As a proud member of the Rotary Club of New Tampa Noon â which meets Wednesdays at noon in Mulliganâs Irish Pub, inside the Pebble Creek Golf Club â I am really excited about my clubâs fourth annual bike rally (the photo is from last yearâs event) to benefit U.S. military veterans and first responders.
The ride â which is not a race â is an opportunity for riders to ride a 4-, 18- or 39-mile course, starting from the Chiliâs Grill & Bar on Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd. (directly adjacent to the BBD entrance to Flatwoods Wilderness Park) while raising funds to benefit four nonprofit charities that help local veterans, law enforcement and firefighters.
Over the first three years of the rally, Noon Rotary president Valerie Casey says that more than 200 total riders have helped the club raise more than $18,000 to helped its selected first responder charities. âWeâd love to get to 100 riders this year,â Valerie says. âCome on out and support some great charitable organizations.â
Proceeds from this yearâs event will benefit four charitable organizations â Support the Troops, the Stay in Step Spinal Cord Injury Recovery Center, Hillsborough County Fire Rescue & The Homefront Foundation. The suggested donation to ride is $30 anytime after March 10.
This yearâs sponsors include Chiliâs, The Little Greek Restaurant, Gentle Care Dentistry (the office of Dr. Tom Frankfurth), Stifel Financial/Mike Wallace, Childrenâs Dentistry (the office of Dr. Greg Stepanski), State Farm Insurance/Joyce Coleman and the New Tampa & Wesley Chapel Neighborhood News.
For registration & info, visit Active.com and search âCycling for Vetsâ or see the ad in the latest New Tampa issue.
Florida Hospital Center Ice Provides The Perfect Venue For The Triumphant Return Of The âTaste of New Tampa & Wesley Chapel!â
Congrats to all of my friends in the Rotary Club of New Tampa (which meets Friday mornings at Tampa Palms Golf & Country Cub) for successfully bringing back âThe Taste of New Tampa & Wesley Chapel,â in partnership with the Greater Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce (WCCC).
An estimated crowd of about 2,000 people came to sample the wares from the 49 restaurants and beverage providers my restaurant committee assembled for the event, which was held on March 18, inside surprisingly not cold Florida Hospital Center Ice off S.R. 56.
The School District plans to move students who live in Arbor Greene & Cory Lake Isles to Hunterâs Green Elem. for 2018-19 school yearÂ
**Please note â This story had to be updated after we went to press (on March 17) with our March 24 New Tampa issue. The information about which students the Hillsborough County School District planned to move wasn’t made available to the public or the media until March 21st.
On Thursday, March 30, 6 p.m., officials from Hillsborough County Public Schools will meet with parents at Benito Middle School (10101 Cross Creek Blvd.) to discuss proposed changes to attendance boundaries.
The affected schools will include Pride, Heritage, Hunterâs Green and Clark elementaries. These changes will not take effect for next school year (2017-18), but the following year, starting in August 2018.
The biggest change in the proposed boundaries is that the students from the University area who currently are being bused into Hunterâs Green and Clark are being reassigned to neighborhood schools closer to their residences to make room for expected growth â about 1,500 homes â in K-Bar Ranch.
Then, the boundaries of the four schools along Cross Creek/New Tampa Blvd., are being adjusted to balance attendance at those schools.
In the proposal, 563 students who live in Arbor Greene and Cory Lake Isles who currently are assigned to Pride will be re-assigned Hunterâs Green, says Lorraine Duffy Suarez, Hillsborough County Public Schools’ general manager for growth management. âWeâre changing a lot of students, and I understand that,â Duffy Suarez says. âThey have a lot of pride in their Pride, but Pride canât hold all the students who are going to come there.â
She says moving so many students should give the affected students a measure of reassurance. âThe whole neighborhood is moving,â she explains. âYouâre going to a different school, but youâre taking 562 of your friends with you. Itâs like a big chunk of Pride is now going to be called Hunterâs Green.â
She explains that, while it may be uncomfortable for those who are affected, the change is needed. âWe monitor growth, and we know how much growth is coming, and we have to accommodate it,â she says. âPride was built on land that we bought from K-Bar Ranch. The school was sited there because we knew that development was coming. Now is the time.â
School grades for last year, which are based on test scores, rank Pride and Clark as A schools, Heritage as a B, and Hunterâs Green as a C. For those families moving from Pride to Hunterâs Green, Duffy Suarez says, âYouâre not moving from an A school to a C school, youâre taking your A school with you.â
Another proposed change is that students who are residents of the Morgan Creek apartments, just north of the Bruce B. Downs (BBD) Blvd. exit off I-75 will move from Hunterâs Green to Clark, which affects assignments for 187 students.
Students who live in most of K-Bar Ranch, who currently are assigned to attend Heritage, will move to Pride. This affects 154 students. Some students who move into areas of K-Bar Ranch that are not yet built, along with students in Easton Park, will remain at Heritage.
Duffy Suarez explains these numbers are not exact. âThese are the numbers of students who are assigned to (those) schools,â she says. âNot every kid we assign to a school actually goes there.â Some students attend magnet, charter, or private schools, or are homeschooled.
Jason Pepe, chief community relations officer for Hillsborough County Public Schools, encourages all parents and interested community members to visit a special webpage thatâs been set up with frequently asked questions regarding the changes that are happening in New Tampa and surrounding areas. It is available at sdhc.k12.fl.us/doc/1831/universityfaqs.
âThe purpose of the FAQs is to be transparent,â says Pepe. âWe have shared everything we know at this point and we really want to get this information to as many people as possible.â
Comments from parents and the community will be accepted at the meeting on March 30, as well as via email.
Duffy Suarez explains that the meeting will be âopen houseâ style. âWe have tables and stations set up for people to ask questions,â she says. âFor example, if youâre being changed, you can go talk to the principal of the school youâre moving to.â
She says theyâll have maps set up, and she and her colleagues will be there to explain the maps to those who attend.
There also will be staffers on hand at the meeting who can answer questions about the process for choosing a different school, rather than their assigned neighborhood school.
âOur purpose in this meeting is to hear from (people who are affected by the changes),â Duffy Suarez says. âWe will take written comments, and then we (will) come back and sort through it. We canât make everyone who doesnât want to move not move, but we will review comments and rationale and can make changes to the proposals.â
Plans outlining the new proposed school boundaries were released on the school districtâs website at sdhc.k12.fl.us on March 21 (after we went to press with our latest issue, hitting mailboxes Friday).
These proposed changes will not take effect for next (the 2017-18) school year, but the following year, starting in August 2018.
âItâs important to recognize that these changes are (only) proposed,â says Pepe. âAll boundary changes have to be approved by the School Board.â
Comments from parents and the community will be accepted at the meeting on March 30, as well as via email. Changes may be made based on that input before a final recommendation is made by school superintendent Jeff Eakins to the seven-member School Board.
The School Board is expected to consider the proposed recommendation â including any changes made as a result of comments from the community â at its meeting on Tuesday, May 16.
We keep telling you everything thatâs happening in Wesley Chapel in every issue of this publication, but quite honestly, itâs hard even for us to keep up with everything going on in this community.
âMarch For Babiesâ Kickoff
I attended the Feb. 22 kickoff event (at Pasco Hernando State Collegeâs Porter Campus at Wiregrass Ranch) for the 2017 Suncoast March of Dimes âMarch for Babies,â which will be held Saturday, April 29, 8 a.m., at the Shops at Wiregrass mall. The annual walk is the largest fund raiser for the March of Dimes, which invites you to walk for more babies to be born healthy. Premature birth is the number one killer of babies and the March of Dimes, which was founded in 1938 by former U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt (afflicted with polio himself) to combat polio, which at that time, was a tremendous worldwide killer and crippler of babies. Since then, the organization has focused its efforts on helping mothers and babies live healthier lives.
The 2017 Event Chair, Jennifer Cofini (photo above), who works for the Parks Auto Group, has two children, Dylan and Madison, both of whom were born prematurely (although they are both healthy today), so the March of Dimes is near and dear to her heart. Jen and her committee hosted more than 100 people at the kickoff event, many of whom work for Publix, a major sponsor of this yearâs March.
According to MarchforBabies.org/ EventInfo?EventID=18398, the March already has raised more than $25,000, with Cofiniâs goal being $250,000. WTVT-TV Fox 13 news anchor Linda Hurtado hosted the kickoff event, and quite a few parents of premature babies who amazingly survived being born as early as 29 weeks into a 40-week pregnancy brought those children along with them to the event; some even told their amazing, heart-wrenching stories of courage.
I hope youâll visit the previously mentioned website to make a donation and show up at the mall for a nice, three-mile walk to benefit this wonderful cause.
WRH Team Wins âPeopleâs Choiceâ At Dessert Contest
I also was on hand on Feb. 23, for the Pasco Education Foundation (PEF)âs second annual dessert contest (held at Land OâLakes High), whereby teams from all five high school Culinary Academies in Pasco County competed to be able to provide dessert for more than 200 guests at PEFâs upcoming âCinderella Ballâ (to be held tomorrow night at Heritage Springs Country Club in Trinity), the foundationâs largest annual fund raiser. Although a team from Land OâLakes High won first place from the four judges, one of the two teams (photo, left) from Wiregrass Ranch High (WRH) took home the âPeopleâs Choiceâ award for its strawberry dessert.
My surprising (to me) favorite of the seven confections everyone in attendance got to sample that night was the â24 Karatâ dessert provided by the other WRH team. It had just enough of a hint of cayenne pepper in it to give this chocolate delight a unique kick.
And, donât forget to check out the latest episode of WCNT-tv on YouTube. Weâve now had nearly 250,000 views and a reach of more than 500,000 through 17 episodes!
Curtis Reeves said he believed he was in a âlife-or-death struggleâ with Chad Oulson before killing him on Jan. 13, 2014, at the Cobb Grove 16 Cinemas.
Curtis Reeves will face second-degree murder charges for the shooting death of Chad Oulson at the Cobb Grove 16 Cinemas in Wesley Chapel after Pinellas-Pasco Circuit Judge Susan Barthle ruled March 10 that the controversial âstand your groundâ defense did not apply in his case.
Reeves, a 74-year-old retired Tampa Police Captain, and Oulson, who was 43 when he died, had an altercation at the cinemas prior to the showing of the movie âLone Survivorâ on Jan. 13, 2014.
Reeves claimed he feared for his life and that Oulson was aggressive towards him after Reeves asked him to stop texting during the movie previews. Reeves claimed Oulson punched or threw a cell phone at him, and that he had no choice but to shoot.
Oulson was shot in the chest and died at the scene.Â
Reevesâ attorney, Richard Escobar, invoked the âstand your groundâ defense, which says a person does not have to retreat when confronted and can use deadly force if they feel they are in danger of bodily harm or death. If âstand your groundâ is permitted by the judge, the accused does not have to stand trial.
But, a two-week-long hearing (Feb. 20-March 3) failed to convince Judge Barthle that it was applicable.
âAfter careful consideration of all of the evidence provided in this case, this court finds that the defendant did not credibly demonstrate that he reasonably believed it was necessary for him to use deadly force in this situation, therefore, defendantâs motion is DENIED,â Judge Barthle wrote.
Reevesâ defense hinged on his account of being attacked by Oulson and in fear for his life. According to Reeves, Oulson, who was sitting one row in front of him, was coming over the seat to attack him and practically on top of him when he pulled the trigger.
âThe defendant testified…that he was grabbing the alleged victimâs chest or body with his left hand while he fired the fatal shot with his right hand, and even stated that he was surprised he did not shoot himself in the hand while doing so: The video evidence and other witness testimony contradicts this assertion also,ââ Judge Barthleâs order stated.
The closest Oulson came to Reeves is when he grabbed Reevesâ bag of popcorn and threw it at him.
âThe video then shows the defendant lunge forward with his right arm extended, and fire at the alleged victim, who at that point was so far back from the defendant that he could not even be seen in the video anymore,ââ Judge Barthle concluded. âHe certainly was not on top of the defendant, and plainly, the defendantâs left hand was nowhere near the alleged victimâs body.â
Reeves, who is 6 feet, 4 inches tall, was portrayed by the defense as old, frail and fearful for his life, but the judge concluded that he was anything but that fearful victim.
âHe is quite a large and robust man,ââ she wrote. âHe also appeared quite self-assured when he was testifying, and certainly did not appear to be a man who was afraid of anyone.â
Reeves testified for six hours during the hearing on Feb. 28, claiming that he politely asked Oulson to stop using his cell phone as the previews began.
Oulson swore at him, Reeves said. He said that Oulsonâs wife Nicole was talking to him.
âI felt like he would ultimately comply,ââ Reeves testified.
Reeves also said that when Chad Oulson returned to his phone, he told him he was going to the cinema manager to complain. When Reeves returned from talking to the manager, he said he noticed the phone was off, and said he apologized to Oulson for involving cinema management.
That contradicted Nicole Oulsonâs testimony of Feb. 23, when she claimed that Reeves was anything but polite in asking her husband to turn off his phone, calling it more of an âorderâ than a request.
And, she said, when he returned after talking to management, Reeves did not apologize, but rather goaded her husband.
âI see that you put the phone away now that I went to get management,ââ she testified that Reeves said to her husband. âIt was not a polite, âOh, thank you for putting it awayâ…It was to keep nagging at Chad…to keep the argument going.â
According to Reeves, a few seconds later, Chad Oulson stood and confronted him, as Nicole tried to restrain him.
âWhen I looked up, he was coming over the seat at me, across from where my wife was,â Reeves said. âI saw just a snapshot of something dark in his hand. Almost immediately, I saw what I perceived to be a glow from a light screen right in front of my face, and I was hit in the face.â
Reeves claimed the blow almost knocked the glasses off his face.
At that point, he testified that he began to fear for his life. âI realized I was in a life-or-death struggle,â he said.
Witness Mark Turner, a retired U.S. Air Force officer who was sitting a few seats down from Reeves, said he heard Reeves say something like, âThrow popcorn in my faceâ almost simultaneously with the shot being fired.
Two other witnesses sitting nearby in the theater, also testified that they heard Reeves make the popcorn comment. Another witness to the shooting, Derek Friedhoff, said the popcorn comment was prefaced by âshow you.â
Sumter County Sheriffâs Sgt. Alan Hamilton, who was off duty that day but taking in a movie, delivered what was some of the most damaging testimony to Reeves on Mar. 1.
Sgt. Hamilton testified that he saw the popcorn fly, followed almost immediately by the flash of the gun. He moved to where the shot came from, and said he heard Curtis Reevesâ wife Vivian say, âThat was no cause to shoot that man.â
He then claimed Reeves scolded his wife.
âHe pointed his finger at her and told her to shut her mouth and to not say another f-ing word,ââ Hamilton recalled.
Hamilton said he identified himself as a deputy and took the pistol Reeves had shot Oulson with away from the suspect.
Hamilton also testified that while he was keeping an eye on the altercation, he did not see Oulson climb over a seat to get at Reeves, as Reeves testified, or throw a cell phone or a punch at him.
âCommon sense and the credible testimony of the medical examiner casts grave doubt on the likelihood of anything hitting the defendant in the eye beneath his glasses in the manner the defendant described,ââ the judge wrote. âWhich begs the question, why did the defendant say he was hit. in the left eye to the point of being dazed, when the video images and basic physics indicate that he did not get hit in the left eye with anything? The logical conclusion is that he was trying to justify his actions after the fact.â
In audio recordings of Reevesâ being interviewed the day of the shooting, Reeves can be heard saying what he had done was âstupid.â
âIf I had it to do over again, it would never have happened,â he said. âWe would have moved. But, you donât get do-overs.â