Commissioner Grover C. Robinson, IV
Letter to the Editor
I was at a funeral earlier this week and the speaker made a comment about this area that is so true. He said, “in Northwest Florida we would rather fight over pennies than work together for dollars.â€
This is a very true statement and it explains much of the controversy that the Escambia Board of County Commissioners (BCC) heard at its February 6, 2014, Public Forum related to the Extension Service and its relationship with 4-H.
Since the sale of the Matt Langley Bell 4-H property, an internal struggle within the Extension Service (IFAS) has occurred. The question is whether to build a building at the current Stefani Road property or invest that money in land and buildings further to the north of our county closer to its agricultural roots.
Both sides have come to the BCC claiming that they represent the children and that the other side is wrong and ultimately the BCC is wrong unless it does what they want. Having listened to both sides the challenge is they both have validity, standing and a future in the success of Escambia County. However, they seem incapable or perhaps unwilling to work together for a mutual solution.
The Extension Service, a joint participation by Escambia County and the University of Florida under IFAS, provides significant services to the community, both the traditional ag as well as other environmental services for the greater community. The challenges are, while our traditional agriculture based in the northern two-thirds of this county, the other services provided create benefits to the 80 percent of the population that lives below Nine Mile Road.
One side represents more traditional agrarian services such as 4-H in growing livestock for show and agricultural needs. The other side of this argument is the group that provides environmental and horticultural services to the urban core of our community otherwise known as Master Gardeners. Both groups serve a vital position within the Extension Services and within Escambia County.
Unfortunately, both want to control the future of IFAS and the proceeds that came from the sale of the Matt Langley Bell Center. Unfortunately, in doing so they have turned on each other and they both seek a political resolution created by the BCC. Let me be clear not only are both groups necessary to Escambia County, both groups are represented by honorable people who I greatly enjoyed getting to know through this process that I wish I could bring together for a solution.
On one side you have people like Jacob Gilmore who absolutely in his heart simply wants to make our community a leader in those areas which are critical to him including raising livestock. On the other side you have individuals like Justice Ken Bell and his brother who are part of the same character as their grandfather who originally endowed our Extension Service with the assets it enjoys now.
It has been my hope for some time that both sides would work together and see there is a need for a facility such as that identified at Stefani Road for providing environmental and horticultural services to the more populated southern end of our county. At the same time it is vitally important to have livestock programs centered on a piece of land in the northern portion of our county that focuses on traditional ag programs.
Commissioner Barry plans to bring a proposal to the next Committee of the Whole. Unfortunately, a series of emails and letters have created hard feelings on both sides before we have the opportunity to really evaluate a solution.
I hope and pray over the next week that we, in Escambia County, see that if we work together we can create more than if we simply line up to fight each other. The future of Escambia County and the future of our success is based on that collaboration of being the best of what we have both our traditional agriculture in our north end and our more urbanized southern end.
If we can ever find the opportunity to work together this community has great potential. I hope the future of Extension will be that catalyst for us to realize the dollars we can create together is much more than the pennies we have fought over in the past.
Sincerely,
Grover C. Robinson, IV
Escambia County Commissioner
District 4