District 1 Winner To Help Shape The Future Of The ‘Connected City’

rachel_oconnor2
Pasco County Commission District 1 candidate Rachel O’Connor answers a question, as fellow candidate Ron Oakley checks his notes at a recent candidate forum in Zephyrhills

Three of the five Pasco Board of County Commissioners seats are up for grabs on Tuesday, November 8, the most interesting of which might just be District 1, which represents the Zephyrhills, Dade City and Wesley Chapel areas.

There are three Republicans on the ballot vying for votes in the Tuesday, August 30, primary election –

(in alphabetical order, as they will appear on the Aug. 30 ballot)

Ronald Oakley, a 71-year-old Zephyrhills citrus farmer and former treasurer and chairman of the Southwest Florida Water Management District board;

Rachel O’Connor, a 31-year-old Pasco County substitute teacher and former Republican Party of Florida field representative who also is a Wesley Chapel resident;

Debbie Wells of Lake Jovita, 66, the director of sales for the Tampa division of Meritage Homes and ex-wife of Pasco Property Appraiser Mike Wells, Sr.

Wells’ son, Mike Jr., currently is Pasco’s District 4 commissioner.

O’Connor and Oakley both ran unsuccessfully for the same seat in the 2012 Republican primary, losing to four-term incumbent Ted Schrader, who this year running for property appraiser.

The winner faces Dimitri Delgado, 51, a no-party candidate, in the general election on Nov. 8.

The three candidates all present similar views on many subjects, with some differences on quite a few, like development, supporting police, improving the area roads and increasing tourism.

The Metro Question

However, at a Pasco County Commission Candidate Forum on Aug. 15, in front of roughly 25 potential voters at the Alice Hall Community Center in Zephyrhills, the biggest difference between the candidates’ views centered on Metro Development’s plans to build a “Connected City” on nearly 8,000 acres of land that sits in District 1.

Debbie Wells
Debbie Wells

Because Metro asked to delay consideration of its plans in front of the commission, originally slated for July, to sometime later this year, the winner of the District 1 race could now cast a crucial vote.

Recent attempts by Metro, as reported by the Tampa Bay Times, to stack an advisory board with hand-picked members while removing public and county representation, as well as a request for impact fee credits typically not afforded to other developers, has raised some eyebrows.

O’Connor is opposed to the project and says she will not vote for it.

“They propose taking the voice of the people away, giving them permission to do whatever they want with the land there,’’ said O’Connor, adding that giving Metro impact fee credits, “would not fly with another developer.”

Oakley and Wells both said they needed more information before deciding if they are in favor of the project, which includes a highly-anticipated “Crystal Lagoon” in the Epperson Ranch Development of Regional Impact (DRI) off Curley Rd., as well as the promise of ultra-fast internet speeds in every home in the development.

“There’s a lot of issues and nuances that are unknown,’’ Wells said.

Oakley said he has had at least seven meetings with Metro Development, and has been unable to figure out “what they are holding back.”

O’Connor, however, questioned whether Oakley or Wells could vote against the project at all, based on the fact they have received a combined $20,000 in campaign contributions — $14,000 for Wells and $6,000 for Oakley — from Metro and its affiliated companies.

“I know Rachel said she was the only candidate that did not take contributions, but they were not offered to her,” said Wells, a claim O’Connor said was not true.

“I would never support that (project), which is why I have not taken the opportunities presented to me to take money from Metro Development,’’ O’Connor said.

Metro also has donated thousands to commissioners who are currently serving and running for re-election.

Oakley defended taking contributions from a development company that will need his vote.

“I did, I got a contribution from them for my campaign,’’ Oakley said. “That money was needed to run my campaign. Just like anybody else that has to run a campaign, it costs money. I can tell you that in that process, I didn’t sell my integrity, I didn’t sell my soul, and I didn’t sell my vote to Metro.”

O’Connor, who has railed against the ‘Good ol’ Boy Network’ during her campaign, said that is not a chance voters should take.

“When you take money from a developer or a builder, you are pretty much saying that they have an open door to you,’’ she said. “And, if they don’t have the door to you, they invest heavily in other county commission candidates. When you take $14,000 from one developer, that is pretty much buying your vote. No way you’re going to say no, I’m sorry.”

Other than the exchange over Metro, the three candidates did not disagree on much.

On the vastly expanding Wesley Chapel area, all three candidates agree that growth and development is a good thing.

Oakley said that the economic development on the east side of Pasco County, primarily in Wesley Chapel, was a “steamroller and it is running down that road” towards Zephyrhills and Dade City. He said that is a good thing, as long as certain controls are in place.

“It’s one of the better things we have going for Pasco County,’’ he said.

Meanwhile, Wells, citing what she said was a 20-plus-year career in business leadership and boardrooms (mostly in real estate, where she is currently director of sales for the Tampa Division of Meritage Homes) said that to continue the growth, she would form a strong partnership with Pasco Economic Development Council (EDC) president and CEO, Bill Cronin. She stressed the need for Pasco to better market itself to continue to attract new businesses.

O’Connor presented a six-point plan for harnessing the growth, including streamlining permitting and updating the county’s technology for handling it, reviewing codes to make sure the county is open to all types of businesses, instead of just a few, creating competitive impact fees and evening the playing field by not playing favorites to certain developers.

All three candidates, speaking in front of a small Zephyrhills audience, said S.R. 56 was going to connect to their city and they needed to be ready and prepared for the growth that is likely to come with it.

Regarding the county’s current issues with homelessness and drugs, Wells said she was a proponent of helping, “but also to enable them to get jobs and get back on their feet.”

Oakley called for a bigger role by local ministries, while O’Connor said working with the sheriff’s office to help stop the drug problem would play a big role in settling the homeless issue.

All three candidates profusely praised both Sheriff Chris Nocco’s office and the county’s other first responders, and promised to help find more funding for those departments.

Asked what is one of the biggest issues facing the district and county, O’Connor said preparing for the upcoming development and population boom that would accompany it is a priority. Wells said the Zephyrhills Airport was a “jewel” and needed attention, and also stressed the need for better county infrastructure. Oakley said he was “very passionate” about improving Pasco residents’ quality of life.

New Wiregrass Elementary Hits The Ground Running On Opening Day

WCElem3It was a countdown worthy of a trip to the stars:

“…three, two, one! Open the door!”

That was the cry from dozens of students and parents gathered outside Wiregrass Elementary off Mansfield Blvd. in Wesley Chapel on its opening day.

Principal Steve Williams obliged the crowd by pushing open the heavy gate and quickly stepping aside, as the surge of youthful humanity streamed in, bringing what had been simply a new school building to life. The scene was captured by a Pasco County School District photographer who posted the video, entitled “Wiregrass Elementary School — First Day,” on the school district’s official YouTube channel.

The significance of a new school’s grand opening was central to the message Williams relayed to the world via the same YouTube video.

“You know, when you build a school, there’s only one chance to have a Day One, and today has been fantastic,” Williams said. “I love to see a brand new school and today has been worth all the hard work that we’ve put into making Wiregrass Elementary.”

Pasco County School District superintendent of schools Kurt Browning was on hand for the big event and likewise went in front of the camera to express satisfaction about the new school’s opening, as well as optimism about its role in the community.

“We’re excited about Wiregrass Elementary School,” Browning said. “It got off to a great start this morning and we’re happy for this community to be able to provide this school.”

WCElemThe school is located about a mile south of S.R. 56, and opened with just over 500 students enrolled.

With a capacity of 800 students, there’s room to accommodate future growth, as developers build more houses in the Wiregrass Ranch Development of Regional Impact (DRI) nearby and families move into them. Like nearby Wiregrass Ranch High (WRH), Wiregrass Elementary is named after the Porter family’s Wiregrass Ranch, which is helping drive a lot of residential growth in Wesley Chapel. Also like WRH, the new elementary school’s mascot is a bull.

Technology & More

Befitting a new school of the digital age, the classrooms at Wiregrass Elementary have been outfitted with some of the latest technology, such as 3-D computing stations, Apple TVs, iPads and MacBooks.

Williams kept his Wiregrass Bulls and their families updated during the school’s construction via the district’s YouTube channel. In his debut video, “Building Something Amazing,” Williams dons a hardhat and sports a fluorescent lime green safety vest over his collared shirt and tie to connect building a school with developing young minds.

“There’s a tremendous metaphor of building a school and building a learner,” Williams said.

WCElem2In the video, Williams extended the metaphor by explaining how families and the community form the foundation for learning and that using the right educational tools for each student is important. For example, doors can open up opportunities for growth and success, and stairs are for overcoming challenges and reaching the top.

“Our expectation is that this is going to be a very progressive and exciting school,” Williams said. “This is the kind of school where the community will want their kids to go because of the amazing outcomes that (will be) coming out of this school.”

You can see the videos mentioned in this story and other official Pasco County School District videos on the school district’s official YouTube channel. To learn more about Wiregrass Elementary, visit the school at 29732 Wiregrass School Rd. in Wesley Chapel, go online at WRES.Pasco.k12.fl.us, or call 346-0700.

New Tampa Piano & Pedagogy Academy Students Perform Royally

piano academy group WEB
First row, left to right: Abraham Schrader, Pavani Parashar, Tanvi Balan, Vinesh Mesaros, Sofia Gonzalez. Second row, left to right: Jane West, Dr. Judith Jain, Aline Giampietro, Benjamin Scotch, Ashley Viradiya, William Piriou and Bhavya Gudaru.

Achieving a high level of proficiency at playing the piano requires dedication and the right instruction. Students at the New Tampa Piano & Pedagogy Academy (NTPPA) on Cross Creek Blvd. demonstrated that they have both, as all 16 of the academy’s students participating in a recent Royal Conservatory of Music exam scored 90 or higher, earning the highest classification — First Class Honors with Distinction.

The Royal Conservatory of Music is the largest and oldest independent arts educator in Canada. The Toronto-based institution’s influence extends internationally through its examination program, which measures a musician’s performance skill and technique. In addition to a grade, participants receive a certificate and written feedback about their performance.

Judith Jain, Doctor of Musical Arts (D.M.A.), founder and executive director of NTPPA, says the Royal Conservatory exam results validate the teaching methods she and her instructors use.

“It’s not a coincidence that you have 16 students taught by just the three of us (see below) all scoring 90s,” says Dr. Jain, a Pebble Creek resident. “It’s the methodology.” She notes that her students’ high scores indicate flawless execution and a high level of artistic expression in performing the exam’s musical pieces.

The name of Dr. Jain’s music instruction studio, one mile west of Morris Bridge Rd. on Cross Creek Blvd., reflects her background and approach to teaching music. She earned her D.M.A. in Piano Performance and Pedagogy (the method and practice of teaching, especially as an academic subject or theoretical concept) from University of Cincinnati College Conservatory of Music in Cincinnati, OH. She has performed as a soloist, with chamber groups and orchestras.

Visitors to NTPPA’s website will read this quote from Dr. Jain: “I teach children so that I can learn from them.” It’s a teaching perspective that Jain says distinguishes her academy from others.

“That’s basic to our philosophy,” she says. “We’re looking at music from all angles because music is not one dimensional.”

Jain opened NTPPA two years ago, when the number of students she was teaching as a private instructor grew beyond what she could accommodate herself. After finding a space adjacent to the New Tampa Dance Theatre (see story on page 22), she outfitted it with a selection of Yamaha grand and upright pianos, as well as a Clavinova digital piano laboratory. Jain also hired faculty to teach, all of whom have Master’s degrees related to music or education.

“I found the right people to work with,” Jain says. “The degree is a given, but the mindset is important.”

Speaking Of Those Instructors…

NTPPA instructor Jane West is a pianist and music scholar with a Master of Arts (M.A.) degree in Historical Musicology from Tufts University in Medford, MA. She has experience as a soloist and chamber music performer. According to West, there is no age limit to learning about music and playing the piano.

“From the moment a child is born up to the point they can take private lessons, which would be roughly 5 or 6 years old,” West says, “there’s that period when you can teach a child concepts and musicianship skills; a sense of rhythm, pitch, being able to sing back and clap back. Those are all skills that then a student can develop in a private (instructional) setting.”

Dr. Jain says that integral to early childhood music education is NTPPA’s Musikgarten program, which is under the direction of Beth Maberry, who has a Master of Education (M.Ed.) from the University of South Florida in Tampa at the Academy.nt piano WEB1

Music is appreciated by people of all ages and anyone who wants to learn how to play the piano can do so at NTPPA, no matter what stage they are at in their lives.

“We believe music is for everybody and we’re here to facilitate your relationship with music,” says Dr. Jain.

For adults who are seeking to expand their skills and horizons, there is the opportunity to combine private lessons and a bit of socializing with occasional group performances and recitals. Dr. Jain says her academy can even create a music education plan for a busy professional or someone with extra time to fill.

“We will craft a program with the person in front of us in mind,” she says.

Even For Recreational Pianists

A new program that the Academy is beginning in the fall is called Recreational Music Making. Jain says it is oriented toward older adults and their needs and interests.

“It’s about wellness and engaging the mind and improving the quality of life for senior citizens, rather than mastering a piece of music,” she says.

As a member of NTPPA’s piano faculty, Aline Giampietro, who has an M.A. degree in Piano Performance from Eastern Washington University in Spokane, sees the commonality of students whatever their age or purpose.

“I want them to really love music and get that in their lives,” Giampietro says. “We teach such a range of students that we can gear the lessons to whatever their goal is.”

Jain says whatever goals or learning styles her students have, she and her faculty will accommodate them.

“We teach to the way you learn,” she says. “Usually it’s the other way around.”

Jain also says she is conducting a search for another faculty member because the demand for instruction at NTPPA is increasing.

While a career in music may be the goal for some students, there are plenty of benefits along the way, as parents of some of Jain’s youngest students will attest.

Sonia Mesaros of Grand Hampton has two children, ages 6 and 10, enrolled at NTPPA. She appreciates how it has helped them develop their educational skills, as well as being a creative outlet.

“I’m seeing that it’s transferring into their academics, especially mathematics and the ability to multitask,” she says.

Mandel Pickett also has two children receiving lessons from Dr. Jain and her faculty. He appreciates how the lessons have encouraged his nine-year-old son to become a musical mentor to his seven-year-old brother.

nt piano labWEB“He plays his entire lesson from memory and he helps his brother out, which really impresses me,” Pickett says.

Eighth-grade student Ashley Viradiya of Tampa Palms attends Terrace Community Middle School in Thonotosassa and has been playing piano for six years, the last two at NTPPA. She is enthusiastic about how music has enhanced her life.

“The piano can help you with creativity and it helps you with many skills,” Ashley says. “It can open up your senses and help you understand things.” Her father, Naresh Viradiya, concurs.

“I have observed a great improvement in her skills,” Naresh says.

While Dr. Jain is pleased with the Royal Conservatory of Music test scores, she puts the results in perspective.

“Whether or not a student takes the test, we teach the same way,” she says.

Of the 16 students taking the Royal Conservatory of Music exam, 12 are from New Tampa and four are from Wesley Chapel. The New Tampa students are: Tanvi Balan, Phu Doan, Niral Gaddi, Bhavya Gudaru, Aeon Johnson, Micah Lawrence, Priya Majethia, Vinesh Mesaros, Pavani Parashar, Abraham Schrader,  Ashley Viradiya and William Piriou. The  Wesley Chapel students are: Milana Schemkes, Sofia Gonzalez, Lauren Scotch and Benjamin Scotch.

The New Tampa Piano and Pedagogy Academy is located at 10701 Cross Creek Blvd. You can learn more by visiting NewTampaPPA.com, or calling 994-2452.

Father Finds Some Solace After Son’s Killer Is Captured

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(l-r)Wade, Wade Jr., William and Lynn Angel.

Wade Angel walked his wife to the garage around 5 a.m. the morning of August 9, kissing Lynn goodbye as she slid into the driver’s seat.

He returned to his computer, where he has spent almost every free moment the past three years in his Wesley Chapel home, and checked his email. One had just popped in, from the State Attorney’s office.

Just one line: “Mr. Angel, we have good news, Christopher Ponce has been arrested.”

He started yelling for Lynn. Even above the din of her car engine, she could hear him, and hopped out of the car, meeting him at the garage door.

He told her what the email said. They started crying, and held each other’s shaking bodies in their arms.

“Three years of bottled-up emotion,’’ Wade says. “One minute we were crying, the next minute we were laughing and jumping up and down, and the next minute we’d be crying again.”

Christopher Ponce, accused of killing 20-year-old William Brooks Angel in 2012 while driving drunk, was arrested in Spain on Aug. 9 after a manhunt lasting more than three years.

Ponce was driving the wrong way in the northbound lanes of I-275 near downtown Tampa when he hit William Angel’s 2000 Ford Mustang, also seriously injuring passengers Jay Davis and Robert Newberry.

On May 9, 2013, Ponce slipped off an electronic monitoring bracelet he had been wearing while awaiting trial for DUI manslaughter. He has been on the run ever since.

In 2014, CNN’s “The Hunt”, hosted by John Walsh of “America’s Most Wanted” fame, profiled the case.

Wade has spent the last three years hunting his son’s killer. Until this year, he had been doing it on a full-time basis, leaving his job building and customizing wheelchairs at Shriners Hospital for Children in Tampa, to set up a website — FindChrisPonce.com —dedicated to the search and asking for tips.

He received many, but they all proved fruitless. New York City police interviewed someone in a bar there based on a tip. In Chicago, police visited a house they were told Ponce might be, and the same for a house in California.

Wade, however, never lost his drive.

“If William were here, he would say, ‘Dad, let it go,’” Wade says. “But, I made a promise. I did this for him, not for me. I wasn’t going to stop.”

He scoured the internet for 15 hours a day, and blogged often about Ponce. Wade was in constant touch with U.S. Marshalls and FBI agents, hopeful they were closing in on the fugitive.

For these last three years, the search consumed him. He says Lynn became concerned.

“But, she understood that the day we went to the funeral home to see my son’s body, I promised him that I was going to make sure that justice was done,’’ Wade said. “I thought by that I meant I was saying I would stay on top of the attorneys and get a proper trial and a lifelong sentence. But then, (Ponce) takes off. So, before I can get justice (for William), I have to find him.”

Although he continues to devote every free hour to the hunt, Wade finally returned to work in January, but not before posting this on Jan. 15, 2016: “I truly feel that this is the year we get him.”

And now, it is.

According to Wade, a reporter for Ideal, a newspaper in Granada, Spain, who broke the story, told him that Ponce had been acting suspiciously in a bus station in nearby Almeria, in southeast of Spain near the Mediterranean Sea, when police asked for his identification.

Ponce supplied a forged Mexican passport, and the name on his bus pass was not his. After fingerprinting him, Spanish police discovered he was listed in an Interpol fugitive database.

Ponce currently is awaiting extradition. The Ideal reporter told him Ponce is currently being held in one of the area’s tougher prisons. That made Wade happy.

He is not surprised at all that Ponce was caught in Spain. He received a tip through the website shortly after starting it in 2013, that Ponce was headed for Spain. So, he began tracking Internet Protocol, or IP, addresses, which are the numerical labels assigned to any device on a computer network that uses Internet Protocol, to see if anyone was checking his site from Spain.

Every month he would download all the IP addresses in a spreadsheet and email them to U.S. Marshalls.

Someone was definitely checking his website from Spain. Once in a McDonald’s, but usually on public wifi from bus stations.

Wade says, “When he was arrested in Spain, I said ‘I knew it!,’” adding that Ponce and his family are too narcissistic to resist the chance to see their names in print and wonder what people were saying about them. That’s one of the reasons, he says, that he started the website, hoping to catch Ponce electronically.

He would try to raise Ponce’s ire — “to get his dander up” Wade says — by posting negative things, hoping to bait him into commenting or trying to contact him.

“Since Christopher is a drunk and an addict, I thought maybe one time he would be drunk and high and he’d make a mistake,’’ Wade says.

Ponce may not have been directly captured because of any leads from Wade’s site, but because he was captured in a bus station, where so many IP address hits had come from, he could have been on his way to use the station’s public wifi.

Either way, it doesn’t matter, Wade says. Ponce will have plenty of time to read the site dedicated to putting him away for life from prison, where he will end up.

Wade’s last website update read, in part: “CHRISTOPHER PONCE HAS BEEN ARRESTED IN SPAIN!!!!!!!! That’s right, the POS is finally in jail.”

Wade promises it won’t be his last post, however.

“The website is still up, and I will continue to write,’’ Wade says. “I will take him (Ponce) through the extradition and then take him through the trial. I’m not done yet. The day he is sentenced, that will be my last post.”

You can follow Wade’s journey at FindChrisPonce.com, or on Facebook at Facebook.com/findchrisponce.

Wesley Chapel Mourns The Loss Of Capt. Jack

Capt_JAckIt was a frequent sight in front of one local Publix — a golf cart dressed up with fire-engine red paint, diamond plate bumpers, and even a fire truck-style bell. Sitting in that golf cart was “Captain Jack,” the nickname John Joseph Whalen, Jr., had since his days as Captain of the Fairview Fire District in Poughkeepsie, NY.

Capt. Jack was known to many as a kind, friendly man, ready with jokes and endless stories for anyone who would take the time to listen.

His golf-cart-turned-fire-truck is missing from the Publix parking lot now. Capt. Jack died on Saturday, August 13.

Shortly before he passed away, the mileage on that golf cart rolled over to 10,000 miles. The round-trip from his home in Meadow Pointe to the Shoppes of New Tampa on Bruce B. Downs Blvd. at S.R. 56 is just over seven miles, so he must have made it more than 1,300 times. That makes sense, considering he made the trip every day he could for the past 10 years.

For years before that, when he was driving his Buick decorated with many stickers supporting his fellow firefighters, he dreamed up that golf cart. When it was time to have it made, because he wasn’t able to drive anymore, his grandson Jason designed it with him. By then, the terror attacks of September 11, 2001, had happened in Capt. Jack’s home state, and it had a deep impact on him. He lost friends and comrades that day, so he designed his own “fire truck” as a tribute.

Then he used that golf cart to connect with people here in Wesley Chapel.

Little Jacky

John Joseph Whalen, Jr., was always called “Little Jacky” as a child to distinguish him from his father. He was born January 31, 1925, and celebrated his 91st birthday surrounded by his family earlier this year. He was a father of three — Greg Whalen, Sue Ann Yero, and John Joseph Whalen, III — with four grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. One of his great-grandchildren carries his name, John, and his youngest great-grandchild is Skylar, who is just seven months old.

Capt_Jack3As a young man, Jack joined the Navy and fought in World War II. His children remember that he had nightmares about the time his shipmate was killed right next to him on the U.S.S. O’Bannon. After three years of service in the Navy, he returned home to New York, where he began working for the Fairview Fire District.

“Whether it was in the Navy, or as a firefighter, he always served people, and saved lives,” says his son, John.

“He had been through a lot,” John continues. “The fires he was involved in, with those old, wood structures in New York, two or three blocks would go up in flames.” Whalen also helped fight a big chemical fire, when the chemical tanks blew up. Many years later, his injuries from that fire caused him to lose one of his legs.

But, that didn’t get him down. Always the jokester, if he bumped his prosthetic leg into something, he’d grab a Band-Aid and put it on his “leg.”

In 2014, Jack lost his wife Louise, whom he had loved for 65 years, to Alzheimer’s. She had been a registered nurse, which is how they met back in the early 1950s. He was a patient being treated for smoke inhalation in the hospital where she worked.

His children say his health was poor and he never expected for her to pass away before him. But, even with his disability, he cared for her at home as long as he could, until she moved into assisted living for the last couple years of her life. “He has lived alone these last two years,” says John, “but he didn’t want any help from us.”

Capt. Jack and Sparky

So, he would drive his golf cart up to Publix – and sometimes Walgreens at the corner of BBD and County Line Road – to visit with people. He would park the “street legal” vehicle, complete with a license plate and handicapped sticker, in the same spot.

There, he would talk with anyone who approached him, whether it was kids wanting to pet his gigantic stuffed Dalmatian, which he affectionately named “Sparky,” or people wanting to pose with him for pictures.

CaptainJack2“He loved to let kids ring the bell on his golf cart,” says John. “He loved to tell jokes and to tell stories about the war, and stories about the fire department.”

Even after the decades of hearing his stories, his children say they never tired of them, and they didn’t feel like they were hearing the same ones over and over again. The jokes, yes. “He’d always ask, ‘Want to see my pride and joy?’ and you’d think he was going to show you a picture of his grandkids or something. Nope,” says John, showing off a little card with a picture of a bottle of “Pride” cleaning product and “Joy” dishwashing detergent. And, if anyone asked for “his card,” he showed them a business card sized paper that just says “HIS CARD” in large letters. Greg, Sue Ann and John saw him make people smile with those two cards quite a bit.

“He was a character,” says Sue Ann. “He was truly larger than life.”

A Bright Light

Capt. Jack loved the celebrity that came along with his unique mode of transportation and his willingness to spend time and share stories with his neighbors, his children say, but not because of an ego. He had always served people, and being friendly was his way to continue serving.

That’s how Meadow Pointe resident Sasha Lash met him. She was walking into Publix one morning with her son — still young enough that she referred to him as a baby, but he was big enough to spot Capt. Jack’s “fire truck” and wanted to go see it. It caught his attention because his daddy — Sasha’s husband — works for Tampa Fire Rescue.

“We said ‘hi’ and he loved that I had a little one,” Sasha remembers. “Capt. Jack let my son pet Sparky and ring the bell on the cart, and he showed him all the stickers.” After that first meeting a couple years ago, Sasha says she saw him often, introducing her older son, now 8, to him, too.

Capt_Jack5As they got to know each other, Capt. Jack had quite a bit of advice for the firefighter’s wife. “One thing stands out,” she says. “He told me to always be open to listen to my husband when he wants to tell stories about the job. First responders sometimes see the worst of the worst, so if he’s in a horrible mood, it may be because of something he’s experienced. He told me to be slow to anger, loving, and always kind.”

Sasha says she considers it, “profound advice” and is grateful for it. “It’s very true and poignant, and it’s just one of the things I learned from Capt. Jack.”

She adds, “It’s like a bright light in Wesley Chapel has gone dim,” Sasha says. “We need more people like him who aren’t afraid to get out into the community and be kind, and spread joy, and make the best of life.”

Fighting Until The End

Capt. Jack got up early every morning, a habit he developed when he was promoted out of shift work at the fire department and began a steady 5 a.m.-4 p.m. shift.  His children remember hearing the scanner in the middle of the night, causing him to jump out of bed and race to a fire. The equipment he had was crude — his son Greg says we should be thankful firefighters have much better technology today — and his kids think Whalen’s health problems were related to all of his years fighting fires without any real protection.

They recall that he always rode in a fire truck with an open-air cab, even in the middle of winter. When calls came in, the firefighters knew the general location of the fire, but they had to watch out the top of the open vehicle to see the column of smoke that would indicate the exact location of the fire. Sue Ann recalls a particular fire, in the middle of winter, when it was so cold the water was freezing as her father and the other firemen tried to use it to put out the fire.

Capt. Jack retired from the fire department in 1979. Louise worked for five more years, then they retired to the warmer weather of Pine Island, FL. Once while living there, Jack had to be airlifted to the hospital. So, he and Louise decided they would move closer to family and closer to more modern facilities. And, in 1996, they bought a house in Meadow Pointe.

When Capt. Jack passed away, he had been in poor health for quite a while. “His heart and lungs were bad from his firefighter days,” says John, as he and his sister, Sue Ann, rattle off a list of problems he was experiencing. “But, he went when he was ready. He waited until I got down here. I was stuck in Georgia and he waited until I got here to say good-bye.”

Sue Ann calls him a “consummate fireman,” and says he had a special relationship with the firefighters from Pasco County Fire Rescue Station 26, located on Aronwood Blvd. in Meadow Pointe. A whole bunch of them came to visit Whalen in the hospital shortly before his death.

Greg says Capt. Jack sat up and smiled. “My brothers are here,” he said.

Capt. Jack’s memorial service will be held on Tuesday, August 30, 6 p.m., at Whitfield Funeral Home in Zephyrhills. The family asks that, in lieu of flowers, donations be made to the International Association of Fire Fighters.

To make it special, the family plans to have his golf cart at his memorial service, where everyone who attends will be asked to ring the bell in his honor.

A formal ceremony also will be held at Bushnell National Cemetery, where Louise already is buried. One of Jack’s grandsons currently serves in the U.S. Army, and he will honor his grandfather by presenting a U.S. flag to the family as part of the ceremony.

Through tears and laughter, his family remembers him.

“He loved his family, he loved kids,” says Greg. But, most of all, “he loved people.”

“He was always larger than life, over the top,” says Sue Ann. “He left a mark wherever he went.”

“You hear about legends – and most of the time they’re fiction,” adds John. “But he was a true legend.”