Volume 21 Issue 6
Inside: Don’t Miss The 2013 ‘Taste Of New TampaTM!’
March 16, 2013
See pages 3 & 8!
The Direct-Mail News Magazines Serving New Tampa & Wesley Chapel Since 1993! THIS INDEPENDENT COMMUNITY NEWS MAGAZINE IS DIRECTLY MAILED TO: WESLEY CHAPEL: Aberdeen • Belle Chase • Brookside • Chapel Pines • Country Walk • Lexington Oaks • Meadow Pointe • New River • Northwood • Pinewalk • Pine Ridge • Saddlebrook • Saddleridge Estates • Saddlewood • Seven Oaks • The Lakes at Northwood • The Villages of Wesley Chapel • Wesley Pointe • Westbrook Estates • Williamsburg NEW TAMPA: Arbor Greene • Cory Lake Isles • Cross Creek • Easton Park • Grand Hampton • Heritage Isles • Hunter’s Green • Hunter’s Key • K-Bar Ranch • Lake Forest • Live Oak Preserve • Pebble Creek • Richmond Place • Tampa Palms • The Hammocks • West Meadows
Quail Hollow Elem. Parents Updated About School’s Two-Year Closing By Matt Wiley & Gary Nager The students, teachers and staff at Quail Hollow Elementary (QHE) are in for some big changes next school year, as the Wesley Chapel area’s oldest elementary school will close for two years for major renovations. Although only 93 people signed in during a public meeting on March 6 to discuss the renovations and the plans for new attendance boundaries for QHE’s current students, the room was filled with an estimated 200 or more parents, students, Pasco School District administrators and not only QHE staffers, but also the principals of the two schools that will each welcome a portion of the current QHE student population. Built in 1974, QHE, located north of S.R. 54 on Quail Hollow Blvd., will begin to undergo some heavy renovations after school lets out for the summer at the end of the 2012-13 school year. Current QHE students will be split between Wesley Chapel Elementary (WCE) and WaterGrass Elementary, depending upon where they live. Beginning August 19, or at the start of the 2013-14 school year, students who live south of Quail Hollow Blvd. will be attending WCE (located on Wells Rd.), while those who live in the rest of the QHE attendance areas north of Quail Hollow Blvd. will attend Wa-
terGrass Elementary (located north and east of WCE off Curley Rd.). QHE principal Michelle Berger introduced WCE principal John Abernathy and WaterGrass principal Scott Mitchell, noting that both schools will welcome QHE students and staff “as if they were already students of those schools, not just temporary visitors.” She added, “(The renovation) ultimately will be a good thing for Quail Hollow Elementary. We were the first school built in Wesley Chapel, and after the renovations are complete, it’s like we’ll be new all over again.” The renovations will update the school’s aging infrastructure, including plumbing and electrical wiring, as well as include permanent walls, which most of the school’s current “pod”-style classrooms are lacking. Some classrooms at QHE don’t even have windows. “The actual interior design hasn’t yet been designed by the architects,” said assistant superintendent for administrative services Ray Gadd, who told those in attendance at the meeting that the total cost of the renovations is currently estimated to cost between $8.5$10. Although that number is only an estimate right now, he said it would include all architectural design, engineering, permitting and construction costs. Kurt Browning, the superintendent of schools for Pasco County, explained that the
renovations are part of the next round of “Penny for Pasco” improvement projects, although the second ten years of “Penny” funding doesn’t go into effect until 2015. He thanked the voters in attendance for helping to pass the second ten years of Penny funds, “because we couldn’t Ray Gadd (standing), the assistant superintendent for administrative make these renova- services for Pasco County Schools, takes questions from current Quail tions without it.” Hollow Elementary parents about the plan to relocate their children at He also said the WaterGrass and Wesley Chapel elementaries the next two years. school has to close because, “It’s just too hard to make these ren- ideal. Shady Hills and Quail Hollow were both designed by architect Eoghan Kelley in ovations with children running around.” Gadd noted that since the next round of the 1970s and are the first of the School DisPenny funding doesn’t begin until 2015, the trict’s seven Kelly-designed schools that will District will bond those future funds to pay be renovated using Penny for Pasco funds. “It costs us about $21 million to build a for the renovations to QHE and to Shady Hills Elementary in northwest Pasco, which new school,” Gadd said at the meeting. “But, we can renovate these seven schools for a lot also will close at the end of this school year. Berger explained that her school was less, so it just made sense to us to upgrade built “about the time I graduated from col- them instead.” He added that QHE will be lege,” when open “pods” were thought to be See “Quail Hollow” on page 14.
Patty Wolf - The Smile & Spirit Of Wolf’s Den - Remembered At Memorial
NEIGHBORHOOD MAGAZINE!
Plan Could Build Elevated Lanes Along S.R. 54/56 Corridor, Pilot Dies In Plane Crash, Tighter Water Restrictions Have Begun, Lots Of Local Business Features & More!
Local 5Ks Push Physical & Emotional Limits, Where To Get Your Irish On St. Patty’s Day, Toast Is More Than Just A Wine Bar, Lots Of Neighborhood Nibbles & Biz Bytes & More!
Pages 1-32
Pages 33-40
See “Patty Wolf ” on page 15.
Patty Wolf, the wife of Wolf ’s Den Restaurant owner Roger Wolf, finally lost her nineyear battle with cancer on February 28.
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lot, considering that Roger was an enlisted U.S. Marine who was among the first combat troops deployed in the Vietnam War. At a memorial service held March 5 at Lifepoint Community Church on Bruce B. Downs Blvd. (in front of Hunter’s Green) and presided over by Lifepoint Pastor, the Rev. Brad White, an estimated crowd of more than 300 people came out to honor Patty’s memory and to show their support for Roger and Patty’s mother, Alice Beck; the couple’s son, Shawn Wolf and his wife, Christine; Patty’s sisters, Pam BeckDanovich and Debra Smitz; and the couple’s granddaughter Allyson. Roger recalled that he was told Patty may have only had months to live when she was first diagnosed with Stage 4 cancer in 2003, but she refused to even consider that possibility. Nine years and too many surgeries and chemo treatments later, she was still
Dated Material Please Rush!
Unfortunately, I never really got to know Patty Wolf, the even more popular wife of Wolf’s Den Restaurant owner Roger Wolf, in part because the first few times I met her, I didn’t realize that she wasn’t just another one of the friendly servers at Roger’s always-busy diner on S.R. 56. I also didn’t realize that she was already five or six years into what has now ended up
being a nine-year battle with ovarian cancer — a battle she finally lost on February 28. If you ask Roger, his beautiful, alwaysoptimistic wife of 35 years was so much more than just a pretty face. She was the smile and spirit of Wolf’s Den. “Everyone who ever met Patty here knew she was something special,” Roger said at his restaurant a few days before Patty passed. “These last few months have been the hardest of my life.” And, that’s saying a
Postal Customer
By Gary Nager