Town-Crier Newspaper April 25, 2014

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BAKER TO TAKE OVER CAFÉ AT RPB PARK SEE STORY, PAGE 3

ALEGRIA CLAIMS U.S. OPEN TITLE AT IPC SEE STORY, PAGE 15

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TOWN-CRIER WELLINGTON • ROYAL PALM BEACH • LOXAHATCHEE • THE ACREAGE

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Saddle Trail Project Moves Ahead Despite Some Objections

Volume 35, Number 17 April 25 - May 1, 2014

Serving Palms West Since 1980

CAKE-OFF FOR WOUNDED WARRIORS

Residents in part of Saddle Trail Park are a step closer to having paved roads and municipal water. Members of the Wellington Village Council gave unanimous approval Tuesday for village staff to pursue plans for the services. Page 3

Indian Trail Celebrates Hamlin House Opening

The Indian Trail Improvement District celebrated the opening of the newly renovated Hamlin House on Friday, April 18 with a ribbon-cutting ceremony. Located on Hamlin Blvd. near Nicole Hornstein Equestrian Park, Hamlin House will be a venue for community events, as well as a facility for the nearby horse shows. Page 5

The third annual Cop Cakes Cake-Off to benefit Children of Wounded Warriors was held at the Wellington Amphitheater on Saturday, April 19. There was a cake-decorating contest in which the winner won a television, while two runners-up won trophies. The cakes were auctioned for the cause. Shown here are cake decorating winners Ali Benvenuto (third place), Natalie Arocho (second place) and Dina St. Andrew (first place). MORE PHOTOS, PAGE 17 PHOTO BY DENISE FLEISCHMAN/TOWN-CRIER

Wellington Might Raise Drainage Assessments

By Lauren Miró Town-Crier Staff Report The Village of Wellington might add a $100 per unit annual assessment to residents in the Acme Improvement District to fund what council members said are muchneeded drainage upgrades. Council members voted Tuesday to allow staff to proceed with the process of amending the district’s water control plan. Village Engineer Bill Riebe told council members that the changes would add several capital improvement projects to the water control plan, including raising Forest Hill and South Shore boulevards. “This only affects residents of Wellington who own property within the Acme Improvement District,” he said. The district spans most of the original areas of Wellington, west of State Road 7 and east of Flying Cow Road. The assessment would bring Wellington a revenue increase of

approximately $2.4 million a year. The projects, which will be built over 12 years, are estimated to cost $29.3 million. Since Tropical Storm Isaac dropped nearly 18 inches of rain on the western communities two years ago, Wellington has been working to improve its drainage system. “We can only discharge so much into the regional system,” Riebe said. With changes to the Federal Emergency Management Agency flood maps that put parts of Wellington in a flood zone, Riebe noted the drive to improve drainage became even greater. “So far we’ve been successful in our attempts to provide more information and update the proposed maps,” he said, noting that some of the organization’s information dates back to the early 1990s and did not include recent improvements. Though residents will likely see a rise in flood insurance premiums, See ACME, page 16

RPB Zoners Approve Changes ROYAL PALM EGG HUNT For Cypress Key Townhouses

Wellington’s Egg Hunt Returns To The Fields At Village Park

Wellington’s annual Egg Hunt took place Saturday, April 19 on the softball fields at Village Park on Pierson Road. The event was sponsored by the Wellington Preservation Coalition, Bright Horizons Early Education & Preschool and Premier Family Health & Wellness. Page 9

OPINION

Drainage Upgrades Are Costly, But Necessary

If we learned anything from Tropical Storm Isaac two years ago, it was that having a working infrastructure is crucial in an emergency. Though updating infrastructure is neither cheap nor exciting, communities must do so. This week, Wellington took the first steps to increase its annual drainage assessment by $100 per unit. Although some residents may cringe at the added cost, these improvements are critical to preventing future problems. Page 4 2014

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By Ron Bukley Town-Crier Staff Report The Royal Palm Beach Planning & Zoning Commission recommended approval Tuesday of a site plan modification for the 35-acre Cypress Key mixed-use development to include reducing the floor levels of the 124 townhouses from three to two. The applicant, builder K. Hovnanian, purchased the development at the northwest corner of Southern Blvd. and Cypress Head Ave. The project received approval in 2006 and was started but never finished. Site Plan Coordinator Kevin Erwin said the total number of homes will remain the same, with 23 single-family units, 124 townhouses and 120,800 square feet of commercial uses, which would be reduced from the originally approved 125,000 square feet. “Other than minor parking changes and a reduction in the

overall commercial square footage of 4,200 square feet, that site is going to remain essentially the same,” he said. Erwin noted that the townhouses will be toward the center of the development, with the single-family homes situated along the north and east sides of the property, and a central entrance from Southern Blvd. connecting to the commercial portion of the development. Two service roads will run east and west through the development between Cypress Head Ave. to the east and Old Crestwood Blvd. to the west. The site has an overall density of 4.173 units per acre, which is below the allowable density of five units per acre. Erwin explained that the site was approved years ago. “There has been no activity on the site for a number of years,” he said. “However, the prior ap-

plicant installed the underground utilities, which vested the site plan approval. That is why it’s not a site plan approval at this point. It’s a site plan modification through the infrastructure improvements that were completed.” Erwin said the modification meets all parking and height requirements, and keeps the current commercial floor area ratio of 0.79, which is less than the allowable 0.802. In addition to cutting the building height from three stories to two, the amendment would change the bedroom mix and square footage of the units and eliminate an internal ring road that would have provided access to garages. The townhouse design was turned around so the front of the homes face the open space and the garages face the two roads, which will be tree-lined on both sides. The road designs were also See CYPRESS KEY, page 16

RPB To Host Commons Park Workshop Saturday, April 26

By Ron Bukley Town-Crier Staff Report The Village of Royal Palm Beach will host a design workshop for undeveloped portions of Royal Palm Beach Commons Park on Saturday, April 26 at 8:30 a.m. At the meeting, which will be held on the main floor of the Commons Park Sporting Center, the village will gather input from residents on additional park pathways with a specific discussion of a possible connection to the north. Village Manager Ray Liggins updated council members on the planned workshop last week. “We put it on the front page of our newsletter, and it went out to all the households,” he said. “We have a survey online that about 100 people have responded to. We’re going to keep that open right up to April 26 and bring the results of that information, along with some other methods we’re

using in gathering information from the public.” In February, the council approved master plan amendments for the park but removed plans for two new pedestrian and bicycle entrances at the park’s north end. One of the entrances would be created by demolishing a foreclosed home at 109 Heron Parkway. The village purchased the property for that specific purpose. However, residents near the proposed northern entrance presented a petition in opposition to the idea, concerned that it would compromise their privacy and lead to more vehicular traffic on the street. The entrances were part of proposed changes to the park’s plan that include the location of a new dog park and community gardens, expanding the use of the great lawn and adding two restrooms. Other residents complained

about pedestrian/bike paths within the park that are on the conceptual drawings of the park but have not actually been designed. At the April 17 council meeting, resident Peggy Jupp of Swan Parkway East presented another petition on behalf of 111 residents who favor a pedestrian and bicycle entrance at 109 Heron Parkway. “The signatories are aware of the upcoming charrette, and many have expressed that they will attend,” Jupp said. “Having a pedestrian/bike path on the north end of Commons Park will enhance our neighborhood, as well as increase our safety as we walk or bike to the park.” The village’s planning consultant, Cotleur & Hearing, will use the information gathered at the workshop to develop a final plan for review and adoption by the council.

The First Baptist Church of Royal Palm Beach hosted an Easter egg hunt on Saturday, April 19 at Royal Palm Beach Commons Park. The event also featured crafts and snacks. Shown here, Ayden and Isabella Vergin take part in the festivities. MORE PHOTOS, PAGE 17

PHOTO BY DENISE FLEISCHMAN/TOWN-CRIER

Bid Discrepancies Irk Wellington Council Members

By Lauren Miró Town-Crier Staff Report Concerned about inaccurate estimates for several recent projects, members of the Wellington Village Council chastised senior staff members Tuesday. After the final bid for a public restroom and storage facility at Wellington Green Park came back more than double the original budget, council members expressed concern about what they deemed a persistent issue. “This has been a recurring issue, and I’m not trying to be critical,” Councilman Howard Coates said. “When we make decisions to move forward on projects, we take the estimates that have been given to us as the basis [for that decision].” The council was asked to ap-

prove a $208,000 contract to add public restrooms and storage to the 10-acre park located on Stribling Way behind the Hampton Inn & Suites hotel. But council members pulled it off the consent agenda, noting that they had budgeted only $100,000 for park upgrades when the issue was raised two years ago. “When something comes in at 100 percent more than what we estimate the budget for this to be, how can we be that far off?” Coates asked. Director of Operations Jim Barnes said that the scope of the project had changed, asking for three restrooms on each side instead of one. He also said construction costs had risen since the project was originally presented. But Coates said inflation See PARK COSTS, page 16

PBSO Leaders: Area Districts Among County’s Safest

By Ron Bukley Town-Crier Staff Report Commanders of the local Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office substations discussed their respective districts at a meeting hosted by County Commissioner Jess Santamaria on Wednesday, April 16. Capt. Jay Hart, commander of PBSO District 8 in Wellington, said his village is the safest municipality in Palm Beach County, statistically speaking. The department has several special programs in the works, including a crackdown on illegal use of Section 8 housing. “It’s not as widespread a problem as people think it is,” Hart said. “It’s actually a very good

program for what it is meant to do. Unfortunately, there are some issues with Section 8 housing that prevent the good people from actually getting into those homes. The problem is that when you do have a family get into that home, maybe they’re not following the rules, it seems to deteriorate the entire neighborhood.” Hart’s substation has set up a program so that anytime someone is arrested on a felony charge, his or her name is run through the Palm Beach County Housing Authority’s list of Section 8 clients. If the arrestee is part of the program, then the PBSO starts the paperwork to evict that person and possibly anyone else living there.

“We feel that as long as we can keep control of that, and we know who is living in those homes, then we can kind of contain that and keep the good people who actually deserve to live in there,” Hart said. District 8 also made a recent change in its street team, putting a different sergeant in charge. “As a result of that change, in the last four months, we have made 75 drug arrests; we’ve arrested 76 different individuals; we’ve confiscated 1,977 grams of marijuana, which equates to about 4.3 pounds; and seized about $5,000 in cash,” he said. The team is also working on illegal pill problems, which Hart said is a major contributor to crime.

Crime in Wellington was at its worst in 2009. Since then, the crime rate has declined each consecutive year. “We are on track for 2014 for it to go down for the fifth year in a row,” Hart said. As of that evening, Hart cited declines in all categories: robberies were down 14 percent; sexual assaults, 25 percent; shootings, 33 percent; vehicle burglaries, 27 percent; residential burglaries, 15 percent; stolen vehicles, 20 percent; and construction burglaries, 67 percent. Business burglaries rose, however — up 57 percent, or seven burglaries, five of which occurred at the Village Park concession stand.

“We’ve actually stayed in that concession stand all night long with our undercover guys,” he said. “Unfortunately, it did not get hit that night, but we are doing whatever we can to protect that.” Hart credited the Wellington Village Council for giving the department everything it needs to do its job. Lt. Ulrich Naujoks represented PBSO District 9 in Royal Palm Beach, which is commanded by Capt. Paul Miles. Naujoks noted that most of the calls the department answers are not crime-related. “Most of the calls we receive on a daily basis don’t really have to do See PBSO, page 16


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April 25 - May 1, 2014

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April 25 - May 1, 2014

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NEWS

Saddle Trail Project Moves Forward Despite Some Objections

By Lauren Miró Town-Crier Staff Report Residents in part of Saddle Trail Park are a step closer to having paved roads and municipal water. Members of the Wellington Village Council gave unanimous approval Tuesday for village staff to pursue plans for the services. “It’s a very large number [of property owners] supporting this item,” Councilman Matt Willhite said. “I think the burden now is on us to allow them to go forward with what they’re asking to do.” In February, a group of residents from the southern portion of Saddle Trail Park — located south of Greenbriar Blvd. — asked the council to help the community by using a special assessment process to pay for the improvements. The project calls for a 10- to 15-foot-wide bridle trail, paving the roads, reworking drainage swales and installing new potable water pipelines and fire hydrants throughout the area. Council members agreed to do a formal poll of the community to see if the project has support. “We sent out a ballot to each of the residents in the area and held a public meeting,” Village Engineer Bill Riebe said. Riebe said there were 80 votes (76.2 percent) in support, nine votes (8.6 percent) against and 16

parcels (15.2 percent) that did not respond. “It was made clear that if you didn’t return your ballot, it was going to be considered a no vote,” he said. “We really wanted to gauge the level of interest and be sure there was support for the project.” The formal poll allowed for one vote per plotted lot, meaning some homeowners were allowed more than one vote. According to the staff report, there are 67 property owners among the 105 lots. Forty-eight owners (72 percent) supported the project, seven (10 percent) were against it, and 12 owners (18 percent) did not respond. Wellington requires a two-thirds majority to approve such projects. The poll showed that the project has sufficient support, Riebe said. “This measure tonight authorizes staff to begin the process to procure engineering design services for the proposed improvement project,” Riebe said, adding that the process would take 75 to 90 days. Council members will ultimately choose the engineering firm to do the work. The roughly $10 million cost, including both construction and financing, would be bonded out by Wellington and paid back by Saddle Trail residents in a special assessment.

Riebe said the average cost per lot for the total project will be about $61,000 before interest. Payment would be based on acreage and vary by individual homeowner. Councilwoman Anne Gerwig asked for clarification. “Is the cost based on acreage or lot?” she asked. Riebe said currently the costs were based on acreage but it could be changed if the council wanted. “We just wanted to give them a preliminary idea of what the costs would be,” he said. Gerwig also asked staff to research legal requirements for water usage. “I believe that once water is provided, you’re required to use it,” she said. Riebe said residents would have to connect to the municipal water. “They will get a meter set and will have a base monthly charge, but we can’t force anyone to use the water,” he explained. Vice Mayor John Greene expressed concern about the footing for horse crossings. Riebe said it would likely be scarified asphalt, which is roughened to provide traction for the horses. “Some of those details are yet to be determined,” he said. “We’re going to have neighborhood meetings to [determine] some of those solutions.”

Greene then asked what the major concerns were for those opposed to the project. Riebe said they varied. “Some people just don’t want the additional expense,” he said. “Some people have lived in the area for a long time. When they moved in, it was rural, and they like it.” During public comment, residents were split. Those who supported the project said it would help settle dust and prevent breathing issues, as well as help prevent speeding. Opponents were largely concerned with safety issues stemming from paving the roads. Richard Schechter, a 17-year resident of Appaloosa Trail, said he supports the project, especially bringing in fire hydrants and other safety measures. “I think this is desperately needed, and I’m enormously in favor of it,” he said. “I think a neighborhood that doesn’t have any fire protection, with 1,000 horses and all the people, is very dangerous.” Equestrian Preserve Committee Member Linda Elie, who lives in the other portion of Saddle Trail, said that many of the owners who voted in favor of the project are not year-round residents. “They are not here in the summer and not here when a Tropical Storm Isaac 100-year storm comes through,” she said. “Sometimes

the only place you have to exercise horses during times like that is on the roads. The bridle trails are under water, the riding arenas are under water, there’s no other place to do it.” Further, she said, pavement can cause horses to slip and fall. Because bridle paths are only on one side of the road, many horses would have to cross pavement to reach them. “Falling on concrete is a higher risk for both rider and horse,” she said. Resident Diane Bostwick agreed. “Most of the people who promoted this are relatively new residents,” she said. “Those of us who have been here year-round have seen the dangers of asphalt. And asphalt isn’t going to slow down traffic.” Kelly Sachs said she doesn’t see a problem with the trails. “I ride them all year round,” she said. “If it’s raining or bad weather, I give my horses a couple of days off.” She said that although she was initially against paving, the dust kicked up from the road has caused breathing problems in her family. “We’re all so sick all the time because of the dust,” Sachs said. “That’s really the mitigating factor for me.” Margaret Newman-Biggs said that opponents of the project are largely against the road paving.

“If you want to compromise and just provide water, you may get a better opinion,” she said. She asked that Wellington poll the riders in Saddle Trail, not homeowners, many of whom she said simply rent out their barns. “This is being done by people who are quite wealthy,” NewmanBiggs said. “Because they own a lot of land in our neighborhood, they had a lot more votes. Their votes counted more.” Council members said that although they understood residents’ concerns, they wanted to move forward to get more concrete information. “We’ll find out through the process if it’s going to be beneficial,” Willhite said, noting that the vote that night would allow staff only to move forward in the process, not authorize any construction. Gerwig said she sympathizes with opponents of the project, but thought she had to listen to the majority of residents. “I understand completely people who bought in a neighborhood with the intention of it staying the same,” she said. “Our standard has been two-thirds, and I have to fall back to that for these types of improvements. It has been presented to me that this is an acceptable solution. If it’s wanted by the residents, I want it, too.”

Baker To Take Over Café At Veterans Park In Royal Palm Beach

2014

By Ron Bukley Town-Crier Staff Report A baker with a long history of vendor service has been selected by the Royal Palm Beach Village Council to operate the café at Veterans Park. On April 17, the council approved a bid award and authorization for the village manager to enter into a contract with Peter Torocsik, proprietor of Ultimate Bakery and Pastry, and the only bidder to operate the café, which has had several different vendors since the park opened. Councilman Jeff Hmara asked to have the item pulled from the consent agenda so he could ask about the contract. “We’ve discussed the need to re-establish a viable, going concern that will provide food to everybody who frequents the park, and there are quite a few people who do that,” Hmara said. “If

there’s a really good food vendor, it will increase the traffic there.” Parks & Recreation Director Lou Recchio said Torocsik is a baker by trade. “He has been a baker for a number of years and has had businesses where he took care of the City of Miami Police Department, Fort Lauderdale, Parkland, the City of West Palm Beach,” Recchio said. “He realizes this is not a restaurant per se. He knows it’s a concession business, and that is what he has been in along with his bakery.” Torocsik’s most recent operation was a bakery at Lantana Road and Congress Avenue. “We have had the opportunity to actually sample his product, and it’s great,” Recchio said. “I think the people are going to love it.” Recchio pointed out that there are no independent bakeries in the village. “He realizes the limited

amount of traffic, but he will be reaching out to the neighborhoods,” Recchio said. “He has all intentions of taking part in our special events, which is going to be a huge undertaking for him.” Recchio pointed out that on weekends, the large pavilions are rented out every Saturday and Sunday for parties and family gatherings. “His intention is to put packages together and reach out to those folks and offer them a package,” Recchio said. He added that the sample menu was reasonably priced. In addition to bakery items priced from $1.25 to $2 each, the menu offerings include egg-and-cheese sandwiches from $1.50 to $2.50, bagels for $2.50, pizza by the slice for $2.25, subs for $6, hot dogs for $3.50, coffee varieties for $1.25 to $2.75 and other beverages from $1.25 to $2.

Spring Plant Sale Hibiscus & Rose Shows

We bring the best plants to you… Over 80 Vendors from all over the state! One-Stop Shopping – 1000s of Fabulous Plants! Plants not found anywhere else!

Saturday, Apr. 26 9:00am–5:00pm (Members breakfast starts at 8am)

Sunday, Apr. 27 9:00am–4:00pm Event Admission: $10, Members: Free Memberships Available at Door Palms, orchids, bamboo, begonias, bromeliads, fruit trees, and many other types of plants. Hibiscus Society Show Rose Society “Festival of Roses” Plus, fabulous wooden bowls and other crafts by the Palm Beach County Woodturners.

Mounts Botanical Garden 531 North Military Trail, West Palm Beach 33415

561-233-1757 mounts.org

“He has all the equipment that’s needed to run it, so he doesn’t need to make an initial investment, but he realizes it’s going to take time,” Recchio said. Hmara said Torocsik could take advantage of special events at the park. “We’ve got a couple of them coming up,” he said, including Cultural Diversity Day on Saturday, May 10 and Memorial Day. Recchio said there are also community garage sales and other events at the park, but that previous vendors chose not to take part in them. “We can use our own vendor for Memorial Day,” Recchio said. “Obviously, we will approach him.” Vice Mayor David Swift said he was impressed with Torocsik’s résumé. “When he reaches out to the neighborhoods, I certainly would commit myself to helping out in any way,” Swift said. “I

really would like to see that little place get going.” Recchio said the aroma of fresh baked goods, bread and pastries will advertise that he is there. “He made a statement that when he gets in there in the morning, he’s going to open up his doors and people are going to smell his fresh baked goods, and that’s

going to draw them in,” Recchio said. The three-year contract commences May 1 and may be renewed for two one-year terms. The lease payment is based on 2 percent of the annual gross sales the first year, 3 percent the second year and 4 percent the third year, plus monthly utility charges.

Acreage Woman Arrested In Connection With March Crash

An Acreage woman was arrested Wednesday in connection with a traffic crash that left a 9-year-old girl in critical condition last month. According to a Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office report, a warrant was placed for the arrest of 28-year-old Dynasdy Williams for a DUI (driving under the influence) crash with serious bodily injury. Williams turned herself in

to a deputy and was taken to the Palm Beach County Jail. The arrest stems from a March 4 incident when Williams struck 9-year-old Melanie Ponce de Leon, a student at Golden Grove Elementary School, as she was walking home from her bus stop on 130th Avenue North. Ponce de Leon was taken to the hospital in critical condition.


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April 25 - May 1, 2014

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OUR OPINION

Wellington’s Drainage Upgrades Are Costly, But Necessary

If we learned anything from Tropical Storm Isaac two years ago, it was that having a working infrastructure is crucial in emergency situations. Though updating a community’s infrastructure is neither cheap nor exciting, it is a crucial necessity that must be done. This week, Wellington began the process to increase its Acme Improvement District drainage assessment by $100 per unit each year. The village plans to use the extra money to make a much-needed $29 million investment into its drainage infrastructure over a 12-year period. Although some residents will cringe at the added cost, these improvements are critical to preventing future issues. Two years ago, much of Wellington was under water for several days because of unexpectedly high rainfall. Water issues are complicated enough as it is, with municipalities battling for drainage rights. Having so much water in such a short period of time caused emergency situations across the western communities.

Although Wellington can’t necessarily get more drainage privileges, it can increase its capacity to hold water, and make it easier for water to drain off the roads. Raising the elevation of Forest Hill Blvd. and widening culverts is a major step in this process, and it will help when the next major storm arrives. Another issue complicating things is the rising costs of flood insurance because the Federal Emergency Management Agency has put much of our communities in the flood zone. The new distinction couldn’t have come at a worse time, as we continue to grapple with drainage solutions. Wellington hopes its efforts will keep residents from paying high premiums, which have risen exponentially in some parts of the state. While no one likes to pay a higher rate, these assessments are crucial to keeping Wellington residents out of the flood zone. Further, Wellington’s efforts will help regionally, creating more capacity for storage, and hopefully encouraging other communities to invest in drainage projects.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Wellington Should Host EcoGreen

On April 1, Shelly Townsend of Equine EcoGreen presented her company’s idea of a public private partnership (P3) to the Town of Loxahatchee Groves. In essence, a P3 arrangement has a local government and a private enterprise working together for a common purpose. In the case of Equine EcoGreen, it would be the environmentally friendly recycling of equine wastes including raw manure as well as manure/urine contaminated bedding (shavings). The idea of housing an equine waste handling facility in Loxahatchee Groves was not received well and I, as a resident there, know exactly why. In essence, we are tired of being on the receiving end of the horse waste coming out of Wellington. This has gone on for many, many years, following Wellington receiving orders from both the United States Army Corps of Engineers and the South Florida Water Management District to fix the phosphorus pollution emanating from Acme Basin B and leading to eutrophication of the Arthur R. Marshall Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge. That led to Wellington creating “best management practices” for the problem. However, it turned out that the main way to handle the problem was to export their waste, and to save on fuel charges, the closest place was and remains Loxahatchee Groves. In May 2012, after thoroughly reviewing the process, I sent a letter of support for Equine EcoGreen to Mayor Bob Margolis and the Wellington Village Council. Presently, Ms. Townsend and her company have received a patent on this process, and I suggest, no I challenge, the Village of Wellington to work with her and get started on establishing a P3 relationship to locate an Equine EcoGreen facility within the equestrian areas of Wellington. It is way past time for Wellington to take the long overdue responsibility for the wastes generated by its multi-million-dollar equestrian industry. I thank you for your time and consideration. Please note that I have no financial interest in Equine EcoGreen, nor am I paid for this endorsement. I just want equestrian phosphorus out of the waters of South Florida and the flies out of my air. Dr. J. William Louda Loxahatchee Groves

Start High School Later

They say the early bird gets the worm, but in high school, this is not the case. The School Board of Palm Beach County should consider starting high school at a later time in the morning.

High school students are often typified as zombies. However, we are a product of our environment. High school has been set to begin earlier than both elementary and middle school, something that is almost illogical. During adolescence, our circadian rhythms, or in other words, our biological clocks, shift to a later time; our bodies have the natural tendency to fall asleep, and, subsequently, wake up later. High school beginning early disrupts this way of nature, depriving us of precious hours of sleep. But it’s only our health affected, who cares, right? Wrong. Many studies, as well as sheer common sense, demonstrate that a strong correlation exists between well-rested minds and focused minds. Focus, unfortunately, and perhaps not coincidentally, is something high school students lack. The main concern I imagine our school board has regarding shifting to a later starting time is money. Having to change high school schedules would involve changing bus schedules, which would affect middle and possibly elementary school. Though this is difficult to resolve, it is definitely not impossible. In fact, several counties across the country have found a relatively simple solution: doubling up on routes. They combined both middle and high school routes so that students would share the buses at the same time. Doing so actually saved these counties money by eliminating routes with fewer students. It is evident that the pros outweigh the cons. School board officials must gravitate toward this change if, in fact, they truly do care about students’ performance and general welfare. However, they are not completely cognizant of it, and it is because of this that the community must voice their concerns to achieve this change. There is no doubt that sleep is necessary for success; after all, it is the night owl that gets the mouse. Camila Yepes The Acreage Editor’s note: Ms. Yepes is a student at Seminole Ridge High School.

‘Gang Of Three’ Represents The People

Lately, I’ve noticed on your pages what seems an organized letter-writing campaign to disparage Wellington Mayor Bob Margolis and council members Matt Willhite and John Greene as a “gang of three” running amok, while ennobling council members Anne Gerwig and Howard Coates. Let’s not forget that when the three were elected in 2012, turnout was 34 percent higher (5,500 votes vs. 4,100) than in the 2014 vote that re-elected Gerwig and Coates. As such, it’s the three who repre-

sent a larger slice of our citizenry and, therefore, better represent our community’s view that Wellington should not be “Boca-sized” into just another hodgepodge of strip malls and high-rise hotels, such as the local developer crowd tried to erect, and which Gerwig and Coates were willing to let them do. The letter writers also make a big deal of the Jacobs family’s campaign contributions. But the Jacobs have long tried to protect our equestrian areas, the green spaces that make Wellington unique, and are in tune with what our town is all about. The bottom line is that Margolis, Willhite and Greene are the people’s choice and their programs are what the people, and not just the business and developer interests who back Gerwig and Coates, want Wellington to be. Jay Schleifer Wellington

Thinking Of Charlie Schoech

We were saddened recently to hear of the recent death of Charlie Schoech’s wife, Janice. For me, it brought back memories of working with Charlie at the Acme Improvement District, the Palm Beach County Commission and the incorporation of Wellington. When we began an effort to incorporate Wellington, I asked him to help create our new charter. The charter needed to be unprecedented, in many regards, to gain the support of very skeptical Wellington voters, while at the same time meeting extensive State of Florida requirements. Charlie spent nearly a year crafting our unique charter, balancing the protection of unique neighborhoods with landowner rights, empowering the citizens to limit tax increases and requiring developers to pay infrastructure costs of development. He refused any compensation for hundreds of hours of legal work. On the day the legislature was to vote on the Wellington incorporation, following a year of intense opposition, Charlie Schoech and Kathy Foster were to meet me at my aircraft hanger to fly to Tallahassee. Charlie, uncharacteristically, didn’t show up, so Kathy and I took off without him. There were only two items on the agenda: the annual state budget and the incorporation of Wellington, which passed unanimously. After landing back in Palm Beach County, I tried to locate Charlie, only to find he had been in a terrible auto accident. While waiting for a red light on Southern Blvd., he was rear-ended by a dump truck loaded with gravel. When I saw his car, it was difficult to believe that he could have escaped alive. Wellington owes Charlie Schoech a great deal. Not only

did he donate hundreds of hours drafting our constitution, but he nearly lost his life to provide us with the right of self-governance. In all the hours we worked together through fierce opposition, I never heard Charlie say an unkind word about anyone — a wonderful example that seems to have been lost over the years. I hope he knows that there are many here in the community thinking about him in this, his time of loss. Ken Adams Wellington

RPB Mayor Ignores Resident

At the last Royal Palm Beach Village Council meeting, you would not be watching democracy in action or see anyone rise to defend one of his fellow residents’ right to address a grievance, but what you would witness could only be described as a man without benefit of counsel and whose grievance would not be addressed. Most residents would believe that the mayor would have risen, in the interests of harmony, to explain to the resident why his grievance would not be heard, but alas, all that fell on the resident’s ears was the sound of laughter coming from the mayor in private conversation with a council member, which may or may not have been related to his dilemma. Someone did explain at the meeting, but not before the meeting, that 4 to 5 days was required to “review” his grievance and the pictures he had. Mr. Blicksilver, who appeared in a previous article in the Town-Crier, brought pictures and was prepared to voice his concerns about a problem he was experiencing in the canal behind his property. The problem was that unlike other areas in the village where spraying had been ordered by the village, not only were the weeds being killed, but the fish as well. Mr. Blicksilver recognized the need to control the overgrowth of grasses but wanted an explanation of why, unlike in other areas sprayed, the fish were dying as well. Mr. Blicksilver brought pictures and was prepared to voice his concerns about the problem, but he wasn’t afforded an opportunity to address the council. As a longtime resident of RPB and as an observer of this mayor, I found the expectations of Mr. Blicksilver to be naive and that passive requests as in “one concerned neighbor to his neighbor” and any low-key overture to be largely ignored. The answer seems to be that if you want a fair hearing under this mayor, you must as in a court of law, hire an attorney, build a case, which should be totally unnecessary in my opinion, and change the tenor of what should be a simple hearing of a resident’s grievance

before people who you elected, and just enter into litigation with the village and go after the contractor who did the spraying and question in a court of law the village agent who hired him. Richard Nielsen Royal Palm Beach

Wellington’s Dysfunctional Leadership

mayor. Instead, he chose to side with Willhite and Greene, putting his personal alliances ahead of the voters. If Margolis wonders where the angst among the council and the public comes from, I suggest he look in the mirror. Victor Connor Homeland

Lost Faith In The PBSO

The Wellington Village Council continues to demonstrate just how dysfunctional they can be under Mayor Bob Margolis’ dysfunctional leadership. Despite paying over $10,000 for a professional evaluation, Mayor Margolis’ very first official action after the recent election was to slap Councilwoman Anne Gerwig hard in the face. Gerwig was re-elected with more than 63 percent of the vote, the highest voter approval of any sitting council member, and with the most seniority. Gerwig earned the position of vice mayor. But instead of treating other council members with respect and courtesy, Margolis seconded Matt Willhite’s motion to make Councilman John Greene the vice mayor. Not only is Greene the least senior member, he is also the councilman who doesn’t even understand his own motions. Last year, after making the motion to give the Van Dell group exclusive rights to K-Park for nine months, the council debates exclusive, Greene then votes to make it exclusive, the motion to make it exclusive passes, and then Greene asks the village manager when they could hear from the other groups! Margolis had to explain from the dais to Greene what “exclusive” meant. Mayor Margolis’ action was an insult to the voters in Wellington who just re-elected Gerwig, an insult to Anne and an insult to women in office. Even though Gerwig earned the vice mayor position, Margolis passed her up for Greene. Apparently, Margolis thinks a junior councilman who doesn’t understand what he votes on is a better choice than a senior member woman who wins with 63 percent of the vote. There’s an old saying: “the fish rots from the head down.” Margolis is the head of the council. He had every opportunity in the world to move the council down a healing path by making Gerwig the vice

On April 14, around noon, two deputies, one in uniform, the other in plain clothes came into our property asking for permission to view our security camera DVR in order to solve a burglary. The burglary happened sometime between April 3 to April 7 at the Royal Palm Beach RV and boat storage facility. We gave permission with some reluctance on my part. After they left, I wondered why they came here in the first place. The Palm Beach County Water Utilities Department Regional Pumping Facility #4100, located at 40th Street and 121st Terrace North, is way closer to the scene of the crime, and they must have much better cameras than ours. They have so many warning signs on their gate that it looks like Area 51. I’m sure their cameras would show a much better quality picture/ video. Why didn’t they use those cameras instead? What about fingerprints, DNA and other physical evidence? What bothered me the most about their visit was some questions that were asked at various times: my daughter’s name, the purpose of a security device in the room with the DVR and my husband’s place of employment. Of course, they were asked in an innocent manner, and we willingly gave the answers, but they seemed out of place and unprofessional. At the end of the visit, the one deputy who came in the house decided they didn’t need a copy of the DVR footage after all because he already had a pretty good idea who committed the crime. Strange. Then why invade our privacy? We just want to live in peace and to feel safe. Is that too much to ask for here in Palm Beach County? In The Acreage? Sadly, my trust in the PBSO was lost about two years ago, even before Seth Adams’ death. Christine Boyette The Acreage

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NEWS

County OKs Ordinance To Prevent Deceptive Gas Price Posting

By Ron Bukley Town-Crier Staff Report The Palm Beach County Commission approved an ordinance Tuesday to prevent gas station owners from displaying deceptive prices. The ordinance prohibits practices such as displaying gas prices conspicuously, with the “cash price” stipulation posted so small that it is difficult to see until a motorist pulls into the station. “The ordinance is requiring any gas station that wishes to

post a cash price on their sign advertising that price, that the lettering has to be a minimum of 6 inches high, so it’s much more visible to the public,” said Assistant County Administrator Vince Bonvento, who added that sellers would be allowed up to one year to retrofit signs to meet the requirements. During the interim, if cash discounts are offered, the sellers must place a sign at the pump. “I think this is going to increase transparency, which is

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the reason I brought it up in the first place,” Commissioner Hal Valeche said. Palm Beach County Mayor Priscilla Taylor asked what the penalties will be, and Bonvento said a warning will be given initially, followed by a $250 fine if the station owner fails to comply. Gas station owner Kevin Dalton was one of several to speak in opposition to the ordinance. “To suggest that any gas station owner is misleading the public is certainly an untruth,” Dalton said.

“That’s not what was intended by this.” Dalton, who owns several gas stations, said gasoline sales provide his lowest profit margin, and that he pays close to $11,000 a month in credit card fees for each station. “The credit card companies are making more off the gas than I am,” he said. “That should be illegal.” Dalton added that he thought gas station owners had been misled when the commission said it

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would delay a decision until July, allowing station owners to offer more input into the ordinance. At a meeting last week, the commissioners decided to put an ordinance in place quickly in order to beat pending state legislation that could prevent future local regulation. Valeche said the county ordinance still allows posting of cash discounts and the ability for customers to take advantage of it. “We’re certainly not trying to exclude that,” he said. “I am highly

pro-business, and I think my colleagues know that.” Valeche said the deceptive practices of “a few bad apples” are ruining it for everyone else. “I’ve seen for myself, and I’ve heard it from lots of people, that there are deceptions going on,” he said. “We do want to have a uniform standard so that members of the public understand exactly what they’re buying into.” Valeche made a motion to approve the ordinance, which passed unanimously.

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Page 5

NEWS

INDIAN TRAIL CELEBRATES HAMLIN HOUSE OPENING WITH RIBBON CUTTING

The Indian Trail Improvement District celebrated the opening of the newly renovated Hamlin House on Friday, April 18 with a ribboncutting ceremony. Located on Hamlin Blvd. near Nicole Hornstein Equestrian Park, Hamlin House will be a venue for community PHOTOS BY JULIE UNGER/TOWN-CRIER events, as well as a facility for the nearby horse shows.

Attendees gather outside the newly opened Hamlin House.

Jaylen Banks with Brendan and Ella Altieri.

ITID Supervisors Carol Jacobs, Jennifer Hager, Michelle Damone and Ralph Bair.

Jenna and Ryan Rinzel join Melaya Peterson to enjoy the bounce house.

Laurie Palm, Jim Shallman and Don Rinzel.

The Sea Turtle Tappers Lynda Mitchell, Steve and Vicki Barnard, Sharon Palmer and Linda Cutting.

CAFCI HOLDS ANNUAL EASTER PICNIC AT OKEEHEELEE’S MICANOPY PAVILION Caribbean-Americans for Community Involvement (CAFCI) hosted its annual Easter picnic on Saturday, April 19 at Okeeheelee Park’s Micanopy Pavilion. The picnic featured an Easter egg hunt, bounce house and Caribbean foods. PHOTOS BY JULIE UNGER/TOWN-CRIER

Attendees enjoy the picnic.

Sylton Edmondson, Aaliyah Henry, Zion Henry, Thomas Cargill Demi-Anne Barnett and Marcus Wilson enjoyed the day.

The 25th Annual Picnic Committee, which planned the event.


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April 25 - May 1, 2014

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CRIME NEWS

Burglary Reported At RPB Car Dealership

By Lauren Miró Town-Crier Staff Report APRIL 21 — A deputy from the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office substation in Royal Palm Beach was called to a car dealership on Southern Blvd. Monday morning regarding a burglary. According to a PBSO report, sometime between 8 p.m. last Sunday and 7:30 a.m. the following morning, someone entered the dealership’s lot and stole four Goodyear tires and four Ford aluminum rims from a Ford Escape on the lot. An employee found the 2014 Ford Escape up on blocks. According to the report, one of the blocks had broken and the vehicle had fallen, damaging the passenger-side frame. The damage was estimated at approximately $1,000. The vehicle was located in a fenced lot, and it was believed the suspect(s) jumped the fence or used a ladder. The stolen items were valued at approximately $1,600. There were no suspects or witnesses at the time of the report. ••• APRIL 17 — A Royal Palm Beach man was arrested last Thursday morning on charges of theft after he was caught shoplifting from the Bealls department store on Southern Blvd. According to a PBSO report, at approximately 10 a.m., 34-year-old Franklin Shumate entered the store and proceeded to the women’s accessories section. According to the report, he selected eight women’s fragrances and concealed them in a duffel bag, then exited through the front doors, passing all points of sale without attempting to pay for the items. A loss prevention officer stopped Shumate outside and recovered the items, valued at $207.92. A deputy from the PBSO substation in Royal Palm Beach was dispatched to the store, and Shumate was arrested. He was taken to the Palm Beach County Jail, where he was charged with petty theft. APRIL 18 — A Royal Palm Beach man and a Lake Worth woman were arrested early last Friday morning on trespassing charges after they were found inside a restaurant on Southern Blvd. According to a PBSO report, a deputy from the Royal Palm Beach substation responded to an alarm call at the restaurant and observed a white male run into the business from the rear, and then a white male and white female exit the business. The deputy stopped the suspects, later identified as 32-year-old Patrick Stewart and 29-year-old Samantha Wilson. According to the report, the deputy contacted the restaurant owner, who said no one had permission to be in the building. Inside the restaurant, the deputy observed two open bottles of beer. Stewart and Wilson were arrested and taken to the county jail, where they were charged with trespassing. APRIL 19 — A deputy from the PBSO substation in Royal Palm Beach was dispatched to a hair salon on State Road 7 last Saturday evening regarding a theft of services. According to a PBSO report, a woman had $109 in hair work done at the salon and then said she needed to get money out of the bank to pay for the service. An employee contacted the Royal Palm Beach substation when the woman did not return. According to the report, the deputy spoke with the suspect on the phone and she said her daughter had to be taken to the hospital, but she would return to pay. There was no further

information available at the time of the report. APRIL 20 — A resident of Olympia called the PBSO substation in Wellington last Sunday to report a theft. According to a PBSO report, sometime between 1 and 4 p.m., someone stole two Roadmaster bicycles from his garage. The bicycles were between four and seven years old. There was a blue ladies bike and a green mens bike. The stolen bicycles were valued at approximately $200. There were no suspects or witnesses at the time of the report. APRIL 21 — A resident of 88th Place North called the PBSO’s Acreage/Loxahatchee substation early Monday morning regarding a vehicle burglary. According to a PBSO report, sometime between 11:15 and 11:40 p.m. last Sunday, someone entered the victim’s vehicle and stole a speaker box and an Apple iPad from inside. The victim came outside to find his car’s rear hatch and driver’s-side door open. According to the report, the doors were left unlocked. The stolen items were valued at approximately $720. There were no suspects or witnesses at the time of the report. APRIL 21 — A deputy from the PBSO substation in Wellington was dispatched Monday morning to a home on White Pine Drive regarding a theft. According to a PBSO report, sometime between 8 p.m. last Sunday and 6:45 a.m. the following morning, someone stole the right wheel and tire from the victim’s black 2000 Ford Explorer. The vehicle was in the victim’s driveway at the time and was found left up on a jack. The stolen tire and wheel were valued at approximately $200. There were no suspects or witnesses at the time of the report. APRIL 21 — An employee of a plant nursery on B Road called the PBSO’s Acreage/Loxahatchee substation Monday morning to report a burglary. According to a PBSO report, sometime between 8 p.m. last Saturday and 8 a.m. Monday morning, someone entered the business and stole 65 areca palm trees from a gated area. The palm trees were each in 15-gallon buckets and were valued at approximately $45 each, for a total loss of $2,925. There were no suspects or witnesses at the time of the report. APRIL 21 — A resident of Indian Mound Road called the PBSO substation in Wellington on Monday to report a delayed theft. According to a PBSO report, the victim purchased a vacant home on the street and has been doing construction on it. Sometime between Wednesday, Jan. 1 and Saturday, March 1, someone stole several Wellington trash cans from his property. The victim noted that many contractors have been doing work at the home. The garbage cans were valued at $150. APRIL 21 — A deputy from the PBSO substation in Wellington responded Monday to a home in the Wellington Lakes community regarding a theft. According to a PBSO report, the victim brought his boat up to dry dock at approximately noon last Friday. When the victim returned to his dock, located behind his home on Shoreside Lane, last Sunday at approximately 10 a.m., he discovered someone had stolen the Minnkota engine and battery from the boat. The stolen items were valued at approximately $404. There were no suspects or witnesses at the time of the report.

Crime Stoppers of Palm Beach County is asking for the public’s help in finding these wanted fugitives: • Jesus Isaguirre is a white male, 5’11” tall and weighing 220 lbs., with brown hair and hazel eyes. He has multiple tattoos. His date of birth is 10/08/93. Isaguirre is wanted for failure to appear on charges of possession of ecstasy, possession of marijuana and possession of drug paraphernalia. His last known address was Red Pine Lane in Greenacres. He is wanted as of 04/17/14. • Quentin Linville is a white male, 5’7” tall and weighing 170 lbs., with brown hair and blue eyes. He has multiple tattoos. His date of birth is 07/07/85. Linville is wanted for violation of supervised own recognizance and possession of a schedule IV substance. His last known address was Shady Palms Way in Greenacres. He is wanted as of 04/17/14. Remain anonymous and you may be eligible for up to a $1,000 reward. Call Crime Stoppers at (800) 458-TIPS (8477) or visit www.crimestopperspbc. com.

Jesus Isaguirre

Quentin Linville

THE INFORMATION FOR THIS BOX IS PROVIDED BY CRIME STOPPERS OF PALM BEACH COUNTY. CRIMESTOPPERS IS WHOLLY RESPONSIBLE FOR THE CONTENT SHOWN HERE.


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April 25 - May 1, 2014

Page 7

NEWS

RPB Contractor Reports Progress In Control Of Aquatic Weeds

By Ron Bukley Town-Crier Staff Report Royal Palm Beach staff and contractor Clarke Aquatic Services reported last week that they are gaining control of aquatic weeds in the village’s canals. At the April 17 meeting of the Royal Palm Beach Village Council, Utilities Director Paul Webster said Clarke’s contract calls for 90 percent control of exotic aquatic weeds and 85 percent control of floating weeds and algae, and to maintain control of aquatic plants with consideration of flood control, fishing, boating and aesthetics. Webster also pointed out that last year, Clarke’s contract was amended to include a full-system treatment strategy, and that the village was recently issued a special permit by the Indian Trail Improvement District to let it do the primary maintenance on the M-1 Canal, which has been a source of

complaints from village residents. “Our agreement with Clarke was amended this month to include that,” Webster said, pointing out that the village is in its third and final year of the agreement with Clarke. The condition of the canals as of the end of March was 97.9 percent clear in the village waterways and 90 percent clear in the M-1 Canal, Webster said. The M-1 Canal had floating tape grass throughout, and other sections of the waterways had tape grass and hygrophila floating in from the M-1 Canal. “In our six-month comparison from the end of September last fall to the current conditions at the end of March, we see improvement throughout the system,” Webster said. Clarke did soundings of the canals in March to detect submerged growth and muck and made maps of the entire system. “Those species like to grow in muckier areas,”

Webster said. “It also helps us do a baseline for development of our future dredging program.” Clarke Water Resources Manager Dr. Brett Bultemeier said that although visual inspections are done, the sonographs reveal bottom conditions that cannot be seen. “These waterways are a little bit darker, where you can’t see more than 3 or 4 feet into the water, and you can have an awful lot of plants growing underneath there. By the time you see it, it’s almost too late,” he said. “The idea with the mapping is to identify the problems before they can be seen visually.” Bultemeier described his company’s sounding equipment as a “fish-finder on steroids” that reveals the muck, the actual bottom of the canal and any plants growing there, giving recorded data of the conditions. “Looking at this gives us a complete understanding of the

entire system, so that rather than try to remember what we saw as we drove through, we have datadriven information that we can utilize to be proactive,” he said. “Instead of waiting for the plants to be almost at the surface, we can catch it early on before it becomes something worse.” Bultemeier also pointed out that the collection of the data gives the village a historical record of the system. “It allows you each year to go back and determine if things are getting better,” he said. “It also provides the ability should you get calls from residents who say, ‘This is the worst it has ever looked,’ for you to say, ‘No, we can go back in history and see it is a lot better.’” Along with an improvement in the vegetation, they are seeing an improvement in the sediment as well. “We are seeing an improvement in that sediment shifting to more of a hard sediment,” Bultemeier said. “As we open up that

area, natural processes are allowed to turn that muck sediment into more of a sand.” He said the generally clearer canals will give the company a head start as they move into summer, when growth is more pervasive. Taking over control of the M-1 Canal, where many of the plants are coming from, will also help in controlling the weeds over the summer, Bultemeier added. South Regional Operations Manager Angelo Fanelli said the company was in the process of treating the entire canal system as the growing season begins, then will follow up with a systemic treatment for new sprouts. “We’ll be selective as much as possible to keep the more desirable plants on the shoreline, reduce erosion and help keep out undesirable plants,” Fanelli said, explaining that Clarke’s main focus is on eliminating non-native plants that tend to be more aggressive and

retaining native plants that are good fish habitat. Asked how the non-native plants get there, Bultemeier said it is often from residents who dump aquarium contents into the water. “Somebody has a beautiful fish aquarium, they get tired, the fish die, they forget to feed them when they go on vacation, they come home, dump it into the canal, and now you have a mess,” Bultemeier said. “A singe node of that plant can float to a nice, soft spot and grow into an entire canal full of plants.” Boaters can also bring them in, as well as birds and other animals. Bultemeier said the company is getting to the point of being ahead of the plant control curve after a period last summer when numerous residents were complaining about aquatic weeds. “The mapping helps a lot with that, and we’re taking steps to see that we stay ahead of it,” he said.

Damone To RPB: Lobbyist Will Assure The Completion Of SR 7

By Ron Bukley Town-Crier Staff Report The Royal Palm Beach Village Council heard a status report April 17 on the planned State Road 7 extension to Northlake Blvd. from Indian Trail Improvement District Supervisor Michelle Damone. Damone, ITID’s representative on the Western Communities Council, has led the effort to see that the road is extended to Northlake Blvd., as has been planned for decades. With funding from area municipalities, the Western Communities Council recently hired the law firm of Lewis, Longman & Walker at a cost of $30,000 to do lobbying, primarily at the federal and state

levels to see that approved funding remains. The City of West Palm Beach continues to try to stop the road. “Some interesting things have been going on,” Damone said. “The Florida Department of Transportation has anticipated that they will be going over litigation with U.S. Fish & Wildlife and the Federal Highway Administration, so in their anticipation, they are looking at additional alignments.” She said that suggested alternative alignments on 130th and 140th avenues, as well as Seminole Pratt Whitney Road, adversely affect Acreage residents. “They’re anticipating litigation, and they’re trying to save some

time, but they’re going to prove their case in advance and be proactive instead of reactive and show all options,” Damone said. She pointed out that the proposed alternate alignments are unrealistic. “There’s a lot of eminent domain and easements that we just don’t own,” she said. “These are costly, expensive alignments. They’re anticipating that they’ll say, ‘We agree with you,’ and the alignment that we’ve all supported in the western communities is the best one.” Damone said the primary goal is to assure that approved financing remains secure. “That’s what I’m concerned about — the City of West Palm Beach and what they

are trying to strategize and do,” she said. The $80 million, four-lane extension from 60th Street North to Northlake Blvd. would run along the southern edge of the Ibis community, then north along the eastern edge of Ibis and the western edge of the Grassy Waters Preserve to Northlake. She said the county has finished construction of the SR 7 extension from Persimmon Blvd. up to 60th Street North and has started building west to Royal Palm Beach Blvd. as a temporary reliever until the state’s extension is complete. “They started with some landscaping, and it’s starting to look like a road,” Damone said. “I’ve

heard that they’re going out to bid on it and getting a permit on it. That should be completed by summer, so State Road 7 is moving forward. It really has taken a collaborative effort and the support of everyone. I think if we stand together as one, we stand strong.” Councilman David Swift thanked Damone, Wellington Village Manager Paul Schofield, Wellington Councilman Howard Coates and Loxahatchee Groves Councilman Jim Rockett for their work on the SR 7 project. “They have been very helpful, very supportive,” he said. “Michelle has been up to Tallahassee several times now working on this, and we have other folks

who also have traveled up there. Thank you for your good work. I appreciate it.” Councilman Richard Valuntas asked whether FDOT anticipated litigation from the federal government and Damone said it has, explaining that FDOT received a letter from the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service in April 2012 registering concern about environmental impacts to snail kites. “The City of West Palm Beach suddenly became an environmentalist, and there were some snail kites about four miles east of the alignment that’s approved,” Damone said. “We just need to [assure] Fish & Wildlife that they’ll be safe and secure in their nests.”

IPC POLO SEASON ENDS WITH EXCITING MASERATI U.S. OPEN CHAMPIONSHIP An exciting season of high-goal polo ended Sunday, April 20 with the Maserati U.S. Open Championship finals at the International Polo Club Palm Beach. Guests enjoyed a thrilling match between Alegria and Valiente, with Alegria taking an 11-10 victory in overtime. In addition to the match, there was an Easter egg hunt for families. (See page 15 for more on the polo match.) PHOTOGRAPHY BY LILA PHOTO

USPA Chairman Chuck Weaver and his wife, Laurie, with USPA President Joe Meyer and his wife, Susan.

Anna Lermer with Jesse, Roman and Darryl Frey.

Matt Harrington and Ashley Van Metre.

Joe and Ashley Maguire with children Bryson, Kathryn and Madison.

Analise and Kirsten Franklin.

Veuve Clicquot/Gardens Mall Fashion on the Field winner Amy Cunningham.

Joey Mooney with Chukker and the Easter Bunny.

George J. DuPont Jr. and Brenda Lynn of the Museum of Polo & Hall of Fame and IPC President John Wash present the trophy for the USPA Maserati U.S. Open Championship.

Shareese Logan, Rochelle Holmess, Vanessa Clermont and Sara Katisch.

Kirsten, Jim and Elsa Braden.

NEWS BRIEFS WCS Preschool Open House Set For May 1

Wellington Christian School will hold an open house Thursday, May 1 for parents of prospective students of the school’s Early Childhood Education program. The open house will take place from 9:15 to 10:15 a.m. at Wellington Christian School, located at 1000 Wellington Trace. While the elementary and secondary schools will close at the end of this school year, the Early Childhood Education program will continue and include Florida’s Voluntary Pre-Kindergarten program. In addition to the VPK program, it will serve children ages 2 to 4 with a variety of schedule options. The program will share the location with the new Eagle Arts Academy, an arts-themed charter elementary and middle school that will open for the 2014-15 school year. Wellington Christian’s Early Childhood Education program is a Gold Seal Quality Care program. The program focuses on developing the whole child in a nurturing, Christian environment. Open house meetings will be

held on the first Thursday of each month throughout the summer until classes are full. For more information, visit www.wellingtonchristian.org or call Patricia McCaulley at (561) 793-1017.

PBSO Warns Against Laser Light Misuse

The Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office reminds the public that misuse of a laser lighting device is a felony. There has been an ongoing problem with the misuse of a green laser that has been pointed into the cockpits of aircrafts landing at Palm Beach International Airport. The misuse of a laser lighting device is a third-degree felony. Any person who knowingly and willfully shines, points or focuses the beam of a laser lighting device on an individual operating a motor vehicle, vessel or aircraft, and such act results in bodily injury, is committing a second-degree felony. If the aircraft were to crash, it would become a first-degree felony. Anyone witnessing the misuse of a laser lighting device is asked to report it immediately to the PBSO, the nearest law enforce-

ment agency or Crime Stoppers at (800) 458-TIPS or tips@cspbc. com.

Women’s Group Planning Fashion Show Brunch

The Women of the Western Communities will be hosting its Passion for Fashion Brunch & Fashion Show on Sunday, May 4 at 11 a.m. at the Wanderers Club in Wellington. Special guest Jay Cashmere from WPTV News Channel 5 will be the master of ceremonies and fashion will be provided by Dress Barn and Visions Salon. There will be a silent auction, a Chinese auction and other fun activities and prizes. Proceeds will benefit YWCA Harmony House and the club’s scholarship fund. Tickets are $50. RSVP by April 30 to Mair Armand at mair@wwc-fl.com or (561) 635-0011.

Movie Night And Food Truck Invasion In RPB

Bring the family out for a night

under the stars on Friday, April 25 at 8 p.m. at Royal Palm Beach Commons Park. The evening will include a free movie night featuring the blockbuster Gravity, where a medical engineer and an astronaut work together to survive after an accident leaves them adrift in space. In addition, enjoy the more than 20 food trucks that will be on hand. The food truck event will run from 5 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. Please bring seating. For more information, call (561) 790-5140.

Autism Benefit At Hurricane Grill April 30

Hurricane Grill & Wings will host “Make Waves for Autism Speaks” on Wednesday, April 30 from 5 to 9 p.m. At the event, 20 percent of the proceeds will benefit Autism Speaks, a nonprofit organization that sponsors autism research and conducts awareness and outreach campaigns. The event will include entertainment, face painting and balloon artists. Hurricane Grill & Wings has locations in Wellington at 4075 State Road 7, Royal Palm Beach

at 11071 Southern Blvd. and Boca/ Mission Bay at 10125 Glades Road. For more information, call (561) 318-6107 (Wellington), (561) 753-4868 (Royal Palm Beach) or (561)218-8848 (Mission Bay).

Dawn Hluebek Honored By RPB Rotary

Dawn Hluebek, a special needs teacher at H.L. Johnson Elementary School, recently received the 2014 Crystal Apple Award from

the Rotary Club of Royal Palm Beach. Hluebek was nominated by her peers for the award. She has done phenomenal work in the special needs field for more than 30 years. Hluebek was recognized at the club’s weekly meeting on Thursday, April 24. The club has been awarding the Crystal Apple to a teacher in western communities for the past 21 years. Each year, a different school principal is asked to select a teacher who stands out. The school displays the plaque with all the recipients on it for the year.

Crystal Apple Award — (L-R) Rotarian Eric Gordon, Club President Selena Smith, Crystal Apple recipient Dawn Hluebek, H.L. Johnson Principal Dr. Patti Lucas, Crystal Apple Chair Tony Endler, Rotarian Lynn Balch and Rotarian Dr. Sharada Bhandary.


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April 25 - May 1, 2014

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April 25 - May 1, 2014

Page 9

NEWS

WELLINGTON’S ANNUAL EGG HUNT RETURNS TO THE FIELDS AT VILLAGE PARK

Wellington’s annual Egg Hunt took place Saturday, April 19 on the softball fields at Village Park on Pierson Road. The event was sponsored by the Wellington Preservation Coalition, Bright Horizons Early Education & Preschool and Premier Family Health & Wellness. PHOTOS BY DAMON WEBB/TOWN-CRIER

Kajal, Falgun, Deeya and Shreeya Patel open their eggs.

Emmanuel Lopez, Maibelin Perez, Emma Lopez and Cleidis Fernandez.

The Landa family enjoys the egg hunt.

Alejandro, Helen and Mariana Torres hunt for eggs.

Sacha Dobesti with Paola, Camila and Francesca Duffy.

Cristina Rodriguez, Jose Rodriguez, Traci Brinkmann, Chad Cain and Paul Parent serve refreshments.

ROYAL PALM SENIORS HOLD SPRING FLING PARTY WITH BONNET CONTEST

The Royal Palm Beach Seniors Activities Group held its Spring Fling Party and Bonnet Contest on Thursday, April 17 at the Royal Palm Beach Cultural Center. Spring bonnets were judged, and six winners received prizes. Guests also enjoyed refreshments, door PHOTOS BY DENISE FLEISCHMAN/TOWN-CRIER prizes and entertainment.

Bonnet winners with Brenda Hoffman (center).

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Volunteers Attis Solomon, Elaine Mathis, Vinette Tracey, Cheryl Lower, Lorna Pearson, Beth Kaplan and Joe Schelorke with gifts.

Dora Maniscalco, Gretchen Lugo and Rose Brown.


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April 25 - May 1, 2014

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PALMS WEST PEOPLE

SEMINOLE RIDGE HONOR STUDENTS HELP LGLA CLEAN UP ALONG OKEECHOBEE BLVD.

National Honor Society students from Seminole Ridge High School helped the Loxahatchee Groves Landowners’ Association pick up litter and discarded road debris along the north and south five-mile length of Okeechobee Blvd. The students and LGLA members worked on the Adopt-a-Road clean-up on April 12 from 8 until 11 a.m. At the last town meeting, the Loxahatchee Groves Town Council expressed appreciation for the work done by the residents and the students.

Nick Fah-Sang, Matthew Smith and Dagnes Mosqueda picking up trash on Okeechobee Blvd.

Members of the cleanup team take time for a photo.

April 25 - May 1, 2014

Page 11

Teacher/Cancer Patient Plans Walk To Washington, D.C.

Okeeheelee Middle School science teacher Brian Thomas, a founding member of the Road Warriors long-distance running team, has gained fame for running across multiple states to raise funds to cure life-threatening diseases for others. Last year, Thomas was diagnosed with Stage IV melanoma and given only a few months to live. After enduring invasive surgery, grueling chemotherapy and radiation treatment, he is now preparing to walk the 991 miles to Washington, D.C. over a two-week period starting June 7, accompanied by Jean Morris, CEO of Hugs & Kisses, a nonprofit that offers financial assistance to cancer patients. “My purpose is to highlight the stresses that cancer patients confront daily, fighting for their lives but also fighting to stay afloat

financially,” he said. “I have a beautiful daughter who I want to see graduate from school, walk her down the aisle when she gets married, and be there when she has my first grandchild.” Before the long-distance walk, the Okeeheelee Middle School PTSA is sponsoring the second annual Brian Thomas 5K/Kids Mile Paint Race & Benefit on Saturday, May 10. Activities are scheduled from 8:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the school. Runners check-in is from 6 to 7 a.m., with the Kids Mile starting at 7:15 a.m. and the 5K at 7:35 a.m. There will be music, games, food trucks, crafts, baked goods and more. For details about the benefit, contact gaolo. moreira@palmbeachschools.org. For more about the walk to Washington, D.C., contact Thomas at (561) 819-9471 or visit www. brianthomascancerbeatdown.com.

Taylan Finishes AF Basic

LGLA President Marge Herzog with a load of trash.

Peter Burch fills up a truck.

Air Force Airman 1st Class Vins Patrik A. Taylan graduated from basic military training at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland in San Antonio, Texas. The airman completed an intensive, eight-week program that included training in military discipline and studies, Air Force core values, physical fitness, and basic warfare principles and skills. Airmen who complete basic training earn four credits toward an associate’s degree in applied science through the Community College of the Air Force. Taylan earned distinction as an honor graduate. He is the son of Ruby and Vinson Taylan of Royal Palm Beach. The airman is a 2007 graduate of Royal Palm

Vins Patrik A. Taylan Beach High School. He earned a bachelor’s degree in 2011 from the University of South Florida.

Norton Completes Army Training

Dalton Boccanfuso, Angelica Destsfano and Nori Benjamin

Brooke Herron and Sumner Young

Army Pvt. Joseph S. Norton has graduated from basic combat training at Fort Jackson in Columbia, S.C. During the nine weeks of training, the soldier studied the Army mission, history, tradition and core values, physical fitness, and received instruction and practice in basic combat skills, military weapons, chemical warfare and

bayonet training, drill and ceremony, marching, rifle marksmanship, armed and unarmed combat, map reading, field tactics, military courtesy, military justice system, basic first aid, foot marches, and field training exercises. Norton is the son of Paula and Dan Norton Lake Worth. He is a 2009 graduate of Park Vista High School.


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April 25 - May 1, 2014

WES KINDERGARTENERS LEARN ABOUT WORMS

On Thursday, April 3, kindergarten classes at Wellington Elementary School learned all about the world of worms. Trish Yancey from Fun Learning came into the kindergarten classes and taught about different variations of worms. Yancey explained to the students facts about the worms, such as how earthworms eat all kinds of leftover foods and paper towels, worms make dirt after they eat and that worms need to live in the ground. Each student was able to hold a red beetle worm. Yancey also taught them that the red beetle worm is not really a worm, but will meta morph into a red flying beetle. It was a fun, hands-on experience while learning fascinating facts about different worms. Shown here are Trish Yancey of Fun Learning, kindergarten teacher Sheila Frey and several of her students.

Golden Grove To Hold Kindergarten Roundup

If you are the parent of an incoming kindergarten student who will be attending Golden Grove Elementary School in August, you are welcome to attend a kindergarten roundup on Wednesday, May 7 from 8:30 to 10 a.m. The school will be handing out kindergarten registration packets

at this time. After-school program information will be available for anyone interested in enrolling their child. Logo polo shirts will be available to purchase for $12 each (cash only). For more information, call Golden Grove’s main office at (561) 904-9700.

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SCHOOL NEWS

Sem Ridge Students Win Essay Contest

Seminole Ridge High School juniors Katya Kameka and Laura Louberti were honored April 8 at the Palm Beach Fellowship of Christians and Jews annual essay contest awards ceremony. Students from nearly 40 schools throughout Palm Beach County submitted more than 300 essays on the theme of courage, related to the fellowship’s mission. Kameka and

Essay Contest Winners — (L-R) Katya Kameka, SRHS English teacher Mrs. Melissa Long and Laura Louberti.

Louberti each received a watch and $100 from contest sponsor Tourneau of Palm Beach. • Dukharan Nominated for Yale Book Award — SRHS junior Victoria Dukharan has been chosen as the Yale Club of the Palm Beaches’ Secondary School Book Award Program nominee. Last year, more than 750 Yale Book Awards were given nationwide, with 14 awards given in the Palm Beach County area. The criteria for nomination include outstanding personal character and intellectual promise. As a symbol of the award, each recipient will be able to choose a book with a special Yale Book Award bookplate. • Tri-M Announces New Officers — Seminole Ridge’s TriM Music Honor Society has chosen its officers for the 2014–15 school year. Congratulations to President Gianna Cannestro, Vice President Sarah Al-Buhaisi, Secretary Mairéad O’Rourke, Treasurer Sarah Persson and Historian Rowan Pelfrey. • NHS Elects Officers — The SRHS chapter of the National Honor Society is proud to announce its newly elected officers

for 2014-15: President Austin Taylor, Vice President Jordan Suarez, Secretary Daisia Grafton, Editors Sabrina Kirmani and Julissa Valiente, Treasurer Brandon Phan, Historian Bailee Machado, Parliamentarian Kaitlyn Bolander and Social Directors Gabi Garcia and Carolina Pereira. • Choral Groups Earn State Honors — The Seminole Ridge choral department participated in the 2014 Florida Vocal Association South State Solo & Ensemble Assessments at Palm Beach Atlantic University on April 5. Mairead O’Rourke received not only a Superior on her vocal solo, but also a Superior with Distinction, allowing her to perform at the state honors recital that same afternoon. The Philammonus men’s ensemble also received a Superior with Distinction, allowing them a similar honor. Congratulations to Jemaul Cole, Mateo Garcia, Alex Grafton, Cody Jenkins, Scott Kuczynski, Richie Laurent, Sean Lewis, Cemi Rivera, Cristian Soto, Elijah Spate, Aubrey Talton, Maxx Weinstein, Brandon Wilson, Daniel Wood, Joel Zayas and Samuel Zayas.

The Fly Boyz barbershop quartet, the Thamyris concert women’s ensemble and the Musagetes men’s show choir, the mixed show choir and the Silver Madrigal ensemble all received an Excellent rating. • Hawk Battalion Holds Annual Ball — Seminole Ridge’s Army JROTC Hawk Battalion hosted its fifth annual Military Ball the evening of April 4 at the Binks Forest Golf Club. The ball serves as a formal military ceremony for members of a unit. It includes a dinner and events to foster camaraderie. The theme of this year’s ball, American Heroes, was reflected in the words of guest speaker Emily McClimans, a sophomore at Wellington High School, who spoke of her father, Capt. Joshua McClimans, an Army nurse killed in action in Afghanistan three years ago. Her emotional address to the corps of cadets brought home the realities of war. The battalion took time to honor its graduating seniors, many of whom served throughout high school, and presented them with certificates and coins.

St. Clare To Host Open House On April 28

On Monday, April 28, St. Clare Catholic School will host an open house from 6:30 to 8 p.m. All parents with children entering grades pre-kindergarten through eighth grade are welcome. St. Clare Catholic School is located at 821

Prosperity Farms Road in North Palm Beach. St. Clare Catholic School has been educating and enriching children’s lives for 50 years. Approximately 400 students are enrolled in pre-kindergarten through

eighth grade. St. Clare School is a faith-driven school that does not just teach the Catholic faith, but does its best to live it. Modeling of Christian values is woven into the entire fabric of the school, from the teachers, staff and parents, to older

students who mentor younger students. The entire school community strives to think of and serve others. For more info., or to RSVP, call (561) 622-7171 or visit www. stclareschool.com.


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SCHOOL NEWS

Author Visits Crestwood Middle School

Crestwood Middle School was recently visited by author Lynda Mullaly Hunt. Hunt is the author of a young adult novel titled One for the Murphys. One for the Murphys was chosen as a Florida State Sunshine Book this year and was placed on the reading lists in 21 other states. Hunt addressed the entire student body at Crestwood, sharing experiences about writing her novel. Students and staff were impressed by her candor and authenticity. Many of the students commented to their teachers that Hunt’s presentation had inspired them to create their own manuscript. In the afternoon, she conducted a writing

workshop for a group of promising writers. Hunt also agreed to attend Crestwood’s Barnes & Noble night in order to autograph books and talk to parents and students. The staff at Barnes & Noble was pleasantly surprised when all of the author’s books were sold. When asked why there were only 30 copies of the book available, Barnes & Noble personnel said they never sell more than that at an author’s signing event. One for the Murphys is a book rated “T for tears,” so have a tissue box nearby if you are lucky enough to have a signed copy to read. The Crestwood family feels fortunate to have such an experience to remember.

to recreate the breakfast that they entered into the competition. The meal was judged on preparation, including teamwork and presentation, in addition to taste. “We didn’t win, but the kids were amazing — cracking, beating and scrambling eggs, chopping and dicing vegetables and fruit garnishes, and making whole wheat toast,” Asch said. “I, myself, did more to prepare a meal with the students than I do for myself, and I loved every second of it.” The students got to have fun with TD, the Dolphins’ mascot, and got to take home the aprons and chef hats. Their competition medals were awarded by Dolphin’s kicker Caleb Sturgis, who also autographed all of their stuff and then took them down to the field.

Page 13

CLEAN-UP DAY FUN AT GOLDEN GROVE

Crestwood Principal Dr. Stephanie Nance with author Lynda Mullaly Hunt.

Equestrian Trails Students In Cook-Off On Tuesday, April 8, four students from Equestrian Trails Elementary School and their physical education teacher were involved in a breakfast cook-off challenge at Sun Life Stadium in Miami. Coach Liza Asch is the program advisor for Fuel Up to Play 60, a national program sponsored by the NFL with the of getting kids active for 60 minutes per day, learning about health and nutrition along the way. Four schools selected for the competition had to create a healthy, easy-to-make breakfast using dairy and protein. The school delegation arrived at Sun Life Stadium and were served a buffet breakfast on the Club Level. Students were then taken into a luxury suite to be interviewed. The teams were then given 75 minutes

April 25 - May 1, 2014

The students were fourth graders Matthew Haas, Michael Aronson and Tyler Roth, and fifth grader Soraya St. John. All four students are Fuel Up to Play 60 Ambassadors at Equestrian Trails. Roth found out that he is really good at cutting vegetables, while Haas loved hanging out with TD and was trying to get Sturgis to come watch him on the BMX track. “The Gridiron Food Challenge at the Sun Life Stadium for Fuel Up To Play 60 was a great experience,” St. John said. “It taught me how to cook healthy while having fun. One of my many favorite parts was having fun with my team from my school to cook a healthy breakfast for the judges, along with meeting Caleb Sturgis

and the two cheerleaders from the Miami Dolphins. I cannot wait to see what other challenge we can do to be healthy and active.” Her mother, Maria St. John, said the program helps keep her daughter active. “This program allows them to monitor their daily activities and teaches kids to learn and establish healthy eating habits while making it fun,” she said. “What better way to get kids excited and to challenge themselves to learn points for being active. As a parent, I am thrilled to hear my child coming home with excitement about being healthy and active, along with the many rewards that come along with it. Thank you to Equestrian Trails and coach Asch for getting kids motivated and excited about their health.”

Golden Grove Elementary School and Key Club members from the Alexander W. Dreyfoos Jr. School of the Arts teamed up for a day to clean the school grounds and nature trail at the front of Golden Grove on Saturday, April 12. “The Key Club from the Dreyfoos School of the Arts was a great asset in helping us clean up the school,” Ms. Marge Keller said. The mission of Keep Palm Beach County Beautiful Inc. is to enhance the quality of life in Palm Beach County through programs and partnerships that encourage public agencies, private entities, residents and visitors to reduce litter and waste, increase recycling, beautify and maintain public spaces, and inspire generations of environmental stewards.

NEW HORIZONS TO HOLD KINDERGARTEN ROUNDUP MAY 7

RPBHS Chorus Wows In Washington, D.C. Royal Palm Beach High School’s chorus is a triumphant success story in the making. David Sommer, the director of the group, pushes his students to obtain skills not only relative to their vocal talents and performances, but also skills that they can use throughout their lives. They began their journey at the Palm Beach County District 14 Solo and Ensemble Festival. They were the talk of the town after their performance of two jazz selections, Cole Porter’s “Night and Day” and a medley of songs from Manhattan Transfer called

“Manhattan Transfer Swings.” 10 soloists were also adjudicated based on singing classical solos in English, French, Spanish and German. All the soloists obtained excellent and superior ratings, and the chorus received straight superior ratings and a standing ovation. The ratings earned the chorus a spot to perform in Washington, D.C. at the D.C. Choral Festival. Widline Sainvil, president of the program, was shocked they made it to DC. “It’s very surreal. I couldn’t believe we made it,” she said.

Vice President Denisha Colin agreed. “I have been to D.C. before, but it was a different atmosphere this time,” she said. “It was really fun and a great bonding experience for all of us.” The performance in Washington, D.C. was a successful one, bringing home two plaques and three trophies, one of them being first place in the nation, as well as Best in Jazz, the Adjudicators Award and the Sweepstakes Award. The chorus was asked to perform in the Hall of Remembrance

at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum for a few survivors. The chorus was also asked to sing the national anthem at Arlington National Cemetery. Sommer has worked incredibly hard with the students and said that hard work pays off. “I couldn’t be prouder of our kids to represent Royal Palm Beach, Palm Beach County and the State of Florida,” Sommer said. So what’s the next plan for the Royal Palm High School’s chorus? The road to Carnegie Hall.

New Horizons Elementary School will host its kindergarten roundup on Wednesday, May 7 at 8:30 a.m. in the school’s cafeteria. All students attending New Horizons for kindergarten next year are invited to attend. New Horizons is located at 13900 Greenbriar Blvd. in Wellington.


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April 25 - May 1, 2014

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FEATURES

Easter Baskets Are Boring When Jen Is In Charge Of Them!

I am always making fun of my daughter for her strict adherence to a diet that doesn’t harm animals, fruits, vegetables or packing materials. She is a purist in her own way. She started out as a sorta-vegetarian, which meant that she was a vegetarian unless she was visiting someone and they had cooked meat. She didn’t want to discuss, debate or acknowledge her vegetarianism, so she just ate what she was served. I liked that. But, little by little, she became more adamant. And she realized it wasn’t the meat, it was how the animal was treated before it was reduced to meat. So then everything had to be cage-free, roaming wild,

Deborah Welky is

The Sonic BOOMER humanely raised, etc. That significantly narrows the field at the grocery store. Milk had to be from “happy cows,” eggs from “meandering chickens.” Cheese went back to being wrapped in waxed paper, not plastic, and heaven forbid something came in styrofoam.

She had to have all these happy cows and meandering chickens roaming around a healthy planet with a healthy sky above it. That meant no fluorocarbons, aerosol sprays or spritzing of anything on one’s hair. When Jen spoke, it was with authority. For me, it was like watching the ozone layer disintegrate immediately over my head. So, Easter arrived. We had a couple of all-natural eggs dyed in vegetable dyes, and I got the toddler some healthy crackers to put in a rather disappointing-looking Easter basket. In one bold, subversive move, I buried four or five jellybeans in the bottom. The kid, being a kid, immediately ferreted them out and crammed

the entire handful into his mouth at once, before his mother could find out he was eating (brace yourself) sugar. Skippy doesn’t know what sugar is, but he loves it. While he was licking sugary drool off his fingers, I had to hear about the evils of jellybeans from my daughter. “Those things are gelatin-based! Do you know what gelatin is made from?” “Yes, actually, I…” “I hope this doesn’t become a habit.” “Easter only comes once a year, Jen, and jellybeans are kind of tied to Easter. I think he’ll be OK.” (I didn’t point out that, while we spoke, little Skippy was upending everyone else’s basket, hoping to root out a few more

gelatinous, sugar-laced sweets.) My basket, of course, was filled to the brim with chocolate rabbits and red gummy bears and orange circus peanuts and bright yellow marshmallow Peeps. The Easter Bunny knows what I like, and to each their own. I sneaked off with my basket and the remote control and had a fine evening. You’d be surprised how well either white or red wine goes with Peeps. Oddly, this morning I felt a little nauseous. Could it be? Could Jen be right about sugar and dyes and gelatin? She could. Either that or it may be time to grow up a little bit. Nahhh.

In The Days Of ‘Zero Tolerance,’ Who Protects The Children?

The number of children being abused and bullied in schools around the country is on the rise, and, unfortunately, school administrators seem to be doing a lot of it. We have headlines about a special-needs child in a Pennsylvania high school who, because he was bullied by a group of kids, recorded them on his iPad as a way of proving the facts. Did the school’s administrators help protect the child and punish the bullies? Of course not. The boy was arrested for making the recording, and nothing at all happened to the young thugs. Perhaps the principal took them for ice cream to make them feel better. Then, a crazy judge decided that even though the boy had followed every tiny bit of procedure set down by the school, he was still guilty. Finally, after national publicity, a district attorney decided to drop the whole thing and let the boy go back to school. And no one in any position to protect the

‘I’ On CULTURE By Leonard Wechsler child within the system did so. This has become common. One 5-yearold was suspended because a counselor saw that a pastry he was eating was, after a few bites, shaped like a pistol. No worry about the damage to the boy. A 6-yearold who kissed a female classmate on the cheek was labeled a “sex offender.” That should do wonders when he applies for college. The stories keep multiplying. Girls caught with Midol get tagged under “zero tolerance” drug rules that were originally

instituted to protect against heroin. After all, when you have zero tolerance, there is no difference, at least in the heads of the brainless. There was a news story last year about a kid in Texas who was asthmatic and saw one of his fellow students, who he knew had the same problem and the same medication in her inhaler, collapse. She had forgotten her inhaler, and he used his instead. The police gave him an award for saving a life, and his school suspended him. Back when I was a school administrator, I sometimes resented guidance counselors. They would fight for students even when they might not be worthy. They were fierce defenders, using the argument that “every child needs an advocate.” And they saved a lot of kids. Today, some counselors seem most intent on becoming elements of an anti-child SWAT team. A kid looks the wrong way at someone else, punish him. A 6-year-old wanting to show

affection, brand him a sex offender. I just heard about a school up north that sent out a flier about “fighting bullying.” What a child should do is to ignore it, certainly not “tattle” to administrators. After all, if that happens, the school leadership might just have to do something about it. And the most important thing: Do not fight back at all if you are being attacked. To defend yourself, you are in as much trouble as the older, larger kids who are hitting you. There are some teachers who are bullies; they want kids who behave perfectly. The nose-in-her book little girl is their ideal — never challenging or creating a problem. No wonder boys are increasingly at risk; most do not do very well acting like girls. They may be demanding and take up more class time than teachers want to give. It is far easier to provide drugs to keep them quiet. School leaders have in many cases

become the biggest bullies of all. Of course, some of them were bullies when they were in school. Others, who were among the bullied, now enjoy being far too strong to be victims and side with the strongest elements. Of course, these same administrators have lawyers ready to back them every inch of the way, and school boards that worry that if they allow for ambiguities, they will face lawsuits. So children suffer and educational leaders wonder why more parents are moving their children to charter schools. I believe very strongly in public schools; they are a centripetal force pulling us together as a nation. I worked in them for more than a third of a century. But too often, leaders forget that children are infinitely varied as they grow up. Childhood is a precious time, and students need to be cherished. We need those type of guidance counselors.


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April 25 - May 1, 2014

Page 15

NEWS

Alegria Secures U.S. Open Title With Thrilling Overtime Victory

Alegria denied Valiente polo’s “Triple Crown” with a thrilling overtime victory to claim the 2014 Maserati U.S. Open Championship at the International Polo Club Palm Beach last Sunday. Six-and-a-half chukkers of all-out polo were punctuated by a penalty call that sent Alegria’s Hilario Ulloa to the 40-yard penalty line where he converted the shot for the 11-10 win over Valiente (Bob Jornayvaz, Santi Torres, Sapo Caset and Juan Martin Nero). Alegria (Julian Mannix, Hilario Ulloa, Mariano Aguerre and Clemente Zavaleta) scored first on a shot from the field for the 1-0 lead just 35 seconds into the opening chukker. Torres responded with consecutive goals from the field, and Nero made it 3-1 with the closing goal of the chukker.

Alegria got right back into the game in the second. A stellar defensive effort that shut out Valiente was supported by goals from Ulloa and Mannix. After two chukkers, it was all even at 3-3. Valiente demonstrated its defensive prowess in the third, blanking Alegria while adding a goal on a three-foot penalty shot from Caset. After three chukkers of play, Valiente left the field with a narrow 4-3 halftime edge. Ulloa and Caset swapped penalty shots to open the fourth period. Ulloa tied it up at 4-4 with a 30-yard penalty conversion. Caset answered back by scoring on a 40-yard penalty shot, making it 5-4, but the rest of the chukker belonged to Alegria. Ulloa scored on three consecutive 30-yard penalty shots, and Alegria moved in front of Valiente by two goals, 7-5.

Caset cut the Alegria lead to a single goal, 7-6, with a 60yard penalty conversion in the fifth chukker. Three minutes later, Alegria team captain Mannix scored his second goal on the day, making it 8-6. Caset cut the lead back to a single goal on a penalty shot with just 44 seconds on the clock. After five periods of play, Alegria was on top, 8-7. Torres scored in the opening 30 seconds of the sixth chukker, creating an 8-8 tie. With just under five minutes left in regulation play, Caset hit the ball downfield to himself, and carried it in for a 9-8 lead. Mannix raced down the field with the ball but left it on the doorstep, where Aguerre converted to even the score at 9-9. An Alegria foul resulted in a penalty that allowed Caset to convert from 60 yards out for a 10-9 Valiente lead.

Alegria continued to press the attack and moved the ball down into the Valiente end of the field. A melee in front of the goal allowed Zavaleta an opportunity, and he drove the ball through the posts to end regulation play tied at 10-10. After a brief intermission, both teams returned to the field for sudden-death overtime. Both Alegria and Valiente had opportunities to score in the early going, with a Valiente foul putting Ulloa on the penalty line some 60 yards out from the goal. The shot went wide, and Valiente tried to regroup. Three minutes later, Valiente fouled along the boards in their own end of the field and Alegria was awarded another penalty attempt, this one from 40 yards out. Ulloa made good See POLO, page 16

The victorious Alegria team of Julian Mannix, Hilario Ulloa, Mariano Aguerre and Clemente Zavaleta with the trophy.

PHOTOGRAPHY BY LILA PHOTO

PALM BEACH COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE BLOODHOUND ACADEMY GRADUATES

The Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office Bloodhound Training Academy graduated four bloodhound teams and one instructor on Thursday, April 17 at the training facility in West Palm Beach. The dogs, all from the same litter, were donated by the Jimmy Ryce PHOTOS BY DENISE FLEISCHMAN/TOWN-CRIER Center for Victims of Predatory Abduction.

School District Officer Curtis Riddick with Kash, BSO Deputy Kevin Bolling with Suzie, BSO Col. Al Pollock, Don Ryce, BSO Deputy Debra Wallace with Wyatt, PBSO Deputy Luis Ledbetter with Bandit, BSO Deputy Kelli Covett with Maci and PBSO Cpl. Brian Cullen with Justice.

Helen and Al Santana with their certificates of appreciation.

Graduates and representatives from the PBSO and the BSO.

PBSO Deputy Luis Ledbetter with K-9 Bandit and Sheriff Ric Bradshaw.

Don Ryce is honored for his donation of the bloodhounds.

BSO Dep. Kevin Bolling graduated as an instructor/trainer and is seen here with his K-9, Suzie.

Sunday, April 27th | 4 – 7 pm Bring the entire family out for a FREE celebration of Earth Day & Arbor Day including: •

Concert by VIVA at 4:30 pm

Smokey the Bear

Coloring Mural

Face Painting

Demonstrations

Giveaways

FREE Tree Seedlings

Food Trucks & more!

FREE Events

at the Wellington Amphitheater April 25

Titanic (PG-13) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7:30 PM

26

Green Market . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9:00 AM – 1:00 PM

26

Wellington High School Jazz Band Concert . . . . . . . . . . 7:00 PM

27

Earth Day & Arbor Day Celebration . . . . . . . . 4:00 PM – 7:00 PM

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VIVA Classic Rock & Roll . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4:30 PM

May 01

Food Truck Invasion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5:00 PM – 9:30 PM

02

Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit (PG-13) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8:30 PM

03

Tina Turner Tribute by Simply Tina . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8:30 PM

08

Food Truck Invasion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5:00 PM – 9:30 PM

16

Epic (PG) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8:30 PM

17

The Long Run Eagles Tribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8:30 PM

June 06

Noah (PG-13) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8:30 PM

13

Mr . Peabody & Sherman (PG) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8:30 PM

14

Frank Sinatra Tribute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6:30 PM

14

VIVA Classic Rock & Roll . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8:30 PM

20

Frozen (PG) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8:30 PM

27

The Lego Movie (PG) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8:30 PM

12100 Forest Hill Blvd | (561) 753-2484 For more information on FREE Amphitheater events scan the QR code to the left or visit wellingtonfl.gov.


Page 16

April 25 - May 1, 2014

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NEWS

Women Of Note Chorus Takes Second Place In Sweet Adelines Region 9

The Women of Note Chorus soared to new heights in its regional competition Friday, April 4 in Daytona Beach, achieving the highest score in the history of the chorus and winning a second-place medal in the midsize division and a third place medal overall out of 15 statewide choruses. Also, Women of Note’s Attitude Quartet skyrocketed to first place out of 19 quartets in the region. Under the direction of Mitchell Greenberg, the chorus welcomed

PBSO

Local Leaders Speak

continued from page 1 with crime at all,” he said. “I’m very proud to say that. A lot of villages can’t.” Most of the calls the office receives are about traffic. “They are people speeding through neighborhoods, whether it be La Mancha or Counterpoint, or whether it be some of the [problem] intersections,” he said. The Royal Palm Beach substation recently initiated a selective traffic enforcement program as a result of a traffic analysis showing that three village intersections were the most dangerous for traffic accidents: Southern Blvd. at Crestwood Blvd., Southern Blvd. at State Road 7 and Okeechobee Blvd. at State Road 7. Naujoks noted that the accidents aren’t necessarily fatal incidents. “They just happen to be the ones that merit more attention than others,” he said. To fight this, the substation assigned a recently allocated motorcycle unit, along with the existing motor unit and a cruiser, to enforce traffic laws at those intersections. The goal, however, is on education, not ticket writing. “We’re not

Park Costs

Project On Hold

continued from page 1 couldn’t be to blame. “That doesn’t jive with what I hear in the financial world,” he said. “You can’t convince me that a 100 percent increase is caused by inflation.” Councilwoman Anne Gerwig said deflation is more to blame. “From my personal experience, there are less people offering these services,” she said. “The costs have gone up because there are not as many companies competing.” Coates then asked how cost estimates are vetted before going to the council. “I’m starting to have a growing lack of confidence in the estimates given to us,” he said. “I’m seeing time and time again examples of where they are just radically off.” If council members had an accurate cost, he said, “our decisions might be different.” Barnes said the estimates are determined by using construction databases. This is not the only project

eight new members onto the competition stage this year. This exceptional women’s a cappella chorus, with 45 members on stage, gave a rousing performance of When the Midnight Choo Choo Leaves for Alabam’ and delivered a warm, resonant, emotional rendition of Love Walked In. Once again, the Women of Note Chorus ends the season volunteering at SunFest in West Palm Beach and is gearing up for the 2014-15 season that will include a youth

workshop, a holiday show in December and additional performances throughout South Florida. The Women of Note Chorus is a chapter of Sweet Adelines International, a nonprofit music education association for women. Made up of teachers, nurses, lawyers, legal assistants, bookkeepers, artists, business owners and homemakers, among others, the group delights audiences with four-part a cappella harmony, innovative choreography and dazzling costumes.

(Above) Women of Note members with their medals. (Left) The award-winning Attitude Quartet. out there to start writing tickets,” he said. “We’re out there to educate people with warnings.” District 9 also employed its electronic message board at Royal Palm Beach High School, and more recently at Southern Blvd. at Al Packer Ford, where it displays messages to westbound traffic such as “Don’t text and drive,” “Speed kills” and “Wear your seat belt.” The department has also tried to address the problem of vehicle burglaries. “That’s a result of kids,” Naujoks said. “They’re walking around through some of our developments. They’re checking the vehicles for unlocked doors. If they find them, they go in them and take whatever might be in there. If they don’t, they move on ’til they find one.” The department recently investigated eight vehicle burglaries matching the same method in the Counterpoint Estates neighborhood and has focused enforcement there. The department also enforces a truancy program to pick up students who are not supposed to be out of school and return them to school. Truancy has been found to be a big contributor to burglaries. “We are number one for having picked up and returned truants back to their respective schools,” Naujoks said. District 9 supports youth

through numerous activities, including the recent safety fair at Royal Palm Beach High School and its Police Athletic League boxing program, which is open to all youth in the county. The department has a community outreach coordinator who organizes activities such as “Shop with a Cop” and food drives during the holidays. “We are very active in any way we can participate in the community and make the village and surrounding villages a better place to live,” Naujoks said. Lt. David Combs, commander of PBSO District 15 serving The Acreage and Loxahatchee Groves, said his district encompasses about 150 square miles and 44,000 people. “It’s a little bit different in that we are a rural district, as opposed to Wellington and Royal Palm Beach,” Combs said. “It’s an interesting challenge, and it’s quite different than the rest of the sheriff’s office… The good news is District 15 is a wonderful place to live. There is a very low crime rate, and we have very little personal crime. Most of the crime in District 15 is property crime.” Although District 15 does not have as large a staff as others, it initiated a program in the past few years that reduced its primary problem of residential burglaries by about 50 percent. “We’ve been able to get the

where the cost has been much higher than anticipated, Coates said. The costs of moving the Wellington Tennis Center and rebuilding the Wellington Community Center also came in over budget. “It’s happening enough that I think we need to look internally,” he said. “Staff has to ask itself if they’re giving us the best information so we can make decisions.” Village Engineer Bill Riebe said the change in scope was largely to blame for the rise in cost for this project. “The additional cost came from where we have to [locate] the bathrooms and the utility work we have to do,” he said. “When we first contemplated this, the use of the park was much less. It has grown. It’s being used more.” The park was largely a passive park two years ago, meaning it was open space available to residents. Since then, Wellington has begun using the site for several programs, Barnes said. Vice Mayor John Greene asked whether Wellington is in need of more park space. “Is parks and rec asking that this be used for overflow or something?” he asked

Barnes said that although there are no plans to make it a permanent park, some of the village’s sports providers have been using it for organized play. Councilman Matt Willhite said that is an issue, since the space was meant for families who want to play ball in an open field. “We’re kicking the dad and his kids off the fields, saying that this is for organized play,” he said. “There’s nowhere in Wellington you can just go play without being part of an organization.” Coates said he isn’t comfortable paying for a new facility when the 10-acre site does not have a defined purpose. “We don’t know what that 10 acres will be used for ultimately,” he said. “We haven’t had our visioning session.” He made a motion to table the item until after the council has conducted that session. “That is supposed to be in early May,” Coates said. “If we’re going to make a motion on this property, I’d like to have consensus among us for what we’re going to use that property for.” Greene seconded the motion, which passed unanimously.

The chorus holds open rehearsals and welcomes any woman who loves to sing and wants to have fun

while making new friends. The chorus rehearses every Monday night at 7 p.m. at Palm Beach Cen-

tral High School. For more info., visit www.womenofnote.com or call (877) 966-7464.

Florida Firefighter Games Will Make A Big Impact In Palm Beach County

For two weeks, Palm Beach County will have the nation’s largest gathering of firefighters competing in sports. The Florida Firefighter Games and its 3,000 participants will take place in Palm Beach County from April 25 through May 10. The Florida Firefighter Games is an Olympic-style competition dedicated exclusively to firefighters. This multi-sport event features more than 30 different sporting events, including soccer, flag football, softball, golf, basketball, volleyball, ice hockey, fishing, racquetball, bowling, billiards and cycling. Multiple venues throughout Palm Beach County will be utilized to accommodate the variety

of sporting events. Seminole Palms Park, Royal Palm Beach Commons Park, Okeeheelee Park, Northwood University, Palm Beach Atlantic University, Cardinal Newman High School, Palm Beach Skate Zone, Greenacres Bowl and several golf courses will serve as anchor facilities. The Hilton Palm Beach Airport is the host hotel and will serve as a venue to indoor sports. The Florida Firefighter Games is one of the largest sporting events in the United States solely dedicated to firefighters, and the influx of visitors will create a major tourism and economic impact. This event has taken place in Palm Beach County on two previous occasions (2004 and 2007) and

consistently generates more than 1,500 hotel room nights and nearly $1 million in visitor spending for its host community. “The Florida Firefighter Games will be a very special occasion for Palm Beach County,” said Guy Quattlebaum, president of the Palm Beach County Sports Commission. “While this multi-sports festival will attract a surge of new visitors, hotel room nights and new revenues for our destination, we also have the privilege of hosting an event to celebrate some of our finest heroes and first responders who dedicate their lives to public service.” For more information about the Florida Firefighter Games, visit www.palmbeachsports.com.

crime in check,” he said. “We have excellent men and women serving District 15. There aren’t as many of us as some of the other districts because we are a rural district, but there is a lot of talent and a lot of dedicated people who serve there.” Combs said crime in general is down in District 15 and protection is improved. “Our economy was very definitely a desperate situation,” he said. “There were many houses that had been abandoned, but the economy is changing and things are getting better.” He said the next big challenge

for District 15 is the anticipated growth. “We stand in District 15 on the precipice of unbelievable expansion,” Combs said. “We have a brand-new college campus, Palm Beach [State] College going in on Southern Blvd. at B Road in the Town of Loxahatchee Groves, and this is quite a crown for our area. In addition to that, we have a tremendous amount of housing coming to our area, and like all things, there will be some good and some bad.” At least 5,000 additional homes have been approved in District 15

in two different developments, the Callery-Judge property, which was sold to Minto with approval for up to 3,000 homes, and up to 2,000 homes at Highland Dunes near Palm Beach Aggregates. “Those houses will bring more people to our community, and those people will bring with them the prerequisite other things such as grocery stores, gas stations and restaurants,” Combs said. “My job as commanding officer of District 15 is to prepare a policing model that will serve the folks not only once they get here, but as they arrive.”

premiums, but could help keep costs down. “Through these improvements, we will still see flood insurance rates go up, but not like other communities are seeing,” Schofield said. During public comment, several residents spoke against the assessment increase. “I’m opposed to increasing the taxes on our properties because we had one 100-year storm,” resident Carlos Arellano said. “We had five days under water, and the rest of the year we were fine. I don’t see the need to spend this money to raise our taxes.” Resident Gil Hallenbeck was not happy about the increase. “It’s not an assessment, it’s a tax,” he said, pointing out that Wellington recently agreed to spend $12 million to move its tennis center and rebuild the Wellington Community Center. “You agreed to spend that money when not one person came up here and asked for it to

be moved. You’re spending $12 million to build tennis in a place no one wants it… If you have to do this, why don’t you borrow money? You do nothing but crap all over the horse people.” Councilman Matt Willhite noted that the assessment increase comes out to about 27 cents per day. He said Wellington is sorely in need of drainage upgrades because it doesn’t benefit from a curb and gutter system like other municipalities. “We base our water storage on swales,” he said. “About two years ago we began our swale maintenance program. The water that comes off the road has to go somewhere, and if the swales aren’t maintained, it goes back into the road. We had to cut and regrade all our swales, and at the rate we’re doing it, we’ll be doing it for a long time.” He made a motion to approve the resolution, which passed unanimously.

Acme

Assessment Might Go Up

continued from page 1 they will hopefully not be as drastic as in other parts of the state. Councilman Howard Coates noted that by increasing the Acme assessments, residents aren’t guaranteed to have a decrease in flood insurance premiums. Village Manager Paul Schofield said these changes are a means to an end. “It’s a part of the process that gets us there,” he said. “The original FEMA maps were based on old data. We’re going to get credit for the mitigation work we plan to do. It’s things like raising Forest Hill and South Shore and providing additional storage in canals that will help. This is one step in a series toward mitigation.” He said the assessment will not directly affect flood insurance

Cypress Key

Zoners OK Changes

continued from page 1 modified at the request of fire officials to allow access for emergency vehicles. A clubhouse will be located in the middle of the single-family homes on the north edge of the property. George Gentile, K. Hovnanian’s planner, said he thought the modifications were great improvements to the original design. “We are utilizing the previous plan in regard to infrastructure, but we made some significant improvements in regard to fire access, the unit types, particularly to the area,” Gentile said. “We felt and K. Hovnanian felt that three stories were not appropriate. Two-story profiles were better

for the area, because of the single and two-story homes surrounding the area. We opened up the open space in the middle and got the car traffic out of it, and allowed that to be more of a park scene for the entire area.” Gentile added that he thought reducing the stories will improve the value and living space of the townhomes. He added that a traffic light will be installed at the commercial opening on Southern Blvd., in accordance with previous approvals. Erwin said there is a proposed deceleration lane from the westbound approach with two northbound entrances from Southern Blvd., one for the right turn and one for the left turn, and two leftturn lanes exiting the center of the site, along with one right turn. Commissioner Barbara Powell made a motion to approve the amendments, which carried 5-0.

Polo

Alegria Wins U.S. Open

continued from page 15 on this attempt, giving Alegria the 11-10 victory. Caset scored five of his gamehigh six goals on penalty shots. Torres added three goals, and Nero scored once for Valiente. Ulloa scored five times (four on penalty shots). Mannix and Aguerre each scored twice, with Zavaleta adding a goal for Alegria. Zavaleta was awarded the MVP award, while Ulloa’s Mia received Best Playing Pony honors. The game capped the 2014 high-goal season at the International Polo Club Palm Beach. Learn more at www.international poloclub.com.


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April 25 - May 1, 2014

Page 17

NEWS

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH HOSTS EASTER EGG HUNT AT RPB COMMONS PARK

The First Baptist Church of Royal Palm Beach hosted an Easter egg hunt on Saturday, April 19 at Royal Palm Beach Commons Park. The event also featured crafts and snacks. The church held egg hunts at several locations across the village. PHOTOS BY DENISE FLEISCHMAN/TOWN-CRIER

Sistas Bible Group members Lorie Bishop, Lori Richards, Chrystal Fernandez, Jean Fulton and Gail Kazee.

Aryanna, Elaine and Derrick Johnson.

Mariam and Hannah Andrews with their baskets of eggs.

Eliana Perlman opens an egg.

Bella and Bianca Bowonthamachakr collect eggs.

Naomi Jennings colors in the pavilion.

THIRD ANNUAL CAKE-OFF BENEFITS THE CHILDREN OF WOUNDED WARRIORS

The third annual Cop Cakes Cake-Off to benefit Children of Wounded Warriors was held at the Wellington Amphitheater on Saturday, April 19. There was a cake-decorating contest in which the winner won a television, while two runners-up won trophies. The cakes were auctioned for the cause. PHOTOS BY DENISE FLEISCHMAN/TOWN-CRIER

PBSO Cpl. Brian Cullen and K-9 bloodhound Justice.

Tom and Regis Wenham make a bid in the silent auction.

Rachel Ferguson, Ashley Ferguson and Paige Davis show off their cakes.


Page 18

April 25 - May 1, 2014

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Life Is Busy For Wellington’s Jennifer Santana

Talented amateur owner rider Jennifer Santana runs Santana Stables in Wellington’s Palm Beach Point with her husband, professional jumper rider Paulo Santana. Their 8-acre farm is filled, on any given day, with riders from all walks of life striving to learn a difficult sport. Ellen Rosenberg’s Column, Page 21

April 25 - May 1, 2014

Page 19

Wellington Boys Lacrosse Team Wins District Title

The Wellington High School boys varsity lacrosse team won its third-straight district championship title in a 10-3 match over American Heritage School on Thursday, April 17 at Palm Beach Central High School. Palm Beach Central was the host venue for the District 22 playoffs. Page 27 2014

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Learning Express Toys Support St. Jude

This spring, Learning Express Toys of Wellington will help give hope to kids battling cancer and other deadly diseases by supporting the St. Jude “Give thanks. Give hope.” campaign benefiting St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. Until April 30, shoppers can spring into action to support the lifesaving mission of St. Jude. Page 23

Sports

Wellington Boys Volleyball Team Boasts 23-0 Record

The Wellington High School boys varsity volleyball team hosted Seminole Ridge High School in a district matchup and took the contest in three sets (25-11, 25-7, 2515) on Wednesday, April 16. The win catapulted the Wolverines to a 23-0 unbeaten record on the season before a capacity crowd, as the team honored its seniors. Page 27

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It’s A Busy Life For Jennifer Santana Of Santana Stables I first ran into Jennifer Santana at the Trump Invitational in January. She was one of a handful of talented amateur owners riding in the prestigious event. She struck me then as friendly and down-to-earth. I recently met up with her again at Santana Stables in Palm Beach Point, which she runs with her husband and professional jumper rider, Paulo. Originally from Newport Beach, Calif., Jennifer grew up in the then-quiet surfer town engaged in a non-typical Southern California sport: competitive figure skating. She practiced long hours every day, before and after school, obsessed with making it all the way to the top. Until disaster struck. “I was competing in the nationals, and I fell,” Jennifer recalled. “I did a jump and landed wrong and went down. I’d never, ever fallen before. I did not take defeat well. Not at all. I was humiliated. Here I’d given this sport a full life commitment, and after that, I quit.” She was 9 years old. “All of a sudden, I had nothing to fill my time after school,” Jennifer continued. “So one day, I tagged along with a friend when she went for her riding lesson. She rode western, but there were other riders there jumping. It looked pretty interesting. I decided to give it a try.” As you can guess, when Jennifer does

Get updates all week long... follow Ellen Rosenberg on Twitter at twitter.com/Horse TalkFL or stop by the Tales from the Trails page on Facebook and click “like.”

Tales From The Trails By Ellen Rosenberg something, she goes whole hog. It wasn’t long before her father had bought her a horse. “Black Tie was a lovely Thoroughbred, an ex-race horse, and the most terrible competitor ever,” she laughed. “Don’t get me wrong — he was a great horse with an amazing heart. He’d try anything I asked, tolerate any kind of stupid thing at all and never complain. One time there was a botulism outbreak in the area, so all the barns shut down and no one could ride. I rode him around in his stall for those two weeks.” However, he had no competitive drive. “He was more of a hunter than a jumper, and my heart was set on doing open jumpers,” Jennifer said. “Hunter classes were too boring. I love the simplicity of jumpers: either the bars stay up and you go fastest, or you don’t. Hunters are much more political, a judge’s opinion, which can be based on who you are and who you ride for and how much your horse and equipment cost.” It’s takes a degree of savvy to be a jumper, she said. “Despite what some people think, you really have to know what you’re doing to succeed

Jennifer Santana with her daughter, Isabella, at Santana Stables in Wellington. in the jumper ring,” Jennifer said. “You can’t just ride like a crazy person and advance in the sport. You have to do things properly. You need a good riding foundation so you can plan a ride ahead of time and know the best way to present a course to your horse, rather than adapt to the situation and ride by the seat of your pants.” Jennifer prefers being an amateur owner.

Unlike the pro riders, she doesn’t get paid to ride, but competes three of her own horses: Option D’Auge, a new chestnut gelding; Fabelous, a gray mare; and Horse Flight.com Kendall, another gray mare with whom she has been very successful. “That’s just a lot of extra pressure to win for an owner. There’s enough pressure already, See ROSENBERG, page 29


Page 22

April 25 - May 1, 2014

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Business News

Culinary Creations Dinner To Support Quantum House

The American Culinary Federation’s Palm Beach County Chefs Association will host the 15th annual Culinary Creations dinner on Monday, June 2 at the Kravis Center for the Performing Arts. This spectacular dish-centric dinner, inspired by some of the region’s most talented chefs, will benefit the Quantum House and the Palm Beach County Chefs in Distress Endowment Fund. Chaired by Jeff Simms, executive chef of banquets at the Breakers and 2013 Palm Beach Food & Wine Festival featured chef, Culinary Creations celebrates the extraordinary talents of

some of the finest chefs in South Florida. Different from other food and wine events in Palm Beach County, guests can expect the complete package, beginning with a champagne reception featuring delectable hors d’oeuvres. The “foodie” themed evening flows into a silent auction, where guests can bid on private chef dinners, wine tastings and other items. The once-in-a-lifetime dinner also features four courses served round-robin style. Guests have the opportunity to experience a dish from each of the 25 chefs, such as Porcini and Pancetta Stuffed Artichoke with Tomato Con-

fit, Mango Barbeque Braised Short Rib & Jamaican Jerk Shrimp, Pancetta-Wrapped Veal Tenderloin Milanese Gremolata and Warm Strawberry Rhubarb Tart. Some of the participating clubs and restaurants include Boca Grove, the Breakers Palm Beach, Echo Palm Beach, Mar-A-Lago and Café L’Europe. The diners will leave with a full stomach and a full heart, because 100 percent of the proceeds from the dinner will benefit the two deserving charities. “The chefs do an astounding job highlighting their talents and Quantum House is honored to be part of this

fantastic event,” Quantum House Executive Director Robi Jurney said. “You’ll never have a chance to have all of these award-winning chefs under one roof preparing such a gourmet feast.” Tickets are on sale now with just a handful left. General tickets are $150 per person, or $1,250 per table of ten. VIP tickets are $175 per person. Tickets can be purchased at www.quantumhouse.org. (Right) Breakers Palm Beach Executive Chef of Banquets Jeff Simms with Quantum House President Julie Warren Criser. Photo courtesy Lucien Capehart Photography

Wellington Businessman Featured In Wells Fargo Annual Report

Wellington businessman and Serket Racing founder Mark Llano was recently featured in the 2013 Wells Fargo Annual Report. Serket Racing competes based on a code: Americans have a responsibility to help the brave service men and women who have honorably served and sacrificed for our country to become successful and www.Roostersmgc.com

productive members of the society they have fought to protect. Llano, a former Marine, is also the founder of Wellington-based Source One Distributors. He was named a 2009 Ventrepreneur of the Year and 2011 Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year. Llano is empathetic to the issues service members face and is working to do

something about it. Serket Racing raises awareness and financial assistance for military veterans and their families. While Llano provides guidance and inspiration directly to veterans, 25 percent of sponsorships generated by Serket Racing benefit one of four veteran-focused nonprofit organizations: the American Free-

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team develops and implements innovative at-venue and community-based programs to assist veterans and their families with the numerous challenges they face on a regular basis, such as: PTSD, homelessness, drug abuse, unemployment and more. Learn more about the team at www.serketracing.com.


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Business News

Page 23

Volunteers Recognized For Helping Medicare Beneficiaries

In honor of April as National Volunteer Month, the Area Agency on Aging Palm Beach/Treasure Coast Inc., in partnership with the Florida Department of Elder Affairs, recognized volunteers of the SHINE (Serving Health Insurance Needs of Elders) Program in Palm Beach County. On Friday, March 14, volunteers joined SHINE program staff for a luncheon in appreciation of their strong commitment to providing services to Medicare beneficiaries, their caregivers and their family members. As trained SHINE volunteers, they serve their community by

providing Medicare and health insurance information through free and unbiased counseling in person or over the telephone. From April 2013 through March 2014, organization volunteers donated 5,912 hours to counsel approximately 6,000 clients seeking oneon-one assistance from a SHINE counselor. Additionally, volunteers and staff spent 830 hours to provide 210 outreach activities and educational events. “Thank you for providing me such an inspiring example of the spirit of volunteerism, I’ve always admired your generosity and the

resolve you exhibit on behalf of our clients,” staff member Jennifer Vander May told the gathered volunteers as she recognized their dedication to serving others in the community. Volunteering with SHINE will not only help you gain an understanding of the complex world of Medicare for yourself or your loved ones, but it will also empower you to help others in the community. For more information on how to become a volunteer, or for a SHINE counseling appointment, call the local Helpline at (866) 684-5885, or call SHINE Liaison Samantha Howell at (561) 684-5885.

Volunteer Honorees — (L-R) Jennifer Vander May, Sally Hamerman, Manny Athavale, Francine Bryant, Jackie Bassie, Samantha Howell, Beverly Ennis, Sheila Shaffran, Dean Boyce and Barbara Jaindl.

Learning Express Toys Support St. Jude Children’s Hospital

This spring, Learning Express Toys of Wellington will help give hope to kids battling cancer and other deadly diseases by supporting the St. Jude “Give thanks. Give hope.” campaign benefiting St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. Until April 30, shoppers can spring into action to support the lifesaving mission of St. Jude. In exchange for a $1 donation at checkout, patrons receive a springthemed paper pin-up featuring a St. Jude patient, like 2-year-old Reese

or 5-year-old Ethan. Thanks to generous donations, families never receive a bill from St. Jude for treatment, travel or food, and they can focus on what matters most — helping their child live. Visit Learning Express Toys at the Mall at Wellington Green, 10300 W. Forest Hill Blvd., to support this campaign. One hundred percent of the donations raised during this program go to help St. Jude continue its fight to find cures for cancer and other deadly childhood diseases. Unlike

other hospitals, the majority of funds come from individual contributions and programs like “Give thanks. Give hope.” The program has raised more than $2.6 million for the kids of St. Jude. St. Jude is where doctors send their toughest cases, because St. Jude has the world’s best survival rates for the most aggressive forms of childhood cancers. Treatments invented at St. Jude have helped push the overall childhood survival rate from 20 percent when the hospital

opened in 1962 to more than 80 percent today. And every discovery is freely shared so that every child saved at St. Jude means doctors and scientists can use that knowledge to save thousands more children around the world. Learning Express Toys is the nation’s leading franchisor of educational toy stores, with more than 130 locations across the country, each one locally owned and operated. Providing an extraordinary shopping experience, Learning Express

Toys is known for its knowledgeable sales staff that offers expert advice on choosing the perfect toy. The Learning Express Toys product mix is carefully selected from manufacturers around the world, and each toy has exceptional play value. A birthday gift registry, free gift wrapping, free personalization and civic fundraising make each Learning Express Toys store an integral part of its community. For more info., visit www. learningexpress.com.

Calling all campers for a summer of fun. Sports-minded, adventure-seeking, nature-loving kids will find something for everyone at Breakers West Country Club. Daily Golf, Tennis, & Swimming Instruction Arts & Crafts | Magic Shows | Science Projects Wildlife Demonstrations | Family Cookouts New Family Activity Center & More Ages 5 – 14 Weekly Sessions:

June 9 – August 8, 2014 (Excluding June 30 – July 4) Monday – Friday | 8:45 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. After-care Also Available

For more information or to register for camp, please call 561-422-4915. 1550 Flagler Parkway West Palm Beach, FL 33411 breakerswestclub.com

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SUMMER CAMP GUIDE

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The Armory Art Center’s Summer Art Camp is a great way for children in grades K-12 to experience a broad range of art projects. Each of the ten weeks has a different theme or focus. Experienced art instructors provide exciting hands-on art activities. Children will explore various art mediums, including ceramics, photography, mixed media, printmaking, collage, drawing and painting. All art materials are included with tuition. Campus security includes video surveillance. The experienced staff has been screened and meet DCF standards. The Armory Art Center is located at 1700 Parker Ave., West Palm Beach. For more info. call (561) 832-1776.

Breakers West Country Club is calling all campers for a summer of fun. Sports-minded, adventure-seeking, nature-loving kids, ages 5 to 14, will find something for everyone at Breakers West. Enjoy daily golf, tennis and swimming instruction; wildlife demonstrations; science experiments; magic shows; arts & crafts; cookouts; and more. This summer, campers will also enjoy game room fun at the new Family Activity Center. Camp runs from June 9 through Aug. 8 (excluding June 30 through July 4). Camp times are Monday through Friday, from 8:45 a.m. to 3 p.m. Lunch is included. Space is limited. To register for Breakers West Summer Camp, call (561) 422-4915. Discover the summer camp with an academic focus, and find out why local families have been choosing Camp Cambridge for more than 25 years. This Wellington camp offers programs for children from 2 years old through second grade, with an experienced and mature staff, bilingual programs, in-house weekly field trips, specialty camp sessions, an on-site swimming pool supervised by Red Cross-trained staff, flexible schedules, weekly sessions, and private and group swimming. Nine weeks of camp is offered at Cambridge Schools, located at 1920 Royal Fern Drive in Wellington. For more info., visit www.cambridgepreschools.com or call (561) 791-0013. Casperey Stables Horse Camp is a small, fun-filled day camp for children ages 7 to 14. With four riding opportunities each day, arts and crafts, and outdoor games, campers find little time to be bored. The low counselor-child ratio ensures that each child receives individual attention. There are camp sessions for spring and winter school breaks, and during the summer. Each two-week session has a theme, such as Indian Days, Circus Days and Medieval Days. Casperey Stables has a weekly swim party and ends each session with a horse show and family barbecue. To learn more about the camp, located at 2330 D Road in Loxahatchee Groves, call (561) 792-4990 or visit www.caspereystables.com. Dance Theatre is offering Summer Dance Camp for ages 5-9 and Dance Intensives for intermediate and advanced dancers ages 10 and up. Three weeks are offered: June 23 - June 27, July 14 - July 18 and July 28 - Aug. 1. The program offers ballet, jazz, tap, lyrical, flexibility, hip-hop acro, musical theatre, drama, modeling, ballroom, arts & crafts and more. A $100 deposit is required to hold space. Space is limited, so reserve your space today. The cost is $200 a week or $500 for all three weeks. The program runs 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. Daily rates are available, as are multiple child discounts. Dance Theatre is located at 10620 W. Forest Hill Blvd., Suite 30, in Wellington Green Square between Pei Wei and Fresh Market. Call (561) 784-4401 for more info. Join the Junior Golf Camp at the Okeeheelee Golf Course, Park Ridge Golf Course and John Prince Golf Learning Center through the Junior Golf Foundation of America. New or seasoned golfers will develop skills while having fun. The JGFA provides junior golfers with the tools to enjoy the game for a lifetime. Professional PGA/LPGA golf instructors, trained coaches and staff are carefully picked for their love of junior golf, teaching abilities and inspirational approach. The program emphasizes safety, fun, sportsmanship and personal attention. Camps run June 9 through Aug. 15 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Monday through Friday, with extended camp available until 3 p.m. at Okeeheelee and Park Ridge. Written evaluation reports, prizes, trophies, official JGFA items, a certificate of completion and a pizza party on the last day is included. Also available: camps for ages 3 to 5, camps for advanced tournament golfers, Junior Golf tournaments, weekly programs, leagues, walk-up clinics and more. Visit www.jgfa.org or call (561) 964-GOLF for more information. The Lab/High Touch High Tech is conveniently located off State Road 7 at Lantana Road. The Lab brings science to life with hands-on experiments provided by High Touch High Tech, the leader in science education for the last 19 years. Each day will be a new adventure, from interacting with real “lab critters” to launching rockets and panning for gems. The unique Lab offers affordable pricing, experiments with lots of cool take-homes, arts and crafts, physical activities and more. The program

taps into children’s natural curiosity and provides them with safe and fun activities that help them learn about the world around them. Campers will make slime, erupt volcanoes, make ice cream, tie dye T-shirts and more. Call (561) 444-3978 or visit www.thelabforkids.com for more info. The Lake Worth Playhouse will offer a summer camp teaching children acting, voice, dance and stage movement through daily activities and rehearsals, culminating in full-scale productions of popular musicals. The students will produce Willy Wonka Junior June 9-28 and Schoolhouse Rock Live Jr. from July 14 to Aug. 4. They will be engaged in studio-style rehearsals for music, dance and production. Campers 12 or older also will have the opportunity to participate in behind-the-scenes roles and other theater-related educational opportunities. The opportunities are for a one-week and a three-week camp, and range in price from $200 to $600. To sign up, call (561) 586-6410 or visit www.lakeworthplayhouse.org. The Little Place Pre-School has been serving the western communities for more than 36 years. The school has two convenient Wellington locations and is now taking summer camp registration at both locations. The Little Place offers a preschool program for children ages 2 to 5 years old, and a program for children ages 6 to 8. Various classes are offered, as well as arts & crafts and much more. Little Place will make your child’s summer fun! Call or visit them at 1040 Wellington Trace (561-793-5860) or 2995 Greenbriar Blvd. (561-790-0808). At Noah’s Ark Summer Camp, children will enjoy field trips and activities such as swimming, bowling, skating, South Florida Science Museum programs, movies and picnics. Tuition includes camera surveillance, a creative curriculum, use of computers and all meals. Registration is now being accepted, and is free for new customers only. Noah’s Ark is located at 14563 Okeechobee Blvd. in Loxahatchee Groves. For more information, call (561) 753-6624 or visit www.smallworldpbc.com.

The Learning Foundation of Florida’s (TLFF) Academic Summer School/Camp 2014 is an elementary, middle and high school summer academic school/camp program with several options available to assist the diverse needs of students. The program begins on June 17 running through Aug. 7 and allows for attendance flexibility in scheduling of days and weeks. TLFF’s K-8 summer program focuses on individualized academic remediation using weekly themes and a variety of teaching strategies, including multi-sensory, hands-on approaches and creative lessons. Middle school students can take FLVS courses for promotion to the next grade level. There are two sessions available: 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and/or 12:30 to 4:30 p.m. The high school summer program allows students to accelerate or, if they received grades of D or F in classes, they may redo for higher grades. The session is open Tuesdays through Thursdays from 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. For more information, call Debra Thornby at (561) 795-6886. Tiny Tikes Preschool Camp is geared toward the elementary-age camper. Daily activities are sure to keep the campers happy, busy and engaged. Trips include bowling, skating and weekly movies, as well as special trips to the zoo, the science museum and more. Tiny Tikes has three conveniently located centers, which are open from 6:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Activities occur throughout the day, both at the center and out on the bus. Meals are included. Call (561) 790-1780 now to reserve your space, or visit Tiny Tikes Academy at 16245 Okeechobee Blvd. in Loxahatchee.


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Wellington Boys Volleyball Team Boasts 23-0 Record

By Gene Nardi Town-Crier Staff Report The Wellington High School boys varsity volleyball team hosted Seminole Ridge High School in a district match-up and took the contest in three sets (25-11, 25-7, 25-15) on Wednesday, April 16. The win catapulted the Wolverines to a 23-0 unbeaten record on the season before a capacity crowd as the team honored its seniors. The Wolverines (23-0, 7-0)

played stellar defense during the match, holding Seminole Ridge from getting into the double digits in the second set. The Hawks clawed back to come within three points at 10-7, but Wellington’s Alex Ng served a 7-point run to put the set out of reach. Seminole Ridge was determined to not go down without a fight, battling back in the third set, but the Wolverine front was too strong. Wellington took the third set and the win.

Wellington’s Alex Ng sets the ball for an attack.

Photos by Gene Nardi/Town-Crier

Wellington is undefeated at 23-0 on the season and looks to achieve what the school’s girls squad accomplished earlier in the year. They are currently the fourth-ranked team in the state. Wellington traveled to Royal Palm Beach High School on Tuesday, April 22 and Pine Crest High School on Thursday, April 24, but results were not available by press time.

Seminole Ridge’s James Parson III goes for a spike while Wellington’s Yannick Feurich and Tyler Crickenberger try to block.

Yannick Feurich leaps up to spike the ball over the net.

Wellington Boys Lacrosse Wins District Championship

By Gene Nardi Town-Crier Staff Report The Wellington High School boys varsity lacrosse team won its third-straight district championship title in a 10-3 match over American Heritage School on Thursday, April 17 at Palm Beach Central High School. Palm Beach Central was the host venue for the District 22 playoffs. The Broncos were eliminated by the Stallions earlier in the week in

the semifinals. Wellington defeated Park Vista to earn their spot in the final match against American Heritage. The Wolverines have held the district crown for the last two years, and will retain the title another year. From the start of the whistle, both teams battled for possession. The Wolverines spread the ball around and found the opening to draw first blood. With seconds left in the first period, attackman Jason D’Aoust

The Wolverines after claiming the district title.

Photos by Gene Nardi/Town-Crier

found the back of the net to score. Wellington would not surrender the lead for the remainder of the game. D’Aoust and midfielder Allen Moye combined for five goals and three assists going in the early stages of the second period to extend the Wellington lead to 5-0. The Stallions finally got on the board to cut the Wellington lead 5-1 to end the first half of play. Wellington continued with aggressive defense, keeping the Stallions workhorse Thomas Oporto away from the crease. Oporto still managed to score all three of the Stallions’ goals, but it was not enough. The Wolverine offensive attack was a collaborative effort, using patience and accuracy. American Heritage did not score again until late in the game. Wellington sealed the victory with a late goal in the final period to close it out 10-3 to win the District 22 title once again. D’Aoust tallied five goals and one assist for Wellington. Moye totaled four goals and one assist. Defender Chris Englert had three assists, and midfielder Michael Costello was big in the face-off arena, winning a majority. Midfielder Chad Moye

Wolverine attacker Jason D’Aoust scores one of his five goals. had 10 forced turnovers. Oxbridge Academy defeated the Wellington advanced to take on Kings Academy 17-7 for the District the Oxbridge Academy in the re- 21 championship. Results were not gional tournament Tuesday night. available at press time.


Page 28

April 25 - May 1, 2014

Big Win For 10-U Wellington Wild

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sports & recreation

TKA Wins Middle School Baseball Championship

The King’s Academy’s middle school baseball team defeated the Benjamin school 8-1 earlier this month to win the PBCCL championship in front of an enthusiastic crowd at Palm Beach State College in Palm Beach Gardens. Under the leadership of new head coach and Major League Baseball veteran Brad Wilkerson, the Lions (8-3-1) rebounded from two regular-season losses to Benjamin (11-1) to capture TKA’s second championship. The Lions have either won or been in the championship game in

On Sunday, April 13, the Wellington Wild 10-U A team won its first championship. It was an exciting day for the family and friends who came out to support the girls. The team is made up of a great group of girls who practice hard, along with dedicated coaches who work equally as hard. Shown above are: (front row) Mia Corcoran, Sara Jenal, Paige Rodriguez, Victoria Cannata and Nicole Gumula; (back row) Jamie Marcus, Madison Prickett, Isabella D’Eusanio, Kassidy Allen, Rylee Hagan and Leighton Strickland; and coaches John Prickett, Mike Shea, Ric Hagan, Charlie Gumula and Jason Allen.

four of the five years since the team’s inception. The Lions were led defensively by the outstanding pitching of Chandler Marsh and Trevor Hollis. Hunter Furtado and Cory Croteau led the offensive barrage, which included nine total hits for the Lions. Wilkerson played eight years in the MLB with the Expos, Nationals, Rangers, Mariners and Blue Jays. He was a 1998 first round draft pick. In college, he led the University of Florida Gators to the College World Series in 1996 and

TKA’s middle school baseball team celebrates.

1998, earning All-American status. Wilkerson also represented the United States in the 2000 Olympics in Sydney, helping the team win the gold medal.

Kacey Moore Wins Tennis Title

Kacey Moore of Wellington recently won her first high school state tennis championship. A freshman at the American Heritage School in Delray Beach, Moore began her love of tennis at the Wellington Tennis Center at a tennis/ swim camp when she was 7 years old. Moore went undefeated this year in singles and faced her only doubles defeat at the state tournament in a nail-biting semifinals match against Ransom Everglades with partner Angelica Blake. Moore has been training competitively since she was 9 years old. She plays more than 100 matches a year and competes at the national and international level. You may have seen her around town hitting on the tennis court or doing sprint and speed work in the street.

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Shantel Lightning Cheerleaders Horne Win Big In Orlando Palm Beach Lightning All Star team took home the grand chamSigns For Cheerleaders took Orlando by storm pions title. this month, winning big at the 13th If you would like to be a part of annual Clash of the Titans National one of the Palm Beach Lightning, Lacrosse Championship. now is the time. The team is holdSeminole Ridge High School senior Shantel Horne has signed an athletic scholarship letter of intent to play lacrosse for Post University in Connecticut. Horne is excited to be joining the Post University Eagles this fall. “Their goalie is graduating, so I hope to be able to fill that slot for them,” she said. (Left) Shown here is Horne with Athletic Director Scott Parks (left) and Principal James Campbell (right).

Rosenberg

Jennifer Santana

continued from page 21 riding in these top classes. You have to bring your ‘A’ game every time. You’re not just a horse and just a rider. It’s truly a joint effort,” Jennifer said. “A successful partnership with your horse is like a marriage, you have to work at it all the time. The horse doesn’t know or care how much you paid for her. She only

knows how she is treated. When you take the time to really know your horse, she’ll do anything for you. I have an incredible connection with Kendall. I enjoy her a lot, and she loves what we do. That’s what you want in a horse. You strive for that intense relationship.” I was amazed when Jennifer confessed that she sometimes gets scared while riding. I thought all open jumpers were fearless. “It’s a very fine line,” she confessed. “I do sometimes get scared while I’m on course and think, ‘I

can’t do this.’ That can create a bad situation. It leads to a breakdown in communication with your horse and makes her doubt herself as well. Fear is a stifling emotion. It starts to asphyxiate you. I get through it with the help of my husband and coach, Paulo. He has a terrific work ethic and is really demanding. He brings out the best in me. Riding is such a mental game. I’ve learned to focus in a different way.” Paulo rides for the Brazilian team and trains the Dominican Republic team. Their 8-acre working farm is

The Lightning cheerleaders, ranging in age from 5 to 18, came home with five first-place trophies and one second-place trophy. They were also honored with outstanding achievement awards for Best Stunts, Best Pyramid, Best Dance, Best Choreography and Best Cheer Uniform. In addition, the Senior 2

ing clinics April 22 through April 25, and team placement tryouts are set for Wednesday, April 30 and Thursday, May 1. No experience is necessary. There are teams suited for beginners as well as more advanced athletes. Visit www.palmbeachlightning. com for more information.

Send sports news items to: The Town-Crier Newspaper, 12794 W. Forest Hill Blvd., Suite 31, Wellington, FL 33414. Fax: (561) 793-6090. E-mail: news@goTownCrier.com. filled, on any given day, with riders from all walks of life striving to learn this difficult sport. Jennifer and Paulo also travel some, following the big shows around the country and Europe. They try to never miss the Spruce Meadow show in Canada, which is where they first met in 2005, marrying a year later. Their two children, Isabella, 5, and Mattheus, 3, also take up a chunk of Jennifer’s time. “They both have ponies,” she laughed. “They’re pony obsessed. Isabella’s already boasting that one

day she’ll get big and beat me and daddy. I’m not a natural rider. I have to work at it all the time. I always try to better myself. It’s a passion. Even when I take some time off, I’m always drawn back to riding. I’ve tried to walk away from it hundreds of times, but this is where my heart is. How often are you lucky enough to do what you love every day and incorporate your whole family into it?” For more information about Santana Stables, call (561) 308-8206, or visit www.santanastables.com.

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April 25 - May 1, 2014

Saturday, April 26 • Butterfields Southern Café (1145 Royal Palm Beach Blvd.) will host an autism benefit on Saturday, April 26 during Autism Awareness Month. Twenty percent of proceeds will be donated to Autism Speaks. There will be a bounce house, popcorn and cotton candy. Call (561) 317-8763 for more info. • The Wellington Green Market will take place Saturday, April 26 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Wellington Municipal Complex (12300 W. Forest Hill Blvd.). Call (561) 283-5856 for more info. • Wellington’s Great American Cleanup is set for Saturday, April 26 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Volunteers will pick up trash along Greenbriar and Greenview Shores boulevards, and in the Folkestone/Yarmouth community. Water, lunch and T-shirts will be supplied. Visit www.wellingtonfl.gov and click on the “Great American Cleanup” for registration details. For more info., contact Scott Campbell at (561)-791-4105 or campbell@wellingtonfl.gov. • The Royal Palm Beach library (500 Civic Center Way) will host RPB Teen Xpressions for ages 12 to 17 on Saturday, April 26 at 2 p.m. Share your original poems, writings, art work and more with a group of your peers. Snacks will be provided. Call (561) 790-6030 to pre-register. • The Wellington library (1951 Royal Fern Drive) will host Chess Club for Kids ages 8 and up Saturday, April 26 at 2:30 p.m. Practice strategy skills with other players. Basic game knowledge is required. Call (561) 790-6070 for more info. • The Acreage library (15801 Orange Blvd.) will host Crafts for Kids for ages 3 to 8 on Saturday, April 26 at 3 p.m. Call (561) 681-4100 to pre-register. • The Royal Palm Beach library (500 Civic Center Way) will host Dollar Bill Origami for ages 12 to 17 on Saturday, April 26 at 3 p.m. Make your dollar bills into actual art. Bring your own crisp dollar or use fake money provided. Snacks will be provided. Call (561) 790-6030 for more info. • Whole Foods Market in Wellington (2635 State Road 7) will host Gluten-Free Cooking on Saturday, April 26 at 4 p.m. There is no charge. Call (561) 904-4000 to pre-register. • The Wellington High School Band will host Jazz Under the Stars during the a spring concert/scholarship benefit and bake sale at the Wellington Amphitheater on Saturday, April 26 at 7 p.m. featuring both the WHS jazz band and the Wellington Landings Middle School jazz band. Admission is free, however the Wolverine Band Boosters will be collecting donations. For more info., contact Joe Piconcelli at (561) 791-4756. • The Kravis Center (701 Okeechobee Blvd., West Palm Beach) will host the 21st annual Reach for the Stars Benefit on Saturday, April 26 at 7 p.m. in the Dreyfoos Hall lobby. For more info., call (561) 832-7469 or visit www.kravis.org. Sunday, April 27 • The Royal Palm Beach Green Market & Bazaar will take place Sunday, April 27 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Commons Park (11600 Poin-

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ciana Blvd.) Visit www.rpbgreenmarket.com for more info. • The Acreage Green Market will take place Sunday, April 27 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Acreage Community Park (6701 140th Ave. North). For more info., visit www.shopgreenmarkets.com or call (561) 929-0237. • Yesteryear Village at the South Florida Fairgrounds will present the 14th annual Sweet Corn Fiesta on Sunday, April 27 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Watch amateurs and professionals chow down during a competitive corn-eating contest, and partake in a number of other outdoor festivities. For more info., call (561) 996-0343 or visit www. sweetcornfiesta.com. • Whole Foods Market in Wellington (2635 State Road 7) will host a Meditation Presentation on Sunday, April 27 at 2 p.m. Explore the healing power of meditation at this free event. Call (561) 904-4000 to pre-register. • Community of Hope Church (14055 Okeechobee Blvd., Loxahatchee Groves) will host its inaugural Sunday Family Fun Day on Sunday, April 27 from 3 to 7 p.m. with a classic car and bike show, bounce houses, vendors, crafters, a silent auction, food, prizes and activities for people of all ages. Proceeds will support the church’s recovery ministry, which meets Mondays at the church. For more info., call (561) 753-8883 or e-mail info@gocoh.com. • Congregation L’Dor Va-Dor will participate in the countywide 24-hour Yom HaShoah Holocaust Remembrance and reading of children’s names who were killed during the Holocaust on Sunday, April 27 at 6:45 p.m. at Lake Charleston Park (700 Charleston Shores Blvd., Lantana). For more info., call (561) 968-0688. • The Village of Wellington will host an Earth Day & Arbor Day Celebration on Sunday, April 27 from 4 to 7 p.m. at the Wellington Amphitheater (12100 W. Forest Hill Blvd.). For more info., call (561) 753-2484 or visit www.wellingtonfl.gov. Monday, April 28 • The Royal Palm Beach library (500 Civic Center Way) will host Lego Building Crew for ages 7 to 11 on Monday, April 28 at 3:30 p.m. Play with Legos and make your own creation. Bring a Lego creation of your own to show. Call (561) 790-6030 for more info. • The Wellington library (1951 Royal Fern Drive) will host Legos for ages 8 and up Monday, April 28 at 4 p.m. Create vehicles or buildings out of Lego pieces. Call (561) 790-6070 for more info. • The Mid-County Democratic Club will meet Monday, April 28 at 7 p.m. at Tree’s Wings & Ribs (603 Royal Palm Beach Blvd.). For more info, contact Steve Licari at (561) 307-0876 or stevenlicari@hotmail.com. • The Royal Palm Beach library (500 Civic Center Way) will host It’s Pajamarama Time for ages 3 to 6 plus siblings Monday, April 28 at 7 p.m. Enjoy an evening of boisterous sounds and noise. Don’t forget to wear your favorite PJ’s. Stuffed animals, pillows and blankets are welcome. Call (561) 790-6030 to pre-register.

Tuesday, April 29 • Kravis On Broadway will feature Million Dollar Quartet from Tuesday, April 29 through Sunday, May 4 in Dreyfoos Hall. For more info., call (561) 832-7469 or visit www.kravis.org. • The Okeeheelee Nature Center (7715 Forest Hill Blvd.) will host Science For Seniors: Reef Ecology for ages 50 and up Tuesday, April 29 at 9 a.m. The class is a half-day field trip to Peanut Island. The cost is $5 per person, plus an $8 ferry fee. Call (561) 233-1400 to RSVP. • The Royal Palm Beach library (500 Civic Center Way) will host Salt Dough Magnets for ages 7 to 14 on Tuesday, April 29 at 4:30 p.m. Shape and mold salt dough concoctions to fashion into stylish magnets. All materials will be provided. Call (561) 790-6030 to pre-register. • The Acreage library (15801 Orange Blvd.) will host Club Pokémon for ages 6 to 12 on Tuesday, April 29 at 6:30 p.m. Bring your DS or Pokémon cards to battle, trade and make new friends. Call (561) 681-4100 to pre-register. • Whole Foods Market in Wellington (2635 State Road 7) will host SOS: Sustainable Outstanding Seafood on Tuesday April 29 6:30 p.m. Learn the benefits of responsibly farmed seafood, including a cooking demonstration and tasting. There is no charge. Call (561) 904-4000 to pre-register. Wednesday, April 30 • Temple Beth Tikvah (4550 Jog Road, Greenacres) and Temple Beth Kodesh will host Israeli speakers Rabbi Eyal and Nathalie Riess on Wednesday, April 30 at 10:30 a.m. Rabbi Reiss is director of the International Center for Tzfat Kabbalah. Call (561) 967-3600 for more info. • The Wellington library (1951 Royal Fern Drive) will host Holocaust Witness for adults Wednesday, April 30 at 3 p.m. The docudrama follows Halina Laster, a Polish Jewish girl who was arrested by the Germans for helping smuggle food into a ghetto and spent five years in concentration

The Town-Crier camps. Videographer Fred Singer leads a discussion as part of Holocaust Days of Remembrance. Call (561) 790-6070 to pre-register. • The Wellington library (1951 Royal Fern Drive) will host Teen Game Night for ages 12 to 17 on Wednesday, April 30 at 6 p.m. Play Nintendo Wii and board games. Food will be provided. Call (561) 790-6070 for more info. Thursday, May 1 • The Okeeheelee Nature Center (7715 Forest Hill Blvd.) will host Story Time for ages 2 to 5 on Thursday, May 1 at 10 a.m. Introduce little ones to Mother Nature through stories. The cost is $2 per child. Call (561) 233-1400 to RSVP. • Executive Women of the Palm Beaches will hold its Women in Leadership Awards luncheon Thursday, May 1 at 11:30 a.m. at the Kravis Center’s Cohen Pavilion. The keynote speaker will be Valerie Plame, former CIA officer and bestselling author of Fair Game and Blowback. For more info., visit www.ewpb.org or call (561) 868-7070. • Wellington’s Food Truck Invasion will take place Thursday, May 1 from 5 to 9:30 p.m. at the Wellington Amphitheater (12100 W. Forest Hill Blvd.). Call (561) 753-2484 or visit www. wellingtonfl.gov for more info. • The Wellington library (1951 Royal Fern Drive) will host Writers’ Critique Workshop for adults Thursday, May 1 at 6:30 p.m. Share, offer and accept constructive criticism to improve fiction, nonfiction and poetry in a supportive atmosphere. Call (561) 790-6070 to pre-register. Friday, May 2 • The Wellington Amphitheater (12100 W. Forest Hill Blvd.) will host a free screening of Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit on Friday, May 2 at 8:30 p.m. Call (561) 753-2484 or visit www. wellingtonfl.gov for more info. Send calendar items to: The Town-Crier, 12794 W. Forest Hill Blvd., Suite 31, Wellington, FL 33414. FAX: (561) 793-6090. E-mail: news@ gotowncrier.com.


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April 25 - May 1, 2014

Page 31

Drive-Thru Safari PLUS Amusement Park

Hundreds of animals on over 300 wild acres

1095 Admission for Each Person in Vehicle Not valid with any other offer. Present this coupon. Expires 06/30/14

LionCountrySafari.com On Southern Blvd. 10 miles west of Florida’s Tpke. Turnpike Exit 97 or I-95 to Exit 68 2003 Lion Country Safari Road, West Palm Beach, FL 33470 561-793-1084


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April 25 - May 1, 2014

The Town-Crier

www.gotowncrier.com

“A non-profit sanctuary”

YOU WILL SEE EVERYTHING... from WHITE TIGERS to LIGERS to

BLACK LEOPARDS, RUFFED LEMURS, KINKAJOUS, REDTAIL HAWKS, GREAT HORNED OWLS, SCARLET MACAWS, GILA MONSTERS, ALBINO BURMESE PYTHONS, GREEN MAMBAS & MORE!

Tours are

Tuesday - Saturday 11am, 12pm & 1pm

Call Keith 561-644-0246 Licensed & Insured

RESERVATIONS REQUIRED

561-790-2116 McCarthyswildlife.com


Page 33 April 25 - May 1, 2014

www.gotowncrier.com

PALMS WESTTHIS WEEK’S

The Town-Crier

WELLINGTON • ROYAL PALM BEACH • LOXAHATCHEE • THE ACREAGE

WELCOME HOME

Watching your home so you can relax

New Location! New Showroom!

CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATE!

Candace Osias

House Nanny & Dog Walker

561-333-2306 TOLL FREE: 855-808-8555

WE DO NOT SELL CHEAP FLOORING CHEAPER 561-791-6041 516-965-0389 (cell) candieosias@gmail.com

WE SELL THE BEST FOR LESS! 766 Pike Road • West Palm Beach, FL 33411 (Between Southern Blvd. & Belvedere)

ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS FOR AS LOW AS $21 A WEEK*


Page 34 April 25 - May 1, 2014

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

The Town-Crier

www.gotowncrier.com

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

PROFESSIONAL SERVICES

REAL ESTATE

A/C AND REFRIGERATION

IRON WORK

SPRINKLER SYSTEMS

FOR RENT - GREENACRES

JOHN C. HUNTON AIR CONDITIONING & REFRIGERATION, INC.—Service & new installation FPL independent participating contractor. Lic. CAC 057272 Ins. “We are proud supporters of the Seminole Ridge Hawks” 561-798-3225. Family Owned & Operated since 1996. Credit Cards Accepted

C A L A B R E S E C R E AT I O N S I N I R O N — Ornamental Aluminum & Iron Work, driveway gates,grand entry gates, garden gates, railing room dividers, ornamental screen doors. ( Lic. & Ins.) antique restoration. 561-792-7575 cciron@bellsouth.net

AQUATIC SPRINKLER, LLC — Complete repair of all types of systems. Owner Operated. Michael 561-964-6004Lic.#U17871 Bonded & Ins. Serving the Western Communities Since 1990

ROOMMATE TO SHARE — 2 bedroom 2 bath apartment - Purdy & Jog Road. $550 per month. Looking for under 35 years old. 954-296-3748

TILE / CERAMICS

ROOMS FOR RENT LaMancha, Royal Palm Beach — Furnished, no pets, no children. male or female $600 monthly. 561-667-3475

CLEANING - HOME/OFFICE WE CLEAN OFFICES & PRIVATE HOMES — Licensed & Insured. Call for an estimate and to schedule your apartment. Discount for Central Palm Beach County Chamber members and to all new clients for first cleaning. 561-385-8243 Lic. #2012-252779 ALL AMERICAN HOUSE CLEANERS — Commercial/Residential. MoveIn Move-Out, organizing. Credit Cards Accepted. Call Elizabeth 561-313-4086 MODERN CLEAN —Preparing properties for selling, renting or moving. Residential/Commercial. References available. Diane-561-301-7757 English Monica 408-368-2918 English/Spanish

COMPUTER REPAIR D.J. COMPUTER — Home & office, Spyware removal, websites, networks, repairs, upgrades, virus removal, tutoring. Call Jeff 561-333-1923 Cell 561-252-1186 Lic’d Well. & Palm Beach. We accept major credit cards.

O COMPUTER SERVICES (PC OR MAC)

INSURANCE Whole FAMILY Medical $49.95 — No Deductible, up to 86% coverage. Dr. visits, hopsital - includes dental, braces, vision, prescriptions & chiropractic. Call John at 561-716-0771

PAINTING J&B PRESSURE CLEANING & PAINTING, INC. — Established 1984. All types of pressure cleaning, roofs, houses, driveways, patios etc. Commercial & Residential. Interior & Exterior painting. Certified pressure cleaning & painting contractor. Lic. #U21552 Call Butch 309-6975 or visit ourwebsite at www. jbpressurecleaningandpainting.com JOHN PERGOLIZZI PAINTING INC. — Interior/Exterior - Repaint specialist, pressure cleaning, popcorn ceiling, drywall repair & roof painting. Family owned/owner operator. Free Est. 798-4964 Lic. #U18473 COLORS BY CORO, INC. — Int./Ext. residential painting, over 20 yrs exp. Small Jobs welcome. Free est. Ins. 561-383-8666. Owner/Operated. Lic.# U20627 Ins. Wellington Resident

PET SITTTING

A N Y W H E R E , A N Y T I M E S P Y WA R E / VIRUS REMOVAL — Manufacture restore, network setup (WiFi or Wired), repairs, upgrades. Call Val 561-713-5276

PET SITTING — Days and overnight in your home-caring person. Excellent references. Housesitting available. 561-572-1782

DRIVEWAY REPAIR

TOWN-CRIER CLASSIFIEDS CALL 561-793-7606 TODAY

D R I V E W AY S — F r e e e s t i m a t e s A & M ASPHALT SEAL COATING commercial and residential. Patching potholes, striping, repair existing asphalt & save money all work guaranteed. L i c.& In s. 1 0 0 0 4 5 0 6 2 5 61-667-7716

HANDYMAN THE MASTER HANDYMAN — All Types of Home Repairs & Improvements. No job too big or small done right the first time every time 40 yrs of satisfied customers. See me on Angies List. Tom (561) 801-2010 or (954) 444-3178 Serving Palm Beach and Broward Counties. BILLY’S HOME REPAIRS INC. REMODEL & REPAIRS — Interior Trim, crown molding, rottenwood repair, door installation, minor drywall,kitchens/cabinets/countertops, wood flooring. Bonded and Insured U#19699. Call 791-9900 or 628-9215

HOME IMPROVEMENTS ANMAR CO.—James’ All Around Handyman Service. Excellent craftman Old time values. Once you’ve had me! You’ll have me back! Lic. Ins. Certified Residential Contractor CRC1327426 561-248-8528

HOUSEKEEPING & ERRANDS PERFECTLY PAMPERED CLEANING — offers Luxury Affordable Cleaning & Personal Concierge Services for you & your family. Residential & Commercial. $20 Off 1st service. Fluent English. Free Consultation at 561-2035821. www.perfectlypamperedcleaning.com

HOUSE NANNY/DOG WALKER WELCOME HOME – Watching your home so you can relax. Dailey, weekly and monthly services available. Snowbird and seasonal services available as well. Kitchen restocking, errand running, and many other services offered. Professional and Trustworthy! (561)791-6041 (516)965-0389 (Cell) candieosias@gmail

TOWN-CRIER CLASSIFIEDS get results CALL 561-793-7606 for information.

PLUMBING JEREMY JAMES PLUMBING — Licensed plumber, legitimate estimate. Water heaters, new construction. CFC1426242. Bonded Insured. CFC1426242. 561-601-6458

PRESSURE CLEANING J&B PRESSURE CLEANING & PAINTING, INC. — Established 1984. All types of pressure cleaning, roofs, houses, driveways, patios etc. Commercial & Residential. Interior & Exterior painting. Certified pressure cleaning & painti n g c o n t r a c t o r. L i c . # U 2 1 5 5 2 C a l l Butch at 309-6975 or visit us at www. jbpressurecleaningandpainting.com D R I V E W AY C L E A N I N G — S t a r t i n g at$59. $50 Off House Exterior Wash, Free Sidewalk Cleaning (up to 50 Ft.) with roof cleaning.Pressure Pros of Palm Beach, Inc. 561-718-9851 Lic. & Insured.

ROOFING MINOR ROOF REPAIRS Don Hartmann R oofing — R o o f p a i n t ing, Carpentry. Lic. #U13677 967-5580 ROBERT G. HARTMANN ROOFING — Specializing in repairs. Free estimates, Bonded,insured. Lic. #CCC 058317 Ph: 561-790-0763. ROOFING REPAIRS REROOFING ALL TYPES — Pinewood Construction, Inc. Honest and reliable. Serving Palm Beach County for over 20 years. Call Mike 561-309-0134 Lic. Ins. Bonded. CGC-023773 RC-0067207

SECURITY SECURITY — American owned local security company in business 30 plus years. Protection by officers drug tested. 40 hour course. Licensed & Insured. 561-848-2600

SCREENING JOHN’S SCREEN REPAIR SERVICE — Pool & patio rescreening. Stay tight,wrinkle-free,guaranteed! CRC1329708 call us 798-3132. www.poolscreenrepair.com

SPECIALIZING IN BATHROOM REMODELING — Free estimates serving South Florida since 1980. Quality you expect, service you deserve. Lic. bonded & Ins. U21006 561-662-9258

TREE SERVICE TREES TRIMMED AND REMOVED — 561-798-0412 D.M. YOUNG TREE SERVICE. Family Owned & Operated Lic. & Insured 1992-12121 Visit our website at dmyoungtreeservice.com

WALLPAPERING PAPERHANGING BY DEBI — Professional Installation,Removal. Repair of Paper. Neat, Clean & Reliable. Quality work with a woman’s touch. 30 years experience. No Job too big or too small. Lic. & Ins. References available. 561-795-5263

WATER TREATMENT NEED A NEW WATER SYSTEM! — Let us come out and give you an estimate. Call Mike 561-792-5400

OFFICE SPACE LAW OFFICE TO SHARE: — Royal Palm/ Wellington. Furnished executive offices plus two secretarial work stations, use of conference room, reception, kitchen. Utilities included. $1,000 month. 561-793-1200, ext. 1 or 561-386-7307 OFFICE SPACE — Executive and Virtual Office Space Available - Wellington, Florida. Furnished or unfurnished office space available. Unlimited use of conference rooms, reception, kitchen with no extra fees. Utilities included. The best LAKE VIEW in Wellington! Please contact Diane 561-227-1500 www.LakeWellington.com

SITUATION WANTED CNA HOME HEALTH AIDE — 26 years experience, excellent local references, own transportation, honest, kind, dependable. Western Communities. 561-793-9827.

ROOMS FOR RENT - ROYAL PALM BEACH

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE - WELLINGTON ONE PLUS ACRES IN PINEWOOD EAST— 5 bedrooms/3.5 bath home in beautiful Pinewood East, with one plus acres and swimming pool. Lots of room. Interior has wood and tile floors-updated kitchen. Cell 561-685-0386 Office 561-793-4444 rage, pool, gated upscale, golf country club. $895,000 561-795-0533 IMMACULATE 2BR, 2BA, 2CG HOME IN WELLINGTON Move-in ready, well-maintained home by original owner. CBS construction, impact resistant doors/ windows, newly renovated master bath. Open,split plan. Wellington schools! Great location & curb appeal! $199,900. Contact Lorna Riedle, KW Realty, 561-319-1292; LRiedle@bellsouth.net

HOUSE FOR SALE - STUART F lorida C lub S tuart — 3 b d r m , 2bath, den, 2 car garage, gated golf community, granite, hdwds, new appliances, etc. $317,900 by owner 772-224-9854.

TOWN-CRIER CLASSIFIEDS get results CALL 561-793-7606 for information.

FICTITIOUS NAMES Legal Notice No. 574

Notice Under Fictitious Name Florida Statute 865.09 Public notice is hereby given that the undersigned desires to engage in business under the fictitious name of:

VISBY PRODUCTS FARRIER SUPPLIES Located at:

3101 Fairlane Farms Rd. #6 Wellington, FL 33414

County of Palm Beach, Florida and intends to register said name with the Division of Corporations State of Florida,forthwith Grace Gartner Publish :Town-Crier Newspapers Date: 04-25-14

EMPLOYMENT BOOKKEEPER NEEDED — part-time, experienced in QuickBooks, flexible hours. Please fax resume to 561-791-0952 HUNTINGTON LEARNING CENTER IN WELLINGTON — Now hiring certified teachers.$10-$15/hour. Call 561-594-1920 E-mail: MarleneGiraud@hlcwellington.com PT/FT SALES HELP WANTED — For local flooring store expanding. Sales experience a plus. Will train the right person. 561-333-2306 buyithere7@gmail.com PART-TIME ASSISTANT — Needed from 2pm - 6pm for preschool.Call 561-790-0808 F U L L T I M E A S S I S TA N T — N e e d e d Monday - Friday . Working with Pre-K experience preferred 561-790-0808

ALL YOURS HAIR AND NAIL SALON IS GROWING!

We are hiring full-time Specialists/ Nail Technicians, Stylists and Certified Licensed Massage Therapist dedicated to their profession. Please contact Kelly by E-mail allyourssalon@gmail.com or call the salon at 561-790-5855 DRIVERS: $5,000 Sign-On Bonus! — Great pay! Consistent Freight, Great Miles on this Regional Account. Werner Enterprises: 1-855-517-2488


The Town-Crier

PALMS WESTTHIS WEEK’S

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April 25 - May 1, 2014 Page 35

WELLINGTON • ROYAL PALM BEACH • LOXAHATCHEE • THE ACREAGE

ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS FOR AS LOW AS $21 A WEEK*


Page 36 April 25 - May 1, 2014

www.gotowncrier.com

The Town-Crier

HERE’S MY CARD

Lic & Insured CFC057392, CAC1817688

SEPTIC & DRAINFIELD SPECIALISTS


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April 25 - May 1, 2014 Page 37

HERE’S MY CARD

We Come To You!


Page 38

April 25 - May 1, 2014

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