Florida Hospital Center Ice Inches Closer To Its Opening

Gordie Zimmermann stands on one of the all-but-completed rinks at Florida Hospital Center Ice, which is expected to “soft open” sometime in December.
Gordie Zimmermann stands on one of the all-but-completed rinks at Florida Hospital Center Ice, which is expected to “soft open” sometime in December.

As the Grand Opening of the $20-million Florida Hospital Center Ice (FHCI) fast approaches, not a day goes by that Gordie Zimmermann isn’t asked about when that will be.

He is asked in the grocery store, while walking around Wesley Chapel and his phone never seems to stop dinging with text messages and ringing with eager callers.

“Everybody is excited about it,’’ Zimmermann says. “I got hammered all weekend with phone calls, people asking when it will be open and when can they book a birthday party and what are some of the great events coming in. This is such a big community in Wesley Chapel, they can’t wait.”

They won’t have to much longer. Zimmermann says the 150,500-sq.-ft. FCHI, which is located along Cypress Ridge Blvd. on the northeast corner of the I-75/S.R. 56 interchange in Wesley Chapel, is looking at a soft opening in December to test out some final details. He says there are plans for an official Grand Opening in January.  A tentative date has been set, but he still can’t reveal it.

fhci11_9_5A tour through the facility on Nov. 9 revealed that it won’t be long.

One rink is all but finished, framed by completed dasher boards, glass and scoreboards. Once it is cleaned up, the ice will be ready to go in.

A second rink is right behind, as the protective glass was carefully put in recently by workers. A third rink, as well as the main NHL-sized rink, are taking form.

“We’re working as fast as we can to get all the kinks out,’’ says Zimmermann, a developer for Z Mitch, LLC. “Everything has to be just right.” As we went to press last week, the electricity was turned on, lighting up the interior.

Zimmermann said the demand for the new facility has already far exceeded what he expected.

“It’s already basically booked into the summer,’’ he says. “And, we haven’t even gotten to our fall schedule yet.”

fhci11_9Zimmermann says FHCI is about 80-85 percent done. The seating and kitchen for the Top Shelf Restaurant & Bar, which will overlook the rinks below, and seating areas for fans are now easy to visualize.

Sometime in December, Zimmermann says the palatial new complex will be open for some public skating, pick-up hockey games and skate-and-shoot sessions. Learn to Skate USA classes also will be offered sometime in December.

Come January, those in charge of getting the facility up and running will be on a power play. Zimmerman says some events are already scheduled with the Tampa Bay Lightning, including a street hockey tournament (on FHCI’s multi-sports pad) followed by a skills camp put on by former Lightning players.

Zimmermann says the Lightning, who also will hold occasional practices at the facility, will release those details when the plans are finalized.

Better Book Now!

Some of the non-sports events already booked include the Taste of New Tampa and an unnamed (by Zimmermann) 250-person corporate roundtable discussion.

fhci11_9_3On June 17, Skate For Hope, which will feature many of the world’s top figure skaters and will benefit cancer research, will be held at FHCI. Also in June, there will be a National Roller Hockey Tournament that Zimmermann says will feature 200 teams playing for 10 days on three of the FHCI rinks.

USA Hockey adult leagues for age groups ranging from 40+ to 70+ also are coming, and Zimmermann says Tampa Bay Lightning High School Hockey League games will be played at the rink beginning Jan. 4, with the Wiregrass Ranch High (WRH) team he coaches getting the opening night honors, highlighting a doubleheader (and potentially a triple header), along with a to-be-determined opponent and 2-4 other teams.

High school ice hockey players from WRH, Freedom, Wesley Chapel and Wharton (which currently does not have a team but has in the past) high schools will use the rink for practices and games.

On Jan. 18, Bright House Sports Network (BHSN) will televise a live high school hockey game from FHCI.

fhci11_9_4The eagerly-anticipated facility, which will be the largest skating complex south of New York the day it opens, will feature three NHL-sized hockey rinks and one larger, Olympic-size rink, as well as 17,000-sq.-ft. multi-sports pad that can accommodate a number of other sports, even basketball and volleyball and lacrosse.

In addition to the rinks and restaurant, FHCI will have a sports performance center, fitness room and plenty of room for yoga, pilates and dance classes, as well as corporate outings and parties.

“Everything is going smoothly,’’ Zimmermann says, “and when we open, it’s going to be good.”

The most important aspect of the facility – the 65 miles of refrigerated pipe laid in by Toronto’s CIMCO — has to be tested thoroughly as the big motors that will eventually keep the ice for the various rinks at a cool 22-28 degrees or so are revved up, and the final touches are being carefully addressed.

For more information, visit FloridaHospitalCenterIce.com or see the ad on page 12 of this issue.

How Wesley Chapel Voted For President & Local Races On Nov. 8

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There were voting lines at Lexington Oaks (Precinct 73) on Nov. 8. President-elect Donald Trump received 2,438 of the votes cast at the precinct, while Hillary Clinton got 2,106 (44.1 percent)

President-Elect Donald Trump.

For almost exactly half of the country, that was either a sad or terrifying (or both) prospect, but the possibility apparently pleased Pasco County voters enough that the New York real estate developer and reality-TV star was a decisive choice county-wide on Nov. 8 — as Trump won Pasco with 58.4 percent of the 244,620 votes cast, while former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton received only 37 percent.

Nationwide in the 2016 General Election, Trump won the Electoral College 290-228 with Michigan still counting votes as of our press time, although the former First Lady won the popular vote, with 62,829,832 votes to 61,488,190 for Trump, with a few million votes still outstanding..

Trump’s 141,943-89,998 advantage in votes cast in Pasco, where turnout was at 72.8 percent — compared with just 56.8 percent nationwide, wasn’t a surprise in Republican-leaning Pasco.

In Wesley Chapel’s precincts, however, the margin was much closer than it was countywide: Trump grabbed 49.9 percent of the vote, while Clinton was at 45.2 percent. With 30,324 votes cast, Trump finished with a 1,423-vote edge.

Nowhere in Wesley Chapel was Trump fever stronger than in the Quail Hollow area, where 2,284 votes were cast for the President-Elect at the polling booths at Quail Hollow Country Club. That was 63 percent of the votes cast, with Clinton receiving 1,179 votes.

The only other polling place in Wesley Chapel where Trump received more than 51.1 percent of the ballots cast was Meadow Point IV, where clubhouse voters gave him a 737-502 advantage, or 56.6 percent to Clinton’s 38.6.

Take away those two precincts and the race between Trump and Clinton was virtually even in zip codes 33543-45.

Clinton, who leads the national popular vote by roughly 1.5-million ballots, won four of the 11 precincts in Wesley Chapel. She received more votes at Bridgewater Church on Wells Rd. (48-46 percent), Meadow Pointe III (50-45), Northwood Community Center (55-41) and Meadow Pointe II (51-43).

In the four combined precincts in Meadow Pointe, the Wesley Chapel community was split right down the middle, casting 4,347 votes for Clinton and 4,344 for Trump, a difference of only three votes.

Clinton’s vaunted “ground game” did not materialize on Election Day nationwide, or in Pasco. While she actually led after the early voting period by 55 votes, ballots cast on Nov. 8 in Wesley Chapel’s precincts favored Trump 6,453 to 4,994. 

Many voters, according to various media reports, also may have just been plain disgusted by both candidates — or perhaps an election season filled with political ads, name-calling and scandals — and didn’t bother to cast a vote for either candidate, despite going through the trouble of finding a polling station, standing in line and filling out a ballot.

In Pasco, there were 1,388 undervotes, or ballots cast where the voter elected not to make a choice for president, more than twice the 616 undervotes in 2012. The number of undervotes in many other places also was more than twice what it was in 2012. In Michigan alone, for example, more than 87,000 undervotes were tabulated.

While Clinton couldn’t get more votes from Pasco County residents than Trump received, Ron Oakley did.

Oakley, 71, decisively won the District 1 County Commission seat, which represents much of Wesley Chapel, with a decisive victory over retired U.S. Coast Guard commander and no-party candidate Dimitri Delgado.

After all 112 precincts were counted, Oakley more than doubled Delgado’s vote total with 151,849, or 69.2 percent of the vote. Delgado was the choice on only 66,503 ballots, or 30.3 percent.

Oakley, a Zephyrhills resident who formerly served on the Southwest Florida Water Management District governing board and whose family is well known in the local citrus and ranching industries, put $150,000 of his own money behind his bid in June to help win the seat, which includes the area in Wesley Chapel north of S.R. 54.

In 2012, Oakley also ran for the District 1 seat, but was defeated in the Rep. primary by Ted Schrader, who elected not to run for the seat again and instead lost in the Republican primary in his bid to become Pasco’s new property appraiser.

This year, Oakley defeated Rachel O’Connor and Mary Wells in the primary to earn the right to face Delgado, who had no party affiliation.

Oakley led a Republican sweep of the three commission seats that were up for grabs.

In District 3, Kathryn Starkey, 58, rolled past Democrat Barry Horvath 62.2-37.8 percent, or a little more than a 55,000-vote advantage. Starkey’s district runs all the way from the west coast of the county to just east of I-75, and includes a small part of Wesley Chapel bordered by I-75, S.R. 56, Bruce B. Downs Blvd. and County Line Rd. In District 5, Jack Mariano, 56, ran virtually unopposed, garnering 96 percent of the vote.

In the U.S. Senate race between Republican Marco Rubio and Democrat Patrick Murphy, it was the incumbent (and failed presidential candidate) winning comfortably overall with 4,822,182 votes, or 52 percent. Murphy received 44.3 percent, or 4,105,251 votes. In Pasco County, Rubio was the pick of 134,631 voters, or 56.6 percent, while Murphy received 88,520 votes, or 37.2 percent.

Don Peters (below, center) didn’t win his Community Development District (CDD) race, but these folks did: Rick Carroll (Lexington Oaks, Seat 1), Michael Cline (Meadow Pointe II, Seat 1), John Picarelli (Meadow Pointe II, Seat 5), Mimi Kilpatrick (Northwood, Seat 1), Brian Quigley (Northwood, Seat 3), Barbara Cruz (Northwood, Seat 5), Sam Watson (Oak Creek, Seat 4), Charlie Cacioppo (Seven Oaks, Seat 2), Gerald Cruz (Seven Oaks, Seat 4) and John Christensen (Seven Oaks, Seat 5).

For more Wesley Chapel Election results, visit WCNeighborhoodNews.com.

Local Business News


The Greater Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce (WCCC) is offering a great luncheon seminar called “Get Down to Business,” which will be held Tuesday, November 15,  at Saddlebrook Resort Tampa off S.R. 54. There will be a Trade Show & Registration at 11 a.m., with lunch from noon-1:30 p.m., featuring Keynote Speaker Julie Jenkins, the CEO of Churchill Leadership Group.

At ChurchillLeadershipGroup.com, Jenkins writes, “We believe there is so much untapped potential in leaders and teams. That’s why we turn talent into performance. Churchill is a global provider of leadership development solutions including Executive Coaching & Corporate Leadership Programs.”

For reservations & info, call 994-8534 or visit WesleyChapelChamber.com. — GN

TAMPA PALMS EXPANDING: Cal Atlantic, which began site work on a new housing community called Stafford Place at Tampa Palms in the spring, is targeting completion by the end of 2017, with a model opening in February of 2017. It expects its first residents next summer.

Stafford Place is being built on 52 acres of land just south of BJs Wholesale Club off Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd. , between the Emerald Pointe Townhomes and I-75.

According to Danielle Tocco at CalAtlantic, the community will have direct access to a future City of Tampa park abutting the property. “This community will provide residents one of the last opportunities tcraftyo purchase a new home in all of Tampa Palms,’’ Tocco wrote in an email.

CROSS CREEK CRAFTERS: Samantha Harrison, who lives in West Meadows, is in permitting now and hopes to open Go Craft Yourself, a do-it-your-self creative studio, soon.

Go Craft Yourself will be located in the Cory Lake Isles Professional Center at 10311 Cross Creek Blvd., Suite A, and will offer classes in things like wood framing, metal stamping, canvass painting and more.

Or, she says, “You can walk right in and do it right there, if you don’t want to sign up for a class,’’ Harrison said. “That’s what makes us different.” Need more info? Check out GoCraftYourselfFl.com.

DOUBLE FAULT!: Internet shopping has claimed another victim. And this time, it’s MP Tennis.

The New Tampa store, located next to Bigel Music at 20437 Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd., closed for good on Sept. 17. The store did well when it first opened, taking advantage of an area heavy with tennis players from nearby communities, but the popularity of online shopping was too much for the store to overcome.

In its final weeks, the store was carrying fewer and few racquets, shoes and clothing, although its racquet stringing services were still popular. MP Tennis still has a retail location at 14845 N. Dale Mabry Highway in Carrollwood. — John C. Cotey & Celeste McLaughlin

When Your Loved One Needs Care At Home, Optimal Wellness Can Help

optimal-wellness
Optimal Wellness Home Healthcare owners Andre (2nd from left) & Monique (2nd from right) Hikel, with their children (l.-r.) Alexandrea, Joshua & Alivia.

Andre and Monique Hikel own Optimal Wellness Home Healthcare, which has been located in the Tampa Palms Professional Center off Commerce Park Blvd. since August 2014. The company cares for patients in their homes in New Tampa and Hillsborough County, as well as in Manatee, Hardee, Highlands, and Polk counties.

Monique earned a Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN) degree from the University of South Florida (USF) in Tampa in 1994, and has been a practicing Registered Nurse (RN) for 22 years. She also earned a combined Master of Science in Nursing and Master of Business Administration (MSN/MBA) degree from the University of Phoenix in 2004.

Monique also has worked as a clinical instructor for students earning their BSN degrees at both the University of Tampa and at USF. Monique works at Florida Hospital Wesley Chapel (FHWC) as a labor and delivery nurse, which she says helps her to keep her nursing skills current as she also runs Optimal Wellness.

Andre was a tennis professional whose career took an unexpected turn when he was injured in a car accident.

He started working in the financial industry, and ended up continuing in that career for the past 11 years, until leaving recently to focus on building Optimal Wellness Home Healthcare with Monique.

They consider this business a merger of their skills. Monique’s title is Director of Nursing and Administrator, and she oversees the clinical and records-keeping side of the business. Andre handles the financial and marketing aspects. “This business allows us to combine our strengths,” says Andre. “It’s both of our passions to give back and to make a difference.”

Monique & Andre’s Story

Andre and Monique have lived in Wesley Chapel for 16 years and are now raising their three kids – Joshua, 7; Alexandrea, 9; and Alivia, 11 – along with their niece, Phylecia, who is 15.

“Based on our history, we want to make sure we are always giving great care to our patients,” says Andre. “Quality of care is very near and dear to our hearts.”

That history includes losing both Andre’s dad and Monique’s mom to cancer, and Andre’s mom being diagnosed as schizophrenic when he was a young boy in his native Trinidad. And, there’s this: The couple’s son was diagnosed with cancer in December of 2015 when he was five, but now he is in full remission.

“Joshua’s diagnosis of cancer gave us confirmation of the great need for home health care,” says Monique. “We started the business in August of 2014 and Joshua was diagnosed in December. It was hard to continue the business at that time, but God gave us the strength to forge through and opportunities presented themselves that gave us further confirmation during that difficult time.”

In-Home Specialists

“We can take care of anything in the home,” says Monique, explaining that Optimal Wellness provides health care professionals such as CNAs (Certified Nursing Assistants), home health aides, or RNs, depending upon what level of care is needed.

Currently, the company specializes in care for patients with Alzheimer’s, hypertension, diabetes and COPD (Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease, an umbrella term used to describe progressive lung diseases), and also offers respite care, to give caretakers a break from their responsibilities.

Another area of service is infusion care, such as antibiotics or other medications that needs to be administered via injection.

Monique says each condition requires specific training and care, which Optimal Wellness provides. For example, for patients with Alzheimer’s, “We go through extensive training to be sure our providers are equipped for these patients,” she says. “There’s a way to speak to them and to approach them. For example, sometimes they become aggressive, so you have to stay calm and not take it personally. It’s part of their disease.”

If a patient needs full-time care but doesn’t want to live in an assisted living facility (ALF), Optimal Wellness can provide 24-hour care in his or her own home.

“It’s a good option for someone who doesn’t want to go into an ALF,” says Monique.

Some of the company’s clients are leaving the hospital or rehab facilities and need temporary care in their homes.

“We also have long-term clients in assisted living facilities who need 24-hour care, seven days a week,” says Andre. “The families of these clients have hired us to provide supplemental care during ‘down times’ at the ALF. The patient needs extra attention, so the family pays out of pocket.”

For now, Andre says all of the company’s clients are self-pay. Optimal Wellness has gone through the application process to be able to accept Medicare, and has received confirmation that the company meets all of the stringent regulations, but a moratorium is currently preventing them from being approved as a Medicare provider.

Optimal Wellness is in the process of working with several insurance companies to be approved providers with individual companies and expects to begin accepting insurance soon.

Quality, Personalized Care

“We are quality people giving exceptional care, and we want to treat everyone as family,” says Monique.

To ensure each patient receives exceptional care, Monique and Andre say Optimal Wellness follows a specific routine with the family and caretaker, and has a weekly “quality call” to ensure everything is going according to plan.

That call helps to makes sure everyone is on the same page. If a caregiver was a few minutes late, or if there was a minor issue that needs attention, it can be dealt with immediately. “We want our clients to be assured they’re getting the best care possible, and these calls seem to put them at ease,” explains Andre.

Optimal Wellness creates an individual care plan that is gone over with each patient’s family. “We address specific, individual needs and match each patient to the caretaker who suits them the best,” he says.

Monique explains that the company is accredited through CHAP (Community Health Accreditation Partner), which is a many-months-long process that ensures compliance with stringent standards. While accreditation is required for home health companies, it is not required for all staffing companies or registries.

“We want to be known as a company that gives exceptional quality care,” says Monique, and she knows that starts with the professionals who are in their patients’ homes, providing that care.

“We ask our professionals to look at their patients and see their own mom or dad, and proceed accordingly,” Monique adds. “Treat them the way you would want someone to treat your mom or dad.”

They start with hiring only well-qualified, experienced caretakers. Monique says CNAs and home health aides must have at least one year of experience, and RNs must have at least two years of experience.

The company also does a “Level 2” background check, which means that the new employee’s background is searched in all 50 states, not just Florida. Monique says they will not send a healthcare professional out to a home until that background check comes back clear.

And then, they are trained. “Prior to going out to any of our homes, the nurses, CNAs and home health aides that work for us receive training,” says Monique. “Even if a health care provider is an RN with years of experience, we ensure they are trained by us and understand the specific care plan of the patient they will visit before they are sent out to someone’s home.”

Optimal Wellness provided care for Celsa Villanueva, who lives in Cross Creek. She is a diabetic with multiple health issues, and her nephew, Carlos Velazquez, says Monique provided great care for her during a time when she was in need.

“She taught my aunt a lot about what to do when her sugar was low, or high, and helped her organize her medication,” he says. “She explained all the medications and their side effects, and taught her how to tell the difference between pills that look alike.”

Carlos added, “I would recommend her in a heartbeat. She was very professional and caring, and very good to my aunt.”

Optimal Wellness Home Healthcare is available for care 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Office hours are Mon.–Fri., 9 a.m.-5 p.m. For more information, see the ad on page 46, call 381-5415 or visit OptimalWellnessHomeHealthcare.com.