Rick's Blog

Daily Outtakes: Hard Look at ECSD

Warrington Prep Academy Update

Last week, I met with Warrington Prep Principal Dr. Erica Foster and tour the former Warrington Middle School to see the vast improvements made in the past month since Charter USA Schools took over the property.

Why this matters: The filth left by former principal Denny Wilson and the school district has been cleaned up – new floors, cafeteria flooring, landscaping and a/c filters, plus windows tinted, walls painted and bathrooms scrubbed and graffiti removed.

Dig Deeper: The Escambia County School District has seven elementary, one middle and one high school on the state’s low-performing list. Several have been on the list for several years – pre-pandemic and pre-Dr. Tim Smith.

Are the Escambia County School Board and its administration able to turn around any of these schools? Or should we ask Charter Schools USA to take them over, too?

LOW-PERFORMING SCHOOLS & THEIR GRADES FOR PAST SEVEN YEARS

ENSLEY ELEMENTARY – Five D’s, One C since 2015
MONTCLAIR ELEMENTARY – Two F’s, Two D’s, One C, One B
OAKCREST ELEMENTARY – One F, Three D’s, Two C’s
SHERWOOD ELEMENTARY – Four D’s, Two C’s
WARRINGTON ELEMENTARY – Two F’s, Two D’s, Two C’s
REINHARDT HOLM ELEMENTARY – Five D’s, One C’s
GLOBAL LEARNING ACADEMY – Four D’s, Two C’s
BELLVIEW MIDDLE – Four D’s, Two C’s
PINE FOREST HIGH – Three D’s, Three C’s

History shows the Escambia County School Board and its administration – with or without an elected superintendent – cannot turn around a failing school.


Okaloosa County Lands 350 Jobs

Central Moloney, Inc., (“CMI”) headquartered in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, announced the selection of Okaloosa County for a new, state-of-the-art manufacturing facility that will specialize in producing pad-mounted electrical transformers.

Why this matters: The new manufacturing facility is being built Okaloosa County’s Shoal River Gigasite located – over 10,500 Acres, with 6,850 Acres North of I-10 and 3,650 Acres South of I-10.


Dig Deeper:
FloridaWest is behind on the infrastructure development of The Bluffs and OLF-8. However, this deal shows there is demand in Northwest Florida for manufacturing facilities.


Kudos to Dr. Meadows

The Florida College System Council of Presidents announced that Pensacola State College President Dr. C. Edward Meadows has been voted in as its next chair.

Dr. Meadows is Pensacola State College’s sixth president and has held the position since 2008.

Meadows is a past chair of the COP and returns to the role as Pasco-Hernando State College President Dr. Timothy Beard prepares for retirement. Beard will continue working with COP as the Honorary Chair until his retirement.

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