Truman, the python-sniffing black Labrador retriever, recently tracked down his first snake in a new program Florida is using to eradicate the invasive species.

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission recently began training Truman and another dog named Eleanor to detect a python’s scent and alert handlers when they’ve come across one. The first success was last week when Truman found an 8-foot Burmese python in the Rocky Glades Public Small Game Hunting Area in Miami-Dade County.

“We’ve got to stay innovative. We’ve got to try new approaches and the detector dogs is just one area where we’re doing that,” Gil McRae, the director at the agency’s Fish and Wildlife Research Institute, told commissioners during an update Wednesday.

He showed commissioners pictures of the dogs during a virtual meeting, including one with Truman standing behind the massive snake he found.

“They’re hard workers, commissioners. They really are very dedicated and you can see that they’re very proud and they should be,” McCrae said.

Estimated to number between 100,000 and 300,000, pythons have become a threat to the fragile Florida Everglades ecosystem as they devour native mammals and birds, disrupting the natural balance of predator and prey. They’ve been successful at reproducing in the swampy Everglades because they have no predators. Females can lay up to 100 eggs.

Trainers use python-scented towels and live pythons with surgically implanted trackers to teach the dogs to pick up a snake’s scent. The dogs were trained for more than a month before going out in the wild, according to the agency’s website.

And while Burmese pythons have been known to eat small alligators and small deer, Truman and Eleanor are trained to stay about 3 feet away from the reptiles.

The battle to contain the pythons in the Everglades and nearby areas has been a difficult one for Florida, and Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis made increasing eradication efforts a budget priority. He also signed a bill that allows drones to be used to track down the snakes.

McCrae told commissioners that snake hunters hired by the state captured about 6,300 pythons over the last four years. He said nearly 40% of that total was in 2020 alone and credited the governor for the increased attention on the problem.

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A Colombian “Red-Tailed” Boa, which is a non-native exotic snake was captured in Lehigh Acres Sunday.

According to Scott Flavelle, who is licensed for nuisance animal control the python is 60 lbs. and more than 8 1/2 feet long.

The snake was caught near Joel Blvd in the area of the Greenbrier community.

Flavelle said it was possibly someone’s pet that escaped or was released at some point in the past.

The boa was sent to Adam’s Animal Encounters in Bokeelia.

Adam Pottruck, the owner of Adam’s Animal Encounters, said, “I was pretty excited to take her in. I was more impressed that he took the extra steps, Scott, took the extra steps to make sure she wasn’t euthanized, knowing it wasn’t her fault.

He added that it looks like the boa was slithering around Southwest Florida for a while and also agrees it appears to have been someone’s pet.

“There are native animals that are falling prey to these animals,” Pottruck explained, “It’s not even a fair competition.” Adding, the snake is big enough to eat a bobcat.

He reminds that it’s a good lesson for people who are considering getting one as a pet, “I wish the exotic pet trade was much stricter than people buying them off a whim and then deciding to get rid of it.”

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A search is underway in Fort Myers for a 65-year-old woman reported missing on Sunday.

Police were searching along several streets on Wednesday looking for Maria Espinal, who is considered endangered because she has dementia. A K-9 picked up on a scent, according to police.

Espinal was last seen walking on Luckett Road, east of Ortiz Avenue. She was wearing a light green/blue sweater, gray sweatpants and black Croc-style shoes.

Her daughters are also out searching for her, hoping to find her safe and bring her home before the holidays.

“We’re still looking and we will still keep on looking,” said her daughter, Jessica Espinal.

“At this point, I don’t care; I go in the woods, we go street to street.”

Police say K-9s picked up on a scent and started to track it, covering a lot of ground in a short time – but so far, nothing.

“There is times where, I’m not going to lie to you, there’s moments that I feel frustrated, devastated, that all I can do is cry,” Jessica said.

But she promised she’d find a way to stay positive and keep going.

“We’re still going to be everywhere; we’re adamant and we want her to be here.”

Anyone who sees Espinal is asked to call the Fort Myers Police Department at 239-321-7700.

Maria Espinal (Photo provided by FMPD)

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The NCH Healthcare System has purchased the Naples Daily News building in North Naples, according to a news release from the health care system.

The sale of the 186,000 square-feet building closed on Tuesday. The news release did not disclose the amount of the sale. According to the Collier County Property Appraiser, the property has an assessed value of $ 25,090,116.

The building, built in 2009, is located a couple of blocks west of the NCH North Naples Hospital campus. The property is located on an 18-acre lot.

Current plans include the relocation of some of NCH’s administrative offices, including accounting, billing, IT. business office, supply chain, system warehousing among others. Those officers are currently located at 2157 Pine Ridge Road.

The hospital system’s human resources, marketing and other non-clinical support services will also move to the new building.

The move is expected to be complete in early spring of next year, according to the release.

It’s unclear what will happen to the operations of the Naples Daily News at this time. We are still waiting to hear back from them about what the sale means for the newspaper.

The daily newspaper, owned by Gannett, moved printing operations to Sarasota last December, eliminating close to 50 full- and part-time jobs.

The Naples Daily News and The News-Press, also owned by Gannett, have since been printed at the Sarasota Herald-Tribune.

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A black bear was killed in a collision with a truck on I-75 in Collier County early Wednesday.

The Florida Highway Patrol says the bear ran into the path of the truck on the interstate, east of CR-951.

The bear was pronounced dead at the scene.

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A British coroner ruled Wednesday that excessive air pollution from traffic fumes contributed to the death of a 9-year-old girl who died of a fatal asthma attack. The girl is believed to be the first person in the U.K. to have air pollution listed as the cause of death on their death certificate.

Ella Kissi-Debrah, who lived close to one of London’s busiest thoroughfares, died in February 2013 after making almost 30 hospital visits over the previous three years. Her mother has long fought to have the role of air pollution in her daughter’s death recognized.

Coroner Philip Barlow said Wednesday after a two-week hearing that he concluded Ella “died of asthma, contributed to by exposure to excessive air pollution.”

“Air pollution was a significant contributory factor to both the induction and exacerbations of her asthma,” he said, adding that in the three years before her death, the girl was exposed to levels of nitrogen dioxide and particulate matter that exceeded World Health Organization guidelines.

“The principal source of her exposure was traffic emissions,” Barlow said, adding there was a failure to reduce the pollutants to within the limits set by European Union and U.K. law.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan said that the coroner’s conclusion was a “landmark moment.” The inquest highlighted the importance of implementing policies such as expanding a low emission zone to inner London, he said.

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Nursing homes around Florida began inoculating patients and staff Wednesday against COVID-19 with doses of the first U.S.-approved vaccine against the disease that has killed more than 20,000 people in the state.

At the John Knox Village near Fort Lauderdale, 90 of the 100 residents of its skilled-nursing were vaccinated Wednesday. The village has about 1,000 residents overall with most living independently in homes or apartments with others in assisted living. The state says three village residents have died of the virus, but Mark Rayner, its director of health services, disputed that number. He said the three had recovered and died of other causes.

Rayner said none of the skilled nursing patients had gotten the disease and one employee who contracted COVID-19 has since recovered. The patients in the six-story facility have individual apartments, with 12 people per unit who come together for meals and socializing. Rayner said that layout, social distancing, protective equipment for staff and daily testing have kept the virus at bay.

Resident Vera Leip, 88, got her vaccination Wednesday afternoon as Gov. Ron DeSantis and about 30 reporters and photographers watched. Liep, who taught elementary school in Ferguson, Missouri, for 40 years, said she was excited to get her shot.

“I hope it will help me from getting COVID,” she said. “I don’t know if it (the vaccines) will help or not. I hope they do. … I don’t know anything about it (the disease), but I would prefer not to have it.”

She said even with the pandemic, she has been able to visit with her two daughters, her son and three grandchildren. They meet in designated areas or outdoors and she has given them hugs.

“I don’t know if I was supposed to, but I did,” she laughed.

DeSantis was touting his administration’s effort to get nursing home patients vaccinated as quickly as possible. He said 21,400 doses of the Pfizer vaccine were split between nursing homes in the Fort Lauderdale and St. Petersburg areas, with emergency medical technicians and Florida National Guard medical personnel visiting the homes to give the shots.

He said the first nursing home shots had been scheduled by the CVS and Walgreens drugstore chains next week, but he didn’t want to wait. Over the last six weeks, the number of nursing home patients testing positive statewide has risen from 1 in 200 to 1 in 75, he said.

“We were not happy allowing that wait. Time is of the essence,” he said. “We believe the quicker you can get in to vaccinate, the better it is going to be.“

After Leip got her shot, DeSantis asked how she felt – fine, she replied. He then quickly pushed her wheelchair back inside and left without taking questions.


You can watch a replay below of DeSantis’ visit to John Knox Village and see Leip receive her vaccination. App users, click here to watch.


Such nursing homes have borne the brunt of the state’s outbreak, with 7,765 of its 20,365 confirmed deaths reported there. Thirty-nine Florida nursing homes have had two dozen or more deaths among residents and staff, including a nursing home in the South Florida community of Hialeah with 70 resident deaths.

Florida is receiving about 180,000 doses of the initial Pfizer vaccine approved for emergency use, and hospitals around the state began vaccinating front-line health workers Monday. Several nursing homes were beginning the jabs Wednesday.

DeSantis has focused much of his pandemic messaging around protecting nursing homes. Previously, the state had imposed early restrictions on visitations and barred the return from hospitals of virus-positive patients unless those facilities had COVID-19 wards. With Florida’s high percentage of retirees and large number of nursing homes, the toll on the elderly was an acute concern early in the pandemic.

In some early periods about 50% of the deaths in Florida were linked to nursing homes. That figure has now been brought down to 38 percent of the total, just a tad below the national average of 39% computed by the Covid Tracking Project.

Florida has the second-highest nursing home population in the country behind California. However, the percentage of its population living in long-term health facilities is only 23rd in the nation.

At John Knox, Rayner said the facility is not requiring employees to get the vaccine and only 80 of the 200 employees in the skilled nursing facility have volunteered for the first wave. He said many of those who had declined were Black employees who said they didn’t trust it.

“They are frightened,” he said. “There is that culture line.”

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Collier County Public Schools has posted its draft 2022-2023 academic calendar along with a survey so parents, employees and other community members can weigh in on it.

The survey will be available until 3 p.m. on Jan. 8, 2021.

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An arrest has been made in a violent home invasion robbery that happened in Clewiston on Thanksgiving Day.

The Clewiston Police Department said Wednesday that Darion Radcliffe, 22, faces charges of home invasion robbery, aggravated assault, aggravated battery, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, and theft.

Police say that on Thanksgiving Day, they responded to a home and learned that a man was at his elderly mother’s house when two men knocked on the door and pushed their way through after he answered. The victim fell and at least one suspect began to strike him in the head with their firearm.

The victim’s brother, who lives at the home, arrived, and the suspects stopped beating the victim, grabbed various items from the home, and fled. The brothers began to chase the suspects, causing one of them to turn around and fire his weapon. The suspects continued running and the victims lost sight of them.

Investigators searching the area found a vehicle that was believed to be involved in the incident. From there, officers were able to identify Radcliffe as a suspect.

The CPD says the incident remains under investigation and additional arrests are likely.

Radcliffe is being held in the Hendry County Jail on $320,000 bail.

Anyone with information is asked to contact Southwest Florida Crime Stoppers at 1-800-780-TIPS. Tips can also be emailed to police@clewiston-fl.gov, or you can call 863-983-1474, ext. 206 to speak with a detective.

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Congressional negotiators closed in Wednesday on a $900 billion COVID-19 relief package that would deliver additional “paycheck protection” subsidies to businesses, $300 per week jobless checks, and $600 or so stimulus payments to most Americans.

The long-delayed measure was coming together as Capitol Hill combatants finally fashioned difficult compromises, often at the expense of more ambitious Democratic wishes for the legislation, to complete the second major relief package of the pandemic.

It’s the first significant legislative response to the pandemic since the landmark CARES Act in March, which delivered $1.8 trillion in aid and more generous jobless benefits and direct payments to individuals. Since then, Democrats have repeatedly called for ambitious further federal steps to provide relief and battle the pandemic, while Republicans have sought to more fully reopen the economy and to avoid padding the government’s $27 trillion debt.

But President-elect Joe Biden is eager for an aid package to prop up the economy and deliver direct aid to the jobless and hungry, even though it falls short of what Democrats want. He called the emerging package “an important down payment” and promised more help next year.

Republicans, too, are anxious to approve some aid before going home for the year.

“We made major headway toward hammering out a bipartisan relief package,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Kentucky told reporters Wednesday morning. And during a Senate GOP lunchtime call a day earlier, party leaders stressed the importance of reaching an agreement before for the upcoming Georgia Senate runoff election, according to a person who was on the private call and granted anonymity to discuss it.

The details are still being worked out, but lawmakers in both parties said leaders have agreed on a top-line total of about $900 billion, with direct payments of perhaps $600 to most Americans and a $300-per-week bonus federal unemployment benefit to partially replace a $600-per-week benefit that expired this summer. It also includes the renewal of extra weeks of state unemployment benefits for the long-term jobless. More than $300 billion in subsidies for business, including a second round of “paycheck protection” payments to especially hard-hit businesses, are locked in.

Democrats acknowledged that the removal of a $160 billion-or-so aid package for state and local governments whose budgets have been thrown out of balance by the pandemic was a bitter loss.

“It’s heartbreaking for us,” said Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois, whose state has big fiscal problems.

The emerging package was serving as a magnet for adding on other items, and the two sides continued to swap offers.

And it was apparent that another temporary spending bill would be needed to prevent a government shutdown at midnight on Friday. That is likely to easily pass.

House lawmakers returned to Washington Wednesday in hopes of a vote soon on the emerging package, which would combine the COVID-19 relief with a $1.4 trillion governmentwide funding bill and a host of other remaining congressional business, including extending expiring tax breaks and passing other unfinished legislation.

Negotiations intensified on Tuesday after months of futility. Before the election, with Democrats riding high in the polls, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi took a hard line in the talks. Now, McConnell is playing a strong hand after a better-than-expected performance in the elections limited GOP losses in Senate races.

McConnell successfully pushed to get Democrats to drop their much-sought $160 billion state and local government aid package while giving up a key priority of his own – a liability shield for businesses and other institutions like universities fearing COVID-19 lawsuits. Democrats cited other gains for states and localities in the emerging deal such as help for transit systems, schools and vaccine distribution.

Pelosi has insisted for months that state and local aid would be in any final bill, but as time is running out, she is unwilling to hold the rest of the package hostage over the demand.

A poisonous dynamic has long infected the negotiations, but the mood was businesslike in two meetings in Pelosi’s Capitol suite Tuesday that resulted in a burst of progress.

Pressure for a deal is intense. Unemployment benefits run out Dec. 26 for more than 10 million people. Many businesses are barely hanging on after nine months of the pandemic. And money is needed to distribute new vaccines that are finally offering hope for returning the country to a semblance of normalcy.

The looming agreement follows efforts by a bipartisan group of rank-and-file lawmakers to find a middle ground between a $2.4 trillion House bill and a $500 billion GOP measure fashioned by McConnell.

The $908 bipartisan agreement has served as a template for the talks, although the bipartisan group, led by Sens. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., and Susan Collins, R-Maine, favored aid to states and localities instead of another round of stimulus payments. The CARES Act provided for $1,200 payments per individual and $500 per child.

“I think that the work that our bipartisan group did really helped to stimulate this,” Collins said.

With Congress otherwise getting ready to close up shop, lawmakers are eager to use the relief package to carry other unfinished business.

A leading candidate is a 369-page water resources bill that targets $10 billion for 46 Army Corps of Engineers flood control, environmental, and coastal protection projects. Another potential addition would extend favorable tax treatment for “look through” entities of offshore subsidiaries of U.S. corporations. Meanwhile, thousands of craft brewers, wineries, and distillers are facing higher taxes in April if their tax break isn’t extended.

The end-of-session rush also promises relief for victims of shockingly steep surprise medical bills, a phenomenon that often occurs when providers drop out of insurance company networks. That measure, combined with an assortment of other health policy provisions, generates savings for federal funding for community health centers. And Senate education panel Chairman Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., is eager to simplify the maddening form for federal college aid.

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