When the half-penny school sales tax referendum passed in Hillsborough County last year, the promise was that aged roofs and floors and playgrounds would be repaired, athletic tracks would be repaved and classrooms and fire evacuation systems being upgraded, just to name just a few much-needed enhancements.
But, what got Wharton High’s Parent Teacher Student Association (PTSA) president Kristie Scism most excited was much cooler than all those things.
âThe air conditioning,â Scism says. âIt may not be the best thing, but it was the one thing I was most excited about.â
Hillsborough County Public Schools announced last week that teams of workers have begun moving into the 21 schools that will receive an overhaul or replacement of their existing AC systems.
While every school in New Tampa except for Hunter’s Green and Tampa Palms elementaries is scheduled to get upgraded AC in years 1-5 of the school tax referendum, only Wharton High, Benito Middle School and Clark Elementary are among the 21 schools having the work done this summer.
Over the next 10 years, funds from the half-penny sales tax are expected to overhaul or replace the A/C systems at 203 schools, or about 20 each summer.
âIt’s pretty miserable when the A/C breaks,â Scism said, adding that it has been an all-too common occurrence at Wharton. âIt gets to be like a sauna in some rooms. It’s very hard (for students) to concentrate in those conditions.â
Intermittent air conditioning at times has also been a complaint of parents and teachers at Benito and Clark for years.
The big, inflatable dalmatian on S.R. 56, less than a mile east of I-75, stands guard over the Pet & Fit Center plaza that is home to Pet Urgent Care of Wesley Chapel.
Earlier this month, St. Petersburg resident Diane Grey was driving home from north Florida with her dog, a 108-pound Rhodesian ridgeback named Morocco. She was getting close to Pasco County when she says Morocco began showing signs of illness. She got off the interstate and pulled into a gas station.
âI saw he was in distress, so I called my vet in St. Pete,â she says. Morocco was anxious because of all the travel and was suffering from heat exhaustion. Diane was told not to wait until she got home, but to seek help for Morocco immediately.
She searched the internet and found Pet Urgent Care of Wesley Chapel, which had only recently opened one exit away.
âI was so worked up and emotional,â she says. âWhen I saw the Pet Urgent Care sign, it was the best thing I ever saw. They were really friendly and took care of Morocco immediately.â
It is the kind of important emergency services for your pet management had in mind when Pet Urgent Care of Wesley Chapel opened on April 15, making it the first urgent care clinic for pets in the Wesley Chapel/New Tampa area.
Pet Urgent Care shares a building with Dr. Sree Reddyâs Seven Oaks Pet Hospital, which first opened in 2007, and moved to its current location on S.R. 56, just east of I-75, in the plaza called the Pet & Fit Center, in 2016.
Medical director Dr. Gina Ushi is one of three experienced pet emergency veterinarians youâll find at Pet Urgent Care of Wesley Chapel.
The Pet & Fit Center is now a place where pet owners can visit their veterinarian, stop by the nearby retail store for pet products, such as food, toys, treats, beds and much more. The retail store is Pet Depot, and it occupies 3,000 square feet next door to the pet hospitals.
Seven Oaks Pet Hospital treat dogs, cats and exotic pets. When the pet hospital closes, the urgent care center opens.
Pet Urgent Care of Wesley Chapel is open seven days a week until 11 p.m. (see full hours at the end of this story).
Making Pet Urgent Care Closer & More Convenient
Gina Ushi, DVM, is the medical director for Pet Urgent Care of Wesley Chapel. Prior to joining the pet hospital, Dr. Ushi worked at an emergency clinic in Tampa.
Dr. Ushi earned her DVM degree in 2009 from the University of Florida in Gainesville. She had previously earned a Bachelor of Science (B.S.) degree in Biology from Xavier University in New Orleans, LA, in 2003.
âIf people have an emergency with a pet in this area, we want them to know they donât have to drive down to Tampa,â she says. âWhen I worked in Tampa, we would often get calls from Wesley Chapel where people would ask, âis there anything closer?ââ
Now, she says, there finally is a closer option for pets with all kinds of urgent medical needs, such as bite wounds or lacerations, not eating or drinking, or toxin ingestion.
âWe see pets with allergic reactions, ear and eye infections, vomiting and/or diarrhea,â Dr. Ushi explains, âor minor traumas, such as they jumped off the bed and now theyâre limping.â
There are no scheduled appointments, so all patients are seen on a walk-in basis. Dr. Ushi says pet owners can call ahead so the staff is prepared for you when you get there, but even that isnât necessary.
Pet Urgent Care of Wesley Chapel is fully staffed with veterinarians who are all experienced in emergency medicine. Dr. Ushi is joined by Dr. Megan Niedens, who was Dr. Ushiâs classmate and also received her DVM degree from UF in 2009, and Dr. Michele Lentovich, who received her DVM degree from UF in 2005. Each of the three doctors has more than 10 years of experience in emergency medicine for animals.
Dr. Ushi says their experience is critical when it comes to being able to save the life of a pet, because a doctor experienced in caring for animals is not the same as one experienced in handling emergencies. âWhen you visit our urgent care, you will see a doctor who has been in emergency medicine for at least 10 years,â Dr. Ushi explains. âYou can rest assured youâre seeing a highly trained, highly experienced doctor.â
Pet Urgent Care of Wesley Chapel sees dogs, cats, rabbits and ferrets. The doctors will sometimes see other exotic animals and birds, but thatâs at the doctorâs discretion. Not every doctor is comfortable with every animal, so it will depend upon which doctor is available.
Dr. Ushi advises that anyone who has birds or small exotic animals should call before walking in to determine whether or not they can be seen at the urgent care facility. Most exotics can be scheduled at the regular hospital by appointment.
âWe are a bridge between your family veterinarian and an overnight emergency facility,â explains Dr. Ushi. Sometimes, she says, a petâs illness is so critical that they must be sent somewhere else for overnight care but, in most cases, they are able to be treated and sent home.
In fact, Dr. Ushi says, many of the cases they see are minor issues where a pet owner simply canât get to their own vet during regular office hours.
Whether a pet is regularly seen at Seven Oaks Pet Hospital, or any other veterinarian, they are still welcome to come to Pet Urgent Care, if needed.
Diane and Morocco will forever be grateful. She says the doctors at Pet Urgent Care of Wesley Chapel were able to stabilize Morocco so he could travel the rest of the way home.
âWhen youâre so stressed like that, it was a wonderful feeling that everyone had great customer service,â Diane says, âfrom the receptionist to the vet who treated him. The facility was clean and easy to navigate. They saved my dogâs life.â
She says that Morocco is doing much better now. She also took her paperwork from the visit to her vet back home and asked if the services that were recommended, such as blood work, were necessary, and if what she was charged was reasonable.
Her veterinarian confirmed that he agreed with the recommendations of Pet Urgent Care of Wesley Chapel. âSo, they have integrity, too,â says Diane.
Pet Urgent Care of Wesley Chapel is located at 27027 S.R. 56 (look for the big, inflatable dalmatian). Pet Urgent Care of Wesley Chapel is currently offering a special of 10-percent off the regular exam fee for all new clients. It is open Monday-Friday, 6 p.m.â11 p.m., 2 p.m.â11 p.m. on Saturday and 5 p.m.â11 p.m. on Sunday. For more information, call (813) 279-6500 or visit UrgentPetCareOfWesleyChapel.com.
As far as Pasco County is concerned, the long-debated connection of Kinnan St. in New Tampa to Mansfield Blvd. in Meadow Pointe — a 30-foot or so patch of grass, dirt, weed and garbage — is dead.
The Pasco County Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) was presented with the results from its recent online Connections Survey Tuesday morning, and voted unanimously to forward the second-most popular option, Option 3, which would connect both the Meadow Pointe Blvd. and Wyndfields Blvd. extensions to K-Bar Ranch Pkwy. in New Tampa’s K-Bar Ranch community — to the Pasco Board of County Commissioners (BCC) for a final vote.
The MPO did agree to connect Kinnan St. and Mansfield Blvd., but only for emergencies. A traffic arm will be installed for emergency service vehicles, and there will be a path for bikers and pedestrians.
The final vote to settle the connections conundrum will likely be held on Tuesday, July 9, in Dade City. Considering that all five members of the BOC are on the MPO, and they voted unanimously in favor of Option 3, it is almost certain to pass.
County residents were given four options, and despite claims that connecting Kinnan-Mansfield was widely unpopular, 54 percent of the 1,180 respondents actually voted for Option 1, which would connect Kinnan-Mansfield as well as the Meadow Pointe Blvd. extension to K-Bar Ranch Pkwy.
There was no option to just connect Kinnan-Mansfield, nor was it an option that was studied in the year-long Roadways Connections Study commissioned by the county.
The most popular option (No. 2) among those who filled out the online survey was connecting just Meadow Pointe Blvd. to K-Bar Ranch, with 67 percent of respondents voting yes.
The least popular option was No. 4, which would have made all the connections — Kinnan-Mansfield and Meadow Pointe Blvd. and Wyndfields Blvd. extensions to New Tampa.
Even so, a majority of those responding, 52 percent, voted in favor of Option 4.
John C. Cotey can be reached at john@ntneighborhoodnews.com
For more information, check out the upcoming June 28 edition of the Wesley Chapel Neighborhood News.
Doctor of Chiropractic Barney Bickerton is the weekday chiropractor at The Joint Chiropractic Center which celebrated its second anniversary in the New Tampa Center plaza on Bruce B. Downs Blvd., (less than two miles south of the Pasco County line) in May. (Photo: Charmaine George)
Given the potential for abuse of and addiction to opioids, Alex Pierroutsakos was determined after losing his arm in a serious car accident at the age of 23 not to become reliant on them.
So, to manage his pain, he searched for alternatives, such as exercise, diet, massage therapy and chiropractic care.
âThose are the four things that have helped me get myself to be able to live my healthy, active life,â Alex says.
While the first three of the four things were readily accessible, Alex found that finding good, affordable and available chiropractic care wasnât. It inspired him to open The Joint Chiropractic Center in New Tampa (in the Publix-anchored New Tampa Center shopping plaza, less than two miles south of the Pasco County line on Bruce B. Downs Blvd., at New Tampa/Cross Creek Blvd.).
The Jointâs New Tampa location is owned by Dr. Edward Leonardâs TJ Wesley Chapel PA, and managed by Alex and his wife Valerie.
While Alex is a businessman â he and Valerie recently opened a second The Joint location in Brandon â he also is devoted to helping patients find the solutions to the very problems he has encountered due to his accident.
The Joint was originally founded in 1999 by a Doctor of Chiropractic with a vision to transform the traditional, often misunderstood concept of routine chiropractic care by making it more convenient, friendly and affordable. In March 2010, The Joint was re-founded with the acquisition of the original eight franchised clinics. Today, The Joint has more than 425 chiropractic offices, more than 900 chiropractic physicians and has handled more than 12 million patient visits across the U.S.
Two Years In New Tampa!
The Joint, which as of May 21 has been open on BBD for two years, has licensed chiropractors to help you with spinal and joint function. It offers weekly adjustments to improve your bodyâs balance and relieve pain. It will hold its two-year anniversary sometime in June or July â with free food and beverages being provided by outside vendors, big raffle prizes, giveaways and a full day of free adjustments.
The Jointâs new patient special offers a $29 initial visit, which includes a consultation, exam and adjustment. Then, for $69 a month, you get four adjustments â less than $20 per visit â and each additional adjustment (if you need more than four in a month) costs just $10. For those 17 and under, the cost is only $39 a month.
For a single visit, the cost is only $39, but The Joint, which boasts nearly 400 members in New Tampa, also offers a number of packages for multiple visits, and recommends maintenance visits even after your pain goes away.
Pebble Creekâs Diane Seay joined in January when she was having issues with the sciatic nerve on her left side. Dr. Barney Bickerton, D.C., was able to relieve her pain, but he also discovered something else.
âHe discovered that I have scoliosis in my shoulders,â Diane says. âThat was a surprise. I always thought my one shoulder was lower than the other, but I thought that was from carrying purses and shoulder bags all these years.â
Diane is now having her shoulder treated by Dr. Bickerton, and says she can already notice the difference when she looks in the mirror. She also says she had back pain from sleeping on her side, but âDr. B,â as many patients call him, diagnosed an issue with her lower spine, or sacrum, and is making improvements there as well.
âThereâs no question I feel better,â Diane says, and so does her husband, Jerry, who started going because he saw the changes in his wife.
While Jerry says he didnât have any back or neck issues, he started going once week (Diane goes twice a week) and says, âI feel more relaxed when I work around the house, in my yard, washing the cars and cleaning the pool. It just feels easier to do, and I feel more flexible.â
The Seays had high praise for not only Dr. Bickerton, but the entire staff at The Joint.
Qualified, Experienced Chiropractic Physicians
Dr. Bickerton, who received his Bachelor of Science in Human Biology and Doctor of Chiropractic degrees from Logan University, near St. Louis, MO, has 16 years of experience. Dr. B handles the weekday patients at The Joint.
On Saturdays, Dr. Jennifer Wright, D.C., and Dr. David Mangano, D.C., share duties.
Like Dr. Bickerton, Dr. Wright also earned her D.C. degree from Logan College of Chiropractic in 2007, after attending Ohio State University for her undergraduate studies. Dr. Mangano is a Board-certified Chiropractic Physician in the state of Florida and in New York, with more than 35 years of experience. He also is an affiliate doctor with the Cancer Centers of America, and a wellness consultant and member of the nonprofit organization The Foundation for Wellness Professionals.
Most people seeking chiropractic care are suffering from back pain. According to WedMD.com, 22 million Americans visit chiropractors annually, and 35 percent of them (or 7.7 million) are seeking relief of pain in their backs.
While many medical doctors prescribe opioids for back pain, chiropractors rely on hands-on manipulations of the spine and other joints that can relieve pain and restore mobility. Dr. Bickerton says that if the 24 independent vertebrae arenât functioning together properly, you can experience pain and discomfort.
âI would say the majority of our patients come in with some level of back and neck pain,â Alex says. âAfter that, people come because of headaches, or problems with an extremity, like a knee, ankle or shoulder.â
While most people associate chiropractic care with back pain, some studies, Alex says, have shown that routine care also can help with other maladies like relief from arthritis, bursitis, stress and tension disorders and even colds, allergies and sinus problems.
In fact, Alex says his lifestyle, which includes running and sports like basketball, has been helped immensely by keeping various body parts in alignment.
âWe actually help a lot of young people, like cheerleaders and football players,â he says. âThereâs a tremendous amount of study around ankle and leg adjustments to prevent injury for football players and other athletes. When my chiropractor does my ankles, holy cowâŠbecause I exercise and run a lot, the amount of build-up onto that ankle is unbelievable. Itâs a significant adjustment.â
The Joint is open from 10 a.m.-7 p.m. on weekdays, a convenience for those who work and would otherwise have no options. It also is open on Saturdays, from 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
In the fall, Alex says there are plans to open The Joint on Sundays as well.
Best of all, you donât even need an appointment, and although The Joint doesnât accept insurance, you can still use Healthcare Flexible Spending accounts or Health Savings Accounts.
Alex says the focus of The Joint is to make people feel better, not their insurance companies and lawyers. âAnd we have a lot of motivated doctors that also want to be a part of that.â
For more information about The Joint (19014 BBD Blvd.), visit TheJoint.com or call (813) 534-6415. The two-year anniversary party is open to everyone, whether they already are patients at The Joint or not, and we’ll let you know when it is scheduled.
Tim Ford-Brown was the teamâs leading rusher and second-leading receiver last year and, along with others in the first graduating class at Cypress Creek (CCH), will leave a big hole. Can anyone fill it?
The Answer
Itâs unlikely, as the Coyotes are graduating about 85-90 percent of all of their offensive production from a year ago. Rising sophomore Andrew Burgess got the lionâs share of the carries and pass receptions in a disappointing 35-14 spring game loss to Pasco, but showed some durability and versatility. The Coyotes will still rely on rising senior twins Jehlani (the quarterback) and Jalen Warren (wide receiver and running back), but will need more help.
Spring Game Standouts
Fullback Brycen Hernandez scored both of Cypress Creekâs touchdowns in the spring loss on 2- and 4-yard runs. Dontrell Clerkley caught a 24-yard pass in the game. Defensive lineman Ameen Saed had a forced fumble on the first play of the game, but separated his shoulder doing so and sat out the rest of the contest.
Audible
â(Burgess) is someone weâre going to move around a lot on offense,â head coach Michael Johnson said. âHe was all-in for the spring game but there were some eye-opening moments for him, especially in the second half, playing at the varsity level.â
WIREGRASS RANCH
Biggest Question
The Bulls only graduated seven seniors, but most were critical pieces to the starting lineup, like two-year starter at quarterback Grant Sessums. How would the replacements, especially 6-foot-2 rising senior QB Hunter Helton, look in live game action?
The Answer
Well, the new quarterback helped produce 55 points, so he looked pretty good.
Helton connected with rising senior running back Keith Walker on three touchdowns in a barn-burner 55-48 win at East Lake. The defense, on the other hand, gave up a lot of points against a hurry-up offense that limited their substitutions and audibles.
Spring Game Standouts
Walker scored five touchdowns on the night, three through the air and two rushing. A role player last year on offense, Walker could be primed for a huge season after topping 100 yards rushing and receiving against East Lake. Helton threw for 242 yards and spread the ball around well, hitting Noah Biglow for a 69-yard score.
Audible
âI donât know how many teams weâll play that play that fast,â Wiregrass head coach Mark Kantor said of East Lake. âThat style was faster than arena league and it was hard to get a lot of things going on defense because they (East Lake) snapped the ball so fast â it was tough.â
WESLEY CHAPEL
Biggest Question
The quarterback position has been a quarterback-by-committee affair ever since Jacob Thomas graduated at the end of head coach Tony Eganâs first year.
Egan, new staff members Tom McHugh and Brian Colding from Pasco High, as well as former South Carolina and CFL quarterback Stephen Garcia, have been working hard with possible starters. So, who will it be between rising junior Owen Libby and backup Ethan Harper?
The Answer
To be determined. Both guys played well in the spring game, a 35-7 win over Land OâLakes. Libby threw for 177 yards and two scores, including gains of 41 and 38 yards. Harper threw a fourth-quarter touchdown pass and also ran for a score.
Spring Game Standouts
Isaiah Ramsey, a basketball player who goes 6â-4â, 205 lbs., caught a 48-yard touchdown on a slant, and JonâTavius Anderson had a breakout game with more than 100 yards receiving.
Audible
âThis is going to be the first time we have a 20-game starter at QB since Jacob Thomas,â Egan said. âBoth (Libby and Harper) need more reps and weâll be doing a lot of 7-on-7 this summer to help with their progressions and routes.â