Town hall meetings are all the rage this days, with the operative word, in too many cases, being rage. Constituents are demanding answers from their representatives, especially regarding healthcare issues, and the disruptions and anger make national news on a seemingly weekly basis.
A New Tampa town hall, organized by District 7 City Councilman Luis Viera and held June 5 at the New Tampa Recreation Center, however, couldnât have gone any smoother.
âIt really shows that people are engaged,ââ Viera said. âThe next one we have will probably be even bigger.â
Here are five takeaways:
1. This Was A Good Idea
If youâve ever wondered what is really bothering people in New Tampa, the town hall, which attracted roughly 75 local residents, including many of the areaâs Homeownerâs Association presidents, was a good place to find out.
Outside of the usual complaints about taxes and transportation, those who attended raised a number of issues like trash on Cross Creek Blvd, local commercial buildings looking run down, bank foreclosed property causing a blight in otherwise well-kept neighborhoods and even concerns about the ability of ethnic minorities to worship safely.
This is exactly what Viera says he had hoped for when he scheduled the event. With code enforcement inspector Fred George and Tampa Police Department District 2 shift commander Kevin Schoolmeesters in attendance, some of the simpler questions raised will undoubtedly be answered. Most important, Viera said, was that a majority of those who raised concerns seemed to be satisfied with the answers.
For the bigger, more complicated issues, like transportation and the city budget, it was a step in the direction of creating a unified front when it comes to lobbying city hall for changes. Viera has already formed the New Tampa Council with this idea in mind.
âWe need a collective and unified voice,ââ Viera said.
Although Mayor Bob Buckhorn couldnât make it, his chief of staff, Dennis Rogero, did attend. And, while he didnât really have any concrete answers for those asking questions, he was certainly enlightening and honest, even if it meant telling people things they didnât want to hear.
More on that later.
2. The Big Issue
To quote Bob Parker of Heritage Isles, the biggest issue in New Tampa is âtransportation, transportation, transportation.â
While Pasco and Hillsborough counties remain at loggerheads over connecting the two at various points between Meadow Pointe and the K-Bar Ranch, traffic is a real concern for local residents along Cross Creek Blvd.

The City Council recently okayed plans for 400 more homes to be built by M/I Homes in the K-Bar Ranch area. âYou should be ashamed,ââ Parker scolded, considering thereâs only two two-lane roads in and out of the area.
âI feel like I live on an island,ââ Parker added, âand there are two causeways, Bruce B. Downs (BBD) and Morris Bridge Rd.â
That lack of options is preventing people from getting to hospitals, and making the long drives to work in Tampa unbearable. âItâs killing New Tampa,ââ he said.
Rogero said the city is well aware of the issue. âYou are right, you might as well live on an ocean,ââ Rogero said. âWe hear the horror stories. Thatâs one of the reasons I live in South Tampa. We looked here. Itâs beautiful up here. But, I didnât want to add a couple of hours in commute time to my schedule.â
That might be unsettling â to hear the mayorâs Chief of Staff confess to avoiding our area because of the traffic â but Rogero was honest and admitted he didnât have any answers.
Viera didnât expect answers. But the Hunterâs Green resident is advocating for some âincrementalâ changes.
One that should sound good to residents of Cross Creek âIsland,â is a third left-hand turn signal onto Bruce B. Downs at the very busy intersection that Viera said he will propose.
Another possibility that was raised: Putting the controversial East-West Connector back in the MPO.
Jim Davison, who narrowly lost to Viera in the City Council runoff in December, applauded his former opponent for the town hall and the New Tampa Council, and suggested a second town hall, perhaps with a more narrow focus on one topic, like transportation.
Viera said he hopes to hold another one in December.
3. Getting The Short Shrift
Rogero got an earful from local attorney Tracy Falkowitz, who lives in Tampa Palms, about the plight of the New Tampa Rec Center.

For the second time in five years last year, the City Council voted to provide funds for a different project â the Cuscaden Park pool in Ybor City â instead of the rec center, even though a $1.5-million, 14,000-sq.ft. expansion of the facility was originally included in recent budget drafts.
Despite spending $3.2 million on renovating the Cuscaden Park pool and re-opening it last August, it was closed again in April for more repairs. It has since re-opened.
âThis area has been short-shrifted every year,ââ Falkowitz said. âThat money needs to come back. This amazing facility does so much with so little. We want our expansion. Every year that money allocated for here gets sent somewhere else, and itâs my understanding that this year itâs not even included in the budget.
She added, âIt constantly sends the message: New Tampa, just send us your money, then sit down and shut up. Thatâs what weâre all being told. So as the budget guy, what are you doing to make sure the community gets what it deserves and was supposed to be given to us six years ago.â That statement drew the nightâs loudest round of applause.
Rogero said, however, that it is a misconception that what an area pays in property taxes, it will get back in enhancements. It is a misconception, in fact, shared by quite a few residents.
âWe allocate one big pot of general funding for the priorities of the city, city-wide,ââ Rogero said. âWe donât necessarily try to return dollar for dollar to any particular area. Thatâs simply not the way property taxation is set up.â
Rogero admitted that there is a need in New Tampa for the expansion â the dance and gymnastics programs have roughly 800 students and the waiting listâs cup runneth over â but as each priority is paid off, âby the time we get to the New Tampa Rec Center on the list, weâre out of money.â
Viera said he wasnât surprised at all that people remain angry about the rec center. âItâs the reason we held the town hall there,ââ he said. âI think itâs symbolic.â
4. Did Someone Say Secession?
Falkowitz ended her comments by mentioning that instances like the rec center expansion being cut out of the budget is why the subject of New Tampa de-annexing from the City of Tampa came up in the last election (and continues to come up). âWhat would the city do without the funds from (New Tampa),ââ Falkowitz said, which got at least two people in attendance to clap. âWe are very, very unhappy with how we have been treated by city of Tampa.ââÂ
âFrom the cityâs perspective,â Rogero replied, âwe donât feel that weâre mistreating New Tampa.ââ
There were a few people in the room who didnât agree with Rogero, including former City Councilman Joseph Caetano, a longtime proponent of New Tampaâs secession.
Viera is strongly opposed to the idea. âIâve never thought that was a good idea,ââ he said, adding that if people knew what that entailed, they would be opposed, too.
5. Organize & Be Heard
Brad Van Rooyen, who is on the New Tampa Council, and Davison asked a simple question in regards to tax monies â how can New Tampa get the city to pay attention to its needs and to increases services to the area.
Rogero echoed what Viera has been saying, and really, the reason for town halls like this â make your voices heard.
âI have to tell you, it could be that some of you have shown up to the budget meetings, but I can guarantee all of you havenât,ââ Rogero said, âbecause thereâs typically less than a dozen people there. I appreciate your emails, and your phone calls, but when itâs a billion-dollar budget and another half billion of capital improvement projects, your city council is looking at an empty room. I canât tell you what prioritization comes to their minds. I can almost guarantee you, though, it wonât be yours.â
Talk of taxes, transportation, budgets and secession aside, most in attendance seemed to be looking for answers to simple problems, like beautifying Bruce B. Downs â Viera is already talking to officials about getting mowers out to New Tampa more frequently — and local commercial buildings and taking care of bank-foreclosed homes.
George, who admits his code enforcement department is understaffed, encouraged people to call in complaints to (813)-274-5545, because he canât see everything.
Others remain concerned about the countyâs plans to stop courtesy buses for students who live within two miles of their school, which will result in students having to cross over BBD by foot. (Walking pedestrian bridge, anyone?)
Residents seemed pleased with the TPD, and were complimentary about the service they receive, like the visits you can get from officers when you are on vacation just by calling (813) 931-6500. And code enforcement and police requests while on vacation can also be filed via TampaGov.net, the cityâs website.
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