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The Laker/Lutz News

Serving Pasco since 1981/Serving Lutz since 1964

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Mike Camunas

A burning desire for history

October 18, 2022 By Mike Camunas

It started with a truck.

A Class B fire engine.

Museum vice president Lois Ressler, center, welcomes two retired firefighters: Pat Cotter, left, a former fire truck driver, and Wayne Garrett, a former battalion chief. The museum gets lots of visits from current and former firefighters, but also has become a hub for firefighters to meet up and reminisce about their careers. (Mike Camunas)

It was the fire engine that volunteer firefighters in Hillsborough County rode on, during the 1970s and 1980s.

In 2017, four dedicated individuals bought it, looking to restore it.

They did, and because of that, the Hillsborough Fire & EMS Museum was born — not out of fire and ash, but out of a respect for preservation and history.

“After they bought the truck, well, they said, ‘Let’s make a museum,’” said Beth Nevel, museum president.

The Hillsborough Fire & EMS Museum, 15961 N. Florida Ave., in Lutz, is home to artifacts and memorabilia from former firefighters, their families and from the county itself. The space is small, but the museum also has thousands of additional items in storage.

Then, the donations started coming in.

“People would call, and tell us, ‘I’ve got patches’ or ‘I’ve got a first aid box full of stuff’ or ‘I’ve got a helmet and a coat,’ and as our firefighters are dying, their husbands and wives are saying, ‘What do I do with all this stuff from their careers as a firefighter?’,” Nevel added.

Indeed, all the items displayed at the small nonprofit museum at 15961 N. Florida Ave., in Lutz, have been donated by friends or family of, or even current or retired, firefighters.

The donations have been pouring in for about five years, Nevel said. It’s to the point where the museum’s board had to get storage space.

Nevel estimated the museum has thousands of items, from helmets to masks to used tanks to axes and other tools to patches to even toys and memorabilia. However, because of its limited rented space, it can only display some of the collection.

The visitor sign-in book at the Hillsborough Fire & EMS Museum in Lutz sits under a seal of the Hillsborough County Fire Department. It’s been signed by many visitors, including retired firefighters.

The items on display are impressive, but Nevel would love to see the museum expand into a larger space.

“We are bursting at the seams here,” Nevel said. “We started a savings account to get a bigger space and that’s the dream, for now.”

And, like many museums, especially small ones, this one also relies on contributions from “Friends of the Museum.”

Nevel encourages visitors to come take a look.

“Just come by and say hi!” she said. “You just have to contribute — we don’t care. Send us 10 bucks, give us 100 bucks, donate 1,000 bucks (laughs). People are our biggest contributors.”

With an all-volunteer staff and board of about 10 people, the museum relies on contributions — such as receiving $10,000 from Seminole Hard Rock or money from the Lutz Guv’na — but also through its three fundraisers: a car show, a golf tournament and a clay shoot.

Those monies go to keeping the lights on at the actual museum, but also to its three-pronged mission.

Education. Preservation. Restoration.

The museum aims to educate not only visitors, but also seniors and children through virtual classes that teach fire safety and more.

It wants to preserve all the artifacts that are donated, that way they are kept in pristine condition to be shared with whomever may visit the museum.

And, finally, to restore the truck — fix up and bring back to impeccable life the fire engine that’s on a Ford truck chassis, but was transformed into a fire engine by the late Chief Mechanic Ross Macaluso.

“We do get a lot of people — we get everyone who wants to stop by and see some history,” Nevel said. “Just a few weeks ago, we had a retired battalion chief from New Jersey that was down here and just saw us (online) and asked if he could come by. It is a lot of former and retired firefighters, which is great, because they’re interested and have stories, and are more than welcome to come by here and visit or hang out.”

Hillsborough Fire & EMS Museum
Where:
15961 N. Florida Ave., Lutz
When: Tuesdays, 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Details: Founded in 2017, this nonprofit organization and museum restores and preserves the history of the fire department and EMS in unincorporated Hillsborough County. The small museum relies on donations not just of monetary value, but also of any and all artifacts and souvenirs from current and former firefighters, as well as their families.
Info: Visit HillsboroughFireMuseum.org, or to schedule a visit, call 813-269-3459 or email .

Published October 19, 2022

The Hillsborough Fire & EMS Museum calls Lutz its home and has fire rescue artifacts on display, such as helmets, masks, air tanks, axes and more.
A well-used mask, worn by a firefighter, is one of the items on display at the museum.
An old radio unit that was used in Dover is one of the items on display at the Hillsborough Fire & EMS Museum.

Dig into this garden club

October 18, 2022 By Mike Camunas

They speak for the trees in Tree City, USA.

They speak for the butterflies, too, in Monarch City, USA.

In fact, the Dade City Garden Club, celebrating its 75th anniversary, speaks for and keeps an eye on all things plants and nature.

Members of the nonprofit organization work in the fields of gardening, horticulture, landscape design, floral design and environmental awareness through the conservation of natural resources.

The Dade City Garden Club Clubhouse, at 13630 Fifth St., is a 1913 church relocated to the garden club grounds in 1977. The structure then underwent a modern renovation. Volunteers help maintain the grounds and the building. The building is available for event rentals. (Mike Camunas)

The garden club has a diverse group of members.

“We have mothers, we have daughters, we have aunts, we have sisters, we have everyone,” said Mona Goossens, club president. “We have so many who are so into gardens and we have plenty who want to know more about gardens, and we have others that kind of look at gardens and they’re not as hands-on.

“But what we really have is so many who are dedicated to everything our club strives to preserve and educate the public about — horticulture and the environment,” said Goossens, who is serving as the club’s leader for her fourth year.

The club was founded in 1947 when club dues were only $1.50. The next year, the club formed five circles, allowing members to pursue activities and topics of specific interest to each group. Now, there are six circles: Azalea, Camellia, Hibiscus, Hollyhock, Magnolia and Poinsettia.

Over the years, the club has worked on a variety of projects throughout the East Pasco town. Club members have beautified streets, such as Meridian Avenue, and worked on the landscaping at places such as Pasco High School and the Dade City Armory.

The club initially met at the nearby woman’s club, but in 1976, Saint Rita Catholic Church presented its old church building to the club and it became the group’s clubhouse.

After a modern renovation of that 1913 church structure, the club took over its location at 13630 Fifth St., in 1977.

“This club, with its members and its garden, it takes into account what can help this town. It always has, and all you have to do is look back at what members have done over the 75 years,” said Joan Hepscher, a longtime member and co-chair of the Club’s Birds, Bees & Butterflies committee.

Longtime Dade City Garden Club member Pat Carver will be remembered for her 61 years of service to the club. Her legacy now has been enshrined with this special plaque in the 3-acre garden surrounding the clubhouse.

One of the mainstays of the garden club — member Pat Carver — was involved for 61 years before she passed away in March. The club honored her contributions with a plaque placed in its 3-acre garden.

“Pat always saw the bigger picture, of how we could do more,” said Hepscher, who was recruited to join the club by Carver. “She was a dedicated member to this club for 61 years, and the club wouldn’t be what it is today without her.”

The club annually celebrates Arbor Day and National Garden Week with special events. It also puts on the biannual Uncorked, a fundraiser event featuring wine, beer and hors d’oeuvres.

Since 1994, the club has been responsible for approximately 450 trees being planted throughout Dade City.

Also, since 1996, the club has decorated the buildings, grounds and gate at Pioneer Florida Museum and Village with permanent and fresh greenery that are brought in for Christmas decorations.

The club also deserves credit for pursuing the designation of Dade City as a Tree City, USA and Monarch City, USA.

Achieving the Monarch City USA designation was Carver’s “last hurrah.”

Club members take pride in the role their organization played in achieving those distinctions.

Polly Touchton Park, adjacent to the Dade City Garden Club Clubhouse, is the site of the Third Annual Monarch Butterfly Festival. It has art and signs on display that proudly proclaim Dade City’s Monarch City designation.

“We would not be a tree city or a monarch city without the Dade City Garden Club,” Goossens said. “We work so hard every year to retain those statuses (of having those titles), and it makes us all feel very connected to the city.”

Third Annual Monarch Butterfly Festival
When: Oct. 22, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Where: Polly Touchton Park, between Fifth and Seventh streets, and Bougainvillea and Southview avenues, in Dade City
Details: The festival, sponsored by the Dade City Garden Club and the Dade City Youth Council, will feature environmental educators, informational booths, presentations, native plant sale and hands-on activities for kids. Through the Dade City Monarch Project, the festival takes on special importance this year because the butterflies have been added to the “endangered” species list. “They’re just not another pretty face,” said Joan Hepscher, chair of the Monarch Butterfly Festival. “We want to make people aware of their ‘struggle.’”
Visitors can park downtown and hop on a free trolley, which will be traveling from downtown to the park from 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Pickup locations are adjacent to the Robert B. Sumner Judicial Center, at 38033 Live Oak Ave., and at The Spoke, located at 37800 Church Ave. Parking is available in city- and county-owned lots, and other areas around downtown.
Info: Email , or visit DadeCityGardenClub.com.

Published October 19, 2022

Coyote boys golf swinging back toward states

October 18, 2022 By Mike Camunas

The thing about the first time is that it can’t be repeated.

However, the Cypress Creek boys golf team sure is going to try to repeat its incredible success from 2021.

From left: Connor Newbold, Trey Sasser, Levi Wade and Joaquin Parrilla make up the Cypress Creek boys golf team that finished sixth at the Class 2A state golf tournament in 2021. (Mike Camunas)

“We’ve been trying to build on each match, and focus on practice and get better each day,” the team’s No. 1 golfer, junior Connor Newbold, said, “and really just prepare for the playoffs. That’s what we’ve really been looking at because we know that’s where the competition will be the hardest.

“Because it’s all about getting back to states.”

One can’t blame the Coyotes (10-2) wanting to get back to their most successful season ever in the program’s short history. Last year, Cypress Creek finished sixth in the Class 2A state tournament, which is obviously a best for the school and a best for local teams.

“The expectation is, absolutely, to improve upon what we did last year,” said Dennis Martin, the team’s coach. “We only lost one senior from last year, and had two really good freshmen jump right in and make a difference, so the expectation is to get back.”

Junior Connor Newbold carded a 5-over par over two rounds to finish fifth at last season’s state tournament, giving him the best score among all local golfers.

“We’re feeling pretty confident about getting back,” Newbold added, noting the team has experienced players who have competed in tournaments and at states.

“So, they can play 18 holes out there, and score low and play smart.”

Playing smart will start with Newbold. As the team’s No. 1 golfer, he’ll be looking to go low in the postseason, including when he finished fifth at the 2A tournament last year with a two-round 5-over par (149). The score gave him the best score among all local golfers.

Newbold will need help, but the Coyotes do return three other of the top five starters, including Trey Sasser (tied 66th, +32), Joaquin Parrilla (tied 70th, +34) and Levi Wade (93rd, +58).

“(They’re) easy to coach — I don’t have any knuckleheads,” Martin said. “They’re a great group of guys and they’re not just recreational golfers, if you will. They’re very serious about it and put in the work and can be hard on themselves because they expect to do well.”

So far so good, as the Coyotes lost just twice in the regular season — to the perennially top team, Mitchell, and Jesuit, which was 2A state runner-up last season.

“The mindset has been one match at a time,” Martin reiterated. “That’s what we focus on, and if we continue to practice and play up to our potential, then the results will take care of itself.

“We don’t really talk about states — we talk about the next match, and they’re focused on the task at hand. Sometimes they don’t even know who the next opponent is because the day before they’ll ask, ‘Who are we playing tomorrow? Where are we playing?’ (laughs).”

High School Golf Postseason

Districts
Class 3A-District 9
Host:
Mitchell High School
When: Boys – Oct. 25, 9 a.m.; Girls – Oct. 26, noon.
Where: Boys: Crescent Oaks Golf Club, 3300 Crescent Oaks Blvd., Tarpon Springs; Girls: Heritage Springs Country Club, 11345 Robert Trent Jones Parkway, Trinity
Teams: Countryside, East Lake, Land O’ Lakes, Largo, Mitchell, Palm Harbor University, Pinellas Park, Sunlake

Class 3A-District 10
Host:
Wharton High
When: Boys – Oct. 24, 7:30 a.m.; Girls – 7:30 a.m.
Where: Heritage Isles Golf & Country Club, 10630 Plantation Bay Drive, Tampa
Teams: Alonso, Armwood, Gaither, Steinbrenner, Hillsborough, Leto, Plant, Plant City, Sickles, Strawberry Crest, Wharton, Wiregrass Ranch

Class 2A-District 9
Host:
Springstead High
When: Boys – Oct. 25, 9 a.m.; Oct. 24 – 9 a.m.
Where: Hernando Oaks Golf & Country Club, 5230 Delacroix Drive, Brooksville
Teams: Central, Cypress Creek, Fivay, Gulf, Hernando, Hudson, Nature Coast, Pasco, River Ridge, Springstead, Weeki Wachee, Wesley Chapel, Zephyrhills

Class 1A-District 10
Host:
Tampa Prep
When: Boys – Oct. 25, 9 a.m.; Girls – Oct. 25, 9 a.m.
Where: Westchase Golf Club, 11602 Westchase Golf Drive, Tampa
Teams: Academy at the Lakes, Bayshore Christian, Berkeley Prep, Bishop McLaughlin Catholic, Cambridge Christian, Carrollwood Day, Hernando Christian, Seven Rivers Christian, Tampa Catholic, Tampa Prep

Regional Tournaments
When: Oct. 21 thru Nov. 2
Where: Varying sites

State Tournament
When:
Class 1A, Nov. 11-12
Class 2A, Nov. 15-16
Class 3A, Nov. 8-9
Where: Mission Inn Resort & Club, 10400 FL-48, Howey-In-The-Hills

Info: Visit, FHSAA.com/sports/golf.

*Bolded teams are Pasco County teams and teams in the publication’s coverage area.

Published October 19, 2022

Bulldogs runner breaks school record

October 18, 2022 By Mike Camunas

(Courtesy of Kimberly Poe)

Zephyrhills High distance runner Will Poe wanted the record, so he went out and not only got it, he shattered it. On Oct. 15, at the Sunshine Athletic Conference Cross Country Meet at Sunlake High in Land O’ Lakes, the junior Bulldog set the new 5K school record by posting a 15:53, and taking first place in the meet.

Poe broke the 18-year-old record held by Jose Espinosa, who posted a 16:10 in 2004. Up next is the Class 3A-District 4 tournament in Inverness on Oct. 20, where Poe will look to advance to regionals and eventually the state tournament, where he placed 26th last year. ‘I’ve put a lot of work into this season, so hopefully I can get 15th place or better at states,’ Poe told The Laker/Lutz News earlier this month. ‘The top 15 runners get on the podium and get a medal. It’s that position or higher, or nothing. That is what I’ve been running for all season.’

Pitching in to help victims of Hurricane Ian

October 11, 2022 By Mike Camunas

Before the rain and wind stopped, the calls started.

Before the water began receding, people were rising to the occasion.

They shared social media posts and then shared their unused supplies.

Stephanie Francis, right, and her daughter, Siena Bracciale, load up a U-Haul with generators, cases of water, food and other supplies on Sept. 30, at the Land O’ Lakes Recreation Complex, for delivery to MidWest Food Pantry in Fort Myers. Many local citizens, neighborhoods, churches, schools, businesses and organizations in Pasco County have organized donation drives and supply runs. (Mike Camunas)

They banded together to respond to fellow Floridians in need after Hurricane Ian decimated the towns of Fort Myers, Port Charlotte, Cape Coral, Bonita Springs, Sanibel and other communities on Sept. 28.

Locals citizens from across Pasco County sprang into action, donating what they could.

They organized drives, and filled cars and trucks to the brim.

They transported the supplies for the victims of the Category 4 storm that leveled homes, business, bridges and the normally tourist-filled beach towns, just a few hours south of Tampa Bay.

“I couldn’t sit back and watch — I had to help!” Wesley Chapel resident Esmeralda Morales said. “I’m new to Florida, I’ve been here for two years, and helping folks is my passion. I’ve never been down to Fort Myers and don’t know anyone there, but I know when other humans need my help.

Victoria Hawkins, of Trinity, tapes up and labels a box of supplies that was donated and taken down to Fort Myers for the victims of Hurricane Ian. (Mike Camunas)

“Watching the devastation on the news inspired me to take on this journey.”

Morales’ journey began by reaching out to her community, Union Park, to “collect whatever I could fit in my car.”

Morales and others drove down on Oct. 1. It took more than 3 ½-hours because parts of Interstate 75 had been closed, due to flooding.

When she arrived in Fort Myers, it was “heartbreaking,” she said.

“I volunteered at the ‘Safe Camp’ run by The Cajun Navy in North Fort Myers,” Morales said. “I’d walk over to cars in a 2-mile-long line and ask them how they were doing. So many said they were starving, and folks just wanted to tell their stories.

“Some simply cried and held my hand, others showed pictures of what was once their home, now a lot filled with debris. Many told me stories of how they had to swim to safety with their young children and even grandchildren.

David Steinberg, of Land O’ Lakes, organized a donation drive, and with the help of his employer, Orthopediatrics, raised $15,000 to buy 20 generators to take down in a U-Haul to Fort Myers. (Mike Camunas)

“Others,” she added with sadness, “shared that they’ll never forget the images of floating bodies they’d observed.”

By midafternoon, the donations had run out, but the need had not.

“People were crying and pleading with us for anything,” Morales said.

In the northern Land O’ Lakes community of Asbel Estates, Timothy Dowd reached out to neighbors just mere hours after it was obvious that Pasco would avoid Ian’s devastation.

Dowd rounded up 16 cases of water, 10 gallons of water, shampoo/conditioner, bars of soap, children’s clothes, linens, snacks, four bags of dog food, two bags of cat food, trash bags and Clorox wipes.

Dowd delivered the donations — which all came from Asbel Estates — to Fort Myers on Sept. 29.

“We didn’t have anything else going on and figured we might as well help with what we could,” Dowd said. “We could’ve just as easily been put in that situation and hoping for someone to bring some supplies.”

David Steinberg, who lives in the Land O’ Lakes neighborhood of Lake Padgett Estates, also pitched in. With the help of his employer, Orthopediatrics, he helped raise $15,000 to buy 20 generations to deliver in a U-Haul to Fort Myers.

Timothy Dowd, of Land O’ Lakes, collected 16 cases of water, 10 gallons of water, shampoo/conditioner, bars of soap, children’s clothes, linens, snacks, four bags of dog food, two bags of cat food, trash bags and Clorox wipes, all which were donated from citizens that live in Asbel Estates, in Land O’ Lakes. (Courtesy of Timothy Dowd)

Stephanie Francis, a Plantation Palms resident, co-coordinated the effort with Steinberg. They set up a “donation center” in the Land O’ Lakes Recreation Complex parking lot on Sept. 30, and received donation after donation from nearby neighbors and residents. Those contributing brought everything from leftover water cases, extra food, clothes, batteries, and paper and baby products.

“We reached out through Facebook, a little through NextDoor, and the people from the neighborhoods and beyond just kept coming up,” said Francis, who was helped loading the truck by students in the Sunlake High Key Club and players from the Florida Premier Football at the Land O’ Lakes Recreation Complex. “We put a sign up on Collier (Boulevard) and the neighborhoods really came together and were very generous.”

Steinberg said it only took about four hours to raise the money for the generators.

“People reached out and donated without hesitation,” he said.

Esmeralda Morales, of Wesley Chapel, filled up cars to the brim with donations from her neighborhood, Union Park in Wesley Chapel. She then made the 3 ½-hour drive to Fort Myers. (Courtesy of Esmerleda Morales)

Elsewhere, others set up supply drop-offs during the week through Oct. 7, such as Sunlake Academy Math and Science in Lutz.

The school’s principal, Dr. Judy Moore, is a member of the Land O’ Lakes Rotary Club, and its district had a Hurricane Ian relief drive. The donations collected at Sunlake Academy piled up high in the school’s front lobby.

“We chose to encourage our parents to participate in a drive-through donation drop-off in our morning car line,” Moore said. “Our drive ran through (Oct. 7) and we will put it with the rest of the rotary districts collections and (drove) them down south on (Oct. 8).”

Other schools, such as Pasco High and Sunlake High, had similar weeklong drop-offs, as well.

In addition to these drop-offs, churches and businesses also held collections. Grace Family Church Land O’ Lakes had a supply collection during it services on Oct. 5, while the car dealership, Jarrett Ford in Dade City, had a “Fill The Truck” drop-off and sent it down on Oct. 6.

However, it was the Pasco County citizens that put aside both their own responsibilities and concerns to band together, and help anyway they could.

The everyday neighbors from Land O’ Lakes to Lutz, from Dade City to Zephyrhills and into Wesley Chapel all joined together to make a difference.

“They are going to need more, and now it’s going to be clean-up supplies and equipment,” said Francis, who dropped off her donations to the MidWest Food Pantry in Fort Myers.

Items still needed include “work gloves, shovels, rakes, detergent to scrub houses that took in stormwater, etc.

They anticipate the next big need will be hygiene products.

“But my hope is to do this all over again, she added. “Get another truck full and down there with community help. Because it’s the right thing to do, as their neighbors.”

Published October 12, 2022

Community service is in this club’s heart, history

October 11, 2022 By Mike Camunas

The women of The Woman’s Club of Zephyrhills are busy bees.

And, that’s nothing new for this group, which was established 107 years ago to be of service in Pasco County’s largest municipality.

“Bee kind — that’s our theme,” said Emily Keene, the club’s recording secretary.

“Be kind, be generous, be happy. All those be’s, all of them, are part of every woman here and what brings them here,” said Keene, displaying her fun-loving spirit by sporting a bee-antenna headband. Each member of the group has one.

Members of The Woman’s Club of Zephyrhills pose together with their bee headbands, which is part of their motto to ‘Bee Kind.’ (Mike Camunas)

“There are all walks of life (in this club), and they come to this club because they want to provide services to this community that make a difference,” said Keene, a member of the club for eight years.

“It is a lot of fun, we have a good time and we’re friends, but it’s not a social club — it’s a working club,” she emphasized.

The Woman’s Club of Zephyrhills has been working for 107 years to help improve life in its community. It is the Zephyrhills branch of the General Federation of Women’s Clubs that was established in 1889.

The GFWC Woman’s Club of Zephyrhills was formed on Nov. 11, 1915 by 15 civic-minded women, while, through the efforts of Walter R. Gail and Mayor B.F. Parson, The Works Progress Administration built the clubhouse, located at 38545 Fifth Ave., from native rock hauled from a quarry on the Hillsborough River.

The Women’s Club first meeting at the clubhouse was April 18, 1941, and the club maintains the building through renting it for events. The club’s rent for the building is $1 year.

“We’ve been growing in leaps and bounds,” the club’s seventh-year president Gina Granger said. “We have a very diverse group of ladies, who all have a servant’s heart, and they just want to serve their community in some way, shape or form.”

Within every GFWC woman’s club, there are five committees, each focusing on a different aspect of the community. There is Arts & Culture; Civic Engagement & Outreach; Education & Libraries; Environment; and, Health & Wellness.

These committees help clubs light a path for the future. They also help focus efforts to address the current and upcoming needs within the community.

“We ask all members to join at least one committee, but some of them have multiple interests, so they might join more than one,” Granger said. “Those committees then come up with an annual service project — this is in every woman’s club.”

GFWC, nationwide, also has a signature service program: Domestic and Sexual Violence Awareness and Prevention, with an aim to increase awareness of and to help prevent the widespread occurrence of violence against women in communities.

Group is devoted, has staying power
The Zephyrhills club’s efforts to address the national GFWC’s signature program involves working extensively with Sunrise of Pasco, the Dade City-based center that helps victims of domestic violence and sexual assault.

The club also works with Meals on Wheels, Zephyrhills Task Force, St. Joseph’s Baby Pantry, Helping Hands Food Pantry, and Support our Troops, and Hospice.
The club, as well as its Education Committee, works with the ABC Program at Zephyrhills High, West Zephyrhills Elementary and Woodland Elementary.

The Women’s Club of Zephyrhills Clubhouse, at 38545 Fifth Ave., is a distinctive structure, built from native rock hauled from a quarry on the Hillsborough River. The building is used for club meetings, but also is available for event rentals. Money raised from those rentals is used for charitable endeavors and scholarships. (Mike Camunas)

Through their members’ education focus, the club created the Pasco-Hernando State College Lola Lambert Memorial Scholarship. Named after a former president, the $15,000-a-year perpetual scholarship supports students who demonstrate financial need and maintain a 3.2 or higher GPA.

“Well, Zephyrhills (High) is a Title 1 school, and it’s been a tough few years to be a teacher,” said Granger, who is a teacher at the high school. “So, there have been ladies here who have adopted my classroom, and collected supplies and even prizes and other things to motivate (students). They’ve done the same at West Zephyrhills (Elementary), and even one year they took care of the teachers, getting them supplies and other stuff to thank them.

“We always try to do service projects that are near and dear to our hearts, but we like to focus on education a lot.”

Granger added that the club also awards 10 $1,000 scholarships, as well as participates in Take Stock in Children of Florida — a nonprofit mentoring, college success and college scholarship organization that will look after a student all the way through high school and into college.

“That one is definitely important to me, and it means a lot to me that others have joined in helping me with Take Stock in Children,” Granger said.

As a new service season gets rolling, members expect to keep themselves busy.

“I have seen this group grow and grow,” said Linda Weyer, a former club president.

“I joined in 2008 and next year I became the president and was president for the 100-year anniversary in 2015. That was a big deal, because (GFWC) is, nationally, one of the oldest community service organizations around.

“And, in all my time, never have I seen the group not be enthusiastic or not dedicated to community service. Members come and go, but we’ve always had amazing numbers and amazing women.”

The Woman’s Club of Zephyrhills
Where:
38545 Fifth Ave., Zephyrhills
Details: Founded in 1915, the club, with about 80 members, is dedicated to community service, civic participation and educational programs. Members work together in the spirit of friendship for the betterment of the community, and support local national and international relief efforts. The club has a more than 100-year history of community service and is open to any woman 18 years of age or older. The club’s outreach includes education, scholarships, supporting local food banks and charitable, nonprofit organizations, and more.
Info: GFWCWomansClubOfZephyrhills.com

Published October 12, 2022

City of Zephyrhills approves 33% budget increase

October 11, 2022 By Mike Camunas

The numbers are in for the City of Zephyrhills’ budget — and this year’s total represents a 33% increase over last year.

The City of Zephyrhills approved a 33% increase in its budget, bringing the total budget for fiscal year 2022-2023 to slightly more than $100 million. (Mike Camunas)

The Zephyrhills City Council approved the city’s budget on Sept. 26. The budget for fiscal year 2022-2023 is slightly more than $100 million.

This is the fourth time in the past five budgets that the city increased its planned spending — and it marks the largest increase.

In the 2021-2022 fiscal year, the city budget increased 24.5%, for a total of $75.3 million.

This year’s budget is based on a millage rate of 6.25 mills, which will generate $6,591,549 in ad valorem taxes. The city’s total property valuation is  $1,110,155,587.

Last year, the valuation was $946,676,382, generating $5,710,825 in ad valorem tax revenues.

This fiscal year’s total expenditures are expected to be $100,621,184.

Budget particulars are detailed in a 54-page book.

Here’s a look at how spending breaks down:

  • General fund: $16,391,197
  • Special revenue fund: $32,739,894
  • Community Redevelopment Agency fund: $1,380,771
  • Impact fee fund: $3,037,407
  • Utility impact fee fund: $5,841,000
  • Utility fund: $30,027,676
  • Airport fund: $8,963,569
  • Sanitation fund: $2,239,670

Zephyrhills City Manager Billy Poe presented some budget highlights to council members. Those included:

  • Sarah Vande Berg Tennis & Wellness Center multipurpose indoor facility: $7,080,672, funded entirely by the state
  • Hercules Park Construction: $4,410,000, funded by Penny For Pasco and the American Rescue Plan Act
  • South Avenue Extension relating to National Guard: $1,940,000, funded entirely by the state
  • Sidewalks: $1.4 million, funded by Penny For Pasco
  • Eiland Boulevard/Simons Road intersection: $800,000, funded by transportation impact fees
  • Annual road resurfacing: $600,000, funded by gas tax
  • County Road 54, east of Hercules: $581,907, funded by Penny For Pasco
  • Stormwater Design Phase: $500,000, funded by Penny For Pasco
  • Zephyr Park Surveying: $400,00, funded by Penny For Pasco
  • Gateway Project: $350,000, funded by transportation impact fees
  • Park improvements: $300,00, funded with General Fund revenues
  • Design of City Yard: $200,000, funded by Penny For Pasco
  • Fuel tank upgrade: $150,000, funded by Penny For Pasco

The new budget calls for additional personnel, including four police officers, an administrative assistant, a code support specialist, a parks maintenance worker, an equipment operator and adding two employees to the High School Student Work Program.

City Council member salaries also will be getting an increase of $100 a month, taking effect at each election for the new elected Council member.

The budget includes a pay increase of 6% for employees and 41 cents to work toward the $15 minimum wage increase.

The budget includes $367,454 for the Zephyrhills Police Department to pay for renovation of an old ambulance, a camera system for command unit, stadium/portable lights and a dispatch consolidation project.

Also, $558,000 in Penny for Pasco funds has been allocated to purchase nine new SUV vehicles.

The streets department has budgeted $70,000 for an asphalt roller and trailer, and $600,000 for resurfacing, which will be paid for through gas taxes. It also has allocated $250,000 for a chipper truck, which will be paid for with Penny for Pasco funds.

The Sanitation Department will spend $535,000 on a new front load garbage truck, Curotto Can cart lift, cart tipper, automated truck arm, and the painting of two garbage trucks.

Parks will spend $93,000 for a zero-turn mower, two lawn trailers and a large area turf mower, paid for with gas tax proceeds, and $150,000 for playground equipment, paid for with park impact fees.

Additionally, Zephyrhills Municipal Airport received a 100% state appropriation for $6.6 million for new Terminal/Box Hangars/Taxiway and $390,000 for existing Runway 1-19 rehabilitation.

The city’s General Fund revenue sources include franchise fees, utility taxes, communication taxes, licenses and permits, state grants, state revenue sources, county shared funds (occupational licenses), building fees, other services fees, fines and forfeitures, interest income, miscellaneous fees and services, and interfund transfers.

Published October 12, 2022

Running down a record

October 11, 2022 By Mike Camunas

Will Poe knew the exact time.

He also knew the exact runner.

Because it’s a runner he’s trying to catch.

“Jose Espinosa. 16 minutes, 10 seconds,” the Zephyrhills High junior distance runner said, without a second thought.

Poe is referring to the 18-year-old school record Espinosa set for the fastest 5K run in 2004.

Will Poe, a junior distance runner at Zephyrhills High, is on the verge of breaking an 18-year-old school record for the fastest 5K run, which is held by Jose Espinosa, when the former Bulldog ran a 16:10 in 2004. (Mike Camunas)

“I don’t remember the year, but it was a long time ago, and I’ve been eyeing it for a while,” the distance runner said.

And, he is getting close.

With a 26th place in last year’s cross-country state tournament and his personal best time already at 16:26, Poe is on the verge of setting a new Bulldogs record.

However, his season was nearly derailed when he broke his toe over the summer, making everyone, including his coach, catch their breath.

“It was definitely a scary moment because his dad (Zephyrhills City Manager Billy Poe) told me, and I was like, ‘Oh … well this is going to be fun!’” second-year coach Matt Page said. “Luckily, it didn’t impact him or his season at all and it’s all water under the bridge now.

“You don’t want to hear it happen to any of your runners, and certainly not your top guy.”

Poe, himself, definitely was worried.

“My cousin broke his toe like a year ago and he had to get surgery, and it messed up the tendons and stuff, so I was pretty nervous I had messed up my foot for running on it,” he said. “But it healed up pretty nice and quick.”

After a collective sigh of relief, Poe went back to work on his goals. Those include not just breaking the school record, but also a return to the state tournament on Nov. 5 at Apalachee Regional Park in Tallahassee.

But first, there’s the little matter of the competition.

Poe’s biggest competitor has been Sunlake senior Alex Pena, arguably Pasco County’s top runner, who recently posted a 15:30 at the 40th Annual Spanish River XC Invitational in Boca Raton on Sept. 16.

However, with new Florida High School Athletic Association (FHSAA) classifications this season, Sunlake moves up to Class 4A, while Zephyrhills stays in 3A. This helps both Poe and the Bulldogs, because the Seahawks and Pena both finished third as a team and individually in the 2021 state championships.

Yet, runners remain that Poe will try to catch or pace. Cypress Creek senior Zach Poekert is one of those. Poekert finished sixth at states last year, as well as second at the Spanish River Invite, just 11 seconds behind Pena.

There’s also River Ridge senior Chase Thurber, who was chasing Poe at the St. Leo Abbey Invitational on Sept. 24. Poe finished fifth (16:36) and Thurber was seventh (16:37).

In that same race, Cypress Creek junior Dylan Powell finished eighth (16:43), while Wiregrass Ranch junior Hunter Boggs also cracked the top 20 with a 17:06.

“I’ve been battling it out (with those guys) all year and for a long time,” Poe said. “They are my biggest competitors.”

Page, however, says Poe is an easy runner to coach.

“I don’t really have to show him anything, which is great,” said Page, who was a distance runner at Pasco High. “The other day, he literally told me, ‘You’re running with me,’ and so, we ran from Lowe’s in Zephyrhills to Winn-Dixie in Dade City, which is 10 miles. I’m a little sore, but it was fun.”

As much fun as it is to have a coach who can keep up, Poe is focused on one thing between now and Nov. 5.

And that’s to have a place on the podium that day.

“I’ve put a lot of work into this season, so hopefully I can get 15th place or better at states and break the school record at states,” Poe said. “The top 15 runners get on the podium and get a medal. It’s that position or higher, or nothing. That is what I’ve been running for all season.”

Cross-Country Postseason:

Sunshine Athletic Conference Tournament
When:
Oct. 15
Where: Sunlake High, 3023 Sunlake Blvd., Land O’ Lakes
Details: This is the annual conference tournament for all Pasco County High School boys and girls cross-country teams.

District Tournaments
Class 4A-District 3
Host: Plant High
When: Oct. 20, 8 a.m.
Where: Rogers Park Golf Course, 7910 N. 30th St., Tampa
Teams: Alonso, Armwood, Bartow, East Lake, George Jenkins, Steinbrenner, Haines City, Land O’ Lakes, Largo, Mitchell, Palm Harbor University, Plant, Plant City, Ridge Community, Sickles, Strawberry Crest, Sunlake, Wharton, Winter Haven, Wiregrass Ranch

Class 3A-District 4
Host: Citrus High
When: Oct. 20, 5:30 p.m.
Where: Whispering Pines Park, 1700 Forest Dr., Inverness
Teams: Belleview, Citrus, Cypress Creek, Fivay, Gulf, Lake Minneola, Lecanto, Leesburg, Pasco, River Ridge, Springstead, Tavares, Vanguard Ocala, Wesley Chapel, Zephyrhills

Class 3A-District 5
Host: King High
When: Oct. 18, 5 p.m.
Where: Mary Help of Christians Center, 6400 E. Chelsea St., Tampa
Teams: Blake, Boca Ciega, Brandon, Clearwater, Countryside, East Bay, Freedom, Gaither, Hillsborough, Hollins, Jesuit, King, Leto, Middleton, Northeast, Osceola, Pinellas Park, Seminole, Spoto, St. Petersburg

Class 2A-District 5
Host: Robinson High
When: Oct. 19, 5:30 p.m.
Where: Mary Help of Christians Center, 6400 E. Chelsea St., Tampa
Teams: Anclote, Bell Creek, Berkeley Prep, Brooks-DeBartolo, Calvary Christian, Carrollwood Day, Chamberlain, Clearwater Central Catholic, Davenport, Discovery, Dunedin, Four Corners, Gibbs, Hudson, Jefferson, Lakewood, McKeel, Mulberry, Robinson, Tampa Catholic, Tarpon Springs, Tenoroc

Class 1A-District 3
Host: Oak Hall
When: Oct. 18, 9 a.m.
Where: Alligator Lake, 420 Southeast Alligator Glen, Lake City
Teams: Bishop McLaughlin

Class 1A-District 5
Host: Indian Rocks Christian
When: Oct. 20, 8 a.m.
Where: Taylor Park, 1100 Eighth Ave., SW, Largo
Teams: Academy at the Lakes

Regional Meets
When:
Oct. 26 thru Oct. 29
Where: Various Sites

State Championships
When:
Nov. 5
Where: Apalachee Regional Park, 7550 Apalachee Parkway, Tallahassee

For more information visit, FHSAA.com/sports/cross.

*Bolded teams are Pasco County teams and teams in the publication’s coverage area.

Published October 12, 2022

Friday Night Lights Football Scoreboard (Oct. 7)

October 11, 2022 By Mike Camunas

Pasco County
Land O’ Lakes 17, Nature Coast 14
Pasco 19, Auburndale 9
Cypress Creek 33, Hollins 8
South Sumter 23, Zephyrhills 20
New Smyrna Beach 20, Sunlake 9
Tohopekaliga 41, Wesley Chapel 14
Zephyrhills Christian 53, Discovery 0
Halifax Academy 42, Bishop McLaughlin Catholic 6

Hillsborough County
Wharton 42, Newsome 21
Steinbrenner 22, Armwood 14
Gaither 25, Bloomingdale 21
Rockledge 20, Carrollwood Day 6
Robinson 64, Freedom 19

Standings
(Overall, district)

Pasco County
Class 4 Suburban, District 6
Springstead 7-0, 1-0
Land O’ Lakes 6-0, 1-0
Mitchell 4-3, 1-1
Wiregrass Ranch 1-4, 0-2
Sunlake 1-5, 0-0

Class 3 Suburban, District 7
Pasco 6-0, 1-0
Cypress Creek 5-1, 0-1
Zephyrhills 3-3, 1-0
Wesley Chapel 0-6, 0-1

Class 1 Suburban, District 5
Lakeland Christian 5-0, 2-0
Victory Christian Academy 4-2, 1-0
Zephyrhills Christian 2-4, 0-2
Bishop McLaughlin Catholic 1-6, 0-1

Sunshine State – Gulf (8 Man)
Shorecrest Prep 5-1, 4-0
Lakeside Christian 4-2, 0-1
Canterbury 2-1, 2-1
Sarasota Christian 3-4, 1-2
Academy at the Lakes 1-3, 1-1
Real Life Christian Academy 0-6, 0-3

Hillsborough County
Class 4 Metro, District 6
East Lake 5-1, 1-0
Palm Harbor University 4-2, 0-0
Steinbrenner 3-3, 0-1
Sickles 1-6, 0-0

Class 3 Metro, District 4
Tampa Bay Tech 7-0, 1-0
Wharton 5-1, 0-0
Armwood 3-3, 0-0
Freedom 0-7, 0-0

Class 3 Metro, District 5
Jesuit 3-3, 1-0
Gaither 3-3, 1-0
Hillsborough 2-4, 0-1
Leto 2-5, 0-1

Class 1 Metro, District 3
Clearwater Central Catholic 5-1, 0-0
Cambridge Christian 4-2, 1-0
Carrollwood Day 3-2, 0-0
Seffner Christian 3-3, 0-1

Oct. 14 Football Schedule
Pasco County
Wesley Chapel at Cypress Creek
Land O’ Lakes at Springstead
Zephyrhills Christian at Bishop McLaughlin Catholic
Zephyrhills at Pasco
Wiregrass Ranch at Sunlake
Shorecrest Prep at Academy at the Lakes

Hillsborough County
Jesuit at Gaither
Palm Harbor University at Steinbrenner
Wharton at Tampa Bay Tech
Freedom at Armwood
Carrollwood Day at Seffner Christian

*All games start at 7:30 p.m.

Goal Diggers win summer league

October 11, 2022 By Mike Camunas

(Courtesy of Colin Eke)

Wesley Chapel Summer 2022 Woman’s League crowned its soccer champ recently, with The Goal Diggers winning for the eighth-straight season.

The Goal Diggers, playing at Wesley Chapel District Park, were almost beaten by the Sonic team, who took the Diggers to penalty kicks. The Diggers won 5 to 4 on the PKs.

Registration is now open for the Fall season, for both men and women. Cost is $500 per team of up to 14 players and an eight-game season. Free-agent registration is $50.

To register, visit www.newapsl.com/leagues. For information or questions, text Colin Eke at 813-610-2278.

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