Fort myers Web Layout & Development

If you are looking for an innovative web site layout that generates buzz inside your niche market just for for its cutting edge appearance, CommunitySEO’s internet design service is precisely what you need. Our team of seasoned web designers service the entire Naples, Fort Myers, and Southwest Florida location. Our team of developers offers a complete repertoire of net design services that consist of:

* custom design for the brand new websites;
* integration of Content Management Program, forums, blogs, control panels, photo galleries, custom programming  for enhancing client expertise;
* narrow or extended internet design interventions to your existing online genuine estates;

So why exactly should you take into account our service?

For starters, we supply probably the most competitive service packages in Florida’s net design market location. And this comes with figuring out the precise cost tag for the intervention even before starting the project – we really ought to point out that there are no further fees or up-sell along the way. We trust our customers commitment and character. For that cause the upfront payment for sealing our agreement will probably be kept to a symbolic figure as compared to the final price of the project.

You’re the 1 setting the project standards. We will manage all the technical particulars with guaranteed professionalism, regardless of how massive or modest your requirements are. Tell us what you’ll need and will deliver the end outcome. For which you have in place a detail initial project assessment chart exactly where you fill in all the particulars you care about, which includes your out there budget. Our consumer support will analyze your input and provide you with a realistic feedback when it comes to cost – project’s extent ratio.

Advanced marketing knowledge. In other words we know what works and what doesn’t in terms of customer friendly web design. As a matter of reality 86% of our orders revolve around building from scratch and enhancing websites that sell products and services. As you almost certainly know having a website up and running doesn’t guarantee great conversion margins even when they rank within the very first #5 positions in SERPs. Our combined 16 years knowledge in the field of on the internet marketing and internet development qualifies us to almost certainly challenge some of your suggestions about how your new or existing website really should look like from a merchantability standpoint. So refrain your conjecture and reap the benefits of our built in marketing advice integrated for totally free in the designing process.

Flexibility. If there is a thing we can completely and realistically brag about then this will need to be our work flexibility. In other words we’re not afraid  or reluctant to any seconds thoughts you may be hit by along the way, as your new website look takes form. Just shoot us an e-mail pointing precisely what you what to be changed or reconsidered within your web page design and we’ll get back to you with the out there alternatives. Take note ! Ongoing adjustments inside your site’s common design frame work is not going to alter the bill we initially agreed upon and due toe payed upon delivery. If, by exception, extra fees need to be added – only imposed by objective expenses our developers need to created – you’ll know about that prior to making the determination of whether or not to go along with your hunches.

Ongoing help. Each and every client we do organization with becomes a friend and lengthy term partner whom will help and serve as very best as probable even following product delivery and bills are paid. So you’ve got your self a brand new web site or redesign for the current web page. Do you know the best way to implement or exploit those new features to the fullest? Our support expands beyond designing phase and  goes to setting up your internet site and teaching you how to use it.

Another discrete touch of professionalism that sets apart our net design service from all of the competitors in Naples and Fort Myers area, is our buyer support department who’s only meaning is to preserve the communication flowing between you and our designing workers. With this exclusive department your questions and concerns are answered in in between 1 to 2 hours from submission. Sadly this won’t w happen throughout the weekend, when the waiting instances are prolonged up till 8 o’clock, Monday morning.

To prove our 100% transparency let’s tackle some of the downfalls of our designing service.

After all as the wide majority of web development businesses on the market, we too need to be hiding a number of skeletons within the closet, appropriate? Properly, not really. All those not so brand lifting aspects of our small business are brought to light within the upcoming section.

In reality, the cause we can afford such advantageous cost ranges is for the reason that we actually shoot to kill as they say  – our policy is to have every prospect customer comprehend and asses our strong and most importantly downfalls of our services before he makes the decision of no matter whether or not he appoints us with the job of building/redesigning/customizing their web-site.

So that are the elements of our organization u might contemplate disadvantageous:

Our, internet developers delight in spending time with their families , so the weekly operating hours is set to 40, from Monday by way of Friday from 8 to four PM. Any have to have for feedback outside this time frame will definitely go unresponded.
Finish product is delivered only following the full payment is created. The world wide web is really a huge place and  that’s our only insurance that our work will likely be compensated.
We don’t support a dollars back guaranteed policy. We basically are too confident about the end results we provide that our board doesn’t think about responding to refund requests either time or expense powerful. Still, this doesn’t exclude our commitment to operating with you to ensure that you’re totally satisfied using the item you paid for. The designing work is considered accepted in three days time given that delivery if additional intervention requests aren’t submitted by the beneficiary.
Our site design services packages:

Static Site Designn
Excellent for those looking for a discrete net presence that doens’t call for periodical upkeep or are limited by a small budget. Even though this isn’t probably the most efficient alternative accessible when it comes to search engine marketing and staying interactive with your visitors, our developers will make essentially the most out of your choice. Really what sets this package apart is the value tag. But with a smaller initial investment along with a loose maintenance schedule this will be the greatest option for these looking for a fundamental on the internet presence to start with.
How does it work. We initial talk about your basic expectations and purpose of the site. Then we get into additional details that include the layout, colours, fonts and pictures and based on these specifics our designers draw 2 initial mock ups for you to chose from. Naturally these 2 sketches are subjected to unlimited revisions and suggestions from your part. Finally, right after we have your approval of the mock design we then start developing and coding your internet site.

Content Management Program
This package is destined for marketers commited to grow their web based enterprise additional along the way. What we give can be a custom content management package that enables you to maintain the web page updated using the most recent trends of one’s niche.  The know-how for managing the website’s text, pictures, pages, adding/removing pages, installing blogs and forums etc., will likely be delivered along side with the CMS scripts.
JuJust to offer you an indea of the extent of our CMS design and development service here are main functions:

* Custom CMS Template Design and Creation;
* CMS Extension Creation and Modifications;
* CMS Setup, Structuring, Degugging, Repair and Upgrading;
* CMS Search engine optimization Enhancement and Ongoing Search engine optimization Services;
* Conversions to Joomla;
* CMS Component, Module and Plug-in Installation;

Ecommerce Web page Design
EcEcommerce site are and will continue to be a deep reservoir of income on the internet, specially for the search engine marketing field. But operating such a platform imposes some significant difficulties in particular for those who want it successfully competing inside the search engine results page. This activity becomes a great deal much easier if you entrust the optimization of your future/existing ecommerce web page to a team of seasoned internet developers that CommunitySEO occurs to give. Basically when our job is executed you’ll have the ability to update and add merchandise, add several images, text, prices, manage live shipping quotes, track inventory/customers, to name just a number of.

* Safe Sockets Layer (https) Integration;
* Use account management function upon registration;
* Order history overview;
* Order confirmation/notification e mail both for the consumer along with the webmaster;
* Foreign markets functions for instance: several languages, multiple currencies, Tax based on the shipping address, store owner based tax calculation for EU-based customers.

We comprehend the significance that the visual impact has on the prospect’s intention to buy and therefor we strive to create your item catalog as appealing as probable. Here are the most important functions that will aid literally place your merchandise in the spotlight:

* Javascript-powered admin interface;
* Unlimited quantity of merchandise and categories;
* Genuine time filtering by categories, cost ranges, manufacturer; show/hide value tags;
* product featuring, rating, availability display, testimonials; “product back in stock” e mail notification.

To total the consumer expertise, we present a flexible and intelligent payment and shipping method. Take a look at the functions that make this module stand out:

* Real time credit/debit card processing and integrated payment gateways (e.g. PayPal, AlertPay, 2Checkout);
* Supports other Payment Modules through the Payment Module API;
* Shipping Carriers and Rates Configuration; reside shipping rates making use of shipping modules from FedEx and InterShipper;
* Supports other Shipping Modules via the shipping Module API.

No, we didn’t overlooked to facilitate the job of running such a effective platform. To create the webmastering job simpler, we give you a comprehensive, non-geek friendly admin interface that will permit:

* Classifying merchandise by categories;
* Assigning product attributes like size and color;
* Dividing customers into shopping groups with unique payment avenues and price ranges;
* price formatting in terms or currency, quantity including/excluding taxes;
* Conversion between distinctive Currencies employing Reside Rates;
* Generating shop statistics based on new customers, orders per time frame, and so forth;
* Producing product stock level reports, order management reports and revenue charts

Redesigning Existing Websiteses

Whether or not you would like a fresh new look for the web page or a thorough reconfiguration for onsite Search engine optimization and search engine marketing reasons, our net designers will work closely with you so that your expectations come across a excellent match within your redesigned site. When the make over is carried out we guarantee that your internet site performs flawlessly in every single web browser, has a trendy eye-catching and user friendly design and gains you a competitive benefit in the market it operates in.

Web Design Fort Myers

Natural gas service in Southwest Florida was shut down Thursday because there is only one line in which to route the fuel’s flow through most of Lee and Collier counties.

When it was severed by a construction worker, it carried a multimillion-dollar price tag and sent another dagger into the hearts of business owners struggling to stay afloat in the worst recession since the Great Depression.

Graphic: Southwest Florida’s gas network
Related: Gas restored to about 500 customers

Gas, which powers everything from dryers to water heaters to residential and commercial ovens, was turned off when the main supply pipe that runs from the Caloosahatchee River in northern Lee County to Fiddler’s Creek in southern Collier County was hit by a road worker.

Lance Horton, a senior project manager with Tampa-based TECO who headed up the building of the system in the late 1990s, said Saturday alternate supply lines have not been built.

“There is yet no redundancy,” Horton said. “As systems go, this one is immature.”

Gas service to this area began in 1998.

“We don’t have ways to reroute the gas as yet,” he said. “Those will come based on customer growth.”

Horton said in older systems – such as in St. Petersburg, Tampa and Miami that have used natural gas for almost 100 years – time has allowed TECO to develop work-around routes so only small sections of homes and businesses are affected if there is a line break.

In a newly developed area such as Southwest Florida, building alternate routes where there are few customers is usually cost-prohibitive.

“Since the system is originally designed based on where the customers are located,” said TECO spokesman Rick Morera, “it is difficult and costly to build redundancy not knowing the direction of future growth.”

Area businesses continued to suffer Saturday.

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“My business was barely surviving in this grim economy,” said Mike Lavin, owner of Gulf Gate Laundry in Naples. “It is possible this shutdown will do me in.”

For some, though, better times were at hand.

Service to the company’s highest priority customers – hospitals and elder care centers – was restored Friday night. By Saturday evening, crews working 15-hour shifts, had an estimated 500 users up and running.

And Morera said “work in the Fort Myers Beach and downtown areas has gone well.”

For others, however, it could take the better part of a week before gas service resumes.

Restoring service is a complicated and lengthy process, Horton said. It includes a representative visiting each customer.

“Our goal is one visit. That’s a tough objective,” he said. “A business might be closed and we can’t get in touch with them. Or someone’s not home. That’s why it takes a week to get all the service back.”

Those visits include turning the gas off at the meter, turning it back on and reigniting a pilot light.

“We work on a mandated protocol for safety,” he said. “We don’t want our customers turning the gas on or off.”

TECO’s assault on the problem resembles, in many ways, how a utility company goes about getting the lights back on following a hurricane.

The company has set up a large staging area at its Fort Myers headquarters just west of Interstate 75 near Luckett Road. More than 200 technicians and repair personnel have come from all over Florida to help.

Horton said the trouble here has not presented insurmountable problems.

“All situations are unique,” Horton said, “and all are similar. You have different geographics, and in this situation, it is a little more difficult because our 7,200 customers are spread out across 50 miles.

“But we know what to do, and how to handle it.”

One gas line, and it was cut

Anyone who’s watched

Bill Barnett deftly dance around a controversial issue or stay on his toes looking for an opportunity to promote Naples will not be surprised to learn the mayor has been cast in a ballet.

Barnett will make a cameo appearance in a presentation of “The Nutcracker” on Dec. 12, according to a news release from Naples Ballet Inc.

Barnett’s collegial, easy-going style makes one wonder whether “The Nutcracker” is the appropriate work, but it doesn’t do to question the choices an artist makes in pursuit of his craft.

The mayor’s participation is bound to raise the profile of the fledgling ballet group, which formed in 2009 and stages its performances at Gulf Coast High School.

In spite of its best efforts since then there are still many out there who don’t know their derrière from a hole in the ground when it comes to ballet.

With that in mind, here are some common ballet terms, their dance definitions and misperceptions ballet neophytes in Naples might hold as we prepare for the mayor’s debut.

* Allegro: Brisk and lively movement; not that allergy medicine that may cause headache, dizziness, diarrhea, vomiting, pain in the arms, legs, or back, cough, hives, rash, itching, difficulty breathing or swallowing, swelling of the face, throat, tongue, lips, eyes, hands, feet, ankles, or lower legs or hoarseness.

* Arabesque: A position with one leg stretched straight out to the back; not someone who likes like they might be from Oman.

* Barre: The railing along the wall of a studio; not a place to go drinking in Olde Naples.

* Cambré: A bend from the waist in any direction; not the park across the street from City Hall.

* Eleve: Rising to point, not that headache medicine that may cause rash, ringing in the ears, headaches, dizziness, drowsiness, abdominal pain, nausea, diarrhea, constipation, heartburn, fluid retention and shortness of breath.

* En haut: a term is used to indicate a high position of the arms, not, when following “f,” a term used to describe Naples in August.

* Jeté: A jump from one foot to the other foot; not a pile of rocks extending out into the Gulf to keep beach sand in place.

* Labanotation: This is a system of dance notation invented by Rudolf von Laban; not all the things that have been written about Jackson Laboratories coming to Collier County.

* Minuet: A dance in 3/4 time introduced in the 16th Century; not one-sixtieth of an houre.

* Passé: A movement in which the pointed foot of the working leg is made to pass the knee of the supporting leg; not “American Idol.”

* Swan Lake: A well-known 19th Century ballet by Tchaikovsky; not a retention pond full of Muskovy ducks that’s been renamed by a developer. * En travesti: A female dancer dancing a male role or a male dancer dancing a female role; not, when following “f,” the whole firefighters vs. EMS thing.

* Vaganova: A method of ballet developed from the Russian technique; not that erectile dysfunction medicine that may cause headache, facial flushing, upset stomach, bluish vision, blurred vision, or sensitivity to light.

* Turnout: A stance in which the legs are rotated outward from the hips so that the knees (and feet) point in opposite directions; not what the folks at Naples Ballet Inc. are hoping to drive up by enlisting the mayor’s talents.

To find out more about Naples Ballet Inc.’s December presentation of The Nutcracker, featuring Mayor Bill Barnett, call 732-1000 or visit www.NaplesBallet.org

Connect with Brent Batten at naplesnews.com/staff/brent_batten

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Brent Batten: Mayor Bill jetes into new role in ‘The Nutcracker’

11. November 2010 · Comments Off · Categories: Family, Home, News, Tech, Video · Tags: , , , , , , ,

7:39 P.M.The News-Press and news-press.com are following a Lee County gas line explosion on Colonial Boulevard near Treeline and State Road 82 involving a construction worker.

All of TECO?s 8,000 customers in Lee and Collier counties will be without gas for several days as the Tampa-based gas company begins the lengthy process of restoring service.

Company representatives will have to personally visit each customer to cut gas service, company spokesman Rick Morera said. And after they fix the break and return pressure to the lines, technicians must go to each home or business turn the gas valves on and re-ignite pilot lights. The law prohibits customers from igniting the lights themselves.

?This is going to be a difficult and lengthy repair,? Morera said. The company will prioritize hospitals and schools when it begins the restoring service and may bring in help from other companies in the state.

Region-wide service cuts are rare, Morera said, though the company had a similar service interruption in Jupiter in May when more than 10,000 customers lost service for several days.

No one has gas, according to Arturo Brawn, manager at Cantina Laredo off Big Pine Way in the Bell Tower Shoppes.

But, he?s still cooking his enchiladas.

?I still have a full restaurant because the majority of my equipment is electrical,? Brawn said. ?We have stoves and steamers that keep the food hot and we can still make any type of enchilada.?

He said he spoke to the city this evening and was told the issue with would be fixed by the end of the night.

Brawn said the restaurant will be closing at their normal time.

The only hiccup is he?s running out of corn tortillas and will be switching to flour ones soon and they can?t serve steaks because they cannot use the grill.

?I?m at the door asking people, ?where are you going?? we?re the only ones serving food,? Brawn said.

7:27 p.m. update

TECO has confirmed 8,000 customers this evening in Lee and Collier counties are without gas.

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The company doesn?t know how long they?ll be without their supply. They have to assess the damage.

Those customers are commercial and residential, according to a TECO spokesperson.

Several restaurants at Bell Tower Shops are taking a hit in sales after their gas supply was cut.

Restaurants as far south as Bahama Breeze at U.S. 41 and Six Mile Cypress have reported gas outages.

Carrey Smith, a server at Taste of New York, said the impact on business there will be huge.

?All of our customers pretty much left,? Smith said.

The restaurant is still serving cold subs and salads.

Bistro 41 and Blue Pointe both confirmed their gas supply was out, but managers there declined to comment.

Arturo Braun, manager at Cantina Laredo, said the restaurant is managing with electric equipment.

?We?re still open, but we?re serving a limited menu,? he said.

6:49 p.m. update

The Fort Myers Police Department has identified the victim of this afternoon?s construction accident as Mario Santos, 30, of Bonita Springs.

The westbound lanes of Colonial Boulevard are expected to remain closed until midnight. The eastbound lane has reopened. Drivers are asked to avoid the area.

Fort Myers police suggest drivers take Gateway Boulevard or Daniels Parkway.

6:32 p.m. update

Several restaurants at the Bell Tower could not serve hot dishes tonight due to having their gas supply cut off by the explosion. Patrons are advised to call ahead to see when service will be restored.

6:01 p.m. update

After the fire broke out, passerbys in the Publix Plaza gathered to watch the flames.

Most scattered after a couple of hours.

Businesses in the area have not reported any impact as of 4 p.m.

Inside Publix, in the deli section, Nichole Shepherd, 19, of Lehigh Acres said the explosion sounded like a sonic boom that reverberated the walls.

?I didn?t know what it was,? Shepherd said. ?And it seemed like no one else heard it because it gets pretty loud back there.?

It did cause a box of cups to fall from a shelf right in front of one of her co-workers.

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Ken Bennett, fire marshal for the Lehigh
Acres Fire District, said that the best way to address a gas fire was to turn off the gas and let it burn out.

Authorities earlier in the afternoon did just that.

?Believe it or not, unless there?s a hazard nearby that forces you to put it out right away, that?s the safest thing to do,? Bennett said. ?It eventually dies down, once there?s no gas, but in the mean time it?s under a lot of pressure.?

Bennett said it usually takes the flames at least an hour to die down and burn up the fuel.

4:53 p.m. update

The severely injured construction worker jumped from the bulldozer, according to Fort Myers police.

4:45 p.m. update

The eastbound lanes of Colonial Boulevard have reopened. The westbound lanes remain closed.

The seriously injured construction worker is being taken from Lee Memorial to a hospital in Tampa.

4:19 p.m. update

TECO Peoples Gas reports at this time approximately 300 residential and 50 commercial customers are without service. TECO has approximately 3,500 customers in Lee County

Compressed natural gas (CNG) trailers, which will help stabilize pressure on the system, are en route.

3:57 p.m. update

Steve Byrne, a Fort Myers firefighter, said “it sounded like a jet engine. It was pretty intense. When we got there, it was roaring.”

The flames shot up 50 feet or higher when it was burning, he said.

Firefighters were pumping water from a hydrant at the CVS store down the street to a fire truck, which then used the water to help extinguish the blaze.

3:22 p.m. update

Capt. Chris Bevan of the Fort Myers Fire Department said the gas was shut down about 30-60 minutes ago. Now, the fire department is spraying the backhoe with water to make sure everything is out.

Also, the worker who was injured suffered burns to over 50 percent of his body, Bevan said.

3:41 p.m. update

Fort Myers police say a second victim, also a Posen construction worker, was treated and released on scene with minor injuries.

3:22 p.m. update

TECO Peoples Gas reports that the pipeline break has been contained.

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As soon as access can be gained, construction of a bypass around the break will be attempted.

A small number of customers are out of service at this time.

Posen Construction is required to contact OSHA to investigate the fire.

3:04 p.m. update

The injured worker is in critical condition at Lee Memorial Hospital.

Fort Myers police are waiting to notify the construction worker?s family before releasing his identity.

Flames aren’t visible anymore as the fire appears to have been almost completely extinguished. Thick black smoke continues to pour out of the ground where the explosion occurred.

3:02 p.m. update

Lee County transportation director Paul Wingard said Posen employees were mixing stone into the dirt – a vital step in stabilizing the soil below the roadbed.

“There must have been a gas line close to the surface,” Wingard said.

This is not the first accident on the site for Posen.

Posen employee Tom Maines, 58, was injured on the same site in late June after a piece of a crane boom fell on him. Crews were working on the boom on the south side of Colonial Boulevard near the Home Depot, county officials had said.

Lee County hired Posen in March 2009 on a $16.7 million contract to widen the road between Interstate 75 and State Road 82. The company is also widening Summerlin Road as part of a $25.1 million contract with the county.

The Summerlin project is 10 months behind and millions of dollars over budget after crews there were forced to rebuild an overpass and environmental regulators found asbestos chunks in the fill.

The injured construction worker was with Posen Construction, the main contractor on the widening of State Road 82.

Fort Myers police suggest drivers take Gateway Boulevard or Daniels Parkway since Colonial Boulevard is closed.

Russ Reed with FPL came out with another worker to look out for their feeder, which lies just west of the fire that continues spouting off billows of smoke and flames.

“It doesn’t look like it’ll affect it,” Reed said. “But, we’re going to watch it and make sure to keep everybody in service.”

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If the wires burn down, it would directly affected the area locally, which includes the Publix plaza and CVS.

2:50 p.m. update

Kenny Winstead, a witness who was driving by, said he heard the explosion that sounded like a sonic boom.

“God help who was on it,” he said, referring to the backhoe that is completely engulfed in flames.

He said you could still hear hissing from the gas line.

2:47 p.m. update

At 1:46 p.m. today, the Fort Myers Police Department responded to a construction accident near the intersection of State Road 82 and Colonial Boulevard, according to the Fort Myers Police Department. Upon arrival police learned a construction worker on a bulldozer severed a natural gas line and caused an explosion. The construction worker was transported to Lee Memorial Hospital trauma alert. Right now Colonial Boulevard is shutdown between State Road 82 and Treeline Avenue.

The fire department also is on scene. Police expect the road to remain closed while repairs are made to the gas line.

Rick Morera, a spokesman for TECO, a Tampa utility, confirmed that construction equipment pierced an 8-inch gas main. The company doesn?t know how many customers will be affected by the explosion.

A Marine Corps veteran at the Blockbuster video store in the Crossroads Plaza at State Road 82 and Lee/Colonial Boulevard heard the explosion.

“It was like a Humvee blew up,” said Chance Hood, 36, who estimated the explosion occurred about 250 yards away. “We didn’t know what it was.”

Hood said the explosion shook the plaza.

The Lee County Sheriff’s Office is directing traffic. Traffic heading east toward Lehigh Acres is blocked at Colonial Boulevard.

2:26 p.m. update

Motorists are asked to avoid the area of State Road 82 and Colonial Boulevard because of a gas line explosion. Both directions of Colonial are closed starting at Treeline Boulevard. Both directions of State Road 82 are closed at Forum Boulevard and Gateway Boulevard. Both directions of Lee Boulevard are closed at State Road 82.

The Lee County Sheriff?s Office is now assisting the Fort Myers Police
Department with the investigation.

2:08 p.m.update

Reports of heavy equipment hitting a gas line, sparking a fire, have caused Colonial Boulevard to be closed at Treeline to SR 82 both directions. SR 82 is closed between Gateway Blvd and Forum Blvd both directions. The Fort Myers Police Department responding.

This is a developing story. Check back for more updates, photos and video.

Explosion cuts gas service to 8,000

6:35 P.M. — SAN JOSE MINE, Chile ? Fresh air and freedom were just hours away today for the first of 33 miners trapped a half-mile underground for 69 days, men whose endurance and unity captivated the world as the Chilean government meticulously prepared their rescue. No one in the history of mining has been trapped so long and survived.

The first miner was expected to be lifted to the surface late today in a custom-made capsule. President Sebastian Pinera was at the mine, waiting to greet him.

“We made a promise to never surrender, and we kept it,” Pinera said at about 5:45 p.m. local time (4:45 p.m. EDT), shortly before two rescue workers were expected to go down to prepare the miners for their trip. The president said the first miner will be brought up about two hours later.

Chile has taken extensive precautions to ensure the miners’ health and privacy, sending down Navy special forces paramedics to prepare them for the trip and using a screen to block the top of the shaft from more than 1,000 journalists at the scene.

The miners will be ushered through an inflatable tunnel, like those used in sports stadiums, to an ambulance for a trip of several hundred yards (meters) to a triage station for an immediate medical check. They will gather with a few family members, in an area also closed to the media, before being transported by helicopter to a hospital.

Each ride up is expected to take about 20 minutes, and authorities expect they will be able to haul up roughly one miner an hour. The rescue of the last miner will end a national crisis that began when a cave-in sealed off the gold and copper mine Aug. 5.

The only media allowed to record them coming out of the shaft will be a government photographer and Chile’s state television channel. Their images will be delayed about 30 seconds or more to prevent the release of anything unexpected.

The worst technical problem that could happen, rescue coordinator Andre Sougarett told The Associated Press, is that “a rock could fall,” potentially jamming the capsule partway up the shaft. But test rides suggest the ride up will be smooth.

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Panic attacks are the rescuers’ biggest concern. The miners will not be sedated ? they need to be alert in case something goes wrong. If a miner must get out more quickly, rescuers will accelerate the capsule to a maximum 3 meters per second, Health Minister Jaime Manalich said.

Mining Minister Laurence Golborne, whose management of the crisis has made him a media star in Chile, said authorities had already thought of everything.

“There is no need to try to start guessing what could go wrong. We have done that job,” Golborne said. “We have hundreds of different contingencies.”

As for the miners, they were kept busy today making final preparations “to keep their spirits up,” Manalich said. He added that they were doing well: “It remains a paradox ? they’re actually much more relaxed than we are.”

Rescuers finished reinforcing the top of the 2,041-foot (622-meter) escape shaft early Monday, and the 13-foot (four-meter) tall capsule descended flawlessly in test runs.
The white, blue and red capsule ? the biggest of three built by Chilean navy engineers ? was named Phoenix I for the mythical bird that rises from ashes.

The miners will be closely monitored from the moment they’re strapped into the claustrophobic steel tube to be hauled up the smooth-walled tunnel. For the last six hours before surfacing, they’ll drink a special high-calorie liquid diet prepared and donated by NASA, designed to keep them from vomiting as the rescue capsule rotates 10 to 12 times through curves in the 28-inch-diameter escape hole.

Engineers inserted steel piping at the top of the shaft. They stopped sooner than planned after the sleeve became jammed during a probe of the curved top of the hole, which is angled 11 degrees off vertical at its top before plunging like a waterfall.
Drillers had to curve the shaft so that it would pass through “virgin” rock, narrowly avoiding collapsed areas and underground open spaces in the overexploited mine, which had operated since 1885.

As each miner is hauled up, a small video camera in the escape capsule will be trained on his face so rescuers can watch for panic attacks. The miners will wear oxygen masks and have two-way voice communication.

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Their pulse, skin temperature and respiration rate will be constantly measured through a biomonitor around their abdomens. To prevent blood clotting from the quick ascent, they took aspirin and will wear compression socks.

The miners will also wear sweaters because they’ll experience a shift in climate from about 90 degrees Fahrenheit underground to temperatures hovering near freezing if they emerge at night. Those coming out during daylight hours will wear sunglasses.

Seconds before each miner surfaces, an ambulance-like siren will sound and a light will flash for a full minute. Officials are calling this the Genesis alarm, meant simply to alert doctors that a miner is arriving.

Many steps have been taken to protect the emerging miners from the media.
Photographers and camera operators will be able to see light but little more from a platform set up more than 300 feet (90 meters) away.

After initial medical checks and visits with family members selected by the miners, the men will be airlifted to the regional hospital in Copiapo, roughly a 10-minute ride away. Two floors have been prepared where the miners will receive physical and psychological exams and be kept under observation in a ward as dark as a movie theater.

Chilean air force Lt. Col. Aldo Carbone, the choppers’ squadron commander, said the pilots have night-vision goggles but will not fly unless it is clear of the Pacific Ocean fog that rolls in at night, a notoriously thick, humid blanket Chileans call “the camanchaca.” Night traffic on the mine road was banned as a precaution to keep headlights from interfering with the night-vision goggles, and to keep the road clear for ambulances should they be necessary.

Families were urged to wait and prepare to greet the miners at home after a 48-hour hospital stay.

“In Chile, we have huge families,” Manalich said, joking that if they weren’t stopped, entire football teams of people would crowd into the hospital’s wards. He also said that no cameras or interviews will be allowed until the miners are released, unless the miners expressly desire it.

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Officials have drawn up a secret list of which miners should come out first, but the order could change after paramedics and a mining expert first descend in the capsule to evaluate the men. First out will be the four miners best able to handle any difficulties and tell their comrades what to expect. Then, the 10 who are weakest or suffer from hypertension, diabetes, dental and respiratory infections and skin lesions from the mine’s oppressive humidity.

The first miner to be rescued will be Florencio Avalos, according to his mother, Maria Silva, and uncle Alberto Avalos, who said Pinera told them that.

The last miner out, according the list, will be shift foreman Luiz Urzua, whose leadership was credited for the miners’ survival during the 17 days when they were utterly closed off from the outside world. The men stretched an emergency food supply meant to last just 48 hours by taking tiny sips of milk and bites of tuna fish every other day.

Several of Urzua’s relatives told the AP that he was last on the list, speaking on condition of anonymity to avoid upsetting government officials.

“He’s a very good guy ? he keeps everybody’s spirits up and is so responsible ? he’s going to see this through to the end,” said his neighbor Angelica Vicencio, who has led a nightly vigil outside the Urzua home in Copiapo.

The government has promised that its care of the miners won’t end for six months at least ? not until they can be sure that each miner has readjusted.

“We learned something in medicine, that our job is to provide benefit and not harm,” Manalich said. “We have to protect them until the last minute, until they can return to normal lives with their families.”

Psychiatrists and other experts in surviving extreme situations predict their lives will be anything but normal, and that both the miners and their families have been forever changed by this experience.

Since Aug. 22, when a narrow bore hole broke through to their refuge and the miners stunned the world with a note, scrawled in red pen, that announced their survival, these families’ lives have been exposed in ways they never imagined. Miners had to describe their physical and mental health in minute detail with teams of doctors and psychologists. And in some cases, when both wives and lovers claimed the same man, everyone involved had to face the consequences.

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By the time of the rescue, nerves were beyond frayed outside the mine in “Camp Hope,” where miners’ families and reporters from all over the world slept side by side in tents and campers, enduring the baking days and frigid nights of the desolate Atacama desert.

Many relatives privately described their feuds and jealousies with an AP reporter who spent the past month at the camp.

“Here the tension is higher than down below. Down there they are calm,” said Veronica Ticona, sister of 29-year-old Ariel Ticona, a trapped rubble-removal machine operator.

Alberto Iturra, chief of the psychology team, told the families to go home, get some rest, and prepare to reunite in several days.

“I explained to the families that the only way one can receive someone is to first be home to open the door,” Iturra said.

1:26 p.m. update

SAN JOSE MINE, Chile ? The first of 33 trapped miners is expected to be lifted to the surface late Tuesday after miraculously surviving more than two months about half a mile below ground, Chile’s Mining Minister Laurence Golborne announced.

The minister told a news conference that officials “hope to have at least one of our miners on the surface” before the end of the day ? apparently the longest period anyone has ever been trapped underground.

President Sebastian Pinera was expected to arrive shortly before the first miner is pulled out in a carefully choreographed operation meant to minimize any risk.

Asked about the biggest technical problem that could hit the rescue operation, coordinator Andre Sougarett said: “A rock could fall.”

“There is no need to try to start guessing what could go wrong. We have done that job,” a confident Golborne said. “We have hundreds of different contingencies.”

Rescuers were keeping the miners busy on final preparations they were to climb into a custom-made capsule for what tests indicated should be a smooth ride to the outside world.

“The miners are very busy ? that’s also to keep their spirits up,” Health Minister Jaime Manalich said. “It remains a paradox ? they’re actually much more relaxed than we are.”

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As the miners emerge, they will be sheltered from the glare of TV cameras. They will get an immediate medical check and gather with a few family members in an area closed to the news media. Officials say a siren will sound as each miner emerges.

Then, they will ride in helicopters ? two at a time if they are in beds, or four at a time if they can sit up ? to the regional hospital in Copiapo for a battery of physical and psychological exams.

“Our job is to provide benefit and not harm,” Manalich said, urging the media ? more than 1,000 journalists are working on the story ? to respect their privacy. “We have to protect them until the last minute, until they can return to normal lives with their families.”

Nearby, the miners’ families have been holding vigil at a place called “Camp Hope.”

“Here the tension is higher than down below. Down there they are calm,” said Veronica Ticona, sister of 29-year-old Ariel Ticona, a trapped rubble-removal machine operator.

After 68 days of shared fears and jitters ? all of it under the close scrutiny of dozens of reporters that have now grown to a battalion ? the early fellowship has frayed. Some relationships, once at least cordial, are as hostile as the desolate sands of the surrounding Acatama desert.

Relatives privately shared stories of the divisiveness with an Associated Press reporter who spent the past month at the camp, frequently bedding down in a tent beside theirs, sharing coffee and gossip.

The feuds and jealousies within families centered on such matters as who got to take part in weekend videoconferences with the miners, who received letters and why ? or even who should speak to the media and how much they should be revealing about a family’s interior life.

Some relatives complained about distant kin seeking the international media limelight, giving interviews about trapped miners they barely know.

Then there are those who, despite only distant blood ties to miners, lined up for donated gifts including sexy lingerie, bottles of wine and electronic toys and Halloween costumes for children.

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There were even fights over who constitutes a close relative ? or even a miner’s preferred conjugal companion.

So Alberto Iturra, the chief of the psychology team advising the trapped men, decided that after each miner rides an escape capsule to daylight, the rescued man will meet with between one and three people whom the miner has personally designated.
Then there is the question of money.

It has already strained relations between families as some seem to be getting more than others, including from some news media, who outnumber the miners’ relations several fold.

Cognizant of the emotional toll, Iturra recommended Monday that the relatives leave the mine, go home and get some rest.

“I explained to the families that the only way one can receive someone is to first be home to open the door,” Iturra said.

The dramatic endgame was hastening as the rescuers finished reinforcing the escape shaft early Monday and the 13-foot (four-meter)-tall rescue chamber descended flawlessly nearly all the way to the trapped men in a series of test runs.

On Monday, the Phoenix I capsule ? the biggest of three built by Chilean navy engineers, named for the mythic bird that rose from ashes ? made its first test runs after the top 180 feet (55 meters) of the shaft were lined with steel pipe, the rescue leader said.

Then the empty capsule was winched down 2,000 feet (610 meters), just 40 feet (12 meters) short of the shaft system that has been the miners’ refuge since an Aug. 5 collapse.

“We didn’t send it (all the way) down because we could risk that someone will jump in,” a grinning Golborne told reporters on Monday.

Engineers had planned to extend the piping nearly twice as far, but they decided to stop after the sleeve ? the hole is angled 11 degrees off vertical at its top before plunging down, like a waterfall ? became jammed during a probe.

Officials have drawn up a secret list of which miners should come out first, but the order could change after paramedics and a mining expert first descend in the capsule to evaluate the men and oversee the journey upward.

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First out will be the four miners fittest of frame and mind, health minister Jaime Manalich said. Should glitches occur, these men will be best prepared to ride them out and tell their comrades what to expect.

Next will be 10 who are weakest or ill. One miner suffers from hypertension. Another is a diabetic, and others have dental and respiratory infections or skin lesions from the mine’s oppressive humidity.

The last out is expected to be Luiz Urzua, who was shift chief when the men became entombed, several family members of miners told the AP, speaking on condition of anonymity because they did not want to upset government officials.

The men will take a 20-minute ride to the surface in the capsule, which will rotate as it passes through gentle bends in the bore hole. It should take about an hour for the rescue capsule to make a round trip, Aguilar told the AP.

Plans called for the media to be blocked by a screen from viewing the miners when they reach the surface. A media platform has been set up more than 300 feet (90 meters) away from the mouth of the hole.

After being extracted, the miners will be ushered through inflatable tunnels, like the ones used in sports stadiums, to ambulances that will take them to a triage station.

Once cleared by doctors there, they are to be taken to another area where they’ll be reunited with the chosen family members. Next stop: a heliport and the flight to Copiapo.

At the hospital, all the miners will be kept for 48 hours of observation that will begin when the last one exits the escape shaft.

Chile choreographs dramatic finish to miner rescue saga

04. October 2010 · Comments Off · Categories: Tech

Web Based Project Management

In doing research this evening on a brand new on the net management application, Central Desktop, I had the pleasure of playing with their incredible Office environment integration. Essentially, it’s a stand alone install that integrates with your central desktop account. It will allow you to produce, get/edit existing information in your account, in addition to Concurrently update any recordsdata inside word or excel. Even though it may well be a bit heavy for smaller teams, I believe this type of integration is WAY far better than stand-alone solutions for instance Basecamp’s writeboards (which are good, but let’s face it – most of us still use Workplace – if only mainly because everybody else does).

Central Desktop’s wonderful new Place of work integration has already received some buzz over at OneDayOneJob, where they’ve highlighted how Central Desktop closely mirrors the changing pace of organization.

In addition TechCrunch was fast to point out that Central Desktop is truly the only sizeable, and usable, competitor to Sharepoint:

Central Desktop for Workplace leverages technology from OffiSync and is compatible with any model of Microsoft Office environment including 2003, 2007 and 2010. Once installed, Central Desktop for Workplace adds a brand new toolbar in Microsoft Word, Excel and PowerPoint that allows customers to open, save, edit and co-author information stored within the cloud – directly from inside Office environment. The new tool enables customers to comment on recordsdata, manage subscribers and track model history. Central Desktop’s co-authoring feature allows a lot more than one particular user to edit Place of work recordsdata, concurrently, by tracking and syncing all changes made by collaborators and merging them correctly into a single updated model.

Scenes during culinary class at Golden Gate Middle School on Thursday, Sept. 16, 2010. The class, which teaches basic culinary skills along with safety and sanitation in the kitchen, was started in August. The program is part of a push by Collier County high schools to start academies to help students who want to go into a specific field such as medical or culinary. Greg Kahn/Staff

Photo by GREG KAHN // Buy this photo

Scenes during culinary class at Golden Gate Middle School on Thursday, Sept. 16, 2010. The class, which teaches basic culinary skills along with safety and sanitation in the kitchen, was started in August. The program is part of a push by Collier County high schools to start academies to help students who want to go into a specific field such as medical or culinary. Greg Kahn/Staff


Becky Iannone likes to refer to her classroom as “organized chaos.”

Students come into her classroom and put on T-shirts in bright greens and orange. They pull hair nets out of small, plastic bags and place them on their head.

And then they grab the knives.

But in Iannone’s class, it is OK to have knives. Iannone runs Golden Gate Middle School’s culinary arts class. The school developed a specialized culinary program as a way to offer high school credit to eighth-grade students who didn’t take algebra or Spanish, the two other high school courses offered at the school.

The program also boosts interest for Golden Gate High School’s culinary academy.

“It is the only place where a student can earn a high school credit that will be attached to a high school academy while attending a middle school,” wrote Dale Johnson, the district’s supervisor of Career and Technical Education, in an e-mail. “Specifically, it is hoped that middle school students will be more likely to complete high school academy requirements if the program begins in eighth grade.”

Iannone, who taught culinary arts for years up North before coming to Collier County 10 years ago, said she approached Golden Gate Middle School Principal Leslie Morris and asked if she could look for a culinary curriculum that was being stored in the kitchen on the second floor of the school.

“It is the only place where a student can earn a high school credit that will be attached to a high school academy while attending a middle school,” wrote Dale Johnson, the district’s supervisor of Career and Technical Education, in an e-mail. “Specifically, it is hoped that middle school students will be more likely to complete high school academy requirements if the program begins in eighth grade.”

“She said, ‘You taught culinary. Why aren’t you teaching it now?’” said Iannone, who also teaches technology at the school. “It’s my passion.”

Iannone and Morris agreed to pilot the program last year with her technology students. Iannone taught technology to the students for nine weeks and culinary arts for nine weeks.

Although the program isn’t officially part of the Golden Gate High School Culinary Academy due to requirements placed on the academy by the National Restaurant Association, students do earn the high school credit for Culinary 1.

Still, other middle schools in the county have programs designed to encourage students to enter the academy programs at the high schools they eventually might attend.

The Gateway to Technology program at East Naples Middle School is designed to create student interest into the Pathways to Engineering and Architecture Academy at Naples High School. The students don’t earn high school credit, but they are introduced to the basic components of engineering and technology.

Students at Cypress Palm Middle School in Golden Gate Estates are given the opportunity to participate in a special technology course called Exploration of Production Technology that introduces students to the various components of construction, with the hope that it will spark interest in the construction academy at Palmetto Ridge High School.

This year, Iannone started with two classes of eighth-graders, with about 40 students in each class.

“The joys of the class-size amendment,” Iannone jokes, referring to the state Constitutional Amendment that requires class sizes to be limited in core classes like English and math to 22 students in middle school.

The unintended result is that elective classes such as culinary arts have more than 22 students in the class.

Because her classes have so many students, Iannone teaches one lesson over four days. A group of about 10 students works in the kitchens, with Iannone supervising them. The remaining eighth-graders work in groups on lessons about cooking.

On Thursday, while students learned to peel and chop vegetables that will eventually be used in muffins and soup, the other students learned about the different types of knives and the different parts of the knife.

“I like being in the kitchen much better (than the classwork),” said eighth-grader Faryn Loskot, 13. “It’s a good class. I wanted to learn to cook better. And it’s good to know in case you need a job.”

“I was tired of my mom telling me I didn’t know how to cook,” said Katya Lopez, 13. “It’s a really fun class. It was this or P.E. and I’m not going to sweat.”

Many of the students who selected culinary arts as an elective said they wanted to learn how to help their mothers at home.

“I was tired of my mom telling me I didn’t know how to cook,” said Katya Lopez, 13. “It’s a really fun class. It was this or P.E. and I’m not going to sweat.”

Katya said she likes the new version of the culinary class.

“I took a similar class last year and the teacher never let us do anything,” she said. “In this class we get to cut the vegetables, we get to make the appetizers.”

The students’ first project was to work in teams to make appetizers like artichoke cheese puffs, creamy bruchetta and black bean dip. The students then had to present their appetizers in a buffet.

“They were so proud and everything was edible,” Iannone said. “We didn’t have to like everything, but we had to try it. Then they evaluated what the best dish was, who did the best presenting.”

Aaren Jones, 13, said she took the class to “learn how to cook American food.”

“My family is Haitian, so we cook Haitian food,” she said, adding her favorite Haitian dish is fried plantains. “Now that I (am cooking), I could see myself doing this for a job. It’s fun.”

When students leave her classroom, Iannone said she hoped the students have the basic culinary industry standard skills and confidence in themselves to read a recipe and have it turn out well. She said she hopes the students understand that food allows them to be creative and use their imaginations.

“I think a lot of the students came in thinking we were just going to bake cookies and eat them,” she said. “I want to push them beyond the obvious.”

Eventually, Iannone said it is her hope the students will be able to make dishes to sell to faculty members as a fundraiser for the program.

“It would be great if one of them like it enough that they would get out and learn to work in this industry,” she said. “In this area, it’s great because of all of the restaurants we have in town.”

__ Connect with K-12 reporter Katherine Albers at www.naplesnews.com/staff/katherine-albers/.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

PHOTOS Food for thought: Golden Gate Middle adds culinary arts class

Tina Haisman needed to stand out.

Her family’s home at 11471 Persimmon Court had been on the market for three months and had been shown to about 10 prospective buyers with little fanfare.

“We’ve had people come to look at our house two and three and four times and tell us they loved it but they would go back to Canada or something and say ‘Oh, we’ll be back in a month,’ ” Haisman said.

Haisman, 37, her husband Paul and their two young children moved to the Chicago area for Paul’s information technology job. The family became frustrated with the failed attempts to sell their 2,280-square foot, four-bedroom home, which is located in Gateway and listed for sale at $269,900.

“The problem is there are so many homes,” Haisman said. “People have plenty of time to search and that sense of urgency that used to be there when you were shopping for a home – that you better make a bid on it if you want it or you’ll lose it – that sense of urgency is not there.”

So Haisman, owner of Tina Haisman Public Relations, did what any PR pro would do. She began strategizing ways to draw attention to the 19-year-old dwelling.

To help them come up with a marketing idea, Haisman and her husband decided to first create a list of what they liked about their home – a brainstorming technique some real estate agents suggest to sellers prior to showing a property.

Paul typed up his ideas and e-mailed his version of the list to his wife. When she read his top 10 selling points, Haisman completely disagreed with her husband on the home’s best features.

“As I was reading it I thought, ‘Oh my gosh. I would change half the things on here.’ It was not what I thought at all,” she said.

The couple realized how differently men and women sometimes view a home’s attributes and decided to each create their own top 10 list. Whereas stellar landscaping, a split floor plan and vaulted ceilings made the cut for Haisman, her husband focused on technical aspects such as the new roof, cable wiring and hurricane panels.

“My top 10 list is more about the beauty of the home,” Haisman said. “My husband’s list is more of the functional, practical, manly man’s list. I don’t think a woman would care as much that you get free hot water from the air conditioning as a guy would.”

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The real estate agent the Haismans were working with at the time posted their dueling top 10 lists to their home listing on Realtor.com. The agent created a flier about the husband and wife’s selling points for the home and e-mailed it to agents on the Lee County Multiple Listing Service. Several local agents applauded the creativity and asked if they could use the husband-wife list idea with their clients.

Haisman then sent press releases to news outlets near Boston, Minneapolis, Detroit, Chicago and Columbus, Ohio – areas traditionally home to Southwest Florida snowbirds.

The day she sent the release, 30 people viewed Haisman’s home listing on Realtor.com. More than 70 people interacted with the media release – meaning they saved it to their computers, printed it or clicked on links within it. It received approximately 40,000 headline impressions, or the number of times people viewed pages that included the headline for the release.

In addition, Haisman – who was reading Daniel Pink’s “A Whole New Mind” at the time, which discusses, among other things, the importance of storytelling in business and marketing – created a blog in an attempt to create a personality for the home she and her family lived in for nine years. On her blog, Haisman posted home photos and has written about everything from winds the home withstood during hurricanes Charley and Wilma to the fun of neighborhood block parties on Persimmon Court.

“I wanted to tell the stories so maybe people can envision their family living there and creating their own memories,” she said.

The mother and public relations professional tweets about her home and blog, posts information about it on Facebook and has asked some friends to post the information on their Facebook pages as well.

Marla Martin, spokeswoman for the Florida Association of Realtors, called the Haisman top 10 lists “very creative” and she said she hadn’t heard of that tactic before. Still, Martin said she is not surprised by the family’s marketing efforts.

“During the boom years, you almost didn’t have to do anything because the homes were moving so fast,” she said. “Now, our members report lots of creative things for sellers.”

Those efforts include holding signs along roadways to promote open houses and an increased use of social media sites and YouTube videos to advertise homes on the market. Sunni Hammermeister of Sellstate Realty Systems Network, who signed on as agent for the Haismans last week, has even seen people offer cars and boats with the sale of their home.

As they continue to aggressively market the home on Persimmon Court, Hammermeister said it has a good chance of finding the right buyer. Haisman, who plans to create a second media release soon, also remains optimistic.

“Hopefully, these things will help us stand out,” she said of her PR efforts. “We’re trying to be positive in this economy and proactive and take action instead of just complaining about how horrible things are.”

His and hers lists help market couple’s home

While a torrential downpour might have made most of Cypress Lake’s offensive performance an ugly one, it was the few minutes before the rains that showed the Panthers’ true offensive quality.

Taking the initiative early and scoring first, the Panthers upset Island Coast 13-6 at Thomas Broomhead Memorial Stadium on Friday night. To Cypress coach Mike Thornton, that first scoring drive against a Division I-caliber defensive line made the night.

“The momentum for us was the first quarter,” Thornton said. “That was the best option drive that I’ve seen since I came here.”

In that drive, the Panthers (1-1) pushed the vaunted Gators defense almost the length of the field. Quarterback Jayron Kearse led the way with several short gains, ultimately scoring on a 4-yard run. Logan Franklin’s kick made it 7-0.

Cypress did not appear intimidated by the defensive line of Island Coast (1-1). Knowing that they couldn’t block it, they attacked and read it.

“I told them that this is the most physical offensive and defensive line that I’ve seen since I’ve been in Lee County,” Thornton said.

Those in attendance nervously watched as a severe thunderstorm approached from the east. As the wall of water finally hit the field, the game continued until the lightning drew too close to safely play in the second quarter. That led to a 65-minute lightning delay.

Players sat in the locker rooms, assistant coaches sat in the press box and spectators sat in their cars as the torrential downpour blasted through the area. But with the officials unavailable today, school authorities elected to wait it out.

When the skies finally cleared, the game turned ugly. Between both teams, there were five fumbles – four lost – before halftime alone. All told, there were 15 fumbles in the game.

One of those fumbles added to the Panthers’ lead.

Philipp Casimir picked up a loose ball on the 2-yard line and ran it in, making it 13-0.

The Gators did not get on the scoreboard until the fourth quarter. Technically, nobody got on the scoreboard since an afternoon storm had shorted it out.

After both sides traded some more fumbles, Island Coast started a drive in Cypress Lake territory. Delmarick Pender took a handoff around the right end and outran the defender to the pylon. The kick was blocked, keeping the game at 13-6.

After that, it was more slogging through muck and fumbling the ball. The conditions kept the offensive gains low, with Kearse tallying a game-high 67 yards.

Cypress nips Island Coast

Hodges University is expanding its facilities, most notably with a $12 million building to be added to its Fort Myers campus, the private, non-profit university announced Thursday.

The three-story, 45,000-square foot building will go up adjacent to the Fort Myers campus’ existing 60,000-square foot main building, on Colonial Boulevard, and is expected to be finished by early 2012.

The new building will be used to add and expand degree programs, but specific programs to be housed there were not named as part of Thursday’s announcement. Since establishing the Fort Myers location in 2005, enrollment there has grown nearly 80 percent, according to a press release.

“Our institution has seen unprecedented growth, and this new facility will help us maintain the highest quality educational experience that our community expects when they choose Hodges University to achieve their educational and career goals,” said Jeanette Brock, the university’s executive vice president of academic affairs.

Earlier this year, Hodges opened a new science and technology building at its Naples campus, and will soon begin work to add a new access road and increased parking there. In Immokalee, the university has plans to remodel portions of its learning site at the Harvest Center at Jubilation, primarily to add classrooms for its growing English as a Second Language program.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Hodges building anew in Fort Myers, renovating in Immokalee