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B.C. Manion

Respecting ‘Old Glory’ throughout the year

June 14, 2017 By B.C. Manion

While the nation sets aside June 14 to celebrate Flag Day, a local group of U.S. Marine Corps veterans wants to honor local residents and business owners who respect Old Glory every day of the year.

The Marine Forever Detachment No. 1440 has established the American Patriot Award to do just that.

A local group wants to honor residents and businesses who fly Old Glory all year long, not just for special occasions such as Flag Day, June 14, Memorial Day or Veterans Day. The Marine Forever Detachment No. 1440 has established the American Patriot Award to show appreciation to those who truly respect Old Glory. (File)

The group, which meets in Land O’ Lakes, recognizes that it takes time and care to properly maintain the flag, and it already has bestowed awards to selected individuals and business owners in northern Hillsborough County and Central Pasco County.

The award goes to the business or resident/homeowner displaying the American Flag in new or like-new condition and must be visible, day or night.

So far, more than 100 awards have been presented, said L. David Kirk, the detachment’s commandant.

“We’re getting such reception from this, you won’t believe it,” Kirk said.

He said he received a call from an Army veteran in Land O’ Lakes who said the award “lifted his spirits” and that a widow of a veteran who lives in Oakstead broke into tears when she received the award.

“The businesses like it, too. They’ve been flying a flag all along, religiously,” Kirk said. They appreciate the recognition.

To nominate your business or residence for an award, send your request to .

To find out more about the group, call L. David Kirk at (813) 956-2469.

To see a list of the recipients, visit Marine4Ever.com, or check the organization’s Facebook page at Facebook.com/MarineForeverDetachment1440MarineCorpsLeague.

NOTE:
Flag day was established officially by the Proclamation of President Woodrow Wilson on May 30, 1916, according to the website USFlag.org.

Although Flag Day was celebrated in various communities for years after Wilson’s proclamation, it wasn’t until Aug. 3, 1949 that President Harry S. Truman signed an Act of Congress designating June 14 as National Flag Day.

Published June 14, 2017

They took on the world — and they won

June 7, 2017 By B.C. Manion

Wesley Chapel Elementary’s “Catch Us If You Can” team has returned as champions from the Odyssey of the Mind World Finals, which took place at Michigan State University.

Front row, from left, Jake Piller, Rowan Heyman, Justin Acosta, Jason Sherman, Mina Melaika, Isabell Barrios and Sam Cappelluti. Back row, from left, Veronica Acosta, Matt Whaley and Janet Heyman. (Courtesy of  Joelisa Sherman)

The victory thrilled the team’s members — Jake Piller, Sam Cappelluti, Isabell Barrios, Mina Melaika, Rowan Heyman, Jason Sherman and Justin Acosta, and the team’s coaches — Janet Heyman and Veronica Acosta.

Before heading to the international competition, the fourth- and fifth-graders had already demonstrated that they were contenders.

They won first place at the Gulf Coast Regional competition, and wowed the judges so much that they won the “Ranatra Fusca Award” for their exceptional creativity.

They also won first place at the state tournament at the University of Central Florida on April 8.

Still, it was the team’s first appearance on the world stage, so team members were hopeful, but also realistic.

“It was our first time going,” explained Jason Sherman, 10. “Most people on our team — like me and my friend, Jake — we knew we’d be OK if we didn’t win.

“When I was pin trading, I overheard people talking, saying, that they’d been there for over seven straight years, and they hadn’t won anything.

Coaches Veronica Acosta, left, and Janet Heyman pose with the trophy their team won at the Odyssey of the Mind World finals. The team scored 340.62 points, which is 22.55 points higher than the second-place team

“I was OK, knowing this was our first time, and we probably weren’t going to win anything,” he said.

Odyssey of the Mind is a competition that encourages students to use creative approaches to solving problems. The program emphasizes the importance of science, technology, engineering, arts and mathematics.

Ten-year-old Justin Acosta said he thinks the team succeeded because of its experience in working together and continual efforts to improve.

“The first year, we practiced. The second year, we practiced some more,” he said, and the third year, it all came together.

Ten-year-old Jake Piller said winning the competition is a pretty big deal.

“I definitely think it’s the biggest thing that’s ever happened in our school, and in our county,” he said, adding it’s “pretty big for Florida,” too.

Ten-year-old Sam Cappelluti said he was really nervous, as they awaited the results.

When they found out they had defeated China to win first place, they all screamed, he said.

“It was crazy,” said 11-year-old Isabell Barrios. “We all started crying.”

Barrios thinks the team stepped up its game for the competition.

“In the World performance, I think we did our best. We talked a lot louder and clearer,” Barrios said.

The ‘Catch Us If You Can’ team from Wesley Chapel Elementary School celebrates as it comes out of the spontaneous portion of their competition. During this part of the competition, the team enters alone without coaches and/or parents, and no spectators are allowed. The team excelled, scoring 98.16 percent from a possible 100 percent.

Barrios also noted that team members made sure they had all of their bases covered.

“This year, after we had everything done, we went through a checklist to make sure we had everything,” she said.

Sherman said the team turned it up a notch for the world competition.

“Right before we went on, we were all talking about adding more drama to it,” Sherman said.

Ten-year-old Mina Melaika thinks that the team’s ability to work well together, and to recover quickly when things didn’t go exactly as planned contributed to its victory.

“We all know each other really well,” Melaika added. Besides being teammates, many of them share the same classes.

Ten-year-old Rowan Heyman thinks a strong performance in the spontaneous portion of the competition was an important element in winning. “We worked as a team.”

As the winners were announced, the coaches kept hearing names of other countries and weren’t sure if their team would take home anything beyond the great experience it had at the competition.

So, they were ecstatic when they heard that they had won.

“I was crying,” Janet Heyman said, adding she’s proud of the team’s hard work and perseverance.

Coach Veronica Acosta said the kids have worked so closely together that “they’ve become one family.”

They’ve learned from mistakes, too, she said.

“That’s what Odyssey is about: Failing and picking up the pieces, and moving forward and going onto the next step. Not giving up —because these problems are not easy,” Coach Acosta said.

The coaches also thanked Freda Abercrombie, regional director for Odyssey of the Mind.

Without her, they said, their program wouldn’t exist.

Published June 6, 2017

Artist wins contest with her portrait of unknown soldier

June 7, 2017 By B.C. Manion

When Clare Hernandez set about to create her award-winning piece of art, she wasn’t thinking of entering it into a contest.

“I didn’t do it for this competition. I was actually working on it for my brother. I was doing it for a graduation present for him, but then I just decided I was going to enter it into the contest,” said Hernandez, who just won the 2017 Congressional Art Competition sponsored by U.S. Rep. Gus Bilirakis.

Being one of nine children, Clare Hernandez said she has grown accustomed to working while there’s a fair amount of background noise. In fact, she said, she prefers it. She’s shown here in a schoolroom in her family’s Dade City home. (B.C. Manion)

The winning art was selected by a panel of judges with the Pasco Fine Arts Council, according to a news release from Bilirakis’ office. There were more than 30 entries from high school students across Florida’s 12th congressional district.

Hernandez entered a pencil drawing of an unknown Confederate soldier. It was based on a photograph of an 1860s tin-type that the young woman from Dade City found through an online search.

The portrait combines two of her interests.

“I’m really interested in history; that’s what I want to study in college, particularly U.S. History, particularly war history — like the (U.S.) Civil War, the Revolutionary War,” Hernandez said.

And, she loves art, too — enjoying it since she was around 5 years old.

Hernandez said it took about 15 hours to complete the portrait of the soldier.

Clare Hernandez drew this portrait of an unknown Confederate soldier based on an image of an 1860s tin-type she found while doing a search online.
(Courtesy of U.S. Rep. Gus Bilirakis)

“I tend to be a perfectionist. Even though I feel like something is finished, I’ll come back the next day and I’ll be like, ‘No.’ And, I’ll work on it some more,” she said.

Getting the shading on the Civil War soldier’s coat was particularly challenging, she said.

“I love to do faces and portraits, but I have a harder time with fabrics — in the folds and things like that,” Hernandez said.

The portrait is “pretty much an exact drawing of the photograph. It’s a little awkward in some places because tin-types often are awkward in the way the people in the photos are positioned,” Hernandez said.

“When you look at my drawing, it doesn’t seem to be completely realistic — his form. But, that’s really because that’s what that looks like. It looks awkward,” she said.

She was taught at home through her early years by her mother, Cheryl, who also happens to be an artist. Beginning in her middle school years, Hernandez has increasingly studied more independently, and in recent years she has taken some dual enrollment classes at Pasco-Hernando State College.

Next, she plans to attend the University of Dallas, in Texas.

Hernandez said she feels ready and is excited about what lies ahead.

Clare Hernandez holds a plaque and a blue ribbon, while standing with U.S. Rep. Gus Bilirakis. Hernandez won first place in the 2017 Congressional Art Competition in Bilirakis’ 12th congressional district

She chose the University of Dallas after falling in love with the college during several visits to see her sister, who recently graduated from there.

“It’s a good size. I love the students, and it’s got a really good history program,” Hernandez said.  Plus, “It’s a Catholic school. That’s important to me, too.”

Hernandez plans to pursue a degree in history, with a possible minor in art. She also will be part of the Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (R.O.T.C.) program, which provides a four-year scholarship, and she’ll be entering the U.S. Army when she finishes college.

Because her portrait was the winning entry, it will be displayed for a year along with outstanding work by other students around the nation in the U.S. Capitol, often referred to as the Capitol Building.

There will be an awards ceremony, but she won’t be able to attend because she’ll be on a mission trip to Ecuador.

However, she will receive two airline tickets, and she’s hoping she and her mom can make the trip together to view the portrait on display.

Having her work on exhibit in such an important building is an honor, Hernandez said.

And, for those who were wondering — she still plans to give the portrait to her brother.

Indeed, she already has. He just hasn’t seen it yet.

Published June 6, 2017

School gets ready for its debut

June 7, 2017 By B.C. Manion

As construction work continues at Cypress Creek Middle High, Principal Carin Hetzler-Nettles and her fledgling staff are preparing to set up residency.

Her initial crew of eight people will be looking to take over the building the week of June 12, she said.

Charlie Barthle, the educational facilities inspector, talks about features in the new school that is scheduled to open in August. (Fred Bellet)

The school, set to launch its inaugural year in August, initially will open for students in grades six through 11.

The building will have roughly 114 staff members, and, as of May 31, Hetzler-Nettles had just nine instructional openings left to fill.

But, there’s still a lot to do before the school, off Old Pasco Road, opens. For one thing, the principal wants to give students and parents a chance to get acquainted with the campus.

“We’re in the unique position where everybody kind of needs to be oriented to the school,” she said.

To help people get a feel for the campus, three events dubbed HowlaPalooza have been scheduled.

Howlapalooza draws its name from the school’s mascot, the coyote.

The gathering for seventh- and eighth-graders, and their parents, is scheduled for Aug. 1, from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Ninth-graders through 11th- graders and their parents are set to meet the same afternoon, from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.

In both cases, parents and students with gather separately for activities in different parts of the campus, and then will join together to tour the school.

Getting the campus ready for its first year is a massive job. A landscaper is shown here stabilizing a new tree at the school.

The tour, Hetzler-Nettles said, “is what everybody is excited about — understandably, so.”

The sixth-grade Howlapalooza is patterned after the ninth-grade orientation that Hetzler-Nettles previously conducted when she was principal at Wesley Chapel High School.

Sixth-graders and parents will arrive at 9 a.m. on Aug. 2.

“We’ll do a Parent University in the morning for the parents, for maybe an hour,” Hetzler-Nettles said.

The sixth-graders will stay until 1 p.m., being guided through such activities as opening lockers, going through the lunch line in the cafeteria, and generally getting a feel for where things are and how things work.

The idea, the principal said, is “get them used to the campus, to kind of erase some of those first-day jitters. It makes it a little less overwhelming.”

Electricians are installing lighting outside the cafeteria, which will have some outdoor dining.

Hetzler-Nettles and staff members already have visited schools that are feeding students to Cypress Creek Middle High, and have been handing out T-shirts and giving updates on the campus’ progress.

Activities are planned during the first week to help orient the students to the campus, she said.

The principal said it’s natural to feel nervous, and she added “anytime you’re stepping into something new, it’s good to be nervous.”

Hetzler-Nettles is excited about the prospects of developing the school’s traditions and opportunities.

“It’s good to work together, and to communicate and create something exciting for kids and the community. We’re really, really jazzed about that,” the principal said.

She said she knows others are excited, too, because she’s seen the school’s T-shirts being worn all over the community.

Cypress Creek Middle High gears up for opening year
Howlapaloozas
Sixth grade: Aug. 2, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Students should wear comfortable clothing and shoes, for outdoor activities and a campus tour. A McDonald’s lunch will be provided. Children who are on medication should address that issue before arriving on campus. Any questions? Email Assistant Principal Meighan Melsheimer at .

Seventh grade and Eighth grade: Aug. 1, 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.: Students and their parents are invited to take part in some activities and tour the campus. Parents will report in the gymnasium, while students report to the cafeteria. After some activities, they will join together to tour the campus.

Ninth grade through 11th grade: Aug. 1, 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.: Students and their parents are invited to take part in some activities and tour the campus. Parents will report in the gymnasium, while students report to the cafeteria. After some activities, they will join together to tour the campus.

Registration
Appointments for registration will begin on June 26. Students who have been rezoned to attend the school do not need to register as new students. Those who are registering as new students should check for registration requirements on the school’s website at CCMHS.pasco.k12.fl.us.

Secondary Orientation Day
A secondary orientation day for seventh-graders through 11th-graders is scheduled for Aug. 8, from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Students will be able to pick up their schedules and pay fees.

Published June 6, 2017

2017 graduates given second chance with new program

May 31, 2017 By B.C. Manion

Graduating from high school typically is a special day for members of the graduating class, and their families.

But, there’s a group in Wesley Chapel High’s Class of 2017 for whom graduation on May 26 at the University of South Florida Sun Dome was particularly meaningful.

Mauricio Lorenzo worked right up to the last day before graduating with Wesley High School’s Class of 2017. He took advantage of a second-chance program that allowed him to make up for lost time.
(Courtesy of Wesley Chapel High School)

That’s because these students — among the approximately 380 graduates from the school —were offered a second chance, and they took it.

Eighteen-year-old Mauricio Lorenzo, who lives in Lexington Oaks, is one of those graduates.

“Since February, I’ve been in the program, trying to recover as many credits as I possibly can,” said Lorenzo, who had to take several courses including English, math, biology and World History, to graduate on time.

He finished his work around noon; graduation was set for 8 p.m.

“I’ve been here like 10, 11 hours a day for the past week or two,” Lorenzo said during an interview on May 23. He planned to keep at it right up to the last day, to try to graduate with his peers.

Lorenzo was one of 20 students enrolled in the Support our Students program, new to Wesley Chapel High, this year.

Students from the high school that are good candidates for the program normally are sent to James Irvin Education Center, in Dade City, explained Danielle Johnson, principal at Wesley Chapel High.

However, James Irvin didn’t have enough seats to accommodate all of the Wesley Chapel students who could benefit from the program, the principal said.

So, she allocated a room with 20 computers and a teacher to establish the program at her school.

The idea is to give students a chance to make up the work they need, or raise their grade point average, so they can meet graduation requirements.

In some cases, the students are recovering credits for classes they failed. In other cases, they’re starting a course from scratch.

The program uses online instruction, with a teacher accessing the courses that students need.

Johnson, who has been an assistant principal at the school for several years became principal this year when Carin Hetzler-Nettles moved to Cypress Creek Middle High, set to open in the fall.

Johnson said she knew she had made the right decision when students began coming up to thank her for the second chance.

Lorenzo is one of those grateful students.

“I’m kicking myself now, but I’m very appreciative and very glad that I get the chance to do this — and make up for the mistakes I’ve made in the past.

“The normal school system, I didn’t really connect with it,” Lorenzo said.

“At one point, I had felt like I had given up on the school system. I felt like they had given up on me,” he said.

Lorenzo said his attitude changed, when he was given the opportunity to join the program.

“It made me realize: These people are giving me a second chance,” Lorenzo said.

The program is demanding.

“There are certain things you need to know beforehand,” Lorenzo said.

“They will take electronics away from you.

“You are taken out of the normal population of the school. You won’t eat lunch with the same people. You are going to be basically isolated, and set apart from everybody else, to ensure that you’re working hard,” he added.

But, the potential payoff is worth it, said Lorenzo, who aspires to go into music, and plans to pursue a real estate license, too.

Now that he’s made up for lost time, Lorenzo offers this advice for other students: “Focus on completing things the right way the first time. “

After all, he observed: “No matter where you go, no matter what you’re doing, you’re going to have to put the work in, if you want to get anywhere or do anything — here, or just anywhere.”

Johnson plans to keep the program going next year.

“Every kid has a different path,” she said. “That’s what we should remember. Some kids, it takes a little longer to master the concepts. Some students, it takes a little bit longer to mature.

“This is a great way for us to say, ‘We’re not giving up on you. You can still make it. And, here’s how we’re going to give you a chance to make it’,” the principal said.

Published May 31, 2017

Witches, ruby slippers and lots of heart

May 31, 2017 By B.C. Manion

Arts in Motion’s production of “The Wizard of Oz” at Pasco Middle School was all about transformations.

This is a photo of the ‘Ruby’ cast. Two casts performed the play, allowing seven of the actors to have both a major role and a minor part in two performances each.

Dorothy’s perspective on Kansas changed.

The Tin Woodsman got a heart.

The Cowardly Lion, courage.

The Scarecrow, a brain.

And, two wicked witches met their ends.

The characters in the theater troupe changed, too, as there were two major casts, which switched out for performances. Seven of the cast members had a chance to play major roles and minor roles in two performances each, through a bit of creative casting.

“Double-casting allows more kids to have bigger roles,” explained Jill Ricardo, vice president of production for Arts in Motion, via email.

“The Wizard of Oz” production involved 38 actors, ranging in age from 5 to 17, Ricardo said. The performances were given on the evening of May 19, the afternoon and evening of May 20, and the afternoon of May 21.

Most of the actors come from East Pasco, but some come from as far away as Riverview, Ricardo said. The performers began rehearsing in mid-February and held rehearsals for eight hours a week, Ricardo added.

The Wicked Witch of the East’s feet, after Dorothy’s house lands on the witch.

Arts in Motion is a nonprofit community youth theater and arts education organization. It aims to give children in kindergarten through 12th grade a chance to participate in the visual and performing arts, according to the organization’s website.

The goals are to help youths to build confidence, to help them learn how to collaborate and to stimulate their creativity, the website adds.

Since its formation in 1995, Arts in Motion has produced such musicals as “Back to the 80s,” “The Little Mermaid,” “A Christmas Carol,” Seussical the Musical,” “Beauty and the Beast,” “Grease” and “The Sound of Music.”

Besides two large-scale productions each year, Arts in Motion also hosts workshops in audition technique, voice, acting, improv and dance, and holds week-long summer camps.

For more information, visit ArtsInMotionPasco.org.

Published May 31, 2017

Increased school impact fees a step closer in Pasco County

May 31, 2017 By B.C. Manion

Pasco County’s Development Review Committee has recommended approval of a proposed ordinance that would hike school impact fees in Pasco County.

The review committee, acting as the county’s local planning agency, found the proposed increase to be consistent with the county’s comprehensive plan.

The new rates would significantly increase the impact fees charged to new residential development to help address the impact that new growth has on schools.

Under the proposed ordinance, the fees could be used to build new schools, acquire school sites or purchase new school buses.

These are the proposed fees:

  • Single-family detached residences: $7,540, for homes 1,500 square feet or less; $9,785 for homes between 1,501 square feet and 2,499 square feet; and, $12,028 for homes of 2,500 square feet or more
  • Single-family attached: $3,633 per dwelling
  • Mobile homes: $5,544 per dwelling
  • Multifamily: $5,295 per dwelling

Those compare to these current fees:

  • Single-family detached: $4,828 per dwelling (no distinction based on size)
  • Single-family attached: $1,740 per dwelling
  • Mobile home: $2,843 per dwelling
  • Multifamily: $1,855 per dwelling

The fees do not apply to age-restricted communities, where residents are 55 and older.

At the review committee meeting on May 25, Mark C. Ogier, representing the Bay Area Apartment Association, challenged the proposed multifamily rate.

“These proposed impact fees are very troubling to our association and our industry,” Ogier said.

Cypress Creek Middle High School is taking shape, off Old Pasco Road. Pasco County Schools has asked the Pasco County Commission to increase school impact fees to help address the county’s burgeoning enrollment. This new school will enable Wiregrass Ranch High School to resume a regular schedule after it was forced to lengthen its school day to teach students in shifts.
(Fred Bellet)

“No. 1, the proposed increases are huge increases for all categories, but they’re especially grossly disproportionate for multifamily,” Ogier said.

The proposed multifamily increase is a 184 percent increase from the current rate.

At the same time, he said, the amount of student generation from multifamily is “significantly less than single-family,” he said.

Ogier — whose association represents more than 142,000 apartment units in the Tampa Bay area — also questioned the generation rates used by the school district’s consultant, Tischler-Bise, in the impact fee study.

He cited statistics showing that 80 children per 100 households live in single-family, compared with 38 per 100 households in multifamily, Ogier said.

When just children between the ages of 6 and 17 are considered, 35 percent of single-family owners have kids in that age range, while multifamily has just 13 percent, Ogier added.

Ray Gadd, deputy superintendent for Pasco County Schools, said the student generation rates were based on where students actually live.

“Every student is geo-coded to a particular residence,” Gadd said.

“I’m not sure how you beat that,” said Pasco County Administrator Dan Biles. “They live where they live.”

While the Pasco County Commission doesn’t have to adopt the full rate that’s recommended, it cannot simply reduce the multifamily fee, said David Goldstein, chief assistant county attorney.

“There’s no legal way to just reduce multifamily,” Goldstein said, noting to do that would cause single-family to pay a disproportionate amount of the fee.

Review committee member John Walsh asked what would happen if the Tampa Bay Apartment Association wanted to debate if the study was valid or not.

Goldstein responded: “They’d have to come up with their own data showing that what Tischler-Bise (the school district’s consultant) came up with, is inaccurate.”

Gadd said he would provide his underlying data to Ogier, so he could see the information that the district used.

A committee appointed by the Pasco County Commission had recommended the full impact fee increase be adopted, but also said that should be done in stages — with a portion of the impact fee adopted within 90 days of the ordinance adoption and the rest adopted after the Pasco County School Board voted to seek a sales tax increase to address school capacity needs.

That recommendation fell flat with county commissioners who said they didn’t want to force the school board to seek a sales tax increase.

Regardless of what happens with the proposed impact fees, the school district remains in a deep hole regarding funding for new schools.

District officials estimate that even with the full impact fee increase, the district would have a   $284 million shortfall for capital construction needed during the next decade.

Pasco commissioners have scheduled two public hearings on the ordinance to amend the school impact fees.

The first public hearing on the school impact fees issue is set for June 20 at 1:30 p.m., in the commission’s board room at the West Pasco Government Center. The second is set for July 11 at 1:30 p.m., on the second floor of the Historic County Courthouse, at 37918 Meridian Ave., in Dade City.

Published May 31, 2017

Pantry provides food for those in need

May 24, 2017 By B.C. Manion

The Helping Hands Choice Food Pantry at Atonement Lutheran Church of Wesley Chapel began more than a decade ago with a simple goal — to feed the hungry.

Carl Haberland came up with the idea.

“He had this dream that he was supposed to feed people in need,” said Carla Haberland, who has led the church’s food pantry efforts since her husband’s death in 2011.

Members of the Giraffe Club at Academy at the Lakes, in Land O’ Lakes, made gift bags for Mother’s Day for moms who come by the Helping Hands Choice Food Pantry in Wesley Chapel. From left are Deborah Szarko, club sponsor, and club officers, Luke Magnusson, Adalynn Williams and Luna Cummings. (B.C. Manion)

“It started out with a Christmas Eve dinner, between services, for the community, and baskets of food,” she recalled.

That was in 2006.

When the church began feeding the hungry, it still had a day care, so it had limited amount of space, Haberland said.

But, when the day care closed, the Helping Hands food pantry opened, distributing food every Wednesday to those in need.

“It started out with like 10, 20 families,” the food pantry director said.

“It didn’t take long to figure out that we couldn’t afford to keep buying the food at Save-A-Lot,” she said.

The pantry signed up with what was then Suncoast Harvest in Land O’ Lakes. There is no longer a food bank there and the organization is now called Feeding Tampa Bay.

The church also signed up to receive foods for the pantry from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). Now, it has nearly 1,200 registered, active families, and on any given week, between 270 to 330 families show up to pick up food.

“USDA requires a form. For us to give you USDA, there’s certain criteria. You have to live in Pasco County,” Haberland said, noting there are five ways to qualify for USDA assistance.

The pantry is organized somewhat like a store.

Carla Haberland, the director of Helping Hands Choice Food Pantry at Atonement Lutheran Church, said the work can be quite demanding, but is also extremely rewarding.

It opens at 10 a.m. and closes at 2 p.m., but people begin lining up long before opening.

Around 8 a.m., Helping Hands opens its doors to let people register or check in. People get numbers, and some leave and return, while others stay and wait outside.

Haberland thinks the people who are driving by and see the large line of people in need — are touched by what they see and prompted to help.

Besides the USDA, the pantry gets food from Feeding Tampa Bay, through donations from local stores, from local organizations and from individual contributors.

There’s also about 40 regular volunteers, who handle all sorts of chores. They pick up food items, sort them, store them, stock the shopping tables, work the distribution lines and do other miscellaneous tasks.

It’s an operation that truly requires many helping hands.

Besides the regular crew, there are others who come in for special occasions.

For instance, officers from the Giraffe Club were at the pantry recently, handing out Mother’s Day gift bags to moms visiting the pantry. Each gift bag was hand-decorated by Giraffe Club members and stocked with goodies to pamper the ladies.

While she has a steady crew of volunteers, Haberland said she always makes room for kids who want to volunteer and can always use more volunteers with muscle.

It’s a big job
The pantry distributes nearly 10,000 pounds of food each week. Items doled out weekly vary, based on what comes in.

One recent week, the USDA tables were stocked with grape juice, milk, cereal, canned peaches and orange juice.

Volunteers Barbara Packer, Marina Buff and Joanne Greseth say they enjoy volunteering at Helping Hands Choice Food Pantry because helping to feed the hungry is important work.

Other tables had bread, chips, salad dressings, canned goods, desserts and produce.

There’s a meat counter, too.

On this particular week, each family received a package of lunchmeat and one meat item.

As people make their way around the tables, volunteers let them know if they can take one item or two, depending on what’s available.

Usually fresh produce is scarce, but on this Wednesday, there was a large supply of romaine lettuce.

That’s because the pantry received an unexpected contribution, Haberland said.

“I had a call Sunday evening, at 5 o’clock, from a trucker, saying, ‘I’m at the rest area, northbound, on (Interstate) 75, I have five cases of romaine lettuce. Can you run and pick it up?’” she said.

And, because of that, Land O’ Lakes volunteer Barbara Packer said, “everybody is going to get a lettuce or a salad, and they’ll probably get one other (fresh vegetable) choice.”

Volume dictates how many choices a family will have, Packer said, “but at least they make the choices. They can make the decisions for their families.”

Besides providing food, the pantry provides something else that matters, Packer noted.

“The neat thing is the fact that we’re kind and positive, and smiling, with our families,” Packer said.

That’s particularly important, she added, “because so many times everybody is saying ‘No’ to them in so many other phases of their life.”

Marina Buff, who lives in San Antonio, has been a Helping Hands volunteer for several years.

“It’s just such an important thing. It needs to be done. There are too many people without food,” Buff said.

Packer agreed: “They just need the basics. They’re kind of the forgotten people.”

It’s true that the volunteers help the pantry, but the pantry helps them, too, Haberland said.

It gives them an opportunity to be needed, and it feels good to do something for someone else, she said.

Haberland said the blessings the pantry receives come in many forms.

The romaine lettuce is just one example, she said.

“Somebody else, from Flying J, a trucker, had 750 pounds of mashed potatoes.”

Plus, she added, “I know that my car will hold 68 king-size bed pillows. I know that, because Target donated like three pallets of bed pillows one week.”

There’s no such as a typical day or week at the pantry, Haberland said.

“It’s like you’re on call 24/7,” she said.

There are times when she gets tired, she acknowledged, and she wonders to herself: “What are you doing this for?”

Then, she said, “You think of the people — and there’s nothing that touches you more.

“You’ll get a new family that comes through and by the time they get around to the meat counter, they’re crying. They are so overwhelmed with the help that they get,” she said.

So, that question that Haberland sometimes asks herself? It always has the same answer.

“Obviously, we’re supposed to be doing this,” the pantry director said.

Pantry wish list
What’s on the Helping Hands’ wish list?

A remodeling project has created the need for Helping Hands Choice Food Pantry to replace its walk-in cooler. The freezer/cooler combination that it needs will cost $30,000. Anyone who wants to help the pantry meet this need should call Carla Haberland at (813) 973-2211.

Published May 24, 2017

Pasco County schools expect budget squeeze

May 24, 2017 By B.C. Manion

As things stand now, Pasco County Schools could be facing an $8.7 million budget shortfall for the 2017-18 budget year, and Superintendent Kurt Browning has begun laying the groundwork for potential cuts.

He briefed the Pasco County School Board during a May 16 budget workshop about what he’s been doing so far to gear up for what could become a tough budget year.

Pasco County Superintendent of Schools Kurt Browning

The final budget numbers won’t be known until Gov. Rick Scott acts on the budget adopted by the Florida Legislature. Scott has 15 days to sign the budget, veto it, or use his line-item veto authority. The 15-day time clock begins ticking once the budget lands on Scott’s desk.

Browning told school board members that he had met the previous week with all the district’s department directors and directed them to “prepare a 10 percent budget reduction exercise.”

The superintendent said he emphasized it was an exercise, but he added, “we’re going to look at each one of those proposed cuts that they recommend, and we will look at it accordingly and see what the impacts to the district are.”

On the same day, Browning had a conference call with secondary principals and two conference calls with the district’s elementary principals, to let them know they need to hold one instructional position open.

The district isn’t taking the position away from each school, but it is freezing it, Browning said.

The district estimates it would take 146 positions to plug an $8.7 million budget gap, Browning said.

Olga Swinson, the district’s chief finance officer, also noted that the charter school enrollment in Pasco County is projected to increase by about 977 full-time equivalent students, which is about a 25 percent increase over the previous year.

The district is also facing additional costs associated with opening Bexley Elementary and Cypress Creek Middle/High School, she said.

There also will be higher retirement costs, health insurance costs, increased costs for McKay Scholarships and higher costs in a number of other areas, according to Swinson.

Browning told board members that the district is considering a wide range of options to balance the budget.

The district is looking at extended school year funds, extended school day funds, furlough days, closing schools, class size requirements, dual enrollment, leadership supplements, athletics, athletic supplements and other options, Browning said.

“The bottom line is, nothing is off the table. Nothing’s off the table,” Browning said.

“The only editorial comment I will make is that, in a year when the state is not in economic crisis, we should not be in this economic crisis,” Browning said.

Published May 24, 2017

Review committee to talk about school impact fees

May 24, 2017 By B.C. Manion

Pasco County’s Development Review Committee is slated to discuss a proposal that would raise the impact fees charged to new residential development to help address the impact that new growth has on schools.

Under the proposed ordinance, the fees could be used to build new schools, acquire school sites or purchase new school buses.

Bexley Elementary School, depicted in this rendering, is set to open in the fall for the 2017-2018 school year. Rapid residential growth in Pasco County has prompted a need for new schools, and the Pasco County School Board is asking the Pasco County Commission to increase school impact fees to help pay for new growth.
(File)

Pasco County already imposes school impact fees, but the new fees would be substantially more than is currently collected.

Here are the proposed fees:

  • Single-family detached residences: $7,540, for homes 1,500 square feet or less; $9,785 for homes between 1,501 square feet and 2,499 square feet; and, $12,028 for homes of 2,500 square feet or more
  • Single-family attached: $3,633 per dwelling
  • Mobile homes: $5,544 per dwelling
  • Multifamily: $5,295 per dwelling

These are the current fees:

  • Single-family detached: $4,828 per dwelling (no distinction based on size)
  • Single-family attached: $1,740 per dwelling
  • Mobile home: $2,843 per dwelling
  • Multifamily: $1,855 per dwelling

The fees do not apply to age-restricted communities, where residents are 55 and older.

Even if the county adopts the proposed rates, school district officials estimate a $284 million shortfall in revenue needed for capital construction during the next decade.

The development review committee meeting, which is open to the public, is set for May 25 at 1:30 p.m., in the board room at the West Pasco County Government Center, 8731 Citizens Drive in New Port Richey.

The development review committee, under the direction of the county administrator, reviews proposed developments and policies, and makes recommendations to the Pasco County Commission. It includes representatives of several different county departments and a representative from Pasco County Schools’ staff.

The school impact fee issue boils down to rapidly increasing school enrollment outpacing the school district’s ability to build schools to house the students.

Concerned about the problem, the school district hired a consultant to do an impact fee study.

That study recommended substantially higher impact fees.

The County Commission reacted by appointing a Pasco County School Infrastructure Funding Committee, which recommended the consultant’s highest fees be adopted, but only if the school board put a referendum on the 2018 ballot seeking a sales tax increase to support school construction.

The infrastructure funding committee’s recommendation fell flat with county commissioners, who resisted the idea of requiring the referendum.

As Commission Chairman Mike Moore put it during a May 2 workshop on the issue: “I’m not very keen on the recommendation for this board to attempt to almost hijack the process, or tie the school board’s hands by forcing them to go out and raise the sales tax. That makes me uncomfortable.”

Instead, commissioners directed county staff to prepare an ordinance to increase the school impact fee, and to schedule the development review committee meeting and two public hearings.

Absent specific direction for the amount to include in the proposed ordinance, the county’s legal staff said it would use the full amount recommended by the consultant.

The proposed ordinance does not include a requirement for the school board to ask voters for a sales tax increase to support schools.

But, it notes that except for annual adjustments that may be made based on construction costs, “the school impact fee shall not be updated in a manner that would result in an increased school impact fee for (a) period of 10 years after the effective date of the 2017 school impact fee rate increase.”

In addition to the review committee’s session, the County Commission has set two public hearings on the proposed changes to the county’s school impact fees.

Considerable debate is likely.

Proponents of the higher fees are expected to contend that new growth should pay for itself, that there’s no question the schools are needed and that there are no other sources of revenue available.

Opponents, on the other hand are likely to argue that new development is being forced to shoulder too much of the cost, that the size of the fees put Pasco County in a competitive disadvantage and that the higher fees will make it essentially impossible to provide affordable housing.

The first public hearing on the the school impact fees issue is set for June 20 at 1:30 p.m., in the commission’s board room at the West Pasco Government Center. The second is set for July 11 at 1:30 p.m., on the second floor of the Historic County Courthouse, at 37918 Meridian Ave., in Dade City.

Published May 24, 2017

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