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My Outtakes covers the new interest from the developers in OLF-8

From the article: Four years ago, a lot of effort was put into making people believe that the county’s purchase of OLF 8 in Beulah was a boondoggle. Today, the county appears to be on the receiving side of a bidding war that could net the taxpayers a profit of more than $20 million while still meeting the goals for the site. Read From Boondoggle to Boon.

Commissioner Jeff Bergosh this morning shared the latest on the bidding war.


The cover is the story behind the Celestine Bed & Breakfast and its owners. The history of this Pensacola family is rich. This will be an article that people will be discussing over the weekend.

From the article:  If people are right, and it truly takes a village, Cornelia and Gerald certainly had one. They grew up in a small-town version of Pensacola where everybody—no hyperbole—knew everybody.

Their immediate family lived on B Street first, then E Street next, with great-grandparents on H Street, a great-aunt and uncle on G Street, and grandparents on their father’s side on I Street. And her parents might summon anyone in their alphabet soup to chauffeur them to their next ballet rehearsal or sports practice.

The proximity served them in support, always besting other students with the biggest—sometimes loudest—cheering section at concerts, games and graduations.

Read Peeling Back the Layers of The Celestine Bed and Breakfast.

And there’s more on inweekly.net.

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