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Posts Tagged ‘treasure coast’

St. Lucie stimulus program at six months: More than 50 companies employed

Monday, October 5th, 2009 by Cara Fitzpatrick

FORT PIERCE — Faced with double-digit unemployment and one of the highest rates of foreclosure in the country, St. Lucie County commissioners created a “local stimulus program” to speed up construction projects and create jobs in an economy desperate for them.

The plan included an ordinance to give local companies an edge in the bidding process and ensure that most workers involved in county projects live in St. Lucie.

But six months into the program, it’s hard to define how successful it’s been.
Economic change comes slowly, and even “fast-tracked” projects can take months to go through the design, bidding and building process. County officials, however, say their efforts have improved St. Lucie’s dire economic situation without raising taxes or increasing long-term debt.

“It’s incremental, but any jobs that we can add to the local economy absolutely has to help,” said Faye Outlaw, the county administrator.

Officials point to these milestones: (more…)

Construction jobs on Treasure Coast declined last year

Monday, October 5th, 2009 by Cara Fitzpatrick

Construction jobs continued to decline on the Treasure Coast during the past year, according to a report released last week by the Associated General Contractors of America.

The Port St. Lucie metropolitan area, which includes Martin and St. Lucie counties, lost about 700 jobs, or 6 percent, between August 2008 and August 2009. The Treasure Coast ranked 59 out of 337 metropolitan areas in the country for least jobs lost. The worst losses were in Reno, Nev., which ranked 337.

The Associated General Contractors of America, based in Arlington, Va., released the numbers to highlight the decline in construction jobs across the country. (more…)

Treasure Coast Boy Scouts face ‘urgent’ cash flow shortage

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009 by TCPalm.com

The regional Boy Scout organization overseeing the Treasure Coast says it is in serious financial difficulties.

In the face of a 30 percent decline in financial support, the Gulf Stream Council cut staff and expenses earlier this year.

Still the administrative organization has “an urgent cash flow shortage that threatened our operations and program,” wrote John Marion, Gulf Stream Council Executive Board president, in a recent letter to local Scout groups.
(more…)

Selling alcohol to minors is widespread problem on the Treasure Coast

Sunday, September 13th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

More than 200 businesses on the Treasure Coast and in Okeechobeen County have been cited for selling alcohol to underage people, according to state records from January 2004 to August 2009. Some of those businesses were repeatedly cited.

“It’s a widespread problem,” Indian River County Sheriff Deryl Loar said.

A Scripps Treasure Coast Newspapers review of five years of citations from the state Division of Alcoholic Beverages and Tobacco show some stores stores have been cited three times — once each year.

Most of the businesses cited are gas stations/convenience stores because of their accessibility, Loar said.

Access of alcoholic beverages to people younger than 21 - the legal drinking age - has been in the news since the Aug. 4 crash that killed three Stuart teens. Crushed beer cans were found at the crash scene of U.S. 1 and Cove Road, where 18-year-olds Christopher Brigilo and Nicholas Coady and 16-year-old Connor Graver died.

The Florida Highway Patrol has yet to release toxicology reports on the three.

Days earlier on Aug. 1, crushed beer cans also were found in the bed of a pickup truck in Key West where three Okeechobee residents — two teens and a 20-year old — died in a head-on collision with a tractor trailer.

Any store that sells to one teen instantly becomes known by other teens, said Lt. Kevin Dietrich of the St. Lucie County Sheriff’s Office.

“A few of them find out which business sell to kids and it spreads like wildfire,” he said.

Convenience store giant 7-Eleven had a total 12 citations on the Treasure Coast from 2004 to 2009, the most for any company, state records show.

Spokeswoman Margaret Chabris said the company is serious about training employees at corporation-owned stores and those franchises owned by individuals.

It is mandatory for all employees of corporate-owned stores to attend the Come of Age program, where employees learn about the laws for the sales of alcohol and tobacco products and do role playing during which employees practice refusing a sale, she said.

It’s not a requirement for employees of franchise-owned stores. However, if the franchise store is repeatedly cited for selling to minors, it could lose its franchise status, Chabris said.

Despite many of the businesses having a history of citations, their alcohol licenses have not been revoked and the stores have not been closed because they haven’t been cited more than three times in a calendar year, division spokeswoman Alexis Lambert said.

The first time a business is cited, it could be fined up to $1,000 and its alcohol license suspended up to seven days; the second time up to a $3,000 fine and suspended license up to 30 days; the third time in a year, its license can be revoked, she said.

The penalties are not meant to harm business owners, division Lt. Kent Stanton said.

“We don’t want to put stores out of business, but we want them to comply with the law,” he said.

Those penalties aren’t enough, said state officials with Mothers Against Drunk Driving.

“We need stricter consequences and more enforcement and stronger consequences for those who sell to minors,” said Don Murray, state executive director of MADD.

Dietrich said enforcement is needed as convenience stores stock up with energy drinks that contain alcohol and are popular with teens.

The division works with local law enforcement officers several times a year in undercover stings using minors and issuing citations for business caught selling to them, Stanton said.

When conducting the sting, authorities must use minors who look their age so not to trick store clerks, but to show if someone of average intelligence could decide if the buyer was underage, he said.

“We can’t pick the oldest-looking kid with facial hair,” Stanton said, “and the girls can’t dress provocatively.”

Store clerks making the sale are charged with a misdemeanor and in Indian River and St. Lucie counties, given a notice to appear in court. In Martin County, the seller is arrested and booked in the county jail, said Sgt. Mark Middleton of the Martin County Sheriff’s Office.

Loar said a citation is issued because there is not enough room in the Indian River County Jail.

Jail time is also a possibility for underage people caught with alcohol, said Adam Guzi, supervisor of court for the State’s Attorney Office in Martin County.

Minors are charged with a misdemeanor possession of alcohol and entered into the juvenile justice system and given the option to attend substance abuse counseling, he said.

While teens target convenience stores, most times getting alcohol is as simple as opening the refrigerator or the family’s liquor cabinet, Middleton said.

“At home, when parents open a bottle of wine they don’t keep track of how much they are drinking or how many beer cans are in the fridge,” he said.

Also, some teens craft a plan where they get alcohol from friends who work in convenience stores where alcohol is sold or restaurants where it is served, he said. If one friend works at convenience store or restaurant where alcohol is served, a group of friends would go to that store-only during the hours the teen works. The friend would only sell alcohol to friends in their circle and ask for identification from anyone else, Middleton said.

“This is something that’s been going on and on and on,” he said. “Today’s young people are no different than they were 30 years ago.”

Another technique teens use is to pay someone — a friend or stranger — to buy alcohol for them, Loar said.

“They would stop someone on the street and says here’s $20 or $40 and go buy me a bottle of wine and you can keep whatever is left,” he said.

Now that school is in session both Middleton and Loar said they typically see more attempts by teens to get their hands on alcohol because more house parties are taking place.

“During the summer the teens don’t get together too much because they have summer jobs or they are gone on a family vacation or something,” Middleton said.

BY THE NUMBERS

Number of alcohol licenses:

St. Lucie County: 543

Martin County: 439

Indian River County: 347

Okeechobee County: 121

Total alcohol licenses on the Treasure Coast and Okeechobee County: 1,450

Number of citations issued to businesses for selling to underage persons from January 2004 to August 2009: 263

Number of most citations issued to a company, 7-Eleven Inc.: 12

Number of citations issued to 29 Publix stores on the Treasure Coast and Okeechobee County: 0

Source: State Division of Alcoholic Beverages and Tobacco

FAST FACTS

Adam Guzi, supervisor of misdemeanor court for the State’s Attorney Office in Martin County:

Minors caught with alcohol are charged with a misdemeanor and entered into the juvenile justice system and given the option to attend substance abuse counseling.

Adults over 18 but under 21 are charged with a misdemeanor and can face up to 60 days in county jail, up to a $500 fine or both. Because the person is an adult they will have a criminal record, Guzi said.

According to Mothers Against Drunk Driving, about 5,000 people a year die from underage drinking.

In 2008, Martin County youths between 12-17 ranked first in the state in admitting alcohol usage, said Tina Levene, program specialist state chapter of MADD.

In July 1984 federal law set 21 as the national minimum legal drinking age, according to MADD. Federal highway construction money were withheld for states that failed to adopt the new law. By 1988, all states had adopted the new drinking age.

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St. Lucie County coaches upset by proposed budget cuts

Monday, March 23rd, 2009 by TCPalm.com

— Proposed cuts to the St. Lucie County School District athletic budget have coaches and athletes alarmed.

The proposed $1 million decrease in the county athletic budget for next year announced Thursday means coaches will be working with less funding.

But what is even more alarming to coaches, is the elimination of feeder programs, which help develop players before they hit the varsity level. (more…)

Many pharmacies are out of a common blood pressure medication

Thursday, February 5th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

— Many Treasure Coast pharmacies are out of a common generic blood pressure medication thanks to a nationwide shortage of the drug.

A series of product recalls began the shortage of generic Toprol XL and now the drug, which patients are not supposed to stop taking suddenly, is nearly impossible to find. Treasure Coast Walgreens and CVS stores, as well as other pharmacies all are out of the medication and unsure when the supplies will return.

“We are actively pursuing alternative sources of supply but at this time, there is only one approved manufacturer with very limited supplies,” Walgreens representative Vivika Vergara said.

In the mean time, here’s what consumers can do:

First, talk to your pharmacist and doctor. Also, figure out what your insurance will and won’t cover.

Some patients might be able to just switch to the brand-name, Toprol XL. Area pharmacists said the cash difference between the drugs, without insurance, was about $13.

Other doctors are advising patients to switch to a similar drug, Lopressor. Pharmacists said the main difference is that Lopressor must be taken twice a day, instead of once.

WHAT IS TOPROL XL?

Toprol XL is the brand-name of a type of beta blocker most commonly used to treat high blood pressure and chest pain. Toprol and its generic version, metroprolol succinate, work by decreasing the force and rate of heart contractions and must be taken regularly to control blood pressure.

WHY IS THE GENERIC SUPPLY DWINDLING?

The main two main suppliers of generic Toprol, ETHEX Corp. and Sandoz, issued a series of recalls of the drug late last year after warnings from the U.S. Food & Drug Administration. KV Pharmaceutical, the ETHEX subsidiary that made metroprolol, stopped production of all its products in January because of financial difficulties.

By Hillary Copsey, TCPalm.com

TCoast schools want to spend teacher money on other programs

Monday, January 26th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

Treasure Coast educators facing both the prospect of a 10 percent cut in next year’s state education funds and a deadline to reduce student-teacher class ratios in every classroom say something’s got to give.
They want Tallahassee lawmakers to let them spend millions of dollars earmarked to hire more teachers on school operating expenses.
If they can’t, local school districts say services to students and their families will need to be cut next school year.
(more…)

T-Coast school closings not planned despite tight budget

Sunday, January 25th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

If no public schools on the Treasure Coast close as a result of state funding that is expected to shrink by 10 percent for 2009-10, the three-county area may be an anomaly in public education.

“Just about every school district in Florida is looking at consolidating and closing some schools,” said Wayne Blanton, executive director of the Florida School Boards Association. “I don’t think there’s a school district in the state of Florida that’s going to have as many schools open next year as this year — except maybe some very small ones.”

Officials in Martin and Indian River County school districts say they are not now considering closing and consolidating public schools to reduce spending next year, while St. Lucie County school leaders will only say that every idea to save money is being discussed.

(more…)

Report: Most who bought home in 2005 owe more than it’s worth

Thursday, November 13th, 2008 by Post Staff

Home values in the United States posted their seventh consecutive quarterly decline, falling 9.7 percent year-over-year according to the third quarter Zillow Real Estate Market Reports.

The report showed parts of the Treasure Coast posted even higher losses than the nationwide average.

For the Vero Beach metropolitan statistical area, data from Zillow show home values fell 15.9 percent year-over-year, bringing the average price of a home to $152,058, according to the Zillow Home Value Index. (more…)

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