The Greater Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce (WCCC) is offering a great luncheon seminar called âGet Down to Business,â 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, âWe believe there is so much untapped potential in leaders and teams. Thatâs why we turn talent into performance. Churchill is a global provider of leadership development solutions including Executive Coaching & Corporate Leadership Programs.â
For reservations & info, call 994-8534 or visit WesleyChapelChamber.com. â 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. âThis community will provide residents one of the last opportunities to purchase a new home in all of Tampa Palms,ââ 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, âYou can walk right in and do it right there, if you donât want to sign up for a class,ââ Harrison said. âThatâs what makes us different.â Need more info? Check out GoCraftYourselfFl.com.
DOUBLE FAULT!: Internet shopping has claimed another victim. And this time, itâs 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. â John C. Cotey & Celeste McLaughlin
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. Moniqueâs 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. âThis business allows us to combine our strengths,â says Andre. âItâs both of our passions to give back and to make a difference.â
Monique & Andreâs Story
Andre and Monique have lived in Wesley Chapel for 16 years and are now raising their three kids â Joshua, 7; Alexandrea, 9; and Alivia, 11 â along with their niece, Phylecia, who is 15.
âBased on our history, we want to make sure we are always giving great care to our patients,â says Andre. âQuality of care is very near and dear to our hearts.â
That history includes losing both Andreâs dad and Moniqueâs mom to cancer, and Andreâs mom being diagnosed as schizophrenic when he was a young boy in his native Trinidad. And, thereâs this: The coupleâs son was diagnosed with cancer in December of 2015 when he was five, but now he is in full remission.
âJoshuaâs diagnosis of cancer gave us confirmation of the great need for home health care,â says Monique. âWe 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.â
In-Home Specialists
âWe can take care of anything in the home,â 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 Alzheimerâs, 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 Alzheimerâs, âWe go through extensive training to be sure our providers are equipped for these patients,â she says. âThereâs 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. Itâs part of their disease.â
If a patient needs full-time care but doesnât want to live in an assisted living facility (ALF), Optimal Wellness can provide 24-hour care in his or her own home.
âItâs a good option for someone who doesnât want to go into an ALF,â says Monique.
Some of the companyâs clients are leaving the hospital or rehab facilities and need temporary care in their homes.
âWe also have long-term clients in assisted living facilities who need 24-hour care, seven days a week,â says Andre. âThe families of these clients have hired us to provide supplemental care during âdown timesâ at the ALF. The patient needs extra attention, so the family pays out of pocket.â
For now, Andre says all of the companyâs 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
âWe are quality people giving exceptional care, and we want to treat everyone as family,â 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 âquality callâ 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. âWe want our clients to be assured theyâre getting the best care possible, and these calls seem to put them at ease,â explains Andre.
Optimal Wellness creates an individual care plan that is gone over with each patientâs family. âWe address specific, individual needs and match each patient to the caretaker who suits them the best,â 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.
âWe want to be known as a company that gives exceptional quality care,â says Monique, and she knows that starts with the professionals who are in their patientsâ homes, providing that care.
âWe ask our professionals to look at their patients and see their own mom or dad, and proceed accordingly,â Monique adds. âTreat them the way you would want someone to treat your mom or dad.â
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 âLevel 2â background check, which means that the new employeeâs 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. âPrior to going out to any of our homes, the nurses, CNAs and home health aides that work for us receive training,â says Monique. âEven 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 someoneâs home.â
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.
âShe taught my aunt a lot about what to do when her sugar was low, or high, and helped her organize her medication,â he says. âShe explained all the medications and their side effects, and taught her how to tell the difference between pills that look alike.â
Carlos added, âI would recommend her in a heartbeat. She was very professional and caring, and very good to my aunt.â
Optimal Wellness Home Healthcare is available for care 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Office hours are Mon.âFri., 9 a.m.-5 p.m. For more information, see the ad on page 46, call 381-5415 or visit OptimalWellnessHomeHealthcare.com.
(L.âr.) Visiting Angels office assistant Jeannine Konrad, office manager Wendy Blackmon & owner Christal Becton will make sure your loved ones get the best care possible when they need to be cared for at home.
Christal Becton opened Visiting Angels to serve New Tampa and other parts of Hillsborough County in 2004. As the franchise owner and director, she says she feels blessed to be in the business of helping senior citizens and their families.
Visiting Angels provides home care services as an alternative to moving into a nursing home, retirement center or assisted living facility, allowing seniors and others in need to maintain the independence of their daily routines in the comfort of their own homes. It is a nationally branded company, headquartered in Pennsylvania, with 500 locations across the U.S.
âWhen my 84-year-old aunt, who lived in Columbia, SC, needed assistance, I had to hire a caregiver for her because I was unable to keep traveling back and forth to care for her,â Christal explains. âI believe thatâs what started me on the road to in-home care. After my husband retired from the military, and I was ready to get out of my job in corporate America, I began looking into franchises. Thatâs when I found Visiting Angels.â
Christal opened the Visiting Angels office on N. 56th St. (south of Fowler Ave.) in Temple Terrace, minutes from most of New Tampa.
She has a Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) degree from East Carolina University in Greenville, NC, and a Master of Arts (M.A.) degree in organizational management from the University of Phoenix campus in Albuquerque, NM. She also has a wealth of previous nursing home experience, having served as Chief of Recreation Therapy at a nursing home in Albuquerque.
While the business has grown over the past 12 years, Christal says that what hasnât changed is her passion for helping people and for matching clients with caregivers to give them the help they need in their homes.
âI enjoy working with seniors in need,â says Christal. âSo, this is the perfect profession for me.â
She says every aspect of running Visiting Angels is rewarding. âThe challenges are learning experiences and never a burden. We really have very few issues.â
Services
âMost of our clients are seniors who need some extra help,â Christal explains. âWe also can help anyone over 18 who needs assistance. Younger people sometimes need help, too, due to their own physical challenges or health issues.â
Available services include everything from helping someone temporarily recover from an illness or surgery to providing ongoing companionship to a senior who just needs a friend.
âWe also go grocery shopping and run errands, prepare meals, assist with personal care and do light housekeeping,â Christal adds. She says some clients require help with bathing or shaving, some just need a hand getting up in the morning and starting their day, while others may need clothes laundered and linens changed.
One difficulty common for many seniors, especially those who donât drive or have a relative nearby, is arranging transportation to their doctorsâ appointments. Visiting Angelsâ staff will transport clients to and from their appointments, and always remain on site throughout their clientsâ visits.
âWe provide the vehicle,â Christal says, adding that the service is a relief to relatives who find it difficult to take time off from work to drive their loved ones to their medical appointments.
Visiting Angels accommodates its clientsâ schedules, whether they need a few hours of assistance a week or even 24-hour-per-day, 7-day-per-week care. Day or night, weekends or holidays, temporary or long-term, Visiting Angels can help.
Care Providers
Visiting Angelsâ healthcare providers include about 50 Certified Nursing Assistants (CNAs) and Home Health Assistants (HHAs). Christal says that her company serves about 40-60 clients in New Tampa, Temple Terrace and other surrounding areas.
She adds that the company runs a comprehensive background screening on all caregivers. Christal says she is very selective about who she chooses to help her clients. Many are graduates of medical academies that specialize in home care and/or have worked at assisted living facilities or in other health care environments. Christal says Visiting Angels caregivers choose to specialize in home care because they enjoy the personal interaction with only one or two clients.
âOne of my CNAs has been with the same client since 2004,â she says. âIn hiring, I make sure my staff has a passion for doing what they do, and that they have a strong employment history in caring for seniors.â
Christal also interacts with each new family who calls Visiting Angels and requests a free, in-home assessment.
âI personally do each new client assessment myself,â she says. âI like to make a connection with the family. I get to see how they live and learn about their background, which makes it easier to connect them with the right caregiver.â
During the in-home assessment, she reviews each clientâs needs and asks about the types of services desired, noting the patientâs daily routine, meals, proximity to doctorsâ offices and number of regularly scheduled appointments. She then prepares a care plan and selects the caregivers who are best suited to meet your needs.
After personally meeting all of the available caregivers, you get to choose the candidate you prefer.
âOne of the things that sets Visiting Angels apart from other home care services is that our clients get to choose their caregivers,â Christal explains. âPeople donât just show up and say, âIâm here to take care of you.â Our clients actually meet the caregivers beforehand, so they already feel comfortable with the person who will be caring for them.â
These caregivers become an important part of each patientâs routines, and often, families let Christal know the significance of the care their loved one received in their time of need.
âThank you for the wonderful care you provided,â said a grateful family in a letter to Visiting Angels. âYou were more than a caregiver to us, you quickly became a friend⊠[Mom] so appreciated your presence and friendship, as we all did⊠It was always a relief to us to know that when we needed you, we had no worries at all about Mom being taken good care of.â
Christal says that technology also allows her to keep in close contact with the families of her clients â whether they are out of town or busy working, a quick text or email keeps Christal, the caregiver and the family all on the same page regarding a patientâs care.
In addition, technology allows Visiting Angels to provide information to the community, even those who arenât her clients.
Christal sends out a newsletter and also provides information on the companyâs Facebook page at Facebook.com/VisitingAngelsTampaFL, informing people about dementia, caring for a loved one with Alzheimerâs, fall prevention and other issues that affect seniors.
âThe greatest change Iâve seen as a business is our ability to communicate with the community and use technology effectively to reach out to the community and be a resource,â she says.
Visiting Angels is located at 9812 N. 56th St. in Temple Terrace. And, for a special offer just for readers who mention the Neighborhood News, call Christal at 929-7067.
Management hopes that menu items like the more upscale taco combination plate at Vuelo will attract hungry new customers.
Outside, it still looks pretty much the same. Inside, however, things have changed.
Walls have come down, leaving a more open, free flowing and â dare we say it â festive design.
The staff is friendlier, and already seemingly more knowledgeable.
The menu has been carefully crafted and creatively cultivated, with newer, slightly-pricier dishes promising an infusion of fresher, better and tastier ingredients. The bar is serving zippier drinks.
âItâs a new restaurant,ââ says Suzanne Deveney, who is handling public relations for Vuelo, a ânewâ Mexican restaurant located on Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd. in the same spot as the âoldâ Señor Tâs.
Vuelo means âflightâ in Spanish, and on Oct. 25, the newest New Tampa food joint quietly took off.
Deveney has little interest in talking about Señor Tâs, which had a bumpier opening. She doesnât want to talk about the past, about the no-free-chips-and-salsa opening that seemed to scar Señor Tâs from its very first moments in business, or the vicious reviews on Yelp! about everything else from bad food to shoddy service.
Many things kill restaurants, the majority of which fail before they make it to their one-year anniversary, and social media can certainly take some credit for this one.
But, owner Tom Reynolds then deserves some credit for Vuelo, which bears only a slight resemblance to its predecessor. Reynoldsâ second try at a Mexican eatery in the former Macaroni Grill location shows the touches of someone not afraid to start over, and determined to not fail again.
Chef Mark Estee overlooks the new salsa bar.
Chef and entrepreneur Mark Estee, who has opened a handful of restaurants in Reno, NV, where he says the focus was on fresh food. Estee has made multiple appearances on the Food Network, and has been brought in to engineer Vueloâs new concept.
He heard all about the past failures and even read some of those cringe-worthy Yelp! Reviews.
But, after weeks of studying the market by âlooking, tasting and eatingâ what other restaurants were serving in the area, and putting more emphasis on training a new staff and incorporating a new mindset, he says heâs willing to stake his reputation on one fact: Vuelo isnât just 100-percent better than Señor Tâs, itâs 150-percent better.
âGreat food is simple â make it fresh, from scratch,ââ Estee says. âWeâve put some care into turning this puppy around. The flavors are authentic Mexican-Latin, and they are delicious.â
The menu is filled with new and different things, but not overwhelmingly so.
There are a dozen appetizers to choose from, from simple guacamole and chips or quesadillas to oven roasted shishito peppers and cast iron cauliflower.
There are seven different kinds of Street Tacos, including Beef Lengua, or cow tongue, for the more adventurous eater.
The Bubbling Molcajete bowls are served with bay scallops, catfish and snapper; filet mignon or charred vegetables.
There are burritos and enchiladas, tortas (basically Spanish sandwiches) and create-your-own-lunch specials. Thereâs also a great bar Happy Hour and a new drink menu with a variety of beers and margaritas, including a spicy jalapeno margarita with the salted rim of the glass adorned with a jalapeno pepper.
And,, if you need any more proof that Estee gets it, consider this: the chips and salsa are not only free, thereâs even a salsa bar with six different fresh, homemade salsas.
âWeâre pretty proud of that,ââ Estee says with a smile. âIt allows people to customize their experience.â
Estee was brought in for what can best be described as a restaurant reclamation project, and he started by discarding every microwave oven in the kitchen, and there were many. A wall separating the bar from the rest of the restaurant was removed to create a more open design, and the decor has a more authentic feel.
Deveney doesnât see the success of Vuelo tied to those who were disappointed by Señor Tâs giving it a second chance, because she doesnât see this as a rebranding.
But, thatâs what a majority of the customers are likely to believe. Those who have returned seem to be liking what they are experiencing, with unanimously positive reviews so far on Yelp!
So far, that makes everyone a winner.
Customers get their fresh food and Vuelo gets its fresh start.
Vuelo is located at 17641 Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd.,. For more info, visit VueloMexicanGrill.com or call 972-4800.
Whenever you have the best weather of the year for your outdoor event, youâre bound to be successful. So yes, when the American Cancer Society (ACS) decided to host its annual âMaking Strides Against Breast Cancer of Pascoâ walk on October 22, some people who might not have been planning to take a 2-3-mile walk that day at the Shops at Wiregrass mall may have decided to go ahead and take that morning constitutional in the crisp, sub-70-degree sunshine and crowds of happy people wearing pink.
In other words, although the ACS website MakingStridesWalk.org/PascoFLâs âofficialâ online statistics say there were 1,136 registered participants on 126 teams that raised more than $125,000 (not including sponsorship money, which hadnât been totaled up at our press time) taking a stroll from the mall to Florida Hospital Wesley Chapel, ACS of the South Nature Coast of Florida (serving Pasco, Hernando & Citrus counties) senior market manager Robyn Liska says the actual number of people on hand that day was closer to 5,000.
Photo: Ashley Wilson
Of those 126 teams, the three that raised the most money for the event (although donations are still being accepted that will be added to the totals) were the âClerks for a Causeâ team, whose 32 members raised nearly $19,000; the âKBR Pirates in Pink,â who had the largest team at the event, with 65 members, that raised almost $13,000; and the âJazzercise Bosom Buddies, which had 34 members (some of whom did a performance during the event) who raised nearly $10,000.
The top individual fund raisers at this yearâs Strides of Pasco were Diane Ricca of the âRMCBP Volunteersâ team, who raised nearly $3,700; Jean White of the âKBR Pirates in Pink,â with $3,500; and Diane Gonyea and Kathy Ritz of the âWalmartâs Ride for a Causeâ team, who raised $3,056.50 each.
Just like the fight against breast cancer itself, the numbers for the event may not have been finalized at our press time, but a great time was had by all. For more info about ACS, visit Cancer.org.â GN