New Tampa Students, Teachers Get Back To School
Following a summer of indecision and fear of the unknown, New Tampaâs schools finally opened their doors to students for in-person learning for the first time since they closed in March due to Covid-19.
âWoo hoo!,â shouted one parent, as she drove off smiling after dropping her two kids off at Benito Middle School.
Students spent the first week of the 2020-21 school year eLearning only, as the fight over whether or not to open brick-and-mortar classrooms for students and teachers raged on.
The Hillsborough School Board initially leaned towards doing eLearning only for the first nine weeks, before settling for four weeks after consulting a panel of medical experts. However, that decision was then overturned by Superintendent Addison Davis, after Florida Education Commissioner Richard Corcoran threatened to withhold millions of dollars in funding to schools that did not offer a brick-and-mortar option for parents.
Busy at work cleaning and prepping their classrooms for a socially-distant learning experience, teachers finally opened the doors to their students on August 31.
After the first week, Chiles principal Teresa Evans said things went âremarkably well.â At Chiles, roughly 450 students were home learning online, while 400 or so learned in classrooms. Evans said none of her teachers were forced back into the classrooms, and praised their efforts in the opening week.
âI think we planned and planned and planned and what we planned has worked out so far,â Evans said. âThe kids arenât struggling with masks the way people thought. They have been very compliant, and the parents have been incredibly compliant and helpful in following the new rules.â
Those new rules include keeping desks as far apart from each other as possible, eating lunches outside under the schoolâs covered courts keeping everything as clean and sanitized as possible.
âWe were nervous, but never terribly worried,â Evans says. âWe were very careful and will continue to be, and we are tweaking things as we go.â
While the Covid-19 numbers were slightly rising in Hillsborough County during the first week, schools hadnât reported any large outbreaks.
According to the school districtâs Covid-19 dashboard, the first four days produced only 21 positive cases among students, and another nine from school staff.
The district is not reporting if any classrooms have been quarantined.
From March through July, the district reported 284 confirmed cases of Covid-19.
In New Tampa, the only schools to report any cases were Freedom High and Tampa Palms Elementary, with each reporting one student positive from the first day of school.
Play Ball!

The Neighborhood News wasnât the only news medium on hand in June of 2018 when Wiregrass Ranch developer JD Porter, four of the five Pasco County commissioners, Pasco County/âFloridaâs Sports Coastâ tourism director Adam Thomas, RADDSports president and founder Richard Blalock and several other local dignitaries threw some dirt in the air at the groundbreaking for a new indoor sports facility to be located just north of S.R. 56 and a mile or so from both the Shops at Wiregrass and AdventHealth Wesley Chapel.
Also in attendance that day were representatives of Mainsail Development, which was getting ready to build a Marriott-branded Residence Inn with Wesley Chapelâs first and only rooftop bar adjacent to the planned sports campus.
Fast forward to Aug. 15 of this year, when the Wiregrass Ranch Sports Campus of Pasco County held its first-ever Open House to show off the brand-spankinâ-new, 98,000-sq.-ft., state-of-the-art indoor sports facility to local families. This time around, photographer/videographer Charmaine George and I were the only media folks on hand to let you know about it. And, let me just say…WOW!
The fulfillment of the dream Blalock (pointing in top right photo) has had for more than four years is everything anyone could possibly have hoped for â and really, so much more. Although I obviously am raving about it, since my wife Jannah is the director of marketing for the facility, I could be accused of being unfairly biased about it.

On the other hand, my favorite thing about the open house was walking around the facility, seeing the smiles (and often, gritty determination) on the young athletesâ faces, and hearing the buzz from all of the parents, all of whom were saying, âThis is exactly what we need here.â They all let me know that I wasnât alone in feeling the excitement that day.
âIâm speechless about the facility,â said parent and Wesley Chapel resident Yanet Hernandez. âItâs amazing. Very clean and thereâs a vibe that you get when you walk into the gym.â
Hernandez also pointed out something heartwarming, something that Blalock says also is part of his vision for training young athletes to be not only the best athletes they can be, but also the best people (and teammates) they can be. âSeeing the (volleyball) girls of all races and backgrounds playing together, being so polite to each other â itâs just such a great atmosphere!â
Open House Nuts & Bolts
Blalock (top right photo) and his RADDSports team have been chomping at the bit to get open (despite all of the obvious Covid concerns; more on that below), and he said the main purpose of the Open House was to help the local community get acquainted with this unique facility and everything it has to offer.
Even though the Sports Campus will be bringing in tournaments in one of its four core sports â basketball, volleyball, cheerleading and soccer (both indoor and outdoor) â virtually every weekend, Blalock is equally excited about the programs that will be available just about every weekday throughout the year for local residents of all ages.
He says all levels of athletes, from as young as three years old to adults, will be able to enjoy the Sports Campus during the week, and young athletes have three different levels (Developmental, Competitive & Elite) of instruction and competition in all four core sports â with evaluations and programs for each beginning this month.
Meet The RADD-Star Team!
The Open House also was an opportunity for most attendees to meet the amazing team of directors who will help pick the teams and the coaches who will be running the programs and training the kids. Cheer directors Matt McDonough and Lyric Hill, volleyball director Eric Praetorius, basketball director Ronnie Outen and soccer director Stuart Campbell were all on hand at the event, running the dayâs program and meeting all of the interested young athletes.
Hill and McDonough were helped with coaching and demonstrations of cheer stunts by the high school cheer squads from both Wiregrass Ranch and Cypress Creek high schools. Cheer participants even got to try their hands (and feet) on the 40-foot-long spring floor that looks very much like what Olympic gymnasts also use for training.

Praetorius brought in some of the truly outstanding high school volleyball players who have participated in other programs he has directed. The two volleyball courts set aside for the Open House were filled the entire four hours, with the elite players setting each other up to spike home winners and risking floor burns while diving on the shiny, new gym floor for digs, while everyone who was interested in the sport (no matter what level of player they were) received quick instructional tidbits from Praetorius and other coaches on hand â and lots of play time.
Outen somehow recruited an early morning adult full-court basketball game for the event, with separate full courts set aside for younger players. You could hear several parents and coaches cheering on the young hopefuls â including several talented girls, one of whom repeatedly did a great job of taking older, bigger boys to the hoop â from the sidelines.
And, although I left before he got there, Outenâs son Tyriq, a 6â-4â ice hockey goalie who recently was named the MVP of a major invitational tournament in Canada with his all-minority hockey team that was the surprise winner of the tournament, showed up to take pictures with his dad. Weâll tell you Tyriqâs story next issue.
And, you could just see soccer director Stuart Campbell, a former professional âfootballerâ in England (heâs actually of Scottish descent) and a former player and head coach for the Tampa Bay Rowdies â who probably is the RADDSports director who has most anticipated the day he can start actually coaching, rather than sitting in all-day meetings â absolutely beaming as he checked out the local soccer talent.
âThis is quite an event,â Campbell said. âThe kids are just loving the place!â
RADDSports director of programs Nicole Baker (another former cheerleader herself) also was on hand, doing temperature checks of everyone who entered the building, and helping Jannah and several volunteers make sure every participant signed an online or on-paper waiver before they entered the gym. There was plenty of hand sanitizer available and even though there were at least 300-400 people who stopped by at some point during the event, the spacious interior of the Sports Campus had plenty of space for social distancing.

One of my favorite things was the mezzanine, which has viewing available of the action in both Arenas A & B of the Sports Campus â each of which was designed for four basketball or eight volleyball courts. Thereâs also seating in the mezzanine overlooking the amazing cheer area.
The Wesley Chapel Hilton Garden Inn and Hampton Inn, two of the Sports Campusâ hotel partners, and Culverâs and Bubbaâs 33 restaurants â which are located on S.R. 56 and stand to receive a lot of out-of-town business from the facility on the weekends â had tables inside the lobby to show their support for the RADDSports team (which has held most of its meetings at the Hilton during the construction).
âWe had a few potential sponsors come through to check us out, too,â Blalock said. âI canât even tell you how happy we are to be (almost) open.â
Pasco County Tourism, aka the Florida Sports Coast, was scheduled to hold the actual ribbon cutting for the Sports Campus on Aug. 27, which was after we went to press with this issue. RADDSports is the countyâs private partner which is managing the building that was funded by a recent voter-approved 2-cent increase in the countyâs tourism (or âbedâ) tax.
âPlay Ball,â indeed!
For sponsorship opportunities at the Wiregrass Ranch Sports Campus of Pasco County (3021 Sports Coast Way), email Jannah@RADDSports.com. For program information, email Nicole@RADDSports.com. For sponsorship opportunities at the Wiregrass Ranch Sports Campus of Pasco County (3021 Sports Coast Way), email Jannah@RADDSports.com. For program information, email Nicole@RADDSports.com. Also, you can call (833) TEAM-RADD (832-6723).
Climb To The Top No Easy Task For Freedom Valedictorian

Taravat Tarahom didnât get to bask in the glory of being Freedom High Schoolâs Class of 2020 valedictorian, thanks to the outbreak of Covid-19 cutting short her senior year. Nor did she get to give her speech in front of a throng of her classmates in an arena, instead settling for a safe and socially distant recorded message.
What Taravat says she did get out of being Freedomâs valedictorian, however, was a life-altering accomplishment at the end of what, at times, was an extremely difficult journey.
âThis has taught me to look at one goal, but not make (that goal) my entire life,â the 18-year-old says.
She was able to balance a huge school load, deal with the divorce of her parents and the death of her dog, as well as a diagnosis of Type 1 diabetes, all while unexpectedly rising to the top of her class.
Taravat walked away from Freedom with a greater appreciation of her relationships and health and with the piece of mind that comes from learning how to stay prioritized.
âThe experience definitely changed me,â says Taravat, who finished with a 7.64 weighted grade-point-average.
Leyla Mohebbi, her mother, says she couldnât be more proud. She says academics have always been a priority in her home, where bringing home a B meant you would be asked, âWhy not an A?â
âI feel like Tara put the expectation onto herself that she did not want to be anything less than a valedictorian,â Leyla says. âIâm very happy. I knew that was her dream, and she made it happen.â
Taravat has followed in the footsteps of her sister Targol, who was Freedomâs valedictorian in 2015 and is now in medical school at Nova Southeastern University College of Osteopathic Medicine in Fort Lauderdale. Taravat says she felt the bar was âset impossibly highâ before she even started high school. She faced a steady climb up the academic ladder, ranking only around No. 25 in her class after her sophomore year.
She remembers moving up in the class rankings after the first semester of her junior year, somewhere into the teens, and her determination to become the second valedictorian in the family was growing.
She mentioned to some of her classmates and her teacher in AP Biology that she was going to go for it, and they laughed, because she still had more than a dozen students to pass.
âThat set something off in me,â Taravat admits.
A former cheerleader, she started her senior year ranked No. 7 in the class, but once her summer grades were input into the system â âI had a crazy workload that summerâ â she had quietly risen to No. 3. But, she stayed under the radar, and continued to take a heavy load.
Taravat, who was co-president of the schoolâs Sierra Club, says a typical day in the fall of her senior year would entail waking up at 7 a.m. for six hours of school at Freedom, then coming home around lunchtime to eat and pack herself a dinner, and working for three hours as an online tutor, driving to the Hillsborough Community College (HCC) Ybor City campus for a three-hour English class and then heading over to the HCC campus on N. Dale Mabry Hwy. for physics lab.
In February, she found out it was official â she had quietly risen to the top of her class. She called Leyla. They cried.
Even More Challenges
The hard work did not come without a cost, however.
In December, she had lost 15 pounds and spent two days in the hospital, where she was diagnosed with Type 1 (juvenile) diabetes. âI was so wrapped up in school I didnât even pay attention to my health,â Taravat says. âI was kind of mad at myself for not noticing.â
Her diagnosis has triggered an interest in endocrinology, which she hopes to study at the University of Florida. She plans on majoring in microbiology and cell sciences.
And while her valedictorian speech wasnât delivered to a crowd of her classmates, it did come from the heart. Without the trials and tribulations of her senior year, it might have been a completely different speech.
âRemember this,â she told the Class of 2020. âIf you fall: get back up. Itâs clichĂ©, I know, but get back up. Donât allow setbacks to steer you off your natural path. Donât let a single failure ruin those deep-rooted hopes and dreams. Because ultimately, rock bottom could be the solid foundation that you build the rest of your life on.â
Hillsborough changes course

School in Hillsborough County is starting on Monday, August 24, but instead of being online the first four weeks as voted on by the Hillsborough School Board and based on recommendations from local health experts, those wanting to send their children back to in-person classes can do so beginning Aug. 31.
Superintendent Addison Davis made the announcement Thursday in an email to parents.
“To meet the stateâs emergency order for all schools to open on August 31, Hillsborough County Public Schools will now begin eLearning for all students on August 24 and transition to brick and mortar a week later for those students whose parents want to come back on August 31,” the email said.
The district’s decision to start the school year online the first four weeks was rejected by Florida Department of Education (FLDOE) Commissioner Richard Corcoran, and the threat of losing more than $20 million in funding forced Davis to put a new plan — the first week online is being called the “The Smart Start Week” — into place to meet the state’s Aug. 31 deadline.
Those who chose eLearning can continue to have their kids learning online.
Davis said the district is spending $7-9 million on PPE to ensure the safety of students and teachers. He said schools would try to make social distancing work. “It is going to be hard to do,” he said, “but we’ll do it.”

Asked about a possible outbreak and how the district would react, as Florida’s Covid-19 numbers remain high — more than 6,500 positive tests and a 9.52 positive percentage in the latest numbers — Davis said unless it was a statewide decision by Governor Ron DeSantis, schools would be treated individually depending on the significance and spread of any outbreak.
“We will not be closing everything down,” he said.
Parents were given three choices back in July â to send their kids back to brick-and-mortar schools, keep them home for structured eLearning (that follows the typical daily bell schedule), or have them learn on their own schedules via virtual school.
Countywide, 49 percent of parents preferred the brick-and-mortar option for their children, compared to 42.7 percent for eLearning.
However, eLearning is the most popular choice of parents with kids going to New Tampa schools, according to results from Hillsborough County Public Schools.
Of the 9,322 declaration surveys returned from New Tampa, 5,080, or 52.3 percent, chose eLearning, or distance learning.
Roughly 39 percent, or 3,834, chose the brick-and-mortar option, with 759 parents (about 8 percent) selecting virtual school.
Pride Elementary had the highest rate of parents choosing eLearning â 66.8 percent.
In fact, elementary schools where, ironically, children are said to be the least affected by the virus, led the way when it came to parents choosing to keep their kids home â Clark Elementary (61 percent choosing eLearning) was second, and Tampa Palms Elementary (59.6) was third.
Freedom was the only New Tampa school where parents favored in-school to distance-learning, by a 46-41 percent margins. At Wharton, 695 parents chose eLearning, while 679 favored a return to the classroom.
* * * *
On Aug. 6, the Hillsborough School Board voted 5-2 to open the school year with eLearning for the first four weeks. The Board planned to meet again on Sept. 8 to see what the Covid-19 numbers were looking like.
And yes, the Board had already voted two weeks prior to approve Davisâ reopening plan, which offered the three choices for parents. But, it did so almost begrudgingly, due to a July 31 state-mandated deadline and concerns that it didnât have enough medical data.
On Aug. 6, the Board brought in experts to help with that decision.
After listening to more than 50 mostly-impassioned public comments, a panel of medical experts from the USF Department of Health, the Moffitt Cancer Center and Tampa General Hospital and faced questions from the Board, with the most important one coming from District 5 School Board member Tamara Shamburger:
âYes or no?,â she asked, cutting to the chase. âShould our schools be reopened?â
One by one, the medical officials said no â with most citing the current community spread of the virus and the countyâs already high positivity test rate. While five percent is considered safe, the countyâs positive Covid test rate was nearly double that at the time.
Based on that medical advice, Shamburger and District 6 member Karen Perez pushed to open the school year with eLearning â originally for the first nine weeks â and when the vote was taken, everyone on the Board agreed to online-only for four weeks, with the exception of chairperson Melissa Snively and Cindy Stuart (who represents District 3, which includes all of New Tampaâs public schools).
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis expressed his displeasure at the countyâs decision. Corcoran wrote a letter to Superintendent Davis, saying Hillsborough County couldnât do eLearning for four weeks, because it went against his decree that parents must be given a choice of returning to school.
Meanwhile, Miami-Dade and Broward counties are among the districts being allowed to open online, because they are still in Phase One of DeSantisâ re-opening plan.
























