Tag Archives: house

Turkey fryer causes house fire

FORT MYERS, Fla -?Cooking dinner sparked a house fire Sunday afternoon.

It happened on Montilla Drive in Whiskey Creek.

Firefighters say the family was deep-frying a turkey outside when it caught fire and spread to the home.

The house has about $50,000 dollars worth of damage.

“The fire got into the house and has done some extensive damage to the house,” said Barry Ashman, Battalion Chief of the Iona-McGregor Fire District.

Inside the house were children, their parents and the family cat.

The children and their parents were able to get out safely, but firefighters had to rescue the black cat from a back room.

Ashman says these types of fires are common this time of year when people fry turkeys for Thanksgiving, but says it can be avoided.

For instance in Sunday’s fire, the family fried the turkey only two feet away from the home, Ashman says you need to be much further.

“Anytime you are using a turkey fryer or a grill you should be a least 20 feet from the structure,” he said.

Here are some other safety tips:

-keep an eye on the frying turkey at all times.

-don’t overfill the fryer.

-keep a fire extinguisher nearby

-never use water to put out a grease fire.

Turkey fryer causes house fire

Fla. lawmakers set to override Gov. Crist’s vetoes

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) – Florida lawmakers are poised to do something they haven’t done in 12 years and that they’ve accomplished only twice in the last 24 – override a governor’s veto.

The Republican-controlled Legislature’s agenda for a planned one-day special session Tuesday includes override votes on up to seven bills and one budget item. All were vetoed earlier this year by Gov. Charlie Crist, who quit the GOP to run unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate as an independent.

None, though, will be as contentious as an abortion bill that was one of two vetoed measures the Legislature last overrode on March 11, 1998.?The Legislature says it will not?consider hot-button?vetoes on teacher merit pay and retention, elections and abortion during the one-day session.

“My personal inclination would be not to try and take up anything in special session that was a big, more regular session-type issue such as health care or education,” incoming House Speaker Dean Cannon said.

Instead, Cannon and Senate President Mike Haridopolos said they picked legislation that passed by wide margins and with bipartisan support. The override candidates include a $9.7 million appropriation for the University of Florida’s Shands Teaching Hospital and a bill that would dilute the powers of the governor and other executive branch officials by requiring legislative approval of administrative rules with an economic effect.

Another bill?would let local governments put yard trash in garbage dumps so they no longer will have to make separate pickups for each type of refuse.

The two leaders Monday dropped two of the 10 override attempts they’d originally proposed, including one at the request of Governor-elect Rick Scott, a fellow Republican. That bill?would have stripped the governor of sole authority over the Department of Management Services and required him to share it with the three Cabinet members.

Scott “thinks he has the right skill set to turn around this area, and it needs a lot of turn around,” Haridopolos said.? The agency has drawn criticism from lawmakers over its building construction, maintenance and leasing functions.

The other bill contained provisions designed to control the state’s costs for risk management and workers compensation, including a cap on how much doctors can get reimbursed for drugs they dispense to injured workers. Crist’s veto was supported by doctors who donated heavily to Republicans, including political committees formed by Haridopolos and Cannon.

Besides the overrides, votes also are planned on appropriating $31 million in federal stimulus money for consumer rebates on purchases of solar energy and high-efficiency heating and air conditioning systems and delaying a new septic tank inspection requirement for six months until next July 1.

The last time the Legislature, also with Republican majorities in both chambers, overrode vetoes was when Democrat Lawton Chiles was governor

Republicans also voiced opposition to higher taxes, yet one vetoed bill set for possible override would triple the tax on citrus to 3 cents a box. The increase is expected to raise $3.5 million a year for research on such things as greening, a citrus disease.

Haridopolos said he supports the increase because growers approved it in a referendum.
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Fla. lawmakers set to override Gov. Crist’s vetoes

Grantt trailing by a ‘bushy eyebrow’: No winner yet in Bonita Fire District race

Alex Grantt

Alex Grantt

Video from NBC-2


A close race for one Bonita Fire board seat turned even closer on Friday, suggesting a recount in the election remains a possibility, even if a remote one.

Seat 3 challenger Alex Grantt gained six votes after Lee County officials on Friday added provisional ballot results to the election night total. The addition nips at the lead held by incumbent commissioner Evans Conforti to 0.57 of the total vote, just 0.07 percentage points more than the trigger for a recount in the contest.

If Conforti’s lead falls to 0.50 percent or less of the total vote, election officials will recount all ballots. Conforti currently leads by 70 votes. A total of 12,242 votes have been counted in the race.

The only ballots remaining to be counted are any that will arrive from overseas during the coming week. Election officials will stop counting overseas ballots next Friday, when each race is to be certified.

The number of overseas ballots to come will likely be low, but its effect on the Bonita Fire race is anyone’s guess, elections supervisor Sharon Harrington said.

“We don’t really know,” she said. “It could change it. It’s very close.”

Just under 1,000 ballots were requested this year by overseas voters, a large number for a midterm election, Harrington said. Lee County has lower numbers of overseas voters compared to other cities or counties with military bases.

The remaining week is the tail end of a lengthy period in which overseas voters were allowed to send completed ballots. The ballots are mailed 45 days in advance of election day.

Grantt received 39 provisional votes to Conforti’s 33. Provisional ballots are tallied after the voters who cast them prove they were eligible to vote, usually by showing a driver’s license with a county address.

The number of votes Grantt needs to trigger a recount depends on how many are received.

For example, if another 72 ballots are counted in the race, Grantt would need nine more votes than Conforti to trigger a recount. If 200 ballots are counted, Grantt would only need eight more votes than Conforti.

Grantt’s race is the last in contention for Bonita Fire elections. In two other races, both incumbents won re-election. The margins in those races were tight, but not as tight as Conforti’s and Grantt’s race.

Friday, Grantt said he was searching for an attorney to explain the ins and outs of the recount trigger, the vote certification and his ability to challenge the final results.

Until then, and until all the votes come in, he can’t say what he’ll do.

“It’s sort of uncharted waters I’m traveling in,” he said. “But certainly at the moment Mr. Conforti is leading by a nose, and I’m losing by a bushy eyebrow.”

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Grantt trailing by a ‘bushy eyebrow’: No winner yet in Bonita Fire District race

Arsonist strikes again in Golden Gate

GOLDEN GATE, Fla. – A string of suspicious fires in a Golden Gate community has just added one more to that list, making it a total of five house fires believed to have been started by an arsonist.

This time the person didn’t hit up a vacant home. Instead, a mom and her daughter were home when the fire broke out. It all happened shortly after 2 p.m. Thursday on Painted Leaf Lane.

“My main concern is getting out, getting the baby out,” Kimberly Effert tells WINK News.

There was little time for her to think when she woke up from a nap with her three year old daughter and realized she was choking from smoke.

“I turned around, I grabbed her and ran out the front door. Got on my cell phone right away and called 911.”

The smoke was coming from a fire in her garage, a fire that officials are calling suspicious.

“They said that they smelled some type of gas, and they said it looked like someone was trying to get in the garage,” Effert says of her conversations with investigators.

She also mentions they say her house fire looks like the work of an amateur, compared to the previous four fires which may have been committed by someone more experienced.

The Fire Marshal is investigating.

Arsonist strikes again in Golden Gate

Crooks strike at home wired for surveillance

LEE COUNTY, Fla – A walk behind the home of 15 year old Pablo Batista and you can see how a group of thieves were able to break into his family’s home Friday afternoon.

“The door was there and they threw a rock at it made a hole and got it”, he said. ?

Surveillance video shows a car pulling up in broad daylight and seconds later two men stepped out and walked toward the house just off Metro Parkway and Dabney Street.

Once inside Pablo says the crooks ransacked a closet before making off with a 20-gauge shotgun. You can see the weapon being put into the trunk of the getaway car.

One of the crooks is later seen running out onto the street as an accomplice makes another trip back inside the house.

A flat-screen television was also swiped from the kitchen.

Crooks strike at home wired for surveillance

PHOTOS Agencies helping home-bound seniors struggle to find volunteer drivers

Belva Padgett, left, of Naples, a volunteer with the Dr. Piper Center for Social Services, helps Bill Blackney, III, right, also of Naples, grocery shop at Publix  supermarket in Naples. Padgett volunteers to help around a half dozen residents in the Goodlette Arms apartment complex go to the grocery store and hair salon, attend their medical appointments and tackle other daily chores throughout the week.  Local nonprofits in southwest Florida have been paralyzed by volunteer shortages and struggle to meet the growing demand of needs seniors who have limited mobility. Tristan Spinski/Staff

Photo by TRISTAN SPINSKI // Buy this photo

Belva Padgett, left, of Naples, a volunteer with the Dr. Piper Center for Social Services, helps Bill Blackney, III, right, also of Naples, grocery shop at Publix supermarket in Naples. Padgett volunteers to help around a half dozen residents in the Goodlette Arms apartment complex go to the grocery store and hair salon, attend their medical appointments and tackle other daily chores throughout the week. Local nonprofits in southwest Florida have been paralyzed by volunteer shortages and struggle to meet the growing demand of needs seniors who have limited mobility. Tristan Spinski/Staff

Nearly a dozen Southwest Florida senior citizen service providers, including nonprofits, churches and for-profit businesses, agreed that growing numbers of low-income elderly people are becoming more isolated as transportation and companionship services grasp for volunteers.


It took the death of a friend to make Norman Schreiber think about his own legacy.

While attending a funeral several years ago in Boca Raton, Schreiber listened as his deceased friend’s two sons delivered eulogies that celebrated their father’s life. The man had owned several nightclubs and was a financial success. He gave back to his community. He was a devoted husband and father.

“A big macher” or “big shot,” said Schreiber, 69, of North Fort Myers.

“I thought: ‘God. What will they say about me? Here’s Norman. Open and shut the coffin,’” Schreiber said.

So Schreiber and his wife, Adrienne, decided to spend their time with home-bound senior citizens.

Last year, they met Beverly McLaughlin, 80, of North Fort Myers, through the Lee County Senior Friendship Centers ­­— a nonprofit dedicated to improving the quality of life for elderly people.

Now they run errands together, go out for breakfast, even take McLaughlin’s cat to the vet. They give McLaughlin mobility and companionship in a world that is difficult to navigate when you’re 80, partially deaf and have a difficult time walking.

While McLaughlin has a success story, she is one of the lucky few. Throughout Southwest Florida, nonprofits that help the elderly find themselves in a volunteer crisis.

Nearly a dozen Southwest Florida senior citizen service providers, including nonprofits, churches and for-profit businesses, agreed that growing numbers of low-income elderly people are becoming more isolated as transportation and companionship services grasp for volunteers.

Nancy Green-Irwin, executive director of the Senior Friendship Center in Fort Myers, said her organization has more than 600 people on a waiting list for its services.

“There are a lot of great services, but it doesn’t even scratch the need,” said Sarah Owen, chief executive of Community Cooperative Ministries in Fort Myers.

Green-Irwin said the recent closing of Faith in Action, a transportation-providing subsidiary of Community Cooperative Ministries in Fort Myers, has compounded an already overwhelming need for volunteers. Because the Senior Friendship Center is a multifaceted senior service provider and doesn’t specialize in transportation specifically, people who just need rides are put at the bottom of the waiting list.

Sarah Owen, chief executive of Community Cooperative Ministries in Fort Myers, which used to operate Faith in Action, said her organization had to cancel its transportation program several months ago because it couldn’t obtain liability insurance.

Owen said the organization now has moved to a “facilitative role” in which it refers senior citizens who need rides to other providers in the area.

“There are a lot of great services, but it doesn’t even scratch the need,” Owen said.

And the widening void of transportation options, Owen said, affects people’s independence, dignity and health.

According to Owen, elderly people become at-risk when nobody checks up on them regularly. This degrades the quality of life — an extra day without grocery shopping, the house falling into disrepair and not addressing problems until they become emergencies.

These issues are difficult to address because home-bound seniors are hidden behind closed doors, Owen said. It’s not like driving past a soup kitchen and seeing a line of people in need of help, she said.

The “neighbors helping neighbors” dynamic is what makes these volunteer programs so valuable, as opposed to the elderly relying solely on public transportation, Owen said.

Though public transportation options seem like the remedy for nonprofit volunteer shortages, waiting at the bus stop can deter frail senior citizens, co-payments for door-to-door service can add up, and traversing the bureaucracy of Medicaid and other government programs can be demoralizing. This process can be so frustrating that many seniors give up and retreat into seclusion.

Though public transportation options seem like the remedy for nonprofit volunteer shortages, waiting at the bus stop can deter frail senior citizens, co-payments for door-to-door service can add up, and traversing the bureaucracy of Medicaid and other government programs can be demoralizing.

Gary Bryant, president and CEO of Good Wheels, a nonprofit organization in Fort Myers that provides transportation to people who can’t provide service for themselves, said his company’s budget depends on state and federal funding and already is operating at capacity of serving 500 clients a day.

“There’s a tremendous need for our services and the funding doesn’t match the demand,” Bryant said.

Bryant said he wishes he could find 50 volunteers to free up his 50 paid drivers, so that 50 more people in need would be able to use his service. But in the case of Good Wheels, Bryant said, dependable volunteers have been difficult, if not impossible, to find.

Jonnie Eason, the senior companionship director of the Dr. Ella Piper Center based in Fort Myers, a nonprofit that caters to the needs of low-income elderly people in six counties throughout Southwest Florida, said her organization is in desperate need of volunteers to give seniors companionship and mobility.

Eason pointed to Belva Padgett, a 75-year-old volunteer with the Dr. Piper Center who lives in Goodlette Arms, an affordable housing community for senior citizens in Naples.

Padgett helps five clients through the Dr. Piper Center – giving them rides to the grocery store, the hair salon and medical appointments. She also shops for several home-bound residents in the complex who are too sick to venture out.

“I moved here to a little, one-bedroom. There wasn’t anything to do,” Padgett said. “You can’t clean all day. I like to be around people … I love people.”

Padgett said that volunteering to help her friends and neighbors allows them to maintain a certain degree of independence and gives her something productive to do with her day.

Margarette Rice, 77, who lives in the same apartment complex as Padgett, said that after nine strokes and an ongoing battle with diabetes, she depends on Padgett weekly to get to medical appointments and for grocery shopping.

“She’s my guardian angel,” Rice said about Padgett. “A person like me would be lost without her.”

Back in North Fort Myers, Martha Scott, 74, a retired caregiver and neighbor of McLaughlin, said that her friend is lucky to have found companionship with the Schreibers.

Scott used to secure transportation through Faith in Action and praised the organization for the help it gave her.

“It’s demeaning,” said Martha Scott, 74, a retired caregiver. “You feel like you’re begging. And no senior should feel like they’re begging.”

“They had heart,” Scott said.

It wasn’t just the transportation, Scott said, it also was friendships that developed between clients and volunteers. One of the volunteers used to sit with her for hours as she received medication injections into her eyes to slow her encroaching blindness.

The volunteer, she said, had the same condition, only in much earlier stages.

In a way, they helped each other through the ordeal, Scott said.

Scott now depends on an electric cart to get around. It can be scary, she said, because she is blind in one eye and losing sight in the other.

The worst part, she said, is “not being able to see the traffic coming at you so you’re not too sure when you’re crossing the street.”

When it comes to venturing farther out, Scott said, she feels like she’s being a nuisance to have to ask friends and neighbors for a ride.

“It’s demeaning,” Scott said. “You feel like you’re begging. And no senior should feel like they’re begging.”

And this is what bothers Scott the most — elderly people who have lived full lives, raised families, fought wars — being stripped of their dignity as they scrounge for scraps of independence.

She points to the bigger issue of a general disregard for elderly people and their value to society.

“It leaves us feeling worthless when we can’t find a ride … even to the grocery store,” Scott said.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

PHOTOS Agencies helping home-bound seniors struggle to find volunteer drivers

Republican Marco Rubio makes campaign stop in Southwest Florida

ESTERO, Fla.- Governor Charlie Crist and Democrat Kendrick Meek still face an uphill battle against Republican Marco Rubio in the polls for the U.S. Senate race. Saturday, the Former Florida House Speaker brought his campaign to Southwest Florida.

A warm welcome for Republican Marco Rubio- Southwest Florida supporters packed an Estero restaurant to listen in on the candidate’s outlook on the Senate race.

“This election is literally a referendum on the our identity as a people, and our identity as a country,” Rubio said Saturday.

Rubio talked to the packed house about one of the toughest issues facing Florida and the nation: unemployment.

“Jobs and economic growth is created by everyday people, who start a business or expand an existing business. The job of government is to create an environment where people are encouraged to do that, where we make it easier for people to grow businesses, not harder,” Rubio said.

Some protestors also showed up for the rally, voicing their concerns on Rubio’s tough stance on U.S. border control. But supporters say Rubio has what it takes to tackle the tough issues.

“I’ve been laid off twice, so I know exactly where people are coming from. We need someone who will fight for us and fight hard,” Rubio-supporter Mary Gagnon said at the rally.

Rubio says that’s exactly what he plans to do.

“This election’s a pretty straight forward one. If you like the way things are going in Washington, I’m probably not your candidate. But if you want your next US Senator to be someone who will go to Washington, DC stand up to the direction their taking our country and offer an alternative, I’m the only one running who will do that,” Rubio told WINK News.

Marco Rubio will continue campaigning in Southwest Florida on Saturday. After the Estero event, his campaign planned a stop at the Fort Myers Gun Show at the Lee Civic Center.

Republican Marco Rubio makes campaign stop in Southwest Florida

Only on WINK: Animals services rescue cats from home

NORTH FORT MYERS, Fla – Lee County Animal Services spent a greater part of Saturday trying to round up dozens of cats and dogs hoarded in a home.

The corner of Kindly Road and Ridgeway drive was the site of a heartbreaking case of animal abuse. Animal control removed 9 dogs and cats from a house.

Officers say the animals were living in filth and were malnourished. Two cats were in such bad shape they? were found dead in a driveway and the front yard of the house.

Neighbors tell WINK News a woman lives at the home and was known to feed dozens of stray cats. At least 6 cats could be seen jumping from fence-to-fence and up a tree.

No criminal charges were filed against the animal’s owners though Animal Control says that could change once their investigation is completed.

We do want to warn you the video you are about to see is disturbing.

Only on WINK: Animals services rescue cats from home

Death Investigation in Fort Myers

Deputies have been at a home near the intersection of Moody and Pondella in Ft. Myers after they received a call from friends of a man asking for police to check his welfare.

Now police are swarming the area and the crime unit is taking video outside of his house. They are not saying if the death appears to be suspicious.

Friends tell us it’s an 83 year old man who was in great shape, and loved to fix up boats in his spare time.

WINK knows the mans name, but is not releasing it because police say his family has not been notified.

Death Investigation in Fort Myers

San Carlos Park couple accused of lying about car being stolen

A San Carlos Park couple who told deputies their car was stolen were arrested Sunday night after deputies discovered the man had crashed it, causing it to overturn and catch fire.

Brett Robert Clark, 38, and Riki Jo Russeau, 37, both of the 9000 block of Tangelo Road, were each charged with reporting a false statement to law enforcement. Clark was also charged with leaving the scene of a crash. Bond information for Russeau was not available, but Clark’s was set at $3,500. Both remained in Jail Monday. They are not married but are girlfriend/boyfriend.

According to Lee County Sheriff’s Office reports:

About 6:15 p.m. Sunday, deputies were sent to Murcott Drive East and Mandarin Road in San Carlos Park where witnesses said the only person in the car fled toward Pineapple Road. One witness, Tom Fitzgerald, followed him, saw him go into the Tangelo Road house, and re-emerge wearing different clothing.

Meantime another deputy went to the house where Russeau, the car’s owner, told deputies they had just returned home from the beach. They took the children into the house, leaving the keys in the car. A few minutes later the car was stolen, the couple said. It is not clear how many children were in the house.

A crash investigation showed the car, a 2000 Buick Regal, was traveling south at a high rate of speed and failed to make a curve in the road. It crashed into a concrete culvert, overturned and caught fire. Damage was estimated at $5,000.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

San Carlos Park couple accused of lying about car being stolen