Pokémon GO Invades Wesley Chapel

pokekidsWEBOn a cloudless and sweltering summer day with temperatures in the 90s and humidity suffocating enough to melt your shirt, the Shops at Wiregrass mall is abuzz.

Children, teenagers and even adults walk down Paseo Dr., heads down, staring at their cell phones, eyes darting back and forth, fingers poised. It’s more crowded than on a regular weekday afternoon, and a large group of kids gather at the Wiregrass stage to exchange info.

“Gotta love Pokémon GO,’’ says Shops at Wiregrass general manager Greg Lenners.

In just a few weeks, the augmented-reality gaming app has players of all ages out hunting for Pokémon in droves. The magical animated creatures, wildly popular since the day they were created by Nintendo 20 years ago, can be found just about anywhere, if you look hard and far enough. You just need the free Pokémon GO app and a cell phone. Using GPS, a map is overlayed on the surrounding area so players can locate the coveted critters on trees, sidewalks or even your kitchen counter.

“It has been real crazy,’’ says Gavin Olsen, 19, a student at Pasco Hernando State College and part-time photographer at TSS Photography of Wesley Chapel. “There’s never been a mobile game like this, where you go outside to see people playing it. It’s everywhere.”

Gavin started a Facebook page — Wesley Chapel Pokémon GO — that now has almost 100 members where players share their experiences and talk about the game. It is one of a handful of new pages devoted to Pokémon GO in the Wesley Chapel and New Tampa areas.

pokekids4WEBThe goal is simple, as they say — Gotta Catch ‘Em All. You do that by throwing Pokéballs at the Pokémon — sometimes bribing them with a virtual Razz Berry helps make that task easier — and adding them to your Pokédex, or catalog. Then, you “train” them and help them evolve into newer, stronger characters.

Pokéballs, raspberries and other goodies used to catch Pikachu and Crew can be found at virtual Pokéstops — designated points on Google Maps chosen by the game developer Niantic Labs, and the mall has at least four Pokéstops — and you can battle other trainers at the nearest “gym.” (Note-Niantic, the Google spin-off, also built the popular augmented reality game Ingress. Nintendo, which created Pokémon, owns a stake in Niantic.

Since its release, Pokémon GO has surpassed Snapchat, Instagram and even mighty Twitter when it comes to active users. It has been downloaded more than 20 million times and interest in the game has doubled the value of Nintendo’s stock.

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The impact of the game can be seen almost anywhere you go in Wesley Chapel these days. Shopping areas, like the local malls and other retail centers, are a popular spot for game players because of the Pokéstops and gyms, and it’s also not uncommon to pass a handful of players while driving around your neighborhood.

The Shops at Wiregrass, according to a number of Facebook pages created to track Pokémon in Wesley Chapel, is prime hunting ground and has nine Pokéstops. The Grove at Wesley Chapel isn’t quite as bountiful, and the scene at the Tampa Premium Outlets is mixed. Parks and post offices in the area also are popular sites for Pokéstops.

pokekids2WEBWesley Chapel’s Shawn Doscotch, a mother of two teenagers, is out shopping for the afternoon, and is instantly struck by the sight of so many people staring down at their phones.

“What is going on?,’’ she asks.

The scene, she jokes, is like something out of the popular AMC zombie apocalypse series “The Walking Dead.”

“Do we really need more teenage zombies?,” she quips, as two teenage boys and a girl walk by, intently focused on their cell phones.

Doscotch had fleetingly heard about the game before she went to the mall. One of her children had mentioned downloading it, but she had no idea it had caught on so wildly. The zombie scene gave her pause.

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And, teenagers aren’t the only ones playing the world’s hottest game.

George and Jessica Navarro, a pair of married 25-year-olds, are pushing 1-year-old Alise down the sidewalk as they hold up their phones, looking for Pokémon.

pokeadultsWEBGeorge says when he first read about the game on a blog, he thought, “that’s kind of dumb.” He had grown up, like so many his age, playing Pokémon on a Nintendo Game Boy and collected the playing cards as well, but this was something very different.

He and Jessica, however, were hooked the moment they downloaded and opened the app.

“Like most people, I got addicted,’’ George says.

“It’s bad, and I usually don’t get addicted,’’ adds Jessica.

The first weekend the game was released, the Navarros went driving with friends to look for Pokémon, with one of them holding both phones and the other serving as the DD, or designated driver.

The pull of the game for many adults is simple, says George — it mixes the cell phone, the most popular piece of modern technology, with catching Pokémon, arguably the most popular video game from his childhood — and the childhoods of millions of millennials.

“I think it’s a definitely a nostalgia thing,’’ George says.

The game, however, has not been without its controversies.

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Pokémon GO has come under scrutiny for the amount of personal information it collects from players. It also has received a significant amount of bad press for some of the dangers affiliated with the game.

The first weekend it was released, one player stumbled upon a dead body while searching for Pokémon. A group of teens were robbed in Lake County, IL, according to the Associated Press, by two men who set up a Lure — a module in the game that players can set up within a Pokéstop that attracts Pokémon, thus attracting players who, in this case, were robbed.

Poke2WEBDespite a warning on the game’s start screen to watch where you are going, a man in New York crashed his car into a tree, admitting he had been distracted playing the game. In San Diego, two men fell off a 150-200-ft.-tall cliff after jumping a fence in search of Pokémon.

Some locations that the game designates as Pokéstops would prefer to be removed from the game, like the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and Arlington National Cemetery, both in Washington, DC. Players have come to those locales looking for Pokemon, and spokespersons for both places have called it “inappropriate.”

There are other stories, too, about people’s homes being Pokéstops, setting up situations where dozens of players are walking in their yards looking for the creatures. In Jacksonville, a man fired a rifle at two Pokémon-hunting teenagers he thought were burglars.

In Wesley Chapel, there haven’t been any newsworthy incidents, says Pasco County Sheriff’s Office spokesperson Melanie Snow.

“It’s so early on, but those things will become a bigger issue,’’ Snow says. “It is absolutely something for us to keep our eye on from a safety perspective, when it comes to things like loitering and crime. There’s a multitude of things that can occur as a result of Pokémon GO.”

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The game’s positives, though, do outweigh the negatives, at least according to Olsen. The game definitely promotes the physical nature of finding Pokémon, as players must walk to find them, and the more kilometers someone walks — yes, it’s gotten millions of Americans to use the metric system — the quicker their eggs will hatch and their Pokémon will evolve.

The budding video editor says he has a reclusive friend who has gotten into the game and now spends more time outside than he ever has, shedding 10 pounds in the process.

Olsen also is organizing Pokémon GO meetups — he had one at the Wesley Chapel District Park on Boyette Rd. on July 24 (after we went to press with this issue) — and says he has made friends while hunting at the mall.

“The social aspect of this game is a big thing for me, and the exploration part of it, too,’’ he says.

Meanwhile, George Navarro says he has lost three pounds his first weekend playing the game. He understands the negatives of the app and how those stories tend to resonate with the casual observer, but what he has seen so far is mostly positive. “I would say there are a lot of negatives,’’ Navarro says, “but not enough to overcome the good.”

Both Navarro and Olsen say local businesses might be wise to harness the popularity of the game, and some already have.

At the Shops at Wiregrass, one store offered 25-percent off your purchase if you showed them your Pokédex. Another created Pokéball-themed cookies to get people in the door.

But again, the most popular method of attracting extra customers, though, is creating Lures, which attract Pokémon, in order to attract Pokémon-hungry gamers.

If a business is located in or near a Pokéstop, it can pay (in game coins or real cash via an in-app purchase) to activate a Lure for 30 minutes. A New York Post story recently highlighted a pizza shop in Queens that paid $10 to “Lure” Pokémon to the store, attracting so many players the shop increased sales by 75 percent.

The Barnes & Noble at the Shops has two Pokéstops located inside it, which is paying off for the bookstore. “It’s brought in a lot more traffic,’’ assistant store manager Lisa Kuehner says. “You can definitely tell by the way people are walking around staring intently at their cell phones. People usually walk around looking at their phones, but not that intently.”

Kuehner says Barnes & Noble is definitely hoping to take advantage of being home to multiple Pokéstops. Ironically, It had already scheduled a Pokémon event on July 16th as part of its month-long celebration of pop culture, to celebrate the card game’s 20th anniversary.

Originally planned to focus on the original card game, Kuehner said adjustments had to be made after Pokémon Go was released a week prior to the event — which, she says, attracted about 50 people.

Expect many local businesses to follow suit.

“We’ve definitely noticed (an increase in traffic),’’ says Lenners. “It’s kind of early to tell, but I have actually heard comments from some of the stores that the game is bringing people inside the businesses. From a marketing aspect, we have not done anything, yet. But, if you can get people to the mall, that’s a good thing for us.”

Carrollwood Day School Offers Students A World-Class Education

carrollwood2WEBFor New Tampa and Wesley Chapel families who consider the standardized testing and one-size-fits-all curricula that have become synonymous with public schools unsuitable to the educational needs of their children, there is an alternative.

Carrollwood Day School (CDS) — located 30 minutes from most of Wesley Chapel on W. Bearss Ave., a few miles west of I-75, distinguishes itself by offering more than academic excellence, says Head of School Ryan Kelly.

“The main emphasis (here) is character development,” Kelly says. “That’s the foundation.” He adds that the school promotes that development through its classroom instruction, which is based on the International Baccalaureate (IB) World School Programme.

The IB Programme is based on educational principles developed and promoted globally by the Geneva, Switzerland-based foundation called International Baccalaureate (IB). According to the IB website (IBO.org), its mission statement is to, “develop inquiring, knowledgeable and caring young people who help to create a better and more peaceful world through intercultural understanding and respect.”

Schools throughout the world, from Albania to Zimbabwe, offer IB Programmes. CDS became an IB World School in 2005.

Kelly says the curriculum provides students what they will need to be effective global citizens and healthy risk takers, and that teaching life skills, as well as academics, is an important part of a CDS education.

“At the young age it’s anything from manners to treating a friend well,” Kelly says, “and then, as you get into elementary school, it’s some of the same but we work on public speaking and a variety of other things. And, in middle and high school, it’s (teaching) what you should do in difficult situations.”

The goal is to provide knowledge and tools that can lead to success, and that includes lessons about what to do when things go awry.

carrollwoodWEBKelly characterizes this as a “wholistic” approach. “We’re looking at the whole child,” he says. “There’s a lot of pressure on teenagers today and what we work on is building resiliency within our students, learning how to fail and not let it ruin your whole life and just understanding that there are going to be obstacles in your way.”

CDS director of marketing Shannon Gauthier says the school’s curriculum of Primary Years (age 3-grade 5), Middle Years (grades 6-10) and Diploma programmes (grades 11-12) is distinctive.

“We are the sixth school in the United States authorized to offer all three levels of the IB Programme,” Gauthier says.

About 1,000 students from age two through high school attend the co-educational, private school (unaffiliated with any particular religious group) which began in 1981 as an early childhood learning center in a rented storefront space. Over the years, CDS added grade levels and moved to different locations to accommodate its growth.

It became an IB World School in 2005 and moved to its current location on W. Bearss Ave. the following year, which is also when CDS’ high school division opened.

Academic programs emphasizing science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) have become popular, as students and their families seek knowledge applicable to the modern workplace. CDS adds another “E” (for Entrepreneurship) in its unique STEEM program.

“I want to make sure they are exposed to the STEEM areas because research shows that’s where the jobs are going to be,” says Kelly. “I brought entrepreneurship into the STEM acronym because it’s much more than just building a business, it’s about innovation, it’s about thinking outside the box.”

The STEEM emphasis is applied throughout all grade levels at CDS. Kelly says the IB curriculum’s emphasis on character development provides students a good academic foundation and personal skills that match up well with the school’s STEEM emphasis.

“It’s about social entrepreneurship and that’s about volunteering. A lot of times math, science, engineering and computer technology all sit in their silos and my goal is that there’s much more crosstalk between them all.”

Kelly says students learn to apply their knowledge and skills to real-world problems, like developing a social entrepreneurship business to tutor neighborhood kids.

And So Much More!

CDS offers more than just rigorous academics. Athletic opportunities range from equestrian to football. The softball and volleyball teams have made the state final four in recent years, and the football team is always a playoff contender, to name a few athletic successes.

Several honor societies are represented at CDS and students can join with others in clubs that explore drama, rocketry, table tennis, music, yoga and more. There’s even a model United Nations and a chapter of Oprah’s Ambassadors.

Many activities take place in the new, 25,000-square-foot Hayes Family Gymnasium that cost $3.5 million to build. There also is a performing arts theater located in the main building.

Tampa Palms resident Anh Flinter’s three daughters attend CDS and says the school has served her family’s educational needs well since moving to Tampa from New Jersey in 2009.

“My children are very happy and have flourished at CDS, (thanks) to the rigorous education derived from the IB program,”Flinter says, also noting that the teaching excellence of the CDS faculty and the families who volunteer their time and talents as some of the things that have prompted her to say, “Sending our daughters to CDS was one of the best decisions we’ve made.”

Sandy Smith is a CDS teacher who started out as a parent of a student at the school. The second grade teacher has been at CDS for nine years, following 15 years in the Hillsborough County School District. Her professional relationship with CDS began shortly after her daughter transferred there.

“When my daughter was transitioning to middle school, I wanted something different for her,” Smith says. “When I came to CDS, I just loved the family environment. It’s so warm and inviting.”

Families can contact the admissions office for a tour and several Open House events are held throughout the year. The public also will have a chance to visit the campus on Tuesday, August 9, when educator and author Michele Borba presents a program in which she will, “share hands-on tools to help in parenting for success,” and will provide the audience, “immediately usable strategies and an actionable roadmap for transforming cultures and improving relationships,” according to the CDS website. Borba is the author of the book UnSelfie: Why Empathetic Kids Succeed in Our All-About-Me World, which has made the summer reading list of the staff and faculty at CDS.

CDS is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, the Florida Council of Independent Schools, the Florida Kindergarten Council, and the National Association for the Education of Young Children.

There are two CDS campuses. The main campus, consisting of primary, middle, and high school facilities, as well as the main administrative offices is located at 1515 W. Bearss Ave. in Carrollwood. The early childhood campus is located at 12606 Casey Rd., in Carrollwood Village.

As a private school, CDS charges tuition, although Kelly says scholarship opportunities are available. He notes that there is some capacity to accommodate students with Individual Education Plans (IEP), but “CDS does not have the extensive resources that public schools have in that regard.”

The 2016-17 school year begins on Tuesday, Aug. 16. Families interested in learning more about CDS can check out the school’s website at CarrollwoodDaySchool.org or by calling 920-2288.

 

Local Boy Scouts help feed thousands

boyscouts2webThe nation’s largest food drive is held each year when the National Association of Letter Carriers collects non-perishable donations along their postal routes in the “Stamp Out Hunger” food drive. In Wesley Chapel, this year’s drive got a helping hand from some local Boy Scouts.

The boys are from Troop 2 in Wesley Chapel, which meets at Atonement Lutheran Church on S.R. 54. The boys, all 11-17 years old, gathered at the local post office to help with the big job of sorting and packing food to be delivered to local food banks, pantries and shelters.

Some of the boys’ parents and other family members and friends helped, too. All of the volunteers, together, handled 16,228 pounds of food.

boyscoutsWEB“The Boy Scouts of America’s slogan is ‘Do a Good Turn Daily,’” says Earle McDonald, a parent and committee member for Troop 2. “These boys went above and beyond that Saturday. The donations they helped pack will provide more than 13,000 meals to families in need in our area.”

McDonald encourages anyone who is interested in learning more about Boy Scouts to visit Scouting.org. “If a boy you know is interested in joining Troop 2,” he says, “come to one of our meetings, held Wednesday evenings at 7 p.m. at Atonement Lutheran Church (on S.R. 54). — CM

 

 

Second-Largest Hotel In Wesley Chapel Breaking Ground Soon

HiltonGardenInnWEBA Hilton Garden Inn (rendering below) planned for an outparcel on the southeast corner of S.R. 56 and Silver Maple Pkwy. is currently wrapping up the permitting process and could break ground by the end of August, according to Justin Floyd, the president of R.E. Floyd Construction Corporation.

The new hotel, which will have 123 rooms, making it the largest in Wesley Chapel other than the 540-room Saddlebrook Resort, will be constructed next to the existing BB&T Bank, which is on the same side of S.R. 56 as Texas Roadhouse.

Floyd heads up the construction firm handling the project for a local ownership group based out of New York. He says the ownership group has 27 years of experience in the hotel business and made the decision to expand into the Florida market and the Wesley Chapel area because, “they saw the tremendous amount of growth potential.”

The Hilton Garden Inn will be six stories, and will feature a full restaurant with outdoor seating, a pool and spa with outdoor patio and fire pit, a conference/meeting facility as well as business and fitness centers.

Floyd says he hopes to complete the project and open the hotel during the summer of 2017.

The Hilton Garden Inn is one of three hotels expected to be built along roughly a three-mile stretch of S.R. 56.

Almost directly across S.R. 56, near what will soon become Florida Hospital Center Ice, a Holiday Inn Express Hotel & Suites is expected to open at 2775 Cypress Ridge Blvd. in March 2017. Owned by Global Hotel Group and Gillym Investments, the Holiday Inn Express will have 80 rooms.

And further down S.R. 56, east of the Shops at Wiregrass mall, the 54,500-sq.ft. Fairfield Inn & Suites Wiregrass — which will have 92 rooms — is going through permitting. We’ll keep you posted.

Porter/Raymond James Financial Finally Given Permit To Begin Construction

JD Porter says big things are coming.
JD Porter says big things are coming.
J.D. Porter says big things are coming to Wiregrass Ranch, including Raymond James.

Following almost five years of discussions and anticipation — mixed in with a nice-sized helping of doubt — the long-talked-about Raymond James Financial campus is one huge step closer to becoming a reality at the corner of S.R. 56 and Mansfield Blvd.

Wiregrass Ranch developer JD Porter finally received the news two weeks ago that he has been waiting more than two years for, as the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has proffered an environmental permit for the 65 acres of property just east of the Shops at Wiregrass mall.

“We were all thrilled, everyone in the family,’’ said Porter, the owner and operator of Wiregrass Ranch Inc. “We worked very, very closely with the Army engineers, and it is nice to finally reach a resolution.”

Porter joked in April at a Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce (WCCC) Economic Development meeting that he was tired of hearing about the delays involving Raymond James, but insisted (as he has many times in the past) that the facility was still imminent. He predicted then he would have the Army Corps permit in a few weeks, and though it took just a little bit longer he is now ready to proceed.

“Right now, we have all the permits in hand to proceed forward,’’ Porter said.

The St. Petersburg-based financial services company has been working for several years on the process with the Porter family and, in early 2011, agreed to purchase the land at an undisclosed price, provided the permitting could be completed.

The deal was approved by the Pasco County Board of County Commissioners (BOCC) later that year. In exchange for $15-million in incentives and tax breaks, the county would reap the benefits of what would eventually be planned as six four-story buildings totaling roughly 1-million-sq.-ft., and housing 750 employees by 2024, which will inject millions into the county tax rolls.

jdporterAlthough the Raymond James campus was originally scheduled to begin building in 2012, with the first 100 employees arriving by 2014, the project stalled.

In 2014, a few months after another financial firm, T. Rowe Price, jettisoned its plans to build on 72 acres near the Suncoast Pkwy., Raymond James postponed its project. But, the financial services giant did say it still had plans for the property.

Now, there is renewed optimism that Raymond James will make the impact promised years ago.

“I’m glad that’s over and done with,’’ said District 2 commissioner Mike Moore. “The economic impact will be huge for Pasco County as a whole. There will be nothing bigger in the county.”

Moore said Raymond James will become the largest non-governmental employer in Pasco. “And, anytime you bring in a large employer like that, things start to happen around it,’’ he says.

Bill Cronin, the new president and CEO of the Pasco Economic Development Council (EDC), said when he started in January, one of his first meetings was with Raymond James, citing the importance of getting the company here.

“The investment by Raymond James will be one that, when other companies look to grow here, they will see that someone else has blazed that trail for them,’’ Cronin said. “It will make my job a little easier, to show people there are others that have made this positive decision.”

He added, “Success begets success.”

The next step for Porter will be to re-negotiate the development agreement and adjust some of the original timelines with the BOCC, which will likely take place in the next month or so.

“That triggers the closing,’’ Porter said.

Porter thinks the addition of the financial facility is a major piece of what he hopes the Wiregrass Ranch area will become, as it should drive up home sales and makes the area more attractive to other businesses.

“I think whether we’re talking Raymond James, or the mall or Florida Hospital Wesley Chapel, the state college, you are looking at the kinds of things that define cities and define regions,’’ Porter says. “We’re lucky to land four of them in a short time, when some communities don’t have this after 30 or 40 years.”