The first Rotary Club chartered for New Tampa or Wesley Chapel â the Rotary Club of New Tampa (RCNT), which has met on Friday mornings at Tampa Palms Golf & Country Club for 25 years, now has a satellite club.
On April 7, twelve Charter (11 new and one returning) members of the Rotary Satellite Club of New Tampa After Hours were introduced by Rotary District 6890 Governor Mark Skolnick and After Hours chair Bob Thompson and inducted by RCNT president Walter Oles at Florida Ave. Brewing Co. on S.R. 56.
Although the club is a Satellite Club of the RCNT, Thompson, After Hours Sergeant-at-Arms Cam Caudle and membership chair Jason Contino say that the new club will meet in person only once each month (at least for now) on the first Wednesday of each month at locations throughout New Tampa and Wesley Chapel. âWeâre also planning to have a Zoom meeting on the third Wednesday of each month,â Thompson said, âand begin working on service projects right away.â
The new satellite clubâs first service project was a recent painting event at the Friends of the Joshua House Foundation, Inc. (FJHF), painting and prepping the residences of the abused and neglected children who live there for an upcoming Grand Re-Opening event.
The painting party was part of the After Hours Clubâs promise to its Apr. 7 guest speaker, DeDe Grundel â the executive director of the FJHF, pictured above â when Thompson announced that the Joshua House will be the first charity of focus for the new Satellite club.
Contino says, âThe Satellite club appeals to those who found Rotary attractive but couldnât or didnât want to meet at 7 a.m.â
The Rotary Satellite Club of New Tampa After Hoursâ next meeting â which is open to prospective members and guests â will be held on Wednesday, May 5, at 7 p.m., at Double Branch Artisanal Ales in The Grove at Wesley Chapel. â GN
Residents of K-Bar Ranch met with City Council member Luis Viera last month to discuss a number of community issues, many related to public safety.
Public safety continues to be one of Tampa City Council member Luis Vieraâs primary concerns in District 7, the area he represents that includes all of the communities within the city limits in New Tampa. And, while his primary focus may be on some of the struggling fire stations south of our area, a fire station that has yet to be funded built in K-Bar Ranch almost always makes its way into any conversation with Viera.
When he met with a smattering of K-Bar residents last month at the communityâs amenity center â with staff from the Tampa Police (TPD), Parks & Recreation and Mobility departments in tow â public safety was at the forefront of much of the conversation.
Viera assured the residents in attendance that he was fighting to make sure the planned fire station in K-Bar Ranch comes to fruition, which would help reduce the below-average response times in that part of New Tampa. Because there remains only two entrances into western K-Bar â the main entrance at K-Bar Ranch Pkwy., and the less convenient way via Basset Creek Dr. past Pride Elementary â a fire station for a community that will have more than 2,000 homes with little access makes sense, Viera said. (Note: Easton Park has an entrance/exit off Morris Ridge Rd., but K-Bar Ranch Pkwy. currently does not connect the east and west sides of the community.)
Another access point, however, also would improve public safety response, although it is unclear other than planned connections at Meadow Pointe Blvd. and Wyndfields Blvd. leading into Pasco County, where those access roads could be constructed.
When leaving the growing New Tampa community, K-Bar Ranch Pkwy. and Bassett Creek Dr. both funnel into Kinnan St., so some residents argue that really, the only way in or out of K-Bar is through Kinnan.
And, in the case of any fender bender on Kinnan St., âPeople literally cannot get out of this neighborhood,â says Cindy Gustavel, who lives in K-Barâs Heron Preserve subdivision.
There also were concerns expressed over speeding down both Kinnan St. and K-Bar Ranch Pkwy., a wide open stretch of road running east-west that was completed in 2019. Speed bumps arenât a popular option to slow speeders, and police jurisdiction (K-Bar Ranch is right on the boundary between the City of Tampa and unincorporated Hillsborough County) is confusing for residents when deciding who to call to complain.
Also, there are no bike lanes painted on the new road
âYou are taking your life into your own hands on that road (K-Bar Ranch Pkwy.),â says resident John Bowersox, who is hoping residents can be surveyed to figured out a solution.
Residents in attendance at the meeting also expressed concern about construction truck traffic on roads like Bassett Creek Dr. and Wild Tamarind Dr. â where children, bicyclists and pedestrians are more likely to be â and would prefer a sign directing those trucks to K-Bar Ranch Pkwy.
A proposed park in K-Bar Ranch on roughly 55 acres of land (including the possibility of additional acreage from the county in Live Oak Preserve) which has been discussed for years, remains in limbo, Viera said.
Originally planned to be a partnership between the city, which would maintain and run the park, and Hillsborough County, which would pay to build it, the discussion seems to have hit an impasse over what purpose the park would actually serve, in terms of whether it should focus on athletic fields or green space and trails. Viera told residents that resolving the issue and getting the park built has become one of his goals.
The New Tampa Performing Arts Center is planned to go on the currently unbuilt tract of land behind The Village at Hunterâs Lake plaza and in front of The Trails at Hunterâs Lake apartments.(Drone photo: Charmaine George)
Despite the fact a majority of Hillsborough County commissioners declined to vote to award a $7.3-million construction contract for the long-awaited New Tampa Performing Arts Center (PAC), District 2 Commissioner Ken Hagan says the show must go on, following another intermission.
Hagan believes that once all of the county commissionersâ concerns are addressed by staff, construction will proceed.
âIâm not really concerned,â Comm. Hagan told the Neighborhood News. âI think once staff fully describes and explains not only the history of the project but the operational plan, I think the individual Board members will be comfortable with it.â
Haganâs motion to execute the construction contract with Bandes Construction Company was seconded by Dist. 4âs Stacy White but received no other support. It was withdrawn after some debate, and deferred to the next BOCC meeting on May 5.
The opposition, mostly due to concerns over money and the company that will be managing the facility, raised a few eyebrows in New Tampa, but Hagan says the project, which is located directly across Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd. from the Hunterâs Green community in The Village at Hunterâs Lake, is not in any danger. The pad for the PAC is already in place (see photo), built by the developer, Harrison Bennett Properties, LLC.
Roughly $8 million in funding to complete the project was set aside in 2019 via a bond issue.
The New Tampa PAC â which for almost all of its history had been referred to as the New Tampa Cultural Center â will be a 350-seat venue with four dance studios. The seats in the auditorium will be retractable, allowing the space to be converted into a multi-purpose room for event receptions. The 20,000-sq.-ft. building is adaptable to accommodate various needs when it comes to space. There also are plans to add a second story in the future to accommodate additional dance studios and community spaces.Â
Commissioners Mariella Smith, Kimberly Overman, Gwen Myers and Harry Cohen shared many of the same concerns, mostly centering around questions regarding the company that will manage the facility â the Florida Cultural Group (FCG). Formerly known as The Manatee Players, Inc., the FCG is an umbrella organization that operates the Manatee Performing Arts Center, and the Manatee Players community theater.
Smith questioned why the operations would be handled by a Manatee-based company, as opposed to the local New Tampa Players (NTP). But NTP, which would make its home at the new PAC, is a much smaller organization that has never handled the management of a theater. It currently operates out of its recently completed Uptown Stage location in the University Mall on E. Fowler Ave.
âI just have a concern about the county putting $8 million into a 20,000-sq.-ft. edifice somewhere where thereâs not more local community control,â Smith said, while also voicing concern that the City of Tampa was not contributing to the construction when the facility is located in Tampa. However, as Hagan pointed out, the PAC is just as close to residents in the unincorporated area of New Tampa as it is to those in the area living within city limits.
Overman said with so many of the countyâs capital improvement projects having to be deferred in these cash-strapped times, she was not necessarily opposed but, âthe timing just feels wrongâŠ..I just canât support moving this forward right now.â
Cohen also had concerns about the arrangement with FCG.
âI donât think money was the issue, but the main misunderstanding was with the Florida Cultural Group and their role,â says Hagan of the group that will receive nearly $1.5 million to run the PAC through 2025. âA couple of commissioners didnât understand their history. Our staff has worked on this for a couple of years. They feel extremely confident this will be a very successful partnership and they (FCG) will be able to bring in major national acts and fundraise.â
As for the City of Tampa contributing, District 7 City Council member Luis Viera motioned at the Councilâs April 15 meeting to request Mayor Jane Castorâs administration meet with the county to make an arrangement on helping to finance maintenance, to the tune of maybe $50,000-$75,000 a year.
Rendering of the front of the NT PAC, which the county commission has yet to award a contract for construction for. (Fleischman Garcia Architecture)
The previous administration under Bob Buckhorn declined to help, Viera says he was told.
Viera told his fellow Council members that the project was a long-time coming and of much importance to the New Tampa area, and that he was ready to fight for it. Vieraâs motion passed unanimously.
How much that helps get the project over the final hurdle remains to be seen.
The PAC has been in the works for 20 years, beginning in 2001 when a Connecticut firm was paid $27,000 by the City for a study that determined New Tampa could support a cultural center.
Rendering of the lobby of the NT PAC. (Fleischman Garcia Architecture)
The project fizzled out in 2005, but was revived in 2007, when Hagan and former fellow Commissioner Victor Crist pushed to keep it alive. In 2014, the Village at Hunterâs Lake project, of which the New Tampa PAC is a central part, was initially approved.
Hagan said he has sat through at least 15 different votes on the PAC throughout the years and, at different times over they years, we reported that it was expected to be completed by 2019, 2020 and 2021.
Even that latest projection isnât going to happen, however.
âIâm extremely frustrated that itâs taken this long to execute the (PACâs) construction contract,â Hagan says. âWe should be cutting the ribbon now, not awarding the construction contract. I mean, we designated the funding in 2019. We really should have been up and running by now. That part is very, very frustrating.â
When I first started what was then called WCNT-TV (Wesley Chapel New Tampa Television) with a partner in 2016, my intent was to create something of a hyperlocal TV news station that would one day become a 24-hour âchannelâ featuring news and informational content solely about New Tampa and Wesley Chapel.
A couple of years later, not only had I taken over complete control of our online content from that former partner, we began focusing on short news and informational videos about the people, businesses and restaurants in our communities. That same year, as I was re-branding our online video content as NeighborhoodNewsOnline.net, with the help of a former producer, I applied for â and was stunned to receive â one of only 86 grants worldwide (and one of only 23 in the U.S.) from Google to expand that video content, as part of the online giantâs attempt to combat the growing proliferation of âfake newsâ online.
I was told by Google that even though our Neighborhood News print editions were only about two tiny (but growing) markets, a big reason we received a grant was because we had been in the business of providing real news to and for the residents and businesses of these two small submarkets of the Tampa Bay area for 26 years.
And, that grant money from Google did help us expand our online presence from an average of one video release every two weeks to more than two releases each week of 2019.
Unfortunately, Google didnât see fit to provide us with another grant for 2020 in order to keep that momentum going the following year, which then ended up also being the year that Covid-19 changed everybodyâs business.
Thanks to a Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loan, however, I was able to retain and continue paying all of our employees, including videographer/video producer Charmaine George, but with most people not venturing out of their homes, and working mainly from home from March through much of the summer last year, it was harder for us to continue putting out the same amount of content and even harder to create and release content that people wanted to watch, despite having so much less to do outside.
Even so, we were still able to put out more than two video releases per week, with 74 total releases for 2020, which were viewed nearly 200,000 times, with a Facebook (search âNeighborhood Newsâ) reach of more than 300,000, bringing our overall viewership to close to 2 million through our first five years.
Our ten most-viewed videos of 2020 (all of which were viewed more than 5,000 times each, reaching an average of 12,000+ people each on Facebook) were primarily about new business and restaurant openings, especially Aldi, the Wiregrass Ranch Sports Campus of Pasco County (which had three of our top-10), The Grove, Aussie Grill, Main Event and Pasta di Guy.
Our pace for new video releases has slowed somewhat in 2021, and fewer of you have been watching them, although we also have been encouraged by the fact that our most-watched video ever was our exclusive sneak peek of the all-new Grove Theater (photo) in January, which has, to date, been viewed by more than 32,000 people with a Facebook reach of more than 53,000. We also have had decent viewership of videos about New Tampaâs new Fresh Kitchen and others.
To that end, our plan is to greatly expand our focus on dining and new business opening videos for the rest of 2021. So, if you or someone you know has a new business or one opening soon in either of our distribution areas, please email me at ads@ntneighborhoodnews.com.
The apartments at the new Blue Heron Senior Living in Wesley Chapel are cozy and comfortable. Come check out the facilityâs Open House on Apr. 28. (Photos by Charmaine George)
Whether youâre a senior citizen considering assisted living yourself or you need memory care for an aging parent, I hope youâll take advantage of the opportunity to check out the Blue Heron Senior Living & Memory Care getting ready to open off Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd. south of S.R. 54 in Wesley Chapel, which will be the first in our area that also will provide on-site skilled nursing and rehabilitation services in either of our distribution areas.
Blue Heron, which is being developed by TLC Management, is hosting an incredible Open House celebration on Wednesday, April 28, 1 p.m.-3 p.m., so if you or someone you love is considering moving to an assisted living facility, you should definitely visit that event (or call the number at the end of this story to arrange a tour if you canât make it that day).
The Open House event will include a variety of foods prepared by Blue Heronâs in-house chef, refreshments, live music and tours of this beautiful new addition to the Wesley Chapel community.
Blue Heronâs community relations director Sarah Dymond and executive director Kimberly Lehigh took the Neighborhood News on a recent sneak preview tour of the 159,000-sq.-ft. facility and we definitely came away impressed.
The place, which is visible from I-75, looks huge from the outside (see drone photo), but actually is laid out so that it still feels cozy, comfortable and homey.
The entrance lobby is warm and inviting, with comfortable seating and a gas-fired fireplace where residents and visitors can sit and enjoy each otherâs company. Directly behind the lobby is the equally attractive main dining area, while to your right is an open kitchen area called The Bistro, where residents can enjoy grab-and-go snacks, coffee drinks and other beverages (thereâs even wine on tap) and watch TV as they enjoy their snacks and beverages.
Behind the main dining room is a beautiful outdoor patio, complete with a gas grill, a putting green and plenty of umbrella-covered seating, all overlooking a sizable pond. The outdoor area also will feature live music events for residents.
The first floor also features a great workout facility/wellness center, as well as an art studio/gallery, spa/salon and a life enrichment center.
The separate and secure Memory Care area, which has its own lobby, its own dining room and 22 studio apartments featuring a front-porch-cottage theme, also is on the first floor.
The upper floors are home to Blue Heronâs 73 one- and two-bedroom assisted living apartments, all of which are beautifully designed, with their own kitchens, washer and dryers and easy-access showers.
And, perhaps best of all, Blue Heron is a true rental community, with no buy-in required. âOur residents are free from long-term financial commitments,â Sarah says, âand have the flexibility to manage their own assets and investments.â
Skilled Nursing & Rehab, Too
As mentioned earlier, Blue Heron is the only assisted living facility in either of our distribution areas that also offers both short-term rehabilitation services and skilled nursing care on-site.
For residents who require 24-hour nursing care, Blue Heron has private suites in its health & rehabilitation center, where each resident will enjoy consistent care delivered by a dedicated team of professional, licensed specialists.
Offering short-term rehab in Floridaâs newest state-of-the-art therapy center, Blue Heronâs health and rehabilitation blends the comforts of a luxury hotel with advanced therapies and facilities in a unique âReturn to Homeâ program that includes private suites, advanced therapy equipment, physical, occupational and speech therapies, virtual reality workouts and neighborhood amenities.
âThereâs really nothing like us in this community,â Lehigh says. âOur leadership team is super-excited. I believe weâve hired the best of the best.â
For more information about the Apr. 28 Open House at Blue Heron Senior Living (5085 Eagleston Blvd.) or to arrange a private tour, call (813) 454-0513 or visit SeniorLivingatBlueHeron.com. Â Â