Congratulations go out to Shahida Choudhry, Pharm.D., and her amazing, super-friendly, knowledgeable team at Palms Pharmacy at 17008 Palm Pointe Dr. in the Shoppes at the Pointe plaza in Tampa Palms, which celebrated its fifth anniversary in April with a great, free event for its customers.
Most items in the store were buy-one, get-one-half-off for the one-day party, which was attended by several dozen customers, in addition to the Neighborhood News. Photographer/video producer Charmaine George and I were among those who enjoyed the free cupcakes from Smallcakes Cupcakery next door, as well as truly delicious coffee drinks from the Bean Bar coffee truck.
Palms Pharmacy, which has been providing both rapid Covid-19 and Covid antibody testing for several months, is now also offering both the two-shot Moderna and single-shot Johnson & Johnson Covid vaccines, as well as shots for the flu, shingles and other ailments. And, the prices for everyday over-the-counter medications, vitamins, supplements, CBD products and sundries are competitive with the big chains. For more info, call (813) 252-9063, visit ThePalmsPharmacy.com or see the ad on pg. 19. â GN
It has been nearly a year since families had to wrestle with one of the toughest decisions of their lives â whether to send their kids to brick-and-mortar classrooms, or have them learn at home via computer.
Because of Covid-19, the choices caused a great deal of consternation and debate among families in New Tampa, along with the rest of the state. We talked to three of those parents last July, each of whom had different and complicated choices to make.
So, how did those decisions work out?
Well, we caught up with those families as the 2020-21 school year was coming to a close, and they all say they would make the same decision again, even though the results were mixed.
Laurie Gonzalez and her son Grayson.
Laurie Gonzalez actually had two decisions to make â should she return to teaching in a classroom at Turner-Bartels K-8 School, despite having an auto-immune disease, and should she allow her son Grayson to attend classes at Benito Middle School?
The answer, in the end, was no to both questions.
Gonzalez was fortunate, however. The administration at Turner-Bartels accommodated her health concerns, and she was not forced back into the classroom. She says that other teaching friends of hers werenât so lucky.
âThe administration at my school deserves some recognition for being amazing,â she says. âOther schools were not as flexible.â
Gonzalez admits that teaching virtually paled in comparison to teaching in a classroom, and it wasnât her preferred method of doing her job. Even so, she says the school year went about as well as it could have.
However, she says Grayson did not have as good an experience.
While he had great teachers, Gonzalez says, Grayson did not enjoy learning online. âThere was too much information being thrown at a 12-year-old,â she says.
Socially, eLearning also had a negative impact, because Grayson is outgoing and engaging. Gonzalez says it was âmentally taxingâ for him to stare at a screen all day. While he had his friends in the video gaming community, he missed person-to-person contact.
As 2020-21 school year comes to a close, however, Laurie does not regret her decision, because she achieved her primary goal: keeping her family safe.
âI would 100 percent make the same decision again, because it kept us from getting coronavirus,â Gonzalez says. âI had two family members pass away from coronavirus complications, so I am still taking it very seriously.â
Other Decisions, Other Results
Despite the spread of Covid-19 last summer, and the uncertain future of the virus, Lisa Ling did not hesitate about returning her first- and fourth-grade children to school last August, convinced that schools would be taking the proper safety measures.
Her children attend Hunterâs Green Elementary (HGE), and disconnecting from the school community, which she says her family loves, was never a serious option.
Her decision was fortified by the end of the 2019-20 school year when, at the onset of the pandemic, all schools had to shut down in March and everyone was forced online. It was a difficult few months for her kids, and one Ling didnât want to repeat that situation for an entire school year.
But, sending her children back to school turned out to be the right choice for Ling and her husband Eric.
âI definitely donât regret the decision at all,â she says. âIt went as well as it could have, considering the crazy circumstances we found ourselves in. The kids adapted to wearing the masks pretty well. They didnât love it, but they were okay with it.â
Ling says there were very few cases of Covid-19 at HGE. Her kids did have to quarantine for 10 days once, but that was due to cases at their after-school daycare. She says most of the cases reported at HGE were due to exposure away from the school.
Ling says her children also were fortunate to have the same teachers all year, even as shortages and changes plagued many schools and caused a great deal of shuffling in many classrooms.
âIt was a pretty good year for our kids,â Ling says. âI canât imagine them having spent a whole year out of school.â
One Decision, Then AnotherÂ
Meanwhile, Connor Kelly, a 17-year-old Wharton senior, decided to do eLearning for his final year of high school, mainly because he was concerned about bringing the coronavirus home to his parents, Cindy and Patrick.
But, after one semester, and with Covid-19 vaccinations right around the corner, he decided to return to the classroom at Wharton in January.
Truthfully, he says, neither choice turned out as well as he had originally hoped. While he enjoyed the safety and freedom of online learning, he felt the instruction was lacking and didnât think it was administered very well. He understands it was a difficult experience for everyone involved, âbut it was a draining experience,â he says.
School wasnât the same as he remembered when he returned in January. Heâs not sure what he expected, but it wasnât what he got. It was easier, less challenging. Different.
But, Connor regrets nothing. He loaded up on dual enrollment and AP classes as part of a challenging online workload in the fall, will graduate No. 8 in his class with a grade-point-average higher than 6.0, and plans to study accounting in the fall at Florida State University in Tallahassee.
As far as he is concerned, it wasnât a great journey his final year at Wharton, but he arrived at his destination.
âI wound up where I wanted to be,â Connor says. âAnd Iâm fortunate that the pandemic really didnât touch that much. I was very fortunate. So, the decision I made led me to where I am, and ultimately I stayed on track.â
Cindy agrees. âI think it went as well as anything in the year of Covid 19. Everyone had to implement new and different ways to keep things moving along. Do I feel good about the decision? What I feel is very thankful to all the teachers and other team members in Hillsborough County education who worked so hard and made sacrifices so our kids could continue the learn, to participate in activities, and in some cases, to eat during this challenging time.â
City Councilmember Luis Viera has helped increase community involvement in New Tampa.
For too long, New Tampa has been characterized as an area that does not show up when itâs time to secure support from local government.
Over the last four years, however, we thankfully have begun to see this narrative change.
 Just recently, a $7.5-million dollar New Tampa Performing Arts Center â long championed by former County Commissioner and New Tampa resident Victor Crist â looked like it was doomed in the Hillsborough County Board of County Commissioners. Many New Tampa residents â myself included â were disturbed to hear this and showed up to County Commission meetings to let the commissioners know where New Tampa stands. Thanks to this, as well as a promise of likely maintenance support from the City of Tampa, this at-risk project passed by a 5-2 vote.
This Performing Arts Center is but one of numerous local government wins New Tampa has had over recent years:
âą In 2017, we passed, after years of rejection in the City of Tampa budget, the New Tampa Recreation Center expansion. Year after year, New Tampa saw this expansion rejected in City of Tampa budgets that seemed to care little about zip code 33647. But, New Tampa residents showed up in red T-shirts to City Council to demand that this Rec Center expansion be included in the budget, and it finally passed.
âą That same year, New Tampa successfully pushed to have Fire Station No. 23 â which serves expanding New Tampa communities â included in the City budget.
âą Recently, New Tampa residents supported a compromise in the Kinnan-Mansfield stalemate. Thanks to insistence between the City of Tampa and budget support from Hillsborough County Commissioner Ken Hagan and others, Kinnan-Mansfield is now open for first responders, pedestrians and bicyclists. Though this is only a single â and we wanted a home run â it is a pivotal single for public safety.
âą And, just this past year, a top priority of mine â the New Tampa All Abilities Park for children with special needs â passed our City budget. Soon, New Tampa will be home to a park â a first for the City of Tampaâs budget â for children with intellectual disabilities or Autism.
And, New Tampa has been showing up. In town halls that I have organized, hosted or co-hosted (see page 6), New Tampaâs engaged citizens have been coming out to express their views.
When I ran for Tampa City Council in 2016, I did so because North and New Tampa had too often been ignored in the City budget. For New Tampa, our voice has been heard with results. My vision was and still is not for citizens to be adversarial protestors to the City. Rather, it is one of citizens being involved as stakeholders. This is the narrative that produces results. Residents â Republicans and Democrats â coming together to advocate for our neighborhoods.
And, to quote the Carpenters, âWeâve only just begun.â There is more ground to cover: Residents in K-Bar Ranch look to the County and City to work together on a K-Bar Ranch park; New Tampa lags behind in response times for Tampa Fire Rescue; New Tampa badly lacks robust mass transit investments; and roads like New Tampa Blvd. and Tampa Palms Blvd. also need help.
But, we should pause to see how becoming stakeholders in local government has been paying off for our community. New Tampa â Republicans and Democrats working together â is making its voice heard.
Tampa Mayor Jane Castor takes additional questions from New Tampa residents following the April 21 Town Hall held at Freedom High in Tampa Palms. (Photo: Charmaine George)
If youâre into local government, then you have to be impressed with the roster of dignitaries that District 7 Tampa City Council member Luis Viera lined up for his latest New Tampa town hall, held last month at the Freedom High auditorium.
Those sharing the stage included the guest of honor, Tampa Mayor Jane Castor, longtime District 2 Tampa Police Dept. (TPD) Major Mike Stout, interim Tampa Fire Rescue Chief Barbara Tripp, City of Tampa director of mobility Vik Bhide and Parks & Recreation director Sherisha Hills. âThe Monsters of Rock tour,â Viera joked.
Here are four takeaways from that event:
&%$#@% Roads!
News Flash! â Traffic in New Tampa stinks! That was the message from those who got a chance to speak at the town hall. Whether it was congestion, unpaved roads (e.g., New Tampa and Tampa Palms Blvds.), people speeding or a lack of transportation options â even light rail was brought up! â local residents had a lot to say.
Unfortunately, there really arenât a lot of answers that donât revolve around the city crying poor. The Supreme Court striking down the All For Transportation referendum money (a one-cent sales tax) continues to leave a mark. That money would have fixed a good portion of New Tampaâs problems..
âHopefully thereâs another transportation referendum in the future,â Mayor Castor said.
No Excuses
Not everyone was buying the referendum excuse. Local transportation activist Dr. Jim Davison was his usual feisty self, basically accusing the city of not using the gas and other taxes New Tampa residents pay to fix their transportation woes while blaming the Supreme Court decision instead.
âThereâs millions of dollars there,â Dr. Davison said, to applause.
Davison also criticized the city for taking the East-West Expressway (aka the E-W Rd.) off the Hillsborough Metropolitan Planning Organization long-range plan. The debate over an E-W Rd. â which would have connected the New Tampa Gateway Bridge (that connects West Meadows to Tampa Palms) to I-275 â goes back more than 20 years. It was killed in 2008 by the Tampa-Hillsborough Expressway Authority but had remained in the MPOâs plans until 2017.
Davison also said he has been asked to reorganize the old New Tampa Transportation Task Force, of which he was a co-founder more than 20 years ago. He think itâs time for a âheart-to-heartâ talk about what is happening in New Tampa and basically what the city is and isnât doing about it.
âBecause what is happening now, this âIf you vote for the one-cent sales tax weâll build all this stuff,â thatâs extortion,â Davison said, to more applause.
Kick Off?
Did Davison kick off his 2022 campaign for Tampa City Council or the Hillsborough County Commission at the town hall? It kind of sounded like it.
Davison has run twice for the County Commission and lost, and ran for City Council in a 2016 special election to replace Lisa Montelione that launched Vieraâs political career. Davison won 30 percent of the votes (compared to 20 percent for Viera) in a crowded primary field, but Viera won the run-off by 65 total votes.
So, is Davison ready for another run? Hmmmm.
Some Good News
Mayor Castor told the audience that she has signed off on the planning and development contract for the All Abilities Park, which also has been called the Sensory Park and will be built at the New Tampa Recreation Center.
âThat should be started very very soon, so weâll see another outstanding park out here in the New Tampa area,â Castor said.
Peter Gamborta of the Rotary Club of New Tampa said the club is ready and eager to begin fund raising for the park, as well as improvements for the New Tampa Rotary Dog Park, for which they raised $27,000 to build in 2015.
Castor also said the planning department threw dynamite on its permitting process, blowing it up and starting anew with the focus on new technology and more efficiency and effectiveness. That improvement yielded $4.5 billion in development in 2020, up from $3.4 billion in 2019, despite Covid.
And, despite all the complaints, the mayor insisted that her administration is working on transportation and public safety issues. âOne of the reasons I ran for this positionâŠis that this city is going to change more in the next 10 years than it has in my lifetime,â Castor said. âWe really have one opportunity to create the city we want Tampa to be, and to hand that off to the next generation. Weâre very excited to be a part of that.â
Construction of the New Tampa Performing Arts Center could begin on this barren lot in the next few months. (Photo: Charmaine George)
The New Tampa Players (NTP), a local acting troupe looking for a permanent home, recently finished a run of shows with a cast of just a handful of performers in a 2,000-sq.-ft. black box theater at the old University Mall.
Itâs not exactly what the group may have envisioned when it started nearly 20 years ago with the hope of a cultural center they could call home in the heart of New Tampa, but now, they can see a spotlight at the end of the tunnel.
Thanks in part to a public outpouring of support from many NTP and New Tampa community members, the Hillsborough County Board of County Commissioners voted 5-2 to approve a $7.3-million construction contract to build the long-awaited New Tampa Performing Arts Center (NTPAC).
âWe werenât 100 percent it would go through, but we are super happy it did,â said Nora Paine, a long-time member and current president of the NTP.
The vote is the biggest step yet for the project, which dates back to 2001, and was initially approved in 2014. Commissioner Ken Hagan, whose District 2 includes New Tampa, says a groundbreaking for the state-of-the-art, 20,000-sq.-ft. (expandable to 30,000 square feet) NTPAC should be scheduled in the next month or two.
Hagan would like to see the project, which is located in the Village at Hunterâs Lake development across Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd. from the entrance to the Hunterâs Green community, completed by September of 2022.
âIâm ecstatic over the results,â Hagan says. âGood things come to those who wait. It only took 17 years, but we finally got over the finish line. The end result is that next year, New Tampa is going to have a first-class facility thatâs going to be a wonderful centerpiece for the entire community to enjoy.â
Ken Hagan
Hagan told the Neighborhood News that the construction contract has been awarded to Dunedin-based Bandes Construction, but that the Request for Proposals to operate the PAC hasnât yet happened.Â
Hagan told the Board he had received more than 140 emails in support of the NTPAC project. The handful of emails Hagan said he received in opposition to building it primarily dealt with traffic concerns.
Prior to the vote, more than a dozen speakers, including many NTP members, asked the commissioners to keep the PAC dream alive.
âA lot of us had concerns of (the project just being) small stores and another apartment complex,â said Hunterâs Green resident Rob Larsen. âWell, to our surprise, the Performing Arts Center was going to be the heart of this new center. And without it, it basically dies.â
District 63 State Rep. Fentrice Driskell sent an email of support, and Tampa City Council member Luis Viera, who represents New (and North) Tampa in District 7, weighed in as well, promising a commitment from the city to help pay some of the PACâs operating costs.
Joining Hagan in voting to award the construction contract were commissioners Harry Cohen, Stacy White, Kimberly Overman and Gwen Myers.
They all cited the promises made to New Tampa residents over the years and, as Hagan pointed out, the money to build the PAC was approved back in 2019 and has been waiting to be spent.
âPromises made, promises kept,â said Comm. Myers. âI hope no other community would go through 17 years waiting on a decision from our county.â
The New Tampa Players, performing “Little Mermaid”, may soon have a permanent home to put on its productions. (Photo: James Cass of Picture This of Palma Ceia)
Commissioners Mariella Smith and BCC chair Pat Kemp voted against awarding the construction contract.
Smith said she didnât believe the rights to operate the PAC once it was built should be awarded to the Manatee County-based Florida Cultural Group (FCG).
Kemp was critical of the PACâs location. She said it was a âlittle teeny place carved out of a massive parking lotâ and jammed between a strip mall and an apartment complex, both which financially benefited the developers and left the PACâs actual location as an afterthought.
âIt would just be a boondoggle for me to put an iconic building that you put up a lot of money for behind a strip mall and in front of a four-story apartment building,â Kemp said.
Following the construction vote, the commissioners addressed the concerns about FCG by voting unanimously for a Request for Proposals (RFP) to reopen the bidding process in order to find a group to handle the PAC operations.
Hagan says the county staff felt that FCG was the best organization to run the facility to get it to a net-zero operation, and that its extensive experience at fund raising and luring national acts would be an ideal fit.
âUnless thereâs another organization that weâre unaware of, our staff feels that at the end, after going through the RFP, it will likely be FCG again,â Hagan says. âWhoever it is, I just want them to be able to be effective and able to fund raise and bring in national acts.â
Hagan said he also will champion the creation of an additional local board, comprised of New Tampa residents, to support the facility and help with any other issues.
For more information about the New Tampa Players, visit NewTampaPlayers.org. The troupeâs latest project, âMotherhood Out Loud.â runs June 11-12 at 7:30 p.m., June 13 at 3 p.m., June 18-19 at 7:30 p.m. and June 20 at 3 p.m. at the Uptown Stage at the University Mall (2200 E. Fowler Ave.).