issues, military affairs and missions, ST Aerospace, cyber needs, workforce development, and the difficulties local businesses are having recruiting employees..
Residents are encouraged to send virtual questions and comments they would like to discuss during the event through Facebook.
Thursday, February 10, 2022
Pigpen------Sacola?
A constituent repurposed a piece of junk mail to send me ideas on how to stop the local litterbugs from turning our community into "Pigpen-sacola" Interesting, creative approach.... |
No, the contents of the "Pigpen-sacola" package were not an elementary school class project....so far as I have been able to ascertain from the clues.....probably. I think. |
Escambia County Jail Stats for December and January
Board members were sent the below information from Chief of Escambia County Corrections William "Rich" Powell yesterday afternoon. Good information on a host of important metrics.
Wednesday, February 9, 2022
The Court Wants to Hear from the Clerk.......Within 20 Days
Tuesday, February 1, 2022
Questions and Answers from Last Night's Townhall Meeting
Although not scientific--I did solicit audience participation and feedback at last night's townhall meeting, on a variety of topics. Here were the questions with the rough percentages of agree/disagree, based upon the citizen's display of the agree or disagree cards in answer to questions, below.
Town Hall Audience to PNJ: We Don't Trust You, and You Don't Represent the Values of Escambia County Citizens.....OUCH!
1. Our local Newspaper, the Pensacola
News Journal, is in step with our community’s values.
2. I believe what I read in the local
newspaper, the Pensacola News Journal.