• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • About Us
  • Videos
    • Featured Video
    • Foodie Friday
    • Monthly ReCap
  • Online E-Editions
    • 2026
    • 2025
    • 2024
    • 2023
    • 2022
    • 2021
    • 2020
    • 2019
    • 2018
    • 2017
    • 2016
    • 2015
    • 2014
  • Social Media
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
  • Advertising
  • Local Jobs
  • Puzzles & Games
  • Circulation Request
  • Policies

The Laker/Lutz News

Serving Pasco since 1981/Serving Lutz since 1964

  • Home
  • News
    • Land O’ Lakes
    • Lutz
    • Wesley Chapel/New Tampa
    • Zephyrhills/East Pasco
    • Business Digest
    • Senior Parks
    • Nature Notes
    • Featured Stories
    • Photos of the Week
    • Reasons To Smile
  • Sports
    • Land O’ Lakes
    • Lutz
    • Wesley Chapel/New Tampa
    • Zephyrhills and East Pasco
    • Check This Out
  • Education
  • Pets/Wildlife
  • Health
    • Health Events
    • Health News
  • What’s Happening
  • Sponsored Content
    • Closer Look
  • Homes
  • Obits
  • Public Notices
    • Browse Notices
    • Place Notices

Local News

Two cities, town heading to the polls April 8

February 27, 2014 By Michael Hinman

Mid-term elections are still months away, but cities and towns in Pasco County will have a chance to choose local leaders in municipal elections in Dade City, St. Leo and Zephyrhills.

Qualifying ended Feb. 18 for municipal elections, and incumbents in those cities and town will face challengers. Winners will be decided April 8.

Residents living in those cities who want to vote must be registered no later than March 10, according to Pasco County elections supervisor Brian Corley. At the polls, voters should bring photo and signature identification, or they will be required to vote a provisional ballot.

Zephyrhills
Zephyrhills is getting a new mayor, and he didn’t even have to campaign.

Gene Whitfield, owner of Whitfield Funeral Home and Cremation Services on Gall Boulevard, will succeed Danny Burgess as mayor of Zephyrhills.

He will become the 20th mayor of Zephyrhills, and the fourth one in the last two years, following the retirement of Cliff McDuffie in 2012 and the resignation later that year of new mayor Steve Van Gorden.

The mayor position is largely ceremonial, with no voting power. The city council chooses a board president to run meetings.

Burgess chose not to run again so that he could seek a state House seat being vacated by Will Weatherford, R-Wesley Chapel.

Also taking office unopposed in Zephyrhills is Ken Burgess, who was first elected in 2011 to replace Tim Urban, and didn’t draw an opponent in his first regular race in 2012.

The trip back to the city council dais won’t be so easy for Councilwoman Jodi Wilkeson, as she’ll face off against community activist and retired educator Alan Knight on April 8. Wilkeson, the president and founder of WDA Design Group, was first elected in 2008.

Knight currently is the chair of the city’s parks and recreation board, and has been involved in the city’s interest in purchasing the abandoned Hercules Park on County Road 54 in recent months.

Dade City
Mayor Camille Hernandez is returning for another term on the Dade City Commission after failing to attract a challenger, but her colleague Scott Black will have to convince voters to keep him in a job he’s had since 1990.

Angelica Herrera filed and qualified just before the deadline to challenge Black. She has been civically active over the years, including work in the Tommytown revitalization efforts as well as the United Latino Council. Now she’s a center manager for Catholic Charities on Meridian Avenue in Dade City, according to her election paperwork.

Hernandez was first elected to the commission in 2006, winning re-election unopposed in 2010. She became mayor in 2012, a position that is similar to a board president that is selected by the other commissioners, and where she still gets a vote.

St. Leo
Raphael Davis and Donna DeWitt will face off for a seat on the St. Leo town commission. DeWitt is the current incumbent in Seat 1, and has served on the St. Leo board since 1997.

Davis, who did not list an occupation in his candidate filing, lives in Lake Jovita, a prominent community in St. Leo that has pushed for de-annexation from the town in recent years.

DeWitt is a nun at Holy Name Monastery. She ran unopposed in 2012 and 2010.

James Hallett, a monk at Saint Leo Abbey, won a new term on the board unopposed, while Richard Christmas — who resigned from the commission in 2012 — will take over the commission seat currently held by Mayor John Gardner. The mayor, who will now be replaced by a commission vote at its next organizational meeting, did not seek re-election.

San Antonio
There won’t be any need to open the precinct in San Antonio, yet the city will have two new faces on its commission. Dennis Berberich and Anne Marie Kibbe won seats after both failed to draw challengers in their at-large election.

Returning for another term is Elayne Bassinger, after Thomas Knight filed but failed to qualify for the election.

Berberich and Kibbe will replace Roy Pierce and Richard Gates, both who chose not to run again. Pierce doubled as the city’s building and zoning commissioner, while Gates also was the waterworks commissioner. Bassinger was the commissioner over parks.

Published Feb. 26, 2014.

National soccer scoring title belongs to Sunlake’s Pimm

February 27, 2014 By Michael Murillo

Any soccer team that played the Sunlake Seahawks this season knew that Remi Pimm was a scoring threat. The sophomore forward was by far the best scorer on his team this season.

Sunlake’s Remi Pimm led the nation in scoring this past soccer season with 64 goals. That mark also makes him the new Pasco County single-season record holder. (Photo by Michael Murillo)
Sunlake’s Remi Pimm led the nation in scoring this past soccer season with 64 goals. That mark also makes him the new Pasco County single-season record holder. (Photo by Michael Murillo)

Of course, he also was the best scorer in the district.

And the region.

And the state.

In fact, Pimm finished the year as the top scorer … in the nation. He had 64 goals and 39 assists. Pimm’s total not only was good enough for this year’s national honors, he broke the all-time record for most goals in a season by a Pasco County player of either gender.

Pimm said he takes the substance of the game seriously, but likes adding a little style as well.

“I like to create and have fun with the game, take defenders on, create scoring opportunities,” he said. “When I play I just like to have a good time. I like to do it the right way but also play with flair and good style.”

But flair and style wasn’t on everyone’s mind when he first joined the team this season. Pimm said that people would ask him if he was going to break the county record that had been recently set by another Sunlake player. Connor Gilboy — who joined the University of Florida’s football program and was red-shirted as a freshman this year after graduating from Sunlake — held the mark with 60 goals after last season.

Known for his soccer skills, Pimm said the pressure was on for him to claim the mark for himself. So he was glad to have accomplished that task in his sophomore season.

“Beating his record was my goal at the beginning of the year, and I beat that,” he said. “And I eventually got the Pasco record. I felt really good.”

One goal that the team didn’t accomplish was a state title. The Seahawks fell to Merritt Island 1-0 in the Class 3A state semifinals on Feb. 13. But the team finished with a perfect 16-0 district record and a 29-2-1 overall record.

While the Seahawks wanted to win the title, Pimm said he was proud of the team for playing hard, not giving up, and staying positive.

In fact, a positive mindset is a big part of Pimm’s game. He studies the best professional soccer players — he wants to be one someday — and noticed they bring an intensity and focus even if thing aren’t going exactly the way they want on the pitch.

Pimm believes good players need to have a positive attitude that things will go well, but a short memory if they don’t.

“The secret to scoring this many goals is to quickly forget when you miss one,” he said. “Also studying the game — which is a huge part — watching the professionals do it, and visualizing myself in their position.”

While the Seahawks’ season is over, soccer is still on Pimm’s mind. He plays for the FC Tampa Rangers, a local club based in Lutz, and will participate in the State Cup for the team’s Under-16 boys group, which begins next month.

But wherever he plays, Pimm has learned to keep his attention on the contest at hand, taking deep breaths to regain his focus when necessary.

And he’s also learned patience. While he might score multiple goals in some games, in others those opportunities might not be there in the beginning. He believes the key is to not dwell on a lack of success, but focus on taking advantage at the next available opportunity.

“At no point in the game should you ever hang your head and give up,” he said.

Published Feb. 26, 2014.

Business Digest 02-26-14

February 27, 2014 By Michael Hinman

Process server comes to Wesley Chapel
Archangel Services has opened a new office in Wesley Chapel, providing the legal community with process service business.

The company is licensed in Pasco, Hillsborough, Polk, Hardee and Highlands counties.

For more information, visit ArchangelServices.us, or call (813) 358-6390.

 Costine retires from tax collector’s office
Cindy Costine, a longtime operations specialist at the Pasco County Tax Collector’s office, has retired.

Costine joined the office in 2001.

“Cindy is an unsung hero at the tax collector’s office,” tax collector Mike Fasano said, in a release. “She was part of the glue that keeps this place together each and every day. She is a well-respected and well-liked member of the team. She will definitely be missed.”

Roberts joins LOL Transport & Moving
Jan Roberts, who most recently was the director of partnership development and recruiting for Big Brothers Big Sisters of Tampa Bay, has joined LOL Transport & Moving in Land O’ Lakes as a community liaison.

Jan Roberts
Jan Roberts

Roberts had been with Big Brothers Big Sisters since 2008, and met owner Rene Van Hout at various networking and volunteer groups, according to a release.

LOL Transport & Moving is located at 5811 Ehren Cutoff in Land O’ Lakes. They can be reached at LOLMoving.com.

Free financial market seminar
Jodi Perez and Jeannie Holliday of Independent Financial Services will host a free seminar Feb. 27 beginning at 5:30 p.m. at 20635 Amberfield Drive in Land O’ Lakes.

The company will share its view of the state of the economic markets, and what could be in store for the coming year.

Dinner is included.

To RSVP, call (813) 980-2701.

Political Agenda 02-26-14

February 27, 2014 By Michael Hinman

Commission candidates to debate
The Pasco Federated Republican Women’s Club will host a debate for Republican Pasco County Commission candidates March 7 at 11:30 a.m. at Fox Hollow Golf Club, 10050 Robert Trent Jones Parkway in Trinity.

The forum will include Ken Littlefield, Mike Moore and Bob Robertson. All three are campaigning to win a primary election set for Aug. 26, with the winner set to face Erika Remsberg — or the winner of a Democratic primary if one is needed — in the general election.

Cost is $15, and reservations are required by March 4.

For more information, call Fran Scerbo at (727) 597-3727, or email .

Fundraising slow for Bob Robertson
Now facing two candidates in the Republican primary to replace Pat Mulieri on the Pasco County Commission, Bob Robertson is not making a lot of headway in the fundraising department.

The Zephyrhills-based investment assets manager reported just a single donation in January, $50, while spending a little more than $185. Like many of his other contributions, this latest one once again came from outside the area, this time Maryland.

So far since filing to run in July, Robertson has raised just under $10,200. But only 61 percent of that has come from Florida donors, and nearly half of that came from a loan Robertson himself made to the campaign.

Robertson still has a lot of money ready to spend, more than $5,500. But that pales to the cash available to one of his primary opponents, Mike Moore, who has nearly $35,000 at the ready through the end of last month.

The third candidate in the primary, former State Rep. Ken Littlefield, has yet to file financial reports after announcing his candidacy Jan. 16. Also nothing to show yet in the campaign finance department is Erika Remsberg, who filed as a Democrat Feb. 7.

Constitutional Convention bill clears hurdle
The Florida Senate Judiciary committee has moved forward a bill from Sen. Wilton Simpson, R-Trilby, calling for a Constitutional convention he hopes will limit U.S. Congress bills to just a single subject.

The committee vote Feb. 11 passed 7-2, and the bill now moves on to the Governmental Oversight and Accountability committee. After that, it only has the Rules committee before being ready for a floor vote.

The House version of the bill was referred to committee last December, but is likely waiting for the outcome of the Senate version.

“This is about having the federal government start conducting themselves in a professional manner,” Simpson told The Laker/Lutz News in January. “Most of the frustration we have with our government is that you have something like a spending bill in Congress. They always add on several hundred millions of dollars of something that has nothing to do with the subject they are dealing with. And as a citizen of the state of Florida, I am tired of our federal government being operated this way.”

For more on the call for a Constitutional convention, visit tinyurl.com/SingleSubject.

Lawmakers endorse Burgess
State Rep. Jose Felix Diaz, R-Miami, and State Rep. Debbie Mayfield, R-Vero Beach, have endorsed Zephyrhills mayor Danny Burgess in his attempt to succeed Will Weatherford in the State House.

“Danny and I are both young husbands and fathers, lawyers and businessmen, and deeply concerned for the future of our state,” Diaz said in a release. “I am proud to endorse him, and look forward to working with a principled young leader like Danny.”

“Danny’s record speaks for itself,” Mayfield said in a release. “A mayor committed to his neighbors, a father and husband committed to his family, and a U.S. Army captain committed to his country.”

Diaz was first elected to the state House in 2010, and wrote seven bills in 2012 that were signed by Gov. Scott, including one that ended the Urban Infill & Redevelopment Assistance Grant program. That program was created in 1999 to help local governments revitalize distressed urban areas, but it had not been funded since 2001.

Mayfield joined the House in 2008, and served as majority whip in 2009 and 2010. Although she authored three bills that became law in 2013, she also had one concerning the Fellsmere Water Control District in Indian River County vetoed by Gov. Rick Scott. The governor said the bill would lead to multiple governments competing to provide the same services.

Burgess potentially faces Minerva Diaz in the Republican primary, the winner of which — barring any other entrants into the race — will face Democrat Beverly Anne Ledbetter in the general election.

Late bowler struck hearts with kindness

February 20, 2014 By B.C. Manion

If somebody wanted to track down Betty Strickland on a weekday, it was a safe bet she’d be at Royal Lanes in Lutz.

Betty Strickland was a fixture at Royal Lanes in Lutz. She was known not only for her bowling prowess, but also her kindly nature. (File Photo)
Betty Strickland was a fixture at Royal Lanes in Lutz. She was known not only for her bowling prowess, but also her kindly nature. (File Photo)

The Land O’ Lakes woman, who died on Jan. 29, was a fixture at the bowling alley since it opened in the 1970s.

On busy days, she bowled as many as 10 games. But normally, Strickland bowled around four, according to a feature story about the bowler published in The Laker/Lutz News in 2010.

Strickland enjoyed bowling with her friend, Cat Carson, and the two women played in scores of tournaments – including national tournaments – for several years.

One of Strickland’s biggest moments at Royal Lanes came on Jan. 9, 2006, when she bowled 300 — a perfect game.

Rachel Thompson, who herself bowled a perfect game on Nov. 9, 2012, said that besides being a terrific bowler, Strickland radiated kindness. Thompson works in classified sales at The Laker/Lutz News.

Before meeting Strickland, Thompson said she felt a bit intimidated. After all, Strickland bowled with the Brooklyn Strikers, known as the team to beat at Royal Lanes.

But it didn’t take Strickland long to put Thompson at ease.

“She right away was giving me five and telling me how good I was,” Thompson said, adding that Strickland was “super sweet and really supportive. She didn’t even know me.”

Carson, a retired schoolteacher, also remembers Strickland’s warm welcome. The Land O’ Lakes woman said she was pretty rusty at the time, and Strickland noticed.

“She looked at my old ball from 1960. She said, ‘I think you need some help,’” recalled Carson, who became fast friends with Strickland. “She took me under her wing and started teaching me all of these things. She worked hours and hours with me. We started bowling shortly after that, almost five times a week.”

Their friendship went beyond the bowling alley. They went scalloping together and to country music concerts at the Strawberry Festival in Plant City.

“She liked baseball, too. We were big (Tampa Bay) Rays fans. She’d watch every game, every night,” Carson said.

After games, the women would chat on the telephone about how the players performed.

Carson said she treasures the friendship she and Strickland shared.

“I never had a friend quite like Betty,” Carson said.

She recalls an instance when Strickland called her at midnight and said, “Oh, my cactus flower opened, come see it.”

Carson jumped in her car to go see it.

On another occasion, Strickland was chatting on the telephone and told Carson, “Oh, look, a baby deer was born in my bushes.”

So, Carson jumped in her car once again, and drove to Strickland’s house.

Carson credits Strickland for playing a large role in influencing the welcoming ambience at Royal Lanes.

“Our whole bowling alley is very friendly — the majority of the people there — and I really think Betty had a big thing to do with that,” Carson said.

She was beloved by people of all ages, Carson said. She pointed out that a good number of those in attendance at her memorial service were decades younger than Strickland.

Strickland is survived by her daughters, Brenda Barno (Pete) and Robyn Davie Geiger (John); her four grandchildren, Andrew Barno, Brenna Barno Longmier, Dennis Davie Jr., Wendy Jo Davie; and numerous great-grandchildren.

Robyn Geiger said her mother enjoyed the camaraderie of the bowlers at Royal Lanes. “She liked the people,” Geiger said.

Besides being an avid bowler in her later years, Strickland was a hard worker in her younger years, Geiger said. Sometimes Strickland would work two or three jobs, to make sure she could provide for her daughters.

Thompson, who only knew Strickland from the bowling alley, said the woman left an indelible impression.

“It was great to bowl with her. She made sure to let people know she cared,” Thompson said, adding Strickland was “sweet as cotton candy.”

Published Feb. 19, 2014

 

Wade Boggs, others support new Little League park name

February 20, 2014 By Michael Murillo

Because it’s located at 18050 Kinnan Street, many people know New Tampa Little League Park as Kinnan Fields. But soon it could be getting a whole new name.

Kinnan Fields could soon get an official name after a couple that devoted a lot of time to bring Little League to the area. Eber Park, named for Dick and Kathy Eber, could be made official as early as this spring. (Photo by Michael Murillo)
Kinnan Fields could soon get an official name after a couple that devoted a lot of time to bring Little League to the area. Eber Park, named for Dick and Kathy Eber, could be made official as early as this spring. (Photo by Michael Murillo)

A final decision has yet to be made, but a public meeting on Feb. 10 to discuss options ended with one clear choice among interested parties.

“Every person there spoke to renaming the park Eber Park, after Dick and Kathy Eber,” said Jack Carlisle, director of Parks, Recreation and Conservation for Hillsborough County. The couple was instrumental in the formation of the league, first as the Northeast Little League, and then its move to New Tampa.

And the Ebers still live in the area, Carlisle said, with Kathy Ebers an assistant athletic specialist for the county, and Dick Eber a retired postal carrier.

The Ebers have a vocal group of supporters who want to see them honored with the park naming, but the couple was not informed of the effort, Carlisle said. His plan was to meet with Kathy this week and reveal the news, ahead of Wednesday’s Hillsborough County Commission meeting, where the item is on the agenda.

The ball to recognize the Ebers got rolling when Harald Stone, a former Little League president, spoke with Commissioner Ken Hagan about the possibility of renaming New Tampa Little League Park in their honor. Stone then spoke before the Park Advisory Board to present the issue, which led to a public meeting to consider all options and opinions.

“I had been thinking about it for two or three years,” explained Stone, who has known the Ebers for more than two decades. “They have just been the heart and soul of Little League.”

Kathy, Stone said, served as Little League president multiple times, and would handle the league’s administrative duties in the early days, while Dick would work on managing, coaching and umpiring. After their own children grew out of the league, the Ebers stayed and even sacrificed vacation time to mentor children, remain active and help it grow.

In an organization where leaders tend to come and go as their children moved through the system, the Ebers remained a constant presence and source of support. “Through all the comings and goings of the various of adults and parents who were involved in the league, there was one constant, and that was Dick and Kathy Eber,” Stone said. “We were there when our kids played. They were there long-term.”

The meeting had enthusiastic supporters for the name change in attendance, but it wasn’t a large group. Only six people came to speak to the issue, but some had well-recognized baseball credentials. Major League Baseball Hall-Of-Famer Wade Boggs and former University of South Florida baseball coach Eddie Cardieri were among those speaking on the Ebers’ behalf.

Carlisle explained that while there might not have been large numbers in attendance, it’s not surprising that those who showed up were passionate about the topic.

“I’m fond of telling staff in almost every meeting that at Parks and Recreation, we’re in the business of creating memories,” he said. “When people walk away from the park with their family or from some sporting event, they’re walking away with a memory. I believe that collectively, over time, that creates a kind of passion for a particular place.”

The renaming of the park — which boasts three fields, batting cages and a concession area — won’t be official until the board approves it. But there aren’t any other names in contention. If approved, appropriate signage will be placed at the park, and a ceremony will be scheduled to mark the change.

That could happen sometime in the middle or end of the current season, which runs through closing ceremonies scheduled for May 17.

While he was the catalyst behind the name change, Stone said he’s just one of the couple’s many admirers, and represents the sentiments of those who appreciate their contributions to youth baseball.

“There would have been a hundred other guys who, if I had been hit by a car, would have kept it going. I can tell you that,” he said. “I was not alone in this.”

Published Feb. 19, 2014

Elevated road proposal moving forward quickly

February 20, 2014 By Michael Hinman

All the talk about a proposed elevated toll road along the State Road 54/56 corridor has put it years and years in the future.

But if the Florida Department of Transportation finalizes an agreement with International Infrastructure Partners LLC, such a project connecting Zephyrhills and New Port Richey may come much faster, with the first public presentation of the road’s conceptual plan scheduled for next month.

Public meetings will be in three locations across the county beginning in late spring, the same time IIP begins its negotiations to lease the right of way along the corridor needed to build the elevated road. They would take place on the east and west sides of the county, as well as in between.

“We’re having further discussions about what is going to be happening after those public hearings, but it’s all kind of a simultaneous thing over the next several months,” said Lee Royal, a public involvement director with the FDOT, during last week’s Pasco County Metropolitan Planning Organization meeting.  “There will be possible lease negotiations depending on the outcome of those public hearings.”

Which way the pendulum swings will depend on who shows up for those meetings. Pasco County Commissioner Jack Mariano says he’s received nothing but negative emails about the project in recent weeks, while county planning and development administrator Richard Gehring said a good number of people from a meeting he had in Wesley Chapel chose the elevated road as the best solution for long-term traffic woes in the county.

Negative public sentiment might kill the project before it even gets going, Mariano said, based on how IIP has reacted to bad news in the past. When a member from the Washington, D.C.-based Urban Land Institute recommended against an elevated road, IIP took a step back from its request, and asked for more time to think through its proposal.

“I have not heard anything back positive from the public,” Mariano said. “I think it’s disingenuous to keep those things rolling down the road when all they are going to do is step back again.”

Yet if the elevated road isn’t built, the county and the state will still have tough decisions to make when it comes to fixing pending traffic congestion issues along the corridor while Pasco County continues to grow.

“I am not 100 percent in favor of this managed toll lane … but we have to evaluate everything,” Commissioner Ted Schrader, another MPO member, said. “If (IIP) withdraws their proposal, we still have an issue to deal with because people will be stuck in traffic.”

Another possibility facing the county is that IIP might not build all 33 miles of the road as initially proposed, Gehring said. The prospective traffic problems in the near future will focus on the 10-mile stretch of State Road 54/56 between the Suncoast Parkway and Interstate 75.

Connecting those two major north-south roads might be the best option for everyone in the long run, he said. And while there are some eyeballs on State Road 52 to the north as an east-west connector, the county still has limited options to build since much of the central part of Pasco is protected conservation land.

“There are a lot of natural constraints in this system that we are trying to deal with,” Gehring said.

Published Feb. 19, 2014

Putting God’s love into action through clothing

February 20, 2014 By B.C. Manion

Drop by Phyllis T. Lise’s home and you’ll see piles of clothes on the living room sofa, boxes of clothing stacked against walls, and plastic bags full of shoes and other stuff.

Phyllis T. Lise, founder of Dressing Angels, stands near a stack of boxes filled with clothing in her Wesley Chapel living room. She delivers gently used clothing and shoes to the mentally ill and others in need. (Photo by B.C. Manion)
Phyllis T. Lise, founder of Dressing Angels, stands near a stack of boxes filled with clothing in her Wesley Chapel living room. She delivers gently used clothing and shoes to the mentally ill and others in need. (Photo by B.C. Manion)

However, the piles, bags and boxes are not a sign that Lise is becoming a hoarder.

Instead, the Wesley Chapel woman is the founder of Dressing Angels, a charity that, according to its mission statement, “actively seeks to put God’s love into action by providing gently used clothing and shoes for the mentally ill and those in need.”

Lise was inspired to start the charity after her son was diagnosed as a paranoid schizophrenic.

When she went to see him at mental health facilities or accompanied him on appointments, she noticed that many of the mentally ill patients were wearing clothing and shoes that were dirty or worn. At one facility, she heard patients complaining they were cold. They weren’t wearing any socks, she said.

“Their families had abandoned them,” Lise said.

She decided she needed to get involved.

“This is something God wanted me to do,” she said. “Somebody has got to help. Somebody has got to do something.”

So, she and her husband Fred found time outside their full-time jobs to start purchasing clothing and shoes at thrift shops and garage sales. Lise then launders the clothing and packages it to deliver to mental health facilities, group homes and to schools in Pasco and Hillsborough counties, which have large enrollments of poor children.

The charity also helps the homeless.

The need is great, Lise said.

“The mentally ill, they’re the forgotten in our community,” Lise said. “The stigma is still there. If I tell you I have breast cancer, you would feel so sorry for me. If I told you I had heart disease, you would feel sorry. But if I said I had mental illness, you would treat me as though something is wrong with me.”

But mental illness is pervasive, Lise added. Of Florida’s approximately 18.3 million residents, close to 660,000 adults live with serious mental illness, and about 181,000 children live with serious mental health conditions, according to statistics reported by the National Alliance on Mental Illness.

Lise has encountered many people who have family members or friends who are mentally ill.

“Every time I talk to somebody, they’ll say, ‘I know somebody, my relative …’ People do not realize how prevalent mental illness is in our society,” Lise said.

After she launched the charity and began making appearances in television and radio interviews, she became much more attuned to the scale of the issue.

“You don’t know how many people are suffering until the story gets out there and people start emailing you with their stories,” Lise said.

She acknowledged that she, herself, didn’t realize the extent of the issue until her son was diagnosed. He was 17 when she began noticing something was wrong.

“All of a sudden, he stopped taking a bath. He stopped eating. He stopped brushing his teeth,” she said. “He started having signs of dementia, like mumbling. He couldn’t put his words together.”

Initially, she thought he was using drugs. But he told her he wasn’t. They both spent months visiting doctors before he was finally diagnosed, she said.

Besides donating items to mental health facilities and schools, Lise and her husband also visit a homeless camp where they donate clothing and cooking utensils.

Once a month, Lise delivers 50 bags of clothing to a school in Pasco or Hillsborough county. Each bag holds a week’s worth of clothing.

Some of the clothing she gives away has been donated, but Lise and her husband purchase most of it, she said. They spend much of their time shopping for bargains.

“I go to all of the Salvation Armys. Goodwill. Mom-and-pop thrift stores,” Lise said. “I go to a lot of garage sales because you can find a lot of clothes for like a dollar.”

Dressing Angels Teen and Young Adult Group
People between the ages of 14 and 26 meet the second Saturday of each month from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., at the North Tampa Library, 8916 North Boulevard.

The group might participate in arts and crafts, watch movies, go on field trips to the Museum of Science & Industry or out to bowl.

Current Needs
• Clothing: Gently used or new clothing of all kinds for all ages.
• Gently used or new tennis shoes, shoes, sandals or boots for all ages.
• Donation center space where people can pick up clothing and shoes, and also can meet for support meetings and activities.
• Laundry detergent
To help, call Phyllis T. Lise at (813) 498-7967, or email dressingangels@yahoo.com.

For more information, visit DressingAngels.org.

Published Feb. 19, 2014

Wesley Chapel agriculture program making its mark

February 20, 2014 By B.C. Manion

When sophomores Spencer Brass, Amber Maxwell and Savannah Musser were students at Weightman Middle School, they were all involved in the school’s National FFA Organization program.

Savannah Musser and Spencer Brass help care for the goats behind Wesley Chapel High School as part of the school’s agricultural program. (Photo by B.C. Manion)
Savannah Musser and Spencer Brass help care for the goats behind Wesley Chapel High School as part of the school’s agricultural program. (Photo by B.C. Manion)

But they weren’t sure what would happen after middle school, since Wesley Chapel High didn’t have an agricultural program.

“We were like, how are we going to go into high school and not have this?” said Maxwell, 15. So the students pushed their former agriculture teacher and adviser Halyee Monk to help them out.

With Wesley Chapel High School principal Carin Nettles as a driving force, the school got its agriculture program, and students like Brass, Maxwell and Musser were able to continue their work.

“She definitely was the one who pushed and pushed and pushed and pushed to be able to get this program. Without the support of the principal, it’s impossible,” said Brass, 16.

The students were happy to get to attend a high school that was right next door to their middle school, instead of having to travel to Zephyrhills or Pasco high schools to pursue their interests, said Musser, 16. All three said they would have transferred to different high schools if necessary, but were glad it didn’t come to that.

While Wesley Chapel High’s agricultural program is still in its infancy, it is growing, said teacher Erin McCann Farquhar. It has two courses now and will add another next year.

Despite its short history, the school’s FAA chapter already is beginning to make a name for itself, Brass said.

“I think a lot of people underestimated us,” said Brass, who, along with Helena Polansky, won an award last April for their egg carton herb garden in the ornamental horticulture demonstration category.

“We all have so much determination. We are so new we are trying to get our name out there,” Musser said.

The Wesley Chapel team of Polansky, Stephanie Reschke, Renee Carpenter and Shawn Devisfruto had the highest score in the state in the preliminary round of the dairy judging competition.

“Our school is actually home to three of the top 10 individual scorers,” Brass said. “There’s no other school that has more than one. We have three.”

Reschke tied for first place, while Polansky was No. 4 and Devisfruto was No. 8.

“Helena Polansky, she coached the entire thing,” Brass said.

Reschke gave kudos to Polansky for helping prepare the team.

“Helena, our leader, has helped us quite a bit with the written test she gives us and the study guides on the information,” said Reschke, who enjoys being in FFA.

The school’s dairy judging team placed fourth in the state last year. Results were not yet available for this year’s competition that was on Feb. 15.

Wesley Chapel students have shown animals at the state fair and will show animals at the Pasco County Fair, as well.

Musser, Brass and Polansky are showing steer at the Pasco County Fair. Others in the program who are showing steer are Justin Taylor, Nick Wrage and Carpenter.

Maxwell and Devisfruto are showing pigs.

“These are market animals,” Musser said. “We put our money into them, then we’re going to take them and auction them off and hopefully have a really good profit.”

Before joining FFA, Maxwell said she had some misconceptions about the organization.

“I thought it was all like people who just wanted to be farmers,” she said.

Musser believed it was all about agriculture, too. “I never thought of the public speaking aspect of it, until I got involved,” she said. “When you get involved, you really learn a lot.”

The lessons go far beyond tending to animals or growing crops, Brass said. It provides excellent opportunities to take leadership roles.

“This is a youth-led organization. We run all of the meetings. You learn a lot of life skills,” Brass said.

Musser agreed. “It teaches you how to talk to people, how to approach things.”

While all three students are involved in the program because of their interest in animals, Musser and Maxwell said they don’t plan careers involving animals.

“I want to be a neonatal nurse,” Musser said.

“I want to do physical therapy,” Maxwell said.

Heissler, Reschke and Brass, on the other hand, do expect their careers to involve animals.

Heissler is debating between equine veterinary or zoology. Reschke is debating between a veterinary career or training dogs for people with special needs.

Brass wants to continue his involvement with FFA.

“After high school, I want to go on to serve as a state and national FFA officer,” he said. “I want to go to UF (the University of Florida) and become a vet and have a large and small animal practice.”

Published Feb. 19, 2014

Announced layoffs won’t affect Dade City hospital

February 20, 2014 By Michael Hinman

Just a day after its $7.6 billion sale to Community Health Systems was finalized, Health Management Associates told state officials that it planned to lay off 395 people by the beginning of April.

New signs advertising the renamed Bayfront Health Dade City hospital line Fort King Road in front of the campus. Community Health Systems says its recent layoff announcement will not affect the Dade City facility. (Photo by Michael Hinman)
New signs advertising the renamed Bayfront Health Dade City hospital line Fort King Road in front of the campus. Community Health Systems says its recent layoff announcement will not affect the Dade City facility. (Photo by Michael Hinman)

HMA made the announcement to the Florida Department of Economic Opportunity Jan. 29. So far, it is the largest job cut of the year reported to the agency.

The cuts, however, are not expected to affect Bayfront Health Dade City, or most of the other hospitals in the chain.

“There is no impact on jobs at former HMA hospitals … as a result of the merger,” CHS spokeswoman Tomi Galin told The Laker/Lutz News. “The hospital names and leadership teams remain the same, and most importantly, patients can continue to count on these hospitals for high-quality care, delivered by the physicians and employees they already know and trust.”

The announcement, however, was based on what Florida requires companies to do by law to any potentially impacted employees of restructuring. This particular notice focused on corporate employees for HMA based in Naples, including many who do not actually work in Florida, Galin said.

The notice, known as a Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification — or WARN — also includes about 100 people who are being offered jobs with the new ownership, as well as those who have chosen to leave the organization voluntarily, but did not plan to give notice until after the sale of the chain closed.

“As a result, even though the WARN notice indicates that approximately 400 jobs are affected, many of these individuals will have jobs in our organization, or have already found other jobs,” Galin said.

The purchase of Health Management Associates, first announced last July, included what was then known as Pasco Regional Medical Center and 22 other hospitals in the state. Before the sale, CHS had just two hospitals in Florida, the closest in Lake Wales.

As part of its acquisition, the Federal Trade Commission required CHS to put two hospitals in Alabama and South Carolina up for sale.

Bill Hussey is overseeing the company’s new hospitals in Florida. He has a bit of an indirect connection with the Dade City hospital because he was the Tampa Bay division president when Columbia/HCA owned the Dade City facility.

He would later become chief executive officer of Gulfside Medical Development. Hussey has been with CHS since 2001, and will manage hospitals for the company not just in Florida, but in Georgia and South Carolina as well.

The 120-bed Bayfront Health Dade City was originally founded in 1973 as Community General Hospital, and has had various names over the years. It was known as Pasco Regional Medical Center soon after HMA acquired the hospital in 2000 for $17 million.

It’s located at 13100 Fort King Road in Dade City.

Published Feb. 19, 2014

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 625
  • Page 626
  • Page 627
  • Page 628
  • Page 629
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 656
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Search

Sponsored Content

All-in-one dental implant center

June 3, 2024 By advert

  … [Read More...] about All-in-one dental implant center

WAVE Wellness Center — Tampa Bay’s Most Advanced Upper Cervical Spinal Care

April 8, 2024 By Mary Rathman

Tampa Bay welcomes WAVE Wellness Center, a state-of-the-art spinal care clinic founded by Dr. Ryan LaChance. WAVE … [Read More...] about WAVE Wellness Center — Tampa Bay’s Most Advanced Upper Cervical Spinal Care

More Posts from this Category

Archives

 

 

Where to pick up The Laker and Lutz News

Copyright © 2026 Community News Publications Inc.

   