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THE
TOWN - CR IER WELLINGTON • ROYAL PALM BEACH • LOXAHATCHEE • THE ACREAGE Volume 33, Number 21 May 25 - May 31, 2012
Your Community Newspaper
INSIDE
Boys & Girls Club Breaks Ground On Wellington Facility
With the turning of dirt, officials broke ground Tuesday for what will soon be the Neil S. Hirsch Family Boys & Girls Club in Wellington. The 22,750-squarefoot facility is scheduled to be completed by October 2013. Page 3
Chamber Lunch Focus On WRMC Expansion, Medical Arts District
Members of the Wellington Chamber of Commerce learned about several important changes to Wellington’s medical community at a luncheon Wednesday. Wellington Regional Medical Center CEO Jerel Humphrey detailed the hospital’s upcoming expansion, while Wellington Principal Planner Bill Nemser discussed the proposed medical arts district. Page 4
RPB Urges School District To Pay Fines
The Royal Palm Beach Village Council reluctantly granted the Palm Beach County School District approval last week to expand its bus parking in the Royal Palm Business Park. Page 7
Park Delays Force 470 Grads Bid Farewell To RPBHS RPB To Move Fourth Of July Celebration GRADUATION 2012
By Ron Bukley Town-Crier Staff Report The nearly 470 members of Royal Palm Beach High School’s Class of 2012 celebrated the end of their high school careers Monday morning at graduation exercises held at the South Florida Fairgrounds. Newly appointed Palm Beach County Schools Superintendent E. Wayne Gent was on hand to give his first commencement speech. “How do you define yourself?” he asked. “Not how your parents see you, not how your friends see you, but who are you really inside, one on one? It is very important that if you’re going to give this country and this society the best you have to offer, you need to know what you stand for and who you really are.” Gent advised that the new graduates start out with a purpose, a goal and a target, and develop a life that will change society, others and themselves in a positive way. “That may be hard to do because the net influences are both positive and negative,” he said. “Negative influences will rob you of genuine and true happiness, but a clear mental image of who you really are will help you make the
The RPBHS Class of 2012 marches into the graduation ceremony. PHOTO BY RON BUKLEY/TOWN-CRIER
right decisions. The decisions you make the next five to 10 years, you will spend the rest of your life managing those decisions.” He urged graduates to be persistent as they strive for success. “We all stub our toes, but don’t worry about making mistakes,” Gent said. “If you worry about making a mistake, you’ve already
By Ron Bukley Town-Crier Staff Report Wellington High School sent 520 members of the Class of 2012 out into the world at commencement exercises Monday at the South Florida Fairgrounds.
Principal Mario Crocetti presided over the event, advising graduates to make their mark in the world, sizing up and overcoming obstacles before them. “Don’t overestimate the size and strength of the obstacles in
The Village of Wellington and the American Legion Chris Reyka Memorial Wellington Post 390 presented the third annual open house for veterans Thursday, May 17 at the Wellington Community Center. Page 9
OPINION Take Some Time Out To Honor Fallen Warriors
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made one. Failing won’t hurt your health, but feeling like a failure could. The NBA’s most valuable player, LeBron James, misses 50 percent of the shots he takes.” Salutatorian Ashley Estaris, who will be attending the University of South Florida in the fall and majoring in medicine, told classSee RPBHS GRAD, page 13
Class Of 2012 Graduates WHS
Veterans Open House
Memorial Day is not a time for politics or debating the costs of war. It’s a day for Americans to come together to show that they respect and appreciate the brave men and women who comprise our military. This Memorial Day, we ask you to take some time to honor those who have died in service to our country by visiting one of the two observances planned in the western communities. Page 4
Serving Palms West Since 1980
Wellington High School graduate Lauren Haywood with her parents at Monday’s ceremony at the fairgrounds. PHOTO BY RON BUKLEY/TOWN-CRIER
front of you,” he said. “Take on the challenge, and you can create the future. Just stay hungry, seize the day, and never, never give up.” Student Government Association President Jenna Baxter credited the teachers who inspired them to do their best. “As we begin the next chapter of our lives, it is our turn,” she said. “As past generations have had inspiration for us today and brought us to where we are now, it is our turn to inspire others. Learn and grow while you can, serve and befriend all you can, enrich and inspire all you can. Congratulations, Class of 2012, it is our turn to move mountains.” Salutatorian Debra Marcus stressed the importance of high school experiences. “They say the best is yet to come,” Marcus said. “They say the next years will be better than we can imagine. They say our lives are just now beginning, but I have a hard time discounting all of high school so quickly. It isn’t just a steppingstone that we cross on See WHS GRAD, page 14
Ceremony Honors 700 Broncos By Jessica Gregoire Town-Crier Staff Report Palm Beach Central High School celebrated the commencement of its nearly 700 graduates of the Class of 2012 on Wednesday morning at the South Florida Fairgrounds. Dressed in cardinal red caps and gowns, some adorned with medals and honor cords, the students were overjoyed with excitement as they walked in procession to the graduation march performed by the Bronco Band led by Band Director James Yaques. Senior Class President Sally Pray gave a farewell speech to the Class of 2012 citing her hopes for a bright future. “As we, the graduating class, sit here and watch our last moments of our high school years fade away into the twilight, we are anxiously awaiting the brand-new adventures tomorrow will bring,” she said. Pray was surprised at how quickly the 13 years of formal edu-
cation went by. “Seniors, can you believe it was 13 years ago we started our first days of kindergarten?” she asked. “It may be easy for
some of us to recall those memorable moments of elementary school during recess, playing hopSee PBCHS GRAD, page 15
Stephanie Goldman and Lexus Love with their diplomas. PHOTO BY JESSICA GREGOIRE/TOWN-CRIER
By Ron Bukley Town-Crier Staff Report Several unexpected delays have pushed back the completion date of Royal Palm Beach’s new Commons Park, prompting village officials last week to move the community’s Fourth of July celebration from the new park back to its previous home at Lakeside Challenger Park. “From day one, we have been pushing to have our Fourth of July celebration at Commons Park,” Village Manager Ray Liggins said, explaining that the original completion date was set for May 25. “I don’t know if you’ve been on the site the past week, but it doesn’t look promising. If the sod is not down in two weeks, there is no way we could hold our Fourth of July event there, but there are other concerns as well.” Liggins said his staff has pushed the project hard, not giving extra time and holding the contractor to his schedule. “We have only given 20 days to date, and there have been some regulatory agency delays,” he said. “There were some architectural revisions to the building and
some significant design changes. There was a significant fountain design change.” Another issue has been the railing design for the docks and bulkheads. “While they’re not required by code, we want to have them at this park,” Liggins said. “That probably will not be done by the Fourth of July, either, and I just don’t think it’s safe having the celebration there without those railings.” To date, the village has only allotted 20 days extra time, which would have it completed June 14. “Unfortunately, he’s asking considerably more time than that,” Liggins said. Liggins added that to be able to have the park for the Fourth of July weekend would compromise its quality. The village would take possession of an unfinished portion of the park for the celebration, then close the park again so the contractor could go back in and finish it. “We need to plan this event properly and do it the way we’ve done it in years past at Challenger Park,” Liggins said. “The decision See PARK, page 20
CREATIVE CAKES
The inaugural Cop Cakes Cake-Off was held Sunday, May 20 at the Wellington Amphitheater. There was a cake-decorating contest, as well as music by Bobby Gugliuzza, a bounce house, climbing wall, mechanical bull, food for sale and a silent auction. Proceeds will benefit Our Military Kids. Shown here is Mardi Gras Princess cake maker Vanessa Ganasevici. MORE PHOTOS, PAGE 12 PHOTO BY DENISE FLEISCHMAN/TOWN-CRIER
Wellington Rescinds The Master Plan For Equestrian Village By Lauren Miró Town-Crier Staff Report The Wellington Village Council voted Tuesday, May 22 not to extend a condition of approval for the Equestrian Village master plan — putting in jeopardy the parts of the project approved in February by the previous council. Council members tabled until next month a companion measure that would revoke the site’s commercial arena designation for its existing dressage facility, meaning that shows would need to be approved each season on a conditional use permit. The master plan amendment changed the 96-acre site on the corner of South Shore Blvd. and Pierson Road from a tennis and
polo facility designation to a commercial recreation facility, as well as allowing several access points that have long been used but were never officially on the map. But the council voted 3-2 to rescind the approval Tuesday, with Councilwoman Anne Gerwig and Vice Mayor Howard Coates dissenting. Wellington Director of Growth Management Bob Basehart explained that when the measure was approved, it had seven conditions of approval. One of them was to plat the entire property by April 1. “That condition was not met,” Basehart said. Because the property was not platted in time, the issue automatSee MISSING PLAT, page 4
Reports Of Attempted Abductions Have Parents Alarmed By Jessica Gregoire Town-Crier Staff Report Parents, students, school officials and local law enforcement are taking precautions after two similar reports last week of a suspicious male trying to coax young students into his car. The first incident involved a 14year-old female from Emerald Cove Middle School in Wellington, who stated that at 8:30 a.m. last Wednesday, while walking to the bus
stop, she was followed by a silver Toyota four-door vehicle. A 6-foot-2 black male with a stocky build and medium Afro then approached her. The suspect got out of the car and attempted to coax the student into it by opening the trunk and trying to persuade her that he had something to show her inside. She ran away to the school bus stop, catching her bus at Wellington Trace and Birkdale Drive, emo-
tionally shaken but unharmed. The second incident, also last Wednesday, involved a student from Osceola Creek Middle School in The Acreage. While walking home from school on Orange Blvd., the student was allegedly approached by an adult male in a silver 4-door vehicle. That incident was reported to school officials the next morning. Both incidents have reinforced concerns as to the safety of chil-
dren in the community. The Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office and Palm Beach County School District officials immediately took precautions. The day following the incidents, West Area Superintendent Dr. Matt Shoemaker shared the information he’d received from school district police on the incidents to all principals in the county by email. “Given the similarities and the
fact that both occurred in the West Area, I wanted to make you aware of these reports so that you may take the age-appropriate steps necessary to communicate and reinforce safe walking and commuting practices for our students to and from school,” Shoemaker wrote. A call also went out to parents of Frontier Elementary School and Osceola Creek Middle School stuSee STRANGER, page 20