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Kathy Steele

It’s prom time at the Spring Fling Buddy Ball

April 26, 2017 By Kathy Steele

Octavia Frost sat patiently through make-up and hair styling, as her Best Buddies’ student volunteer, Zyandria Vega, created just the right look for a special occasion – the Spring Fling Buddy Ball.

Volunteer Annie Williams spins 16-year-old Elena Capasso during the Spring Fling Buddy Ball. The prom is held annually for students, age 15 to 22, who are in ESE (exceptional student education) classes at Wesley Chapel High School.
(Fred Bellet)

She wore a dark blue gown of her choosing for the annual prom at Wesley Chapel High School.

And, when she walked into the school’s gymnasium, Frost, 18, was no wallflower. She and dozens of her classmates, who attend exceptional student education (ESE) classes, had a grand, joyful prom.

The fourth annual prom for “students with exceptionalities” actually was Frost’s second prom.

And, the second time around, she knew what to expect.

“Have more fun, play around and talk with my friends,” the Wesley Chapel junior said.

For three hours, nearly 80 ESE students celebrated a traditional right of passage for high school students.

They posed at the photo booth manned by Best Buddies students, Hannah Collin and Ethan Gelinas. The two journalism students took a break from their usual duties of taking annual yearbook photos to volunteer for prom duty.

Wesley Chapel High School journalism student Hannah Collin, 16, took photos of students who attended the Spring Fling Buddy Ball. Here, she gets help from Angel ‘Rocky’ Rivera, 22, who attended the prom for students with exceptionalities.

A musical selection from Peggy Roski – “DJ extraordinaire” – filled the high school’s gymnasium with the beats and rhythms that had everyone moving. There was the Chicken Dance, Silento’s “Watch Me (Whip/Nae Nae),” the glide, and fan favorite selections from the Village People and Taylor Swift.

Phoebe Enering, 15, showed off her knee-length cocktail-style dress.

“My grandmother helped me pick it out,” she said.

The prom began after parents lobbied to give their children the kind of memories that most students take for granted. Staff members at Wesley Chapel donated gowns and prom wear for boys. The fancy duds now can be found in the school’s ABC Closet.

This year, for the first time, the school’s Best Buddies Club partnered to provide volunteers who decorated the gymnasium in a flowers and butterfly theme. Scattered throughout the gym, students could pick up balloons, hula- hoops and beach balls.

The Spring Fling Buddy Ball, supported by the Best Buddies at Wesley Chapel High School, put everyone in a happy mood to dance, stroll and talk with friends.

And, Best Buddies also is aiding with fundraising efforts for the prom.

The Best Buddies club encourages students to forge friendships with students with disabilities. Club members also help with Special Olympics.

“It’s been getting better and better every year,” said Anna Simpson, a paraprofessional transitional assistant for the ESE program.

The prom was from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., to make it easy for students and their parents to attend. Students from age 15 to 22 came to the prom.

Many students meet initially in kindergarten, and move onto middle and high school together, Simpson said. “A lot of the kids are like family,” she said. “The families of the students get together at special events. They’ve been doing this since kindergarten.

“It’s awesome.”

For information on donating prom wear to the ABC Closet, contact the school at (813) 794-8700.

Published April 26, 2017

Shelton McArthur, 18, shows his skills with the hula-hoop at the Spring Fling Buddy Ball at Wesley Chapel High School.
Ashley Mendez, 15, loves the balloon tiara created for her by Lauren Blanset, owner of Twister Events. Blanset is a former Wesley Chapel High School student who volunteered at the Spring Fling Buddy Ball.
Justin Cooper, 20, tries to catch a floating balloon during the Spring Fling Buddy Ball, in the Wesley Chapel High School gymnasium.

La Yuma dishes Cuban cuisine in Lutz

April 26, 2017 By Kathy Steele

Chef Pepe Diaz keeps a close eye on what goes on in his kitchen.

The Cuban dishes that pass from the kitchen to the dining room at La Yuma restaurant are authentic to his native country.

But, Diaz also has recipes uniquely his own.

His back story in itself is not the typical path to culinary success.

Chef Pepe Diaz, left, his wife, Tania Diaz, his daughter, Thania Diaz Clevenger, and son-in-law, Ashley Clevenger, stand outside their new Lutz restaurant – La Yuma.
(Courtesy of Kathy Steele)

As a political prisoner of Fidel Castro, his job in jail was to take scant food staples and turn them into meals for himself and other prisoners.

Later exiled from Cuba, Diaz went first to Spain, and then, to Miami and Key West, where he nurtured a dream of becoming a restaurant entrepreneur.

Patrons of his Key West restaurant in Mallory Square – El Meson de Pepe – have been dining on Diaz’ cuisine for more than 30 years.

Now his daughter and son-in-law, Thania Diaz Clevenger and Ashley Clevenger, are bringing the family recipes to Lutz and Tampa Bay.

Ashley Clevenger is general manager; Thania Clevenger is in charge of marketing. Family matriarch, Tania Diaz, is helpmate to her 76-year-old husband, and overall consultant.

It’s a family-rooted business for five generations.

“But, nobody gets to be chef,” noted Thania Clevenger, except for her father.

La Yuma restaurant opened in Lutz in January, at 16411 N. Florida Ave., south of the apex linking U.S. 41 and Florida Avenue.

The establishment replaces a series of bars that never quite caught on, including The Lutz Area Hangout and Twisted Rooster Bar & Grill.

The bar atmosphere is gone.

La Yuma offers fine casual dining wrapped in a family centric environment.

Murals on the walls depict the journey of Cuban refugees to America, and for some — their new lives in Ybor City.

Pepe Diaz gather at a table at La Yuma restaurant, in Lutz. The family opened the Cuban restaurant in January.

The restaurant’s name, “La Yuma,” is from the street lingo that Cubans use as a stand-in for the United States.

Some believe the term comes from a classic western, “3:10 to Yuma.” The movie, first made in 1957, had a remake in 2007.

“The whole idea was not to tell just our family’s story, but all Cubans’ story,” said Thania Clevenger.

An outdoor patio taps into island leisure. A banquet room will host weddings, parties and special events.

Latin bands perform live on Fridays and Saturdays. Cigars by Tampa’s J.C. Newman cigar company can be enjoyed with Cuba libres, Pepe’s Homemade Sangria and cocktail specialties.

The menu offers tapas, or small plates, including Cuban nachos and Camarone Al Ajillo, a pan-seared shrimp with garlic, parsley and white wine sauce.

Entrees include Cuban favorites, such as Rope Vieja and Picadillo Habanero, as well as combination platters and Paella de La Pepe. A children’s menu includes a Cuban steak platter, hamburgers and chicken fingers.

But, La Yuma isn’t by any means a replica of Diaz’ Key West restaurant. It’s a plan, years and generations in the waiting.

“We kept envisioning a different restaurant we wanted to get to do,” said Thania Clevenger. “We’d sit and daydream about it.”

Thania Clevenger is a civil and human rights attorney who grew up helping out in her father’s restaurant. She earned her law degree from Stetson University.

Ashley Clevenger is a former firefighter and U.S. Coast Guard veteran.

They moved to Tampa Bay in 2007, and to Lutz in 2011. They have one son, 5-year-old Dean Sergio, and another child due in August.

They like the area’s small town.

Ashley Clevenger said his hometown in Illinois had 850 residents. He graduated in a class of 18 students.

“It’s all about family,” he said.

This family legacy is founded on activism and dreaming.

“He essentially lost everything,” said his daughter, of her father’s journey from Cuba to America.

He met his wife Tania, also a Cuban refugee, when they both worked at a Miami restaurant. The move to Key West followed.

El Meson is still family owned and operated.

And, now, La Yuma represents another beginning.

“Once it’s in your blood, it’s always in your blood,” said Thania Clevenger.

La Yuma is open Tuesday-Thursday, and on Sunday from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., on Friday and Saturday, from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m.

For information, visit LaYuma.net.

Published April 26, 2017

Business Digest 04/26/2017

April 26, 2017 By Kathy Steele

First National Bank groundbreaking
First National Bank of Pasco broke ground April 20 for a new location, at 23613 State Road 54 in Lutz.

The 3,000-square-foot facility is expected to open Oct. 1, and is designed to meet the needs of the new generation of millennial customers. The branch will provide an engaging banking experience, with modern furnishings, an open layout and a coffee bar. The bank will be pet-friendly, too.

“The millennial demographic wants innovation, not only in the products we offer, but in the way we offer them,” said Steve Hickman, in a news release announcing the groundbreaking. Hickman is the bank’s president.

Bank officials promoted Kathleen Balthazard from customer service representative to area sales manager. She will be community liaison between the new bank, local businesses and individuals.

JC Audiology expands
Dr. Judith L. Reese, audiologist with JC Audiology, moved her practice to a larger facility at the North Fork Professional Center, at 1541 Dale Mabry Highway in Lutz. She opened her practice nearly 12 years ago, in a smaller office in the same business park.

The new location has a larger waiting room and a suite designated as the Tampa Bay Hearing Aid Hospital. She and technicians will repair and service hearing aids, along with dispensing new hearing aids to patients.

JC Audiology began in 2005 and has grown to serve more than 2,000 patients, according to a news release from Reese.

To celebrate, JC Audiology will offer free hearing screenings during the month of May, which is Better Hearing Month. There also will be free demonstrations of hearing aids.

For information, call JC Audiology at (831) 949-1331, or visit JC-audiology.com.

North Tampa food drive
The North Tampa Chamber of Commerce is partnering with Feeding Tampa Bay to support its Annual Cereal Drive to benefit children who will go hungry during summer months without school meals.

Cereal can be dropped off at these locations through May 5:

  • Jaguar of Tampa Bay, 320 E. Fowler Ave., Tampa
  • Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices, 13131 N. Dale Mabry Highway, Tampa
  • Elder Ford of Tampa, 9560 N. Florida Ave.

For information, call the chamber at (813) 563-0180, or email .

Central Pasco mixer
The Central Pasco Chamber of Commerce will have a mixer on April 26 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m., at the Hilton Garden Inn Tampa Suncoast Parkway, at 2155 Northpointe Parkway in Lutz.

The event is free.

For information, call the chamber at (813) 909-2722, or email .

State Farm ribbon cutting
Jo-Z Wilder State Farm will have a ribbon cutting April 26 from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m., at 23604 State Road 54 in Lutz.

The event is free.

For information, call The Greater Wesley Chapel of Commerce at (813) 994-8534, or email .

Economic briefing
The Greater Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce will host its monthly economic development briefing luncheon April 27 from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., at the Pebble Creek Golf & Country Club, at 10550 Regents Park Drive.

Guest speaker will be J.D. Porter, owner and operator at Wiregrass Ranch/Wiregrass Ranch Foundation.

The cost is $15 including lunch.

For information, call the chamber at (813) 994-8534, or email .

Clinic ribbon cutting
The Root Cause Clinic (chiropractor) will have a ribbon cutting on April 27 from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m., at 15049 Bruce B. Downs Blvd., in Wesley Chapel.

The event is free.

For information, call The Greater Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce at (813) 994-8534, or email .

Apartments an option for Northpointe Village

April 19, 2017 By Kathy Steele

The Northpointe Village shopping center could get a 300-unit apartment complex, on a vacant parcel with rental appeal for employees of Mettler Toledo.

The Swiss-manufacturer broke ground in January on a 250,000-square-foot plant, within Northpointe. The plant is expected to bring about 500 jobs into Pasco County, with about 185 of them being new jobs for the company.

Northpointe Village is a walkable ‘main street’ village concept with offices and shops, off State Road 54 at Suncoast Parkway. Apartments would add a residential component to the development.
(Kathy Steele)

Members of the Pasco County Development Review Committee recommended approval of the apartments at their March 30 meeting in New Port Richey. The matter now goes to the Pasco County commissioners for a final vote.

Letters of support came from the board of directors of the North Pointe at Suncoast Crossings Owners Association, and Mettler Toledo.

Mettler’s General Manager Viggo Nielsen wrote that the apartments may provide “convenient on-site housing for employees and a good mixed-use development that we hope will thrive for many years.”

The rezoning requested by Land Investment Partners would only affect the eastern portion of a master plan for Suncoast Crossings. The development is divided into east and west sides, with separate owners of each side.

Northpointe is a mixed use office and retail complex at the southeast corner of State Road 54 and Suncoast Parkway. The complex is laid out as a walkable “main street” village with shops, offices and restaurants. Renaissance Inn and Hilton Garden Inn also are on-site, as well as TRU Simulation, a manufacturer of flight simulators and a pilot training center.

The Pasco Economic Development Council, which partners with the county on job creation, also has its offices in Northpointe.

The western side of Suncoast Crossings includes the Suncoast shopping center, offices and residential neighborhoods.

Despite efforts to market the Northpointe parcel for non-residential purposes, developers and investors showed no interest, said Clarke Hobby, a land use attorney representing Land Investment Partners.

They repeatedly said the location lacked direct access and visibility to State Road 54

Hobby said, “We think multifamily makes good sense, and it is consistent with market demand. What (Northpointe) doesn’t have and what the retail village has struggled with is multifamily or higher density to get it moving.”

Suncoast Parkway, at State Road 54, is attracting investment for several projects after languishing through the economic downturn.

The master-planned community of Bexley North is under construction on the north side of State Road 54, across from Northpointe. Also, on the north side of the state highway, two more residential and commercial developments are planned adjacent to Bexley and the Suncoast Trail.

If approved, the rezoning for Northpointe would add apartments as a use while retaining office, research and light industrial for another portion of the same site.

Hobby said the focus remains on attracting office and light industrial, and creating jobs. “We’re aggressively pursuing opportunities,” he said.

Future development could include about 225,000 square feet of Class A offices, as well as one or two hotels, he added.

Pasco County plans to build an extension of Northpointe Village Drive as part of an incentive package of about $7.6 million for Mettler Toledo.

Northpointe’s owners will contribute more than $250,000 to the project. That could be reduced by 15 percent if Pasco receives a state reimbursement of about $1.2 million for the estimated $3.2 million road project.

Published April 19, 2017

Sports complex wins crucial approval

April 19, 2017 By Kathy Steele

Pasco County commissioners agreed to push ahead with a proposal from RADD Sports to build a $25 million sports complex at Wiregrass Ranch.

About $15 million in funding would be from a bank loan, secured with a proposed 2 percent increase in the county’s tourism tax. Nearly $11 million would come from previously pledged tourism dollars, and sales tax revenues.

Pasco County Commissioner Mike Moore
(Fred Bellet)

County commissioners unanimously voted to pursue the project, and send out bids for the bank loan at their April 12 meeting in Dade City.

The sports complex, and an $18.5 million, 120-room hotel, would be built on land donated years ago by the Porter family – developers of Wiregrass Ranch and The Shops at Wiregrass.

Over the past eight years, several proposals fell apart, including one for a baseball complex in 2015.

RADD Sports wants to build a 98,000-square-foot indoor facility for sporting and recreational activities including basketball, volleyball, cheerleading, dancing, wrestling, gymnastics, curling and badminton. In addition, there would be outdoor sports fields, an amphitheater with an event lawn, trails, pavilions and a playground.

“This is a good program,” said Pasco County Commission Chairman Mike Moore. “Over the years, for whatever reason, commissions in the past have not moved forward. We have a great opportunity. Let’s stop kicking the can down the road.”

Dirt won’t be flying any time soon, however.

It will take additional votes to finalize the project, including an ordinance to increase the tourist tax. Four of five county commissioners need to approve the increase.

Though the initial vote was unanimous, Pasco County Commissioners Mike Wells and Jack Mariano had concerns about linking new tourism dollars to one project.

Wells would like to see boat ramps built in western Pasco in future. County officials said the bank loan possibly could be increased to $16 million or $17 million to fund those.

Anthony Homer, vice president of real estate for RADD Sports

Mariano said tax revenues should be spread around to benefit the entire county, not just focused within the Wesley Chapel area.

“What’s the fairness to the other side of the county when there’s no return coming back?” he said.

But, prior to voting in favor, he added, “I know this is going to be a top-shelf product.”

Details are still being negotiated, but the county will receive a portion of the profits generated from the sports complex. “The entire county will benefit from this project,” Moore said.

However, the project and the tax increase drew a notable objection from Thomas Dempsey, owner of Saddlebrook Resort.

It makes no sense to use the tourism tax as “backup for a loan that can’t be obtained in a normal way through a bank,” said Dempsey, who spoke during public comment. “I can’t run a business that way. Nobody should. It’s a burdensome tax on Saddlebrook.”

The upscale resort in Wesley Chapel contributed a large share of the $8.5 million already collected in tourist taxes. A rebate program is being proposed to compensate Saddlebrook and other hoteliers. Details will be negotiated as the project moves forward, but Wells said, “It should have been done before yesterday.”

RADD Sports estimates gross revenues of $3.8 million in the first year, with increases each year after. Company officials pledged that the loan debt would be paid first before RADD Sports got paid.

Research shows that the complex will have a regional pull, drawing people willing to drive four hours to eight hours, said Anthony Homer, vice president of real estate for RADD Sports. About 1.2 million people live within a 30-minute drive, he added.

An estimated 30 to 40 special sporting events can be held at the complex, along with weekday activities for local amateur leagues and recreational visitors.

On average, more than $208 is spent daily per person during tournament weekends for the event, as well as at hotels, shops and restaurants in the area.

“We didn’t pull these numbers out of a hat,” Homer said.

However, county officials said banks wouldn’t accept RADD Sports’ revenue projections as the only collateral source for the loan.

Hope Allen, president of The Greater Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce, urged commissioners to support the project.

“The timing is right,” she said, during public comment. “Everybody is ready to move forward,” Allen said.

Published April 19, 2017

Business Digest 04/19/2017

April 19, 2017 By Kathy Steele

Aldi plans new store
Representatives of the discount grocer, Aldi, filed conceptual plans for a store in Cypress Creek Town Center, on the southwest corner of State Road 54 and Wesley Chapel Boulevard, according to Pasco County records.

This Aldi grocery store is in a shopping center at U.S. 41 and Bearss Avenue. Aldi representatives recently filed a conceptual plan for a grocery store in the Cypress Creek Town Center, on the southwest corner of State Road 54 and Wesley Chapel Boulevard.
(File)

The pre-application outlines an approximately 19,000-square-foot grocery store, located on about 5 acres owned by Pasco Ranch Inc. The company is owned by the Sierra family, one of the town center’s developers.

Aldi is a German-based grocer with a singular outlook on shopping. Customers pay a quarter to rent a buggy, which they return before leaving the store. They also must bring their own bags or buy reusable ones sold by Aldi.

Though a typical grocery store might have up to 30,000 items for sale, Aldi stocks about 1,400 most often-used food items, including fresh produce, meat, dairy, wine and beer. The goal is to keep overhead expenses low and pass savings onto customers in discounted prices.

In 2015, Aldi announced plans to open about 650 new stores in America by the end of 2018.

Uncle Maddio’s Pizza aids autism awareness
Uncle Maddio’s Pizza is partnering with Autism Speaks during the month of April, which is National Autism Awareness Month. The Italian eatery, at 3949 Van Dyke Road in Lutz, is sponsoring a “Give $5 Get $5” promotion.

For every donation made at Maddio’s Pizza, each guest will receive a $5 bounce back offer to be used the following week at the restaurant.

“It is important to the Uncle Maddio’s team that we display our ‘served with love’ culture by supporting causes that affect our local communities,” said Matt Andrews, in a company press release. Andrews is chief executive officer of Uncle Maddio’s.

Every guest who donates will be able to display his or her donation on the wall at Uncle Maddio’s. Participating restaurants also will light their buildings blue to create a fun atmosphere and mirror the Autism Speaks ‘Light It Up Blue’ campaign during April.

Uncle Maddio’s launched in 2008 and anticipates having 350 restaurants open in the next five years. Customers create their own pizza, which is cooked in fast-bake ovens and delivered to the table in less than eight minutes.

For information, visit UncleMaddios.com and AutismSpeaks.org.

Job fair on wheels
CareerSource Mobile One: Job Search and Career Assistance will take place April 20 from 9:45 a.m. to 3:45 p.m., at New River Library, at 34043 State Road 54 in Zephyrhills.

The event is free.

Participants will get help in searching for jobs, creating and printing resumes, accessing local and statewide job listings, and getting information about programs provided by CareerSource.

The mobile unit is a self-contained resource room on wheels with 12 computer stations; satellite Internet and telecommunications; and, printing/copying capabilities.

For information, call the library at (813) 788-6375, or visit CareersourcePascoHernando.com.

Zephyrhills mixer
The Greater Zephyrhills Chamber of Commerce will host a mixer at the Zephyrhills Brewing Company April 20 from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m., at 38520 Fifth Ave., in Zephyrhills.

The event is free.

Come tour Zephyrhills’ new micro-brewery and sample beer or ale from award-winning home brewer Robert Hilferding. Locally made sodas also will be available.

For information, call the chamber at (813) 782-1913, or email .

Lunch n Learn
The Greater Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce will host a Lunch n Learn luncheon April 20 from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., at the Don Porter boardroom at the chamber’s office, at 6013 Wesley Grove Blvd., Suite 105, in Wesley Chapel.

KMACC Solutions’ representatives will discuss “Emotional Intelligence (EQ): The Critical Link to Success in Business.”

The cost is $15, including lunch. Space is limited so pre-registration is recommended.

For information, call the chamber at (813) 994-8534, or email .

Wesley Chapel Nissan launch party
Wesley Chapel Nissan will celebrate its launch as the first Motor Trend Certified dealer in the Tampa/Orlando area April 22 from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m., at 28519 State Road 54 in Wesley Chapel.

The event is free.

Mario Lopez, host of the Emmy award-winning Extra television show, will attend the celebration. Lopez also has a nationally syndicated radio program, “On with Mario,” and the CBS show Candy Crush.

For information, call The Greater Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce at (813) 994-8534, email , or call Wesley Chapel Nissan, at (813) 751-1300.

PROtential Sports ribbon cutting
PROtential Sports will have a ribbon cutting April 25 from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m., at 19046 Bruce B. Downs Blvd., in New Tampa.

PROtential Sports offers children’s sports programs and summer camps.

The event is free.

For information, call The Greater Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce at (813) 994-8534, or email .

Pioneer Florida Museum makes film history

April 12, 2017 By Kathy Steele

The 19th century Overstreet House at Pioneer Florida Museum & Village aced the audition and got the casting call for its film debut.

For two nights, the Dade City museum hosted actors and about a dozen graduate students from the College of Motion Picture Arts at Florida State University.

Actor Demi Castro stands on the front porch of Overstreet House and rehearses a scene for ‘The Terrible Trio.’
(Kathy Steele)

The front porch at the Overstreet House will be the setting for a climactic showdown of retribution and revenge in “The Terrible Trio.”

The 12-minute live action short is the thesis film for Robert Eaton, director, screenplay co-writer, and FSU graduate student. His film will debut on campus at FSU, but Eaton anticipates also showing “The Terrible Trio” at small film festivals.

The actors and FSU film crew came to Dade City to shoot their movie on museum grounds after hours.

They blocked out scenes, ran cables, set up lighting, rehearsed and filmed scenes from late afternoon until past midnight on March 27 and March 28.

It is the first time that anyone can recall the museum, and Overstreet House, being featured in a movie.

Director Robert Eaton, center, works with his film crew to take measurements and block out an upcoming scene for ‘The Terrible Trio.’

The museum more often is a popular field trip for elementary students who like to end their day with a picnic on the grounds, said Stephanie Black, the museum’s executive director.

But, she added: “It’s thrilling to have a film crew take over at night.”

Black said she got an email from FSU asking for pictures of Overstreet House. Students then came down for a visit and an agreement was reached to allow filming.

In return, the museum will receive a copy of the film, a screen credit, and an invitation to the screening.

Eaton said Overstreet House competed with another local 1910 house.

But, Overstreet came closest to matching a 1870s “bachelor pad” for a character that Eaton describes as “the king of outlaws.”

The house had simplicity and one irresistible feature – a front porch.

The character, Ronaldo Rey, is of Mexican heritage, slick and intelligent, Eaton said.

Students from the Florida State University’s film school set up lighting for night scenes shot at the Pioneer Florida Museum & Village, in Dade City

Rey (which means king in Spanish) and a gang of corrupt lawmen rob a trio of misfits of gold, furs and a horse. The theft strips them of their livelihoods.

Eaton described his characters as atypical for a Western.

One is a former slave and a Mandingo fighter. Another is a Canadian fur trapper, and the last is Felicity Ford, the female protagonist and film lead. She is struggling to be a strong, independent woman in the Old West.

However, the exact locale of the story is deliberately ambiguous. It could be the Deep South, but then Eaton said the story could unfold somewhere between Florida and California.

The plot unfolds as the terrible trio bands together to reclaim their possessions and their destinies.

The film is a hybrid — including drama and comedy.

“It’s a little over the top and playing on clichés,” Eaton said.

Actors and students from Florida State University’s film school rehearsed a scene for ‘The Terrible Trio’ to make sure everything was ready to shoot a climactic scene at the Pioneer Florida Museum & Village.

When finished, FSU has ownership of the film. The school gives students a budget of $4,000, which Easton boosted to $10,000 through a private investor.

His actors were hired largely through taped auditions.

Caitlyn Sponheimer, who plays Felicity, started her career with modeling and commercial assignments. She also has done film and television.

“I always wanted to do a Western,” she said. “This is a strong female who rebels against the norms of the time. She’s not timid. She’s feisty.”

Demi Castro plays Rey. “He’s charming, very grandiose and verbose. Extremely confident.”

Castro lives in Orlando where he recently performed in the telenovela comedy, Destiny of Desire, at the Garden Theatre in Winter Haven. He also has movie and television credits, and helps other actors put together audition tapes at Class Act Studios, also in Orlando.

John Racioppo is a Canadian actor, living in New York. His character is Wayne Tuck, a fur trader, who Racioppo says is “a stranger in a strange land.”

He gets dropped into the middle of an unfamiliar world, and his attempts to adapt provide a lot of the film’s comedy, Racioppo said.

The third actor in the trio wasn’t available when a reporter from The Laker/Lutz News visited the set.

This is Eaton’s third film, after “Once Upon a Blood Moon” and “The Devil’s Luck.”

He co-wrote “The Terrible Trio,” with Carolina Garrigo, an FSU teaching assistant.

Eaton currently is in discussions to become a second unit director on the HBO series, Westworld. Other jobs on the same series are possible, too, Eaton said.

Whatever comes next, Eaton added, “I love telling stories. I don’t see myself leaving this.”

For information on FSU’s film program, visit Film.fsu.edu.

For information on the Pioneer Florida Museum & Village, visit PioneerFloridaMuseum.org.

Published April 12, 2017

Seeking input on road connections

April 12, 2017 By Kathy Steele

Pasco County will host an open house to find out if area residents in Wesley Chapel want to open up roads between Pasco and Hillsborough County.

The public is invited to Pasco-Hernando State College on April 18 to make comments and get answers on three potential road projects from members of the county’s Metropolitan Planning Organization.

The Wesley Chapel Roadways Connections Study wants to hear from the public regarding possible connections between:

  • Kinnan Street and Mansfield Boulevard
  • Meadow Pointe Boulevard to K-Bar Ranch Boulevard
  • Wyndfields Boulevard into K-Bar Ranch

“We are unbiased. We want to hear from residents, looking at the negatives and positives,” said Ali Atefi, transportation engineer for the county’s Metropolitan Planning Organization. “We’re getting information from both sides, connecting or not connecting,” he said.

A year-long study will look at connecting roadways between Pasco and Hillsborough counties in the Wesley Chapel area of southern Pasco. This barricade separates Kinnan Street in New Tampa’s K-Bar Ranch and Mansfield Boulevard in Pasco County’s Meadow Pointe subdivision.
(File)

A second meeting would be scheduled in the future to review feedback from the public.

An online survey also is being considered to gather additional views on whether to take on these projects, Atefi said.

The study could take up to a year to complete, he added.

Any decisions on moving forward on road projects would be made by the Pasco County Commission.

Currently, Mansfield Boulevard in the Meadow Pointe subdivision dead-ends at the Pasco County line. A barricade separates the boulevard from Kinnan Street, which dead-ends inside Tampa’s K-Bar Ranch in Hillsborough.

In 2016, Mike Moore, then a Pasco County commissioner, and Lisa Montelione, former Tampa city council member, met to discuss connecting the two roadways.

Moore is now chairman of the Pasco County Commission; Montelione is no longer on the city council.

The matter has been batted around for years between Pasco, Tampa officials, and developers of K-Bar, with no resolution.

Some Meadow Pointe residents previously expressed concerns to county officials about the prospect of increased area traffic, if the connection were made.

The subdivision is off State Road 56 in Wesley Chapel, near The Shops at Wiregrass.

Mansfield winds past Pasco-Hernando State College’s Porter Campus at Wiregrass Ranch. There also is an elementary school, a middle school and a high school on the boulevard.

Other issues center around costs, and who would pay for such items as traffic calming devices and traffic signals.

Negotiations on other improvements to street grids in the area also fell short — including engineering better circulation via Beardsley Drive and Meadow Pointe Boulevard.

Pasco recently began repaving and re-striping Beardsley from Mansfield east to Meadow Pointe. The project is expected to take 60 days.

For information, visit the county’s website at PascoCountyFl.net.

What: Wesley Chapel Roadways Connections Study meeting
Where: Pasco-Hernando State College, 2727 Mansfield Blvd., Wesley Chapel
When: April 18 from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.

Published April 12, 2017

Task force on traffic issues starts up again

April 12, 2017 By Kathy Steele

A 17-member volunteer task force will pick up where two previous task forces left off — drilling down into the details of tackling traffic issues along State Road 54/State Road 56.

Much of the discussion is expected to center on traffic issues at State Road 54 and Little Road, and at State Road 54 and U.S. 41.

Little Road is seen as more typical of congested intersections in the county.

The intersection of State Road 54 and U.S. 41 is the county’s busiest with more than 100,000 vehicles a day. It will be a focus of a task force seeking solutions to ease congestion and improve safety along the State Road 54 and State Road 56 corridor.
(File)

The U.S. 41 intersection, however, stands out because more than 100,000 vehicles pass through daily.

“It’s the most congested one in the whole county that we have,” said Ali Atefi, transportation engineer with Pasco County’s Metropolitan Planning Organization.

This is the second of a three-part study to find traffic solutions to ease congestion, improve safety and increase mobility along a corridor that has been a magnet for new residential and commercial development.

The entire study area includes the State Road 54/State Road 56 corridor, from Bruce B. Downs Boulevard on the east and U.S. 19 on the west.

Three meetings will be held in 2017, with the first on April 20 at Rasmussen College. Additional meetings will be scheduled in 2018 to fully complete the study’s second phase.

As part of these efforts, the Florida Department of Transportation is expected to fund a detailed analysis and evaluation of the State Road 54 and U.S. 41 intersection, likely in 2018.

It is the only segment with funding, but Atefi said additional money is being sought for other road segments, including Little Road.

Many members of this task force participated in the West Task Force and East Task Force that kicked off meetings in late 2015. They met separately to consider different segments of the roadway.

In April 2016, the task forces made almost identical recommendations after considering 19 alternatives.

At the April 20 meeting, Atefi said, “We’ll give them feedback on where we are now. And, we want to reconcile all of the alternatives and have one list moving forward.”

Initial solutions included redesigning roads at ground level, building flyovers, using frontage roads and by-passes, and a no-build option.

Three or four alternatives will be chosen from a recommended list of six major highway and transit alternatives, five complementary alternatives, and a no-build option.

Representatives from Pasco County Planning and Development, the county’s MPO, FDOT, and consultants from AECOM will be on hand to take comments and answer questions.

What: Vision 54/56 Phase 2 Task Force meeting
Where: Rasmussen College, 18600 Fernview St., Land O’ Lakes
When: April 20 from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.
Cost: Free, open to the public

Published April 12, 2017

Nominations needed for 2017 Industry Awards

April 12, 2017 By Kathy Steele

Nominations are being accepted for the 2017 Pasco Economic Development Council Industry of the Year Awards.

The deadline for submitting nominations is close of business on April 28.

The awards recognize top companies in Pasco County that excel in technology, innovation job creation, growth, capital investment and community involvement.

Finalists will be interviewed prior to the awards ceremony on a range of topics related to their businesses and the community.

Nominees should be “for profit” business to business service, manufacturing or technology companies operating in Pasco County. Municipalities or affiliates, as well as previous winners in the past five years, are not eligible.

The awards will be separated into divisions based on the number of employees. Evaluations are based on job creation, increased capital investment and contributions to the community through civic involvement between January 2016 and June 2017.

Industry awards are given in the following categories:

  • Small (1 – 20 employees)
  • Medium (21 – 100 employees)
  • Large (101 or more employees)
  • Startup/New within past 24 months

Pasco EDC has partnered with Pasco County government for more than three decades to attract businesses and create jobs in Pasco.

The annual awards banquet is at Saddlebrook Resort in Wesley Chapel. It is attended each year by more than 600 business and community leaders in Tampa Bay and Pasco County, including state legislators, county commissioners and city officials.

To submit a nomination online, visit tinyurl.com/kku4stc.

For information, call Pasco EDC at (813) 926-0827, or visit PascoEDC.com.

Published April 12, 2017

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