Did You Blink & Miss The Summer? Local Schools Are Back In Session!

benito
Incoming sixth-grade students listen to Benito Middle School principal John Sanders offer some words of advice in the school’s cafeteria last month during an introductory camp.

That wailing sound you may have heard echoing across New Tampa on Wednesday morning was likely the sound of local elementary, middle and high school students bemoaning the start of the 2016-17 school year in Hillsborough County.

Already?

Yep, already.

Thanks to state lawmakers responding to the Hillsborough County School District’s request for changes to the school schedule a few years ago, kids went back to school Wednesday, the earliest first day of school in years. And, students in New Tampa were not alone, as 40 of the 67 school districts in Florida returned to school Wednesday as well.

Nearby Pasco County returns to school Monday, August 15.

While summer vacation is one of this country’s great and most treasured traditions — just ask anyone toting a backpack to the bus stop today  — chances are if you blinked this year, you missed it.

But, don’t blame the schools; blame Labor Day. Because so many school districts try to start the school year around the holiday — which is Mon., Sept. 5 this year, — it can interfere with classroom time, with schools having to end the second grading period after winter break.

With Labor Day taken out of the equation and finishing the first two grading periods at a more convenient break in the schedule, it led to starting school earlier.

Now, there is an even break after the first two quarters, in December — as opposed to finishing the second quarter sometime in January — and schools can start fresh with the third quarter when school returns in January (on Tue., Jan. 3, 2017, in Hillsborough).

“Change is always complicated, but the reality is, it’s  nice to have those first two quarters finished when we break at winter break,’’ said Lawton Chiles Elementary principal Teresa Evans. “I can see in secondary school how that is important.”

While the early start may be a shock to the system — in Evans’ case, she said many of her international students who travel back to their countries over the summer had a harder time planning their vacation — it’s not all bad.

In fact, Evans says, she didn’t hear any complaints from students as last year wound down, and she hasn’t heard any moaning about it from the students she talked to this summer.

“By this time, they’re excited,’’ she says, admitting things might be a little different with the younger students at an elementary school, as opposed to say, budding teenagers heading back to middle school. “Everyone I’ve talked to is excited about coming back to school.”

For the 2016-17 school year, the summer will begin right after Memorial Day. And, at the end of the day, students are going to school the same number of days they always have — usually, right around 180 days.

Which solves another problem — in years past, many teachers admit, the 10-12 remaining days after kids come back from Memorial Day are not always purposeful and it’s difficult to keep students focused.

But, even if the students weren’t ready to return, the schools certainly were ready for them. Rooms were being dusted and cleaned last week, floors were mopped and teachers spent the final days of summer in planning meetings, while their students tried to soak in every last second of it before hitting the books again this week.

“We planned for it,’’ Evans said. “I think that’s the real key. It’s not like it hit us in the middle of the summer. The custodial schedule was the hardest thing to do, to get everything clean before school. That was a real priority for us.”

2016-2017 school schedule

Mon., Sept. 5: No school, Labor Day

Fri., Oct. 7: First grading period ends.

Mon., Oct. 10: No school, nonstudent day.

Fri., Nov. 11: No school, Veterans Day.

Mon.-Fri., Nov. 21-25: No school, Thanksgiving/Fall break.

Mon., Nov. 28: Students return from fall break.

Wed., Dec. 16: Second grading period ends.

Mon.-Fri., Dec. 19-30: No school, Winter break.

Tue., Jan. 3, 2017: Students return from Winter break.

Mon., Jan. 16: No school, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

Mon., Feb. 20: No school, Presidents Day.

Fri., March 10: Third grading period ends.

Mon.-Fri., Mar. 13-17: No school, Spring break.

Mon., March 20: Students return from Spring break.

Fri., April 14: No school, nonstudent day.

Wed., May 26: Last day of school. Fourth grading period ends.

Students are released one hour early every Monday and, on the last day of school, are released 2½ hours early.

Local Briefs: Reeves Will Get A Court Date

Reeves
Curtis Reeves police photo

More than two years after being accused of shooting and killing Chad Oulson in the Cobb Theatres Grove 16 movie theater in Wesley Chapel, Brooksville’s Curtis Reeves will take another step towards finally having a trial when he stands before Judge Susan Barthle on Feb. 20 of next year.

Barthle is expected to set a trial date at the hearing at the Dade City courtroom, after dozens of court appearances, delays and the original judge, Pat Siracusa, recusing himself last July.

The retired Tampa police captain, who is now 73, is accused of fatally shooting Oulson, 43 (at the time), during an argument on Jan. 13, 2014, a killing that gained national attention. Reeves was charged on Jan. 31, 2014, with Murder in the Second Degree and Aggravated Battery, the second charge because his bullet also grazed Oulson’s wife Nicole, who threw her arm in front of her husband to protect him as the shot was fired.

According to the police report, Reeves was sitting behind Oulson and his wife in the theater when Reeves confronted Oulson about texting on his cell phone during the movie previews.

After Reeves advised the theater management about his grievance, and when he returned to his seat, he and Oulson exchanged words. Oulson turned and threw a bag of popcorn at Reeves, who then pulled out a .380 caliber handgun and shot Oulson in the chest. According to witnesses, there were no punches thrown during the disagreement.

Reeves said afterwards that he was afraid of being attacked. Oulson was transported to Florida Hospital Tampa, where he passed away.

Reeves spent six months in Pasco County jail before posting $150,000 bail in July of 2014.

Reeves’ attorney, Richard Escobar, said in October that he would be using the ‘Stand Your Ground’ law (statutes 776.012 and 776.013), arguing that his client acted in self defense.

Florida’s first Stand Your Ground law was passed in 2005, basically stating that people can stand their ground in a dispute if they think retreating will result in their own death or great bodily harm to themselves.

Wiregrass Ranch High Teen’s Suicide Investigation Concludes

The Pasco County Sheriff’s Office has concluded that there is no proof Wiregrass Ranch freshman Tovonna Holton committed suicide in June because a nude Snapchat video of her was circulated.

“Our investigation revealed that it was not directly a result of that, but possibly due to other issues involving her mother and the fact they did not get along,’’ said PCSO spokesman Melanie Snow.

Levon Holton-Teamer told WFLA-TV on June 5 that after sending her daughter to clean her room, she found Tovonna in the bathroom in a puddle of blood. Holton-Teamer said hours before her daughter killed herself, she had found out the video had been posted to Snapchat.

“Tovonna would say, ‘Mommy, I owe them, I owe them,” Holton-Teamer told WFLA-TV. “I said, ‘What do you mean you owe them?’ I couldn’t understand what was wrong.”

A Facebook post by a friend and family member claimed that Tovonna had been filmed nude in a shower, and had been cyber-bullied.

“We found no evidence that her decision to do that was based on a Snapchat photo,’’ Snow said.

The story went viral, being picked up by many major metropolitan newspapers, cable news channels and social media. A photo of Tovonna with the hashtag #stopbullying was shared more than 5,000 times on Facebook (although it has since been removed).

A #stopbullying campaign was launched as a result.

Snow, however, said there was no evidence that what happened to Tovonna met the criteria for a cyber crime, which is when a computing device is used to commit an offense.

Wesley Chapel Man Dead After Pulling Into Traffic

Wesley Chapel’s Thomas Burruano, 72, was killed on July 15 when his 2004 Dodge Stratus was hit by two vehicles on Bruce B. Downs Blvd. in front of the Taco Bell at the Hollybrook Plaza.

Traffic northbound on BBD had to be redirected through the Publix parking lot after Burruano drove around other cars waiting at a stop sign to enter the road. His vehicle was hit by a 1998 Lincoln Navigator driven by 42-year-old Kenny Dickinson of Wesley Chapel, which was heading north on BBD in the outside right turn lane. Burruano’s vehicle was hit on its driver’s side and he was pronounced dead at the scene.

Dickinson was treated at Florida Hospital Wesley Chapel with minor injuries and was released. No charges were filed.

Winter Haven Woman Killed In WC Accident

A Winter Haven woman was killed in Wesley Chapel July 18 after a head-on collision on S.R. 54., and two children who were in the car suffered serious injuries.

Tiffanie Michelle Hughes, 33, was driving her 2016 Toyota 4Runner westbound on S.R. 54 west of Loury Dr. (near the Trinity Church of Wesley Chapel) when she collided with a 2009 Mazda CX-9 driven by Wesley Chapel’s Koosh Raahul Patel, which crossed over the center line.

Patel, 17, was driving with 52-year-old Raahul Vallabhbhai, also of Wesley Chapel. They suffered minor injuries that did not require transportation to a hospital.

Hughes was transported to Florida Hospital Wesley Chapel and later died from the injuries she suffered in the crash. The children, two boys ages 10 and 11, were transported to St. Joseph’s Hospital in Tampa with serious injuries.

 

Pokémon GO Invades Wesley Chapel

pokekidsWEBOn a cloudless and sweltering summer day with temperatures in the 90s and humidity suffocating enough to melt your shirt, the Shops at Wiregrass mall is abuzz.

Children, teenagers and even adults walk down Paseo Dr., heads down, staring at their cell phones, eyes darting back and forth, fingers poised. It’s more crowded than on a regular weekday afternoon, and a large group of kids gather at the Wiregrass stage to exchange info.

“Gotta love Pokémon GO,’’ says Shops at Wiregrass general manager Greg Lenners.

In just a few weeks, the augmented-reality gaming app has players of all ages out hunting for Pokémon in droves. The magical animated creatures, wildly popular since the day they were created by Nintendo 20 years ago, can be found just about anywhere, if you look hard and far enough. You just need the free Pokémon GO app and a cell phone. Using GPS, a map is overlayed on the surrounding area so players can locate the coveted critters on trees, sidewalks or even your kitchen counter.

“It has been real crazy,’’ says Gavin Olsen, 19, a student at Pasco Hernando State College and part-time photographer at TSS Photography of Wesley Chapel. “There’s never been a mobile game like this, where you go outside to see people playing it. It’s everywhere.”

Gavin started a Facebook page — Wesley Chapel Pokémon GO — that now has almost 100 members where players share their experiences and talk about the game. It is one of a handful of new pages devoted to Pokémon GO in the Wesley Chapel and New Tampa areas.

pokekids4WEBThe goal is simple, as they say — Gotta Catch ‘Em All. You do that by throwing Pokéballs at the Pokémon — sometimes bribing them with a virtual Razz Berry helps make that task easier — and adding them to your Pokédex, or catalog. Then, you “train” them and help them evolve into newer, stronger characters.

Pokéballs, raspberries and other goodies used to catch Pikachu and Crew can be found at virtual Pokéstops — designated points on Google Maps chosen by the game developer Niantic Labs, and the mall has at least four Pokéstops — and you can battle other trainers at the nearest “gym.” (Note-Niantic, the Google spin-off, also built the popular augmented reality game Ingress. Nintendo, which created Pokémon, owns a stake in Niantic.

Since its release, Pokémon GO has surpassed Snapchat, Instagram and even mighty Twitter when it comes to active users. It has been downloaded more than 20 million times and interest in the game has doubled the value of Nintendo’s stock.

  • • •

The impact of the game can be seen almost anywhere you go in Wesley Chapel these days. Shopping areas, like the local malls and other retail centers, are a popular spot for game players because of the Pokéstops and gyms, and it’s also not uncommon to pass a handful of players while driving around your neighborhood.

The Shops at Wiregrass, according to a number of Facebook pages created to track Pokémon in Wesley Chapel, is prime hunting ground and has nine Pokéstops. The Grove at Wesley Chapel isn’t quite as bountiful, and the scene at the Tampa Premium Outlets is mixed. Parks and post offices in the area also are popular sites for Pokéstops.

pokekids2WEBWesley Chapel’s Shawn Doscotch, a mother of two teenagers, is out shopping for the afternoon, and is instantly struck by the sight of so many people staring down at their phones.

“What is going on?,’’ she asks.

The scene, she jokes, is like something out of the popular AMC zombie apocalypse series “The Walking Dead.”

“Do we really need more teenage zombies?,” she quips, as two teenage boys and a girl walk by, intently focused on their cell phones.

Doscotch had fleetingly heard about the game before she went to the mall. One of her children had mentioned downloading it, but she had no idea it had caught on so wildly. The zombie scene gave her pause.

• •

And, teenagers aren’t the only ones playing the world’s hottest game.

George and Jessica Navarro, a pair of married 25-year-olds, are pushing 1-year-old Alise down the sidewalk as they hold up their phones, looking for Pokémon.

pokeadultsWEBGeorge says when he first read about the game on a blog, he thought, “that’s kind of dumb.” He had grown up, like so many his age, playing Pokémon on a Nintendo Game Boy and collected the playing cards as well, but this was something very different.

He and Jessica, however, were hooked the moment they downloaded and opened the app.

“Like most people, I got addicted,’’ George says.

“It’s bad, and I usually don’t get addicted,’’ adds Jessica.

The first weekend the game was released, the Navarros went driving with friends to look for Pokémon, with one of them holding both phones and the other serving as the DD, or designated driver.

The pull of the game for many adults is simple, says George — it mixes the cell phone, the most popular piece of modern technology, with catching Pokémon, arguably the most popular video game from his childhood — and the childhoods of millions of millennials.

“I think it’s a definitely a nostalgia thing,’’ George says.

The game, however, has not been without its controversies.

  • • •

Pokémon GO has come under scrutiny for the amount of personal information it collects from players. It also has received a significant amount of bad press for some of the dangers affiliated with the game.

The first weekend it was released, one player stumbled upon a dead body while searching for Pokémon. A group of teens were robbed in Lake County, IL, according to the Associated Press, by two men who set up a Lure — a module in the game that players can set up within a Pokéstop that attracts Pokémon, thus attracting players who, in this case, were robbed.

Poke2WEBDespite a warning on the game’s start screen to watch where you are going, a man in New York crashed his car into a tree, admitting he had been distracted playing the game. In San Diego, two men fell off a 150-200-ft.-tall cliff after jumping a fence in search of Pokémon.

Some locations that the game designates as Pokéstops would prefer to be removed from the game, like the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum and Arlington National Cemetery, both in Washington, DC. Players have come to those locales looking for Pokemon, and spokespersons for both places have called it “inappropriate.”

There are other stories, too, about people’s homes being Pokéstops, setting up situations where dozens of players are walking in their yards looking for the creatures. In Jacksonville, a man fired a rifle at two Pokémon-hunting teenagers he thought were burglars.

In Wesley Chapel, there haven’t been any newsworthy incidents, says Pasco County Sheriff’s Office spokesperson Melanie Snow.

“It’s so early on, but those things will become a bigger issue,’’ Snow says. “It is absolutely something for us to keep our eye on from a safety perspective, when it comes to things like loitering and crime. There’s a multitude of things that can occur as a result of Pokémon GO.”

  • • •

The game’s positives, though, do outweigh the negatives, at least according to Olsen. The game definitely promotes the physical nature of finding Pokémon, as players must walk to find them, and the more kilometers someone walks — yes, it’s gotten millions of Americans to use the metric system — the quicker their eggs will hatch and their Pokémon will evolve.

The budding video editor says he has a reclusive friend who has gotten into the game and now spends more time outside than he ever has, shedding 10 pounds in the process.

Olsen also is organizing Pokémon GO meetups — he had one at the Wesley Chapel District Park on Boyette Rd. on July 24 (after we went to press with this issue) — and says he has made friends while hunting at the mall.

“The social aspect of this game is a big thing for me, and the exploration part of it, too,’’ he says.

Meanwhile, George Navarro says he has lost three pounds his first weekend playing the game. He understands the negatives of the app and how those stories tend to resonate with the casual observer, but what he has seen so far is mostly positive. “I would say there are a lot of negatives,’’ Navarro says, “but not enough to overcome the good.”

Both Navarro and Olsen say local businesses might be wise to harness the popularity of the game, and some already have.

At the Shops at Wiregrass, one store offered 25-percent off your purchase if you showed them your Pokédex. Another created Pokéball-themed cookies to get people in the door.

But again, the most popular method of attracting extra customers, though, is creating Lures, which attract Pokémon, in order to attract Pokémon-hungry gamers.

If a business is located in or near a Pokéstop, it can pay (in game coins or real cash via an in-app purchase) to activate a Lure for 30 minutes. A New York Post story recently highlighted a pizza shop in Queens that paid $10 to “Lure” Pokémon to the store, attracting so many players the shop increased sales by 75 percent.

The Barnes & Noble at the Shops has two Pokéstops located inside it, which is paying off for the bookstore. “It’s brought in a lot more traffic,’’ assistant store manager Lisa Kuehner says. “You can definitely tell by the way people are walking around staring intently at their cell phones. People usually walk around looking at their phones, but not that intently.”

Kuehner says Barnes & Noble is definitely hoping to take advantage of being home to multiple Pokéstops. Ironically, It had already scheduled a Pokémon event on July 16th as part of its month-long celebration of pop culture, to celebrate the card game’s 20th anniversary.

Originally planned to focus on the original card game, Kuehner said adjustments had to be made after Pokémon Go was released a week prior to the event — which, she says, attracted about 50 people.

Expect many local businesses to follow suit.

“We’ve definitely noticed (an increase in traffic),’’ says Lenners. “It’s kind of early to tell, but I have actually heard comments from some of the stores that the game is bringing people inside the businesses. From a marketing aspect, we have not done anything, yet. But, if you can get people to the mall, that’s a good thing for us.”

Porter/Raymond James Financial Finally Given Permit To Begin Construction

JD Porter says big things are coming.
JD Porter says big things are coming.
J.D. Porter says big things are coming to Wiregrass Ranch, including Raymond James.

Following almost five years of discussions and anticipation — mixed in with a nice-sized helping of doubt — the long-talked-about Raymond James Financial campus is one huge step closer to becoming a reality at the corner of S.R. 56 and Mansfield Blvd.

Wiregrass Ranch developer JD Porter finally received the news two weeks ago that he has been waiting more than two years for, as the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has proffered an environmental permit for the 65 acres of property just east of the Shops at Wiregrass mall.

“We were all thrilled, everyone in the family,’’ said Porter, the owner and operator of Wiregrass Ranch Inc. “We worked very, very closely with the Army engineers, and it is nice to finally reach a resolution.”

Porter joked in April at a Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce (WCCC) Economic Development meeting that he was tired of hearing about the delays involving Raymond James, but insisted (as he has many times in the past) that the facility was still imminent. He predicted then he would have the Army Corps permit in a few weeks, and though it took just a little bit longer he is now ready to proceed.

“Right now, we have all the permits in hand to proceed forward,’’ Porter said.

The St. Petersburg-based financial services company has been working for several years on the process with the Porter family and, in early 2011, agreed to purchase the land at an undisclosed price, provided the permitting could be completed.

The deal was approved by the Pasco County Board of County Commissioners (BOCC) later that year. In exchange for $15-million in incentives and tax breaks, the county would reap the benefits of what would eventually be planned as six four-story buildings totaling roughly 1-million-sq.-ft., and housing 750 employees by 2024, which will inject millions into the county tax rolls.

jdporterAlthough the Raymond James campus was originally scheduled to begin building in 2012, with the first 100 employees arriving by 2014, the project stalled.

In 2014, a few months after another financial firm, T. Rowe Price, jettisoned its plans to build on 72 acres near the Suncoast Pkwy., Raymond James postponed its project. But, the financial services giant did say it still had plans for the property.

Now, there is renewed optimism that Raymond James will make the impact promised years ago.

“I’m glad that’s over and done with,’’ said District 2 commissioner Mike Moore. “The economic impact will be huge for Pasco County as a whole. There will be nothing bigger in the county.”

Moore said Raymond James will become the largest non-governmental employer in Pasco. “And, anytime you bring in a large employer like that, things start to happen around it,’’ he says.

Bill Cronin, the new president and CEO of the Pasco Economic Development Council (EDC), said when he started in January, one of his first meetings was with Raymond James, citing the importance of getting the company here.

“The investment by Raymond James will be one that, when other companies look to grow here, they will see that someone else has blazed that trail for them,’’ Cronin said. “It will make my job a little easier, to show people there are others that have made this positive decision.”

He added, “Success begets success.”

The next step for Porter will be to re-negotiate the development agreement and adjust some of the original timelines with the BOCC, which will likely take place in the next month or so.

“That triggers the closing,’’ Porter said.

Porter thinks the addition of the financial facility is a major piece of what he hopes the Wiregrass Ranch area will become, as it should drive up home sales and makes the area more attractive to other businesses.

“I think whether we’re talking Raymond James, or the mall or Florida Hospital Wesley Chapel, the state college, you are looking at the kinds of things that define cities and define regions,’’ Porter says. “We’re lucky to land four of them in a short time, when some communities don’t have this after 30 or 40 years.”