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I L E D in and for Duval County, Florida 2 3 2012 I Jul Amended Administrative Order No
Doc # 2012154794, OR BK 16009 Page 1987, Number Pages: 3, Recorded 07/23/2012 04 12 PM, JIM FULLER CLERK CIRCUIT COURT DUVAL COUNTY RECORDING $0.00 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, FOURTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, I L E D IN AND FOR DUVAL COUNTY, FLORIDA 2 3 2012 I JUL AMENDED ADMINISTRATIVE ORDER NO. 95-4 ‘ ;,..;,1...1&,- CLBRKCIIOJITCOIJRT RE: LOCATION OF DEPOSITIONS IN CRIMINAL CASES - DUVAL COUNT * WHEREAS, Rule 3.220(h)(3), of the Florida Rules of Criminal Procedure, provides as follows: Location of Deposition: Depositions of witnesses residing in the county in which the trial is to take place shall be taken in the building in which the trial shall be held, such other location as is agreed on by the parties, or a location designated by the court. the Criminal Division WHEREAS, it is in the best interest of the judiciary and designated the practitioners in Duval County to have the location of depositions expressly by Court, except when the parties agree otherwise; WHEREAS, Administrative Order 95-4 provided that depositions of State witnesses be Street (unless the State taken at the Office of the Public Defender located at 25 N. Market witnesses in criminal Attorney and defense counsel agreed otherwise) and depositions of defense agreed upon between cases be taken in the Courthouse Annex (unless other arrangements were the parties); of WHEREAS, there has been some confusion recently about the appropriate location location from depositions for criminal cases since the Duval County Courthouse has changed its of the 330 East Bay Street to 501 West Adams Street, Jacksonville, Florida and the location Laura Street; Office of the Public Defender has moved from 25 N. -
Parking & Transportation
The State of Downtown 2011 Progress Report Year in Review 3 Development 5 Office Market & Employment 9 Residential Market 13 Culture & Entertainment 15 Retail, Restaurants & Nightlife 18 Hotels & Conventions 20 Parking & Transportation 22 Quality of Life 24 Credits 25 Downtown Map 26 Burro Bar opened at 100 E. Adams in May 2011 Table of Contents 1,234 acres $2 billion in development completed or under construction since 2000 $567 million in proposed development 3 Fortune 500 headquarters 1,100 businesses 51,048 employees 7.3 million square feet of office space 2,365 residences 10 million visits annually 724,000 square feet of retail space in the Downtown Improvement District 93 restaurants 26 bars and nightclubs 120 retailers and services 2.77 miles of riverwalk 2,153 hotel rooms 43,452 parking spaces Quick Facts About Downtown The Jacksonville Landing Year in Review Last year was a great year for Downtown Jacksonville. Downtown began to regain momentum, with a strong commitment from Mayor Brown, the completion of improvements to several parks and public spaces and renewed business interest in relocating Downtown. There were several significant milestones, including: Newly-elected Mayor Alvin Brown made Downtown a top priority. EverBank announced plans to move 1,600 employees to Downtown, which will increase employment in the Downtown core by 8%. The City of Jacksonville completed several significant capital projects, including improvements to Laura Street, Friendship Park and Fountain, Metropolitan Park, Treaty Oak Park, Shipyards site and the Riverside Arts Market. Jacksonville City Council enacted legislation to improve the appearance of surface parking lots, which will improve the parking experience and the pedestrian environment. -
Springfield Historic District
mSTORIC PRESERVATION GUIDELINES FOR THE §JF�CG1lFJ0 �ILJ]) IHIII§lr(Q)JRm(C J])1l§1I1Rill(clr Front Cover: Dr. Richard P. Daniel Residence 1120 Hubbard St,eet Historic American Building Survey ,. HISTORIC PRESERVATION GUIDELINES for the SPRINGFIELD HISTORIC DISTRICT JANUARY, 1992 Prepared By: TIlE JACKSONVILLE PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT DEPARTMENT 128 East Forsyth Street . Jacksonville, Florida 32202-3325 The Honorable W. Ray Newton ED AUSTIN Director of Planning and Development Mayor Bur.eu Th. proj.ct wa. financed in part with hi.toricpra •• rvation grant a •• i.tanc. provided by th. National ParG; S.rvic• • U.S. D.partm.nt of th. Int.rior. edministered through the •• •••• of Hi.toric Pra•• rvation, Florida D.partmant of Stat., a ••i.ted by the Florida Hi.toric Pr••• rvation Advi.oryCouncil. Th. cont.nt. and opinions .xpres d wilhin do nol n.c rily . mention of trede name. or commerciel products reflect the views and opinions of the Department of the Interior, the Florida Depertment of State, or the City of Jacksonville The City of Jack.onville. This program receives federal does not con.titute endoraement or recommendation by the Department of the Interior, Florida Department of State, or the and Saction 504 of tha Rehabilitalion Acl of 1973, the Itnancial e. i.tance for identification and protection of hiatorie propertie•. Und.r Title VI of the Civil Right. Act of 1964 u.s. Department of the Interior prohibits discrimination on the besis of race, color, national origin, or handicap in its federally assisted programs. If you believe you have be.n d.scriminated egainst in eny progrem. -
Opportunities Bradenton Areaconvention Center 941-926-6413 •Neurochallenge.Org/Expo Sponsorship Sponsorship & Exhibitor Saturday, March 6,2021 Palmetto, Fl
parkinsonsexpo NeuroChallenge SPONSORSHIP @Neuro_Challenge & EXHIBITOR OPPORTUNITIES SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 2021 BRADENTON AREA CONVENTION CENTER PALMETTO, FL [email protected] 941-926-6413 • NEUROCHALLENGE.ORG/EXPO TESTIMONIALS WELCOME The“ Neuro Challenge Dear Parkinson’s Community Partner, Program was excellent, Neuro Challenge Foundation for Parkinson’s is helpful and very pleased to invite you to support the Fourth Annual informative PARKINSON’S EXPO on March, 6, 2021 at the regarding new Bradenton Area Convention Center in Palmetto, treatments and FL. The Parkinson’s Expo is the largest annually new medications. I held Parkinson’s educational event in the country. greatly appreciate The Expo is a day-long event designed to educate, the effort everyone engage and empower the Parkinson’s community. The Expo will comprehensively address puts forth to the needs of people with PD and their caregivers by offering high-quality, important make this such information presented by nationally renowned experts in the field. The Expo will an overwhelming also feature interactive demonstrations and a myriad of resources to help people with success. Thank you! Parkinson’s and their caregivers live well with the disease today. The 2021 Expo is expected to attract more than 1,500 attendees. There is no charge to ” attend the Expo, thanks to the generous support of our partners and sponsors — like you. We hope you will consider partnering with Neuro Challenge to support the Parkinson’s Always come away community at the Parkinson’s Expo. If you wish to reserve your space, return the having“ learned commitment form included in this packet. The opportunities in this packet are available something new. -
Load King Manufacturing Job Cuts JACKSONVILLE Acts “Early and Quickly” to ‘IT GOT OUR Shift Strategy Amid Pandemic
Mathis Report: Morris, city FREE discussing old T-U site May 14-20, 2020 PAGE 3 SUPPORT jaxdailyrecord.com LOCAL BUSINESSES! B ro ug r ht ve to er yo bs u by & O the Daily Record JACKSONVILLE Record & Observer Load King Manufacturing Job cuts JACKSONVILLE acts “early and quickly” to ‘IT GOT OUR shift strategy amid pandemic. at Gate Hospitality WHEELSRecord SPINNING’ & ObservJacksonvilleer company owns the Ponte Vedra Inn & Club and three JACKSONVILLE other area properties. BY MARK BASCH CONTRIBUTING WRITER Gate Hospitality Group per- Record & Observmanently laider off 141 employees and temporarily furloughed more than 700 at four Northeast Flori- da resort and hospitality proper- ties, according to a notification filed with the state. JACKSONVILLE The layoffs affected employees at two oceanfront properties – the Ponte Vedra Inn & Club and the Lodge & Club at Ponte Vedra Beach. The other venues are the Epping Forest Yacht & Country Club and Record & ObservThe River Club.er “Sorrowfully, in early April, Gate Hospitality Group was forced to furlough a number of its employees as a result of govern- ment mandated closures and a decline in business resulting from COVID-19 stay-at-home orders,” Gate spokeswoman Misty Skip- per said by email. “Thankfully, the majority of these furloughs are temporary and we are currently resuming operations and bringing employ- Special to the Daily Record ees back to work,” she said. From left, Load King Manufacturing Co. leadership Charles Chupp, president; Kyle Manning, controller; Phil Black, executive director, client services; A total of 735 workers were tem- Tanner Franklin, executive director, manufacturing and supply chain; Ken Carella, executive director, business development; and Chad Grimm, chief porarily furloughed with the largest operations officer. -
Federal Register/Vol. 85, No. 103/Thursday, May 28, 2020
32256 Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 103 / Thursday, May 28, 2020 / Proposed Rules FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS closes-headquarters-open-window-and- presentation of data or arguments COMMISSION changes-hand-delivery-policy. already reflected in the presenter’s 7. During the time the Commission’s written comments, memoranda, or other 47 CFR Part 1 building is closed to the general public filings in the proceeding, the presenter [MD Docket Nos. 19–105; MD Docket Nos. and until further notice, if more than may provide citations to such data or 20–105; FCC 20–64; FRS 16780] one docket or rulemaking number arguments in his or her prior comments, appears in the caption of a proceeding, memoranda, or other filings (specifying Assessment and Collection of paper filers need not submit two the relevant page and/or paragraph Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2020. additional copies for each additional numbers where such data or arguments docket or rulemaking number; an can be found) in lieu of summarizing AGENCY: Federal Communications original and one copy are sufficient. them in the memorandum. Documents Commission. For detailed instructions for shown or given to Commission staff ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking. submitting comments and additional during ex parte meetings are deemed to be written ex parte presentations and SUMMARY: In this document, the Federal information on the rulemaking process, must be filed consistent with section Communications Commission see the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION 1.1206(b) of the Commission’s rules. In (Commission) seeks comment on several section of this document. proceedings governed by section 1.49(f) proposals that will impact FY 2020 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: of the Commission’s rules or for which regulatory fees. -
Winn-Dixie Parent Reports 16% Boost in Third-Quarter Comp Sales
MONDAY November 30, 2020 PUBLIC jaxdailyrecord.com • 35 cents LEGAL NOTICES BEGIN ON PAGE 3 JACKSONVILLE Daily Record SOUTHEASTERN GROCERS Winn-Dixie parent reportsJA CK16%SONVILLE File image Daily RecordStein Mart closed all of its stores as boost in third-quarter comp sales of Oct 26. JACKSONVILLE $25 million loss for Stein Mart Daily Recordin October The Jacksonville fashion JACKSONVILLE retailer closed its stores after filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. BY MARK BASCH Daily RecordCONTRIBUTING WRITER After recording profits in its first two months in bankruptcy, Stein Mart Inc. reported a net loss in October as the company closed its stores. The Jacksonville-based fash- ion retailer had a net loss of $25.5 million on sales of $51.9 million in the period from Oct. 4 to Oct. 31, according to a monthly operating report filed in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District of Florida, Jacksonville Division. Stein Mart filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy Aug. 12 with plans to close its 281 stores. During its going-out-of-busi- ness sales, the company had net income of $20.6 million and sales Provided by Southeastern Grocers of $95.8 million for the period Southeastern Grocers opened its new Winn-Dixie store at 11700 San Jose Blvd. in the Mandarin South Shopping Center on Nov. 11. between Aug. 12 and Aug. 29. It followed with a profit of $3.9 million on sales of $99 million for The Jacksonville- BY MARK BASCH parable-store sales (sales at stores open for the period from Aug. 30 to Oct. -
Community Redevelopment Area Plans
February 2015 Community Redevelopment Area Plans Northbank Downtown CRA & Southside CRA Downtown Jacksonville Community Redevelopment Plan July 30, 2014 Acknowledgements This Community Redevelopment Plan has been prepared under the direction of the City of Jacksonville Downtown Investment Authority serving in their capacity as the Community Redevelopment Agency established by City of Jacksonville Ordinance 2012-364-E. The planning effort was accomplished through considerable assistance and cooperation of the Authority’s Chief Executive Officer, the Governing Board of the Downtown Investment Authority and its Redevelopment Plan Committee, along with Downtown Vision, Inc. the City’s Office of Economic Development and the Planning and Development Department. The Plan has been prepared in accordance with the Community Redevelopment Act of 1969, Chapter 163, Part III, Florida Statutes. In addition to those listed below, we are grateful to the hundreds of citizens who contributed their time, energy, and passion toward this update of Downtown Jacksonville’s community redevelopment plans. Mayor of Jacksonville Jacksonville City Council Alvin Brown Clay Yarborough, President Gregory Anderson, Vice-President Downtown Investment Authority William Bishop, AIA, District 2 Oliver Barakat, Chair Richard Clark, District 3 Jack Meeks, Vice-Chair Donald Redman, District 4 Craig Gibbs, Secretary Lori Boyer, District 5 Antonio Allegretti Matthew Schellenberg, District 6 Jim Bailey, Jr. Dr. Johnny Gaffney, District 7 Melody Bishop, AIA Denise Lee, District -
Native Sons and Daughters Provides Opportunity for Quality Time
AUGUST 2019 Volume 13 Issue 10 MandarinNewsLineA Florida NewsLine Publication page 13 page 3 page 12 Get To Know . page 16 BFF Best Furry Friend Back In Time Zoe Keffer Puzzles Back-to-school, book Native Sons and Daughters provides clubs, business and opportunity for quality time By Martie Thompson blooms — at [email protected] the library By Olga Bayer As local students head back to [email protected] school, it is also time to consider extracurricular activities for the new school year. According As you gear up for the new school to Native Sons and Daugh- year, remember that Duval County ters Florida State Chief Brian Public Schools students have a great Quirk, one of the best ways to Photos courtesy Brian Quirk. resource right at hand — they can use spend quality time with your name, members. Quirk said many tribes stay their DCPS student ID number as son or daughter, away from the their Jacksonville Public Library card. Native together for the full five years of the competitiveness of team sports, program. That’s a good reason to bring kids to Sons and is by joining or forming a Native Daughters. your Mandarin and South Mandarin Sons or Native Daughters tribe. Once formed, each tribe is assigned a libraries often. What’s more, educa- “We have sponsor from the longhouse who will tors who teach in Duval County — “When I first joined when my children always tried to be attend the first few meetings and help were young, one of the other fathers very respectful to all with organization and guidance. -
National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination
NFS Form 10-900 OMB No. 1024-0018 (3-82) Exp. 10-31-84 United States Department of the Interior National Park Service National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form See instructions in How to Complete National Register Forms Type all entries complete applicable sections historic .San Jose Thematic Group and/or common San Jose Estates 2. Location street & number Various - See Individual Inventory Forms N/A not for publication city, town Jacksonville N/A vicinity of state Florida code 012 county Duval code 031 3. Classification Category Ownership Status Present Use district public x occupied agriculture museum building(s) x private unoccupied commercial park structure both x work in progress x educational x private residence site Public Acquisition Accessible entertainment x religious object in process x yes: restricted government scientific x Thematic being considered yes: unrestricted industrial transportation Group N/A no military _x other: Recreation 4. Owner of Property name various - See Individual Inventory Forms street & number Various - See Individual Inventory Forms city, town Jacksonville N/A_ vicinity of state Florida 5. Location of Legal Description courthouse, registry of deeds, etc. puval County Courthouse street & number 330 East Bay Street city, town Jacksonville state Florida 6. Representation in Existing Surveys title Thematic Survey; San Jose Estates has this property been determined eligible? yes no Subdivision date 1983 federal state county local depository for survey records San Jose Estates Preservation city, town Jacksonville state Florida See Individual Inventory Forms Condition Check one Check one __ excellent __ deteriorated __ unaltered __ original site __ gob$ 544 __ ruins __ altered __ moved date __ fair __ unexposed Describe the present and original (if known) physical appearance The San Jose Estates Thematic Group consists of 24 individual structures associated with the 1925-6 development of San Jose, a suburb of Jacksonville, Florida. -
C: Today Is October 12, 2005, and This Is Jim Crooks Speaking to the UNF Oral History Project at the Home of Fred Schultz. I Am
C: Today is October 12, 2005, and this is Jim Crooks speaking to the UNF Oral History Project at the home of Fred Schultz. I am interviewing Fred Schultz for the University of North Florida oral history project. Start at the beginning if you would like. S: All right. I was involved in some casual conversation about the possibility of a university in this area. This was back around the late 1950s and around 1960. I had never been interested in politics, but I had some interest in education at that point. I was on the board out at Bolles. In 1960, when Farris Bryant [Farris Bryant – Florida governor, 1961-1965; Florida state representative, 1946-1956; speaker of the Florida House of Representatives, 1953] ran for governor, I became interested in his campaign. There were some discussions at that point about a university in Northeast Florida. Farris was very interested in the higher education system of the state of Florida. That was his big issue, the big platform that he ran on. So when he was elected in 1960, his chief man in this area told me not too long ago, and that was David Forrester, who was Farris’s campaign manager in this area. Dave told me that Farris had thought about putting me on the Board of Control, but that didn’t work out because somebody else was very interested in it, and Farris felt like he wanted to do something with them. He put me on the Jacksonville Expressway Authority, which turned out to be quite serendipitous. -
Federal Register/Vol. 86, No. 91/Thursday, May 13, 2021/Proposed Rules
26262 Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 91 / Thursday, May 13, 2021 / Proposed Rules FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS BCPI, Inc., 45 L Street NE, Washington, shown or given to Commission staff COMMISSION DC 20554. Customers may contact BCPI, during ex parte meetings are deemed to Inc. via their website, http:// be written ex parte presentations and 47 CFR Part 1 www.bcpi.com, or call 1–800–378–3160. must be filed consistent with section [MD Docket Nos. 20–105; MD Docket Nos. This document is available in 1.1206(b) of the Commission’s rules. In 21–190; FCC 21–49; FRS 26021] alternative formats (computer diskette, proceedings governed by section 1.49(f) large print, audio record, and braille). of the Commission’s rules or for which Assessment and Collection of Persons with disabilities who need the Commission has made available a Regulatory Fees for Fiscal Year 2021 documents in these formats may contact method of electronic filing, written ex the FCC by email: [email protected] or parte presentations and memoranda AGENCY: Federal Communications phone: 202–418–0530 or TTY: 202–418– summarizing oral ex parte Commission. 0432. Effective March 19, 2020, and presentations, and all attachments ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking. until further notice, the Commission no thereto, must be filed through the longer accepts any hand or messenger electronic comment filing system SUMMARY: In this document, the Federal delivered filings. This is a temporary available for that proceeding, and must Communications Commission measure taken to help protect the health be filed in their native format (e.g., .doc, (Commission) seeks comment on and safety of individuals, and to .xml, .ppt, searchable .pdf).