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Wesley Chapel/New Tampa News

This high school will open doors to new possibilities

April 12, 2022 By Mike Camunas

This has been a long time coming.

Since 2018, to be exact.

Ever since Wendell Krinn Technical High opened in New Port Richey — replacing Ridgewood High — there’s been a need for a technical school on Pasco County’s east side.

Soon, that need will be served.

Pasco County Schools is spending $70 million on Kirkland Ranch Academy of Innovation, a school that will feature leading-edge programs on an ultra-modern campus.

Kirkland Ranch Academy of Innovation, at 32555 Innovation Drive in Wesley Chapel, is a state-of-the-art $70-million high school set to open in August. It will provide an array of technical program options for students. (Mike Camunas)

Being built in the rapidly growing community of Wesley Chapel, the new high school is set to open this August, for the 2022-2023 school year.

The STEM (science, technical, engineering and mathematics) high school will feature a curriculum that allows students to earn a standard diploma, while having the opportunity to earn industry certifications.

Dee Dee Johnson, Kirkland Ranch’s inaugural principal, said this type of school has been needed on the east side of the county for a long time.

The campus gives students a chance to attain a well-rounded education, while also exploring programs that might not be their exact focus.

Students will have access to trade and technical programs such as automotive maintenance and repair, including diesel; biomedical sciences; building trades and construction technology; cybersecurity; digital media and multimedia design; engineering and robotics, welding; electricity; and, patient care technology.

Kirkland Ranch is opening with freshmen and sophomores, but will be adding junior and senior classes.

Both school and district leaders are enthused about the new opportunities that Kirkland will provide.

“We’re excited about the whole experience for those students,” said Dr. Kim Moore, assistant superintendent for Career and Innovative Programs.

The school’s STEM focus “is integrated into everything because STEM is a mindset. The programs will all have interconnection,” Moore said.

Kirkland Ranch has been designed to foster collaboration among students.

Several programs are deliberately located close to each other to make it easier for students from various programs to bring their work together.

“Engineering needs to understand the trades of building and construction, just like electrical needs to, as well,” Johnson said. “Honestly, we’re excited about how all of the programs can collaborate and work together. I think that’s really cool because that’s how it will work in the real world. We’re excited to see what every program can build and create.”

The school district also is excited to have a diesel automotive program, one that can and will work on its school buses.

A construction welder works on the campus of Kirkland Ranch Academy of Innovation, a $70-million project to bring a science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) high school to the east side of Pasco County.

“They’ll be able to service our own vehicles — which is just about one of the coolest things the school system will have,” Moore said.

Pasco County Schools is taking full advantage of the county’s unprecedented growth, especially in the Wesley Chapel area.

With the abundance of nearby construction projects — on buildings, roadways and other infrastructure — there’s plenty of opportunity for technical jobs. Those are the kinds of jobs that will be easily accessible to students who receive training and can become certified before leaving high school.

“Think about it,” Moore said. “Large employers like the hospitals coming in right there in Wesley Chapel will need everything from doctors to nurses to biomedical to technicians. But those large businesses will need buildings; jobs that will go to welders and construction and engineers. Those businesses might have vehicles, in which our students will be prepared to work on those mechanically.

“A lot of strategy went into selecting career fields and programs at Kirkland Ranch — that way it would meet the needs locally,” Moore said.

“We took a comprehensive local needs assessment that focused on the jobs needed in Pasco, especially right nearby in Wesley Chapel. We’ll have ready a pool of employees right here in Pasco County that will attract even more businesses.”

Kirkland Ranch is set to be completed this summer, with students expected to have a chance to tour the building sometime in July, Johnson said.

“Everything is on track, which is amazing in what we’re facing (with supply chains) at this time,” Johnson added.

Anticipation is growing and the excitement is palpable, as school and district leaders prepare to welcome the first students to Kirkland Ranch.

“If I was in high school again, I would have gone to this school,” Moore said, with a laugh. “I would have loved to have gone to a school like Kirkland Ranch.”

Interested in enrolling?
The Pasco County Pathways second enrollment period runs through April 18. For more information on Kirkland Ranch, its programs and enrollment, visit KRAI.pasco.k12.fl.us/.

Published April 13, 2022

New BayCare hospital to add 250 jobs

April 5, 2022 By B.C. Manion

Hundreds of construction workers are busy building BayCare Hospital Wesley Chapel, at 4501 Bruce B. Downs Blvd., in Wesley Chapel.

The new 86-bed hospital is expected to open in Spring 2023, and when it does, it will create additional medical options within Pasco County, as well as more jobs.

Becky Schulkowski, the hospital’s president, is pleased with the $246 million project’s progress to date.

“We are on budget. We are on schedule,” Schulkowski said, during a recent hard-hat tour of the construction site, on the 40-plus acre campus.

The hospital is fortunate because it hasn’t been besieged by construction cost escalations and supply chain issues, the hospital leader said.

Becky Schulkowski, the president of BayCare Hospital Wesley Chapel, is pleased with the progress of the $246 million project. She can’t wait to begin to bring BayCare’s health care services to the Wesley Chapel area. (B.C. Manion)

“We were just basically on the crest of that wave,” she said.

“All of our pricing was honored. I have one item that we have identified as a delay in shipment,” she said, but noted that that will arrive well before the hospital opens.

“We did have a shipment of tile that got stuck on a ship at the Port of Miami for a couple of months,” she said, but that has arrived.

When BayCare Hospital Wesley Chapel opens, it will offer comprehensive medical services and health care resources including an emergency department, an intensive care unit with virtual-monitoring beds, diagnostic services such as imaging and lab, and physical rehabilitation.

Right now, there are about 300 construction workers plying their skills at the site. The hospital is expected to begin operations with about 250 employees, and to increase up to 275 by the second year..

BayCare chose to open a hospital in Wesley Chapel because it’s an obviously growing area — and where there are people, there are healthcare needs, Schulkowski said.

“We wanted to meet that need. We’re bringing the BayCare values to the community. Every person who walks through our doors is treated with respect, dignity, trust,” the hospital president said. ““So, really, it is those values that we bring to every interaction.”

The BayCare experience won’t be a new one for many of the Wesley Chapel hospital’s patients or team members, Schulkowski said.

BayCare patients living in the Wesley Chapel area now travel to St. Joseph’s Hospital-North in Lutz, or to St. Joseph’s main campus in Tampa.

“We want to bring the care they’re already looking for, with BayCare, because they know and trust us,” she said. “We’re bringing it closer to home.”

BayCare also has team members who live in the Wesley Chapel area, but work in Lutz or Tampa.

She expects some of them to transfer to the new Wesley Chapel hospital.

“A shorter commute is a big deal and they get to stay within BayCare. So, we do expect that,” the hospital leader said.

Setting a new hospital’s tone
Finding the best people to staff the hospital will be challenging — particularly at a time when there are significant shortages in the healthcare field, Schulkowski said.

But she is optimistic that some of BayCare’s current team will want to work on her campus and that others may be attracted by the opportunity to help create the new hospital’s culture.

Team members also can provide practical suggestions of how things should be set up. Maybe they have a better idea of how a patient gets from one place to another, or where the crash cart should go, the hospital leader said.

The plans may show one thing, she explained, but there may be a better approach.

Staff will be onboarded well before the hospital’s doors open, to familiarize team members with the building and to gather their input.

“The idea is to make sure everything is smoothed out before the hospital opens,” she said.

Sparks fly, as this welder completes a task at BayCare Hospital Wesley Chapel, now being built on Bruce B. Downs Boulevard. (Courtesy of BayCare)

She thinks the idea of having that type of involvement will appeal to potential team members.

The hospital already has asked BayCare team members to help in the hospital’s design — incorporating the knowledge they glean from their day-to-day work lives.

For instance, they provided suggestions regarding how patient rooms should be arranged.

Then, a mock patient room was set up to check everything, before the hospital proceeded with setting up other rooms.

Schulkowski is a big believer in seeking out the best ways to get things done.

“If you want to find the safest and most efficient way to do something, ask a nurse,” the hospital leader said.

The hospital chain also learned from the COVID-19 experience, she said.

“Because we were still early in our design when COVID hit, we were able to build in, what we call, pandemic mode in this building,” she said.

The new hospital has the capability of turning 42 of its rooms into negative rooms, meaning those rooms are capable of exhausting 100% of their air.

“Hopefully, we never have to use it,” Schulkowski said, but the facility will be ready, if it does.

The hospital design also features windows to allow in natural light and is planning to have art work on its walls, to create an inviting environment.

Most people don’t want to be in the hospital, Schulkowski said.

The quality of the care is paramount, but the atmosphere of the hospital is important, too, she said.

“We want it to be pleasant, welcoming,” Schulkowski said.

BayCare Hospital Wesley Chapel
What:
BayCare Hospital Wesley Chapel is under construction at  4501 Bruce B. Downs Blvd., in Wesley Chapel
When: Opening is anticipated in the first quarter of 2023
Cost: The project’s estimated cost is $246 million.
Details: The 318,000-square-foot building is being built on a 40-plus acre campus. The hospital will have 86 private rooms and 20 Emergency Room beds. It will offer comprehensive medical services and health care resources, including an emergency department, an intensive care unit with virtual-monitoring beds, diagnostic services such as imaging and lab, and physical rehabilitation. It is expected to have 250 permanent jobs when it opens, increasing to 275 by the second year of operations.
For additional information about job opportunities, visit BayCareJobs.com or Facebook.com/BayCareCareers/.

Published April 06, 2022

Young performers get their shining moments on stage

April 5, 2022 By B.C. Manion

Hundreds of people turned out to watch the 39th annual “Spotlight on Talent” Performing Arts Competition, which allows young performers to showcase their skills and be evaluated by professional judges.

Faith Phaller, a ballet dancer, is this year’s recipient of the Pasco Heritage Scholarship Award. The $1,000 scholarship goes to a Pasco County graduating senior who attains the highest solo scores from the finals judges for the Spotlight on Talent competition, as well as earning the highest marks from the audition judges. (Courtesy of Heritage Arts Center Association)

The event was held on March 12 at the Center for the Arts at Wesley Chapel High.

Over the years, the competition has become so popular that it has two final shows.

Younger students performed in the matinee, which began at noon and older students and groups perform in the evening show, which began at 7 p.m.

In total, about 110 contestants performed during the two shows, which is staged each year by the non-profit Heritage Arts Center Association.

The association’s 15-member board worked on the competition for three months, with a final production team including 14 additional community friends who gave of their time, according to a news release from the Heritage Arts Center Association.

Barbara Friedman was the competition’s executive director and assistant producers were Lauretta Brown, Michael Roberts, Michelle Twitmyer and Laurel Weightman.

The event was supported by 37 corporate and community sponsors who donated toward the $4,000-plus in cash prizes, trophies and ribbons that were awarded, plus costs of the show, topping $16,000.

Masters of Ceremonies for the event were David West, a Rotarian and a pastor, and Clint Roberson, a lawyer.

The shows were dedicated to the memory of the late Dr. Jack McTague, a board member of the Heritage Arts Center Association.

Diverse talents were demonstrated during the two shows, including vocal, piano, dance, musical theater, electric, rock and classical guitar and spoken poetry.

One of the high points of the evening came when the winner of the 10th Pasco Heritage Scholarship was announced. Faith Phaller, a dancer, was named this year’s winner of the $1,000 scholarship which goes to a Pasco County graduating senior who attains the highest solo scores from the finals judges, as well as from the audition judges.

Here’s the listing of the 2022 Spotlight on Talent winners:

Matinee

Category 1

  • First: Naomi Reed , piano
  • Second: Kaiya Bistany-Charles, vocal
  • Third: Amber Luu, piano
  • Fourth: Berkley Hopper, vocal
  • Fifth: Chloe Adams, modern/acro dance

Category 2

  • First: Alexander Butts, contemporary dance
  • Second: Nikki Lang, piano
  • Third: Camila Trejos, vocal
  • Fourth: Kat Baudoin, vocal/electric guitar
  • Fifth: Abbey Yokum , contemporary dance

Category 3

  • First: Kendall Hill, vocal
  • Second: Rio Ricardo, musical theater
  • Third: Tavin Groomes, musical theater

Groups

  • First: Camila Arguello and Linley Bishop, jazz dance
  • Second: Stagelights PAC, contemporary dance

Evening Show

Category 1

  • First: Shreyashi Bodaka, piano
  • Second: Maelee Scaglione, contemporary dance
  • Third: Maris Willers, ballet dance
  • Fourth: Sofia Acosta, musical theater

Category 2

  • First: Samuel Wu, piano
  • Second: Larkin Mainwaring, vocal
  • Third: Brooke Tudor, ballet dance
  • Fourth: Jasmine Crew, modern dance
  • Fifth: Katie Young, vocal
  • Sixth: Julianne Henderson, vocal

Category 3

  • First: Ezekiel Richards, tap dance
  • Second: Faith Phaller – ballet/point dance
  • Third: Sailor Wade, ballet dance
  • Fourth: Jayden Parsons, vocal
  • Fifth: Michaela Mezzei – lyrical dance

Groups

  • First: Kasey Lang and Conner Harrie, piano duet
  • Second: Star Company, dance

Pasco Heritage Scholarship Award recipient: Faith Phaller – ballet/pointe dance

Published April 06, 2022

Pasco County hires architect for library in Seven Oaks

March 29, 2022 By B.C. Manion

The Pasco County Commission has selected FleischmanGarcia, of Tampa, to handle the design and construction administration for a library planned in the Seven Oaks area of Wesley Chapel.

The new library, currently referred to as the Seven Oaks Library, is planned for a site in Seven Oaks, at 27531 Mystic Oak Blvd.

The design work is being done over the next 12 months, according to Bob Harrison, program manager at Pasco County Libraries.

A new library is planned in the Seven Oaks area of Wesley Chapel, and is expected to open in 2025. (File)

The tentative opening date for the new location is in 2025, and when it opens, the Seven Oaks Library will become the county’s ninth library branch, Harrison said, via email.

The facility will feature an array of technology, including public computers, and will have  meeting spaces, rooms for adults, kids and teens. It also will have books and other materials for patrons to borrow or to browse through. A makerspace is planned, too.

The details of the design have not been worked out yet, but the library team will work closely with the architect, FleischmanGarcia, on the interior footprint of the building, soliciting input from the community along the way, Harrison said.

Also, the nature of the makerspace will be determined with input from the public, as has been the case when decisions were being made about makerspaces at other library locations, Harrison added.

“We’re excited that our patrons in Wesley Chapel will be getting their very own library. This community has been growing tremendously, so this is the logical place for our next location,” Harrison said.

During its March 22 meeting, the Pasco County Commission approved a professional service agreement with FleischmanGarcia in a not-to-exceed amount of $980,428.

The funding is within the county’s fiscal year 2022 budget, under the county’s capital improvements plan project fund designated for libraries.

The library project in Seven Oaks follows discussions that occurred during the 2021 budget deliberations, when Pasco County Commissioner Mike Moore said it was important to begin laying the groundwork to build a library on the Seven Oaks site, which the county has owned since 2004.

The library project got a push when the county board decided to set aside funding from the American Rescue Plan to build it.

In other library-related news, at its March 22 meeting, the county board also:

  • Approved 1st Class Roofing Inc., as the lowest, responsive, and responsible bidder for the replacement of the roof at New River Library, in an amount not to exceed $89,238, as well as damaged decking provision of $3 per square foot, in the not-to-exceed amount of $25,000

This project is not part of the G.O. (General Obligation) Bond approved by voters in November of 2018, but rather is a maintenance project identified by the county’s facilities department, unrelated to the library’s interior remodeling.

  • Approved a task order with Patel, Greene and Associates LLC for the completion of the Library Services Department’s Master Plan, in a not-to-exceed amount of $218,000 for a one-year term, beginning with the date of the county board’s approval.

Published March 30, 2022

Youth group home can proceed, with conditions

March 8, 2022 By B.C. Manion

The Pasco County Planning Commission has waived the requirement for a conditional use permit in connection with a Wesley Chapel group home for at-risk youths.

The planning board unanimously approved the request for the waiver during its March 3 meeting.

Elevated Youth Services can now exceed the previous maximum of six residents at its residential treatment facility, provided the residential treatment facility meets negotiated conditions.

The group home is for young men, ages 13 to 17.

The planning board originally heard the request to waive a conditional use permit requirement for the home at its Jan. 6 meeting.

The issue was continued, however, after both planning board members and neighbors raised a number of questions about the proposed operations.

Neighbors wanted to know how potential group home residents would be screened. They also wanted to know how the youths would be supervised.

Area residents also raised concerns about the group home’s capacity to handle the potential number of occupants, asked about the sufficiency of the home’s septic system, cited existing problems with drainage, noted a lack of sufficient play areas and pointed out that there’s not enough room for parking.

Some planning board members also pressed for more details on how the residents would be selected and what steps would be taken to protect the existing neighborhood.

The request was continued, as Chief Assistant County Attorney David Goldstein negotiated conditions of approval with Dan McDonald, a fair housing attorney representing Elevated Youth Services, the operator of the group home; and, Robert Lincoln, an attorney representing Noelle Munroe, who lives three doors down from the group home.

Goldstein said the group home is intended for youths who have been living in foster homes and who have experienced human trafficking or are at risk of being trafficked. He said the Pasco County Commission supports efforts aimed at addressing the trafficking problem.

Here’s a summary of some of the conditions that the attorneys negotiated. They must be met if Youth Elevated Services wants to exceed six residents at the group home:

  • Occupants in the facility shall be limited to minors with handicaps or disabilities, as defined by the Fair Housing Act or Americans with Disabilities Act, as well as adults supervising those minors.
  • The facility is limited to 16 minor residents or occupants (and adult supervisors), permitted by the Department of Children and Family Services (DCF) — or limited by applicable building codes (fire code, sanitation, health), whichever is more stringent.
  • The facility shall be licensed by DCF and shall not be licensed by the Department of Juvenile Justice.
  • The admissions screening process for the facility shall exclude residents who have been adjudicated based on charges of sexual assault, juvenile sexual abuse , violent crimes or their equivalent. The facility shall not accept residents who pose a direct threat of harming others, and the facility shall make that determination based upon an individualized risk assessment and psycho-sexual evaluation. Residents at the facility cannot be deemed as posing a high risk for harming others.
  • The facility will create an advisory board and will offer a seat on that board to at least one member of the neighborhood who lives within 2,500 feet of the group home. The board also will include a seat on that panel for a member of the county’s community services department or the county’s Commission on Human Trafficking.
  • The facility shall maintain at least one adult supervisor for every four minor residents.
  • The minor residents will be under adult supervision or on a school campus 24 hours a day, seven days a week. The minor resident shall be deemed to have left the facility without permission if an adult supervisor calls 911 within 30 minutes of the minor’s departure; otherwise, the resident will be deemed to have left with permission.
  • No more than six cars can park at the facility. An additional circular driveway must be added within 90 days of the facility housing eight or more minors.
  • The group home must comply with all applicable state licensing requirements, rules, and regulations. The facility must obtain a new certificate of occupancy demonstrating compliance with building code, fire code, sanitation/health code, and establishing maximum occupancy limits.

Goldstein credited Lincoln for helping to improve the conditions for approval.

Goldstein said that Lincoln’s input resulted in greater protections not only for Lincoln’s client, but for the neighborhood, as well.

McDonald said his preference would have been no conditions at all, but said his client wants to be part of the solution.

McDonald also credited Goldstein “herculean” efforts to protect the county’s interests.

By reaching an agreement, the county was able to avoid the potential for liability stemming from inaccurate information provided by a county staff member to Youth Elevated Services.

Before purchasing the house, the company had reached out announcing its intended use of the property and seeking a zoning verification letter.

Elevated Youth Services then received word from the county that a residential group home is a permitted use in the zoning category.

The company subsequently purchased the home.

As it turns out, a residential group home is limited to six residents, as a permitted use.

In approving the waiver for the conditional use, planning board members said they were much more comfortable with the request, given the conditions for approval.

They were particularly pleased by the creation of the advisory board, which will give the neighborhood a chance to monitor the operation and will involve a representative from the Human Trafficking Commission.

Published March 09, 2022

Overpass Road has reopened

March 2, 2022 By Special to The Laker/Lutz News

Overpass Road reopened last week to vehicular traffic, between Old Pasco and Boyette roads.

One lane is open in each direction, according to a Pasco County news release.

No pedestrian or bicycle traffic is allowed and there is no access to Interstate 75, from Overpass Road.

Additional lanes on Overpass Road and the ramps to and from I-75 are projected to open later this year or early 2023, the news release says.

There also will be traffic signals at Old Pasco Road, the two intersections at the I-75 ramps, and Boyette Road.

Construction continues to build sidewalks for future safe pedestrian use.

The area is posted at 30 mph for worker and public safety. Motorists also must be prepared to stop at Old Pasco and Boyette roads.

Overpass Road had been closed since February 2021 to remove the existing bridge and build replacement bridges in conjunction with the new interchange construction, the release adds.

At the time of the closure, according to a report in The Laker/Lutz News, officials from the Florida Department of Transportation, said the closure was expected to last a year, which is essentially what happened.

Although the road has reopened, work on the design-build project continues.

The new interstate interchange being built at I-75 at Overpass Road, is about 3.5 miles south of State Road 52. The new diamond interchange will include a flyover ramp for westbound Overpass Road access onto southbound I-75.

Overpass Road is being widened to four lanes between I-75 and Old Pasco Road and to six lanes between I-75 and Boyette Road.

Completion of the approximately $64 million project is scheduled for summer 2023.

Published March 02, 2022

Work continues on plans to extend Overpass Road

February 8, 2022 By Special to The Laker/Lutz News

Work is set to proceed this spring to lay the groundwork for an extension of Overpass Road, east of Boyette Road to U.S. 301.

Design permitting and re-evaluation of the Project Development and Environment (PD&E) Study is set to begin this spring and is expected to be finished in 2023.

Pasco County is providing $2.5 million and the Florida Department of Transportation also is providing $2.5 million, according to materials in the Pasco County Commission’s Jan. 25 agenda packet.

The county board approved a Transportation Regional Incentive Program (TRIP) Agreement with FDOT on Jan. 12, 2021, for the design phase of the project.

Under terms of that agreement, Pasco County agreed to fund $2,584,107 and FDOT would fund $2,415,893, of the estimated $5 million design cost.

Typically, TRIP Agreements are funded 50/50, but the FDOT had to reduce its funding by  $84,107 because of fiscal impacts to their Work Program. The state transportation agency agreed to restore those funds in its Fiscal Year 2022 Work Program.

So, the county board approved an action at its Jan. 25 meeting to reduce the amount of funding contributed by the county and increase FDOT’s funding, to arrive at a match of $2.5 million each.

No other changes to the initial TRIP Agreement are proposed.

According to FDOT’s website, the project limits extend from Old Pasco Road on the west to U.S. 301 on the east, for a total length of approximately 9 miles.

Improvements for Overpass Road include the following:

  • Four lanes from Old Pasco Road to Interstate 75
  • A new interchange at I-75 and Overpass Road
  • Six lanes plus two auxiliary lanes from I-75 to Boyette Road
  • Six lanes from Boyette Road to US 301

Published February 09, 2022

Arts center deemed ‘jewel’ in community

January 25, 2022 By B.C. Manion

It’s grand-opening celebration may have been delayed, but enthusiasm for Pasco-Hernando State College’s (PHSC) Instructional Performing Arts Center was riding high during a recent ribbon-cutting ceremony at the facility.

Pasco-Hernando State College Dr. Timothy L. Beard, along with Celyse Dahdal, president of the PHSC Student Government Association, share the over-sized scissors during the Instructional Performing Arts Center (IPAC) ribbon-cutting. Marilyn Pearson-Adams, center, chair of the PHSC District Board of Trustees, Dr. Kevin O’Farrell, provost Porter of Campus at Wiregrass Ranch, and Pasco County Commissioner Mike Moore were among other dignitaries and special guests. (Fred Bellet)

The performing arts facility, at 8657 Old Pasco Road in Wesley Chapel, opened quietly in the summer of 2021.

It provides opportunities for students to prepare for careers in the performing and technical arts. It also offers a venue for performances and creates a new place for the community to enjoy the arts.

The center’s grand-opening celebration was held on Jan. 7 — belatedly because of COVID-19 concerns.

The event included a ribbon-cutting, a reception and tours of the facility.

It also featured remarks from numerous speakers, including Dr. Timothy Beard, president of Pasco-Hernando State College; Mike Moore, the District 2 representative on the Pasco County Commission; Cynthia Armstrong, chairwoman of the Pasco County School Board; Ray Gadd, deputy superintendent of Pasco County Schools; Dr. Kevin O’Farrell, provost at PHSC’s Porter Campus at Wiregrass Ranch; Celyse Dahdal, president of PHSC’s student government; and, Lauren Murray, executive director for the Instructional Performing Arts Center.

Bringing the project to fruition involved the efforts of many people.

Armstrong, however, singled out college leadership and the school district’s deputy superintendent Gadd for “thinking out of the box.”

An obviously happy Lauren Murray, executive director for the Instructional Performing Arts Center, makes her way to the microphone to talk about the important role that IPAC will play in students’ lives.

Gadd was persistent in the pursuit of the project, she said, noting he wanted to know: “How can we make this a reality? How can we find a place to build it? How can we incorporate it into our school system?”

For his part, Gadd recalled the supersized role played by former Florida Speaker of the House Will Weatherford.

Gadd recalled: “Speaker Weatherford called me on the phone one day and he said, ‘Ray, we need some kind of performing art theater or arena in Pasco County. Can you help me out?’”

The Instructional Performing Arts Center is an eye-catching sight.

Gadd said he went about collecting floor plans from various performing arts venues and estimating costs.

He gave Weatherford a breakdown: “This is what we can get for $20 million. This is what we can get for $30 million, this is what we can get for $60 million…”

In the end, Pasco County Schools donated a 6-acre parcel to PHSC, on the campus shared by Cypress Creek High School and Cypress Creek Middle School.

And, the state college covered the cost of the $20 million project, and PHSC also is responsible for the facility’s operations.

Gadd praised Harvard Jolly and Creative Contractors for using their combined talents and expertise to create a facility that he calls “a beauty.”

“This is a jewel in this community,” Gadd said.

Wiregrass Ranch High School students Marissa Adams, 16, and Alieah Diaz, 15, both members of the Principal’s Quartet, listen to Dr. Timothy Beard, president of Pasco-Hernando State College, as he addresses the crowd.

The deputy superintendent added: “This is an example of what happens when government works together.”

Armstrong told the crowd she toured the building last year and left feeling impressed.

Ray Gadd, deputy superintendent of Pasco County Schools, played a key role in bringing the vision of the performing arts center to fruition. He described the facility as a ‘jewel’ in the community.

The design is both creative and cost-efficient, she said.

“You walk into the classrooms, and you see how they convert into dance studios and music studios and bigger practice areas. It is just truly amazing that the students that go here can get all of their education, including their specialties, right in one building.

“And then, the theater itself is just amazing,” she said, referring to the 444-seat Weatherford Theater.

The facility not only enhances the school district’s performing arts programs, Armstrong said, but also gives students who are interested in those pursuits an opportunity to remain local, if they wish to continue their education in the arts.

Pasco County Commissioner Mike Moore took a little trip down memory lane, as he addressed the crowd.

“This hits home with me because I was a communications major at Polk Community College, which is now Polk State College.

“I actually interned at a facility very similar to this. I spent my time learning how to work lighting, do the soundboard, being a stagehand and helping those performers behind the scenes.”

Saying there is no other facility like IPAC in the immediate area, Moore thanked area lawmakers for helping to secure the funding for the project.

Speakers from PHSC also shared their enthusiasm about the opportunities that IPAC presents.

The facility offers three Associate in Arts (AA) performing arts curriculum pathways for students who plan to transfer to a Florida public university to complete a bachelor’s degree in dance, theater or music.

It also offers an Associate in Science (AS) degree in digital media and multimedia technology with six college credit certificates.

The 36,000-square-foot facility includes a fully digital system, with the latest in lighting and sound support.

Freelance photographer Fred Bellet contributed to this report.

Published January 26, 2022

Celebrating history, through art

January 18, 2022 By B.C. Manion

Pasco-Hernando State College (PHSC) kicked off 2022 and the first celebration of PHSC’s 50th anniversary, with the unveiling of the college’s first commissioned artwork.

Artist S. Blake Harrison explains the process he used to create a mural commissioned by Pasco-Hernando State College that incorporates much of Wesley Chapel’s history, during an unveiling of the piece at the college’s Porter Campus at Wiregrass Ranch. (Fred Bellet)

A reception and ribbon-cutting were held to showcase “Double Branch,” a 4 foot by 16 foot work, by artist S. Blake Harrison.

The program featured Dr. Timothy Beard, college president; Dr. Kevin O’ Farrell, provost at the Porter Campus at Wiregrass Ranch; Madonna Jervis Wise, a local historian and author; Dr. Lisa Richardson, executive director of the Pasco-Hernando State College Foundation; Andrew Beman-Cavallaro, associate director of libraries for the college; Janet Schalk, a PHSC librarian; and Harrison, the mural artist, who is based in Micanopy.

The college’s foundation paid for the mural, which honors the history and progress of Wesley Chapel, and commemorates PHSC’s golden anniversary.

Local historian Madonna Jervis Wise gave the audience a glimpse of Wesley Chapel’s colorful history. She included a photograph of Bruce B. Downs, the man for whom a now-heavily traveled road in Wesley Chapel was named. At one point, long before the community’s burgeoning growth, Bruce B. Downs Boulevard was known as ‘the road to nowhere.’

The 4 foot by 16 foot mural is believed to the largest mural in Wesley Chapel, O’ Farrell said, in his opening remarks at the Jan. 5 ceremony. It is displayed on a wall in the fourth-floor lobby of Building D, on the Porter Campus at Wiregrass Ranch, at 2727 Mansfield Blvd.

The provost said much research and thought went into the creation of the mural, which includes elements inspired by “Images of America: Wesley Chapel,” a local history book written by Madonna Jervis Wise.

The author said that unlike Zephyrhills and Dade City — which both have city governments, historic buildings and established town centers — Wesley Chapel offered no clear place for her to begin her research.

So, she relied on her background in genealogy to help her find descendants of families with deep roots in Wesley Chapel.

She began her quest by tracking down Marco Edward Stanley, of Gainesville, who arranged for Wise to interview his mother, 95-year-old Lillie Sapp Stanley.

That interview led to others, and ultimately Wise was able to tell the story of the community. Her book chronicles the various names the community has been known by through the years; its turpentine, lumber, moonshine and ranching industries; where the residents attended church, where they went to school and what they did for fun.

Dr. Kevin O’ Farrell, provost at the Porter Campus, discusses some of the elements featured in the mural. The work was done on plywood, using acrylic paint.

“We relied so heavily on Madonna’s work and her historical research, and that really inspired Blake to take those images and take those concepts and put together something that is as beautiful as this large, 4-by-16, piece of commissioned art,” O’ Farrell said.

Andrew Beman-Cavallaro, associate director of libraries, credited librarian Janet Schalk for working closely with Harrison on the project.

The artist expressed gratitude to Schalk for her guidance and to Wise for her work to preserve local history.

He said the mural’s panels reflect a narrative through art, featuring the area’s natural beauty, including trees and wildlife; its industry, including moonshine and trains; and its educational history, including the Porter campus and the college’s new Instructional Performing Arts Center, known as IPAC.

Dr. Timothy Beard, president of Pasco-Hernando State College, a featured speaker during the celebration, praised the mural created by artist S. Blake Harrison, extolling its size, vibrant colors and its potential to be a source of inspiration for others.

The college president was enthusiastic about the result of Harrison’s work.

“This is just an awesome piece of art,” Beard said, marveling at its size, vibrant colors and ingenuity.

“This event is the very first event associated with our 50th anniversary, to be celebrated officially July 1, 2022 through June 30, 2023,” Beard said.

“Certainly we’ve come a long way,” the college president continued, “from having classes in backrooms, storefronts and churches.

“At PHSC, we promote and support many innovative, worthwhile programs that advance health, science and technology. But most recently, we have also embraced the arts, as never before,” Beard said.

He pointed to the college’s newly opened IPAC, as an example, of that new commitment.

The facility is dedicated to instruction in the performing arts, including music, theater and dance, as well as instruction in the digital arts.

It, too, is located in Wesley Chapel — next to Cypress Creek High School and Cypress Creek Middle School — at 8657 Old Pasco Road.

Published January 19, 2022

Youth group home request in Wesley Chapel faces opposition

January 11, 2022 By B.C. Manion

A request to waive Pasco County’s conditional use permit requirement for a proposed group home for handicapped youths has drawn opposition from its potential neighbors, in a Wesley Chapel neighborhood.

The Pasco County Planning Commission has continued the public hearing on the request to its Feb. 3 meeting, to allow Chief Assistant County Attorney David Goldstein time to work on refining conditions in an attempt to address concerns expressed by neighbors and some members of the planning board.

Goldstein has recommended approval of the request, but in doing so, he provided background and a set of proposed conditions.

The issue involves a proposal by Elevated Youth Services (EYS) to operate a residential treatment facility for young men, ages 13 to 17, with multiple or dual diagnoses of emotional or mental illness,  at 26318 Lawrence Ave.

Before the applicant purchased the property, Nicholas B. Browning, owner and clinical director of EYS, sought a zoning verification letter from the county.

In that Aug. 17 request, Browning told the county “we are looking provide housing for up to 12 youth in the home.”

Frederick Humberstone, a planning and zoning tech II for the county, responded to Browning’s request by informing him on Aug. 18:  “Under the AR-1 zoning the proposed use as a residential youth group home is a permitted use.”

EYS then closed on the property for the group home.

It turns out that Humberstone’s determination was incorrect: A residential group home is a permitted use, provided that it has six or fewer residents, under the county code, according to Goldstein.

Browning told the planning board that clients served by EYS need a group-home setting, which operates similar to a family, as part of their treatment plan.

Dan McDonald, a fair housing attorney representing EYS, said requiring EYS to go through the county’s conditional use permit process would constitute a violation of federal law.

In the planning board’s agenda materials, Goldstein summarized EYS’s primary argument. He said EYS claims that Pasco’s land development code “either facially, or as applied, discriminates against handicapped residents (including those that would occupy the EYS facility), because handicapped residents are required to go through a conditional use process, but similarly situated non-handicapped residents are not required to undergo the same process.”

The county attorney’s office has recommended that changes be made to address the legal issues raised by EYS, but those changes are not yet in effect, Goldstein said.

The attorney also noted that “requiring EYS to go through the conditional use process at this time could subject the county to potential liability, and would be a difficult decision to defend in this particular case, because of the existing Land Development Code definitions, and because of the August 18th, 2021 zoning verification letter issued by the Planning and Development Department.

“Accordingly, while the County Attorney’s Office is certainly not admitting to all of the allegations in the alternative relief application, the County Attorney’s Office is recommending approval of the application,” Goldstein said.

Goldstein also told the planning board that approving the request with conditions would provide more protection for neighbors than they could receive if the group home had six or fewer residents — which would have no restrictions.

But neighbors questioned how the residents moving into the home would be screened, noting they don’t want to worry about the safety of their families.

They also raised questions about whether supervision of the residents will be adequate and voiced concerns about the residents “roaming” the neighborhood.

Other issues raised included drainage problems in the home’s backyard and inadequate parking.

Browning said there would be 24-hour staffing, with a four-to-one ratio of residents to staff. He said the youths would be educated through online schooling.

Planning board member Chris Poole said he believes that residential treatment centers are important, noting he has a child who is being assisted at one.

However, he added: “I think we owe it to the residents to go through this (conditional permit process).”

McDonald reiterated that requiring EYS to undergo a conditional use permit hearing would violate federal law.

Goldstein noted the county could be found liable and be required to pay damages.

Published January 12, 2022

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