Wesley Chapel Neighborhood News, Volume 25, Issue 12, June 2, 2017

Page 1

Volume 25 Issue 12

Inside:

June 2, 2017

New Owners/New Menu At Bosco’s Italian To Go! In Neighborhood Magazine!

Don’t Forget To View, Like & Share Every Episode Of The Award-Winning WCNT-tv! The Direct-Mail News Magazines Serving New Tampa & Wesley Chapel Since 1993! For the complete list of neighborhoods that receive this publication by direct mail in Wesley Chapel (zip codes 33543, 33544 & 33545), see page 46!

Will The Diverging Diamond Fix The I-75/S.R. 56 Interchange? By JOHN C. COTEY

john@ntneighborhoodnews.com A diamond could be a commuter’s best friend, according to the Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT). A diverging diamond, that is. That was the message delivered by Ryan Forrestel, PE of American Consulting Professionals, LLC, as he presented what he feels will be the solution to the snarled mess that is the S.R. 56 interchange of I-75 to the Greater Wesley Chapel Chamber of Commerce (WCCC) on May 23, during a meeting at the Mercedes-Benz of Wesley Chapel dealership located just a few hundred feet from where the construction of the diverging diamond interchange (DDI) will begin. Forrestel, the consultant design project manager for the $24.1-million Diverging Diamond Interchange project, told a group of roughly 20 representatives from affected businesses like Havertys, Tampa Premium Outlets, Chick-Fil-A, Florida Hospital Center Ice and others that it will be a good news, bad news proposition. The good: engineers say the DDI is going to make traffic smoother and more efficient and in the long run yield improved results for local businesses. The bad: during the long-awaited construction beginning in fall of 2018, the already-congested interchange is likely to become even more clogged. No one, however, was surprised.

Also Inside This Issue: News, Business & Sports Updates RADDSPORTS Tells Chamber They Are Ready To Build; PCSO Still Looking For Quail Hollow Shooter; Commisioners Can’t Decide On Golf Course’s Fate; Neo-Nazi Bomb Plot In New Tampa; Audi Dealership Breaks Ground; U.S. Women’s Hockey Makes Wesley Chapel Its Home; Spring Football Wraps Up; Plus, Local Business Features!

Pages 3-34

Neighborhood Magazine

WC Rotary’s Derby Just Ducky; Bosco’s Is A Love Story With Great Italian Food; Boy Scout STEM Fair At FHCI & More Neighborhood Nibbles & Business Bytes!

Pages 35-48

“I think this is a good opportunity for us,’’ said Stacey Nance, the general manager of TPO, located just west of the DDI. “Is it going to be cumbersome? Absolutely it is.” Forrestel’s presentation seemed to assuage some of the concerns of representatives from those local businesses, many of whom are concerned that shoppers already are avoid-

ing the area because of the traffic. The project, moved up twice from its original 2024 and then 2020 start dates, is expected to expedite traffic through the muchmaligned interchange, which handles roughly 100,000 vehicles a day and connects many of the residents of Wesley Chapel, Lutz and Land O’Lakes to Tampa.

Forrestel said he will have the DDI plans drawn up by January, and then in June of 2018, bidding will begin to find the company to build it. Construction should start by the fall of 2018, and Forrestel said it could tentatively take anywhere from 18-36 months to build. See “DDI” on page 4.

WCH Softball Caps Huge Turnaround With First Playoff Appearance! By JOHN C. COTEY

john@ntneighborhoodnews.com The Wesley Chapel High (WCH) girls basketball team won eight more games this season than it did last season. The WCH football team, just two years removed from an 0-10 season, went 7-2. The Wiregrass Ranch High (WRH) football team made the playoffs for the first time since 2010. However, when it came to the 2016-17 school year, there weren’t any high school teams in Wesley Chapel that turned things around quite like the WCH softball team did. Buoyed by a bevy of youngsters and first-year coach Steve Mumaw, the Wildcats did the improbable this spring — they beat softball powerhouses Pasco, River Ridge and Land O’Lakes in one of Tampa Bay’s toughest districts, won 19 games and made it to the Class 6A Regional semifinals before losing 4-2 to the eventual State champion Gators. “Now that it’s over and the tears are gone, we can reflect,’’ said Mumaw. “Land O’Lakes won the State championship, and we were pretty close to (beating) them. It could have been us.” Depending upon how many players return — the new Cypress Creek MIddle/High School zones are expected to claim at least a few players — the

Wildcats have the makings of what could be a state contender the next few years. That was hardly imaginable before 2017. Although they showed signs of promise last year, winning seven games in their best season ever to that point, the previous eight years had yielded records like 2-22, 2-21, 2-20, 1-22, 1-15 and 0-24. At one point, WCH lost 27 straight games and 43 of 44 over a three-span. Things changed this spring with the infu- The Wesley Chapel softball team won almost as many games this season (19) as it had in 10 previous seasons (22), setting a school record. sion of some key freshmen, who meshed instantly with a talented crop of sophomores. “We had high expectations,’’ said Mumaw, who has had two stints as the baseball coach and one as the athletic director at WCH. “I wouldn’t

See “WCH Softball” on page 33.


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Wesley Chapel Neighborhood News, Volume 25, Issue 12, June 2, 2017 by Neighborhood News - Issuu