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This Week in History

Posted 7/18/24

Five years ago, 2019 School Board Member Janice Kerekes urged the school board to sue the Board of County Commissioners. This was in response to the BCC denying the school board's request to hold a …

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This Week in History


Posted

Five years ago, 2019

  • School Board Member Janice Kerekes urged the school board to sue the Board of County Commissioners. This was in response to the BCC denying the school board's request to hold a special election, which if approved by the voters, would have added a $300 million sales tax for maintenance and repairs on school buildings. The BCC ended up winning the lawsuit. 
  • Two suspects in a drive-by shooting were apprehended after their car ran out of gas near the Clay/Duval county line. Kenneth McCombs and Justus Harper allegedly fired seven bullets into a home on Tanglewood Boulevard. 
  • FEMA awarded more than $3.1 million for debris removal reimbursement for Clay County following Hurricane Irma. The massive 2017 storm was blamed for 134 deaths and $77.2 billion in damage – $50 billion in the U.S.

10 years ago, 2014

  • The inaugural CalaVida art festival was approved and planned in Green Cove Springs. "CalaVida" means "Cove Life."
  • With the onset of recent heavy rainfall, the South Prong of Black Creek was determined to be at a minor flood-stage level. 
  • For the first time, Clay County commissioners paved the way for a potential property tax hike by approving a tentative maximum property tax rate of 8.4583 mills for the 2014-15 fiscal year.

20 years ago, 2004

  • Clay County Sheriff’s Office corrections officer Jason Bishop was arrested by the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office and charged with allegedly selling cocaine to informants two different times.
  • Three homes in Argyle, Middleburg and Lake Asbury suffered fire damages sparked by afternoon lightning from a thunderstorm.
  • Clay County Sheriff’s Office deputies turned down a measure to unionize by a margin of 67 percent voting no and 33 percent voting yes.

30 years ago, 1994

  • The Florida Department of Education awarded one of three $15,000 grants to Middleburg High School to bolster its Community-Based Instruction Program for students with intellectual and physical disabilities.
  • The Clay County Sheriff’s Office charged Moody Wayne Collins Jr. of Keystone Heights with attempted first-degree murder with a firearm after shooting his 13-year-old son in the face with a .22-caliber rifle.
  • Clay County Sheriff’s Deputy Christopher Dangerfield was treated for minor injuries at University Medical Center in Jacksonville after he was struck by a car on Longbay Road in Middleburg.

40 years ago, 1984

  • The Clay County Board of Commissioners approved a site plan to build a new clinic for the Clay County Health Department on Deer Run Boulevard off of Blanding Boulevard. The facility was expected to cost $167,000.
  • Clay County School Superintendent Jesse P. Tynes Jr. asked school board members to study a proposal extending the school day to seven, 50-minute periods in the wake of a state law offering school districts incentives for extending the school day.
  • Fleming Island insurance agent Robert Larsen went on trial for allegedly killing his 48-year-old wife, Jacqueline Larsen.

50 years ago, 1974

  • Homeowners turned out at an Orange Park Town Council meeting to protest having large amounts of sand show up in their city-ran drinking water supply.
  • The Florida Pollution Control Department gave the owners of Wright’s Dairy 10 days to correct the pollution. The agency said the dairy dumped into Peter’s Creek along County Road 315.
  • Green Cove Springs City Council approved spending $16,500 for a study to determine the feasibility of generating its electricity and breaking away from its current provider, the Jacksonville Electric Authority.