If you’re new to Florida, the attorneys of Spinner Law Firm are hosting a FREE legal symposium on Wednesday, March 1, 6 p.m.-7:30 p.m., at the Hilton Garden Inn Tampa-Wesley Chapel (26640 Silver Maple Pkwy., Wesley Chapel 33544), to introduce you to some of the legal issues you’ll need to deal with as a Florida resident. Attorney Charles Spinner, Esq., will discuss “Insuring Teen Drivers,” Attorney Anissa Morris, Esq., will discuss “Estate Planning Basics,” and Attorney Patrick Barnes, Esq., will discuss “Business Formation Basics.” Refreshments will be provided. To RSVP or for more information, email Jyingling@spinnerlawfirm.com.
The driving range near the front entrance to Saddlebrook Resort and its residential community would be moved if Mast Capitalâs redevelopment plan is approved. (Photo by Charmaine George)
Saddlebrook is becoming Sagabrook, as attempts to revitalize the former great resort continue to be mired in confusion and discontent.
The latest efforts on Feb. 7 to push through an amendment to the resortâs comprehensive plan (in order to change the land-use designations) failed when the Pasco Board of County Commissioners (BCC), after six hours of listening to both sides, chose to delay making any decision.
District 2 Commissioner Seth Weightman acknowledged that some of the changes provided to the BCC by Mast Capital, which owns Saddlebrook Resort, were only being seen that day for the first time and would require further study. His motion for a continuance until the April 4 meeting in Dade City passed unanimously.
âI get the sense weâre all at an impasse,â said Weightman, whose district includes Saddlebrook Resort.
At a Planning Commission meeting on Jan. 5, members were undecided before reluctantly passing it onto the BCC but also telling Mast it needed to add more details.
After six more hours of debate between Mast officials and more than a dozen Saddlebrook representatives and residents, the result was similar, although a vote was not held.
However, Mast did provide a few updates for a plan that has been criticized for lacking details.
It no longer plans on developing Area 4 (which includes the golf courses) with single-family homes and townhomes, instead creating a restricted area which will encompass the existing golf courses.
But, it also showed more detailed plans for removing nine of the 36 holes of the two Arnold Palmer-designed golf courses â introducing a representative from the golf architect company Reece Jones â and showed approximately where in Area 4 the driving range would be relocated. Some of the 27 tennis courts could be eliminated as well.
Mast also promised those homeowners who had a view of the golf course would keep those views no matter what.
But, the residents who spoke want the golf courses and driving range â which also is home to the resortâs golf academy â protected, and argued that the tennis courts are part of what made Saddlebrook famous and should be preserved.
âHow do you attract people without an 18-hole golf course?,â resident Pat Hogan asked. âIf 27 holes is such a great option, why arenât there more of them?â
Hogan acknowledged that the golf course is in need of repair, âBut it doesnât need to be torn up.â
And, the mixed-use development planned for Area 1 â a 35-acre Village Center just east of the resortâs main entrance on S.R. 54 that would replace the current driving range â continues to be a non-starter for the residents.
It includes 75,000 sq. ft. of commercial/retail and office space, 35 townhomes and 465 apartments.
Residents argued that the Area 1 plan is not compatible with Saddlebrookâs overall nature-rich design, would ruin the natural beauty of the resortâs entrance, as well as create a traffic nightmare on the already overloaded S.R. 54.
âThereâs got to be a better way,â said resident Keith Swope. âWeâve been praying for someone to come take over, and now that they have, we are left with a lot of questions.â
A 19.52-acre parcel further east on S.R. 54, labeled Area 2, will be included in Saddlebrookâs boundaries according to the Mast plan, but will have no connections into the resort property. It will include 120 townhomes and 25,000 sq. ft. of retail and commercial space.
Mast paid $15 million for Saddlebrook last year, and the developer said it had big plans to restore the resort and community to their former glory.
However, after a series of meetings with residents â Mast has been criticized for not meeting with all five homeowners associations in Saddlebrook at once â and multiple attempts to get its plans passed on to the state for approval, Mast has been unable to convince the county and planning commission members its plans are ready.
âIâd hate to see it fail because we donât have a good plan,â said District 1 Commissioner Ron Oakley. âI honestly believe (the residents) do want something, they just want (a better plan) than what theyâve been shown by Mast.â
Tampa Mayor Jane Castor speaks to a packed house at Coffee Speaks & Tea Talks on Jan. 27.
The night before Tampa Mayor Jane Castor had to fight off a band of pirates looking to take over the city during the annual Gasparilla invasion, she decided to relax at a New Tampa coffee shop.
At the appropriately named Coffee Speaks & Tea Talks coffee shop in the Pebble Creek Collection, Castor told a standing-room- only crowd of 50-60 people that despite the impending invasion, all was well in Tampa.
She touted some of her achievements during her nearly four years in office, and assured the crowd that she was charging forward on improving two of the cityâs most pressing issues â transportation woes and the lack of affordable housing in the city.
âWe arenât going to stop,â Castor said. âWe are going to find a solution.â
(LThe crowd included Clark Elementary 4th grader Makenna Reel (with microphone) who asked the mayor if sheâd join her club at school and help pick up trash in the local neighborhoods. (Photos: Charmaine George)
The Jan. 27 appearance wasnât as New Tampa-centric as some of her other appearances in the area, but the audience did touch on some HART busing issues, and Castor did say the repaving of Tampa Palms Blvd. is set to begin in the next week or so.
The event lasted just over an hour. Along the way, Castor even committed to helping clean up New Tampa, thanks to the youngest questioner at the event.
Makenna Reel, a 4th grader at Clark Elementary, asked Castor â who told the audience that litter is one of her pet peeves ââ that she had started a club at her school dedicated to picking up trash in the local neighborhoods.
Reel asked if Castor would like to join her later this month when her club gets together to pick up trash along Highwoods Preserve Pkwy. off Bruce B. Downs Blvd. â and the mayor agreed.
The New Tampa stop was part of the âCoffee With Castorâ tour, with the mayor dropping in on small local businesses for some good old campaigning, even though the event was held in the unincorporated part of New Tampa (which doesnât vote in the cityâs upcoming election, which will be held on Tuesday, March 7).
Castor is running for a second term against long-time New Tampa resident and write-in candidate Dr. Belinda Noah (see story on previous page).
Noah, 68, most recently ran in Aug. 2022 for a seat on Floridaâs 13th Circuit Court, losing to Wesley Tibbals, despite garnering nearly 88,000 votes countywide.
Speaking Of Elections…
In other city election news, Hunterâs Green resident and District 7 City Council member Luis Viera has already secured a third term after no one stepped up to run against him.
Viera was one of seven Council members up for re-election this year, but was the only incumbent who didnât draw an opponent. He originally won the District 7 seat by just 65 votes (out of 5,120 cast) over fellow New Tampa resident Dr. Jim Davison in 2016, but beat Quentin Robinson 76%-24% in 2019.
Districts 3 and 6 each have five candidates running for the seats, Districts 1 and 2 have four, District 5 has three and District 4 has two. Districts 1-3 are elected citywide.
âCitywide, about two dozen candidates qualified for Tampa City Council in a very politically acute time,â Viera said. âThe fact that I was re-elected without an opponent in this environment is something I am proud of. I thank my constituents for the opportunity to serve.â â JCC
Tiger Woods has made it official — PopStroke Wesley Chapel/Tampa is opening at noon on Friday, Feb. 17.
The golf legend announced the opening via his Twitter account Thursday morning.
Located just north and east of the intersection of S.R. 56 and Wesley Chapel Blvd., PopStroke is co-owned by Woods and Craig Bartoli. TGR Design, which is Woodsâ golf course design company.
The Wesley Chapel location will feature two 18-hole courses â one will be harder than the other â featuring synthetic turf greens designed to mimic putting on real golf courses. The courses lack the usual mini-golf obstacles, instead focusing on a more realistic experience with undulated greens designed to challenge golfers of all ages, as well as fairways and sand traps.
The mini-golf is complemented by a 10,000-sq.-ft. restaurant and kidâs playground. The restaurant will feature premium food and drinks, as well as 24 different flavors of ice cream. Golfers can see their scores displayed on a large scoreboard, and even order drinks, via an app, that will be delivered to them on the course.
âItâs one of the only concepts I know of anywhere in world, really, where you can find a 3-, 8-. 27- and 80-year-old enjoying it to the same extent,â Bartoli said at the February 2022 groundbreaking.
No matter which scenario proposed by the School District is adopted, Liberty Middle School is expected to lose hundreds of it current students to other schools for the 2023-24 school year. (Photos: John C. Cotey)Â
The long process of finalizing controversial school boundary changes proposed by the Hillsborough County School District is going to take just a little bit longer.
In an email to parents on Jan. 25, Superintendent of Schools Addison Davis wrote that his recommendations, after weeks of community meetings, would not be presented to the School Board on Jan. 31, as expected, and would instead be provided to the parents and the Board at a workshop now scheduled for Monday, February 13 at 10 a.m.
Please note that no public comment is permitted at School Board workshops.
The Board also will hold special meetings on Tuesday, February 28, and Thursday, March 9.
The email also said that between the workshop and the special meetings, five new community meetings would be held. The closest to New Tampa, which isnât impacted as much as other parts of the District, would be held on Monday, February 20, 6 p.m., at King High on N. 56th St.
The School District, which paid New York architectural firm WXY Studio $567,000 to help with the new boundaries, has developed three scenarios, and as many as 24,000 students throughout Hillsborough County could be shifted to new schools. More than 100 of the Districtâs 303 schools could be affected by a process designed to save millions of dollars by improving efficiency, addressing imbalances in enrollment â some schools are overcrowded while others are so far below capacity that they may have to be repurposed â and reducing travel.
âWhen we look at schools that are being overutilized, those are (schools) operating at 110% (of their capacities) or greater,â Davis said. âUnderutilized is 60% or under, and we have 24 schools that must be addressed.â
Many schools in New Tampa could be affected, although none are in danger of being repurposed.
In all three scenarios proposed by the District, for example, 133 students at Heritage Elementary and 49 students at Pride Elementary would be moved to Hunterâs Green Elementary.
Pride is currently at 124 percent utilization, though losing 49 students would still keep it over capacity, at 119 percent. Heritage currently is at 111 percent, but after losing students to Hunterâs Green, would be at a more desirable 95 percent.
Hunterâs Green is currently at 84%, and the influx of new students would put it at 101% of its capacity.
Each scenario means different things for different schools. The only New Tampa public schools not affected in some way are Clark and Tampa Palms Elementary schools.
In Scenario 1, Heritage, Pride, Hunterâs Green, Chiles Elementary and Liberty Middle School would be affected by losing or gaining students.
In Scenario 2, Wharton, Liberty, Benito Middle School, Turner/Bartels K-8 School, Heritage, Hunterâs Green, Chiles and Pride elementaries are affected.
In Scenario 3, the most aggressive of the three proposals, nearly 1,000 students combined at Pride, Hunterâs Green, Heritage, Wharton, Freedom, Chiles and Liberty would be affected.
On paper, it looks as if many students that are bused into New Tampa schools would remain closer to their neighborhood schools instead, saving on travel costs during a time when the district has a bus driver shortage. Changes like Wharton losing 423 students to King (Scenario 2), Chiles losing 112 to Mort (all three scenarios) and Liberty losing 329 to Buchanan (Scenario 1) or 329 to Adams (Scenario 2) middle schools appears to point towards a reduction in bused students, as opposed to moving New Tampa residents.
Hunter’s Green Elementary takes on students from Heritage and Pride in every scenario.
All of the numbers presented so far can change, as Davis takes into account all of the public feedback â 15,000 people have attended community meetings (including the one held at Wharton on Jan. 13), and the districtâs website (HCPS-boundary.org/home) has had more than 335,000 page views, 126,000 address searches and 15,500 comments on the interactive map.
âThe School Board will make the final decision, and they could take any recommendations (by Davis) and make changes to those,â said Hillsborough Schools spokesperson Erin Maloney. âThereâs still a lot of stuff to work out, and none of the numbers you are looking at are final.â
The delay means parents like Dawn Eagle will have to wait a little longer to find out the fate of their children for the 2023-24 school year. She was one of roughly 100 parents to attend the Jan. 13 community meeting at Wharton, hoping to learn her options.
Scenario 2 would move 163 kids from Benito, including Eagleâs daughter, 6th grader Jessica, to Turner-Bartels.
Eagle already has put her sons, who are now at Wharton, through Heritage Elementary and Benito, and would like Jessica to follow the same path.
âItâs closer to our home and all weâve ever known,â she said. âWe know the administration, we know the teachers. Weâve had a great experience and we donât want to disrupt that.â
But Eagleâs concerns go further than that. Jessica is in the orchestra at Benito, and Turner-Bartels doesnât offer orchestra. Also, driving from their home in K-Bar Ranch to Turner-Bartels in Live Oak Preserve would be far more inconvenient.
The Eagles have options, like school choice or magnet schools, and Dawn hopes if Scenario 2 or some version of it is chosen, she would be able to use school choice so her daughter could stay at Benito.
âI do appreciate trying to set up these scenarios and having discussions so the community can be heard,â Eagle says. âI appreciate the effort being made. I understand theyâre trying to do a job and everything comes down to money. Thatâs unfortunate but I get the reality. But logistically, this restructuring for our neighborhood doesnât make sense.â