A Minnesota software company is hoping to open a new office in New Tampa, which is expected to create up to 60 jobs in (or near) the 33647 zip code.
Sagitec Solutions, LLC, a provider of tailor-made software for pension administration and unemployment insurance, has chosen Tampa for its next expansion, and is currently working with commercial real estate firm CBRE Group on options for building a new 10-12,000-sq.ft. building in the New Tampa area, according to a press release from the Tampa Hillsborough Economic Development Corporation (EDC). At our press time, the company had not yet found the location it needed to proceed.
Sagitec, which is based out of St. Paul and currently has four U.S. offices â in Kansas, Colorado, Missouri and California â and two in India, plans to create 60 jobs within two years, including positions as software support specialists, software engineers, business analysts and in the companyâs human resources department.
According to the Tampa Hillsborough EDC, the average annual salaries for these positions is $60,000.
âWe are excited to establish our newest office in Tampa, a growing market for information technology services that offers us the skilled workforce, business climate, and quality of life we sought for our East Coast presence,â said Sanjay Bhasin, global head of human resources for Sagitec Solutions in the EDC. âTampa is the perfect location for us to launch our ambitious expansion plans for the eastern United States and offers us easy access to our existing and future customers in this region.â
The company already has begun relocating employees from other markets to its temporary office space in the Hidden River Corporate Park, which is located just outside of New Tampa on Riveredge Dr. near the Fletcher Ave. exit off I-75.
The Tampa Hillsborough EDC, which was established in 2009 to assist with economic development in Tampa, Plant City and Temple Terrace, assisted Sagitec with local market business intelligence, custom property searches, relocation assistance and training grant opportunities.
For more information about Sagitec Solutions, visit Sagitec.com.
Almost the entire Wharton girls cross country team that won the county championship (above) and finished third at the Class 4A State meet returns this season.
School may have just started at Paul R. Wharton and Freedom high schools, but preparation for the fall athletic season began in earnest in July for the New Tampa areaâs prep teams. What lies ahead for the locals?
Wharton â At Wharton, the only fall team not facing many questions may be the girls cross country team, which should be the best team in our coverage area.
The Wildcat girls are coming off their best season since 2004, when it finished as the state runner-up in Class 3A.
Behind Alisha Deschenes â who finished 21st overall in the state with a time of 19 minutes, 46 seconds and was the top Wharton finisher at the Class 4A State meet â the Wildcats finished third behind state champion Winter Park in 2015.
Deschenes, who will be a junior, returns, along with every other Wharton finisher that scored at state, including seniors Rania Samhouri, Mari James and Bryanna Rivers, and junior Rachel Lettiero.
And, all five scoring finishers for Wharton finished in the top 50 at state.
The boys also were young last season, with Noah Damjanovic, now a junior, leading the team and returning.
Wharton outside hitter Kathryn Attar will head to Yale after her upcoming senior season.
The Wharton volleyball team graduated a strong core of players â setter Tyler Sroufe, middle blocker Lindsey Schaible and libero Chanelle Hargreaves all signed to play in college last November â so star outside hitter Kathyrn Attar will be called upon to carry the Wildcats this season.
Attar, who has orally committed to Yale University in New Haven, CT, had 358 kills last year, one of the top totals in the state, and passed the 1,000-kill mark for her career. Sheâs one of the biggest hitters in the Tampa Bay area, and worth the price of admission.
And, the Wildcat football team embarks on a season without a proven signal caller under center, but until a quarterback develops, look for running back Shannen King to carry the ball a lot as Wharton tries to compete with District 7A-8 powers like Plant and Sickles.
Feel free to go ahead and circle Sept. 23 on your football calendar â thatâs when Wharton hosts arch-rival Freedom this year in football. The Wildcats won last yearâs battle 44-20, and havenât lost to the Patriots since 2009.
Freedom â Freedom also has questions at quarterback and a promising rushing attack, as well as a new head coach in Floyd Graham, who was able to build solid programs at Newsome and Steinbrenner from scratch. Heâll have more to work with at Freedom, but the task will be just as tall.
Football isnât the only sport with a new head coach at Freedom, as volleyball coach Damian Goderich takes over for Brittany Castelamare after last yearâs 9-9 season. The Patriots showed some improvement last year down the stretch, winning three straight games before a close defeat against Wharton to end the season, and despite a few key losses to graduation, last yearâs leader in kills (Cameron Young), digs (Jazmine Boga) and blocks (Lauren Crum) all return.
The Freedom cross country teams expect to be more competitive, as most of the top runners, like boys Alejandro Michel and Baily Easterling and girls Morgan Kugel, Dana Elkalazani and Schuyler Rutherford, return from last season.
Here are the football and volleyball schedules for both high schools:
PROtential Sports founders/owners Nyree (left) & Tony Bland were featured on a recent episode of WCNT-tv.
Tony and Nyree Bland know what it takes to achieve success at the highest levels of athletic competition and they have been sharing that knowledge with young people in communities throughout New Tampa and Wesley Chapel for more than a dozen years.
âItâs about being the best you can be and having integrity,â says Nyree.
Thatâs the foundation of the New Tampa coupleâs youth sports training company, PROtential Sports, where the stated mission is âTeaching Life Through Sports.â
Achieving high standards of performance through hard work and fair play is what the Blands credit for their own personal and professional successes, on and off the fields of play. Nyree was ranked as the number-one junior tennis player in North Carolina before a knee injury curtailed her professional tennis aspirations. Tony was a wide receiver for the Minnesota Vikings for four years, including the teamâs historic 16-victory season in 1998. He played behind NFL Hall of Famer Cris Carter and future Hall of Famer Randy Moss.
Passing on the insights and lessons from their own experiences is the goal of every after-school program, sports league and summer camp PROtential offers.
âWeâre trying to teach them how to be a good person, as well as being a good athlete,â says Nyree.
Their venture into the business side of athletics came about in 2003 when Tony participated in a youth football camp with then-Super Bowl Champion Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Brad Johnson (who was also a teammate of Tonyâs at Minnesota) and running back Michael Pittman.
That experience brought home Tonyâs own football beginning, as a 14-year-old playing in a youth football league and then catching passes at Pinellas Park High. His focused dedication to athletic achievement became part of his overall lifestyle, including academics, and he earned a scholarship to Florida A&M University in Tallahassee, where he majored in political science.
PROtential district manager Julie Garretson is a lifelong athlete who aspired to a career in physical education and now oversees many of the day-to-day operations of PROtential Sports. Since the youth activities are community-oriented, that means developing relationships with activity and lifestyle directors and stopping by when the children are on-site to check on things.
According to Garretson, PROtential Sportsâ after-school programs for students five to 12 years-old are located at Club Tampa Palms, Arbor Greene, Heritage Isles, Grand Hampton and Cory Lake Isles (the latter is for Cory Lake residents only) in New Tampa and at Seven Oaks and Meadow Pointe IV in Wesley Chapel.
âWe pick up from all the local schools,â says Garretson. âWe do a snack time, a quick study hall and then a sports routine. We do two to three sports a day and try to hit each major sport twice a week.â
Besides getting a chance to learn about and play a variety of sports, including baseball, football, golf, tennis and soccer, kids participating in a PROtential Sports after-school program also learn life skills. Garretson says that whether itâs after school, at one of PROtentialâs summer camps or in the companyâs competitive leagues, the principles of teamwork and sportsmanship apply.
âWe want the kids to always put their best foot forward,â Garretson says, adding that instilling a solid work ethic and sense of compassion in young people â whatever their athletic goals may be â will serve them well in the future. And, she says thatâs important for kids to understand.
âYou canât be an athlete forever, but youâre a human being forever,â she says.
There are about 20 coaches working directly with children at PROtential. Experience in sports is a requirement, but according to Garretson, their job qualifications are not just derived from their athletic statistics or backgrounds.
â(Our instructors) should be teachers,â she says. âThey are 50-percent life coaches and 50-percent sports coaches.â
One of PROtentialâs coaches is Brooks Lovely, who says he has been playing sports since he was 3-years-old. Lovely was an offensive lineman at Maryville College in Maryville, TN, and he also was a football coach at Robinson High in Tampa before signing up with PROtential. Lovely expresses awareness of the responsibility he is entrusted with in working with young people.
âWe try to make a positive impact on their lives every day,â says Lovely. âWe teach them what we learned in our life through sports, like the importance of teamwork and communication.â
He adds that part of the job sometimes involves helping kids in the after-school program with their homework and instilling a positive attitude about getting good grades. â(We tell the kids that they) need to learn to like school,â he says.
Coach Devonn Polk can easily relate to the kids heâs responsible for at PROtential Sports. The Wharton High grad played tight end for the Wildcats. To him, youâre never too young to learn a sense of responsibility and PROtential Sports offers a way to do that.
âWe teach them not just how to play sports, but how to be good leaders,â the Heritage Isles resident says.
The lessons that New Tampa resident Sandra Ferris says her son Alexavier has learned through PROtential Sports makes the program a winner in her view.
âItâs gratifying to watch my son learn a variety of sporting techniques while gaining lifelong leadership and sportsmanship skills,â Ferris says. âI firmly believe that Alexavier will learn to exemplify PROtential Sportsâ motto, âTeaching Life Through Sports,â by developing an appreciation for teamwork, perseverance and consistency throughout his adolescence into adulthood.â
NFL Flag Football, Too
While the end of summer means PROtential Sports is right now fielding a lot of inquiries about its after-school programs, itâs also the time of year when interest in football is renewed. For kids who want to compete in organized, limited-contact flag football in a professionally-run league, PROtential Sports offers NFL Flag Football.
The NFL Flag Football program operates under a license granted by the National Football League. It plays a six-on-six style of game, which is known for exciting playmaking on the uncrowded gridiron.
How You Can Get Into The Game With PROtential!
PROtential Sports also gives business-minded adults a way to get in the game through franchise opportunities. The company that Tony and Nyree Bland started more than a decade ago now operates in Riverview and Westchase, as well as New Tampa and Wesley Chapel. Franchising is another area of responsibility for Garretson.
âWe have franchise opportunities available in Central Florida and we hope to expand into Pinellas County and Orlando,â Garretson says.
As PROtential Sports continues to grow, it sometimes means Nyree and Tony dress for doing business a little more often than they do coaching on the field. But, whether itâs business or sports, Nyree says whatever success theyâve achieved can always be traced back to the core values that have guided her and Tony throughout their lives.
âHaving integrity and showing good character,â she says. âBecause thatâs all you have, is your integrity and your word.â
More information about NFL Flag Football, after-school programs, sports leagues, camps and franchise opportunities is available at PROtentialSports.com or by calling 843-9460. You also can check out Episode 3 of WCNT-tv for a special segment featuring PROtential Sports at NTNeighborhoodnews.com or Youtube/WCNT-tv.
Toast started out with a group of owners, all of whom lived in New Tampa or Wesley Chapel. It also began as primarily a wine bar with minimal food, but grew into a pretty good restaurant with reasonably priced food, great retail wines by the bottle or glass, coffee and entertainment, all in a cozy, casual setting, is the latest in, unfortunately, too long a list of my favorite mom-&-pop restaurants in our area that is no longer in business.
And, speaking of those mom-&-pop places, help out as many as you can by entering our 2016 Reader Dining Survey & Contest, where you can win a $50, $100, or even $200 gift card to the restaurant of your choice in the Tampa Bay area!
The General Federation of Womenâs Clubs (GFWC) announced in June that long-time local Womanâs Club Board member and past president Jolie Frankfurth, is now the 2016-18 GFWC Director of Junior Clubs.
Frankfurth was named Director Elect in 2014, and installed the weekend of June 25-29 of this year in Baltimore. She is the first Florida woman since 1972 to hold this position.
âIâm ready for this,ââ Frankfurth said.
Her first day on the new job was Saturday, Aug. 6. âShe was elected by a membership of more than 80,000, has been with the organization a substantial amount of time and her charity work has been outstanding,ââ said Michelle Furman, the GFWC director of communications.
Frankfurth has risen through the ranks of the GFWC, which specializes in grassroots charity work with more than 27 various non-profit organizations such as St. Judeâs Childrenâs Research Hospital, since starting with the GFWC New Tampa Junior Womanâs Club (NTJWC) 20 years ago.
At the time, she said, the New Tampa area was still just mostly a road to S.R. 54.
âThere were a lot of young families with children moving to the area,ââ she said, adding that the New Tampa Juniors was a perfect fit for her.
Frankfurth is a University of South Florida graduate, with a Bachelorâs degree in Business Education and a Masterâs degree in Educational Leadership.
Locally, Frankfurth has made an impact on all levels of membership. She has been an Advisor of the GFWC New Tampa Juniorette Club the past five years and has been president of both the GFWC Womanâs Club of New Tampa and the NTJWC.
âThe richness of our great Federation is in the character, diversity and passion of its membership,ââ Frankfurth said. âOur work these next two years should be about attitude and actions to making good things happen in our local communities.â