NewsDon Fletcher

Atmore to get portion of FAA grants
By DON FLETCHER News Staff Writer U.S. Senator Richard Shelby announced last week that 25 municipal airports across Alabama will receive a total of $60,999,054 in Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) grants. Atmore will receive a nice slice of that pie. The funding, some of which is from the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act of 2020, was awarded by the U.S. Department of Transportation for various airport improvements.…
AFD peels back roof, frees driver
The aftermath of the accident By DON FLETCHER News Staff Writer An unidentified Atmore man reportedly escaped a single-vehicle wreck with relatively minor cuts, bumps and bruises after firemen cut the roof of his vehicle and peeled it back to rescue him. Atmore Police Department reports were unavailable by Tuesday’s press deadline, so the name and age of the driver (and only occupant of the vehicle) were not immediately available.…
ECMS named Imagine Nation Beacon School
By DON FLETCHER News Staff Writer Escambia County Middle School students, who have taken to the Imagine Learning curriculum like ducks to water since it was introduced here less than four years ago, quickly earned the designation as one of the digital learning program’s Schools of Excellence. Now the school has, in a sense, graduated. In a congratulatory letter to ECMS Principal Debbie Bolden, Imagine Learning Chief Executive Officer Jeremy…
2 area deaths
Some restrictions eased as pandemic curve begins to level off By DON FLETCHER News Staff Writer Alabama of Public Health officials have watched anxiously as the COVID-19 virus has continued to be a force to be reckoned with. But, according to data released by ADPH this week, the pandemic’s “curve” seems to be flattening to some degree. The number of confirmed cases within the state has now exceeded 8,000. Health…
Rain floods city streets; winds topple trees, damage farm equipment
By DON FLETCHER News Staff Writer A storm system that moved into the Atmore area around 7:30 a.m. Thursday, April 23, dumped several inches of rain on the city, overwhelming flood-prone streets, and brought stiff winds, some apparently of the straight-line variety, that wreaked havoc on trees, farm equipment and small buildings. Still, it was another “not as bad as it could have been” storm. Over the past 16-18 months,…