
Pat Ciaccio says that before Saddlebrook Resort was sold last year to Mast Capital, it was providing a safe haven where intellectually and developmentally disabled adults could work and be accepted.
The former long-time Saddlebrook general manager says that all the years that he worked for the resortâs founder and owner Tom Dempsey, âwere very good to me and my family and I knew that what I really wanted to do was give something back and do something to help people with special needs.â

Ciaccio says he was building on the good work Saddlebrook started when he came up with the idea for his new nonprofit passion project â which he calls the Community CafĂ©, located in the 3,200-sq.-ft. former Keeps Carpet Store building on S.R. 54, less than a half-mile west of Morris Bridge Rd.
âThe Community CafĂ© will create welcoming spaces and provide workforce training opportunities for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities,â Ciaccio says. âI know there are other businesses that hire the developmentally disabled, including Publix, but we want to do even more to help them. We want to train them so they can not only have a job, but actually move up to management positions. Nearly our entire staff of 30-35 employees (when it opens) will be people with these special needs who normally find it difficult to find a job.â
Raised in New Jersey, Ciaccio says his family background spans more than five generations of leaders in the hospitality industry. He says the Community CafĂ© will be home to a gourmet coffee bar and also will sell ice cream and smoothies (see rendering, right). The CafĂ© also will feature a retail shop selling T-shirts, coffee mugs and other branded merchandise. He says he has visited several other businesses around the country with similar concepts, including Rise & Nyeâs in Sarasota.Â

And finally, there is an 1,100-sq.-ft. private event space that will feature artwork (that will be for sale, with all sales proceeds going to the artists) rotating quarterly by intellectually and developmentally disabled professional artists affiliated with Art4All. He says there will be entertainment on Friday and Saturday nights featuring performers with special needs. He adds that the event space will be available for use by community organizations.
Best of all, each area of the Community CafĂ© will have its own âteam leaderâ among the âShining Stars,â which is what all of the employees will be called. Only Ciaccio himself and the CafĂ©âs top management will not have special needs.
The Shining Stars will deliver a high-quality food and beverage experience with exceptional guest service in a tranquil, family-oriented, decompressing, âTeam Greater Than Meâ environment.
Ciaccio says that his goal is to provide cohesive and inclusive workforce training that will offer advancement opportunities for individuals with intellectual and developmental disabilities.
âWe truly are looking to change the current narrative about special needs adults from awareness to education,â he says. âThe narrative must be changed.â
Ciaccio isnât alone in his passion to help those with special needs.
âI am in partnership with Katbrat Studios (which specializes in digital media and content creation), John Lombardo Coaching & Consulting and The Leyda Group (which specializes in leadership coaching and human resources consulting).
The Community Café also will be led and mentored by a five-person Board of Directors: Dr. Alexis Dempsey-Doyle, Jodi Gordon, Wasim Kayal, Seth Ravenna and Dr. Mohamad Saleh.
âWe plan to connect the community through educational workshops and podcasts in the CafĂ©âs event center while providing an exceptional food and beverage experience,â Ciaccio says.
As though heâs not already busy enough, Ciaccio, Tom Dempsey and Erik and Seth Ravenna also are opening Johnny Câs Italian Eatery on Cross Creek Blvd. in New Tampa, in the former Precinct Pizza location.
Get More Info On Apr. 18!
Although Ciaccio says he anticipates that the Community Café will open on or around June 15, he and his leadership team will host a News Conference that will be open to the entire local community, as well as the media. The event will be held on Tuesday April 18 (the day many of you will receive this issue in your mailbox), at 11 a.m., at the Hilton Garden Inn Tampa-Wesley Chapel (26640 Silver Maple Pkwy.). Ciaccio says he thanks Hilton Garden Inn GM Charlie Whiteacre for graciously agreeing to host this event.
âI also would like to thank all my partners and community members who already have reached out to lend support,â Ciaccio says. âIt takes a village but together, I know that we can change the narrative!â
For more information, visit CommunityCafeFL.com.

