First, of course, there was Chick-fil-A. Then Popeyes. And PDQ. And Chickân Fun. And King of the Coop. And Zaxbyâs. And Slim Chickens. And Chicken Boss.
But now, Celebrity Chef Guy Fieriâs Chicken Guy is expected to open sometime next month on the north side of S.R. 56. Raising Caneâs has started to go vertical on the south side of 56 (next to Rock & Brews). Hangry Joeâs is getting ready to open in the failed King of the Coop location on S.R. 54 in front of The Grove.
And, for those of you who prefer Korean-style fried chicken over anything American-made, Sweet Krunch Korean Fried Chicken & Boba Tea will be open in the former location of FJ Express in the Shoppes at New Tampa at 1832 Bruce B. Downs Blvd. (just south of S.R. 56) by the time this issue reaches your mailbox.
(And, for the record, Chicken Boss closed and has been replaced by Indian Street Kitchen).
Of course, when your restaurant boasts the name of the host of âDiners, Drive-Ins & Dives,â expectations are likely to be higher than for most of the other newcomers, even though the closest existing Chicken Guy location to us â in Winter Park, FL, reportedly faced eviction last year for unpaid rent and another in Michigan closed. The good news is that the fast-food joint co-founded by the self-proclaimed âMayor of Flavortownâ has several new additions to its menu, including chopped salad, Buffalo mac & cheese and hot chicken tenders.Â
At the end of the day, Chicken Guy, Raising Caneâs and Hangry Joeâs are all just (primarily) fried chicken chains, so although I will try them all, anyone who has a slightly different concept is much more likely than the others to get my business on an ongoing basis. Thatâs why I plan to be on-site when Sweet Krunch opens on Sept. 12 (which is after this issue goes to press but before it hits mailboxes). I want to see if the fourth Florida Sweet Krunch location â with its parmesan zucchini fries, Korean-style chicken, shrimp or Bulgogi beef teriyaki bowls, Korean-style fried rice and even Japchae (stir-fry Korean glass noodles) â can keep me interested. For more info, visit SweetKrunchFL.kwick-menu.com or the Ballantrae location at 17788 Aprile Dr., Land OâLakes.
Steak N Shake Opening Delayed Again
If youâve been hankerinâ to try the original smashed steakburgers and delicious hand-spun milk shakes at the new Steak N Shake, located at 5542 Post Oak Blvd. (on Wesley Chapel Blvd., next to The Palms Car Wash), weâre sorry to say that as of today, it still isnât open â but should be sooner than later.
Owner Todd Webb says the long-awaited new Steak N Shake was (finally) set to open on Sept. 23 (tomorrow), then again on Sept. 30, but still had its final inspection delayed as we went to press with our Oct 1 Wesley Chapel issue. For more info, visit SteakNShake.com or stop in at The Palms Car Wash.
Although it appears to be primarily catering to the USF crowd, the University Boba Tea House, located at 2828 E. Bearss Ave. (just west of BBD Blvd.), in the Palms Connection plaza, looks to be a pretty cool place.
I stumbled upon this still-under-construction tea room when I went to see if anything had yet been announced coming to the other empty spaces that formerly housed Woodfired Pizza, Bearss Tavern & Tap and Mint Cocktail Club, but no such luck, at least not yet.
A quick search of the UniversityBobaTeaHouseTampa.comwebsite reveals that not only will the new tea house offer 40 different types and flavors of hot and iced teas, as well as coffee, it also will feature a USF student art gallery and different activities every night, from trivia on Tuesdays, karaoke on Thursdays, Open Mic Night on Fridays and Band Night on Saturdays.Â
Although the exterior signage is already nicely done, a photo taken on Aug. 31 still showed a dirt floor inside, but weâll keep you posted. â GN.
Electioneering at the New Tampa Regional Library on Primary Election Day (Aug. 20), were (above) County Commission candidate Jim Davison (with daughter Allie), Dist. 67 Florida House candidate Rico Smith (below right) and Pebble Creek activist Leslie Green and her husband, Dr. Mike Green (below left).Â
On Aug. 19, the day before the Primary Election throughout Florida, New Tampa resident Dr. Jim Davison told me that he felt he had run his best campaign yet â and believed that he would defeat Hillsborough County Fire Rescue Battalion Chief Chris Boles in his bid for the Republican nomination for countywide District 6, where incumbent Democrat Pat Kemp was leaving her seat to challenge for the U.S. Congressional seat held by Dist. 15 incumbent Laurel Lee. (Note – Rep. Lee easily earned the Republican nomination on Aug. 20 to face Kemp on Tuesday, November 5).
âItâs in the hands of the voters,â Davison told me that day. âMy fate is already sealed. But either way, Iâm going to light a cigar, see what happens and be satisfied with what Iâve worked to accomplish this time around.â
Unfortunately for Davison â who previously has run for both the County Commission (against current District 2 incumbent Ken Hagan; more on him below) and Tampa City Council (losing by 65 votes in a runoff election to now-two-term incumbent Luis Viera in Dist. 7) â it again wasnât meant to be. Davison lost 59%-41% to Boles, who will now face Democratic Primary winner and former State Rep. Sean Shaw for the Dist. 6 seat in Nov.
And, although he was a lot stronger in New Tampaâs 25 voting precincts (see chart below) â where he earned nearly 48% of the vote â than he was countywide, Davison still finished behind Boles on the local ballots, too, despite being a strong-voiced advocate for New Tampa at both City Council and County Commission meetings for more than two decades.Â
Meanwhile, Hagan, the former New Tampa resident, easily defeated Melissa Nordbeck 78.2%-21.8% (Hagan was even stronger in New Tampa, where he earned 82.1% of the vote), and will face Democrat Patricia Alonzo in his attempt to keep alive his 22-year streak of serving either in District 2 or a countywide Commission seat â the longest tenure of any current Hillsborough commissioner.
In one of the more contentious races last month, Tampa Palms resident and incumbent District 3 Hillsborough County School Board member Jessica Vaughn convincingly defeated Myosha Powell â 59%-41% â to retain her seat. Vaughn, who won nearly 63% of the vote in New Tampaâs 25 precincts, survived a number of nasty attack ads (including being called a Hamas terrorist) and Gov. Ron DeSantisâ endorsement of her opponent to retain her seat.
âThe race was unfortunately ugly and had me more concerned about my safety and my familyâs safety,â Vaughn told me a few weeks before the election. âIâll be relieved when itâs over either way.â
In the other School Board race where New Tampa residents had a vote â District-wide Dist. 7 â incumbent and long-time former teacher Lynn Gray advanced to a November runoff against Karen Bendorf in that four-candidate race. Neither Gray (35.1%) nor Bendorf (30.3%) received close to the 50% + 1 vote needed to win the seat outright. In fact, if the rest of the county voted the same way New Tampa did, Bendorf would not have even advanced to the runoff, as third-place finisher Johnny Bush received more votes in our 25 precincts (24.1%-23.7%) than Bendorf did.
Also winning handily in Aug. was New Tampa resident and former County Commissioner, State Rep. and State Sen. Victor Crist, who defeated Melony Williams with more than 68% of the vote (nearly 71% in New Tampa), to secure the Republican nomination for Clerk of the Court & Comptroller. Crist will face incumbent Clerk (and former School Board member) Cindy Stuart. Crist, who is still recovering from a serious car accident that occurred not long before the Primary, is far behind Stuart in fund raising, but he also is a well-known local name, so that Nov. race should be interesting.Â
State &Â National RacesÂ
Republican incumbent U.S. Senator and former Gov. Rick Scott faced little resistance from his Primary Election opponents Keith Gross and John Columbus, but his campaign against Democratic primary winner Debbie Mucarsel-Powell â a former U.S. Representative from Miami-Dade County, could be an interesting one with truly national implications, with the split in the Senate currently sitting at 50 (46 Democrats and four independents who either caucused or are considered to be with the Dems for committee purposes) to 49 Republicans, and one seat open.
If Mucarsel-Powell (who easily defeated three opponents in Aug.) can flip that Senate seat in Nov. â and some recent polls do show her as being ahead by a few percentage points â the Democratic Party could retain control of the Upper House of Congress. Of course, a lot will depend upon the outcome of the Presidential election between former President Donald Trump and current Vice-President Kamala Harris and whether or not the winning candidate proves to have coattails that flip other seats in both houses.
Meanwhile, U.S. Rep. Laurel Lee, who maintains an office in Tampa Palms, grabbed 72.5% of the vote (70.6% in New Tampa) to easily outdistance opponents James Judge (18.2%) and Jennifer Barbosa (9.3%) to face off against Kemp, who had to give up (due to term limits) the countywide Dist. 6 County Commission seat she has held since first being elected in 2016. Kemp, who also was an aide to current Dist. 14 U.S. Rep. Kathy Castor (when Castor served on the County Commission) and former U.S. Rep. Sara Romeo, has been a popular Hillsborough commissioner, but will also have to be able to earn votes from Republican-leaning areas like Wesley Chapel and parts of Polk County to unseat Rep. Lee, will have her work cut out for her.
And, in the battle to face incumbent Democrat (and State House Minority Leader) Fentrice Driskell for her Dist. 67 Florida House seat in Nov., two New Tampa Republicans squared off â Dr. Lisette Bonano, who lost to Driskell in the 2022 election, and Rico Smith (who previously planned to run for the Dist. 6 Hillsborough Commission seat being given up by Kemp but who switched to vie for Driskellâs seat in January, after conferring with party leaders in Tallahassee). Smith, an engineer and a U.S. Air Force vet, defeated Bonano (a retired U.S. Army officer) 56.5%-43.5% in Aug. (57.5%-42.5% in New Tampa). But, according to TransparencyUSA.org, Smith was far behind Driskell in terms of fund-raising and will surely have his hands full trying to unseat this rising star in the Democratic party.
Judicial & Other Races
One of the most closely-watched races in November will be between former twice-elected Hillsborough State Attorney Andrew Warren, the Democrat who was suspended from his seat (for allegedly not following his duties), and the Republican Gov. DeSantis replaced him with â Suzy Lopez. Warren easily dispatched Elizabeth Martinez Strauss on Aug. 20 (70.3%- 29.7%), so it remains to be seen if Warren can keep Lopez from winning a full term in Nov.
There also were two judgeships up for election, including New Tampa resident Linette âStarâ Brookins, who lost the County Court Judge Group 11 seat to Christine Edwards by 57.4%-42.6%, but who lost in New Tampaâs 25 precincts by less than 2% (50.9%-49.1%).
Voter Turnout
Whether itâs always been deserved or not, New Tampaâs voters have long been known in both the city and county for apathy and not showing up to vote â except for in Presidential Election years â but the Primary Election voter turnout countywide was 19.53% and New Tampa was barely behind that with 19.49%.
When you consider that Pasco County as a whole â and the Wesley Chapel area, as well â had only about a 16% turnout, New Tampa didnât fare too badly this time around and, with both a contentious Presidential election and a controversial county School Tax on the ballot, it may be possible for both the county and New Tampa to surpass the 2020 turnout of 76+%.
 âWe know this new facility will be bustling with activity the day it opens .â â Hillsborough Comm. Ken HaganÂ
(Photos by Charmaine George; renderings provided by Hillsborough County)Â
Local families and residents have to be happy with all of the new parks now being built or in the planning stages these days in New Tampa, which has long had a dearth of Hillsborough County and City of Tampa parks and recreation facilities.
Well, no more. Where zip code 33647 at one time only was home to the three-field New Tampa Little League (now called the North East Sports Complex/Eber Baseball) complex on Kinnan St., the county-owned Flatwoods Wilderness/Conservation Park (with entrances on Bruce B. Downs Blvd. and Morris Bridge Rd.) and Branchton Park (on Morris Bridge Rd., south of Cross Creek Blvd.; more on that below), we now have the cityâs New Tampa Recreation Center in Tampa Palms, the county-built North Tampa Athletic Assn. field complex at Turner-Bartels K-8 School (in conjunction with the Hillsborough School District) and the cityâs New Tampa Nature Park. (Note-Of course, both Flatwoods and the New Tampa Nature Park are largely âpassiveâ parks without much in the way of recreational facilities, other than trails and shelters).
But, if you thought that was it for our local government-built parks, you were sadly mistaken, as the county is in the process of building a much-expanded Branchton Park, the city has created its first All-Abilities Park at the New Tampa Rec Center, a new covered outdoor âcourt sportâ facility between Freedom High and Liberty Middle School and (as we reported last issue), also is in the planning stages of building a new 60-acre city park in K-Bar Ranch.Â
The groundbreaking for Hillsborough Countyâs new Cross Creek Recreation Center on Aug. 30, where the featured speakers were County Commissioner Ken Hagan (below right) and county parks director Rick Valdez (below left).Â
And, on Aug. 30, Hillsborough County held a groundbreaking ceremony for the new indoor Cross Creek Recreation/Community Center & Gymnasium (see the latest graphic of the parkâs location, above) on the grounds of what was previously just an unfinished, underused outdoor âpracticeâ facility in Cross Creek (just south of Pride Elementary and the Bassett Creek subdivision of K-Bar Ranch.Â
âThere are no indoor park facilities like this in New Tampa,â Dist. 7 Hillsborough County Commissioner Ken Hagan said at the groundbreaking ceremony. âThe city has the gymnastics center in Tampa Palms, but nothing for indoor basketball or volleyball. We know this new facility will be bustling with activity the day it opens.â
Aug. 30 was a super-hot day, so the festivities for the groundbreaking of the $9-million Cross Creek Recreation Center were short and sweet.
âIâm so excited for how this park will further our mission of enhancing lives through people, parks and enjoyable experiences,â said Hillsborough Parks & Recreation director Rick Valdez. âOur countyâs parks are among our most treasured resources and we are committed to preservingm growing and maintaining these outstanding community assets. And community parks are among our most popular assets, with fun amenities for people of all ages, improving physical fitness and proving that you can have fun and stay healthy at the same time.â
He added, âThis Cross Creek Community and Gymnasium will no doubt serve as a wonderful addition to this community and enrich the lives of our residents.â
Valdez then introduced District 7 Hillsborough County Commissioner (and former New Tampa resident) Ken Hagan, saying that âThe New Tampa community has truly been a labor of love for our next speaker. He has championed major projects, including the state-of-the-art New Tampa Performing Arts Center, the very popular New Tampa dog park (adjacent to the cityâs rec center in Tampa Palms), our soon-to-open Branchton Destination Park and now this. I must say that no one has fought harder for New Tampa.â
Hagan said, âIt is such a pleasure to be here as we break ground on the next destination here in New Tampa., one of the most beautiful areas in all of Hillsborough County..â
Hagan noted that the new park has been âmany years in the makingâ and said that when he did live in Cross Creek and his son was zoned for Pride Elementary, âWe did not have any summer or after-school programs, and we still donât have a public indoor facility, but with this project, thatâs about to change. This project will transform this entire area.â
He then mentioned that the project will include a new 16,000-sq.-ft. community center and gymnasium, with a fitness room, a multi-purpose room with a warming kitchen, it will have multiple classrooms, a covered outdoor space, a new parking lot, walking path, more open green space with a large pavilion and the existing playground will be renovated to be ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act)-compliant and there also will be a new picnic shelter. There will be something for everyone here in New Tampa.âÂ
In addition, Hagan said, there will be summer programs, after-school programs for kids, as well as senior programs during the day, including a possible ceramics studio. âJust imagine all of the possibilities for fun, education, community gatherings and fellowship. Youâll be able to do all of that at this new facility. It did take years for me to secure the funding, but Iâm immensely proud to have championed this facility.â
The rendering of the exterior design of the rec center (top photo) and (below it) the design of the parkâs revamped playground.Â
Following the âturning of the dirt,â Hagan also noted that because of the after-school programming at the new indoor facility, âWeâre confident that it will help the traffic situation at Pride when school lets out. A lot of kids will come to the facility right after school lets out, which will shorten that queue initially and then, itâll be spread out. Some of them will be picked up at 4 or 5 or even 6, so it will actually relieve the traffic here.â
Hagan also said that because a rezoning was required to get the park approved, the countyâs transportation staff had to come up with a pan to handle the traffic beforehand. He also noted that because Bassett Creek Dr. (the roadway that connects Kinnan St. to Pride is a county road that turns into a city road just north of the park site, how the traffic will be handled is just one of the challenges weâre dealing with.â
Valdez said that the Cross Creek Rec Center should be open by Fall of 2025.Â
Branchton Park Update
Hagan also said after the groundbreaking that the first phase of the revamped Branchton Park, located further south of Cross Creek Blvd. on Morris Bridge Rd. than the existing park, was expected to open by the end of this month or in early October, but no update was available at our press time. He also said that his pet project at Branchton Park â the countyâs first public-private partnership zip line â would not be included in that first phase and that not all of the Branchton Park construction phases were funded yet.
Just in case you missed the first annual Fall Festival at the New Tampa Performing Arts Center (NTPAC) last year, this exciting, four-day event is back for a second year this weekend, beginning tonight! Attendees will get to check out the many unique music, dance, art and other cultural programs all weekend long at NTPAC (8550 Hunters Village Rd., Tampa 33647) and, best of all, it’s all free to attend!
Here is a variety of the hundreds of photos we took at last year’s Fall Fest and this year’s weekend promises to be even bigger and better!