More Than 100 Preview WCNT-tv During Our VIP Premiere Party!

IMG_040637Check out the Premiere Episode of WCNT-tv Now at WCNeighborhoodNews.com!

If you somehow haven’t already seen the first-ever episode of WCNT-tv, I suggest visiting our website — WCNeighborhoodNews.com — right now, even before you read this article. The photos on this page and on page 3 are from the incredible Premiere Party we hosted at our Neighborhood News offices on S.R. 54 in Wesley Chapel on June 23 for the first-ever webcast dedicated to the residents and businesses in the New Tampa/Wesley Chapel area and there’s no doubt the premiere episode of our bi-weekly webcast has already captured the attention — and the imagination — of a pretty impressive list of major business owners and representatives who were on hand at the Premiere Party.

Among the people already talking about WCNT-tv — which has its own Youtube channel, but also can be accessed from the front page of our website, our Facebook page and/or by clicking on the “WCNT-tv” tab on the front page of WesleyChapelChamber.com — included our Premiere Party attendees Gordie Zimmerman of ZMitch, LLC, the developers of Florida Hospital Center Ice, our first video news feature; Tampa Premium Outlets GM Stacey Nance; marketing director Tracy Clouser of Florida Hospital Wesley Chapel, which is

Left to right: FHWC’s Tracy Clouser, Susanna Martinez, Gary Nager, Vicki Hutto (VIP Pest Control), Craig Miller & Dirson & Ana De Mesquita of OTB Café.
Left to right: FHWC’s Tracy Clouser, Susanna Martinez, Gary Nager, Vicki Hutto (VIP Pest Control), Craig Miller & Dirson & Ana De Mesquita of OTB Café.

the studio sponsor of WCNT-tv’s news segment; WCCC CEO Hope Allen and membership coordinator Jennifer Reightler; Pasco County commissioner Mike Moore; New Tampa’s State Rep. Shawn Harrison; Peter Gambacorta of the Private Chef of Tampa, which provided some of the food for the event (as did Little’s Italy’s Family Restaurant);  and Troy Stevenson of Wesley Chapel Nissan and his Acme On the Go Movies (which provided the amazing 17’x9’ screen) technician Harry Wilkins, as well as many WCCC business owners & New Tampa & Wesley Chapel Rotary Club members.

Also special thanks to our first chamber-featured business sponsor, VIP Pest Control, and restaurant sponsor, OTB Café. 

Special thanks also goes out to John Fisher of The Polar Pod, which provided 50º comfort on a hot and humid night for all of our attendees, to my WCNT-tv co-anchor Susanna Martinez; Mike McDonald, who provided the entertainment; WCCC Featured Business host Jill Reilly (who also is my Neighborhood News billing manager), my WCNT-tv sales & production assistant Lauren McDonald, as well as asst. editor John Cotey (who took these great pictures at the event) and my entire staff at Neighborhood News, which have allowed me the freedom to pursue a dream; cameraman Brad Hall and especially, my partner and WCNT-tv executive producer Craig Miller of Full Throttle Intermedia.

Look for new episodes of WCNT-tv every two weeks and more to come!

Wiregrass Flag Day Celebration A New Tradition

FlagDay3Most Americans know that our nation’s Independence Day will again be celebrated on Monday, July 4. The bet here is that far fewer people in our area —and throughout the nation — know that Flag Day is celebrated on June 14.

Well, Shops at Wiregrass mall GM Greg Lenners is hoping that he has started a new tradition by unveiling a new, 80-foot-tall flagpole (and 8’ x 12’ American flag) on Piazza Ave. in the center of the Shops. Although the event didn’t have great public attendance (only about 50-60 total attendees), several local political dignitaries were on hand for the celebration and raising of the flag — to only half-staff, in honor and memory of the 49 people who were murdered in Orlando just two days before (on June 12). Lenners opened the event with several moments of silence for those who fell and prayers for the survivors and all of the families affected.

Lenners, who pulled the plug on the Wesley Chapel Rotary Club’s fifth annual Freedom Festival (see stories on pages 1 and 4) at the Shops due to safety concerns, said, “We had to kill Freedom Fest, but to show our patriotic support, we finally installed the flag right there at the valet circle. And, it only took 7-1/2 years to find the perfect spot for the flagpole.”

Among the dignitaries in attendance were Pasco County commissioners Mike Moore and Ted Schrader, State Reps. Danny Burgess and Shawn Harrison and Rotary District 6950 Rotarian of the Year (see page 10) Eric Johnson of the Williams Auto Group and the Wesley Chapel Noon Rotary Club, who sang the national anthem.

Also part of the event were local law enforcement officials on horseback, a beautiful color guard flag-raising ceremony and several active and retired U.S. military veterans.

“The Flag Day event isn’t a replacement for the Freedom Festival,” Lenners said. “But it is a nice little memorial and a patriotic nod and we hope it will become a popular annual event here.”

TBX passes, but still facing scrutiny

TBX
The crowd of local residents and business owners who attended the TBX hearing on June 22 spilled out into the hallways and required extra seating outside of the Hillsborough County Center chambers until early the next morning.

Despite eight hours of mostly negative public comments that dragged on until past 2 a.m. the next morning, the Hillsborough Metropolitan Planning Organization (MPO) voted on June 23 to keep the controversial Tampa Bay Express (TBX) project moving forward.

After listening to dozens of people both for and against the project at the Hillsborough County Center building in downtown Tampa, the MPO voted 12-4 in favor of keeping the $6 billion TBX plan in its Transportation Improvement Plan (TIP).

The TBX plan entails widening I-275, I-75 and I-4 with 91 miles of express (or toll) lanes, as well as potentially creating a rapid bus lane in the center median of those roadways and laying the groundwork for future rail projects. The road improvements, the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT) and supporters said, would better connect the Tampa Bay area and help ease traffic congestion.

Opponents cited the high cost of the toll lanes, which will have variable costs, meaning the more traffic, the greater the cost of traveling in the express lanes. Some estimates say a rush hour trip from the Pinellas County side of the Howard Frankland Bridge to downtown Tampa could cost as much as $30. As a result, opponents have dubbed them “Lexus Lanes.”

But, most of the passion against the TBX plan came from residents of the historic Tampa neighborhoods of Seminole Heights, Tampa Heights and Ybor City, who say they will be displaced by the project. The plan affects mostly poor minority neighborhoods, as well as up to 100 local businesses that opponents believe will be destroyed by FDOT construction.

Lisa Montelione, the outgoing Dist. 7 Tampa City Council member whose area of representation includes New Tampa and USF, voted against TBX. MPO chairman Les Miller, Tampa City Councilman Guido Maniscalco and Hillsborough County Commissioner Kevin Beckner were the others who also voted against the project.

After the vote, Montelione addressed those remaining in the crowd, which once numbered more than 500 people, telling them to not be discouraged and applauding their efforts.

Opponents, many of whom voiced their distrust of FDOT and expressed concern over parts of the plan that had been kept secret, did get some measure of satisfaction, as the MPO unanimously passed amendments requiring more oversight and requesting reports of the human impact of the project.

A Wesley Chapel Perspective

Greater Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce (WCCC) CEO Hope Allen was pleased to see the TBX plan survive. She watched with hundreds of others in the lobby of the downtown Tampa City Center, and noted the intensity of the night.

Twice, Allen — who wore a sticker proclaiming her support of TBX — was badgered by anti-TBX folks, forcing her to change seats. “You must be one of those people from the suburbs,’’ one said to her.

Another woman walked by, pursed her lips and shook her head at Allen in disappointment.

“It’s tough in here,’’ Allen sighed.

The WCCC, along with the Pasco County Economic Development Council and the Pasco Board of County Commissioners (BCC), all have supported TBX, although the roads currently being discussed only go as far north as Bearss Ave., just south of New Tampa.

Construction could begin next year in Pinellas County, and could be completed by 2026. “We believe in connectivity with the communities around us,’’ Allen said. “Plus, these roads will have a direct impact on our residents because so many of them head that way into work. They will use (the highways), and the less time they spend in traffic, the more time they can spend at home.”

Pasco’s District 2 commissioner Mike Moore, who represents Wesley Chapel on the BCC, said his support of TBX was a quality of life issue for him.

“There’s no denying we have well over 50 percent of our residents traveling those roads to go work in Hillsborough and Pinellas counties,’’ Moore said. “If this will cut off two hours a day on the road in traffic, that’s more time with family and friends, and that’s important. And remember, people do come from other areas to Pasco County to work as well.”

Part of the TBX plan includes express bus lines, and Moore said Wesley Chapel (as well as New Tampa) would eventually be home to a station.

The TBX plan was supported by most of the area’s business leaders, as well as by Tampa Mayor Bob Buckhorn. Had the plan not passed on this vote, the county would have had to return the $6 billion in funding to the state.

Most local commuters into Tampa and St. Petersburg often complain about the long, congested rides into work, which can take hours.

“My wife and I moved out to New Tampa several years ago, because that’s where her job was,’’ Joe Farrell told the MPO. “She doesn’t work there anymore, but we stayed because that’s where the affordable housing was.”

Now that he works in Clearwater and has an 18-month-old son, Farrell said it is hard to find time for his family.

“My son wakes up at 7 a.m. and goes to bed at 7 p.m.,” Farrell said, “and most days I have to leave the house at 6:30 a.m. and I am driving like hell through I-275 to get home by 6:30 p.m., so I can spend some time with him. It’s frustrating.”

The Rotary Club Of New Tampa Caps Off Its Fiscal 2015-16 Year

Rotary_Service_Project
Members of the Rotary Club of New Tampa and the USF Rotaract Club did an international service project in Costa Rica for the third time in four years.

At about the same time this publication arrived in mailboxes on June 17, the Rotary Club of New Tampa was holding its weekly breakfast meeting at Tampa Palms Golf & Country Club. This particular meeting had special guests, representing the 19 charities that each left the breakfast with a check in hand, as they were this year’s selected nonprofits receiving donations from the club as it closed it 2015-16 fiscal year.

The process of vetting 501(c)(3) organizations to determine which ones are most deserving and in need of the New Tampa Rotary’s support culminates each year at the annual event, where the checks are presented to the charities.

“We invite the organizations we support to have breakfast with us so we can present them with the contributions we are giving them for the year,” says Karen Frashier, who will be installed as the 2016-17 president-elect of the club later this month. She says it’s an exciting time for the original New Tampa Rotary, as they provide money to these nonprofits, “so they can continue doing their good work in the community.”

The installation banquet for the club’s incoming officers was held Friday, June 24, 6 p.m., also at Tampa Palms Golf & Country Club. Current club president Lesley Zajac passed her gavel on to incoming president Brice Wolford, and New Tampa Rotary member Joyce Gunter was be installed as the new Governor of District 6890, West Central Florida USA.

District Conference In Orlando

Twelve members of the New Tampa Rotary also recently attended the Rotary District 6890 Conference, held in Orlando on May 20-21.

Rotary_District_Conference
The twelve New Tampa Rotary members who attended made up one of the larger contingents at this year’s Rotary District 6890 annual conference in Orlando.

At the conference, the club was recognized by the current Rotary District 6890 Governor Tom Wagner for its leadership in building an accessible playground at Rotary’s Camp Florida, along with Kaboom!, the MetLife Foundation (headquartered in New Tampa) and other clubs in the district. The New Tampa Rotary was awarded the “Governor’s Choice Award-Local Project” and the “Club Communications Award” for large clubs (it currently has 65 members), along with the 2015-16 Rotary International Presidential Citation Gold Level “for helping Rotary make a difference in the lives of people all over the world.”

“I love working side-by-side with all of these wonderful friends!” says Zajac. “We all have fun together, and we are working hard to make Tampa a better place to live for everyone.”

Service Project In Costa Rica

A group of 15 people from the New Tampa Rotary Club and the University of South Florida Rotaract Club it sponsors visited Alajuela, Costa Rica, for six days in May. For the third time in four years, the New Tampa club visited this area to support the efforts of the Rotary Club of Alajuela.

While there, the group painted a local public school and visited its previous projects in the area, including a playground and a butterfly garden. They also visited an active volcano, ziplined the rainforest canopy, and toured local sights.

International Convention In South Korea

Four New Tampa Rotary Club members also joined tens of thousands of other Rotarians at the Rotary International Convention in Seoul, South Korea, May 28-June 1. The members who attended include Joyce and Gary Gunter, and Steele Olmstead and Pamela Jo Hatley, who went to visit their son, Joe Olmstead. Joe, a Rotary Youth Exchange student, is completing one year of cultural study in South Korea, where he lived with a family, went to school and learned the language.

For more information about the Rotary Club of New Tampa, and to register for upcoming events, visit NewTampaRotary.org.

Your First Neighborhood News Show: WCNT-tv, Episode 1

Thursday night at the offices of the Neighborhood News, the first episode of WCNT-tv was shown to a select crowd of more than 100 at the launch party.  Now it’s your turn.

The new YouTube-based video news show is a partnership between Full Throttle Intermedia and the New Tampa & Wesley Chapel Neighborhood News, and also is the exclusive webcast partner of the Greater Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce. The program will come to you from the Florida Hospital Wesley Chapel Studio, and will be released bi-monthly, featuring local news, businesses and restaurants.

Enjoy!