Señor T’s Shuts Down!

16-16 Classified Ads CelesteNew Tampa’s Señor T’s Mexican will not make it to its one-year anniversary.

The restaurant is shutting down immediately, according to new manager Bill Jaber.

Jaber, who has only been with the restaurant for approximately two weeks, called the Neighborhood News Tuesday afternoon to cancel advertising and say that Señor T’s was closing, effective immediately.

Dwayne Bracy, the restaurant’s original operations partner, left in July for another job.

Calls to Señor T’s are now directed to a voicemail that does not identify the restaurant, just the phone number.

Señor T’s opened on “Black Friday 2015” (Nov. 27), in the long-vacant former New Tampa Macaroni Grill, located at 17641 Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd. in front of the also-vacant former Sweetbay Supermarket. The Macaroni Grill was unoccupied for more than a year before Señor T’s confirmed it was moving in last September.

The Mexican eatery was going to be the first link in a planned start-up chain of roughly seven Tampa Bay locations.

The New Tampa restaurant received lukewarm, and sometimes blistering reviews online. It was excoriated on Yelp! and by many in New Tampa for failing to offer complimentary chips and salsa, which is customary in most Mexican restaurants. The food was panned as lacking authenticity, and the service received mixed reviews.

The restaurant was in the midst of trying to recover, with changes in the kitchen and possibly an interior renovation. But, the decision was made to cancel any re-boot and shut down immediately.

The restaurant featured indoor and outdoor seating, a full premium liquor bar that featured 75 different brands of tequila, and mid-priced Mexican fare.

HCSO Seeking Assistance In Identifying Bank Robbery Suspect

robbery2Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office deputies are asking for the public’s help in identifying a suspect who robbed the MidFlorida Credit Union at 20401 Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd. on Aug, 5.

According to the HCSO, the suspect — a white male approximately 40 years of age and 5-foot-9 inches tall with a medium build — entered the credit union at approximately 9 a.m. and approached the bank teller. He passed a note to the teller demanding money and implying that was was armed. The suspect then placed an undisclosed amount of money in a maroon-colored draw-string style bag, retrieved his note from teh teller and feld the credit union heading eastbound on foot.

The suspect, who was wearing baggy jogging-style pants, a Nike jacket, blue visor with white letting on it and gray Nike sneakers, was last seen running behind neighboring businesses. The HCSO says he possibly fled in a silver 2000’s model Toyota sedan with tinted windows. The suspect fled towards Bruce B. Downs.

RobberyAnyone with any information reference the suspect is asked to call the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office at 247-8200, or anyone with any information regarding the identity and whereabouts of this suspect and who
wants to be eligible for a cash reward is asked to call Crime Stoppers at
1-800-873-TIPS (8477), report anonymously online at www.crimestopperstb.com or
send a mobile tip using the HCSO’s P3 Tips Mobile application, which is a free
download for iPhones, iPads and Droids.

You must call Crime Stoppers first to be eligible for a reward.

 

TrafficWEB
The driver of the van (front left) getting off of I-75 onto S.R. 54 eastbound in Wesley Chapel waited at this “intersection” for at least six seconds, even though the lane the van is in is dedicated for vehicles exiting the highway. The same mistake is repeated every day at any intersection that has a designated right turn acceleration lane. Don’t stop at the “elbow,” people

So, I saw a Bay News 9 report a few weeks ago that brought back up some cranky old feelings I’ve had about the drivers of New Tampa and Wesley Chapel who make the same, all-too-common driving mistakes every day because they actually believe they’re doing the “right thing.”

My most recent traffic diatribe (“Part I” of this occasional series) was about folks who think 45 miles per hour in a 45-mph zone is the fastest everyone should be driving in the left lane, so they stay there as long as they can in order to slow everyone else down, despite the throngs of unhappy people who believe they have no choice but to more dangerously pass them on the right, rather than stay behind these self-proclaimed traffic cops.

The Bay News 9 report that’s serving as the impetus for what is now Part II of this series focused on the right-turn portion of the exit ramp from I-75 onto S.R. 54 eastbound here in Wesley Chapel (photo). It’s a weird, not-enough-lanes intersection with only two lanes coming off I-75 itself, with only two left turn lanes onto S.R. 54 westbound and one dedicated right turn lane onto 54 eastbound.

People on the Bay News 9 report were complaining that there’s no “Keep Moving” or “You Don’t Have To Stop” sign before the “elbow” of the right turn notifying them that they do not have to stop there at all, despite the “scary” red signal notifying left-turn drivers that they, rightfully, can’t just make their turn without stopping.

But, whether there’s a sign there or not, the fact is that common logic would seem to dictate that if you have a right lane that no one else coming from the west can possibly make it into, why would you stop at the “elbow” of the turn, rather than continue rolling so when you have an opening to merge left, you’re already on the move, rather than at a dead stop?

Some will say, “I’m trying to go all the way left to turn left at the Walgreen’s (which is at a traffic light at between 500-1,000 feet to the east of the I-75 intersection).” My response is always that it’s still better to be rolling, rather than standing still, to negotiate that maneuver.

If you’ve ever waited for an entire four-minute progression of a light behind these folks who think “Right On Red After Stop” is an “option” that simply doesn’t apply to them, you know what I mean.