Guidelines
Thursday, February 29, 2024
Beulah Master Plan Charette is TONIGHT!
Wednesday, February 28, 2024
It's All About Personal Relationships.......
I was honored to bring remarks on behalf of the Board of County Commissioners to Monday's lease signing between the City of Pensacola and the American Magic sailing team. |
D1 and the West Side of Pensacola about to Get an Amazing Amenity!
Escambia County Does NOT have ALA Membership....But we Will Discuss the ALA at our Next Meeting
"I recently learned that Escambia
County has been paying over a thousand dollars in annual membership dues to the
American Library Association (ALA) and its state chapter the Florida Library
Association (FLA). On behalf of the citizens of Escambia County and the
Christian Family Coalition, which has been leading the statewide campaign to
defund the ALA, I urge you to join the number of counties around the state that
have terminated their memberships in the ALA, including Citrus, Hernando, Collier, Lee, Sarasota,
Pasco, Santa Rosa, Lake, St. Lucie, Manatee, Charlotte,
Flagler, Bay, St. Johns, and Hillsborough counties.
The ALA has become notorious for its
aggressive promotion of "Drag Queen
Story Hours" and sexually explicit LGBT materials targeting children,
along with other leftist ideological agendas.
The ALA's current
president is self-proclaimed "Marxist
lesbian" Emily Drabinski, who has said libraries "need to be
a site of socialist organizing" and has used her position to
champion the "queering" of public libraries.
But the ALA’s radical
agenda of sexualizing children goes back years before Drabinski’s presidency.
Over a decade ago, the ALA started theRainbow
Project Book List. This recommended reading list for children aggressively
pushes alternative sexual lifestyles and "gender fluidity" themes on
children as young as 3 months old, with titles such as Two Grooms on a Cake for
ages 6 to 9; The True Story of a Boy Named Penelope for ages 4 to 8, which
celebrates transgenderism in children; and Bye Bye Binary, for ages 3 months to
4 years, which encourages "dismantling gender norms" from infancy.
The ALA has used its
influence to promote books that not only push gender ideology indoctrination on
children, but outright pornographic content. The ALA’s so-called “Banned
Books List” celebrates these pornographic books by pushing the narrative that
efforts to keep them away from children and out of school libraries are a form of censorship that must
be resisted. The ALA actually encourages libraries during so-called
"Banned Books Week" to promote these books on posters and
conspicuously placed display cases in public and school libraries to encourage
children to check them out. These books include Gender Queer, which includes
graphic depictions of teens engaging in oral sex; Lawn Boy, which depicts sex
between men and children; and Beyond Magenta, which includes a graphic
description of a 6-year-old performing oral sex on multiple men. The ALA
coaches librarians to push back on parents who object to these pornographic
materials being made available to their children by casting them as villains
and “book banners.” Drabinski's designated successor as ALA president, Cindy
Hohl, who will start her term in July 2024, can be expected to aggressively
carry on this insidious agenda given the fact that she is the current treasurer
of the "Freedom to Read Foundation," which is behind the "Banned
Books List" promoting these pornographic materials to children.
The ALA has been
encouraging the expansion ofDrag Queen
Story Hours in libraries for over five years. The ALA’s website devotes anentire
page to
resources to help librarians plan drag queen story hours to encourage children
to explore what they call their "gender fluidity."
The ALA and its defenders claim the
growing movement to defund their organization is about censorship, but it's the
ALA that's doing the censoring. Sen. Marco Rubio has rightly called for ending all
government funding to the ALA and conducting an investigation into its
efforts to censor and discriminate against Christian author and actor Kirk
Cameron and his publisher Brave Books. When Cameron attempted to organize a
national family-friendly story hour on Aug. 5 in libraries across the country,
Deborah Caldwell-Stone, the director of the ALA’s Office for Intellectual
Freedom, coached librarians on how to “invent programming” for that day so
library reading rooms would not be available for the event.
The Florida Department of State's
Division of Library & Information Services recently announced it will not accept
any grants with project activities associated with the ALA or its
state chapter the Florida Library Association. Several other state libraries
and counties outside of Florida also have severed ties with the ALA, including
the Montana, Texas, Missouri, and South Carolina state libraries.
You can find several
articles with more information about the ALA's radical agenda and its Marxist
president here, here, here, and here.
By terminating dues membership in
the ALA and its state chapter the Florida Library Association, our county will
be sending a strong message that it is standing up to this radical and corrupt
organization while adding momentum to the movement to defund the ALA across the
state of Florida and the United States.
I hope we can count on your vote to
stop paying dues to the ALA and the FLA. Please let me know. In the
meantime, we urge the county hold off on any upcoming planned dues payments
until this issue is voted on.
Thank you, and I look forward to
your reply!
XXXXXX XXXXXXXXXX
Precinct
committeeman XXX
Sent
from my iPhone"
Thursday, February 22, 2024
Work At Perdido Key Beach Access #2 Commences
Crews with the county's parks and recreation department have commenced the project to add additional parking spots to Beach Access #2 and to pave the parking lot and add outdoor showers and portable restrooms. These changes will be completed before the start of the busy Summer season, and the demolition and renovation of Access #3 will ocur next winter ahead of the 2025 Summer season.
See the pictures of the renovation of Access # 2 in progress, below.
Monday, February 19, 2024
Election Ugliness Begins
People that play stupid games will win stupid prizes.... |
This August 20th, the date of the Republican
Primary election, will be my 7th contested election in Escambia
County for local office.
And each cycle that I have been through, the nastiness and
ugliness intensifies.
Whether in the school board races or more recently for
county commission—it never ceases to amaze me the depths of cowardly depravity folks
will go to in order to smear their opposition or artificially manipulate an
election outcome.
It’s nasty, it is ugly, and frankly it is the reason lots of
folks never run for office.
This election season is off with a bang, and the Election
Ugliness has officially begun.
DYSFUNCTION JUNCTION
You know folks are desperate when they bring in surrogates
to do their dirty work.
Clerk of the Court Pam Childers actively encouraged at least
two existing county employees to run against me. One has, and I am told the other is
considering it. She’s mad we are suing her to compel her to do her job. Ho hum.
Sitting commissioner Mike Kohler’s recently departed
secretary, Steve Stroberger, is one of these that was encouraged to run by
Childers, and he is running. Good for him. But is it really helpful to have a sitting
commissioner get his secretary to run against another sitting commissioner on
the same board? (Check with disgraced former commissioner Doug Underhill and his former secretary Jonathan Owens on
that). Worse, this commissioner, Kohler,
on a recent trip to Tallahassee pulled aside a friend of mine and started trashing
and slandering me and making false statements about the contents of my stolen
data files. (Oh yeah—someone stole those from the county and guess who ended up
with them? Answer, the guy I beat by 17
points in the last nasty election I was in, Jonathan Owens). As
soon as he, Kohler, was done shooting off his mouth, of course my friend called
and told me everything Kohler said. Wow,
what a desperado.
Interestingly—these comments made by Kohler in Tallahassee were
made before the county released the redacted version of the stolen county records.….Although
the files do not contain what he lies and says they do—there are some
things he mentioned that he would not have known had he not seen a copy. So that will be looked at and questions will
be asked during depositions. This
information will also be passed along to the investigators looking into the
criminal conduct surrounding this theft of county files.
Did Pam Childers, who has and does possess at least one copy of my
unredacted stolen data file—did she give Mike Kohler a copy? Did she give it to the candidate she
encouraged to run, Steve Stroberger? Did
Doug Underhill give it to Mike Kohler?
Too many questions. But we will
get to the bottom of it all as we commence depositions here in the next few months as the county's replevin case moves forward. The Old Bull is walking down the hill, not
running. And all of these individuals
must know by now that mere possession of these files, unredacted and without
authorization, is a Felony under state law, right? Yeah, that’s right.
Meanwhile, I have conducted polling for this race.
And the numbers are about what I expected them to be. This scientific polling indicates there is
one heck of a battle for the bronze medal between Stroberger and Owens, and I’m
comfortably ahead of both of these individuals by double digits. But those two, each more than 20 points
behind me, are within 6-8 points of each other for the Silver Medal…..
Interestingly, though, another creepy, sleazy thing happened
during the time this poll was recently in the field. Apparently, according to another friend I
have that contacted me, Johathan Owens and Alex Arduini attempted to get people
on the internet to “stuff the ballot box” and send bogus responses in on my
poll for my opponents and against me. My
friends forwarded this to me, below.
How desperate do these desperados have to get? Stealing my files, slandering me, and trying
to disrupt elections communications and polling?? Sitting elected officials attempting to
unseat incumbents on the boards upon which they sit? The clerk of the court actively encouraging
sitting county employees to run against us??
It’s weird, surreal, and dysfunctional.
Why can’t these folks just compete, straight up, on the issues? Why the sleaziness and sliminess and anger
and vitriol and weirdness? These guys are almost as bad as our local newspaper,
the PNJ, who argue they have absolute, complete immunity to have my son’s stolen
tax forms and my daughter’s stolen bank account information—even though
neither of these items is a public record nor a matter of public interest and
the possession of this data unauthorized is criminal under Florida Law.
Well, the last data point I’ll share from my poll: When respondents were asked if they believed
the area’s only daily newspaper, the PNJ, was fair, balanced, and
accurate---the response was 62% NO and 38% Yes among all parties and
demographics. It was worse among only
Republicans.
People don’t like and don’t trust the PNJ.
It’s not just me.
See you all on August 20th 😊
Sunday, February 18, 2024
I'll Be the Leadoff Guest on "Real News with Rick Outzen" Tomorrow Morning at 7:00 AM
I've been asked to appear tomorrow morning as the lead off guest on the area's best, most trusted, most accurate, most listened-to morning drive radio news talk show, "Real News with Rick Outzen" on WCOA.
I am assuming we will discuss the looming offers on OLF-8, this week's BCC meeting on Thursday, and possibly the county's replevin case against Alex Arduini, Jonathan Owens, and Gannett/PNJ.
It should be an interesting discussion. Listen live, or catch the podcast here once Rick publishes it.
Friday, February 16, 2024
Show Cause Hearing Held: Jonathan Owens takes the 5th--Refusing to Testify
Does the "press" have the right to possess personal identification information, in contravention to state statutes, when such information neither serves the public interest nor is a public record? |
Escambia County's case against Gannett, Jonathan Owens, and Alex Arduini moved forward yesterday with a show cause hearing on Zoom that lasted about two hours.
The county presented its case and called a number of witnesses. I was first, and I testified truthfully. Jonathan Owens was called to testify and through his lawyer, he took the 5th amendment and did not testify. Alex Arduini, initially advised by his own lawyer to also take the 5th amendment actually did answer questions and testified that he has never seen the text file nor has he ever possessed it. That was his testimony under oath. Not one (1) person from the PNJ bothered to show up to testify. Their lawyer informed the court they would not testify and that they would be shielded from testifying about the identity of their anonymous source that gave them their files via a Florida law that protects the media.
The judge was very methodical and allowed all attorneys present to speak and present their cases.
I was allowed to testify to the fact that several of my family members have endured fraud on their accounts in the last 8 months, and I was given space to describe the circumstances under which I needed to have my phone's contents backed up to preserve county records.
At the end of the day where this case goes next is entirely up to Judge Schlechter. I believe the county presented rational arguments for the return of the stolen files from those who possess it currently. I believe the county presented rational arguments for the case to continue to discovery so that the county can depose individuals to learn more about who has the files, how such files were obtained, and to whom files have been shared. This case is much larger than just me. There are a lot of innocent, unaffiliated individuals who now have their private medical information out in the public--including current and former county employees---due to no fault of their own. These files were in the care and custody of the county's IT department and we believe it is wholly appropriate for the county to work through the courts to retrieve these stolen county files.
And to the defense the attorney for Gannett put forward, at some point some court, somewhere, will need to rule on this to answer this very important question: Where is the line for what the media can and cannot do because of the protections they enjoy under the 1st Amendment. Where is the line? And when I ask that, rhetorically speaking, I mean--does press freedom and legal precedents from last century allow the media to transcend and violate existing state law?
The PNJ readily admit they possess the files at issue here, which files contain the personal identification information on more than a dozen local citizens. The mere possession of data like this is a felony under state law 817.5685. How does the media's possession of my daughter's bank account number, my son's tax form and my other son's social security number serve a public purpose or the public interest? Answer: it doesn't. So if the folks that possess stolen personal information are given leave by the courts to keep such data in contravention to state law---doesn't that serve to encourage more folks to engage in the nefarious conduct of stealing and possessing others' personal identification information?
Really--where is the line for the "press's" immunity? Could they have child porn on their computers if they were using such disgusting information for a story? Could they protect a source if that source admitted committing murder? Where is the line the press can't cross---and does state law trump the press's right to hold data unlawfully?
Maybe, just maybe, this little case might start to provide an answer to this question. We will see.
New Playground and Equipment Installed in D1 at Garcon Bayou Nature Park
Yesterday morning staff sent pictures of the newly constructed playground at the Garcon Bayou Nature Park. This park now has brand new equipment and is the latest playground to be installed in the county. My thanks to staff for their efforts to install this new, safe and FUN equipment in this new park for the citizens' children to enjoy. See the pictures of this new park and equipment, below:
Wednesday, February 14, 2024
Saturday, February 10, 2024
'24 Forward Escambia
We are in an election year and as a candidate for re-election I will, from time to time, post campaign related information to my blog site here. This is one of these occasions.
A candidate for office should have a platform, a reason for running, and a list of priorities that will be sought. In every race I have run, I have always had such plans.
In my first election to the BCC I had a first 100 day plan which I implemented.
In 2020-I wrote Next4Escambia and made it my platform. And I was able to implement many of the goals enunciated within that plan--a fact I am proud of.
For the 2024 election year and the years to follow, I have completed my action plan for implementation if I am so humbled to be re-elected again by the voters of Escambia County. 5 main categories, 24 specific action items, and 3 big ideas-- I've built 24Forward Escambia on the input I have received by voters throughout the district with whom I have interacted for the last 7 years. We have completed a lot, but we have a lot more to do. Click here to read the plan!
Political advertisement paid for and approved by Jeff Bergosh, Republican, for Escambia County Commissioner District 1
90th Coffee with the Commissioner Event this Wednesday: All About EMS
Join us for our 90th Coffee with the Commissioner event Wednesday, Feb. 14. The Zoom live stream will take place from 6:30-7:30 a.m. To join the meeting, visit our District 1 Facebook site here: www.facebook.com/CommissionerBergosh/.
Attendees this month will include County Administrator Wes Moreno, Public Safety Director Eric Gilmore, and EMS Chief David Torsell III. Moreno will provide an update on county business, Gilmore will discuss public safety matters, and Chief Torsell will provide insight into the county's emergency medical services division. We will discuss issues related to EMS billing, Ambulance service, hold times, and other topics that have been raised recently. This coffee will allow for other viewpoints and opinions that illustrate both sides of contentious issues within public safety. We will also discuss the county's ongoing CORE program and our efforts at confronting the ongoing opioid epidemic that results in an average of 6 overdose calls weekly in our area.
If you are interested in this topic--I encourage you to send questions and comments you would like to discussed during the event through Facebook or they can be emailed to district1@myescambia.com or texted to me 850-293-1459.
For more information, contact our office at 850-595-4910
Concerns over Perdido Key Roundabout Discussed
The Perdido Key Roundabout is built. It works as designed. I was at Perdido Key yesterday and it was functioning smoothly. Some folks are happy with it, others want additional measures implemented, still others want it scrapped.
One thing I can say with certainty: This traffic feature has been divisive--which is unfortunate. As an example-- I offer this email exchange from this morning....I've had several like it from both supporters of the roundabout and detractors as well.
"Dear Mr. Jeff Bergosh
But my main peace now is the
round about at Johnson Beach rd. It s way too small I do not even think it
complies with US Government recommendations https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/publications/research/safety/00067/000676.pdf
In my opinion it is about 40-60 ft shy in diameter there is not deterrent for south bound travelers to slow done at all they can enter round about at 50 + per hour and not even have to slow down it needs to be enlarged to be safer and I am surprised you have not gotten any law suites from accidents there but I’m sure you will just saying.. because if I get clobbered there I will bring my dash can video to court and will be suing Pensacola and the driver who hit me.. Been 3 close call just this winter alone from people who fail to yield ….
XXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXX
Canada"
To Which I replied:
Hello XXXXXXXX,
District 1 Commissioner
Escambia Board of County Commissioners
Wednesday, February 7, 2024
99% of What Number?
If there are issues where county policy, state law, and collective bargaining agreements are not being followed in any county division, including EMS, I will always look into that. That's number 1.
And people know that.
The latest issue, EMS. (and by way of context, I offer this: when management badly mistreated and violated the rights of a former employee, a paramedic, I stood strong with him, the case was handled, and those who did wrong are gone. Funny how many of the same folks who have excoriated me for standing with a first responder, a Paramedic in that case are the same ones who are attacking me now for not immediately lapping up every accusation and claim they make currently?)
Over the last 48 hours here has been a lot of discussion surrounding the Union letter sent to commissioners this week stating "no confidence" in the EMS Chief and his deputy.
The media has picked up the story, and comments are flying on social media.
Fortunately I have a direct line to admin staff so I can ask direct questions.
One question I cannot get an answer to is this: How many employees does the Union's 99% support claim represent?
I know our EMS division is staffed for 64 EMT's and 64 Paramedics. I know we have a full compliment of EMT's and are short about 8 Paramedics.
Knowing this, did 120+ current employees really vote "no confidence" in our staff? (that is a rhetorical--my understanding is the number was 17 that voted "no confidence") But I'm waiting for the definitive answer.
So how does 17 = 99% of a department of 128? Answer--it doesn't. That is misleading at best--a lie at worst.
I know we have given a number of salary increases over the last three years to keep our department competitive with other area Ambulance services. I know we offered bonuses as well.
We've purchased new ambulances and spent significant sums modernizing our in-ambulance medical devices and equipment with a long-term contract for replacement of necessary tools and technology for emergency responses.
Are there issues in this department though? Yes. Will there always be issues in this division? Yes. But are the administrative leaders working to fix these issues and make this service better? Yes is the answer to that, as well.
Has the department held calls? Yes. Has that been a persisten problem? Yes. Are we working to resolve this? Yes. Have we dropped the ball on some calls--yes. I looked into two in particular and in those instances, we could have done better and lessons were learned from both. (long wait at a D1 restaurant for an ambulance, long wait for a fall and a hit to the head that was a stroke)
I asked about turnover--and yes there has been significant turnover in the last two years. But overall staffing and positions filled has dramatically improved (much fewer vacant positions that 2021).
Will strong management leaders that hold employees accountable generate angry letters, comments, and criticism from public sector labor unions and disgruntled former employees? Yes.
And finally--are there are protocols in place for the crews working in the field? Yes--of course there are.
The protocols are in the process of bing updated constantly though, and each one that is updated is done so after appropriate training and in-service of the staff. I'm told point blank that the idea that there are no protocols is a flat out lie.
So let's solve the issues we can with facts, logic and a plan--not attacks on leadership staff and allegations that are misleading and misguided.
Always know this, though: I won't stand by and be silent when staff are attacked OR when paramedics are blatantly mistreated and policies are not followed by management.
I'll look at both. Always have and always will.
Tuesday, February 6, 2024
New Judge in County's Replevin/Conversion Lawsuit is Moving Quickly
Monday, February 5, 2024
Next D1 Neighborhood Cleanup is This Wednesday
Join us in
keeping our neighborhoods clean and safe! A neighborhood cleanup for residents
in Crescent Lake and
Carriage Hills will take place Wednesday, Feb. 7. This
is a chance for residents to dispose of items such as old furniture, appliances
and household waste free of charge. Yard
debris is eligible for removal during this cleanup
Only residents in the designated cleanup area can participate in the neighborhood cleanup. Please have all items for pickup at the curb by 7 a.m. on the day of the cleanup. Items left at the curb outside of the cleanup area will not be collected. If you live in the targeted area, pictured above you will have received a postcard in the mail with more information.
Items
eligible for removal include:
- Household appliances and electronics
- Household junk and debris
- Bicycles and toys
- Old furniture and mattresses
- Barbecue grills
- Household hazardous waste (old paint,
motor oil, chemicals, batteries)
- Tires (limit 10 per household)
Items
NOT eligible for removal include:
- Building materials (concrete, bricks,
blocks, roofing, drywall or lumber)
- Explosives or ammunition
- Auto parts
- Dirt or sod
- Vehicles or vessels
- 55-gallon drums of fluids
Not sure if
your item is eligible? Contact Max Rogers, Development Program Manager, at
850-595-3499 or mprogers@myescambia.com
for questions about the cleanup.
Since 2016,
more than 6,385 tons (12,770,000 pounds) of waste have been disposed of
through the Community Redevelopment Agency's Safe
Neighborhood Program. During neighborhood cleanups, crew members and
volunteers visit different neighborhoods in the county to remove a variety of
debris and waste free of charge.
Learn
more about neighborhood cleanups here. Follow Escambia County on Facebook
and Twitter
for updates about neighborhood cleanups and other community events.
I'll be on WCOA's Real News with Rick Outzen as Monday Morning's Lead-Off Guest
I'll be the lead off guest this morning on "Real News with Rick Outzen" on the area's premiere news talk station featuring the market's best talent lineup--AM 1370 WCOA |
I've been invited to appear later this morning on the area's best, most reliable. most trusted, most highly-rated and most isigntful morning drive news program, "Real News with Rick Outzen" on 1370 WCOA.
We have a meeting this week so I am sure Rick and I will discuss that, as well as pending legislation that may affect our area, pending litigation, the latest, revised offer for OLF 8 and other issues of interest.
Tune in live at 7:00--or catch the podcast here.