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City Documents: CEDAR KEY WATER AND SEWER DISTRICT NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON RATE RESOLUTION
August 22nd, 2012

Announcements: BP Settlements - Meeting Notice
August 22nd, 2012

Law Enforcement News: Levy County Arrest Report 8/20/2012
August 21st, 2012

Announcements: Unemployment rate up slightly over the month, down significantly since July 2011
August 21st, 2012

Columns: North Florida – Wild Florida: Shearing the Sheep
August 20th, 2012

Pet of the Week: Pet of The Week - Ariel
August 20th, 2012

City News: CITY ADMINISTRATOR POSITION ADDRESSED IN ANOTHER BUDGET 2012-2013 WORKSHOP
August 19th, 2012

Conservation: The Reinvention of Fire
August 19th, 2012

City Documents: Cedar Key City Meeting Agenda 8-21-12
August 18th, 2012

Fishing News: Stormy Fishing
August 18th, 2012

Arts and Entertainment: DESIGN SELECTED FOR 2013 CEDAR KEY ART FESTIVAL
August 18th, 2012

Columns: ASK A LAWYER - A FOUR INCH KNIFE IS A CONCEALED WEAPON
August 17th, 2012

Conservation: CONSUMPTIVE USE PERMITTING OF WATER PUBLIC HEARING CONVENES IN CHIEFLAND
August 17th, 2012

Obituaries: Herschell William Oder
August 16th, 2012

Announcements: BP Meeting Notice
August 16th, 2012

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Oops, they did it again

Oops, they did it again

Ada Lang

A pair of student pilots from the Daytona Beach Ultimate Air Academy will not be getting gold stars next to their names after a botched landing Monday afternoon at the George W. Lewis Airstrip in Cedar Key.

John Ghanen, 19, has only had his pilot`s license for about 18 months and told authorities that he was flying the single engine plane that wound up in the marsh. However, witnesses on the scene said his "passenger", Tamir Ayoub, 21, was seen exiting the pilot`s side of the aircraft. Ayoub does not have a pilot`s license.


There is agreement that they were approaching the strip too fast and too high, so they aborted the first landing and circled around. The second attempt was not much better but they landed and both men applied the brakes upon landing. According to Cedar Key Police Chief Virgil Sandlin, the left tire blew and they ran off the South West corner of the runway and into the marsh.

The men blame the accident on "faulty equipment" - both tires were deflated upon impact and the nose gear was torn off, according to Sandlin.
But damage is only part of the problems they face. Apparently, the pair had informed the plane`s owner that they were flying from Daytona Beach to Palatka but wound up in the marsh in Cedar Key and they had not filed a flight plan. The FAA is expected to investigate the accident and file a report.

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