Rapid growth fuels Family Of Christ Christian School’s success

Story and photos by Andy Warrener

Family of Christ Christian School principal Jennifer Snow (r.), with Kelli Tully, the director of Pure Hearts Rescue of New Tampa, on Great American Teach-In day at the school.
Family of Christ Christian School principal Jennifer Snow (r.), with Kelli Tully, the director of Pure Hearts Rescue of New Tampa, on Great American Teach-In day at the school.

New Tampa was a vastly different place in the early 1990s, home to more wildlife than people, more trees than homes and Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd. was a two-lane, eight-mile “road to nowhere.”

As we all know, that changed quickly. From 1990-2000, the population in New Tampa increased by 273 percent, from 7,145 residents to 26,634, according to the Hillsborough County City-County Planning Division. Getting in on the ground floor of the population boom was a tiny Lutheran Church with big ideas.

In November of 1999, Family of Christ Christian School (FoCCS), part of Family of Christ Lutheran Church, led by Pastor Dave Haara, purchased 31 acres of land in Tampa Palms. At the time, all Haara and his followers had was a church, a Pre-K and Kindergarten class and a mission.

“Our goal was to add one grade every year,” FoCCS principal Jennifer Snow says. “We are looking to be a light that stands out in the community.”

Family of Christ has stayed the course. The school has continued to add grades, and today, FoCCS includes kindergarten through eighth grade.

“God has blessed us more than anything I could have imagined,” Snow says. “It’s like a family here.”

When Snow arrived in 2005, after helping establish Grace Episcopal Pre-School in New Tampa, there were already 79 students ranging from Kindergarten through fifth grade at FoCCS. The school now educates 177 children, more than doubling the student population under Snow’s watch. “It’s been a tremendous amount of growth,” Snow says.

Snow also notes that 95 percent of the staff that was present when she took over in 2005 is still at the school today.

“There hasn’t been a day that I don’t want to come in here and see these faces,” Snow says with a smile.

FOC5The school couples community service with academic achievement. Parents of FoCCS students are asked to put in 20 hours of volunteer work annually for the school. Those hours can be logged in the classroom, at open house events or during any of the many fund-raising events the school participates in each year.

“(Volunteer hours) are an integral part of the school’s success,” Snow says. “Most (families) do more (than the 20 hours), some go way beyond and are always searching for opportunities to serve others in the community.”

In addition to helping at the school itself, FoCCS parents, students and administrators participate in community outreach programs, including partnering with Metropolitan Ministries in central Tampa to help feed the homeless.

“(Our) parents are the first ones to go out in the community,” Snow says. “Those are the people (who) allow God’s love to show through them.”

Academic achievement is another ingredient in the school’s success. FoCCS is fully accredited by the National Lutheran Schools Association (NLSA). The school also complies with and exceeds the Florida Sunshine State Standards as well as the Hillsborough County Benchmarks set for each of FoCCS’s nine grade levels. The school is an active participant in the National Junior Honor Society (NJHS); in fact, Snow estimates that 80-90 percent of her students are members of the NJHS. FoCCS also offers three high school credits — in Science, Spanish I and Algebra I — and Snow estimates that 98 percent of the students who graduate the eighth grade leave with all three credits.

FOC“We take what’s really working out there and use it to educate (our) students,” Snow says.

The results are encouraging. FoCCS participates in the Science Olympics at MOSI, and recently, first-grader Spence Palmer was one of the award winners. Students also take standardized tests like the SAT and ACT, and most feed into local public and private schools like Wharton, Wesley Chapel, Freedom, Cambridge Christian and Tampa Catholic. Some students have fed into the International Baccalaureate (IB) programs at King and Hillsborough high schools. Many are now attending state universities like the University of Florida in Gainesville and Florida State University in Tallahassee, and even nationally-recognized technology institutes like the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in Cambridge, MA.

Athletics also is a big part of the FoCCS experience. Volleyball, cross country, soccer, flag football, golf and basketball are all offered at the school and students participate in a 14-school Tampa Bay Christian Athletic League.

Getting into FoCCS isn’t automatic, but it’s far from impossible. There’s a screening process every applicant must go through and there is mandatory, annual tuition along with the volunteer commitment. Class sizes range from 18 to 22 students per class and, according to Snow, FoCCS is at capacity but is always looking forward to new applicants. “It’s hard to turn great families away,” she says.

The school has a number of ways to help with tuition once a student is accepted. First, FoCCS participates in the state-approved “Step Up for Students” program, a non-profit organization that provides scholarship funding. There also is a school scholarship fund aimed at retaining students whose families endure economic hardships.

“When there’s a need within the school and the family has attended and started with us, then if there’s a job loss or a death in the family, we try to keep the continuity for the kids,” Snow says. “We try to keep tuition down; it’s up to families (to give) what they are capable of giving.”

FOC2Tuition is not the only source of funding for FoCCS, and that’s where the school takes participation to a new level. In order to fund its nearly constant expansion, FoCCS offers a litany of community fund-raising events.

The school’s “Night of Knights” event, started in 2006, has raised more than $380,000 since its inception. In 2015, the Night of Knights featured a casino theme with a silent auction, a live auction and other casino gaming activities. Auction items included beach weekends, sports memorabilia, and the chance to be principal of FoCCS for a day. The school’s walkathon takes place every February and targets specific needs — in 2016, Snow says the goal will be to build a new basketball court on campus.

FoCCS also hosts an annual Octoberfest, an event open to the public with a live DJ. The first week back from Christmas break, the school hosts an Epiphany bonfire, also open to the public. Even small events like pumpkin carving contests and auctions for decorated Christmas baskets keep the school moving and growing and the community is always welcome to attend all of them.

“We want everyone to feel welcome (at the events),” Snow says.

The week before Thanksgiving break, FoCCS participated in the Great American Teach-In and had 35 speakers come in. Among them were Florida Highway Patrolman Eric Madill, Kelli Tully (director of Pure Hearts Rescue of New Tampa) and USF Assistant Professor of Anthropology Rosie Bongiovanni.

Even if your child does not attend FoCCS, there are opportunities at the church’s Child Development Center (CDC) where full-time childcare is offered 7 a.m.-6 p.m. every weekday. Buses from FoCCS travel to public schools in the area and escort children to the CDC.

“When you can give a tour and not have to sell anything, when you see parents all smiles and having fun, when you see the kids learning but still having fun,’’ Snow says, “it makes you think you must be doing something right.”

Family of Christ Christian School & Church are located at 16190 BBD Blvd. in Tampa Palms For more info, call 558-9343 or visit EdLine.net/pages/FamilyofChristCS. To see FoCCS’s list of donors and sponsors, see the ad on pg. 32 of this issue.

Syrian Restaurant Owner Speaks Out About Fear & Misconceptions

Bilal2By John C. Cotey

Bilal Saleh, the owner of Zaytoun Mediterranean Grill on Cross Creek Blvd. at Morris Bridge Rd. is a U.S. citizen who was born and raised in Syria. Bilal wants the people of New Tampa to know that the vast majority of Syrians living here are productive members of U.S. society.

Bilal Saleh, wearing black dress slacks and a blue pinstriped dress shirt, sits in a booth at the Zaytoun Mediterranean Grill, the restaurant he owns with his brother Mohammad. Saleh’s voice is soft and his words are thoughtfully chosen.

He is troubled.

Originally from Damascus, Syria, Bilal (now a U.S. citizen) says he watches television these days, and the sights from his homeland horrify him, as much as the sounds, from talking heads, politicians, presidential candidates and so-called experts, mostly calling for the United States and other countries to turn away refugees fleeing a war that has dragged on for almost five years now and has left more than 200,000 of his people dead.

Plans to let refugees into the U.S. have been facing stiff resistance. The terrorist killings in Paris on Nov. 13, and unofficial reports of a discovery of a Syrian passport — later deemed a fake — next to one of the terrorists, quickly turned much of the country against the refugees, conflating the Syrian people themselves with the terrorist group commonly known as ISIS.

“It’s just amazing how within the span of a week, the Syrian people have turned from victims to a threat (in people’s eyes),’’ Bilal says. “The Syrian people have been bombarded, killed, raped and tortured for four years. That really hurts, when you see how suddenly (it happens)….yesterday you were a victim; today, you are now a threat.”

Bilal is quick to condemn ISIS and the terrorist attacks in Paris and other places.

“We vehemently disagree with all that is going on. It is definitely against Islam and against the teaching of the Prophet (Mohammed),” he says.

It angers him, because as a result, anti-Muslim fears and threats are at an all-time high in this country, according to the Council of American-Islamic Relations. Mosques are on high alert, Islam is being protested, violence has been threatened.

Bilal says he himself hasn’t been threatened specifically, but the Masjid Daarus Salaam (which translates to “house of peace”) mosque on Morris Bridge Rd. a couple of miles south of his restaurant, where he and his family worship, has received threatening phone calls and hate emails. Facebook comments have been harsh. The vitriol in the public square has definitely been heating up.

“If I compared the reaction after the Paris attacks to the reaction after 9-11, I see this reaction as much more, I don’t know how to describe it…enormous,” Bilal says.

To a degree, Bilal says he can understand the fears and concerns. It didn’t feel great, he says, when he traveled internationally on business in his years working for MCI Telecommunications and was held for a search every time, or how he was suspiciously viewed after 9-11. “We lost over 3,000 people (on 9-11),’’ he says. “I understand.”

Those fires burned out. But now, even larger, hotter flames are being stoked.

“I am a little worried,’’ Bilal says. “I’m worried about a crazy person coming to the mosque on a Friday where we have 500 people. It’s highly unlikely but it is possible….we’ve gotten some (safety) recommendations from the (U.S.) Dept. of Homeland Security. We haven’t done anything. Maybe we should, I don’t know.”

Most disappointing, perhaps, is what Bilal says is a pattern of troubling disinformation espoused by some of the Republican presidential candidates. Ben Carson, for example, compared Syrian refugees to “rabid dogs.” Others have called the refugees terrorists and accused Muslims of celebrating after 9-11.

“For the average person watching CNN and FOX News, I really sympathize with them,’’ he says. “I see where they are coming from. If I were them, I would have the same feelings. There is a very credible story with pictures with experts talking, and they are instilling fear. I would be concerned. I really feel sorry for them, I would like to reach out to them and explain to them at the same time. But, for politicians, leaders, to spread this misconception, I don’t understand. They are playing on (public) fears. It is not American. Everyone is an expert, but no one lets us talk.”

Bilal left Syria in 1978 as a 17-year-old, when his father took a job in Saudi Arabia as a professor. A violent uprising in Syria around that same time made it unsafe to return.

He came to the U.S. as a student, and attended Eastern Tennessee State University in Johnson City. He holds a Bachelor of Science (B.S.) degree in Electronics Engineering, a Master of Science (M.S.) degree in Computer Science and a Master of Business Administration (MBA) degree from the Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University in Chicago. He also holds three U.S. patents.

His four daughters are all college graduates. Two are currently in law school.

The process for Bilal was far easier than it is for political refugees today, who have to pass through a rigorous 13-step process, which can take two years.

In the last year, just over 100 Syrians have settled in Florida, with 36 of them making Hillsborough County home.

Bilal says there are just a handful of Syrian families in New Tampa, but they are productive members of society and take pride in their achievements, and certainly don’t deserve to be a singled out for the atrocities being committed overseas.

“If you look at the Muslim community, and the Syrian community in particular, we are engineers, physicians, lawyers, business people, innovators, technologists,’’ he says. “Chances are, talking to your readers, one of you or someone you know has been treated by a Syrian physician. The bridge you drove on, designed by Syrian engineer. I myself hold three U.S. patents, I have contributed to the technology industry. We are people who are providers, who are contributors. We’re not freeloaders, we’re part of the fabric of this society.”

That fabric, however, may be fraying, as anti-Islamic violence pops up across the country.

Still, Bilal looks around, and while the hatred and anger towards Muslims is disconcerting, it has not changed his view about America. He still thinks it is a wonderful place and a beautiful country and he is still proud to be a U.S. citizen. And, even when darkness seems to be descending, he says there is always seems to be a ray of hope.

“One of the my customers, he called me over and he said I came here for two reasons — the second reason is because you have good food,’’ Bilal says. “But the first reason is to make a statement that I support you. I disagree with what’s being said. I told him people like you make me love this country even more.”

Dining Survey 2015! Readers choices for top area eateries

By Gary Nager

We had another great year of reader response to our annual Dining Survey & Contest, as nearly 600 of you took the time to enter the contest and tell us about your favorite places to eat in our two distribution areas. As for this year’s results, our readers’ favorite restaurant in New Tampa was last year’s #2 finisher — Burger 21, located in the Trout Creek area off Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd., across from Bruster’s Real Ice Cream.

Last year’s first-place finisher, Stonewood Grill & Tavern, dropped to second, and the top ten in New Tampa had the same list of restaurants as last year, only in a slightly different order.

The biggest jump this year? Cappy’s Pizza, which, in only its second year on our ballots, rocketed to #12 this year from #24 last year. I’m not going to attribute all of that success to regular advertising in these pages, but I’m sure it didn’t hurt! According to Jessica Meyers, the co-owner of Little Italy’s Family Restaurant & Catering (see story on page 46) our amazing readers really like to support the places they see advertised and reviewed in these pages.

Meanwhile, over in Wesley Chapel, GrillSmith retained the top spot, narrowly edging The Hungry Greek, which moved up one spot, from #3 with our readers last year. At #3, Bonsai Sushi saw a great jump, up from #12 with our readers last year.

The biggest jump in this year’s Survey was also the only place I could accuse of ballot-stuffing this time around — Pinchers Crab Shack. Despite my best efforts and warnings on every entry form every year, people still think they’re helping their “favorite” restaurant when they 1) Put it as their favorite in the area in which it isn’t located (e.g., 28 people were disqualified for putting “Pinchers” as their favorite in New Tampa, even though it’s located, and on the ballot, in Wesley Chapel) and 2) Put it as their #1-#5 favorite in the area in which it is located, rather than just selecting it #1.

In other words, another 48 entries had to be disqualified from a chance at winning any of our prizes, and all of the votes on those entries (other than their votes for other restaurants) did not count towards Pinchers’ totals.

Here are the complete results.

Bon appetit! — GN

burger21Your 50 Favorite Restaurants in New Tampa

  1. Burger 21
  2. Stonewood Grill & Tavern
  3. Kobe Japanese Steakhouse
  4. Acropolis Greek Taverna
  5. Ciccio’s Cali
  6. Liang’s Bistro Asian Cuisine
  7. Vallarta’s (Tampa Palms)
  8. Mr. Dunderbak’s
  9. Koizi Endless Hibachi Grill
  10. Oakley’s Grille
  11. Little Greek Restaurant
  12. Cappy’s Pizza
  13. Sushi Café
  14. Woodfired Pizza (E. Bearss Ave.)
  15. Las Palmas Spanish Café
  16. Café Olé
  17. Sukhothai
  18. China Wok
  19. Thai Ruby
  20. Mulligan’s Irish Pub
  21. Peabody’s Billiards & Games
  22. Taste of NY Pizza
  23. Zaytoun Mediterranean Grill
  24. Casa Ramos
  25. Full Circle Pizza
  26. Biagio’s II
  27. Saffron Indian Cuisine
  28. Sushi Ko
  29. Hunter’s Green CC
  30. Lanna Thai
  31. Hoosiers Grille
  32. Ho King
  33. Fushia Asian Bistro
  34. Soho Sushi
  35. Takara Sushi & Sake
  36. Top Thai
  37. China City
  38. PJ Dolan’s Irish Pub
  39. Seasons Fresh Café
  40. Cross Creek Deli
  41. Hawkeye’s NYS Pizza
  42. Big Papa’s Pit
  43. Pita’s Republic
  44. Olive Garden
  45. Glory Days Grill
  46. Petra Express Mediterranean
  47. Dine or Dash (OOB)
  48. Toast Wine & Café
  49. Red Lobster
  50. Chipotle

 

grillsmith

Your 50 Favorite Restaurants in Wesley Chapel

  1. GrillSmith
  2. The Hungry Greek
  3. Bonsai Sushi
  4. Vallarta’s (WC Village Mkt)
  5. Burger Monger
  6. Pincher’s Crab Shack
  7. PrimeBar
  8. Yamato Japanese Steakhouse
  9. 900° Woodfired Pizza (Wiregrass)
  10. OTB Café
  11. Amici Pizza (SR 54 Lutz)
  12. PDQ
  13. CinéBistro
  14. PizzaMania
  15. Wolf’s Den
  16. Dempsey’s Steak House
  17. Asian Buffet
  18. Latin Twist Café
  19. Best NY Pizza
  20. NY NY Pizza
  21. 365 Caffe Italiano
  22. China Wok (WC Village Mkt)
  23. City Grill
  24. Hibachi Express
  25. La Prima Pizza
  26. Bonefish Grill
  27. Stage Left Bar & Kitchen (Lutz)
  28. Dolce Gelato & Crepes
  29. Chick & Peas Grill
  30. China Taste
  31. Don Pan International Bakery
  32. Kwan Ming Bistro
  33. Bagelicious & More
  34. Cantina Laredo
  35. Ho Wok
  36. Ciao! Italian Bistro (OOB)
  37. Gonna China
  38. Woody’s Pizza & Wings
  39. Texas Roadhouse
  40. Happy Cow Frozen Yogurt
  41. Bosco’s Italian To Go
  42. Fine Thai Express
  43. First Watch
  44. Quail Hollow CC
  45. Lexington Oaks GC
  46. Red Robin
  47. 100 Montaditos
  48. Dempsey’s Too Lounge
  49. Outback Steakhouse
  50. Tokyo Grill/Sushi

Your Other 2015 Favorites In New Tampa & Wesley Chapel!
So, there are some surprises on this year’s list of our readers’ other favorites. Perhaps biggest among them was 900° Woodfired Pizza in the Wiregrass mall winning as your favorite pizza place for the first time (and neither La Prima Pizza nor Pizza Mania cracking the top five) and Latin Twist Café jumping all the way to #2 (from #7) on your favorite Latin restaurants list.
Don’t forget — my list of 2015 favorites will appear next issue! — GN


Your Favorite Chinese Restaurants In NT & WC 

  1. Liang’s Bistro Asian Cuisine
  2. China Wok (Village Market)
  3. Asian Buffet
  4. China Wok (County Line Rd.)
  5. Gonna China
  6. Fushia Asian Bisto
  7. Sushi Ko
  8. Kwan Ming Bistro
  9. Ho King
  10. Ho Wok

Your Favorite Thai & Indian Restaurants In NT & WC

  1. Thai Ruby
  2. Sukhothai
  3. Top Thai
  4. Saffron Indian Cuisine
  5. Fine Thai Express
  6. Lanna Thai
  7. Tabla Indian Cuisine

(NOTE: No other Thai restaurants received enough votes to make this list.)


Your Favorite Burger Restaurants In NT & WC 

  1. Burger 21
  2. Burger Monger
  3. Oakley’s Grille
  4. GrillSmith
  5. Mulligan’s Irish Pub
  6. City Grill
  7. OTB Café
  8. Five Guys Burgers & Fries
  9. Wolf’s Den
  10. (Tie) Peabody’s & Red Robin

Your Favorite Japanese & Sushi Restaurants In NT & WC 

  1. Kobe Japanese Steakhouse
  2. Yamato Japanese Steakhouse
  3. Bonsai Sushi
  4. Koizi Endless Hibachi Grill
  5. Sushi Café
  6. Asian Buffet
  7. Hibachi Express
  8. Sukhothai
  9. Sushi Ko
  10. Takara Sushi & Sake Lounge

 


Your Favorite Pizza Restaurants In NT & WC 

  1. 900° Woodfired (Wiregrass)
  2. Amici Pizza
  3. Best NY Pizza
  4. NY NY Pizza
  5. Woodfired Pizza (Bearss Ave.)
  6. Cappy’s Pizza
  7. La Prima Pizza
  8. PizzaMania
  9. Taste of NY Pizza
  10. Ciccio’s Cali

 Your Favorite Latin & Mexican Restaurants In NT & WC 

  1. Vallarta’s Wesley Chapel
  2. Latin Twist Café
  3. Vallarta’s Tampa Palms
  4. Café Olé
  5. Casa Ramos
  6. Las Palmas Café
  7. Don Pan International Bakery
  8. 100 Montaditos
  9. Cantina Laredo
  10. Dine or Dash (out of business) 

Your Favorite Bars & Taverns In NT & WC 

  1. PrimeBar
  2. The Brass Tap
  3. GrillSmith
  4. Peabody’s Billiards & Games
  5. Stonewood Grill & Tavern
  6. Ciccio Cali
  7. CineBistro
  8. Mulligan’s Irish Pub
  9. Acropolis
  10. City Grill & Stage Left

 Your Favorite Greek & Middle Eastern Restaurants In NT & WC

  1. The Hungry Greek
  2. Acropolis Greek Taverna
  3. Little Greek Restaurant
  4. Zaytoun Mediterranean Grill
  5. Kabob House (OOB)
  6. Pita’s Republic
  7. Chick & Peas Grill
  8. Petra Mediterranean Express

Your Favorite Bakery In NT & WC

  1. Publix
  2. Don Pan International Bakery
  3. Panera Bread
  4. Dunkin Donuts
  5. Ms. Jane’s Cupcakes
  6. Stonemill Artisan Bakery & Café
  7. Le Macaron
  8. Happy Cow Frozen Yogurt
  9. Bagelicious & More
  10. (Tie) OTB Café & Starbucks

Your Favorite Ice Cream & Dessert Restaurants In NT & WC 

  1. Happy Cow Frozen Yogurt
  2. Dairy Queen
  3. Twistee Treat
  4. Coldstone Creamery
  5. Bruster’s Real Ice Cream
  6. Sprinkles Ice Cream Parlor
  7. 365 Caffe Italiano
  8. Baskin Robbins
  9. Pinchers Crab Shack
  10. Frogury

 The Restaurants With The Best Service In NT & WC

  1. Stonewood Grill & Bar
  2. Pinchers Crab Shack
  3. GrillSmith
  4. Bonefish Grill
  5. Happy Cow Frozen Yogurt
  6. Vallarta’s
  7. OTB Café
  8. First Watch
  9. PrimeBar
  10. Wolf’s Den

Your Favorite Lunch Restaurants In NT & WC

  1. Panera Bread
  2. The Hungry Greek
  3. First Watch
  4. OTB Café
  5. GrillSmith
  6. Ciccio Cali
  7. Vallarta’s (WC Village Mkt)
  8. Pincher’s Crab Shack
  9. Wolf’s Den
  10. (Tie) Chipotle, Koizi & PDQ 

Your Favorite Pasta Restaurants In NT & WC

  1. Olive Garden
  2. Amici Pizza
  3. PizzaMania
  4. GrillSmith
  5. Biagio’s II Pizza & Pasto
  6. Best NY Pizza
  7. La Prima Pizza
  8. Bonefish Grill
  9. Ciccio Cali
  10. (Tie) NY NY & 900° Woodfired

Your Favorite Chain Restaurants In NT & WC

  1. Bonefish Grill
  2. Chili’s Grill & Bar
  3. Pinchers Crab Shack
  4. Chick-fil-A
  5. Applebees
  6. Outback Steak House
  7. PDQ
  8. GrillSmith
  9. Red Robin
  10. Texas Roadhouse

Of course, we always save the best news for last when we can, so here is our list of big winners for this year:

Grand Prize – A FREE Carnival Cruise for Two — Sheila Cavender, Tampa Palms

$200 Gift Card (to any restaurant in the Tampa Bay area) – Andrea Roscart, Lexington Oaks

$100 Gift Card – Ramara Shackleford, Heritage Isles

$50 Gift Card – Shelly Jacobs, Citrus Park

 

Commisioner Victor Crist will be in deep thought over holidays

VictorCristRepublican Victor Crist is facing one of the biggest decisions of his political career in the coming months, as an interesting new year awaits the District 2 County Commissioner.

Crist appears to hold the fate of the Go Hillsborough transportation initiative in his hands. The decision comes down to either siding with commissioners Kevin Beckner (D), Ken Hagan (R) and Les Miller (D), who all back a tax referendum (as does Tampa mayor Bob Buckhorn) to finance the project’s plans for road, bridge and transit improvements, or going the route Republican commissioners Al Higginbotham, Sandy Murman and Stacy White favor, which is finding other ways to pay for the project that won’t involve voters.

Crist may be the one breaking a 3-3 stalemate to push the referendum forward sometime early next year.

“I’m going to make a decision not from emotion or politics,’’ says Crist, who also serves as chairman of the Hillsborough County Public Transportation Commission (PTC). “This is going to be a tough one either way I go. No matter what, half the world is going to be angry at me. It’s one of those things, you’re darned if you do and darned if you don’t.’’

He is in the middle of a contentious debate over a possible referendum that would put a half-cent sales tax to a vote and raise $117-million for Go Hillsborough transportation projects.

How does that effect New Tampa?

Crist says the Go Hillsborough initiative calls for “significant” improvements in the USF area, particularly to Skipper Road, 42nd and 46th streets and Bruce B. Downs Blvd. (BBD). He said bottlenecks on BBD between Bearss and Fowler could be alleviated, and extensive resurfacing in the New Tampa area is included as well.

“I’m still studying the plan, and the funding of it, and the community’s attitudes towards it,’’ Crist says. “We’re mapping out all the proposed improvements within our district to take look at, what they are and what they do to see if they will be effective. I’m really doing my best to get my arms around this thing and understand it top to bottom. I plan to make a decision based on rationale information, and the assessment of rational information.”

Crist, who served in the Legislature for 18 years representing the USF area, says there is not enough money in the current budget to do the volume of work that needs to be done in the next 20 years.

“There’s $6-8 billion worth of work on the table now and only $50-60 million a year to put towards it,’’ he said.

First, Crist says he wants to determine if they are voting on a good plan, and he added that he thinks at least 80 percent of it will provide solid improvements and make a significant change. He wants to know where the projects are in 30 years and who is benefitting, and to eliminate any pork, or what he calls “fluff”, from it.

Secondly, he wants to know what the most effective funding source will be.

“There’s a variety of different funding sources, so we can use one, or all, or a combination,’’ Crist says.

And thirdly, and most importantly he says, is finding out how the public feels about it. If it’s a loser as an issue, Crist said that would weigh heavily on the decision to pursue any referendum.

Transit referendums have not done well in the Tampa Bay area recently. In 2010, a 1-cent tax referendum was defeated as 58 percent voted against it, and in 2014 Pinellas County’s Greenlight Pinellas referendum was opposed by 62 percent of voters.

However, transportation continues to be a major issue in the Tampa Bay area, and one that some leaders insist is keeping Hillsborough County from developing and thriving as it should.

Despite recent history, Crist says this referendum is only a half-cent, and the past failures seemed to focus only on high speed rail.

“This one is a complete plan mapped out with strategic projects,’’ he said.

He said a painstaking process involving 18 months of research with over 100 meetings to generate ideas and hear what people want done have helped shape this latest effort.

Crist freely admits the referendum isn’t something he thinks his constituents in the USF and New Tampa area would even support, but he wants to make sure voters understand this isn’t a high speed rail vote.

“New Tampa could care less about light rail,’’ Crist said. “It’s not important to us up here, or in Carrollwood or Cheval or Temple Terrace or Thonatosassa. And you know what, none of the dollars in the existing proposals from those areas will go to it.

“The idea that New Tampa is going to pay for light rail in south Tampa is baloney.”

Crist isn’t tipping his hand, but whatever he decides will be with an eye on the future, no matter how much heat he receives from fellow Republicans and Tea Partiers.

“At his point in my life, I’m doing the right thing regardless of the heat,’’ Crist said. “I’m at the point where I’m not afraid of the fire. What I’m afraid of is making the wrong the decision. I have a 3-and-a-half year old daughter, I want her to be able to walk to school safely, ride her bike to the shopping center or her friend’s house safely. When she climbs behind wheel of car at 16, she can drive safely and if she decided to work here in Tampa Bay, can get to and from her job in a reasonable amount of time.”

A decision to place a referendum on the 2016 ballot would need to be registered with the Division of Elections by May, and while Crist doesn’t plan on using all that time to decide, he said he will only do so after he has all the facts, probably sometime in January.

He is fully aware his decision could make his future in local politics perilous. While Tampa Tea Party co-founder Sharon Calvert, who Crist defeated in a primary to win his current seat in 2012, has declared in reports that there is no appetite for a tax, Crist sees the current debate being more about letting voters decide.

“There is a lot of meanness and ugliness out there on this issue,’’ he said. “There’s been a lot of fights the last two weeks on both sides. If it costs me, it’s not the end of the world. I’ll go out smiling.”

 

 

 

 

Wesley Chapel Rotary's 'Turkey Gobble' Feeds Hundreds Again

Gobble1By Gary Nager

The Rotary Club of Wesley Chapel Noon is proud to have again served more than 500 “Turkey Day” meals with all of the trimmings at two locations on Thanksgiving morning, Nov 26 — including 450 meals at Atonement Lutheran Church on SR 54 in Wesley Chapel — during the club’s sixth annual “Turkey Gobble.”

The 100-member WC Noon Rotary, which meets Wednesdays at noon at Stage Left on SR 54 in Lutz, has been feeding area homeless and other needy individuals & families at the church (which also is the location of the free Helping Hands Food Pantry for locals in need) every year since 2010. At this year’s “Gobble,” more than 50 volunteers from the WC Rotary (including club members and their family & friends) fed more than 450 families at Atonement Lutheran, while the WC Rotary’s “satellite” club in Land O’Lakes served another 50 meals at Keystone Community Church on S.R. 54 in Lutz, the third year in a row that the Rotary Club has “Gobbled” at Keystone.

Gobble2“We also donated 150 ‘snack packs’ for those families to take with them,” said Dineen Pashoukos Wasylik, the Rotary Club’s Turkey Gobble organizer this year for the third consecutive year. She also thanked a contingent of volunteers from Boy Scout Troop 149, based in Lutz. “And, some members of our club again went into the woods to take meals to the homeless camp (located off S.R. 54).”

Dineen also thanked other members of the community, who pitched in by delivering meals to housebound people in need. “I am so thankful for the volunteers who spent time on a holiday to put the ‘giving’ in Thanksgiving,” she said.

I am always so proud to say that I’m a member of the Wesley Chapel Rotary Club. If you want to be part of an organization that truly believes in the Rotary International motto of “Service Above Self,” one that always gives back to its local, regional and even international communities, visit WCRotary.org. First-time visitors always receive lunch for free at our regular Wed. meetings at Stage Left and you can even sign in as my guest.