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Thursday Briefing: Sheriff’s Law Enforcement Vigil, Flagler and McLaughlin Town Halls, Go Natural Walk, Chelsea Manning

May 18, 2017 | FlaglerLive | Leave a Comment

The Flagler County Sheriff holds its annual Law Enforcement Memorial ceremony, this year starting with a candlelight vigil at the Flagler County Courthouse, then walking to the Sheriff's Operations Center. See below. (© FlaglerLive)
The Flagler County Sheriff holds its annual Law Enforcement Memorial ceremony, this year starting with a candlelight vigil at the Flagler County Courthouse, then walking to the Sheriff’s Operations Center. See below. (© FlaglerLive)

Today: Mostly sunny. Highs in the mid 80s inland…in the lower 80s coast. East winds 10 to 15 mph. Tonight: Partly cloudy. Lows in the upper 60s. East winds 5 to 10 mph. Details here.
Drought Index is at 490.
Today’s tides: at the beaches, at the Intracoastal Waterway.
Today’s document from the National Archives.
The OED’s Word of the Day: Defcon, n..
The Live Community Calendar
Today’s jail bookings.

Today’s Briefing: Quick Links

  • First Light
  • In Flagler and Palm Coast
  • Flagler Jail Bookings and Sheriff’s Crime Reports
  • Announcements
  • In State Government
  • In Coming Days in Flagler, Palm Coast and Beyond
  • The Day’s Best Reads
  • Fact-Checking the Knaves
  • Palm Coast Construction and Development
  • Local Road and Interstate Construction
  • Cultural Coda


“The transformation from citizen to prisoner is terrible to behold, regardless of its justice. Unlike my sister the teacher or my brother the lawyer, I take prisoners, and to exercise that authority is to invoke a profound social trust. Each time a surgeon undertakes the responsibility of cutting open a human being, it should be awesome and new, no matter how necessary the operation, no matter how routine. A police officer who takes away someone’s freedom bears a burden of at least equal gravity. Let me tell you, it’s a pleasure sometimes.”

–Marcus Laffey, a.k.a. Edward W. Conlon, from “Cop Diary,” in The New Yorker issue of Nov. 10, 1997. who joined the New York Times as a columnist in April.

flaglerlive

In Flagler and Palm Coast:

Note: all government meetings noticed below are free and open to the public unless otherwise indicated. Many can be heard or seen live through each agency’s website.

The Sheriff’s daily incident reports and jail bookings are posted here.

Reminder: a countywide burn ban is in effect. Details here.

Flagler Town Hall Meeting hosted by the Florida Chamber Foundation at the Flagler Auditorium, 8:45 to 11 a.m. The State of Florida will welcome an additional six million residents between now and 2030 — is Flagler County prepared for this growth? You are invited to help plan the future of our community and region by participating in a Flagler Town Hall Meeting. The free event is coming to Flagler County as part of the Florida Chamber Foundation’s Florida 2030 research project. This two-year initiative has been engaging and gathering feedback from residents, business and community leaders by hosting interactive town hall meetings throughout the state. The Flagler County session will be led by Dr. Jerry Parrish, Chief Economist and Director of Research of the Florida Chamber Foundation. This is a chance to listen, learn, and share your thoughts about issues that impact Flagler County, our region and state today and in the future. The Town Hall is open to the public. If you cannot participate in this interactive session, you can listen to it live at www.wnzf.com or 106.3FM. You can also take the survey. http://www.flchamber.com/florida-2030/florida-2030-survey

Circuit Judge Dennis Craig holds Drug Court at 10 a.m. in Courtroom 401 at the Flagler County courthouse.



County Commissioner Nate McLaughlin hosts a town hall meeting at the Hidden Trails Community Center in West Flagler at 5:30 p.m. Overview of issues related to the Daytona North Community. Guest speakers include Debbie Neuman with Focus on Flagler Youth Coalition and Kim Hale with Flagler Sheriff’s Police Athletic League (PAL).

The Flagler County Sheriff’s Office holds a candlelight vigil at 7:30 p.m. at the Flagler County courthouse, followed by a walk to the Sheriff’s Operations Center at 7:45 p.m.

Go Natural Thursday Nature Walk 8:30 a.m. at Long Creek Nature Preserve, 1050 Palm Harbor Pkwy., Palm Coast. As part of the Mayor’s Healthy Community Challenge, join Palm Coast Environmental Planner Denise Bevan for a guided nature walk through the nature preserve. Free, but please sign up at www.palmcoastgov.com/healthy. More info: 386-986-2323.

The Flagler Palm Coast High School Starlets take the stage at the Flagler Auditorium at 7 p.m.

Announcements:

The Palm Coast Arts Foundation Blows Past 86% Of Its Fundraising Goal

The Palm Coast Arts Foundation is closing in on its goal to raise $50,000 to add a a roof to its big new stage at its home in Town Center. The deadline is May 19. Help them out here. And listen to an interview with Executive Director Nancy Crouch below:

Adult Basketball League, June 5 Through July

Monday and Wednesday evenings from June 5 through July, games start at 7 p.m., 8 p.m. and 9 p.m. at Buddy Taylor Middle School, 4500 Belle Terre Pkwy., Palm Coast. Register as a team for this 5-a-side style play. Ages 18+ Compete for the title of league champions and free entry into next year’s league. The league includes eight regular season games, one game played every hour, single-elimination tournament, three FHSAA certified officials per game, game equipment and prizes. Fees are $360 team/$43 free agent for Super Early Bird Registration through May 7; $400 team/$50 free agent for Early Bird Registration May 8-15; and $440 team/$56 free agent for Regular Registration May 16-June 2. Register at: www.palmcoastgov.com/register or call 386-986-2323.

In Florida and in State Government:

Note: Some proceedings below can be followed live on the Florida Channel. Most legislative proceedings can be followed through the Senate or House websites.

The University of Central Florida Board of Trustees is scheduled to meet, after holding a series of committee meetings. (Committee meetings start at 8:15 a.m., followed by full board at 1 p.m., University of Central Florida, Fairwinds Alumni Center, Orlando.)

The Florida Supreme Court is expected to release its weekly opinions at 11 a.m.

–Compiled by the News Service of Florida and FlaglerLive

 

In Coming Days in Palm Coast, Flagler and the Occasional Beyond:

♦ May 19: The latest in a series of pre-trial hearings is scheduled in the case of Kimberle Weeks, the former Supervisor of Elections who faces five felony counts (down from 12). The hearing before Circuit Court Judge Margaret Hudson, in Courtroom 402, is a status hearing to determine where lawyers are in the case, and whether a trial date may be set.
♦ May 19: Kayaking College Waterway, 8:30 a.m. at Long Creek Nature Preserve, 1050 Palm Harbor Pkwy., Palm Coast. As part of the Mayor’s Healthy Community Challenge, join Palm Coast Digital Communications Coordinator Jason Giraulo on a kayaking trip along College Waterway. Free, but please sign up at www.palmcoastgov.com/healthy. More info: 386-986-2323.
♦ May 19: Lunch N’ Lecture Series, 11 a.m.-12:30 p.m. at Palm Coast City Hall, 160 Lake Ave: Palm Coast Astronomy Club member and volunteer NASA Solar System Ambassador Lee Bentzley will talk about the total solar eclipse coming Aug. 21. Lee will define what an eclipse is and tell how to protect your eyes while viewing this once-in-a-lifetime event. The lecture and lunch are free, but pre-registration is required (while space available) by 11 a.m. May 17: www.palmcoastgov.com/register. More info: 386-986-2323.
♦ May 20: Walk with the Mayor, 9 a.m. at Central Park, 975 Central Ave., Palm Coast. As part of the Mayor’s Healthy Community Challenge, join Palm Coast Mayor Milissa Holland for a walk around Central Park and Town Center. Meet at the main stage area at the Central Avenue front entrance. Free, but please sign up in advance at www.palmcoastgov.com/healthy. More info: 386-986-2323.
♦ May 20: First Aid and CPR/AED Class, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. at Frieda Zamba Swimming Pool classroom 339 Parkview Ave., Palm Coast. This class is a 7-hour course (one hour for lunch) designed to meet OSHA regulations and teach administering CPR to children and adults, using an Automated External Defibrillator (AED), using a mask or barrier device, assisting with bleeding, broken bones. $5/person with pre-registration required by 9 a.m. May 18. Sign up at www.palmcoastgov.com/cpr. More info: cprcertification@palmcoastgov.com or 386-986-2300.
♦ May 23: The The Flagler County NAACP holds its monthly meeting with a special guest speaker, James M. Sharpe Jr., father of Linda Sharpe Matthews, the current president of the NAACP. James M. Sharpe Jr., former Montford Point Marine, a founder of the African American Cultural Society, former AACS chairman of the board and former president, and a former NAACP executive member, will speak on African-American history. 6 p.m. at the African American Cultural Society, 4422 North U.S. 1, Palm Coast. For further details, contact the NAACP at 386-446-7822 or Jeroline D. McCarthy, Chairman, Press and Publicity Committee, 386-437-5142.
♦ May 25: Go Natural Thursday Birding Walk, 8:30 a.m. at Linear Park, 31 Greenway Court, Palm Cosat. As part of the Mayor’s Healthy Community Challenge, join Palm Coast Digital Communications Coordinator Jason Giraulo for a guided bird walk. Free, but please sign up at www.palmcoastgov.com/healthy. More info: 386-986-2323.
♦ May 26-28: Country 500 2017, also called “The Great American Music Fest at Daytona,” featuring the biggest stars in country music spread over three days and nights, programmed on three huge performance stages-all specially designed and built for the festival. Country 500 will take place on the infield of the world-famous Daytona International Speedway, allowing fans to actually camp out in the infield.
♦ May 27: Wine Walk: Explore interesting wines inside and outside host locations and walk Flagler Avenue in New Smyrna Beach from 1-7 p.m. During the progressive event, taste your choice of more than 100 showcased wines. Wine tasting passports are $25 and are available at the corner of Flagler Avenue and Peninsula Avenue, at the corner of Flagler Avenue and Cooper Street, or at the corner of S. Atlantic and Flagler Avenue. Passports include 20 tasting tickets and a keepsake wine glass. Some locations feature both one- and multi-ticket wines to sample. Those who want to share their 20 tasting tickets with a friend may get an additional wine glass for $5.
flagler county democratic executive committee♦ June 1: Palm Coast Democratic Club Meeting at the African American Cultural Center on U.S. 1, Palm Coast. Guest speaker is Reverend Harry Parrott. The subject: Separation of Church and State, here in Florida and in America. Rev. Parrott has served on the National Leadership Council and National Advisory Councils of Americans United for many years. He was a plaintiff in at least two cases against the Governor of Florida in lawsuits to protect the separation of church and state. He is an excellent speaker. Meet and greet social is at 6:30, meeting at 7 p.m. Email palmcoastdemocraticclub@gmail.com for information.
♦ June 2: A free showing of “Voiceless,” a Christian movie in opposition to abortion, is scheduled for showing at 6:30 p.m. at Santa Maria del Mar Church, 915 N. Central Ave, Flagler Beach, in either the Fellowship Hall or the Church, depending on the response. Light refreshments will be served. Please call either Elaine Torma, 407-227-4198, or Duane or Janice Berreth, 386-597-2344, to register or if you have any questions. Caution: the event is organized as a partisan rejection of abortion as an option, not merely as an informational showing, and will feature a “mobile sonogram” unit and the participation of sectarian organizations that provide Christian-based counseling against abortion. (“We do not wish to have any negative publicity as part of this event and running it with that caveat would certainly open us up to that,” Torma wrote.) The movie has not been controversial so much as unpopular: Since its release in October, it has grossed just over $400,000. “Voiceless,” one reviewer wrote, “may be atypical of evangelical Christian movies in some ways, but it is further evidence of what Saturday Night Live and I have observed, which is that such films have grown positively uninterested in offering anything to audiences who don’t already share their beliefs.”
♦ June 3: Sample craft beers along historic canal street. in New Smirna Beach from 1 to 7 p.m. Tickets are $20 and include a six-ounce Canal Street souvenir glass and 12 sampling tickets that can be redeemed at 10 locations in the district.  The walk is held on the first Saturday of each month. For more information, go here.
♦ June 3: Art Stroll and Gallery Walk, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.: Artistic vendors set up along the historic Canal Street in New Smyrna Beach. Musical artists play from 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. in Christmas Park, 101 Live Oak Street. Galleries feature solo and group exhibitions and artist talks in the Douglas Avenue area of the district and at the Hub from 4-8 p.m. Admission is free.

The Day’s Best Reads:

It is difficult to overstate the significance of @xychelsea's revelations. Now she is a free woman. https://t.co/VKE5ccH8nM

— The Intercept (@theintercept) May 17, 2017

Sen. John McCain: Trump scandals have reached "Watergate size and scale." https://t.co/UWoq54emJb pic.twitter.com/CG1OqrEa0v

— CNN International (@cnni) May 17, 2017

One byproduct of the 1927 Mississippi River flood: the start of the literary careers of Faulkner and Richard Wright https://t.co/4JrbAcEsJN

— Arts & Letters Daily (@aldaily) May 13, 2017

How far could North Korea's missiles reach? https://t.co/xXnMkKxn9F pic.twitter.com/1ME2AM3OOo

— Al Jazeera English (@AJEnglish) May 17, 2017

Top 10 novels about Pakistan https://t.co/RTBLVlAmh2

— The Guardian (@guardian) May 17, 2017

What have Roseanne Barr, John Goodman and the rest of the cast been up to? https://t.co/cWC93qHyHp

— BBC News (UK) (@BBCNews) May 17, 2017

A Twitter List by PierreTristam

Palm Coast Construction and Development Progress Reports

The following is an update of ongoing permitting, construction and development projects in Palm Coast, through May 12 (the city administration’s full week in review is here):

Click to access week-in-review-may-12-20171.pdf

Road and Interstate Construction:

  • Florida Department of Transportation Road Project List

Cultural Coda:

Chopin: 24 Etudes for Piano Op.10 , Op 25, Lukas Genjušas, Piano

Previous Codas:

  • Bach’s St. Anne Fugue, BWV 552, Performed by Diane Bush on the Organ
  • Alike: The Best Short Film Ever
  • Fauré’s Requiem, Performed by the Ensemble Orchestral de Paris, Choeur Accentus
  • Arthur Rubinstein Performs Saint-Saëns’s Piano Concerto No 2 in G minor, Op 22
  • Mendelssohn’s Symphony No. 5, Reformation: Jérémie Rhorer Conducts the Frankfurt Radio Symphony Orchestra
  • C.P.E. Bach Keyboard Sonata in F sharp minor, Wq 52 4
  • Boccherini: Quintet with Guitar G 448 D-Major
  • Jean-Baptiste Poyard Performs Telemann’s Violin Fantasia n°1
  • Eudora Welty Reads “A Worn Path”
  • Francis Poulenc at the piano
  • Antonin Dvořák: Romance for Violin and Orchestra performed by Tanja Sonc
  • Joseph Haydn’s Symphony Nr. 66 in F major, Herbert Blomstedt, cond.
  • Sarah Chang Plays Elgar’s Damn Romantic Salut d’amour, Op. 12
  • Beethoven: Symphony No. 7, Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Iván Fischer, cond.
  • Rimsky-Korsakov, Russian Easter Festival Overture, Op. 36
  • Händel: Keyboard Suite HWV 428, Daria van den Bercken, piano
  • Haydn: Piano Trio No. 39 in G major Hob. XV/25
  • Mozart: Ave Verum Corpus, Leonard Bernstein
  • What is McCarthyism? And how did it happen?
  • The Corrs: Toss the Feathers
  • Peter Falk’s Acceptance Speech for 1972 Emmy, for Colombo
  • How Did Beethoven Compose His 9th Symphony After He Went Completely Deaf?
  • Ray Chen Performs Mendelssohn’s Violin Concerto in E minor, Op. 64
  • The Well Tempered Clavier, Book 1,HJ Lim, Piano
  • Alicia de Larrocha plays Two Spanish Dances By Granados
  • Comparone Plays a Scarlatti Sonata
  • C. A. de Beriot, scene de Ballet, Daniel Shindarov, violin, Sergey Silvanskiy, piano
  • Johnny Cash: Sunday Morning Coming Down
  • Cinema Paradiso: The Main Theme
  • Duke Ellington’s Take the A Train
  • The Temptations and the Four Tops in a Motown Medley
  • Sheku Kanneh-Mason Performs Leonard Cohen’s “Hallelujah,” Arranged By Tom Hodge
  • Alessandro Marcello’s Oboe Concerto
  • Isaac Albéniz, Suite Iberia, Félix Ardanaz, piano
  • Johannes Ockeghem: Ave Maria
  • Cimarosa’s Oboe Concerto, François Leleux and the City Chamber Orchestra of Hong Kong
  • Eubie Blake in Berlin, 1972, Plays Charleston Rag
  • John Eliot Gardiner Conducts Three Bach Cantatas: BWV 113, BWV 179 and BWV 199
  • David Letterman: The First Show, Feb. 1, 1982
  • Roy Eldridge, 1957
  • Art Blakey and The Jazz Messengers: A Night In Tunisia (1958)
  • T. Paige: Put The God Things First (sic.)
  • Dick Cavett Interviews Janis Joplin, Gloria Swanson, Margot Kidder, Dave Meggyesy

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