The Chamberâs first annual New Tampa Business Forum on September 29 at Tampa Palms Golf & Country Club was a big hit with those who attended. The Forum featured a highly informative and entertaining âPersonal Branding in a Connected Worldâ workshop presented by Bernie Borges (CEO of Find and Convert and author of Marketing 2.0) and a candid keynote address by John Harding, regional President/CEO of Adventist Health System/University Community Health about the state of health care in the U.S. The Chamberâs annual member Business Expo, cocktail hour, awards ceremony and installation of new officers completed the evening. Roughly 40 Chamber members were on hand to promote their businesses to members and guests during a lively evening of networking in the Grand Ballroom at Tampa Palms Country Club.Continue reading
Wesley Chapelâs First Synagogue Opens In Time For High Holy Days
By Sean Bowes
After years of meeting in hotel conference rooms, and composing services in the living rooms of each otherâs homes, the Jewish community in Wesley Chapel (and northern New Tampa) now has a synagogue to call its own, one that opened just in time for the Jewish High Holy Days.Continue reading
New Tampa Juniors Kick Off âBooks For Troopsâ Collections
âBooks for Troops,â a new project by the General Federation of Womenâs Clubsâ (GFWC) New Tampa Womanâs Junior Club (NTWJC) and Juniorettes will be officially starting in October and the club has three new business partners to assist with the collection.Continue reading
S.R. 54 Widening Expected To Be Completed By December!
By Gary Nager
It canât be soon enough for Wesley Chapel residents who live or work near S.R./C.R. 54 from west of I-75 to just east of Curley Rd., but the good news from the Pasco County Project Management-Design department is that the widening of S.R./C.R. 54 is expected to be completed and open to the public by the first week in December.Continue reading
Womanâs Death From Fumes Sparks Concern About Carbon Monoxide Detectors
By Sean Bowes
Following a two-week-long investigation led by Tampa Police Department (TPD) homicide detectives, the Hillsborough State Attorneyâs office has ruled that no charges will be filed against Andrew Grywalski, 22, a New Tampa man who, police say, forgot to turn off the ignition in his car. As we reported last issue, the mistake left one of Grywalskiâs neighbors, Rebecca Hawk, 23, dead from fumes that leaked into her apartment. TPD officials are calling the death a âterrible accident.â
But, many hope that Hawkâs memory will live on through a new Florida law. Ms. Hawkâs friends and some strangers have come together to urge lawmakers to change the current regulations regarding the installation of carbon monoxide detectors in all residences. A friend of Hawkâs, Heather Donaldson, is calling the movement âHawkâs Law.â She says that if the changes arenât made to the current regulations, more innocent people like Rebecca could be injured or die.
âMy ultimate goal is to require every apartment, condo, townhome and duplex with an attached garage to install a carbon monoxide detector,â Donaldson says.
Donaldson also has started a Facebook page to raise awareness about the movement. At our press time, the page had 90 followers.
Currently, Florida law requires that only buildings that were constructed after July 1, 2008, must have carbon monoxide detectors installed within 10 feet of each bedroom. At this time, only 26 states have laws that require the use of carbon monoxide detectors in apartments or single-family homes.
Donaldson wants to make Florida the 27th state to require the detectors in all residences with attached garages. She is asking supporters to write to their state representatives to get the legislature to pas a new law that could prevent future tragedies. Donaldson adds that Hawk, who had been working for only ten weeks at the Hillsborough County Sheriffâs Office (HCSO), where she trained as to be a child protection investigator, lived her life to help others.
âMy goal is to prevent other people from suffering the pain we had to suffer in losing such a wonderful person,â Donaldson says. âKnowing that Rebecca wanted to impact peopleâs lives, I believe she would want us all to do this for her.â
Carbon monoxide detectors cost as little as $20 and can be bought at locally at hardware stores like Home Depot and Loweâs. The detectors function by measuring the carbon monoxide levels in a closed environment and if dangerous levels of the gas accumulate in a room, an alarm alerts residents, giving those inside the residence adequate time to evacuate their home.
The Centers for Disease Control estimates that carbon monoxide poisoning annually claims nearly 500 lives, and causes more than 15,000 visits to hospital emergency departments.
AThe TPD report says that Hawkâs roommate, Kashaunda Joyner, 20, and a 62-year-old neighbor, were taken to University Community Hospital and were treated after inhaling the fumes. They were both released later that day.