All eleven New Tampa public schools repeated their Florida Department of Education letter grades from the end of the 2021-22 school year to the end of the 2022-23 school year. Several New Tampa elementary schools have had âAâ grades for many years in a row.Â
With the 2023-24 school year roughly half over, the Florida Department of Education recently released its letter grades for every school in Florida, including the six elementary, two middle, two high and one âcombinationâ school (Turner-Bartels K-8) in New Tampa for the 2022-23 school year.
All eleven public schools in our area repeated their letter grades from the previous school year, with all six elementary schools in our area â Chiles, Clark, Heritage, Hunterâs Green, Pride and Tampa Palms â all receiving âAâ grades. Benito Middle School also received an A again, while Liberty Middle School and Turner-Bartels (which receives its grades for both its elementary and middle schools) earning Bs. Freedom and Wharton High again received C grades.
A Tradition Of Excellence
New Tampaâs schools, which again outperformed the Hillsborough School District as a whole, continued their long-standing tradition of excellent grades, as both Clark and Pride elementaries have received A grades from the state for 21 consecutive years, while Chiles earned its 20th A in a row
Meanwhile, Benito has received an A grade for 20 of the last 21 years, but that includes one year when middle schools did not receive letter grades. Tampa Palms has earned an A for six consecutive years, while Liberty has received three straight Bs after earning As the 18 years before that.
Turner-Bartels has earned a B for six consecutive years, after nine straight As in the years before that.
And, while both Wharton and Freedom have each received seven straight Cs, both earned either As or Bs the previous six years.
Both Heritage and Hunterâs Green elementaries have had more of a mixed bag prior to their two consecutive As, with both schools receiving either Bs or Cs for either eight (Heritage) or nine (HGE) years since their last As.
New Tampaâs elementary schools definitely outperformed the Hillsborough School District as a whole, which had only 35 A schools among its 144 elementaries. And, Benitoâs A was one of only 12 As earned by the Districtâs 45 middle schools.
Overall, the Districtâs 267 total elementary, middle, high and combined public schools earned a total of 96 A grades, or about 36% earning that highest possible grade. But, New Tampaâs seven As among its 11 total District schools meant that 63.6% earned that most-coveted letter grade. Congrats!
Tkachik Named A Finalist!
Because of when the finalists were announced (during the Christmas break), we were unable to interview Suzy Tkacik, a media specialist at Pride Elementary, who was named one of the four finalists for the Hillsborough School Districtâs Ida S. Baker Diversity Award. The winner will be announced on February 1 at the Straz Center for the Performing Arts in downtown Tampa, along with the Districtâs Teacher of the Year and Instructional Support Employee of the Year.
No other finalists were from New Tampaâs schools. Good luck, Suzy!
The cast of the New Tampa Playersâ âPreviewâ performance at the New Tampa Performing Arts Center on March 25.Â
Although thereâs no doubt that there were (and still are) more major news stories coming out of Wesley Chapel in 2023 than there were in New Tampa, zip code 33647 certainly had any number of big news stories of its own the past 12 months. Below are the five that made the biggest splashes.
1. The New Tampa Performing Arts Center Opens!
âGreaseâ officially opened NTPâs 2023-24 season in July of 2023. (Below) The group known as âSave Pebble Creekâ helped get a redevelopment plan for the communityâs shuttered golf course rejected by Hillsborough County.Â
It took more than 20 years for it to become a reality, but the New Tampa Performing Arts Center (NTPAC) did finally open in March of 2023, with a ribbon-cutting ceremony and a New Tampa Players (NTP) âPreviewâshow. The NTPAC was dedicated to the memory and in honor of NTP founder Doug Wall, who passed away nearly six years before his dream of a local place for his theatre troupe to perform came true.Â
I was in the cast of the first show of NTPâs 2023-24 season â âGrease,â which was true to the original Tony Award-winning Broadway version, but also incorporated songs from the hit 1978 movie starring John Travolta and the late Olivia Newton-John. The Performing Arts Centerâs first-ever Fall Festival was held in September and was followed by âShrek The Musicalâ in October. NTP will next host performances of âDreamgirlsâ (see ad on pg. 5) in February.
2. Pebble Creek Redevelopment Plan Rejected!
As 2023 came to a close, we still had no idea what will happen to the former Pebble Creek Golf Club golf course, which has been shuttered since July of 2021.Â
The plan submitted by GL Homes to redevelop the 149-acre golf course property into 251 single-family homes was rejected on July 17 by the Hillsborough County Commission by a vote of 5-2, as Commission Chair and District 2 (which includes all of Pebble Creek)
Commissioner Ken Hagan told his fellow commissioners that the feedback he had received from the residents of Pebble Creek was overwhelmingly against the GL Homes plan, leaving property owner Bill Place with few options moving forward for his property.Â
With three County Commission seats â including Haganâs District 2 â up for grabs in a presidential election year, itâs possible that Place is waiting to see how the election changes the Boardâs makeup before trying again to redevelop his land.Â
3. Lotte Plaza Market Opens!
Lotte Plaza Marketâs Grand Opening in November was attended by hundreds of New Tampa residents and continues to attract large numbers of people for everything from its Korean beauty products (below) to its Sijang Eatery food court.Â
While the opening of the new Aldi supermarket in the former Ruby Tuesday location in New Tampa did receive some fanfare a few years ago, it was nothing compared with the expectations and reaction to the opening â finally! â of the new Lotte Plaza Market Korean/Asian grocery store in the former Sweetbay/Kash N Karry location next to Home Depot.Â
The long-vacant 49,000-sq.-ft. store became the 15th link in the Lotte Plaza chain (the only other Florida location is in Orlando) of Korean/Asian superstores on Nov. 3 and immediately attracted large crowds of people (photos on next page) of all backgrounds and nationalities to its huge selections of produce, fresh fish, meat and groceries, as well as its unique Korean beauty products and its Sijang Eatery food court, which features a half-dozen eateries never before seen in our area.Â
Although the crowds have died down somewhat since that opening month, thereâs no doubt that Lotte Plaza Marketâs opening is still one of the biggest 2023 news stories for New Tampa. If you still havenât visited it yet, what are you waiting for? It literally has something for everyone!Â
4. Live Oak Property Sale To Help Build Pride Park
The developer of Anand Vihar in Pasco County purchased an adjacent parcel of land in Live Oak from Hillsborough County that will help the county pay for its planned rec center at Pride Park.Â
Hillsborough County has had a plan in place to build an indoor rec center and expand the outdoor facilities at Pride Park (just south of Pride Elementary) for some time. The county also has owned an unused 61.89- acre parcel of land intended to be a county park, but didnât have enough money to construct facilities at either location.Â
That is, until Anand Vihar (in Meadow Pointe) developer Santosh Govindaraju decided to purchase (for $6 million) the unused park site in Live Oak, which means the county will be able to begin construction on the Pride Park rec center early this year.
5. Early Storm Causes Damage In New Tampa
he unnamed first major storm of 2023 hit New Tampa hard on June 4. Fortunately, no other major storms blew through our area (or Florida) for the remainder of the 2023 hurricane season.
Thankfully, 2023 was a relatively quiet hurricane season throughout Florida, especially coming on the heels of 2022, which saw two major hurricanes decimate portions of the Sunshine State.Â
And, although Florida and New Tampa were virtually unscathed by any of the 20 named storms (including seven hurricanes and three major hurricanes) that hit the Atlantic in 2023, our area received an early dose of hurricane-like Tampa City Councilman Luis Viera had to call for assistance to remove uprooted and downed trees in several New Tampa neighborhoods.Â
City of Tampa and Hillsborough County School District officials came out in force for the ribbon cutting at the new New Tampa Sports Pavilion behind Liberty Middle School in Tampa Palms. (All photos provided by the City of Tampa)Â
What used to be six old, underused tennis courts just for students at Liberty Middle School in Tampa Palms has been transformed into a new recreational area for the entire community.
The tennis courts are gone, and what stands in their place will now be called the New Tampa Sports Pavilion.
The Pavilion includes three basketball courts that also can be used for pickleball, tennis and volleyball.
Next to the courts, a huge metal shade structure stands over an artificial turf field. At 166 feet by 127 feet, itâs larger than four school buses lined up one way and three school buses lined up the other.
A building with offices and restrooms is located by the covered field, too.
On November 15, City of Tampa and Hillsborough County School District officials held a ribbon cutting to officially open the new expansion, which will be used by Liberty students during the school day and open to the public whenever school is not in session.Â
The new basketball courts at the Pavilion.
District 7 Tampa City Council member Luis Viera, whose son attended Liberty, says the idea was suggested at a 2020 town hall meeting by Tampa Palms resident Alexandra Gilmore. He championed the idea, saying it would add to the other recreational opportunities that have been brought to New Tampa over the last several years.
âThis is another big win for New Tampa and a really big deal,â says Viera. âItâs a $4-million expansion, and when you include the $3-million expansion of the New Tampa Recreation Center and multi-million-dollar All-Abilities Park, it represents a nearly $10 million investment in parks for New Tampa since 2018.â
Heâs referring to the playground that opened at the New Tampa Community Park one year ago, the first of its kind in the city that is designed for kids of all abilities, especially those who may not be able to play at typical playgrounds because they use a wheelchair or have other special needs.
Viera says that investment has made a significant impact.Â
Dist. 7 Tampa City Councilman Luis Viera speaking at the ribbon cutting.
âNew Tampa has gone from being a city park desert, where all we had was a rec center that was busting at the seams,â he says, âto being home to the cityâs first All-Abilities Park and now this additional expansion.â
The new rec center expansion is located adjacent to the New Tampa Community Park on the property of Liberty at 17400 Commerce Park Blvd.
The ribbon cutting on Nov.15 was attended by Viera, City of Tampa Mayor Jane Castor, Hillsborough County School Board members Jessica Vaughn and Lynn Gray, and Hillsboroughâs Superintendent of Schools Van Ayres.
Viera says the public access to the courts will be scheduled after school ends each day, during school holidays, weekends, and summer.
City of Tampa manager of athletics, aquatics and special facilities Heather Erickson says the New Tampa Sports Pavilion has experienced something of a soft opening and expects to be fully operational around January 1.
She says security lights are in place, but the courts themselves are not yet properly lighted, so they currently are only open until sundown.
Starting in 2024, the pavilion will be staffed for open basketball and pickleball nightly, plus scheduled activities.
âOur obligation is to make sure itâs not just a hangout without supervision,â Erickson says. âWe also offer classes such as sports readiness for girls and boys, fitness and agility.â
For more information, she says check the City of Tampa website at TampaGov.net after Jan. 1. Navigate to âParks & Rec,â then âActivities,â then âAthletics.â For questions about using the facility, reach out to Tampaâs supervisor of athletics Cedric Smith at Cedric.Smith@tampagov.net.Â
(l.-r.) Freedom High Business Academy director Brian Nanns, business teacher Natalie Lozada, marketing teacher Derrick McCoy, accounting teacher Stacey Polhill and Freedom assistant principal of curriculum Matthew Smith . (Photos by Charmaine George)Â
From charter schools and private schools to public school magnet programs, there are plenty of options for high school students in New Tampa to find a customized high school curriculum that will prepare them for the next step in their lives that isnât always the closest school to where they live.
But now, Freedom High in Tampa Palms is hoping to attract more New Tampa students to choose their local public school with a brand new attractor program that will be the first Business Academy in the Hillsborough County School District.
Students who finish all of the classes in the Business Academy will graduate with a certification that recognizes them as a program completer. Along the way, each class they take will earn them either an industry certification or college credit.
Courses in the Academy include a series of classes in accounting, marketing, business principles and entrepreneurship, many that are either Advanced Placement (AP) or Cambridge Advanced International Certificate of Education (AICE), which can result in students earning college credit if they pass an exam.
Freedomâs assistant principal of curriculum Matthew Smith says one reason this program is poised for success is because it actually pays for itself, rather than requiring money to operate.Â
Thatâs because the Florida Department of Education (FDoE) provides a stipend to schools that prepare students to do jobs that are needed in the workforce. So, when students earn industry certifications or college credits, that state-provided stipend goes back to the school, where it is used to enhance those programs.
âWe applied for a state grant to expand into this area because thereâs a big shortage in accounting in Florida,â Smith says. âWe are planning to transform our regular classrooms into high-tech accounting labs.â
He says this will include seating where students work together collaboratively and have technology to project to the walls, for example, and that the room will likely feature a live stock market ticker.
âThis could be a game-changer for Freedom,â Smith says. âWeâre hoping to retain neighborhood kids so they donât have to get on a magnet bus and go somewhere else in Hillsborough County for a different program.â
Smith explains that the Business Academy will be overarching and encompass the schoolâs Digital Academy, which has been in place for several years and prepares students for careers in game design, web development or related fields.
âOur Digital Academy labs are already well equipped,â he explains, âwith more than $200,000 per year in funding from industry certifications that our students receive.â
This allows the labs to be continually updated with the latest technology.
âWe are adding AI next year, too,â he says, referring to teaching students about artificial intelligence.
The Hillsborough County School Districtâs Chief of Innovation and Strategic Planning Marcos Murillo says these and other career and technical education classes have set the foundation for the Business Academy to be built on, and that it will be unique in the District. While other schools offer entry-level classes in subjects such as accounting and marketing, the Business Academy will be more comprehensive.Â
The Business Academy also will encompass the schoolâs existing Digital Academy
âFreedom will offer more classes in that area than any other school in the District,â Murillo says. âThe higher level classes wonât available anywhere else and will allow students to have a more robust transcript to apply for college.â
Murilloâs job is to innovate at every school throughout the county but, he says, âFreedom is dear to my heart. My daughter graduated from there and my son is there now.â
Instructors for Freedomâs Business Academy are already in place and are training for new courses that will be offered for the 2024-25 school year.
For example, Stacey Polhill has worked as an accountant in the private industry and at the school district and has decades of real-world accounting experience.
âShe currently teaches math and accounting honors,â explains Smith, âbut next year, she will teach additional accounting classes, such as managerial accounting honors or AICE accounting.â
Not all classes will be available next year, but classes will be added as the program grows and students in the program need them.
Other teachers include Brian Nanns, who is the chair of the schoolâs Career Technical Education Department. He currently serves as director of the Digital Academy, teaching classes such as AP Computer Science Principles, and will be director of the Business Academy, too.
Social studies teacher Eric Galante has a business degree and is now working to get certified to teach AP and AICE business principles and global business classes.
Derrick McCoy currently teaches marketing and television production and will expand the marketing classes that will be made available to students.
Natalie Lozado will teach business ownership and entrepreneurship, which Smith says will teach students how to fully develop a new business, execute their plans, and compete in the marketplace.
To participate in the Business Academy, all students â even if they currently attend Freedom â must apply through Hillsborough Countyâs âschool choice and magnet applicationâ available online at HillsboroughSchools.org/choice.Â
In addition to the Business Academy, Smith says many students use the choice application to join the Digital Academy, which does not carry the âattractorâ designation, or to participate in the schoolâs popular veterinary science program, where students can graduate high school as a Certified Veterinary Assistant.
Freedom will appear on the application as an option during the next choice/magnet application period, which is typically in Feb.
Smith says that if it happens that there is space available in the program, it may be possible for current Freedom students to take some of the classes in the Business Academy. However, seats are reserved for those who are chosen for the attractor program and commit to completing the entire track.
âI canât wait to build out the program,â Smith says.
 Tampa City Council Denies Proposal To Allow New Development On The East Side Of Morris Bridge Rd.Â
Research by Joel ProvenzanoÂ
The blue outline above represents the city limits of the City of Tampa. The portion outlined in purple is the property that was proposed for new development that was unanimously voted down by the Tampa City Council on Nov. 30. (Map Source: City of Tampa; modified by Neighborhood News)Â
When Cory Lake Isles first began developing in the late 1980s, the only entrance to that now-built-out community was off Morris Bridge Rd. â at that time a little-known, little-used, two-lane arterial roadway that connected to Fletcher Ave. and I-75, four miles south of the Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd. exit off I-75, which turned north towards (and continuing past) the Pasco County line.
It wasnât until several years later, when Cory Lake Isles developer Gene Thomason was able to get a new entrance to his fledgling community off Cross Creek Blvd., that home sales in Cory Lake Isles really began in earnest. Until then, Morris Bridge Rd. was â pun intended â a bridge too far for most of the people who wanted to move into the suddenly burgeoning community that first began being called âNew Tampaâ in the mid-1990s.
But, while it took about another decade for any significant new development along Morris Bridge Rd. to take hold, the huge K-Bar Ranch development started with the Easton Park subdivision just north of Pride Elementary. Today, K-Bar/Easton Park is the only community in the entire City of Tampa experiencing significant growth.
To that end, on Nov. 30, District 7 Tampa City Councilman Luis Viera and his fellow City Council members unanimously voted down a proposed comprehensive plan amendment for 28.36 total acres in two parcels (see map) on the east side of Morris Bridge Rd. (property that was annexed into the city in 2007), that would have allowed for up to 43 new single-family homes (and more) to be built across Morris Bridge Rd. from an undeveloped portion of the Easton Park subdivision.
âMy constituents who live in K-Bar Ranch, Easton Park and Cory Lake Isles all tell me that Tampa shouldnât allow any additional development along Morris Bridge Road,â Viera told me after the Nov. 30 public hearing. âThey all say, âMorris Bridge is full,â and I definitely agree with that.âÂ
Since the City of Tampa annexed (in 2007), for the first time ever, property previously located in unincorporated Hillsborough County, east of Morris Bridge Rd., no property owners in that area had ever requested to build new residential units or commercial buildings in that area.
That changed on Nov. 30, when representatives for Ike and Yvonne Okeke, who own two parcels totalling 28.36 acres on the east side of Morris Bridge Rd. (across from a currently undeveloped portion of the Easton Park subdivision of K-Bar Ranch), requested Amendment #TA/CPA 23-19) to the City of Tampaâs Comprehensive Plan that, if approved, would have allowed the property to change from its Rural Estate-10 & Environmentally Sensitive Areas (ESA) Adopted Future Land Use designation to Suburban Mixed Use-3 (which allows for up to three dwelling units per acre) and ESA.
Considering that there are only about 14.36 acres of developable land on the site, without the Plan Amendment, the property owners can only build one dwelling unit â or 40,000 sq. ft. of non-residential uses â on the site.
If the change had been approved, however, the property owners could have built up to 43 single-family detached and multi-family dwelling units or 156,380 total sq. ft. of both residential and non-residential uses.
All of the property on the east side of Morris Bridge Rd. included in the 2007 annexation was originally designated as Rural Estate-5, meaning that only one dwelling unit per acre would be allowed.
However, in 2008, according to staff planner Jennifer Malone of the Hillsborough County City-County Planning Commission staff, who appeared at the Nov. 30 public hearing, the Comprehensive Plan was amended to further reduce the number of possible dwelling units per acre on the east side of Morris Bridge Rd. from 1 dwelling unit per 5 acres to just 1 unit per 10 acres.Â
This is the property on Morris Bridge Rd. that was requested to receive a Comprehensive Land Use Plan amendment that was rejected by the Tampa City Council on Nov. 30.Â
Malone confirmed that this Comprehensive Plan land use designation is the lowest future land use category in the entire City of Tampa and, in fact, the Rural Estate-10 designation was actually created by the City for these annexed properties.
According to Malone, the land, which, to the east, is near Hillsborough River State Park and the Lower Hillsborough Wildlife Management area, is uniquely environmentally sensitive.
In fact, Malone said, âThe State Department of Community Affairs (DCA) commented that the annexed property is so unique that RE-5 wasnât rural enough for this area,â which helped the city decide to create the RE-10 designation specifically for this area. The DCA also wanted the land use for the city property to match the one dwelling unit per 10 acres designation of the adjacent Hillsborough County property.
Prior to the Nov. 30 hearing, the proposal to change the land use designation was first rejected by the Planning Commission staff for being âinconsistent with the Tampa Comprehensive Plan,â a conclusion shared by the City of Tampaâs own staff â due to the lack of utilities and city services within the area and lack of similar land uses on the east side of Morris Bridge Rd. â even though the property in the undeveloped portion of Easton Park directly across Morris Bridge Rd. already has the Suburban Mixed Use-3 designation that these property owners were seeking for their land.
Malone pointed out, however, that there are âno Suburban Mixed Use-3 land uses on the east side of Morris Bridge, which has a significantly different development pattern than the west side.â
Tampaâs Transportation Planning Organization also noted that there are no roadway capacity improvements, transportation projects or transit services planned for the area (more on this below).
Evan Johnson with the Cityâs planning department, corroborated Maloneâs claims:
1) He said Morris Bridge Rd. canât handle any additional capacity and isnât programmed to get any larger or to offer any type of mass transit.
2) He said the property is too environmentally sensitive and too close to Hillsboroughâs rural service area to allow the change.
3) And, âThe property owners are not required to connect to city utilities but, depending upon what they end up wanting to build, they could be required to do so.â
Also, Johnson said, âThe closest possible hook-up for water would be 1,700- 2,000 feet away, in the new portion of K-Bar Ranch. And, the nearest wastewater hookup is a manhole in Easton Park that would be about a 1/4-mile from this site, and those are significant distances and could cost from several hundred thousand to a million dollars or more to build these facilities.â
Because of all of these factors, and the significant increase in proposed density of the site, Johnson said, âWe object to the change in the character (of the property) because the jump is so large.â
David Wright, who spoke on behalf of the property owners, said that the density request was reduced from their original proposal, adding that, âWe know where the wetlands areâ and that the proposal took those into account. Wright claimed that the 14-1/2 acres fronting Morris Bridge Rd. âis ready for development, so all weâre really asking for is a continuation and expansion of the same Morris Bridge land use (on the west side).â Wright also acknowledged that the property owner would be responsible for making the utility connection to the site.
Turning It Down
District 7 City Councilman Luis Viera, whose district includes all of the city portions of New Tampa, made the motion to deny the plan amendment. The proposed change was unanimously (7-0) voted down by the Council members, after Viera said he had, âA lot of high hurdles with this proposal, including across-the-board negative comments from both the Planning Commission and City staff.â
Viera also noted that even though the property on both sides of Morris Bridge Rd. in this area is city property, the roadway itself is a county road, âand my understanding is that it canât be expanded, because of its environmental designation…and it is just packed at the seams right now, which is one of the top things I hear from my constituents.â
He added that another big issue he has are the emergency response times by Tampa Fire Rescue in K-Bar Ranch, as well as, âthe mosque, the church and the Sikh house of worship, all on Morris Bridge Rd. I see this as a size-36 waist trying on size-32 pants and I canât see supporting this proposal.â
But, What About Two Rivers?
Even though the east side of Morris Bridge Rd. is clearly environmentally sensitive, a little to the north of the Pasco County line, the road is currently being widened to accommodate the new 3,405-acre Two Rivers development, which is planned to include 6,400 new residential units, 1.3-million-sq.-ft. of office and industrial space and 630,000 sq.- ft. of retail space, plus three new schools, a golf course and numerous other amenities.
The second phase of Two Rivers actually extends south of the Pasco County line and the development is certain to bring much more traffic to Morris Bridge Rd., so the hope here is that something can be done to widen Morris Bridge Rd. south of the county line, too.Â