Congratulations to my friends Jamie, Paul and their son James Bartell, who will be hosting their fourth annual Pasta Dinner to raise money for the Sean Bartell Memorial Foundation. Sean â Paul and Jamieâs younger son â passed away in 2014 from a rare disease called toxic epidermal necrolysis.
The Sean Bartell Foundation Pasta Dinner will be held on Saturday, April 28, 4:30 p.m.-7 p.m., at Trinity Church of Wesley Chapel (33425 S.R. 54). All of the food â lasagna, meatballs, salad and bread â will again be donated by my (and the Bartellsâ) friends Carl and Jessica Meyers of Little Italyâs Family Restaurant. There also will be a cake to commemorate what would have been Seanâs 20th birthday.
The tax deductible donation for dinner will be $15 for adults, $8 for children 6-12 and free for those age 5 and under. To-go boxes will be available.
In the past three years, the Foundation has awarded 17 $1,000 Scholarship Grants to local Seniors at Wesley Chapel, Wiregrass Ranch and Zephyrhills high schools and 30 $100 Teacher Grants to teachers at many local schools, for a total of $20,000. âWe plan to grant between 3-5 $1,000 grants to local seniors coming up in May, with more Teacher Grants to come in August,â Paul says.
Purchase âWill Callâ Tickets at SeanBartell.org by clicking on âPayPal Donateâ (please note the # of tickets), by visiting the Foundationâs Facebook page, or email spbfoundation@hotmail.com.
(L.-r.) Wharton High principal Brad Woods talks to a few parents at Heritage Elementary as Area 3 leadership coach Kristin Tonelli & athletic director Eddie Henderson look on.
In response to community concerns about violence and increased law enforcement at Wharton High earlier this year, school administration and district officials held a series of five meetings â at Turner Bartels K-8 school, Hunterâs Green (HGE) and Heritage elementary schools and Van Buren and Benito middle schools â between April 4 and April 11.
Designed to be smaller, more intimate gatherings where parents could ask questions freely, the meetings were attended by what could hardly be called âcrowdâ â in fact, a fraction of the hundreds of parents who showed up back in February for a larger meeting held on campus at Wharton were at the five meetings combined.
The meetings were led by principal Brad Woods, who, in a strange twist, announced his resignation from Wharton after 10 years at the school the morning after the final meeting at Benito.
In addition to Woods, the schoolâs six assistant principals and district staff â including Area 3 superintendent Dr. Anna Brown, who oversees Wharton and all of the New Tampa-area Hillsborough County public schools, and former HGE principal Kristin Tonelli, who is now the Area 3 leadership coach â attended all five. New Tampa-area Hillsborough District 3 School Board member Cindy Stuart attended all but one.
At the New Tampa-area meetings, attendance varied.
Administrators outnumbered parents 7-4 at the Heritage meeting, by far the least attended. The meetings at Hunterâs Green and Benito had about 30 parents each; roughly 20 were at Turner Bartels.
Some parents in attendance did express concern about the low turnout.
âIâd love to see more parents here,â said Jennifer Brooks, a Wharton parent.
But, administrators say their goal was to connect with the parents who did show up, no matter how many there were.
âIt didnât matter if the turnout was large or small,â Tonelli said after the last meeting. âWe knew the community had questions and we wanted to provide answers.â
Woods stressed at each meeting that school officials had heard from parents on issues like better communication and student support, and improving school pride, which could include things like beautification.
A request has been made to have Wharton painted, but the cost could be $225,000 and the School Board would have to approve funding for that project. A campus clean-up and beautification day will be held on Saturday, April 28.
Parents and community members are invited to attend, although details on time and exactly what improvements will be made were not available at our press time.
Woods explained at the first meeting that new soap dispensers were being ordered that could not be as easily removed from the walls. Apparently, some students would empty the dispensers so that it was difficult to keep them filled. At the last meeting at Benito, Woods announced that the new dispensers had been installed.
He also addressed the issue of the smell of marijuana coming from the 100 Hall bathrooms at two of the meetings. Woods reported that a teacher reported the smell to the office earlier last week, and when no one was found in the restroom at the time, administrators reviewed security video and searched students seen going into or coming out of the bathroom during that time.
One student who was found with marijuana was suspended and arrested.
While administrators insist problems at the school stem from both local students who attend Wharton from New Tampaâs 33647 zip code and those who are bused in from outside of it, Woods reported that one parent has met with School Board member Cindy Stuart to propose new boundaries for Wharton, beginning a long process that could potentially end in rezoning at some point in the future.
Parents seemed to be reassured that the violence that was prevalent on campus a few months ago had calmed down. So, questions turned to issues of safety.
âWe have your prized possessions here,â Woods said, adding that at Wharton, the perimeter of the school is being examined, and changes have been made to keep the students safer, such as opening and closing gates as needed, rather than leaving a gate open all day.
âItâs comforting to hear theyâre managing the fighting situation and bringing it down to a normal level,â said Dale Miller, whose two children attend Wharton.
Following the final meeting at Benito on April 11, Brooks echoed the sentiments of several parents who attended the meeting. âI think theyâre moving in the right direction,â she says. âI donât expect everything to be fixed overnight, but I want to be kept in the loop.â
She says her 10th-grade daughter loves Wharton and she has no hesitations about her eighth-grade daughter attending the school next year.
âMy two questions for any school are always, will you be safe, and will you be challenged?,â said Brooks. âThe answer at Wharton is yes (to both).â
Brooksâ friend Christine Bonatakis has a daughter in eighth grade who will attend Wharton next year. âWe have lots of friends and neighbors who attend Wharton and theyâre happy,â Bonatakis said. âI feel very comfortable with my decision.â
An aerial view of the clubhouse and The Ridge at Wiregrass Ranch community, which is being developed by GL Homes along S.R. 56 in Wesley Chapel.
On S.R. 56 in Wesley Chapel, a couple of miles east of the Shops at Wiregrass, behind a stunning entrance with an eye-catching waterfall feature, The Ridge at Wiregrass Ranch continues to take shape.
Families who want to enjoy the best possible Florida lifestyle in luxurious, custom homes have been moving into the community since 2016. Of the nearly 350 homes that have been sold in The Ridge so far, 216 have been completed. At build-out, The Ridge is expected to include 564 homes.
The starting prices for homes in The Ridge range between $310,000 to $640,000, with sizes from just under 2,000 sq. ft. to more than 5,000 sq. ft. Most homes back up to ponds or conservation areas, and the few homes that back up to another home feature deeper lots and more green space between them.
The Ridge is being developed, built and sold by Sunrise, FL-based GL Homes, a privately owned company that has been in business for more than 40 years. GL Homes started in Palm Beach and Broward counties and has grown to include communities throughout Florida.
The company is different from many community developers, because it also builds the homes.
âWe purchase the land, work with engineers to create a site plan, go through the approval process, develop each home site and build each home,â says Marisa Lufkin, the project manager for The Ridge.
Marisa has been working at The Ridge for more than a year, and has been with GL Homes for 18 years. Previously, she was at Valencia Lakes (the only other GL Homes community in the Tampa Bay area), which is for adults ages 55 and older, located in the Sun City Center area of southern Hillsborough County.
She explains that being both the developer and the builder has its advantages.
âWe control the standard of the overall aesthetics,â Marisa says. âWe start with the entrance and follow through with the elevations of the homes. We tie it all together, from the guardhouse to the landscaping, to the exterior of the clubhouse to the homes themselves.â
The elevations of the homes in The Ridge all include concrete roof tile, stacked stone exterior details, a covered patio, and brick pavers on driveways, walkways, entries, and covered patios.
âThese are standard features in all of our homes,â explains Marisa. She adds that the high-end standard features continue inside, as well, where you wonât need to upgrade to get stainless steel appliances, granite countertops, 42â upper cabinets in the kitchen or luxury bathroom finishes.
Thatâs one reason Adaliz Aponte and her family chose to build a home in The Ridge when they relocated from Panama City Beach, FL, last August.
âThings that are standard here were an upgrade with our last builder,â she says. âThe quality of the home is really impressive. Itâs the perfect fit for us, and weâre so happy weâre here.â
Marisa adds, âIn this community, you really can have it all.â
Clubhouse & Pools
Speaking of having it all, the communityâs 11,691-sq.-ft. clubhouse opened in March of last year. It includes a fitness center with 24-hour resident access, aerobics room, indoor sports court, game room, kids room and even an arcade.
At The Ridge at Wiregrass Ranch, developed and built by GL Homes, residents and visitors are greeted by this stunning waterfall entrance.
Outdoors, a resort-style pool is accompanied by a lap pool, kids water play area and a water slide. There also are four tennis courts, a shaded tot lot, a full-size, full-court basketball court, open play field and party pavilion.
âThereâs nothing else like it in a community this size,â says Marisa. âWeâre different for the market, and thatâs what attracts buyers to this community.â
âWe just love it here,â Adaliz says, âespecially all the amenities.â
For example, Adaliz and her family enjoy the pool. âItâs huge,â she says. âFirst of all, itâs actually three pools because thereâs also a lap pool and a water slide. The big pool has a lot of seating, including cabana-style seating, so you can sit back and watch the kids. We can cook out or take food.â
The community also has a lifestyle program, now in full swing, offering plenty of events for residents. A lifestyle director plans events, which have included a health and wellness expo, Christmas party with Santa, cookies, and crafts, and a âWinter Wonderlandâ event with food trucks, a snow machine, and a âpolar bear plungeâ down the waterslide.
Adaliz is one of many residents who chose The Ridge in part for its location, which is close to The Shops at Wiregrass, Tampa Premium Outlets, Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd. and I-75. âItâs close to everything thatâs important to us, like doctors, the supermarket and restaurants,â she says.
Marisa adds that a wide variety of people are coming to live at The Ridge, âfrom newlyweds to families with children to empty nesters.â
She says many of the buyers are local. âOur community gives people who have outgrown their New Tampa homes an opportunity to build a bigger home in the area,â she says, adding that other local buyers are looking to downsize once they become empty nesters. âOther families just want to live in a brand new home with all the finishing touches and these amazing community amenities.â
In addition, she says, âGL Homes offers the whole package. From the multi-million-dollar entry that makes you feel like youâre coming into a truly upscale community, to our many floor plans and hundreds of options for customization, along with the great lifestyle.â
The sales center at The Ridge at Wiregrass Ranch is open every day, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. For more information, visit GLHomes.com or call (855) 671-1700.
If you have chronic back and/or neck pain, regular adjustments from a trained chiropractic physician, like those at The Joint Chiropractic Center, located in the Publix-anchored New Tampa Center plaza (near Pizza Hut), may help. A lot.
As Iâve mentioned in these pages before, The Joint is a new, much more affordable way to address your chronic pain when compared with most other chiropractic offices.
Like some of you, I wasnât a believer in chiropractic care, in part because I never really suffered from any kind of back or neck pain until I was well into my 50s. I chalked it up to the problems of my sometimes sedentary lifestyle â I spend a lot of hours gazing into a computer, especially during my two deadline weeks per month â combined with trying to continue to do regular physical activity in order to keep my weight down as my body has aged.
But today, I am a true believer in not only the power of regular, ongoing chiropractic care, but also in The Joint, because never before has visiting a chiropractor been this affordable.
The initial fee at The Joint is just $29 and includes a consultation, an exam and an adjustment. Dr. Barney takes the time to find out where your pain is and when you feel it most often, and if you say you have pain in your neck or back, you donât even have to show him where it is because heâll find the source of it with his magic hands within a few seconds.
If youâre used to paying $45-$55 or more every time you visit the chiropractor, youâll probably appreciate the fact that one adjustment per week â four adjustments every month â at The Joint will set its members back only $69, and additional adjustments in the same month, when you need them (like after Jannah and I were in a car accident in November), are just $10 each.
The Joint New Tampa recently hosted a Customer Appreciation event where Dr. Barney saw and adjusted 90 people in one day, including yours truly â with minimal wait times. Look for a one-year anniversary celebration announcement in future issues and please tell âem I sent you!
For more info about The Joint (19014 BBD Blvd.), visit TheJoint.com, call (813) 534-6415 or see the ad on pg. 3! â GN
In some ways, Parker James is a typical high school senior â visiting colleges, awaiting acceptance letters and hoping for great scholarship offers, while spending his days at school and playing sports.
Parkerâs sport of choice these days is golf, and he works hard at it â training every day after classes at Saddlebrook Preparatory School inside Saddlebrook Resort Tampa off S.R. 54 in Wesley Chapel.
Parker (pictured with his golf coach, Nick Dunn) also is getting ready to do something most teenagers donât â he will host a golf tournament to raise awareness for a health condition he suffers from, Crohnâs disease.
âCrohnâs has shaped my fighter mentality,â says Parker, explaining that fighting his disease has prepared him for the mental challenges of golf. âIn golf, you can go out on the course and lose every day. You can always do better, and you have to overcome that.â
He says heâs always loved playing sports, and as a child played baseball, basketball, football, soccer, lacrosse, golf, tennis, even skateboarding and wakeboarding.
His diagnosis at 10 years old with Crohnâs disease changed things for Parker. Crohnâs is a chronic inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) characterized by inflammation of the digestive tract.
Since then, an ankle injury and a new diagnosis â this time of rheumatoid arthritis âfurther limited his ability to play most of the sports he loves.
But, Parker found a way to keep his athletic dreams alive, by playing sports that are less strenuous on his joints, especially golf.
And now, he wants to raise awareness about the many people who suffer from Crohnâs, especially those who, like him, are diagnosed as kids.
âI want to inspire other young people to never feel defeated by their illnesses,â Parker says. âDonât let it hold you back in any shape or form.â
The golf tournament Parker is organizing will be held on Saturday, April 14, at Saddlebrook Resort. All proceeds will benefit the Crohnâs & Colitis Foundation.
Players can register a foursome, or sign up to play in a group with an academy student.
To learn more about sponsoring the tournament, to donate or sign up to play, visit GolfForeGuts.com.