The 61st Miami-Dade County Fair & Expo is Underway

Come live the experience and be a part of the Miami-Dade County Fair, going on daily until April 1, 2012.

Presented by Pepsi, Kia Motors America and Sedano’s Supermarkets the Fair is ranked the largest fair in Florida, attracting well over half a million visitors annually. This adrenaline filled 18-day event includes live entertainment, state-of-the-art rides, skill games, outrageous fair foods and livestock/agricultural competitions.
It proudly showcases more than 45,000 local student exhibits, both artistic and academic, and generously supports youth achievement programs throughout the year. In cooperation with the Miami-Dade County Public Schools, The Fair showcases the artistic and academic talents of more than 45,000 students through competition and exhibition. Most experience the thrill of receiving public recognition for the first time, sharing with friends and family a proudly displayed blue or red ribbon and a cash prize.
In its 61 year history, The Fair has donated more than $8 Million in scholarships, awards and premiums.
http://www.fairexpo.com/thefair/fairinfo-about_us.php
The Miami-Dade County Fair & Exposition, Inc. located on 86 acres of beautifully landscaped grounds in the southwest region of Miami, offers the best of fair traditions with cosmopolitan flair. Due to the largely Hispanic market, the Fair offers diversity in its entertainment, midways and concessions. With attendance of nearly 600,000 the 18-day family-oriented event attracts all age groups.
There are three exhibition halls at The Fair Expo Center: Arnold Hall (78,000 sq ft) houses student and adult exhibits as well as concession booths; Edwards Hall (36,000 sq ft) houses commercial merchandise booths and the E. Darwin Fuchs Pavilion (49,000 sq ft) will house the Fair’s featured show, an ice skating extravaganza.
The Miami Fair offers a little of something for everyone from amusement rides, face painting, and all varieties of exhibits to a widely cultural menu on the concessions page. There are livestock shows, as the Fair sponsors the local 4-H chapter, among others in the community.
This year’s festivities includes numerous live musical acts and also boasts some live wrestling action as well.
Visitors are welcomed at the fair seven days a week; however, the website does not make hours of operation available, if you are traveling from out of town possibly and want to know what times the fairgrounds are open to the public, please call: 305-223-7060.
There are a number of discounts and deals available to those that wish to attend; some are scheduled for specified dates and others are honored daily at the gates. Take a peek here: http://www.fairexpo.com/thefair/fairinfo-discounts.php
Miami Fairgrounds address:
10901 SW 24th Street
Miami, FL 33165
CONTACT: 305-223-7060
MAP: http://tinyurl.com/7zyujla
Purchase your tickets in advance here: http://www.fairexpo.com/thefair/advance_sales-individual.php

Continue reading on Examiner.com The 61st Miami-Dade County Fair & Expo is Underway: – Miami art events | Examiner.com http://www.examiner.com/art-events-in-miami/the-61st-miami-dade-county-fair-expo-is-underway#ixzz1pllMtP1X

Sacto 911: Scandia, crane company cited in Screamer ride accident

State safety officials have issued significant citations in an accident that toppled a crane and a portion of a carnival park ride at the Scandia Family Fun Center in North Highlands last year.

A Cal-OSHA investigation revealed that the accident that left a worker’s arm crushed was due to improper rigging, underestimating the weight of the ride that was being dismantled and other factors.

“These are serious violations,” said Cal-OSHA spokeswoman Erika Monterroza. “Under Cal-Osha definition a serious violation is one that has a high probability of causing serious injury or death.”

The accident occurred Aug. 30 about 4 p.m. when two employees from Scandia were removing the ride portion of the Screamer from the ride tower. A crane and an operator from Maxim Crane Works was on hand to help remove the ride from the vertical support post and position it in the parking lot.

The ride slid off the post and fell to the ground, tipping the crane at the same time, the report said. One of the Scandia employees had his arm severely injured as the boom of the crane struck him.

He dangled from the tower as his co-worker, who sustained less severe injury, tried to help, according to the report. A Sacramento Metropolitan Fire District crew passing by responded immediately.

The Scandia Screamer, located at Interstate 80 and Madison Avenue, was designed to send passengers in a gondola on a wind-whipping ride 165 feet into the air.

Cal-Osha issued citations to both companies.

The report said that Maxim failed to protect both its crane operator and Scandia employees from an improperly rigged load. Also, Maxim did not have a qualified person on the job to determine the magnitude of the load.

Total proposed penalties are $36,000 for Maxim.

Scandia was cited for not rigging the ride to the crane for safe handling, for not making sure the ride was properly balanced, for not having a qualified rigger and for not knowing the weight of the ride to be removed.

Not having a qualified rigger to determine the weight resulted in the crane being overloaded by the ride and rigging, according to the report.

Scandia citations add up to about $39,000.

Scandia declined comment. Maxim Crane Works corporate offices could not be reached for comment.

Both companies have told Cal-OSHA that they would appeal the citations.

Finger Lakes Musical Theatre Festival quickly approaching

Tickets now on sale
AUBURN, N.Y. – Tickets for the inaugural season of the Finger Lakes Musical Theatre Festival are now
on sale. Tickets can be purchased online, by calling 315-255-1785 or 800-457-8897, or in person at the
Finger Lakes Musical Theatre Festival winter offices in the Westminster Presbyterian Church located at
17 William St. 2nd Floor, Auburn, N.Y.
Beginning in May, the 250-performance, professional musical theater festival will offer shows that range
from revivals of the most storied classics to newer favorites, along with 20 new musicals, presented in
their earliest stages of development, in a series known as “THE PITCH.”
The Finger Lakes Musical Theatre Festival will be held at three different venues just minutes away from
each other. As the festival continues to grow in the upcoming years organizers anticipate the festival to
annually draw 150,000 attendees, generate a $30 million boost to the local economy and help create 400
new jobs. 
Heralded as a top travel destination by “Shermans Travel” magazine, the Finger Lakes region offers fine
dining, celebrated wineries and outdoor activities once the curtains close.
2012 Finger Lakes Musical Theatre Festival Schedule
Merry-Go-Round Playhouse
 “Kiss Me, Kate” (May 30 to June 20)
 “9 to 5: The Musical” (June 27 to July 18)
 “My Fair Lady” (July 25 to Aug. 15)
 “Cabaret” (Aug. 22 to Sept. 8)
 “The 25
th
Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee” (Sept. 12 to Sept. 29)
 “Nunsense” (Oct. 3 to Oct. 20)
Auburn Public Theater
 “Altar Boyz” (June 6 to June 30)
 “My Mother’s Lesbian Jewish Wiccan Wedding” (July 5 to July 28)
 “Fingers & Toes” (Aug. 1 to Aug. 18)
Theater Mack at the Cayuga Museum
 “THE PITCH” (June 14 to Aug. 18)
Tickets are now available including single-show tickets; Off-Broadway Passes, which include one ticket to
each show at Auburn Public Theater; Merry-Go-Round Playhouse subscriptions, which include one ticket
to each of the four shows at the Merry-Go-Round Playhouse; and Flex Passes, which allow for flexibility
in selecting up to nine musicals. Group rates and an “early bird/night owl special” are also available.
About Finger Lakes Musical Theatre Festival:
Finger Lakes Musical Theatre Festival, produced by the Merry-Go-Round Playhouse in Auburn, N.Y., is a
new annual summer-long festival featuring nine professional musical productions along with 20 new
musicals, presented in their earliest stages of development, in a series known as “THE PITCH.” The
festival will offer productions at three different venues just minutes away from each other. As the festival
continues to grow in the upcoming years, organizers anticipate the festival to annually draw 150,000
attendees, generate a $30 million boost to the local economy and help create 400 new jobs. For more
information on the festival or to purchase tickets, visit www.FingerLakesMTF.com. Find Finger Lakes
Musical Theatre Festival on Facebook or follow FingerLakesMTF on Twitter.

Local dad accused of abandoning daughter, nieces at RodeoHouston

Local dad accused of abandoning daughter, nieces at RodeoHouston

HOUSTON – A family outing led to a trip to jail for a Houston dad who allegedly left his daughter and two nieces alone for two hours at RodeoHouston.

Ralph Robinson, 22, is charged with three counts of child abandonment.

According to police, Robinson took the three girls, ages 4, 6 and 7, to the show Sunday night.

But a woman sitting next to the kids said Robinson left the girls there for two hours, returning only once to check on them.

The woman called security, and guards took the kids into custody and detained Robinson until police arrived.

Robinson was taken to the Harris County Jail, where he remained Monday on $6,000 bond.

Rising gas prices create tough climate for states’ proposals to increase gas tax

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP) — As if gas prices weren’t high enough, several states across the U.S. are looking to raise fuel taxes they say are needed to pay for roads and bridges that are outdated, congested and in some cases, dangerous.

Maryland’s governor is proposing a phased-in 6 percent sales tax by 2 percent a year, which would raise about $613 million annually when fully implemented. Iowa is considering raising its current 21-cent-per-gallon tax by either 8 cents or 10 cents.

Such proposals were hard to even contemplate during the recession and its immediate aftermath. Now, states forced to grapple with the problem are running into record-high gas prices for this time of year and lingering effects of the recession.

In Maryland, lawmakers are questioning whether the time is right for such an increase, which is never popular even in good fiscal times. “They understand that it’s needed,” Delegate Tawanna Gaines, a Democrat, said when asked about the proposal last month, on a day when the national average price of gasoline hit $3.65 a gallon. The average price of gas on Monday pushed toward $3.80 a gallon. “They get that, but they basically believe that you can’t get blood out of a turnip. It’s going to be a very, very tough sell.”

Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley, a Democrat, is quick to point out that the state hasn’t raised its gas tax since 1992 — and the flat tax doesn’t buy nearly as much as it once did. But some lawmakers say they are getting significant pushback from residents who are calling their offices to express opposition at a time when Maryland, like most other states, is still trying to bounce back from the recession.

O’Malley’s plan would delay a 2 percent annual increase if gas prices rise by more than 15 percent in a fiscal year. Lawmakers also say Maryland’s $1.1 billion deficit is creating another obstacle, because his challenging budget plan includes a variety of other tax increases that legislators will be considering.

Other states also are looking at increasing revenue streams for transportation projects after years of neglect. Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder, a Republican, is calling on lawmakers in his state to raise $1.4 billion more for transportation needs. In Arkansas, voters may be asked to consider raising two taxes to help pay for the state’s roads. In Iowa, a commission named by Republican Gov. Terry Branstad recommended late last year that the fuel tax be increased.

In Michigan, state lawmakers in both parties are considering higher fuel-related taxes and vehicle registration fees to raise more than $1 billion of the $1.4 billion the governor is seeking. Rep. Rick Olson, a Republican who supports the revenue increases, contends it’s a matter of trying to avoid larger expenses later, if maintenance is deferred. “It’s certainly going to be difficult, and no one argues that we need $1.4 billion,” Olson said. “The longer we wait, the more it is going to cost us.”

In both Maryland and Michigan, business groups have been supportive of raising revenue for transportation.

Rich Studley, president of the Michigan Chamber of Commerce, said Michigan’s transportation system is crucial to three top industries in the state, including manufacturing, agribusiness and tourism. “It’s really, from a Chamber of Commerce perspective, all about jobs and the economy,” Studley said.

2012-03-05-ap-Gas-Tax.JPGView full sizeKathleen Snyder, president and CEO of the Maryland Chamber of Commerce, takes part in a Jan. 19 rally in Annapolis, Md., backing an increase in the gas tax. The chamber is one of several business organizations that is part of the Statewide Transportation Alliance to Restore the Trust, which advocates for a gas tax increase along with assurances that any new money headed to the state’s Transportation Trust Fund won’t be used for other purposes.

Kathy Snyder, Maryland’s Chamber of Commerce president, also is backing a revenue increase in Maryland. However, she said the chamber would rather phase in a 10-cent increase to the state’s flat tax, instead of O’Malley’s phase-in of a sales tax.

“Transportation funding is one of the top priorities of the Maryland chamber again this year,” Snyder said. “Like many states, we don’t have enough funding to build any road, bridge, highway or transit project either from state funds or federal funds.”

An Arkansas constitutional amendment that lawmakers have placed on the November ballot will ask voters to approve a temporary, half-cent sales tax to pay for the state’s highways. The sales-tax measure is part of a highway plan calling for an increase in the state’s diesel tax, which the Legislature approved last year. That plan was scaled back when the state’s trucking lobby withdrew its support and said voters would not approve a tax hike. Instead, voters approved extending a $575 million highway bond program in November.

A second proposal in Arkansas would raise the state’s severance tax on natural gas to pay for highways. A former natural-gas executive has until July 6 to submit more than 62,000 signatures to place his proposal on the November ballot. It would increase the severance tax to 7 percent. Wells are now taxed at between 1.25 percent and 5 percent of the value of the gas being taken from the land.

In Iowa, a commission recommended late last year that the fuel tax be increased by 8 cents to 10 cents per gallon. Iowa has gone even longer than Maryland in increasing its current 21cents-per-gallon tax, which was last raised in 1989. Branstad reacted by saying there was no need to increase the tax this year, and instead told state transportation officials to identify $50 million in savings that could be diverted to road projects. They have done so.

Some Iowa lawmakers think that’s inadequate, however, and committees in both the House and Senate are debating a fuel-tax increase.

Branstad continues to say he’s focused on finding efficiency but refuses to issue a veto threat that would halt debate immediately. Republicans run the House and top leaders there have the power to block debate, but they have yet to do so. Democrats run the state’s Senate, and they say the issue will proceed only if it gets broad support from Republicans.

Interest groups pushing the issue say there are enough votes to approve the increase, with the only remaining question being if an adequate level of Republican support can be found to avoid the issue being used against Democrats in November. All sides say they will need some signal from Branstad that he will approve the measure, even if it only comes privately.

In Maryland, O’Malley focused much of his State of the State speech on the need to make tough budget choice in order to find money that would help create construction jobs and maintain transportation infrastructure crucial to economic development in the suburbs of the nation’s capital, which has some of the worst traffic in the nation. “To create jobs, a modern economy requires modern investments,” O’Malley said in the Feb. 1 speech. “Investments by all of us, for all of us.”

O’Malley’s chief of staff, Matthew Gallagher, has been meeting with lawmakers to underscore the gas tax measure’s “breaking mechanism,” which would defer any increase in fiscal years when the price of gas increases by more than 15 percent. Gallagher said the administration anticipated concern about price volatility and included the slowdown to allay worries. “I think there is an awareness about the significant need for funding and an awareness that nothing has happened on this in 20 years,” Gallagher said.

Studley, who is optimistic there will be a window of opportunity to pass legislation in Michigan this year, noted the challenges of previous years, when lawmakers have told him to come back with the proposal when it’s not an election year or when gas prices are not high. “Sometimes, working on this issue is kind of like going into that friendly neighborhood tavern, where everybody knows your name and the sign behind the bar says ‘Free beer tomorrow,’ which sounds good, but tomorrow never comes,” Studley said.

Florida Strawberry Festival opens today

0301 Strawberry Prep

The Florida Strawberry Festival starts with a couple of big names on Thursday: the Oak Ridge Boys and Gretchen Wilson are set to take the stage at Plant City’s signature event.

The Strawberry Festival, which runs through March 11, combines top-flight entertainers, a classic country fair, midway rides and a bevy of tempting fried foods guaranteed to clog your arteries.

Of course, truckloads of shortcake and strawberries will be on hand — the focal point of the annual event held during the peak of the region’s strawberry-growing season. The fruit is the area’s top crop; more than 8,000 acres are devoted to strawberries, and local farmers grow nearly all of the nation’s winter strawberries.

Country music fans know the festival as a premiere destination for top talent. This year’s lineup features the Gatlin Brothers, Crystal Gayle, Jake Owen, Hank Williams Jr., Vince Gill, Josh Turner, The Band Perry, Lee Greenwood, Louise Mandrell, the Charlie Daniels Band and Reba McEntire.

The festival entertainment lineup also includes a slate of big band, pop, gospel and oldies artists, including Demi Lovato, Air Supply, TobyMac and Brenda Lee.

Other festival highlights include a karaoke contest tonight; a Youth Parade on Saturday, when kids through high school age get into the festival for free; a baby contest on Sunday; a lamb costume contest on Tuesday; a corn dog-eating contest on March 7; a strawberry shortcake-eating contest on March 8; and a baby parade on March 10.

Daytona 500 stopped after fiery explosion with jet drier

The Daytona 500 is under a caution after a car collided with a jet drier on the track.

That car was driven by Juan Pablo Montoya.  He was able to get out of the car, and reports say that everyone is OK.

Montoya was driving well behind the rest of the field when something on his car broke and he slid out of control into the jet drier, setting off an explosion and sending fuel pouring onto the track.

The jet drier holds 200 gallons of jet kerosene.

The driver of the jet drier was helped out of his truck.

The race finally got started under the lights at Daytona International Speedway just after 7 p.m.

And within the first two laps, several drivers were involved in a crash, including Jimmie Johnson, Danica Patrick, Trevor Bayne, David Ragan, Elliott Sadler and Kurt Busch. Jimmie Johnson is out of the race, and Sadler is in while the others are examining their cars to see if they can return.

Bayne won the Daytona 500 last year.

NASCAR officials said the weather forecast has forced them to push the start time to seven hours later from the original noon start today.

Just a week ago, officials at Daytona International Speedway were beaming at the great weather that stuck around for every other event during Speedweeks.

But by Sunday afternoon, that string of good luck finally ran out.

The Daytona 500 has run in the rain before, but never has wet weather postponed the race — until now.

“While we’re suspending the start from noon to 7 ET, we’re not suspending our efforts. We’ll be working all day,” said NASCAR president Mike Helton.

Jet dryers spent about two hours getting the track ready after some early afternoon rain. Fortunately storms are staying off to the south of the track.

Racing teams have to be a little wound up, having been preparing all winter for the first race of the year, only to have to sit around all day.

And if the rain delay wasn’t enough, the next scheduled race is Sunday, March 4, in Phoenix. That gives teams less time to go home and do some laundry before heading west.

The Daytona 500 Champion’s Breakfast has been postponed to a later date.

Carl Edwards, runner-up to Tony Stewart in last year’s championship race, will start from the pole. Former IndyCar star Danica Patrick will make her Daytona 500 debut.


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