Jazz Tyme Productions is proud to announce that the Wesley Chapel Jazz Festival will return to the Wesley Chapel District Park on Boyette Rd. on Saturday, October 21, noon-8 p.m. (File photo from 2016)
Although it always features a little more than âjustâ great jazz, itâs hard not to have a soft spot for the Wesley Chapel Jazz Festival, which returns to the Wesley Chapel District Park on Boyette Rd. (two miles north of S.R. 54) on Saturday, October 21, noon-8 p.m.
Event organizer and promoter Tim Hancock of Jazz Tyme Productions has previously survived events where the heat index seemed to reach 120 degrees and one cancelled by torrential rain as the headliner hit the stage.
But, through it all, Hancock has brought great music, some excellent food and other vendors together for all-day shows that are appropriate for families but still allows adults to enjoy adult music and to a location only 15 minutes or so north of the Hillsborough/Pasco county line.
Bring your lawn chairs and/or blankets and grab the kids for some fun activities just for them.
This yearâs Jazz Festival sponsors include the Greater Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce, Rubenstein Law, DeSigns Signs & Printing, Serenity Village Insurance & Consulting, Kaptain Krab Seafood, Jazz Tyme Productions and the New Tampa & Wesley Chapel Neighborhood News.
Food vendors already announced for this year include JBâs Sweet Addictions, Anthony & Son Catering, Mommaâs Empanadas, The Tea Jug, T-Momma Catering & Kaptain Krab Seafood.
New Tampa and Wesley Chapel residents whose homes, possessions or businesses suffered damage or loss as a result of Hurricane Irma may be surprised that the Small Business Administration (SBA) can help them get back in business or help them be made whole again.
The SBA is providing assistance with low-interest disaster loans for Florida residents and businesses in the 48 counties covered by U.S. President Donald J. Trumpâs disaster declaration covering areas affected by Hurricane Irma. Hillsborough and Pasco are among the Florida counties eligible for federal assistance.
Homeowners can apply for low-interest loans up to $200,000 to repair or replace damage to their primary residence and along with renters, can apply for up to $40,000 to cover personal property, including vehicles. SBA homeowner disaster loan rates are advertised as being as low as 1.75 percent with terms up to 30 years.
Help For Businesses, Too
When it comes to assisting businesses and private nonprofit organizations of any size, the SBA disaster loans address not only physical damage to assets such as real estate, infrastructure and inventory, but economic loss as well. Owners can apply for up to $2 million for physical loss and $2 million to cover working capital.
Those loans, called Economic Injury Disaster Loans, are available even if no physical property damage has occurred.
The SBA is advertising loan rates as low as 3.305 percent for businesses and as low as 2.5 percent for non-profit organizations.
The SBA may not be the first place people might think of for homeowner or renter disaster assistance, so public affairs specialists like Mary Gipson and Laura Wages have been dispatched from the agencyâs Disaster Assistance Field Operations Office in Atlanta to spread the word about the resource through local media, including a recent stop at the Neighborhood News office.
Gipson says providing disaster assistance is part of the job. âIn times of presidential or other federal agency-declared disaster, we make loans to businesses of all sizes, nonprofit organizations, homeowners and renters,â she says.
Applications for physical property damage loans need to be filed by Thursday, November 9, and the deadline to return economic injury applications is June 11, 2018.
According to Gipson, if you think you have a claim, apply sooner, not later.
âDo not delay when completing your SBA application,â she says.
The SBA loaned $40,900 in Tampa in 2016, with no reported loans in Wesley Chapel, according to data on its website, sba.gov, where you can find more information and apply online.
You can call (800) 659-2955 (or {800} 877-8339 (for deaf and hard of hearing applicants) or call Mary at (202) 579-3172.
If you prefer to do business in person, there is an SBA Disaster Recovery Center serving Hillsborough and Pasco county residents 36 minutes south of County Line Rd. and Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd., at Hillsborough Community College at the Regent (6437 Watson Rd. in Riverview). It is open daily from 8 a.m. — 8 p.m., according to the SBA website. Applicants can get assistance filling out the form and have their application reviewed before submitting it.
This photo taken by a drone shows the 60-foot gap between Kinnan St. (on the bottom) and Mansfield Blvd. Hillsborough and Pasco counties are stalemated on the issue but continue to discuss connecting the two roads.
There are many things keeping the 60-foot patch of dirt and grass separating Kinnan St. and Mansfield Blvd. concrete-free, but Hillsborough County District 5 Commissioner Ken Hagan wants to make sure money is no longer one of them.
Comm. Hagan proposed adding $250,000 to the county budget on Sept. 14 to be used for a potential Kinnan-Mansfield connection, which the Hillsborough Board of County Commissioners approved, potentially removing one of the roadblocks to resolving the long-standing dispute between Pasco, Hillsborough and the City of Tampa.
Hagan says he has been told there have been recent meetings between Hillsborough and Pasco Countyâs MPO, and a traffic study Pasco commissioned to evaluate a number of connections between the two counties is expected to be finalized in November.
âAt this point, we are waiting for their traffic analysis to come back,ââ Hagan said. âThen, we will reach out to Pasco County administrators and see if we can finally break this stalemate.â
Kinnan St., which runs north from Cross Creek Blvd. to the Hillsborough/Pasco county line, is located mostly in the county, although it does turn slightly west and into the City of Tampa boundaries as it nears Mansfield â where the barricades currently stand.
Both Tampa and Hillsborough County have worked on the issue over the years, but recently the city has declined all requests from Pasco involving putting up any money related to traffic studies or potential construction of the connection.
âI know the City of Tampa staff is unwilling to invest anything to make it work,â Hagan says. âI didnât want the cost to hold us back, so we put the $250,000 in the budget to make the connection. I didnât want money to be a deterrent or in any way delay making the connection.â
The money, Hagan said, it to be used for the actual construction of the connection.
The Kinnan-Mansfield link is seen as an important connection to help alleviate traffic on Bruce B. Downs Blvd. for drivers from both counties, particularly those driving between the residential communities in both New Tampa and Wesley Chapel.
It would also serve as an economic stimulant, Hagan says, as well as assist in public safety efforts in an area where hundreds of new homes are approved to be built in K-Bar Ranch, which is entirely within the city limits.
âI know firsthand, from living in Cross Creek, the frustration of being essentially landlocked,â says the former resident of the Creekwood subdivision of Cross Creek, just two miles from the unconnected roads.
Hagan, the longest-serving current commissioner in Hillsborough County, now in his 15th year, is no stranger to the dispute between Pasco and Hillsborough over the two roads.
As the commissioner in District 2 (which includes Cross Creek, Pebble Creek, Live Oak and many of the communities located in the city in New Tampa) from 2002-10, Hagan has been involved in dozens of discussions about connecting the two roads.
âWe were told that once Wiregrass was fully connected to the north, Pasco would authorize the connection,ââ Hagan says. He said he grew so frustrated during negotiations that, at one point, he threatened to put a toll booth on Bruce B. Downs at the county line.
âI got a lot of very, very favorable response from New Tampa, and a very very hateful response from Pasco County,â Hagan says.
Tampa City Councilman Luis Viera, who represents New Tampa as part of the cityâs District 7, has been a vocal cheerleader for the connection. Viera has called Haganâs move a âgame-changer.â
âIâm glad the county took this step,ââ Viera says. âPasco has its position, we have had ours, but now, this could potentially change things with the involvement of the money. Itâs a very positive step.â
Regardless, residents on the Mansfield side of the debate, as well as their local county commissioner, have remained cool to the idea because of fears that the two-lane road cannot handle additional traffic and that the location of elementary, middle and high schools, as well as Pasco Hernando State College (PHSC)âs Porter Campus at Wiregrass Ranch, all along Mansfield is a safety hazard.
âThe study will probably come back late fall or into winter,ââ Pasco County District 2 commissioner Mike Moore said. âThereâs not much more I can add.â
Comm. Moore said the money appropriated for Kinnan-Mansfield wouldnât have any effect on the decision by his county. He says many of his constituents in Meadow Pointe, particularly Meadow Pointe II & III, do not want Mansfield and Kinnan hooked up, even though itâs been in Pascoâs long-range transportation plan since Meadow Pointe was first developed in the early 1990s.
Based on feedback his office has received, Moore puts the percentage of those opposed at 70-80 percent.
At a public meeting hosted by Pasco County planners at PHSC in April, three potential connections were discussed âKinnan-Mansfield, extending the existing Meadow Pointe Blvd. to the proposed K-Bar Ranch Blvd. and extending Wyndfields Blvd. to both K-Bar Ranch Blvd. and to Morris Bridge Rd.
While Dennis Smith, the chairman of the Meadow Pointe I CDD, said he wanted to see the connection made, others did not. The proposed extension of Meadow Point Blvd., two miles further east, had wider support, Moore said.
âRight now, in my mind, Meadow Pointe Blvd. would be an excellent location,ââ Moore said. âThere is little to no objection to it.â
However, Hagan made it clear the $250,000 the county has allocated is only for the Kinnan-Mansfield connection, not any other connector roads Pasco County may request instead. Multiple connections could be an option.
âWe always talk about regional connectivity,â Hagan says, âand we have (other) connections between the two counties. Itâs just absurd this road hasnât been connected all these years.â
On Saturday, October 15, which is National Pregnancy & Infant Loss Awareness Day, Heritage Isles resident Kimberley Asante will lead an event called âLetâs Not Be Still!â
Itâs New Tampaâs first walk to support the Star Legacy Foundation, which provides research, education and support for families who have lost their babies due to miscarriage, stillborn birth or death shortly after birth.
âIn 2016, I was pregnant with my daughter,â says Kimberley, who lives in Heritage Isles. âMy cousin, who lives in Spain, was pregnant at the same time and was due 10 days after me. We shared a lot of our experiences, because this was the first pregnancy for both of us. On December 31, my baby, Maya, was born happy and healthy. Unfortunately, 2 weeks later my cousinâs baby was stillborn. It was such a horrible loss for the whole family.â
Kimberley decided to do something in honor of her cousin and many other families who suffer similar losses. She says she tried to find an event to participate in, but couldnât find anything closer than Atlanta. Thatâs when she decided to organize the event herself.
The âLetâs Not Be Stillâ walk will start at Heritage Isles Country Club (10630 Plantation Bay Dr.) with registration at 8 a.m. and a family walk at 9:30 a.m. Thereâs a âdiaper dashâ for toddlers ages three and under, and a âkids fun runâ for ages four through 12. Also, there will be a remembrance ceremony at 11 a.m.
New Tampa Girl Scout Cadette Elaine Feaster is collecting books to donate to kids in elementary schools who might not have any books at their homes.
Elaine Feaster is a seventh-grade student at Liberty Middle School in Tampa Palms who lives in Richmond Place.
Sheâs also a Cadette in Girl Scout Troop 1247 who believes in the Girl Scout Law. âIt says to make the world a better place, and I want to do that for kids in need.â
Sheâs been a Girl Scout for five years, in a troop that meets at St. James Church on Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd. in Tampa Palms, and is comprised of 14 middle-school-aged girls from many different schools.
As a Cadette, sheâs eligible to apply for the Girl Scout Silver Award, which requires her to complete 50 community service hours and to create a project that will have a lasting impact on the community.
So, she decided to collect books to help promote literacy, especially among underprivileged kids.
âWe have to get the books in kidsâ hands in elementary school when theyâre eager to learn,â Elaine says. âItâs like riding a bike or learning to swim. You want to learn when youâre young.â
âI totally believe in what sheâs doing,â says Elaineâs mom, Jane. âI was oblivious until Elaine started kindergarten at Clark Elementary and I overheard a teacher saying she had kids wanting to take books home because they donât have any books at home. It blows my mind. Itâs outrageous.â
In Elaineâs research, she says she found statistics such as this: Students who donât read skillfully by the third grade are four times more likely to drop out of school; nearly 85 percent of youths who face trial in the court system are functionally illiterate; and the more types of reading materials there are in the home, the higher the studentsâ reading levels.
So, Elaine teamed up with an organization called Parents & Children Advance Together (PCAT) family literacy program, which provides free programs to underserved children to help them learn to read.
At that time, Elaine collected about 175 books, just from word-of-mouth efforts, and donated them to PCAT.
As support for her project grew, Elaine had to consider how to manage collecting even larger numbers of books, so she asked the New Tampa Family YMCA (16221 Compton Dr. in Tampa Palms), where she and her family are members, if she could set up a donation bin. Now, thanks to the New Tampa Yâs support, anyone can drop off book donations for elementary school students there.
In just a couple of months, about 1,600 books were donated through that bin. After sorting out cookbooks, calculus books, and others that arenât a good fit for elementary school kids, plus setting aside some early education books that would be helpful for PCAT, Elaine still had about 1,500 elementary- level books to donate.
She gave them to Foster Elementary in the Old Seminole Heights area of Tampa, where she says 98 percent of the students receive free or reduced lunch.
âWe actually donated more books than there are students,â Elaine says. âThere are only about 500 kids, and we donated 1,500 books.â She says she was told the teachers would select appropriate books for their classes, so the students would be able to check them out from their classroom libraries to take them home and read, then bring them back for new books.
Elaine says she will continue to collect books at the collection bin until about January. While sheâs currently only collecting books for elementary school reading levels, she encourages everyone to clean out their bookshelves and donate what they have to any local school or even the public library.
Elaine hopes to earn her Girl Scout Silver Award with her efforts for this project, then hopes to build on her project for the Girl Scout Gold Award, which is the highest award in Girl Scouting and is available only for high school students.
She says since she dropped the books off at Foster Elementary in September, she has probably collected an additional 500 books. She will be identifying another school for the next round of donations.
âI just want to thank everyone in the community who has donated books so far,â she says. âWhen I started, I thought my goal would be about 500 books. I didnât expect more than that, but everyone in this community is so caring. Because you donated a book, a child can be a doctor or really successful in life.â