
On The Passing Of Councilwoman Gwendolyn Henderson
My City Council colleague Gwendolyn Henderson (above) has passed on (only five days after attending the kickoff event for Vieraâs campaign to be the next Dist. 67 State Representative; see story below). Gwen was many things â a fighter who was hilarious, independent and stubborn and a woman with a beautiful heart.Â
Councilwoman Henderson was raised in Carver City â a Tampa community created for returning black veterans in the 1950s. Her Dad, Asbury Henderson, was a Korean War veteran. Her mother, Gladys Henderson, was a caring woman of faith. Gladys was descended from Sam Hightower â an enslaved man who was emancipated in Georgia in 1865 and would die in 1932.
Gwen owned the Tampa Heights Black English bookstore. If you want to see the heart of Councilwoman Henderson, go to Black English bookstore. It is a love letter to Black History and people like Sam Hightower and Asbury and Gladys Henderson.
She was proud to be a member of the Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. (a sisterhood comprised primarily of Black, college-educated women with more than 1,050 chartered chapters worldwide), and a Carver City woman. She was proud to be a Dragon from Jefferson High School. She was proud of her Christian faith. She was proud to be a mom. And, she was proud to be a public servant representing the community where Gladys and Asbury Henderson raised a family.
She was also hilarious. I sat next to her [at City Council meetings] and laughed a lot. But, she was a tough lady, too. She endured some mean political attacks and never flinched. Public service can be a pleasure â but there are those who take the cheapest of all shots from the cheapest of all seats. Councilwoman Henderson punched back against those cheap shots.
I last saw her at an event she put on for young people attending Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU). I told her: âLook at all of these young people, you are doing what you were meant to do.â
She brought a passion to the plight of everyday families like the one raised by Gladys and Asbury Henderson. She had a beautiful heart and will be missed.
On The Repaving Of New Tampa Blvd.Â
New Tampa Blvd. â home to God knows how many potholes and broken tires â is finally in line to be repaved.
This $2.5-million mobility project will repave 1.8 miles of the main road through the West Meadows community â from Meadow Pine Dr. to Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd. The project will include pedestrian accessibility features with safety and ADA improvements.
This work will begin in Quarter 2 of 2026 and is set to be finished by the end of 2026.
I am glad we are finally getting here. Had the 2018 penny sales tax not been struck down in court, New Tampa Blvd. would have been repaved long ago. As it stands, I had to fight hard to get it in the budget â and I thank Mayor Castor and my fellow Council members for the support.
I would be remiss if I did not give a shout out to my long-time friend, Brad van Rooyen of West Meadows, who has been pushing for this project for years. If Brad is Captain Ahab, then West Meadows is his Moby Dick.
Not long ago, we got portions of Tampa Palms Blvd. repaved. We will finish the rest of Tampa Palms Blvd., too. Remember folks, like the Johnny Cash song goes: âOne piece at a time.â Until we get better funding sources for mobility, itâll have to be just one piece at a time.
On The Fourth Of July
The Fourth of July is coming up and I look forward to marching in some Independence Day parades. I love the Fourth of July for many reasons â for sentimental reasons and because I was raised in the 1980s.
And, I love how it is a good time to celebrate our country. A former President once said: âWhat is right with America can help heal what is wrong with America.â This Fourth of July, think about what is right with our country and how that good can help overcome what is wrong with our country. It has in the past and it will again.
Know what a real pleasure it is to represent you all in public office.Â
Viera Kicks Off Campaign To Succeed Rep. DriskellÂ

As we told you back in April, District 7 Tampa City Councilman and New Tampa resident Luis Viera has announced that instead of running for Mayor of Tampa, a citywide Council seat or a spot on the Hillsborough County Commission, he is instead seeking the position currently held by his long-time friend and Dist. 67 Florida Rep. (and State House minority leader) Fentrice Driskell.
Viera officially kicked off his campaign for the seat at a fund-raising event held at the Columbia Centennial Museum in Ybor City on June 5 that was attended by more than 200 people, including Richard Gonzmart (at microphone, left), the chairman of the 1905 Family of Restaurants (including the original Columbia Restaurant adjacent to the museum), who introduced Viera to the crowd, as well as fellow City Council members Gwendolyn Henderson (who passed away suddenly a few days after the event) and Charlie Miranda and Dist. 1 Hillsborough Commissioner Harry Cohen.Â
Unable to attend the campaign event was Leader Driskell herself, who was (and is) still in Tallahassee with the rest of the State Legislature trying to get a Fiscal Year 2026 budget passed.

Viera, who was actually the second Democrat to enter the race for Driskellâs seat, no longer faces a primary election, as retired U.S. Air Force Colonel William âWillâ Atkins, the first candidate to file for the seat, pulled out of the race after reading my profile of Viera (photo, right) â at least, thatâs what Will told me when I saw him at the YMCA groundbreaking in Wesley Chapel last month.Â
âI come from the heart,â Viera told the crowd at the event. âI always tell people Iâm the same guy on Saturday night that I am on Sunday morning. That means that Iâm the same guy I was before I got elected, and [Iâll be] the same guy when I go to Tallahassee that I am now. And by the way, Iâm gonna be the same guy in the primary that I am in the general election, because you donât put your finger in the wind on your values. Your values count when they are rock-solid. They come with you, and they donât change based upon whatâs happening. I always believe in dignity for all, which is the idea that youâre entitled to dignity and respect â the idea that we all do better when we all do better.â
For more information or to make a donation, visit VieraforFlorida.com. â GNÂ