Volume 27 Issue 20
WESLEY CHAPEL
NEWS
September 20, 2019
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Community Comes Together To Honor 9/11’s Heroes
(Above) Pasco commissioners Mike Moore (far left), Mike Wells and Jack Mariano (in back), retired FDNY EMT Stephen Spelman, Penelope Bastidas (with scissors), and U.S. Rep. Gus Bilirakis (far right) were among those who helped cut the ribbon on the new 9/11 Memorial (right) at the Tampa Premium Outlets on Sept. 7. (Right) WC Rotary president Chris Casella (left) and Simon Property Group operations director Dallas Stevens check out the memorial.
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By ANDY WARRENER
or most Americans, the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, will live on forever. Where you were, what you were doing, who you were with and how the horrifying sight of the World Trade Center’s twin towers crumbling to earth left you feeling afterwards will likely never really go away. The memories linger, and on Sept. 7, at the dedication of Pasco County’s first permanent 9-11 memorial inside the food court area of the Tampa Premium Outlets, hundreds gathered to share their recollections and honor those who died that day. Retired New York City EMT Stephen Spelman knew many of them. Spelman says he was standing at the foot of the north tower and being ordered by his lieutenant to search for some nearby vehicles.
“What he did in that moment was actually save my life,” Spelman told the gathered crowd. As he was returning from that task, Spelman said the north tower collapsed. Because of where he was located, Spelman was able to take off running north on West St. to avoid the falling wreckage. Many of Spelman’s co-workers, including the lieutenant who gave the order, ran east on Vesey St. Their bodies were never recovered. Like so many who were at Ground Zero that fateful day, Spelman hasn’t really recovered, either. He retired from the fire department in 2009, and moved to the Wesley Chapel area in 2010. Years went by as he tried to cope with the psychological burden of losing so many of his friends and co-workers, as well as the lingering health problems associated with what he and so many other surviving first responders endured that day. In the Spring of 2017, Spelman says he got a call from the Motts Military Museum in Groveport, OH,
which asked him to come tell his story. The event was set for the 16th anniversary of 9/11, but fate and another disaster would prevent the former EMT trainer from attending. Hurricane Irma tore through central Florida on September 11, 2017, causing billions of dollars of damage and taking the lives of 129 people. Florida officials ordered 6.5 million residents to evacuate. Spelman never made that trip up to Ohio. A few weeks later, however, he got a package in the mail from the Motts Museum — a piece of the ladder from the Ladder 18 Truck from Battalion 4 in lower Manhattan, the station also known as Fort Pitt. “At first, I saw it (the piece of the ladder) as a burden, but it wound up being a real gift,” Spelman says. The ladder awakened something in him, spurring him to try to find the right home for it, where it hopefully would do some good. See “9/11” on page 4.
Inside: Another Chance To Win FREE Dining In Our 2019 Dining Survey & Contest! See page 35! New Businesses Coming Little Feet Shoes From a craft brewery to a cigar Store on S.R. 56 promises the shop, WC is staying busy. right fit for your kids’ shoes. Pages 12-13 Pages 24-25
OTB Delights Café The breakfast is delicious, but OTB also offers meal deliveries. Pages 38-39