Ormond Beach Observer 10-30-25

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Ellie McDade, Clarity Collins and Sparrow Lee Collins pose together. The three dressed as Zoey, Rumi, and Mira from the movie “K-pop Demon Hunters.” Photo by Sydney Tevin
Jurors examine evidence in the case of Goldilocks and the three bears. Photo by Jarleene Almenas

NEWS BRIEFS

Flagler Sheriff’s Office K-9 Kyro honored in memorial service

The Flagler County Sheriff’s Office honored K-9 Kyro in a memorial service at the First Baptist Church Bunnell on Oct. 24.

Kyro, who died on Oct. 14 of an undiagnosed heart condition, joined the FCSO in August 2024 as a dual-purpose K-9 in both patrol and narcotics detection. During his short but distinguished career, he aided in 37 arrests, the detection and seizure of 65 grams of illegal narcotics, and the recovery of 25 pieces of drug paraphernalia, a FCSO Facebook post said. Kyro’s partner was Master

COPS CORNER

MIDDAY BREAK-IN

3:42 p.m. — First block of Seville Street, Ormond Beach Burglary. A 16-year-old Ormond Beach teen called police to report that two men — dressed in all black, including ski masks — had just tried to break into his house.

The teen claimed to see one of the men trying to pick their lock; the teen said he kicked him in the face.

The armed suspect fled to a car, at the same time the second suspect, who had been “standing lookout” on the corner of the garage, got into the driver’s seat of the vehicle. The teen said their license plate had been blacked out as if it had been covered by black tape.

Deputy Marcus Dawson. Kyro was a 2-year-old German Shepherd. Kyro was inside Dawson’s air-conditioned patrol vehicle while Dawson oversaw the training of a new K-9 team. Dawson returned to the vehicle during a break and found Kyro unresponsive, a FCSO press release said. The patrol vehicle’s air conditioner and heat alarm were on and functioning at the time, and the heat alarm — which transmits a distress signal to a K-9 handler if there is a mechanical issue — did not go off, the press release said.

Sheriff Rick Staly asked everyone to Dawson and the FCSO in their thoughts. The K-9s are not just working dogs but trusted partners to their handlers and members of the FCSO family, he said.

“There’s a saying that ‘all dogs go to heaven,’ and Master Deputy Dawson did everything he could to save

The teen called his mom and then contacted 911 once she got home. His mom told police her son had never done anything like this in the past and that she couldn’t think of anyone who would want to break in.

Police noted both the teen and his mom “appeared calm as if nothing had happened,” the report states, citing a lack of fear or worry about the alleged armed burglary attempt while the teen was home alone.

The teen affirmed everything in his report was true and that he understood the consequences if it was fabricated. When asked about his demeanor, he told police he was “tired and not afraid to die.”

OCT. 3 BABY ON BOARD 10:52 p.m. — 1400 block of West Granada Boulevard, Ormond Beach

his beloved partner, but sadly, just like humans, our fourlegged partners can also have undiagnosed medical conditions,” Staly said. “I guess God need a well-trained and beautiful K-9 in heaven.”

19-year-old

wanted for stolen credit cards turns herself in

A 19-year-old Palm Coast woman has been arrested for allegedly stealing and then using a credit card from a nail salon client.

On Aug. 9, a woman called the Flagler County Sheriff’s Office to report that her credit card had been stolen and had 10 fraudulent charges totaling over $500 in purchases from stores and restaurants in Palm Coast. The victim told deputies that she had left her credit card at Palm Nails, a nail salon in Palm Coast, on

Child neglect. Police arrested a 37-year-old Ormond Beach woman and a 39-year-old St.

Augustine man after multiple calls came into dispatch about an unattended baby in a car parked in a local shopping plaza.

The callers reported the parents appeared to be under the influence and that the mother had fallen while getting out of the car.

After they were detained, the couple began arguing about who was supposed to watch the baby as the other went inside the store.

Video surveillance and witness testimony later contradicted the couple’s statement. Witnesses were concerned for their sobriety, having seen the woman bump into things and that the man could hardly stand straight or talk.

They were arrested for child neglect, and a search of their vehicle turned up a

Aug. 6, according to a FCSO

press release.

FCSO detectives obtained surveillance footage from the stores where the credit card had been used, showing a white female with long dark hair using the stolen card to make purchases, the press release said.

Unable to obtain any further identifying information on the suspect, the FCSO posted on social media on Sept. 23 asking for the public’s assistance in identifying the suspect. Later the same day, the suspect, Brynn Gifford, 19, called the Flagler County Emergency Communications Center and said she was the woman in the photo and asked to speak to the case detectives.

Gifford told detectives she had not done anything wrong, but admitted she was the woman in the surveillance footage shown purchasing items with the stolen card.

small plastic bag with cocaine residue.

OCT. 21

RUN DOWN

4:28 p.m. – 100 block of Cypress Point Parkway Petit theft. A 24-year-old Palm Coast man caught stealing$16.97 Iron Man sunglasses and a $34.92 watch led law enforcement on a half-mile foot chase.

A loss prevention officer at a store on Cypress Point Parkway watched the suspect steal a watch and called the Sheriff’s Office. A deputy made it onto the scene before the suspect had left the property and spotted the suspect leaving the store parking lot.

The suspect took off when the deputy approached him and led the deputy on foot chase through neighboring retail plazas, according to the man’s arrest report.

The deputy called for backup and chased the sus-

Gifford was a receptionist at Palm Nails when the card was stolen, the press release said.

On Oct. 15, detectives obtained a warrant for Gifford on the following charges: fraudulent use of personal identification information of a person 60 years of age or older, fraudulent use of a credit card more than two times in six months, and petit theft.

Three canals in Beverly Beach named after fallen deputies

Beverly Beach and two residential neighborhoods in The Hammock came together on Oct. 25 to rename three canals after three fallen Flagler County Sheriff’s Office deputies.

The dedicated canals are in the Sunset Inlet subdivision and was organized by Beverly Beach and the Shelter Cove Homeowner’s Associa-

pect on foot across Cypress Point Parkway into another grocery store’s parking lot.

The suspect tried to hide in the bushes before running to the back of another property, making it around to a dealership on Palm Coast Parkway, the report said.

The deputy finally managed to detain the suspect and when he searched the man’s pockets, the deputy found the watch, the sunglasses and a $4.96 bicycle tire tube.

The items together with tax totaled $60.83.

The suspect admitted to stealing the tire tube and sunglasses, saying thy were intended for his job as eye protection and to commute to work. The watch he took because he liked it, the report said.

The man was charged with petit theft and for obstruction without violence, since he fled and hid from law enforcement.

tion for the FCSO deputies, according to an email from the FCSO. The three deputies honored were Deputy Charles T. “Chuck” Sease, Sgt. Francesco “Frankie” Celico, and Deputy First Class Paul Luciano.

Sheriff Rick Staly and members of the deputies’ families were each given a plaque that contained a map of the canals with a picture of the signs installed naming the canals. Each of the three canals has a name plate attached to the canal wall in honor of one of the deputies.

Staly joined members of the FCSO, local government officials, Beverly Beach residents, and the deputies’ family members to pay tribute to their legacies, a FCSO Facebook post said.

“The newly named canals will serve as lasting reminders of their courage, commitment, and sacrifice,” the post said.

OCT. 21

WRONG WAY

1:41 a.m. – Intersection of Royal Palms and Belle Terre Parkways, Palm Coast DUI. A Palm Coast woman pulled over for running a red light and driving in the wrong lanes had a blood alcohol content three times the legal limit, according to the FCSO. A deputy witnessed the woman go through a red light. The deputy followed the woman, but in the northbound lanes, with his lights and sirens going before the woman pulled over, still in the southbound lanes. When the deputy confronted her, the woman said she had just finished work at a bar.

The woman failed the field sobriety test and, and during the breathalyzer test, blew a .241 and a .232. She was arrested and taken to the county jail.

Reaching a verdict

Pine Trail Elementary gifted students learn about judicial branch with mock trial

Did Goldilocks use bad manners when she entered the home of the three bears?

A jury of her Pine Trail Elementary peers found her guilty on Friday, Oct. 24, during a mock trial of the fairy tale at the S. James Foxman Justice Center in Daytona Beach. The mock trial was part of a PTE field trip for second and third grade gifted students, who are currently studying govern -

ment in their classes.

Third grade teacher Dusty Buck said it took some time for the jury to reach a unanimous decision during its deliberations. Initially, jurors were at a 10-2 verdict of guilt. One juror changed his mind after five minutes of discussion, and the final one needed a bit more convincing.

“I feel like that experience really helped the jury members realize just how important their role is in the judicial process,” Buck said. “After we returned back to school, we also discussed why it is so important to pay attention as a jury member as the little details are ultimately what let to their verdict.”

This is the second year Buck

has brought her students to the courthouse for a mock trial, in which third graders act out the roles and second graders observe. Last year, the students examined a case based on the “Lion King.” It resulted in a hung jury, a mistrial. Judge Richard Orfinger, of the Fifth District Court of Appeal, has conducted mock trials with students about 40-50 times over his 34 years on the bench. It’s a chance for him to share his enthusiasm for the law, he said.

“A lot of kids walk out saying, ‘I want to be a lawyer,’” Orfinger said. “I don’t know how many follow through, but it’s nice to give them that enthusiasm.”

Plus, it’s a chance to show kids how the court system works, he added, and learn about the three branches of

government — executive, legislative, and of course, judicial.

“It’s important for the kids to understand at least this branch, and hopefully the executive and legislative branch do things with students as well that demonstrate their roles,” Orfinger said.

The mock trial is also a good opportunity, Buck said, to have students put their reading skills to the test as they go through their script.

“You could really tell the personality of the kids coming out,” Buck said. “They really put themselves into the role and because they’re strong readers, they were able to apply that.”

Orfinger and two attor-

neys were at PTE last week going through the speaking parts with the students. Last year, his grandson was part of the mock trial. This year, his granddaughter got to watch with her second grade peers.

“We’re just thankful for the opportunity to enrich the kids because that is one of the things that sometimes gets missed in the school system, so being able to take them out of the classroom and show them real life opportunities, I think, is a big deal,” Buck said.

Teachers and schools interested in mock trials should visit https://circuit7.org/ tours-speakers-bureau.

Email jarleene@observer localnews.com.

The three bears were played by Sophia Mahany (Mama Bear), Collin Coltharp (Papa Bear) and Charlie Jiloty (Baby Bear).
Judge Richard Orfinger and his granddaughter, Emma Russell.
Joshua Ferebee plays the role of the bailiff.
Bradley Will was one of the attorneys for the plaintiffs, the three bears.
Ellie Pona presents evidence to the jury.
Jurors Mateo Lu, Hunter Hamilton and Ben Vallancourt laugh in the courtroom during witness testimonies.
Pine Trail Elementary second graders laugh during the mock trial. Photos by Jarleene Almenas
Paislee Goris plays the role of Goldilocks.
Third grader Janelly Medina and fellow jurors listen to the trial.
Linda Weiss plays a lawyer on behalf of the defense during the mock trial. Third grader Kason McFerren was the judge during the mock trial.

Philanthropist Lowell Lohman dies

Lowell and his

made significant contributions to various local causes.

JARLEENE

Ormond Beach philanthropist and longtime businessman

Lowell Lohman died at 80 years old on Tuesday, Oct. 28.

Lowell and his wife, Nancy, have made significant contributions to various nonprofits and causes in Volusia County, including the Ormond Memorial Art Museum, Volusia County Schools, the dogfriendly beach in Ormond, Halifax Humane Society, Halifax Health and the Museum of Arts and Sciences. The museum’s planetarium now bears their name, thanks to a $2.5 million gift in 2021.

Various of the organizations whom were touched by the Lohmans’ generosity over the years took to social media to express their condolences to the family.

“Lowell Lohman was a remarkable man whose life reflected generosity, strength, and vision,” Halifax Health stated on Facebook. “He was a devoted husband, father, grandfather, businessman, athlete, and friend.”

The hospital wrote that Lowell, who had Type 1 diabetes, never let it define him.

“Instead, he used his journey to inspire and uplift others,” the Facebook post states.

“Through his wisdom, compassion, and relentless drive to make a difference, Lowell touched countless lives and built a legacy of hope that continues to shine brightly. His spirit of giving lives on in the care and kindness extend-

ed to every patient and family our Halifax Health - Lohman Center for Diabetes & Endocrinology serves — a true reflection of a man who gave so much of himself so that others can thrive with diabetes … as he did.”

A statement by VCS expressed gratitude for the Lohmans’ continued partnership that helped create the Lohmans’ Museum of Arts and Sciences Field Study in 2021. The initiative allows all VCS fifth and eight grade students to visit MOAS for a day of science education. Transportation and admission costs were covered by the Lohmans.

“Lowell’s vision was clear: every student, regardless of background, should have access to hands-on science learning,” VCS stated. “Thanks to the couple’s generosity, more than 40,000 students have explored science, technology, and space in unforgettable ways, like when Lowell joined in on the fun by dressing as an astronaut. Lowell’s legacy of inclusion,

curiosity, and generosity will continue to inspire generations to come.”

Rep. Chase Tramont wrote that Lowell was a “true pillar of our community.”

“Lowell’s life was defined by service, generosity, and a steadfast commitment to improving the lives of others,” Tramont said. “... He and his wife Nancy have set a powerful example of what it means to give back, to invest in people, and to build a stronger Volusia County and a better #Florida.”

Lowell Lohman, a graduate of Florida State University, owned 60 businesses in his lifetime, including Lohman Funeral Homes. The Lohmans sold the business in 2012, refocusing their family’s entrepreneurial efforts to owning over 4,000 apartments.

Most recently, the Lohman family constructed The Cupola at Oceanside, a 12-unit luxury townhome development in Ormond Beach.

Vape use rising among younger kids

Volusia County Schools adds program to educate students in fourth and fifth grade against vaping.

So far this school year, 21 fourth and fifth grade students in Volusia County Schools have been caught with a vape while on campus.

To address what district staff is saying is a “rising concern,” VCS has implemented a program to educate elementary students against the use of vapes. The program mirrors the district’s existing educational initiative for students in middle and high schools, but is designed for students in fourth and fifth grade. The School Board was given an overview of the district’s Volusia Assistance and Prevention Education program during their workshop on Tuesday, Oct. 28.

“We were seeing a rising concern with elementary students being caught with vapes, with fourth and fifth grade students primarily,” said Mike Micallef, VCS executive director of graduation assurance and student services. “It’s a concern. I think when you have one or two at that level of age, it should be a concern.”

The VAPE program aims to teach children about the harmful ingredients in vapes, develop healthy coping strategies, understand consequences and learn school rules and laws, according to the district’s presentation.

Only students who are first-time offenders for the possession and/or use of a

vape are eligible to take part in the program, which requires parental consent and must be completed within nine weeks with a passing score of 80% or higher on all quizzes.

Micallef said that when addressing vape use in students, the consequence in the past was a suspension.

“We weren’t trying to educate them,” he said. “We weren’t trying to do anything out of the norm to change that behavior.”

If the parent does not provide consent for their student to take part in the program, the student will likely be sent to an alternative education site for 45 days.

In addition to the VAPE program, VCS has also introduced a Threat and Wellness Program for students who have made school threats or “demonstrated concerning behaviors related to safety and respect,” the presentation states. This includes possession of toy guns or knives at school and making violent threats — including ones to harm the school or school community.

The program has modules for students in kindergarten to second grade, and third to fifth grade. It is designed for first-time offenses only as an educational intervention,

according to the district.

“We want to teach strategies for making safe, responsible, positive choices,” said Jessica McIntyre, VCS coordinator of mental health services. “Taking those responsibilities for the decisions that they do make, developing that emotional regulation, expression skills and overall, working to foster that culture of kindness and respect.”

Students taking part in this program must have parental consent and at least one counseling session with a school counselor. The program must be completed within two weeks and also requires a passing grade of 80% or higher on all assessments.

Students who fail to complete the program could end up in an alternative school or receiving off-campus instruction.

To date, 24 students in kindergarten through second grade have enrolled in the program, 10 of which have already completed it. For the third to fifth grade modules, 530 students have been enrolled, with 16 having completed it.

Second and fifth grade have been the sources for the highest enrollments, McIntyre said.

“It’s such a key developmental time with social peers, deciding your own ways of thinking,” she said. “That development is so key in those two ages, so it is very interesting that those are our two highest points there.”

“It’s a concern. I think when you have one or two at that level of age, it should be a concern.”

MIKE MICALLEF, VCS executive director of graduation assurance and student services

Kent stalls horse-friendly beach idea

Hold your horses, Volusia County won’t allow them on the beach — at least not in Al Weeks North Shore Park.

When it comes to allowing horses on Volusia County beaches, County Councilman Troy Kent is reining in his proposal.

In August, the council directed staff in a 5-2 vote to bring them options for a sixmonth trial period to allow horses on a 9-mile section of the beach. Two possibilities were presented: Al Weeks North Shore Park in Ormondby-the-Sea or at the Neptune

Avenue beach approach, utilizing the Grace Lutheran Church off-beach parking area.

Kent had voiced he preferred Al Weeks North Shore Park as a potential location over Neptune, as the latter would require horses and their handlers to cross A1A, but at the council’s meeting on Tuesday, Oct. 21, he said he no longer supported it and pulled his motion.

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“I am now a ‘neigh,’” Kent said.

Most of the emails he’s received about allowing horses on the beach are against the idea, he added. The county would need a location on the east side of A1A that could handle horse trailers. Proceeding with Al Weeks North Shore Park would mean eliminating 19 parking spaces to incorporate two trailer spaces, according to staff’s presentation in August.

“The location is not feasible,” Kent said. “Not only is it not ideal, it’s not feasible. ... I still like the idea of riding horses on the beach. The location is wrong.”

wife, Nancy,
Lowell and Nancy Lohman listen to Mayor Bill Partington speak during the topping off ceremony for The Cupola at Oceanside on Thursday, Nov. 30, 2023. File photo by Jarleene Almenas
Patrick Gardiner leads his family at Mala Campra Beach during an Equestrian Adventures of Florida tour. File photo by Michele Meyers

Underdog bidder wants Marineland park for dolphin-assisted therapy

Jack Kassewitz said this is an opportunity to bring ‘Marineland back to the greatness it once was.’

A federal bankruptcy judge in Delaware has rejected a $7.1 million developer’s bid, giving a local nonprofit the chance to bid on and purchase Marineland Dolphin Adventure.

The tourist attraction in Marineland has been open since 1938 but has deteriorated and is thousands of dollars behind in property taxes. Its parent company, The Dolphin Company, filed bankruptcy earlier this year, and a mysterious company, Delightful Development, placed a $7.1 million bid to purchase the property.

The proposed sale of Marineland to a developer brought together a host of grassroots efforts to save the attraction. Jack Kassewitz, with the nonprofit Global Heart Inc., is leading the charge alongside an anonymous, private family that is

funding a $4 million bid to purchase the property.

“This is David and Goliath,” Kassewitz said. “We’re a bunch of people trying to save it, and we’re up against the developers. And we had a major change yesterday. I feel very confident that we’re going to end up with Marineland.”

Because of the bankruptcy proceedings, the sale must be approved by the judge, Laurie Selber Silverstein, District of Delaware United States Bankruptcy Court. Kassewitz and his team argued in the court hearing that it had been blocked from

the bidding process, and the judge, dissatisfied with the strictly real-estate transaction of the winning bid that did not answer her questions about the dolphins, halted the sale process. Another hearing in November is scheduled, to reconsider the sale.

Kassewitz said he believes his group has a real chance of winning the bids.

“The judge said they don’t have to take the highest bidder. That’s significant,” he said. “We have an opportunity to do something great for the dolphins.”

Those who wish to donate

TO ANNEX PROPERTY TO BE INCLUDED WITHIN THE CORPORATE AREA AND CITY LIMITS OF THE CITY OF FLAGLER BEACH; PROVIDING FOR THE ANNEXATION OF APPROXIMATELY 514.06 ACRES OF PROPERTY DESCRIBED IN EXHIBIT “A” TO THIS ORDINANCE AND LYING IN THE AREAS PROXIMATE TO THE EXISTING CITY LIMITS OF THE CITY OF FLAGLER BEACH, FLAGLER COUNTY, FLORIDA; PROVIDING FOR ANNEXATION IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE VOLUNTARY ANNEXATION PROVISIONS OF SECTION 171.044, FLORIDA STATUTES; PROVIDING FOR ANNEXATION OF REAL PROPERTY/AMENDMENT OF CORPORATE/CITY LIMITS; PROVIDING FOR RIGHTS AND PRIVILEGES RESULTING FROM ANNEXATION UPON LAND USES; PROVIDING FOR EFFECT ON A VALOREM TAXES; PROVIDING FOR EFFECT ON BUSINESSES AND OCCUPATIONS; PROVIDING FOR EFFECT ON BUSINESSES AND OCCUPATIONS; PROVIDING FOR CONFLICTS, SEVERABILITY AND AN EFFECTIVE DATE

This notice is pursuant to the provisions of Chapter 166 and 171, Florida Statutes, and the Charter and Ordinances of the City of Flagler Beach, Florida as amended and supplemented. Subject annexation meets the statutory criteria for annexation as established in Chapter 171, Florida Statutes. PUBLIC HEARINGS ARE SCHEDULED TO BE HELD AT CITY HALL, 105 S. 2ND STREET, FLAGLER BEACH, FLORIDA AS FOLLOWS: PLANNING AND ARCHITECTURAL REVIEW BOARD: TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 2025 AT 5:30 P.M.

1ST READING: CITY COMMISSION: THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9, 2025 AT 5:30 P.M. OR AS SOON THEREAFTER AS POSSIBLE. 2ND READING: CITY COMMISSION: NOVEMBER 13, 2025 AT 5:30 P.M. OR AS SOON THEREAFTER AS POSSIBLE.

Copies of the proposed Ordinance and legal description of the property by metes and bounds are available and may be obtained from the office of the City Clerk at 386-517-2000 Ext. 233.

to help save Marineland and the dolphins can go to savemarinelanddolphins.org, which has information about the history of Dolphin Adventure, how to help and links to donate.

“The fight is not over,” Kassewitz said.

Kassewitz has over 20 years of experience working with dolphins and works alongside his wife, Donna Brewer Kassewitz, with the dolphin communication research group Speak Dolphin, run by Global Heart.

Kassewitz said he wants to keep the attraction opera -

FDOT to host open house for Nova Road improvements

The Florida Department of Transportation will host an open house next week to discuss a project that will

tional, with the goal to introduce an animal-assisted therapy program and bring in therapists and health care professionals and university researchers. He has already reached out, he said, and there is interest, if they can successfully purchase the oceanarium.

He also wants to begin bringing in nonprofit organizations like Wounded Warriors, which works with injured veterans, as well.

When asked, by the judge and the Observer, if he thought his ideas for Marineland Dolphin Adventure would be successful, he said “absolutely yes.”

“It will be financially sustainable, and we will bring Marineland back to the greatness it once was,” Kassewitz said.

Former Marineland Park Director Felicia Cook — who left the facility in February to ensure staff members who could care for the dolphins could stay on — said there are 17 dolphins at Marineland, many of which were born at Marineland and a few of which are third-generation Marineland dolphins. One such dolphin is Grandma Betty, whose daughter and granddaughter

resurface almost 4 miles of Nova Road, from Flomich Street in Holly Hill north to U.S. 1 in Ormond Beach. The open house will be held from 5:30-7 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 5, at The Casements, 25 Riverside Drive. According to a city notice, the project will include a raised median that will replace portions of the center two-way left-turn lane on Nova Road between Granada Boulevard and Willmette Avenue.

are also dolphins at Marineland. Kassewitz and Cook hope to ultimately run the attraction. They found an anonymous partner who is putting up $4 million to bid on the property and another $1.5 million for the cost of operations. But Kassewitz and his group were blocked from placing a bid, he said. After the judge’s decision on Oct. 27, Kassewitz and his group will have another chance to place a bid. If Marineland is sold to a developer, Cook said, when the dolphins are rehomed, the family units would likely be broken up. She said it would leave her brokenhearted to see the animals rehomed.

Cook believes Kassewitz’s vision of an animal-assisted therapy program could keep the oceanarium solvent as well: “It’s done in many places.” Overall, she said it was refreshing to hear the judge take up the interest of the dolphins’ care.

“It was like, ‘OK, somebody finally gets it,’” she said. “This is about the land that’s right there on the ocean, it’s about the animals that are living there.”

Email sierra@observer localnews.com.

The project will also add a new traffic signal at Old Kings Road and a directional median at Arroyo Parkway, which FDOT states will allow left turns onto Arroyo Parkway from Nova Road; traffic turning from Arroyo Parkway to Nova Road, however, will only be able to turn right. Other improvements include upgraded traffic and pedestrian signals, enhanced lighting at signalized intersections and the reconstruction of pedestrian curb ramps to comply with ADA standards. The design phase of the project is estimated to cost $2.6 million. The total construction cost is $16.8 million and construction is slated to start in summer 2026. Can’t attend the open house in person? FDOT is also offering an online webinar. Register at https://attendee. gotowebinar.com/register/6260663638790416219. To read more about the project, visit https://www.cfl

Persons are advised that, if they decide to appeal any decision made at these meetings/hearings, they will need a record of the proceedings and for such purpose, they may need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made, which record includes the testimony and evidence upon which the appeal is to be based, per Section 286.0105, Florida Statutes. In accordance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, persons needing assistance to participate in any of these proceedings should contact the City Clerk’s Office at 386-517-2000 Ext. 233 at least 48 hours prior to the meeting. Location Map

Marineland Dolphin Adventure. Photo by Brian McMillan
Old Salt Park in Flagler County.
Photo by Sierra Williams

Ormond women raise over $10K for cancer research

Tara Hoppe Fowinkle and Kathy Shanahan’s annual effort is inspired by Terry Gorski, a friend battling stage 4 breast cancer.

JARLEENE

When Ormond Beach resident Tara Hoppe Fowinkle was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2021, she had her friend Terry Gorski to lean on for support.

Fowinkle had gone in for a regular mammogram, which revealed a 1.5 centimeter nodule, so small Fowinkle said she couldn’t feel it, even after doctors showed her where it was.

After Fowinkle received her diagnosis, Gorski took her out to dinner with a group of girlfriends and gifted her a bag containing a blanket and other items to help her on her cancer journey. Gorski had gone through this before; she was first diagnosed with breast cancer in 2015 and was in remission at the time.

Due to carrying the BRCA2 gene, doctors recommended Fowinkle undergo a mastec -

tomy and a hysterectomy to ensure she remained cancerfree in the future.

Gorski was there every step of the way.

“She was my light and my biggest cheerleader,” Fowinkle said.

Shortly after that, doctors informed Gorski that her cancer was back. Today, Gorski is battling stage 4 metastatic breast cancer.

Fowinkle and Kathy Shanahan, another friend of Gorski’s, wanted to honor her. Last year, they formed a virtual walk for their Plantation Oaks neighborhood to participate in the annual Making Strides Against Breast Cancer movement. They put the virtual team together and raised almost $5,000 in two weeks.

This year, Fowinkle and Shanahan were able to raise double that — $10,103.91 — for their virtual team, Golden Warriors of Ormond Beach. The team ranked second in the nation for virtual teams raising money for the American Cancer Society. Fowinkle frequently participated in the walks in Orlando, where she previously lived. She thought about joining the Volusia walk in Daytona, but thought that an event in her neighborhood, one where

people could take part in a golf cart parade, would suit their needs better. So for the past two years, they’ve done just that. Over 100 people showed up for this year’s event on Saturday, Oct. 25, which also had a raffle, lunch and dessert. Gorski prepared all the food.

“She’s such a giver,” Shanahan said. “Anybody that moves into the community, she brings them a meal or flowers or something. Anytime someone’s sick, she’s the first one to ask them what she can do to help. It’s very hard to do things for her.”

A couple in the neighborhood donated tickets for luxury box seats for a Jacksonville Jaguars game. Their only stipulation was that another set of tickets go to Gorski and her husband.

Almost everyone that lives in their neighborhood knows Gorski, Shanahan said. She’s the type that is always looking to give back in any way that she can.

“She’s just such a real person,” Shanahan said. “She’s so interested in everyone’s story and she doesn’t brag. She’s just so genuine.”

Seeing all the golf carts, decked out in pink for breast cancer awareness, was heartwarming, Shanahan said.

Fowinkle agreed.

“I just want to freeze the moment — just to take it all in,” she said. “I truly do.”

“And just to know that we know how much it means to her,” Shanahan added.

According to the American Cancer Society, about 1 in 8 women in the U.S. will be diagnosed with breast cancer in their lifetime. Making Strides aims to raise awareness and funds to support breast cancer research.

That’s why Shanahan and Fowinkle have vowed to host a Making Strides event every year in Gorski’s honor.

“She always says that if they haven’t found anything to save her, she wants them to be able to keep finding things until it can save someone else,” Shanahan said.

Because decades of cancer research have helped women like Fowinkle become cancerfree.

“If the little annual thing that we do in our community every year is going to propel that even further, that makes me happy,” Fowinkle said. “I don’t want anyone to have to go through what Terry’s going through. So finding a cure is important.”

NEWS BRIEFS

Flagler Cares’

Carrie Baird receives News Service award

Carrie Baird, chief executive officer of Flagler Cares, has been recognized by the News Service of Florida as one of the state’s “Women Shaping Florida’s Future.” Baird received the organization’s Above and Beyond Award during a ceremony held on Oct. 8 in Tallahassee.

The award honors women across Florida who demonstrate exceptional leadership and innovation in their fields. Baird is the first Flagler County leader to receive the distinction.

Baird said she was humbled and proud to see the organization’s efforts acknowledged at the state level.

“I was encouraged that our accomplishments were seen as significant and noteworthy,” she said. “It’s an honor to see Flagler Cares recognized for the impact we’re making right here in Flagler County.”

Former Flagler County commissioner and Flagler Cares co-founder Barbara Revels nominated Baird for the award, crediting her with turning an early community vision into a thriving organization. “We had the idea, but she did the work to make it real,” Revels said.

Flagler

School Board’s Lauren Ramirez named Emerging Leader

Flagler County School Board member Lauren Ramirez has been named to The Florida School Boards Association’s newest class of Emerging Leaders.

Of the 64 new School Board

members elected throughout the state in 2024, Ramirez is one of 16 to earn this distinction.

To be named an Emerging Leader, School Board members must complete and document a minimum of 48 hours of professional development within one year of election. These hours are earned through participation in FSBA’s New School Board Member Training, Parts I and II, along with attendance to at least two of the FSBA’s three forums — School Finance, Policy Governance and Bargaining 101.

“I am so excited to recognize Lauren as an Emerging Leader,” said Tina Pinkoson, FSBA’s director of leadership services. “Since her election in 2024, her commitment to the students of Flagler County has been evident through her dedication to professional growth. Lauren’s willingness to learn and her engagement in training opportunities have laid a strong foundation for her work on the board.”

Flagler inmates wrap up graphics on FTC trailer Inmates in the Flagler County jail’s Homeward Bound program vinyl applications class recently completed the graphics and wrapping of a 53-foot-long trailer to be used in the commercial truck driving program at Flagler Technical College.

The Homeward Bound program at the Sheriff Perry Hall Inmate Detention Facility is a collaborative effort between Flagler Schools and the Flagler County Sheriff’s Office. Vinyl applications is the oldest class in the five-yearold program. Other classes offered through FTC are HVAC pre-apprenticeship, culinary food management, electrician pre-apprenticeship and basic auto body collision and prep for painting, which was added this past year.

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Superior: Local high school marching bands get top marks in state tests

Matanzas, Mainland and FPC received straight superiors.

Seabreeze got its first superior in six years.

All four local high school marching bands in Flagler County and north Volusia County have taken home

superior ratings for their Marching Band Music Performance Assessments on Oct. 25.

The MPA is a competitive assessment in which marching bands perform their shows for judges and are scored across several categories: visual performance, general effect, two music scores and one score for auxiliary, or the color guard. Bands can receive a poor, fair, good, excellent or superior rating in each cate -

gory, with superior being the top rating a band can receive.

The Seabreeze and Mainland High School bands performed at Hagerty High School in Oviedo with 14 other marching bands in the District 6 group.

This was the Mainland High School marching band’s fourth consecutive year receiving superiors. The band has over 100 students who competed in the MPA, performing a medley of songs from the band Earth, Wind and Fire, featuring songs like “September,” “Boogie Wonderland” and “After the Love Has Gone.”

Gregory Dukes has been the Mainland band director for the last seven years. He said he and his assistant director arranged the music so that each section — percussion, brass and woodwind — were spotlighted in a portion of the score.

The Buccaneers received straight superior ratings across all five categories.

“The greatest joy of a director,” Dukes said, “is watching students grow. Seeing them where they started and watching them excel and then to reach these high achievements.”

Dukes said he works with the students on their fundamental skills in preparation

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1 - 9AM TO 5PM

for a performance like MPA.

That includes tone and ear training exercises, technical skills and music reading exercises.

“You can’t have a great band without great musicianship,” Dukes said.

Not only does marching band teach actionable skills and discipline the students will use for the rest of their lives, but there are also opportunities for some students to take leadership roles.

In Mainland, two seniors lead the band as drum majors: Kailyn Wilson, who plays alto saxophone, and Trent Riddick, from the percussion section.

Dukes said both students did well this year.

In Seabreeze’s case, this is the first superior rating they’ve received in six years, Seabreeze Principal Tucker Harris said in a morning announcements video message on Oct. 27.

“Greatness is no accident. Hope is not a strategy, luck is not a strategy,” he said. “Band, you’ve been working hard, and then, boom. Superior. It’s not accidental, it’s not luck.”

According to the Florida School of Music Association’s website with the MPA results, Seabreeze, with its 77 band students, received four of five superior ratings and one

excellent rating in the auxiliary category, for an overall rating of superior.

Dukes said that though his band received top scores, there is always room for improvement, from the overall sound to marching consistency. His students are success-driven and have high expectations, he said.

Dukes is teaching students a mindset that will stay with them for years to come.

“We have a thing that we say: ‘Superior is non-negotiable,’” Dukes said. “It’s not just in a score that we receive when we get evaluated, but it’s in everything that we do. It’s in how we rehearse, it’s in how we come to school. It’s in how we think. That’s the mindset that my students have taken.”

PIRATES AND BULLDOGS CONTINUE SUPERIOR RATING STREAKS

Both the Matanzas High School and Flagler Palm Coast High School marching bands also received straight superiors, continuing their streaks of success.

The MHS band has only been competing consecutively since the 2021-2022 school year, according to the FSMA website. It has consistently earned superior ratings, with all but one year’s performance taking home straight

superiors.

The FPC Marching Bulldogs have been competing consecutively for 22 years — with the exception of the 2020 MPA that was canceled — accord ing to the FPC Facebook page. The band has earned superiors every year. The two Flagler County marching bands competed with 15 other marching bands at the assessment in the District 21 group, performing at Bartram Trail High School in St. Johns County.

An’jeli Seppala performs with the FPC band at halftime.
Photo by Brent Woronoff
Mainland High School band. Photo by Brian McMillan
The Matanzas High School band warming up before MPA. Courtesy photo
The Seabreeze marching band plays after the homecoming game win against Atlantic at the Daytona Stadium on Friday, Oct. 3. Photo by Michele Meyers

Deep roots: Garden Club at Palm Coast celebrates 50 years

The club celebrated during the Florida Federation of Garden Clubs district meeting at Hammock Dunes.

BRENT WORONOFF

ASSOCIATE EDITOR

In 1975, 12 residents of Palm Coast got together to establish a garden club. Fifty years later, the Garden Club at Palm Coast has 98 members with deep roots in the community.

The club celebrated its 50th anniversary on Thursday, Oct. 23, at the Hammock Dunes Club while also hosting the Florida Federation of Garden Clubs’ District VI fall meeting.

“We’ve been looking forward to the celebration,” FFGC President Christy Linke said before the meeting. “We’re lucky to be here for that.”

The FFGC has 153 clubs in 12 districts from the Panhandle to Key West, Linke said. District VI includes clubs in Brevard, Volusia and Flagler counties totaling 950 mem-

bers. When the district was looking for a host for its fall meeting, Garden Club at Palm Coast President Denise Garcia said she raised her hand right away. “I said, ‘We’re doing it,’ because I knew it was going to be a special time for us,” Garcia said.

Over the years, the local garden club has grown and branched out like a Southern live oak. It hosts the annual Spring Festival the first Saturday in April at Flagler Palm Coast High School. The club’s Propagation Guild grows a lot of the plants that are sold at the festival. The club’s Arranger’s Guild focuses on floral design for homes, churches or flower shows and offers floral design classes.

The club hosts an annual competition for high school digital media students to design the cover of the Garden Club’s yearbook. It celebrates Arbor Day by planting a tree within the community. It celebrates a home’s landscape with the Selection of the Month.

The club offers agriculture,

horticulture or environmental sciences related college scholarships to high school seniors and sponsors two youngsters each year to FFGC’s Wekiva Youth Camp. And it sponsors junior garden clubs at Belle Terre and Rymfire elementary schools.

The club has funneled FFGC grants to the Palm Coast Historical Society and Museum to replenish their garden in 2021 and to families to rebuild their yards after storms.

“This club is awesome,” said Garcia, who has been club president for three years. “You don’t have to be a gardener to be in the club. You can come and learn how to garden.”

She said the first thing she did when she moved to Palm Coast 11 years ago was to find a garden club. She had belonged to the garden club previously in Needham, Massachusetts.

“That was where I actually learned about garden clubs,” she said “I grew up in Miami, Florida. I had my own flower shop, and I didn’t know about garden clubs.”

Club membership is $50 a year, $65 for couples. The club meets every second Monday from September to May at 11:30 a.m. at Club 51 in Palm Coast. Visit garden clubatpalmcoast.org.

Vohras earn November garden honors

The home of Gloria and Raj Vohra of Florida Park Drive is The Garden Club at Palm Coast’s Selection of the Month for November.

The Vohras have lived in Palm Coast for 24 years. Gloria is originally from Puerto Rico, and Raj from India. Raj owned an HVAC company for 22 years.

He serviced, repaired and installed heat pumps in the area. Gloria provides residential cleaning services and assists Raj with his business operations.

Raj’s retirement hobby is making wooden furniture, as well as wooden pictures and mirror frames.

Their front yard has curb appeal with Crossandra firecracker flowers, pink curcuma gingers, mammy crotons, canna lilies, Mexican heather, Egyptian star cluster pentas, agapanthus and dracaena.

There are two sabal palms, a European fern palm, a papaya tree, two crape myrtles — dark pink and light pink — as well as a Japanese photinia topi-

Sharon Smith, Debbie Lashinsky, Ann Fleming and Marinus Grootenboer volunteer at the plant sale at the Garden Club at Palm Coast’s 50th anniversary celebration and the Florida Federation of Garden Clubs’ District VI fall meeting at the Hammock Dunes Club.
Garden Club at Palm Coast President Denise Garcia poses next to the display of the club’s 50-year timeline, clippings, books and DVDs. Photos by Brent Woronoff
The yard of Gloria and Raj Vohra of Florida Park Drive is the Garden Club at Palm Coast’s Selection of the Month for November.
Courtesy photo
Flagler County Deputy Administrator Percy Sayles. Courtesy photo

MY VIEW RANDY FINE, U.S. REPRESENTATIVE

Explaining my ‘Path to Florida Springs National Park Act’

HR 4656 would commission a study to see whether Florida springs could become a national park.

I’ve been taking my family to the Florida springs for years. My sons grew up jumping into these waters, and like so many of you, we made unforgettable memories here. A lot of us have swam, hunted, and built our homes and businesses here. These places are not just part of our environment; they are part of who we are as Floridians. This is why I want to address some misinformation about HR 4656, the Path to Florida Springs National Park Act. Your voice and

input are important, so I want you to know what my bill really does and why I believe it is worth becoming law. Yellowstone has the largest collection of geysers in America, and Florida has the largest collection of natural springs in the world. Both are special and worthy of protection because they are unique. My bill does not turn the springs into a national park overnight. It is a proposal to commission a special resource study to see whether some or all of our springs merit a national park recommendation. The study would follow, which may take years, and would incorporate feedback from federal officials and local stakeholders like you. If that study determines part or all of the springs warrants a national park designation, that can be followed by an additional round of legislation changing the status of the springs to a national park. For anything to happen, each legislative step would still need to pass the House and Senate and then be

signed into law by the president. It would not be a hasty process. If I have learned anything in Washington, it is that there is no such thing as an easy bill.

A special resource study and two separate rounds of legislation are a high bar to hurdle for the springs to become a national park. For perspective, New River Gorge, the most recently added national park, by some accounts took more than 40 years to achieve that status. The springs are one of Florida’s crown jewels, and the rest of the country should see them for what they are: one of America’s greatest national treasures. I love our national treasures, which is why when my boys were born I promised to take them to every national park, a journey we are now close to completing. Having seen so many of them, I can say with certainty that Florida’s springs are just as worthy of the designation as Yosemite, Zion, and the Grand Canyon. This bill does not close off land, ban hunting, or impose any new rules. Absolutely

nothing has changed or will change if it becomes law. There is no new land taken from the state, and it does not put up fences where none exist today. What it does is open a conversation and start a research process. This bill is an opportunity to examine the environmental, recreational, cultural, and economic pros and cons of making the springs a national park. It is an opportunity to look at whether national recognition would help bring tourism and federal resources to protect these springs for future generations, or whether the status quo is the best path forward. That determination will not be made in secret. It will be made through a transparent process with input from you. Some of you have called in and said Florida has done a good job protecting our parks already. I agree. Our state parks are the best in the nation, and the people who work there are second to none. Asking whether our springs deserve the recognition of being America’s next national park does not

MY VIEW CARMEN BALGOBIN, VOLUSIA SUPERINTENDENT

diminish what Florida has done. It builds on it. All I am doing is asking you, yes you, if we should share them on an even greater stage, so that when people talk about Yellowstone or the Everglades, they also talk about Silver Springs or Juniper Run.

I introduced this bill because I want to hear from you. I am grateful for every letter, email, and phone call my office has received. Even when you disagree with me, your input makes the idea better. If you have concerns, questions, or ideas about this bill, or anything else, I invite you to share them with me.

You can visit my website at fine.house.gov to leave your comments or reach my office by phone. My staff and I want to hear from you, because the voices of local residents are the most important part of this process. Together, we can make sure that the future of Florida’s springs reflects the love we all share for them, whether that’s as a National Park, a National Forest, or something in between.

Randy Fine represents District 6 in the U.S. House.

Community engagement ‘holds us accountable to the highest standards’

I’m writing today to share important information about the significant progress Volusia County Schools has achieved, to address questions that have been raised in our community, and to outline our ongoing commitment to every student we serve. Our community deserves transparent, fact-based communication about our schools — both our successes and our challenges. The passion and engagement I see from parents, teachers, and community members reflects how deeply you care about our children’s education. That commitment inspires us every day, and it holds us accountable to the highest standards.

CELEBRATING PROGRESS

The 2024-25 school year brought meaningful achievements that belong to our entire community: For the first time since 2008-09, Volusia County Schools earned an “A” rating from the Florida Department of Education. We showed improvement in 10 of 12 state accountability areas. The number of “A” schools increased from 17 to 29, and for the first time in more than a decade, 100% of our traditional schools earned an A, B, or C rating — with no D or F schools.

Our students are achieving at higher levels. Eighth-grade math proficiency jumped from 40% to 56%. Geometry proficiency increased from 47% to 62%. Critically, all major student subgroups — including Black and Hispanic students, students with disabilities, and English language learners — showed significant gains.

Our graduation rate reached 94%, the second highest among the 11 dis-

tricts in the Central Florida Coalition. Dual enrollment participation grew from 560 to 717 students, with graduates earning dual enrollment credentials increasing from 108 to 144. These numbers represent students who are better prepared for college and careers.

Our students’ talents extend beyond academics. For the second consecutive year, we were named one of the Best Communities for Music Education by The National Association of Music Merchants (NAMM) Foundation. Our students have performed at Carnegie Hall and in London’s New Year’s Day Parade — representing Volusia County on international stages.

These achievements reflect the daily dedication of our teachers, staff, students, and families. They are real, they are earned, and they matter.

GRADUATION RATES

I want to directly address questions that have been raised about our graduation

A brief history of Halloween

WRITER

Halloween is not an official federal holiday in the United States. It is a cultural holiday celebrated annually on Oct. 31, and is especially popular among children.

rates. Our 94% graduation rate represents real students who earned real diplomas by meeting Florida’s graduation requirements. I understand why stakeholders ask questions when rates improve — it’s a sign of healthy engagement and accountability. When students struggle to stay on track for graduation, we don’t adjust numbers — we adjust our support. Here are the steps we took to ensure progress for our students:

„ Credit recovery programs allow students who failed a course to demonstrate mastery of that content through additional instruction and assessment. Students must complete the required curriculum and pass assessments that verify they’ve learned the material. These aren’t shortcuts; they’re second chances with the same academic standards.

„ Alternative learning environments serve students whose needs aren’t met in traditional settings — whether due to work schedules, family

responsibilities, health issues, or learning differences. These programs maintain the same graduation requirements while providing flexible paths to meet them.

„ Targeted interventions include tutoring, mentoring, attendance support, and family engagement — all designed to keep students in school and on track.

Every one of these approaches is monitored for academic integrity. Course completion requires demonstrated mastery and diplomas represent our students’ genuine achievement of state standards.

OUR ESE COMMITMENT

I want to be direct about our work supporting students with disabilities, because this community deserves honesty about both progress and ongoing obligations.

Volusia County Schools is operating under a settlement agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) that requires specific improvements in how we

serve students in Exceptional Student Education (ESE). This settlement exists because we needed to do better, and we have.

Here’s what we’ve done:

„ Reduced the number of state complaints related to ESE services through improved compliance systems and proactive problem-solving with families

„ Implemented new processes for evaluating students and developing individualized education programs

„ Increased training for staff on inclusive practices and legal requirements

„ Strengthened communication between ESE staff and families

Meeting all requirements of the DOJ settlement remains an ongoing priority. This work is complex, it takes time, and we’re committed to getting it right.

Read Superintendent Carmen Balgobin’s full op-ed online at observerlocalnews.com

The modern Halloween holiday evolved from the ancient Celtic pagan festival of Samhain, which marked a pivotal point in the agricultural year, and has been traced back over 2,000 years. It originated in Europe, specifically in the area that is now Ireland, the United Kingdom and northern France.

The festival of Samhain celebrated the Celtic New Year and was observed on or around Nov. 1. It marked the end of harvest season (the lighter part of the year) and the beginning of winter (the darker part of the year), which is the time that Celts believed

Halloween is a day of widespread observance throughout the nation where activities such as carving jack-o’-lanterns, costume parties, decorating homes and businesses with festive and spooky items and trickor- treating are traditions enjoyed by the masses. The Halloween holiday season prompts some of the largest national sales of candy due to purchases for trick-ortreaters.

the boundary between the physical and spirit worlds could be breached allowing spirits to cross over. Included in the ancient celebrations were the honoring of family ancestors, preparing food for the living and the dead, dressing in costumes and wearing masks in an attempt to confuse and chase harmful spirits away, lighting communal bonfires to burn the bones of slaughtered livestock and the ritual of animal sacrifice.

In the 8th century, the Catholic Church led by Pope Gregory III gave rise to modern Halloween by creating a vigil on All Hallows’ Eve (a day of fasting and praying celebrated on Oct. 31 in preparation for

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Our president is Donald Trump

Dear Editor:

Thank you for printing

Ron Nowviskie’s letter to the editor, “No Kings protesters are out of touch.” On the

front page of the Ormond Beach Observer we see a sign saying, “Not my president.” Unless that person is a citizen of another country, they should know now, that the elected president of the United States is Donald Trump.

Those that do know, may wonder why the Ormond Beach Observer chose it necessary to print two pages about the protest alienating so many readers who voted for our president. I don’t always agree with our

All Saints’ Day). All Saints’ Day is a feast celebrated on Nov. 1 which honors all the saints of the church, whether they are known or unknown.

The name “Halloween” is an Old English term that evolved from “All Hallows’ Eve.” It was blended from ancient Celtic traditions and later Christian influences.

As Irish and other Catholic immigrants found their way to the United States (particularly during the 19th century), they brought their customs and traditions, including the Catholic celebration of Halloween. By the 1920s and 1930s Halloween was adopted into the culture of the nation as a community-centered holiday which features black cats, parades, parties, playing mischievous pranks, skeletons, trick-or-treating (which

president, but it is disturbing that the Observer printed a photo of a woman with a smile on her face that appears to encourage another assassination attempt on our president’s life.

BARBARA SANDBERG Ormond Beach

originated from the ancient Celtic practice of leaving food for spirits and evolved into the modern practice of groups of people dressed in costumes going door-to-door expecting treats to be handed out), and supernatural entities such as ghosts, the Grim Reaper, vampires, witches and zombies.

Over the past several generations, modern Halloween traditions have expanded to include watching horror movies and visiting creepy attractions like corn mazes, eerie cemeteries, haunted houses and spooky trails which are all designed to scare and thrill.

LOCAL ACTIVITIES

The Palm Coast Fire Department’s Fire Station 21 hosts an annual haunted house event called “Hall of Terror” which features terrifying rooms inspired by horror films. The Hidden Trails Halloween Fest at the Hidden Trails Community Center in Bunnell is hosted by Flagler County Government and features carnival games, food, drinks, a DJ and a costume party for children. Halloween events in Ormond Beach include the Trunk or Treat at Prince of Peace Parish where children dressed in costumes walk from parked car to car to receive Halloween treats, unique Ghost Stories at The Casements which include a tale of ghost hauntings on the mansion’s third floor, and the Tanger Outlets Halloween Party which features costume contests, crafts, giveaways, musical entertainment and trick-or-treating at various stores.

Note to protesters: Trump presidency is democracy in action

Dear Editor: Note to No Kings protesters: What you are watching is democracy. Trump achieved a landslide victory less than a year ago based on his promise to do exactly what he is now doing. Most Americans voted for this and couldn’t be happier. More will vote for Vance in 2028 to continue the America first agenda to Make America Great Again.

ADAM LANGE Palm Coast

trunk-or-treaters.

Spooks & smiles

YOUR TOWN

Vocalist Mark Holley to perform at the Ormond Beach Library on Nov. 12

Next month, the Ormond Beach Regional Library will welcome accomplished vocalist Mark Holley for a performance of his celebrated program, “Timeless Classics.” Holley will perform at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 12, in the library auditorium.

He will perform hits from legendary artists like Frank Sinatra, Ray Charles, Tony Bennett, Elvis Presley, the Temptations and more. This is a free program sponsored by the Friends of the Ormond Beach Library. The public is invited to attend.

Chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution honors four members

The Daytona-Ormond Chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution presented Gold 250th Anniversary Medals to four of its members

during its October chapter meeting.

The recipients were:

„ Bill Elder, of DeLand

„ Cara Elder, of DeLand

„ Kelly Crumley, of Ponce Inlet

„ William Ashmore, of Ormond Beach

According to a press release,

BUILDING COMMUNITY, ONE HOME AT A TIME.

Realty Pro Assured hosted its annual Community Appreciation Night trunk-or-treat at The Casements on Friday, Oct. 24. This year, Realty Pros and O’Quinn Insurance brought more Halloween spirit with a costume contest, a mystery box contest and a glass pumpkin filled with candy corn — guests were invited to guess the total to win a $50 gift card. Attendees also enjoyed complimentary hot dogs, cotton candy, snow cones and water. To end the evening, the city hosted its monthly Movies on the Halifax event, featuring a screening of “Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice.”

–SYDNEY TEVIN

the gold medal “recognizes those compatriots who participate and lead events which publicly educate, recognize, honor, and celebrate the heroes of the American Revolution.”

Additionally, Ryan Estes, of Port Orange, was inducted into the chapter. Estes is a descendant of John Hart, a delegate to the Continental Congress who signed the Declaration of Independence.

Bethune-Cookman University launches ‘B-CU Global’ platform

Grammy-winning songwriter Sevyn Streeter was the first student to enroll in “B-CU Global,” an online learning platform that expands access to Bethune-Cookman University’s accredited bachelor’s and master’s degree programs.

According to a press release, Streeter’s decision to pursue her degree marks “a powerful start for the initiative, which is designed to help people with even the busiest schedules pursue their education goals.”

The program is tailored for three groups: veterans, working adults and “reclaimed Wildcats,” or students who started degrees at B-CU, but didn’t finish.

“The ‘B-CU Global’ initiative builds on Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune’s unwavering belief that education should be accessible to all,” B-C President Dr. Albert Mosley said in the press release. “For more than a century, B-CU has empowered students to rise, achieve and lead. Today, through the power of technology, we are carrying that vision forward — opening doors for veterans, working adults and Wildcats returning to finish what they started. This is ‘B-CU Rising — All of us. All in.’”

“B-CU Global” gives students the ability to set their own pace for learning, including weekend and evening classes, as well as gives credit for prior professional experience and provides payment plans. Registration opens midOctober. Classes will begin in Spring 2026. Students can pursue bachelor’s degrees in psychology, criminal justice, business administration, interdisciplinary studies, and national security and global affairs. Graduate students can choose from master’s programs in nursing, Christian ministry, business administration, organizational leadership, exceptional student education, and integrative environmental science. Additional programs — including Master of Arts in Teaching, Master of Science in Education, and the Educator Preparation Institute — will launch soon.

With a reputation built on trust, integrity, and results, we’re here to guide families through every chapter of homeownership. Our commitment goes beyond transactions—it’s about strengthening the communities we’re privileged to call home.

Ormond Beach, let’s grow together.

Bill Elder, Cara Elder, Kelly Crumley and SAR Chapter President William Ashmore. Courtesy photo
James Caputo and Gavin Kwiatek pose together doing the signature hand motions from the popular “6-7” meme.
Emily Hunter, Talia Sznapstajler, Grace Gildon, Hadie Macdonald, Elle Iannarelli, and Ava Messina smiled for the camera in their unique, freestyle costumes.
Yenaya Gavillan and Izzy Hans cosplay Kagamine Rin and Len from “Vocaloid.”
Costume contest winners (front) Elise Emberley, Ava Emberley, Olivia Kuczmera and Knox Deaton stand with the judges: (back) Bill Navarra, co-owner of Realty Pros Assurred; Ormond Beach Mayor Jason Leslie, and City Commissioners Kristin Deaton, Harold Briley and Travis Sargent. The children won the categories for most unique, scariest, cutest, and most original. Photos by Sydney Tevin
Ashley Shriver, Shora Peterson, and Aiyana Russel hand out candy for

THURSDAY, OCT. 30

WHAT IS THE FUTURE OF VOLUSIA COUNTY BEACHES?

When: 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.

Where: Ocean Center, 101 N. Atlantic Ave., Daytona Beach

Details: Volusia’s Deputy County Manager Suzanne Konchan, Coastal Director Jessica Fentress and representatives from Taylor Engineering, the county’s coastal engineering consultants, will discuss the ongoing Volusia County Beach Feasibility Study. Hosted by the League of Women Voters of Volusia County and includes lunch. There will be complimentary parking in the south lot. Costs $20 per person.

AUTUMN IN PIEDMONT

When: 6-8 p.m.

Where: Ormond Memorial Art Museum and Gardens, 78 E. Granada Blvd., Ormond Beach

Details: Join OMAM on the museum’s rooftop terrace for a four-course seasonal food and wine pairing inspired by Piedmont, Italy. Enjoy small bites and wine, courtesy of Beach + Vine and Chef Synaca from Homegrown Catering. Costs $45 for museum members and $55 for non-members. Register at www.ormondartmuseum.org/ classes-programs.

HALL OF TERROR

When: 7-10 p.m. Thursday and Friday, Oct. 30-31

Where: Palm Coast Fire Station 21, 9 Corporate Drive, Palm Coast Details: For the 24th year, the Palm Coast Fire Department is hosting this haunted house and show event. From 6-7 p.m. on both nights, there will be a sensory-sensitive hour. There will be food trucks on site. Free admission.

CIRQUE DE PARIS

When: 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct.

30; 5 p.m. Friday, Oct. 31; 1:30 p.m., 4:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.

Saturday, Nov. 1; and 1:30 p.m. and 4:30 p..m. Sunday, Nov. 2

Where: Tanger Outlets, 1100 Cornerstone Blvd., Daytona Beach

Details: Cirque de Paris, presented by Anouchka Bouglione, makes its debut in Daytona with a 90-minute show featuring an ensemble of European circus artists including BMX trick riders, illusionists, aerialists, acrobats and clowns. Tickets cost start at $30 for children and $35 for adults. Visit https:// cirquedeparis.com/city/ daytona-beach-fl.

FRIDAY, OCT. 31

CRAFT EXTRAVAGANZA

When: 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday, Oct. 31; and 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 1

Where: Flagler Woman’s Club, 1524 S. Central Ave., Flagler Beach

Details: Join the Flagler Woman’s Club for its Craft Extravaganza. Choose from the assortment of handcrafted items including home décor, holiday decorations, jewelry, children’s gifts, pet gifts and more. There will be a bake sale and raffles. Lunch is available from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. For more information, call Penny at 386-447-0399.

TRICKS & TREATS

When: 3-5 p.m.

Where: Florida Agricultural Museum, 7900 Old Kings Road, Palm Coast

Details: Start your Halloween celebrations with a free event at the Florida Agricultural Museum. There will be pumpkins, a costume contest for humans and pets, a candy cannon blast, games and more.

TRUNK-OR-TREAT

When: 5-7 p.m.

Where: Tomoka United Methodist Church, 1000 Old

Tomoka Road, Ormond Beach

Details: Tomoka United Methodist Church is hosting a trunk-or-treat featuring candy, games, prizes, goodie bags, cookies, cider, juice and popcorn. A DJ will play Halloween tunes. Free event.

TRUNK-OR-TREAT

When: 5-6 p.m.

Where: Palm Coast United Methodist Church, 6500 Belle Terre Parkway, Palm Coast

Details: Join Palm Coast United Methodist Church for a trunk-or-treat. Enjoy some Halloween fun, costumes and candy.

FCSO TRUNK-OR-TREAT

When: 6-8 p.m.

Where: Kim C. Hammond

Justice Center, 1769 E. Moody Blvd., Building 1, Bunnell

Details: Join the Flagler County Sheriff’s Office on Halloween night for a drive-thru trunk-or-treat. Free event.

‘DANCE WITH THE DEAD’

When: 6 p.m. and 8 p.m.

Where: Zanzibar Blu, 250 S. Palmetto Ave., Daytona Beach

Details: Attend a tasteful burlesque show featuring Ormond Beach dancers, jazz singing and spooky ghost stories based on the book, “Haunted Daytona Beach.”

Guests will enjoy three complimentary cocktails during the hour-long performance. Attendees must be 21 and older. Tickets cost $47.93. Visit https://dancewiththedead2025.eventbrite.com.

TRUNK-OR-TREAT

When: 6-8 p.m.

Where: Parkview Church, 5435 Belle Terre Parkway, Palm Coast

Details: Grab a candy bucket and don your costume for this trunk-or-treat. Free. Visit parkviewlife.com/events.

LIFECOAST CHURCH

TRUNK-OR-TREAT

When: 6:30-8:30 p.m.

Where: Future Lifecoast Church site, Park Street, Palm

Coast Details: Lifecoast Church is inviting the community to a trunk-or-treat event at its future site, located in Town Center at the corner of Park Street and Central Avenue.

SATURDAY, NOV. 1 PICKLEBALL SPOOKTACULAR TOURNAMENT

When: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Where: Palm Coast Southern Recreation Center, 1290 Belle Terre Parkway, Palm Coast

Details: Presented by Oceanside Beach Bar and Grill, this pickleball tournament benefits Flagler Strong for youth sports. Costumes encouraged. Costs $20 per player. Register at https:// tinyurl.com/mm7jyus6.

SECOND ANNUAL VETERAN HEALTH SEMINAR

When: 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Where: Ormond Beach Regional Library, 30 S. Beach St., Ormond Beach Details: Healthier, Wealthier, Wiser Inc. is hosting its second annual Veteran Health Seminar. Guest speakers include Charles Fordham II, coordinator of Veterans Services at Daytona State College; Shirley Thompson, registered nurse, VA Volunteer and retired Bethune-Cookman University educator; Abriel Gardner, VA mental health specialist, and more. There will be health screenings and lunch. Free and open to the public. RSVP to investinhealth2022@gmail.com.

ORMOND ART WALK

When: 3-7 p.m.

Where: Ormond Beach MainStreet Arts District, 128

W. Granada Blvd., Ormond

Beach

Details: Join Ocean Art Gallery, Frame of Mind, Art Spotlight, The Studio by Artist Angel Lowden, the Ormond Memorial Art Museum and more on the first Saturday of each month for art openings and art events.

FOR THE LOVE OF QUINCY JONES

When: 4-6:30 p.m.

Where: Museum of Arts and Sciences, 352 S. Nova Road, Daytona Beach Details: Attend this concert celebrating the musical legacy of Quincy Jones. Tickets cost $65 for general seating and $75 for VIP. Doors open at 3:45 p.m. Visit https:// www.adanteproduction.com/ event-details/for-the-love-ofquincy-jones.

GOONS & GOBLINS

‘HALLOWEEN REWIND’

DANCE PARTY

When: 7 p.m. to 1 a.m.

Where: Palm Coast Lanes, 11 Old Kings Road N., Palm Coast

Details: Sip & Bowl presents this dance party with DJ Big Mike Brown. There will be a costume contest, swag giveaways and free drink tastings. Admission costs $25 and includes two hours of unlimited bowling.

SUNDAY, NOV. 2

KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS PANCAKE BREAKFAST

When: 8 a.m. to noon

MONDAY, NOV. 3

HALIFAX HEALTH

EDUCATIONAL SERIES:

St. Elizabeth Ann Seton hosts mass for patron saint

St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Church recently celebrated its patron St, Elizabeth Ann Seton with a special mass, a candlelight procession and an Adoration of the Blessed Sacrament.

Fifty years ago, on Sept. 14, 1975, St. Elizabeth Ann Seton was canonized by Pope Saint Paul VI. This was a historic moment as she was the first American-born woman to be declared a saint. The Thursday and Friday’s Jubilee mass was presided over by Father

SAFETY TIPS FOR SENIORS

When: 1 p.m.

Where: Ormond Beach

Regional Library, 30 S. Beach St., Ormond Beach

Details: Halifax Health educator Annette Tracy, a registered nurse, will discuss safety tips for seniors. Free event.

TUESDAY, NOV. 4 FILM SCREENING: ‘JAWS’ When: 6-8 p.m.

Where: Southeast Museum of Photography, Madorsky Theater, 1200 W. International Speedway Blvd., Daytona Beach Details: See a screening of “Jaws” in celebration of the movie’s 50th anniversary. Free and open to the public. Popcorn

WEDNESDAY,

Where: Social Hall at St. Brendan Catholic Church, 1000 Ocean Shore Blvd., Ormond Beach Details: The Father Eamonn Gill Council 13018 Knights of Columbus will serve their famous pancake breakfast. The meal includes all the pancakes you can eat, scrambled eggs, a sausage link, orange juice and endless coffee. Costs $6 for adults; children under 12 eat free. All are welcome.

FOCUS ON FAITH

Brought to you by: Stephenson, Wilcox and Associates

Robert Trujillo and Bishop Felipe J. Estevez. A Facebook post stated that “her journey to sainthood was marked by deep faith, perseverance, and love. A wife, mother, widow, teacher, and foundress of the Sisters of Charity, she gave her life to God’s service and became a true example of holiness in ordinary life.”

The Chapel to host fifth annual car show on Nov. 2 The Chapel in Ormond Beach is putting on its fifth annual car show on Nov. 2 at 1805 N. U.S. 1. The car show has free admission and will have awards, a barbecue potluck, children’s games and a bounce house.

The scream team: PCFD’s 24th Hall of Terror has Friday the 13th theme

Get spooked from 7-10 p.m. on Oct. 30 and 31 at Fire Station 21, located at 9 Corporate Drive in Palm Coast.

SIERRA WILLIAMS STAFF

Palm Coast Fire Department

Lt. Dan Driscoll said he has been wanting to create a Friday the 13th themed Hall of Terror for years.

“It’s a passion for me,” he said. “It’s my favorite franchise, and we’ve never been able to pull it off in the past.”

The Hall of Terror is a free Halloween event put on by the Palm Coast Fire Department that is open for anyone looking for a good scare. It’s held on Oct. 30 and 31 from 7-10 p.m. at Fire Station 21, at 9 Corporate Drive in Palm Coast. Parking will be available at the lot adjacent to the station and across the street in the Kohl’s shopping center parking lot.

This year, the Fire Department can perform a Friday the

13th house, Driscoll said, primarily because of the number of volunteers who joined in.

Over 100 people have come together to create the 24th annual Hall of Terror, putting together better lighting and sound effects and creating a horror house themed with the

eight Friday the 13th movies.

Back again in its own sequel showing is the low-sensory hour from 6-7 p.m., providing a “more comfortable experience for individuals” who may need or prefer reduced lights and sounds, according to a Palm Coast press release. Driscoll said last year was the first time they had tried out a low-sensory time, and the kids who attended loved it.

“We walk them through and not as much smoke or lights, not as much jumping out and scaring,” he said. “Just so they can be in the environment and get to enjoy the show like everyone else.”

New this year are outdoor sets and improved light and sound effects, which Driscoll credits to volunteer Kaelum White. White is a professional DJ for his day job.

White said he joined around three years prior as part of the production team after attending the Hall of Terror for years. He runs all the lighting, audio

and visual for the show.

This year, White said, they have added more lighting and scenes in each room, similar to what someone might experience at Halloween Horror Nights. Each new section of the set incorporates different props, lighting and sounds from each of the eight Friday the 13th movies.

“The sound is going to be really good this year,” he said. “I’m really excited about it. Each room is going to have kind of its own sound effects and different things going on.”

Over 5,000 people attended the event last year, but Driscoll said he didn’t think they could “physically get any more people” through the line than in 2024.

Regardless, he said, the team will just cap the line at 10 p.m., not shut down the event at 10.

“We get everybody who’s in line by 10,” he said. “You got here on time, we’ll get you through.”

The 25th annual Palm Coast Fire Department’s Hall of Terror is themed after Friday the 13th. Photos by Sierra Williams
The 25th annual Hall of Terror depicts classic props and scenes from each of the eight Friday the 13th movies.
Patrick Appolonia and Lt. Dan Driscoll showcase discuss this year’s upgraded light and sound effects, designed to enhance suspense.
The 25th annual Hall of Terror depicts classic props and scenes from each of the eight Friday the 13th movies.
The 25th annual Hall of Terror depicts classic props and scenes from each of the eight Friday the 13th movies.

Victory Tattoo Ormond reopens after year-long hurricane closure

Victory Tattoo celebrated its reopening with a community event on Saturday, Oct. 25.

Hurricane Milton forced Victory Tattoo Ormond to close its doors last year.

Located across the street from the ocean, at 1496 Ocean Shore Blvd. in Ormond-bythe-Sea, the building sustained water and roof damage during the storm. There was a

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lot to repair, and it was happening at a time when many others were also dealing with similar storm damage, slowing the process, said Bobby Ellis, owner and lead artist at Victory Tattoo.

But after a year of work, Victory Tattoo Ormond is back in business and celebrated its grand reopening on Saturday, Oct. 25. The event was scheduled to feature seven bands, free food and alcohol, and tattoo and piercing specials.

“I’m excited to finally be reopening,” Ellis said before the event. “Obviously, we have two shops, but this is the shop that started it all.”

Victory Tattoo also has a location at 514 Main St. in Daytona Beach.

The building that houses the Ormond-by-the-Sea location was constructed in 1957, but it’s been operating as a tattoo shop since the 1980s. In 2009, Ellis became the owner, acquiring it from his mentor’s ex-wife.

That’s part of the sentimental value of the shop, said Ellis, who has been a tattoo artist for 19 years.

He initially tried to get into tattooing right out of high school, but it wasn’t until he was tattooed by Atlanta artist “Painless” Paul Nelson that

Ellis was able to get an apprenticeship. Ellis was in college at the time, and people generally either picked a tattoo off the shop’s wall or brought their artist a pre-made design.

“If you came in and asked them to draw something, it wasn’t happening,” Ellis said.

“So I would paint the designs, come in and get them tattooed. After doing that a few times, he asked if I wanted to learn.”

Drew McElveney is one of the other artists of Victory Tattoo. What got him into tattooing?

“There’s a shop in San Francisco called ‘Primal Urge’ — I think that’s the best description,” he said. “... There’s something in it that people are subconsciously driven toward.”

When Ellis first moved to the area, no one looked to beachside shops for tattoos. They were infamous for high prices and bad-quality art.

But the artists at Victory Tattoo are just that — artists, many of whom have had paintings displayed in galleries, Ellis said.

“It took a while to actually change that image and let them know, ‘We’re here. We’re serious about tattoos,’” Ellis said.

When it came to planning their grand reopening, tattoo artist Desmond Larmer said they wanted to let people know they were back in the community while giving back.

“It’s all community-funded,” Lamer said. “I just made some phone calls, brought them together. One restaurant or bar would find out that the other one was doing it and then they wanted to one up the other one. ... It was a really cool experience, honestly.”

All of the bands that agreed to participate — The Remembrance, Little Gracie, Still Pictures, Moth, Wings of Mercury, Umbrella and a surprise act — are local. The event sponsors included Fletcher’s Irish Pub, Rockefeller’s, Seadrift Sports Bar and Grill, Froggy’s Saloon, Frank’s Place and One Horse Saloon.

For Ellis, he was pleased to be able to see clients, both old and new. The shop used to host events like this frequently in the past, he said.

“It’s going to be amazing to have everyone banded together, supporting it to be reopened again in this new chapter,” Ellis said. Visit victorytattoodaytona. com.

BIZ BUZZ

Sprouts Farmer’s Market to open west of Tanger, in Daytona, in 2026

One of Daytona Beach’s new grocery store chains could open in a matter of months. There is no official opening date set for Daytona Beach’s new Trader Joe’s in Tanger Outlets, but the neighboring Sprouts Farmer’s Market will

open in 2026. A Sprouts PR representative said the new location at 1591 N. Williamson Blvd. will open in 2026, and a more exact date will be shared later on.

The Sprouts Farmers Market will be located in the shopping plaza, on the west side of the Tanger Outlets shopping center off of LPGA Boulevard. According to emails from public relations employees from both companies, neither grocery store chain is sharing grand opening dates.

Trader Joe’s Public Relations Manager Nakia Rohde said the company does not have either an exact date or an estimated

date for the Trader Joe’s opening. Rohde wrote that 70 crew members have been hired for the store.

Dominic’s Deli’s Daytona Beach location to close after seven years

The Dominic’s Deli & Eatery in Tomoka Town Center is closing. The Deli announced on its Facebook page on Oct. 27 that its Daytona location, at 1307 Cornerstone Blvd., was closing. The post did not state why the location was closing after seven years, but did share they are looking for a new location.

“We would like to thank all of our staff and customers for seven great years in Daytona,” the post said. “We will keep you posted on a new location as soon as we find the perfect spot.”

Dominic’s Deli also has a location in Palm Coast in the City Market Place plaza at 160 Cypress Point Parkway, Suite 101.

According to their website, Dominic’s Deli & Eatery was first established in 2008 by Pete and Deserie Tavolacci and Butch and Debbie DeCarlo.

Bobby Ellis, Desmond Larmer and Drew McElveney, of Victory Tattoo. Photos by Jarleene Almenas
Desmond Larmer, Bobby Ellis and Drew McElveney, of Victory Tattoo.
Courtesy photo

REAL ESTATE

Plantation Pines home tops sales at $690,000

Ahouse in Plantation Pines at 3782 Pine Cone Lane was the top real estate transaction in Ormond Beach and Ormond-by-the-Sea for the week of Oct. 4-10. The house sold on Oct. 6, for $690,000. Built in 2001, the house is a 5/4 and has a pool and 3,264 square feet. It last sold in 2020 for $300,000.

JARLEENE ALMENAS

MANAGING EDITOR

Condos

The condo at 3180 Ocean Shore Blvd., Unit 511, sold on Oct. 6, for $295,000. Built in 1994, the condo is a 2/2 and has 876 square feet. It last sold in 2018 for $220,900.

The condo at 2700 Ocean Shore Blvd., Unit 402, sold on Oct. 10, for $237,000. Built in 1986, the condo is a 2/2 and has 925 square feet. It last sold in 1987 for $69,900.

ORMOND BEACH

Breakaway Trails

The house at 148 Deep Woods Way sold on Oct. 10, for $420,000. Built in 2000, the house is a 3/2 and has 2,561 square feet. It last sold in 2018 for $320,000.

Oak Trails West

The house at 30 S. Center St. sold on Oct. 6, for $400,000. Built in 1973, the house is a 4/3.5 and has 3,274 square feet. It last sold in 2017 for $177,000.

Ormond Ridge

The house at 360 Collins St. sold on Oct. 9, for $237,000.

Built in 1971, the house is a 3/1.5 and has 1,152 square feet. It last sold in 1986 for $8,000.

Plantation Bay

The house at 1297 Harwick Lane sold on Oct. 9, for $512,000. Built in 2007, the house is a 3/2 and has a pool and 2,862 square feet. It last sold in 2009 for $233,000.

Riverbend Acres

The house at 229 Riverbend Road sold on Oct. 10, for $620,000. Built in 1987, the house is a 3/2.5 and has a fireplace, a detached garage and 2,184 square feet. It last sold in 2022 for $700,000.

The Trails

The house at 7 Rocky Creek Trail sold on Oct. 6, for $500,000. Built in 1981, the house is a 4/3.5 and has a fireplace, a pool and 2,776 square feet. It last sold in 2013 for $260,000.

The townhome at 235 Pine Cone Trail sold on Oct. 10, for $300,000. Built in 1978, the house is a 3/2.5 and has a fireplace and1,696 square feet. It last sold in 2017 for $175,000.

The house at 3782 Pine Cone Lane sold on Oct. 6, for $690,000. Photo courtesy of Adams, Cameron and Co. Realtors

WEST DAYTONA BEACH

Mosaic A house at 348 Mosaic Blvd. sold on Oct. 10, for $620,000. Built in 2024, the house is a 4/3 and has 2,606 square feet. It last sold in 2024 for $680,000.

Latitude Margaritaville

The house at 540 Good Life Way sold on Oct. 10, for $530,000. Built in 2021, the house is a 2/2 and has 1,922

square feet. It last sold in 2021 for $384,400.

Legends Preserve

The house at 3117 Legends Preserve Drive sold on Oct. 9, for $390,000. Built in 2025, the house is a 4/3 and has 2,190 square feet.

Lennar at Preserve at LPGA The house at 1216 Belle Isle Lane sold on Oct. 7, for $352,139. Built in 2025, the

Trails North Forty The townhome at 136 Deer Lake Circle sold on Oct. 10, for $364,800. Built in 1988, the townhome is a 4/2.5 and has a fireplace and 2,939 square feet. It last sold in 1988 for $65,090.

ORMOND-BY-THE-SEA

North Ormond Beach

The house at 38 Concord Drive sold on Oct. 8, for $481,000. Built in 1978, the house is a 3/2 and has a fireplace and 1,796 square feet. It last sold in 2022 for $533,000.

Not in subdivision

The house at 26 Island Cay Drive sold on Oct. 9, for $4989,000. Built in 1994, the house is a 3/2 and has a pool and 1,571 square feet. It last sold in 2014 for $190,000.

Oakview Heights

The house at 32 Morning Star Ave. sold on Oct. 6, for $546,500. Built in 1964, the house is a 3/2 and has 2,149 square feet. It last sold in 2024 for $565,000.

Ocean Aire Terrace

The house at 121 Ocean Aire Terrace S. sold on Oct. 6, for $400,000. Built in 2004, the house is a 3/2 and has 1,626 square feet. It last sold in 2011 for $178,700.

Ormond Shores

The house at 10 Juniper Drive sold on Oct. 9, for $444,900. Built in 1963, the house is a 3/2 and has 2,707 square feet.

Raymonde Shores

The house at 23 Briggs Drive sold on Oct. 10, for $405,000. Built in 1957, the house is a 3/2 and has 1,462 square feet. It last sold in 1974 for $15,000.

Seabreeze Shores

The house at 21 Seabreeze Drive sold on Oct. 6, for $275,000. Built in 1957, the house is a 2/1.5 and has 900 square feet. It last sold in 1988 for $67,000.

John Adams, of Adams, Cameron & Co. Realtors, contributed to this report.

house is a 4/2.5 and has 1,874 square feet.

LPGA

The house at 105 Hagge Drive sold on Oct. 10, for $432,000. Built in 2005, the house is a 3/2 and has a pool and 2,104 square feet. It last sold in 2005 for $336,400.

John Adams, of Adams, Cameron & Co. Realtors, contributed to this report.

ORMOND BEACH

REAL ESTATE

Hammock Dunes condo

goes for $2.1 million

Acondo at 28 Porto Mar, Unit 403, in Hammock Dunes, was the top real estate transaction for Oct. 11-17 in Palm Coast and Flagler County. The condo sold on Oct. 15, for $2,100,000. Built in 2007, the condo is a 4/4.5 and has 3,847 square feet. It sold in 2015 for $1,400,000.

Condos

A condo at 11 Surrey Court, Unit 11, sold on Oct. 17, for $150,000. Built in 1981, the condo is a 2/2 and has 1,098 square feet. It sold in 2016 for $94,000.

A condo at 80 Surfview Drive, Unit 808, sold on Oct. 17, for $520,000. Built in 2003, the condo is a 3/2 and has 1,455 square feet. It sold in 2020 for $430,000.

A condo at 60 Surfview Drive, Unit 319, sold on Oct. 16, for $515,000. Built in 2004, the condo is a 3/2.5 and has 1,640 square feet. It sold in 2016 for $330,000.

A condo at 60 Surfview Drive, Unit 706, sold on Oct. 15, for $601,995. Built in 2004, the condo is a 3/2.5 and has 1,640 square feet. It sold in 2011 for $265,000.

A condo at 200 Ocean Crest Drive, Unit 606, sold on Oct. 15, for $660,000. Built in 2003, the condo is a 3/3 and has 1,676 square feet. It sold in 2004 for $937,500.

A condo at 46 Club House Drive, Unit 103, sold on Oct. 14, for $199,000. Built in 1977, the condo is a 2/2 and has 986 square feet. It sold in 2015 for $87,000.

A condo at 55 Riverview Bend South, Unit 2011, sold on Oct. 14, for $277,000. Built in 2007, the condo is a 2/2 and has 1,115 square feet. It sold in 2019 for $182,000.

PALM COAST

Belle Terre

A house at 23 Pebble Wood Lane, sold on Oct. 17, for $375,200. Built in 2025, the house is a 4/3 and has 2,265 square feet.

A house at 13 Priory Lane, sold on Oct. 15, for $345,300. Built in 2025, the house is a 4/2 and has 1,755 square feet.

Flagler Village

A house at 43 Wandering Creek Way, sold on Oct. 17, for $340,990. Built in 2025, the house is a 4/2 and has 1,817 square feet.

Ocean Hammock

A house at 101 Ocean Way North, sold on Oct. 15, for

$1,500,000. Built in 2007, the house is a 6/6 and hasa pool, a hot tub, an elevator and 5,075 square feet.

Pine Lakes A house at 23 Woodborn Lane, sold on Oct. 17, for $350,000. Built in 2016, the house is a 3/2 and has 2,068 square feet. It sold in 2020 for $260,000.

A house at 4 Sutton Court, sold on Oct. 17, for $485,000. Built in 1995, the house is a 3/2.5 and has a pool and 2,122 square feet. It sold in 2023 for $485,000.

A house at 22 Weidner Place, sold on Oct. 17, for $203,000. Built in 1995, the house is a 3/2.5 and has 2,192 square feet. It sold in 1995 for $163,200.

A house at 11 Wellstone Drive, sold on Oct. 17, for $339,000. Built in 2003, the house is a 3/2 and has 1,858 square feet. It sold in 2019 for $215,000.

Sawmill Branch A house at 4 Mill Wheel Court, sold on Oct. 17, for $345,000. Built in 2023, the house is a 3/2 and has 1,986 square feet.

Toby Tobin, of gotoby.com, contributed to this report

World Plate expands to Hammock

Local catering company opens gourmet grab-and-go, World Plate Market.

A local business in Flagler County is opening a new location in The Hammock after much demand from its customers.

World Plate Market, located at 2 Armand Beach Drive, Suite 1B, opens on Oct. 29 and is a new grab-and-go expansion on World Plate’s other services for catering and event planning. The new location will also house World Plate’s events services, owner Sue Wicklund said.

“We’ll be a true market,” Wicklund said. “An exchange of goods and services.”

Wicklund said World Plate has been looking to expand into a new location for a while, and they chose The Hammock after their Hammock customers sent “an abundance of emails” asking World Plate if they could open up a location in the area. Prior to this new location, the nearest World Plate — which has been operating for eight years — was in Bunnell.

The bulk of World Plate’s customers reside in The Hammock area, she said, and would commute to Bunnell for their services.

“So this is going to be really a nice treat for them, because now we’re pretty much in their backyard,” Wicklund said. “We’re going to be a lot closer to them. And I think it’s going to be a great thing.”

The Hammock location will have pre-packaged, gourmet grab-and-go food, with coldand hot-food options as well as snacks and platters.

The grab-and-go is an

extension of World Plate’s catering services, she said. Grab-and-go options include meails or hor d’oeuvres samplers. A “take and bake” option will also be available, Wicklund said.

Wicklund said not only will customers be able to grab World Plate’s recipes for lunch, but The Hammock location will now be the pick-up location for catering orders. This allows their Bunnell location to be strictly production, she said.

World Plate features flavors from seven different types of cuisine: Italian,French, German, Greek, Asian, Latin and Middle Eastern. Wicklund’s husband and co-owner Erick Wicklund is the business’ chef with over 30 years of experience. He has taken his experience with a variety of cuisine

and is bringing that “forward with this grab-and-go,” she said.

On Sundays, through the end of the year, Wicklund said The Hammock location will also offer to-go dinners for two that customers can order ahead of time. To-go dinner orders can be placed online by 11 a.m. on Sundays and picked up by 4:45 p.m. on Sundays. She said they plan to offer the to-go dinners on some weekdays as well in the New Year.

“We just want to kind of do a trial and see how that goes,” she said.

After eight years of operating World Plate, Wicklund said they are very grateful for the support of their customers over the years. World Plate started out of St. Joe Plaza in Palm Coast in September 2017, but quickly outgrew it, expanding into Bunnell, Orlando and, for a short time, St. Augustine. Now, Wicklund said, their production facility has the capacity to cater an event with over 500 guests.

“It’s been great, the support that’s been provided to us, and we look forward to being in The Hammock,” she said. Email sierra@observer localnews.com

PALM COAST
The new World Plate Market in The Hammock is located at 2 Armand Beach Drive, Suite 1B. Photo by Sierra Williams

Guiglotto channels passion to help in new business, Lotus Funeral Services

Owner Nina Guiglotto never thought she would get into the funeral business.

Now it’s become her passion.

BRENT WORONOFF

ASSOCIATE EDITOR

Nina Guiglotto never thought she’d be working in the funeral business, but she fell in love with it. Now she has opened her own business, Lotus Funeral Services at 460 Palm Coast Parkway SW, Suite 3, in Palm Coast.

After two years of planning and refurbishing the office space, Guiglotto hired Funeral Director Stephen Barreto and opened Lotus, holding a ribbon cutting on Oct. 10. “I wanted something that

could be affordable and unique, which is why this setup is the only one really around that isn’t the large funeral home, but offers all of the same services. But some of them are off-site,” Guiglotto said. “... My location is smaller, but I meet the standards to be a funeral establishment.”

Cremation has outpaced burials in the area, Guiglotto said, as well as throughout the country. According to a National Funeral Directors

Association report, cremation rate will more than double burial rate (63.4% to 31.6%) this year with cremations projected to rise to 82.3% by 2045.

Guiglotto has agreements to utilize local chapels in town and an agreement with Hillside Cemetery in Ormond Beach where it can offer space. It also has an agreement with Palm Coast United Methodist Church where Guiglotto is helping them offer columbarium space to the community. Lotus is also building a botanical memory garden there. It’s going to be the first one in town, Guiglotto said. Lotus offers a living urn, which includes a kit with special soil that can be comingled with the ashes of one or more loved ones and it will grow a living tree or flower, which can be planted in the memory garden, or in one’s yard or in a pot.

“They could do a little service in their backyard, and for much less money than having to use a traditional cemetery,” Guiglotto said. “I always say, Your memories can bloom on.”

Lotus offers keepsake urns and biodegradable urns, so they can be dropped into water instead of opening them and scattering the ashes. They also offer memorial videos.

Guiglotto said she got into the funeral business eight years ago, when she and her

family moved to Palm Coast. She posted her resume to a local job site, and a funeral home reached out asking if she would be interested in selling funerals in advance.

“One of the previous things I did was save people from foreclosure, and so they thought, ‘Oh, that must be a kind person,’” Guiglotto said. “I thought, ‘OK, this is

a scam,’ but I decided to go to the interview anyway. And when I went, I was pleasantly surprised.”

Guiglotto’s father died when she was 19, and she remembered her mother saying, “Well, what do we do?” She saw this as an opportunity to help people plan in advance.

“They sent me to a training course, and that was really very excellent. It was a great way to get an introduction to the industry, and I fell in love with it,” she said. “The more I helped people, and the more thank you cards I would receive from families that did the arrangements in advance and just how it touched them, made me so thrilled.”

She ultimately decided to open her own funeral business, and Lotus is the fulfill-

ment of that goal.

“And then I have the nonprofit, Coping with Colors, that is going to benefit families that can’t afford it,” Guiglotto said.

She said it is sad to see families spend and spend because of guilt or fear or sadness. Communication is key, she said.

“I want to make it a subject that people should feel comfortable talking about, if it’s OK to cremate me or scatter the ashes,” Guiglotto said. “Plan it, get excited. A lot of people did a lot of great things in their lives, and this is the moment to shine.” Barreto has been a funeral director since 1995. For more information on Lotus Funeral Services, visit lotusfuneralservices.com

Ribbon cutting at Lotus Funeral Services on Oct. 10. Courtesy photo
Lotus Funeral Services Funeral Director Stephen Barreto and owner and CEO Nina Guiglotto. Photo by Brent Woronoff

Ground control

Matanzas football coach Matt Forrest sees the irony. A proponent of the pass-heavy Air Raid offense, Forrest’s team has been mixing in a heavy dose of the running game since it went into “playoff mode” a month ago.

“From an Air Raid guy, who’d have thought?” Forrest said of the Pirates’ trend toward a ball-control offense in recent weeks. “We’re going to put our kids in the best position we can to go win a game, whether that’s a spread offense or a ball-control offense or a mixture of both.”

On Friday, Oct. 24, the Pirates’ offense was on the field for most of the game in defeating host Pedro Menendez 14-0 on the Falcons’ Senior Night. For the third game in a row, Matanzas running back Wiley Conner had 28 or more touches.

The Pirates had just five possessions in the game, but they held the ball for 31 minutes, 1 second, compared to just 16:19 for the Falcons. Matanzas piled up 353 yards of offense — 215 passing and 138 rushing.

Conner rushed for 96 yards

on 28 carries with a touchdown and caught a pass for 18 yards. Quarterback Cole Walker completed 20 of 27 passes for 215 yards — his sixth game with over 200 yards this season. Ladarien Baker caught eight passes for 86 yards, including an 11-yard touchdown reception. Andrew Bass caught five passes for 68 yards.

Matanzas (6-3) won its third straight game and snapped a four-game losing streak to Menendez, which lost its third game in a row to fall to 3-6.

The Pirates have one game remaining on Thursday, Oct. 30, at home against Palm Bay.

“We’ve been in playoff mode for four weeks now. We won Round 1 against Mount Dora. We won Round 2 against Belleview, and we won Round 3 against Pedro. Round 4 of our playoffs is against Palm Bay on Thursday.”

MATT FORREST, Matanzas football coach

Kickoff is 6:30 p.m. The game was originally scheduled to be at Palm Bay on Oct. 31, but because of a conflict on Halloween, Palm Bay agreed to move the game to Matanzas on Thursday. Matanzas will have to win to have a chance to make the playoffs.

“We’ve been in playoff mode for four weeks now,” Forrest said. “Once we got beat by Mainland (on Sept. 25), and we knew the district championship was not going to happen, we were in playoff mode. We won Round 1 against Mount Dora. We won Round 2 against Belleview, and we won Round 3 against Pedro. Round 4 of our playoffs is against Palm Bay on Thursday.”

Matanzas had just two possessions in the second half against the Falcons, but those possessions combined to consume over 17 minutes of clock.

The Pirates drove 95 yards on 17 plays, consuming 9:01 and ending with Baker’s touchdown. And a 13-play drive consumed 8:08. That ended with an interception at the Menendez 5-yard line with 40 seconds left in the game, a result the same as a good punt.

The Pirates’ first-half drives ended with a missed field goal, Conner’s 1-yard touchdown run and an interception in the Falcons’ end zone.

“There were times where

I felt like maybe we could do this or that and try to break the game open, but kudos to our guys for just executing the game plan,” Forrest said.

Defensively, Matanzas held Menendez to 127 yards of offense. The Priates sacked the Falcons’ quarterbacks three times and totaled six tackles for loss. Jez McCoy had eight tackles, two for loss.

“It was all preparation,” said Matanzas defensive back Javonte Patton, who had seven tackles. “We watched a lot of film, and we knew what they were going to do.”

Playing ball control on offense allowed the defense to be fresh, Forrest said.

“When our defense is healthy and fresh, they’re good,” he said. “If we go three

and out and don’t take much time off the clock, they get winded. And that’s just a natural thing that happens in football. So, we were trying sustain long drives. And if we had to win the field position game, that was what we were going to do, just put them in spots they didn’t want to be in and force them to pass out of it.”

The Falcons completed just six passes for 67 yards.

“We had to win this game and the next game too,” Patton said, adding that he’s glad the Palm Bay game has been moved to the Pirates’ home field. “I really didn’t want to make the long drive, and now, as a senior, I have one more home game.”

Matanzas receiver Jordan Schendorf tries to evade Menendez’s Kayne Vona (3).
Matanzas captains Cole Walker, Jordan Schendorf, Kennith Roberts and Ladarien Baker.
Antoine Jenkins rushed for 48 yards on six carries.
Matanzas fans congratulate the players after the 14-0 win at Menendez.
Matanzas running back Wiley Conner rushed for 96 yards against Menendez. Photos by Brent Woronoff
Matanzas controls the clock in 14-0 win over Menendez

Pine Ridge injury ends Seabreeze game early

The Sandcrabs, winning 28-7, were awarded the win. Now, they turn their sights to Mainland.

BRENT WORONOFF ASSOCIATE

Seabreeze led Pine Ridge 28-7 with about two minutes left in the first half on Friday, Oct. 24, in Deltona, and then last thing you ever want to see at a football game happened. Pine Ridge football player Kaden Boddie made a tackle and didn’t get up.

Boddie was airlifted to a hospital as the game was stopped and the stadium was evacuated so the helicopter could land. The news was promising later as the Daytona Beach News-Journal reported that

Boddie was talking and had movement in his extremities Friday night and was scheduled to be discharged from the hospital on Saturday.

“It was definitely a sobering moment,” Seabreeze coach Mike Klein said on Sunday, Oct. 26. “It’s something you always know is a part of the game. There is always a little possibility something bad can happen. You hate to see it. But I heard he got released from the hospital and was moving his legs and everything, so I’m glad things seem to be going in the right direction.”

Klein said after the teams were removed from the field the Sandcrabs went to their locker room and Klein invited the players to join him in prayer for Boddie.

Klein said he also gave the team an open invitation to join him at Salty Church in Ormond Beach on Sunday.

perspective, Klein said.

“It makes you take a step back and appreciate the things you have and the time you have to enjoy your team. Things that seemed so big, may not be so big,” he said.

On Sunday, Klein talked about completing the game with the Panthers. On Monday, the game became official with Seabreeze winning to improve to 5-4.

Jeremias George rushed for 80 yards on five carries and scored three touchdowns.

Logan Smith added 53 yards rushing with a touchdown.

“About 20 to 30 players and coaches were there. It was cool to see,” he said. When a close call happens, it puts the game of football in

The Sandcrabs now have their sights set on their season finale Friday, Oct. 31, at Daytona Stadium against their cross-town rivals, the Mainland Buccaneers. The Sandcrabs will be the home team.

Mainland has won 14 in a row against Seabreeze with the Sandcrabs’ last win com-

ing in 2010.

“The Seabreeze-Mainland game has been going on for a very long time,” Klein said.

“It’s a game that Seabreeze hasn’t been on the winning end for a long time. To make it a rivalry, it has to be back and forth. We’re trying to make it a rivalry.”

“The Seabreeze-Mainland game has been going on for a very long time. It’s a game that Seabreeze hasn’t been on the winning end for a long time. To make it a rivalry, it has to be back and forth. We’re trying to make it a rivalry.”

Mainland (6-2) has secured a playoff berth for the 32nd consecutive season.

“They’re a great football team and they have been for years and years,” Klein said. “We’re trying to build our football team, and we’re trying to give them a run for their money.”

The Sandcrabs will try to eliminate the Bucs’ explosive plays.

“We want to make them go on 10-play drives to score. We’ve got to be ready to tackle well in space,” Klein said. “They are athletic and move the ball around. We don’t want to make it a shootout by any means. We want to make sure we end every drive with a kick. We don’t want to (turn the ball over). When you play a talented team, it’s about playing mistake-free football. Our guys will be ready. They’ll be hyped up.”

Mainland hopes to extend 14-game winning streak against Seabreeze

Fresh off clinching a district championship, Mainland has another football championship in its sights this week — the Daytona Beach championship. The Bucs will meet Seabreeze in their annual rivalry game at 7 p.m. Friday, Oct. 31, at Daytona Stadium. It hasn’t been much of a contest lately with Mainland winning 14 years in a row. The Sandcrabs have been shut out

“Our players know the history of this rivalry,” Bell said. “They’re pretty excited to go out there Friday night and lay claim as the best in the city.”

The Bucs (6-2) are coming off a 50-6 victory at Belleview to clinch the District 4-5A championship with a 2-0 district record. They advanced to the state playoffs for the 32nd consecutive year and will in all likelihood host a regional quarterfinal on Nov. 14.

seven times during that span including last year when the Bucs cruised to a 53-0 victory. But that hasn’t tarnished the luster off the game, Mainland coach Jerrime Bell said.

Quarterback Sebastian Johnson threw three touchdown passes and back-up Keith Simmons threw two more in the win against Belleview. Braylyn Simmons and Josh Dudley each ran for a touchdown. Braylyn Simmons also had a receiving touch -

down. He was one of four players to catch touchdown passes with Kadin Flores taking both of his receptions into the end zone for touchdowns of 60 and 46 yards. Chris Butler had five catches for 160 yards and a score.

Defensively, the Bucs had nine tackles for loss, an interception and a fumble recovery. Tamaj Woodard got into the backfield four times for tackles behind the line of the scrimmage.

With one game left in the regular season, the Bucs would like to extend their streak against the Sandcrabs to 15.

“In a perfect world,” Bell said, “we never lose to Seabreeze again.”

But Bell knows that the Sandcrabs (5-4) are on the rise under second-year coach Mike Klein.

““Football in the area is always better when Seabreeze and Mainland are good together,” Bell said. “Mike’s building them back up slowly and surely in his image.”

Bell sees a lot of similarities between the path he and Klein have taken in their coaching careers with Klein learning under veteran coach Andy Price at Spruce Creek and Bell learning under former Seabreeze star Billy Glenn at Calvary Christian and then moving to St. Lucie Treasure Coast where he coached under veteran Irvin Jones.

The Bucs are the visitors

this year and will be wearing white jerseys, so they are asking their fans to make the game a white-out by wearing white themselves.

With the Bucs dominating the Sandcrabs for more than a decade, attendance has taken a dip in the city rivalry.

“The community is not as interested in the game anymore, but the rivalry is still there, and there’s pride on both teams,” Bell said.

“Hopefully we can get back to the way it used to be. Hopefully we can have a really big crowd Friday with both teams having a record over .500. Hopefully we can get back to the old ways.” Email brent@observerlocal news.com

The Bucs are in the playoffs, first they have a date with Seabreeze.
MIKE KLEIN, Seabreeze football coach
Seabreeze running back Jeremias George. File photo by Brian McMillan
Mainland linebacker Tamaj Woodard. File photo by Michele Meyers

SIDELINES

the District 3-3A tournament on Oct. 27 to qualify for regionals.

FPC senior Sophia Stiwich bridied the 18th hole at Cypress Head Golf Club in Port Orange to win the district tournament with a two-overpar 74. Stiwich topped Spruce Creek’s Vanessa Perry by one stroke to win the individual title. Spruce Creek won the team title. Matanzas was fourth.

FPC’s Ivey Tsouklaris placed seventh overall with an 86. The Bulldogs advance to the Region 1-3A tournament on Nov. 4 at Hawstone Country Club in Gainesville.

FPC girls, Seabreeze boys advance to golf regionals

Flagler Palm Coast’s girls golf team placed second at

Seabreeze’s boys team also advanced to regionals with a second-place finish at the District 6-2A tournament on Oct. 28 at the Country Club at Mount Dora. Nathan Yarian led the Sandcrabs wih a 71 to

place fifth. Ethan McBroom shot 76 and Sam Garewal shot 77. The Sandcrabs will compete at Drubsdread Golf Club in the Region 2-2A tournament

FPC’s boys placed fifth at district at Ocala Golf Club. Matanzas placed sixth with a 361. Caleb Zarraonandia led the Bulldogs with an 81.

Slaughter, Cerasi fast at Pre-state cross country

Flagler Palm Coast’s Arianna Slaughter won the girls select race, while Matanzas’ Peyton Cerasi set a school and personal record in the girls elite race at the FSU Invitational Pre-State cross country meet on Oct. 25.

The meet was held at Apalalachee Regional Park in Talahassee, the site of the state championships on Nov. 22.

second meet championship.

Matanzas senior Blaine Vogel ran a 16:00.9 to place 57th in the boys elite race. Among other Pirates in the elite race, Brant Tarsitano ran for 16:29.6 for 96th place; Dylan Ciardi ran a PR 16:31.2 for 98th place; and Matt Ciardi ran a 17:03.6 for 167th place.

Seabreeze’s Hunter Shuler led local runners in the boys select race with a 17:07.4 for 62nd place. FPC’s Mateo Almeida was 68th with a 17:15.0.

FPC’s Anna Grigoruk placed 25th in the girls select race with a time of 19:54.4.

In the varsity A race, Matanzas senior Megan Rhee placed 18th with a time of 21:10.5 with teammate Sarah Van Buren close behind with a 21:28.1 for 28th place.

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Gonzalez (154). Other traditional winners were: Matanzas Elaina Padilla (110) and Matanzas’ Addy Weigel (154).

Imagine Mile Series set for first three Saturdays in December

The Imagine School at Town Center cross county team is hosting the annual Imagine Mile Series, a series of three 1-mile races. The series will be held at the Flagler Palm Coast High School track at 8:30 a.m. on the first three Saturdays in December (Dec. 6, 13, and 20). It is open to all children in grades 4 to 8 from any

Cerasi placed 15th in the elite race featuring many of the fastest runners in the state. Her time of 18:16.80 not only broke her own Matanzas school record, but broke her own record of 18:19.2 that she ran at last year’s Class 4A state meet as a member of FPC’s team. She also owns FPC’s school record with that time. The sophomore currently ranks seventh in in Class 3A.

Pirates out-lift Sandcrabs in preseason

meet

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In a preseason girls weightlifting meet, Matanzas defeated Seabreeze 57-14 in Olympic competition and 5624 in traditional.

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Matanzas’s Chloe Cheek (101), Amara Nagel (119), Jordyn Crews (139), Eva Ossler (169)Katelyn Meade (183), Ella Raffo (199) and Amarianna Brown (unlimited) won both competition titles. Camila Arellano (129) was a double winner for Seabreeze.

Other Olympic winners were: Seabreeze Alexis Mellen (110) anf Matanzas’ Hannah

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FPC’s Sophia Stiwich was the low medalist at the District 3-3A golf tournament on Oct. 27 with a two-under-par 74 at Cypress Head Golf Club. Courtesy photo
FPC’s Arianna Slaughter at the Spikes and Spurs Classic on Aug. 23, 2025. File photo by Brent Woronoff

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OTHER PARTIES CLAIMING BY, THROUGH, UNDER OR AGAINST

PETER MYRICK, WHO IS KNOWN TO BE DEAD, UNKNOWN TENANT #1, UNKNOWN TENANT #2, et al., Defendants. TO: THE UNKNOWN SPOUSE, HEIRS, DEVISEES, GRANTEES, CREDITORS, OR OTHER PARTIES CLAIMING BY, THROUGH, UNDER OR AGAINST PETER MYRICK, WHO IS KNOWN TO BE DEAD 222 AGUA VISTA ST. DEBARY, FL 32713 YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action to enforce a lien on and to foreclose on a mortgage on the following property in Volusia County, Florida, commonly known as 222 Agua Vista St. Debary, FL 32713, and more particularly described as: Lot 51, Block D, Plantation Estates Unit No. 21, according to the plat thereof, recorded in Map Book 23, Page 38, of the Public Records of Volusia County, Florida. Which has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to it on ARTHUR S. BARKSDALE, IV, ESQ., DI MASI | BURTON, P.A., the Plaintiff’s attorney, whose address is 801 N. Orange Avenue, Suite 500, Orlando, Florida 32801 within thirty (30) days after the first publication of this notice and file the original with the clerk of this court either before service on the Plaintiff’s attorney or immediately thereafter; otherwise, a default will be entered against you for the relief demanded in the Complaint.

DATED: Oct 10, 2025 LAURA E ROTH CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT By: /s/ Shawnee S. Smith Deputy Clerk Oct. 30; Nov. 6, 2025 25-00523I

FIRST INSERTION NOTICE OF ACTION IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT OF FLORIDA IN AND FOR VOLUSIA COUNTY GENERAL JURISDICTION DIVISION CASE NO. 2024 14218 CIDL NEWREZ LLC D/B/A SHELLPOINT MORTGAGE SERVICING, Plaintiff, vs. BARRY SANDHAUS, AS TRUSTEE OF THE 233 BIRDIEWOOD LAND TRUST, et al., Defendant. To the following Defendant(s): THE UNKNOWN TRUSTEES, SETTLORS, AND BENEFICIARIES OF ANY AND ALL UNKNOWN PARTIES CLAIMING BY, THROUGH, UNDER, AND AGAINST THE 233 BIRDIEWOOD LAND TRUST, WHETHER SAID UNKNOWN PARTIES MAY CLAIM AN INTEREST AS TRUSTEES, BENEFICIARIES, OR OTHER CLAIMANTS YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action for Foreclosure of Mortgage on the following described property: LOT 25, DEBARY PLANTATION UNIT 6, ACCORDING TO THE MAP OR PLAT THEREOF AS RECORDED IN MAP BOOK 44, PAGES 109 AND 110, OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF VOLUSIA COUNTY, FLORIDA. has been filed against you and you are required to serve a copy of your written defenses, if any, to it, on McCalla Raymer Leibert Pierce, LLP, Jamie Juster, Esq., Attorney for Plaintiff, whose address is 225 East Robinson Street, Suite 155, Orlando, FL 32801 on or before NOV 20 2025, a date which is within thirty (30) days after the first publication of this Notice in and file the original with the Clerk of this Court either before service on Plaintiff’s attorney or immediately thereafter; otherwise a default will be entered against you for the relief demand in the complaint. WITNESS my hand and seal of this Court this 21st day of Oct, 2025. LAURA E. ROTH, ESQ. CLERK OF COURT OF VOLUSIA COUNTY (SEAL) BY: /s/ Shawnee S. Smith As Deputy Clerk MCCALLA RAYMER LEIBERT PIERCE, LLP 225 East Robinson Street, Suite 155 Orlando, FL 32801 Phone: (407) 674-1850 Fax: (321) 248-0420 Email: Kimberlee.Masters@mccalla.com 24-10791FL Oct. 30; Nov. 6, 2025 25-00524I

FIRST INSERTION NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR VOLUSIA COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File No. 2025 12869 PRDL Division 10 IN RE: ESTATE OF ELIZABETH GERALDINE JAMES, Deceased. The administration of the estate of ELIZABETH GERALDINE JAMES, deceased, whose date of death was April 24, 2024, is pending in the Circuit Court for Volusia County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is P.O. Box 6043, DeLand, FL 32721-6043. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative’s attorney are set forth below. All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate, on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served, must file their claims with this court ON OR BEFORE THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM. All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN FLORIDA STATUTES SECTION 733.702 WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIOD SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. The date of first publication of this notice is: OCTOBER 30th, 2025. Signed on this 21st day of OCTOBER, 2025. LAWRENCE DAY Personal Representative 687 Mahogany Run Palm Coast, FL 32137

ROBERT KIT KOREY

Attorney for Personal Representative Florida Bar No. 147787 Korey Law, P.A. 595 W Granada Blvd,Suite A Ormond Beach, FL 32174 Telephone: 386-677-3431

Email: kit@koreylawpa.com

Secondary Email: dwargo@koreylawpa.com Oct. 30; Nov. 6, 2025 25-00525I

FIRST INSERTION NOTICE OF RULE DEVELOPMENT BY THE DEAN RIVER COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DISTRICT

In accordance with Chapters 120 and 190, Florida Statutes, the Dean River Community Development District (“District”) hereby gives notice of its intention to develop Rules of Procedure to govern the operations of the District. The proposed rule number is 2026ROP-1.

The Rules of Procedure will address such areas as the Board of Supervisors, officers and voting, district offices, public information and inspection of records, policies, public meetings, hearings and workshops, rulemaking proceedings, competitive purchase including procedure under the Consultants’ Competitive Negotiation Act, procedure regarding auditor selection, purchase of insurance, pre-qualification, construction contracts, goods, supplies and materials, maintenance services, contractual services and protests with respect to proceedings, as well as any other area of the general operation of the District.

The purpose and effect of the Rules of Procedure is to provide for efficient and effective District operations and to ensure compliance with recent changes to Florida law. The specific grant of rulemaking authority for the adoption of the proposed Rules of Procedure includes Sections 190.011(5), 190.011(15) and 190.035, Florida Statutes. The specific laws implemented in the proposed Rules of Procedure include, but are not limited to, Sections 112.08, 112.3143, 112.31446, 112.3145, 119.07, 119.0701, 120.54, 120.542, 120.5435, 120.56, 120.69, 120.81, 189.053, 189.069, 190.006, 190.007, 190.008, 190.011, 190.033, 190.035, 218.33, 218.391, 255.05, 255.0518, 255.0525, 255.20, 286.0105, 286.011, 286.012, 286.0113, 286.0114, 287.017, 287.055, and 287.084, Florida Statutes.

A copy of the proposed Rules of Procedure and the related incorporated documents, if any, may be obtained by contacting the District Manager, c/o Wrathell, Hunt and Associates, LLC, 2300 Glades Road, Suite 410W, Boca Raton, Florida 33431 (561) 571-0010.

25-00526I

Cindy Cerbone, District Manager Dean River Community Development District October 30, 2025 25-00528I

FIRST INSERTION NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR VOLUSIA COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File No. 2025 12928 PRDL Division 10 IN RE: ESTATE OF KEVIN L. DYGERT, Deceased.

The administration of the estate of KEVIN L. DYGERT, deceased, whose date of death was July 28, 2025, is pending in the Circuit Court for Volusia County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is P.O. Box 6043, DeLand, Florida 32721-6043. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative’s attorney are set forth below. All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate, on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served, must file their claims with this court ON OR BEFORE THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM. All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE. ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN FLORIDA STATUTES SECTION 733.702 WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIOD SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. The date of first publication of this notice is: October 30, 2025. Signed on this 8th day of SEPTEMBER, 2025.

/s/ Linda D. Smith LINDA D. SMITH Personal Representative 802 Soft Pine Ct New Smyrna Beach, Florida 32168 /s/ Robert Kit Korey ROBERT KIT KOREY Attorney for Personal Representative Florida Bar No. 147787 Korey Law, P.A. 595 W. Granada Blvd., Suite A Ormond Beach, Florida 32174 Telephone: 386-677-3431

Email: kit@koreylawpa.com

Secondary Email: dwargo@koreylawpa.com Oct. 30; Nov. 6, 2025 25-00527I

FIRST INSERTION NOTICE OF SUSPENSION

To: Raymond A. Vasquez Ocasio Case No: CD202507482/D 1832229 A Notice of Suspension to suspend your license(s) and eligibility for licensure has been filed against you. You have the right to request a hearing pursuant to Sections 120.569 and 120.57, Florida Statutes, by mailing a request for same to the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, Division of Licensing, Post Office Box 5708, Tallahassee, Florida 32314-5708. If a request for hearing is not received by 21 days from the date of the last publication, the right to hearing in this matter will be waived and the Department will dispose of this cause in accordance with law. Oct. 30; Nov. 6, 13, 20, 2025 25-00531I

NOTICE OF ACTION IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 7TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR VOLUSIA COUNTY, FLORIDA CASE NO.: 2025 11682 CIDL U.S. BANK TRUST NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, AS TRUSTEE OF THE LODGE SERIES IV TRUST, Plaintiff, v. MICHAEL BRETT CARPENTER; et al, Defendant(s). To the following Defendant(s): MICHAEL BRETT CARPENTER (Last Known Address: 6080 Lake Winona Road, Deleon Spring, FL 32130) UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF MICHAEL BRETT CARPENTER (Last Known Address: 6080 Lake Winona Road, Deleon Spring, FL 32130) YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action to foreclose based on boundaries established by acquiescence, on the following described property: THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED LOT, PIECE OR PARCEL OF LAND SITUATE, LYING AND BEING IN THE COUNTY OF VOLUSIA, STATE OF FLORIDA, TO WIT: THE WEST 541.12 FEET OF THE EAST 742.35 FEET OF THE NORTH 355 FEET OF GOVERNMENT LOT 5, SECTION 25, TOWNSHIP 15 SOUTH, RANGE 29 EAST, VOLUSIA COUNTY, FLORIDA. SUBJECT TO A PRIVATE, NON-EXCLUSIVE, APPURTENANT, AFFIRMATIVE EASEMENT FOR ROAD PURPOSES OVER THE SOUTH 25 FEET OF THE ABOVE DESCRIBED PROPERTY, AND TOGETHER WITH A PRIVATE, NON-EXCLUSIVE, APPURTENANT, AFFIRMATIVE EASEMENT FOR ROAD PURPOSES, WHICH IS EXPRESSLY

NOTICE OF ACTION IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE 7TH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR VOLUSIA COUNTY, FLORIDA Case No.: 2022 11826 CIDL NEWREZ LLC D/B/A SHELLPOINT MORTGAGE SERVICING, Plaintiff, v. MALEENA ASBURY; UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF MALEENA ASBURY; THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, DEVISEES, GRANTEES, ASSIGNEES, CREDITORS, LIENORS AND TRUSTEES OF MARGARET ANNE BRUGGNER-RENO, DECEASED; BANK OF AMERICA, N.A.; BERT FISH MEDICAL CENTER, INC.; ALL UNKNOWN PARTIES CLAIMING INTERESTS BY, THROUGH, UNDER OR AGAINST A NAMED DEFENDANT TO THIS ACTION, OR HAVING OR CLAIMING TO HAVE ANY RIGHT, TITLE OR INTEREST IN THE PROPERTY HEREIN DESCRIBED; UNKNOWN TENANT #1; UNKNOWN TENANT #2, Defendant. To the following Defendant(s): THE UNKNOWN HEIRS, DEVISEES, GRANTEES, ASSIGNEES, CREDITORS, LIENORS AND TRUSTEES OF MARGARET ANNE BRUGGNER-RENO, DECEASED 2041 SPENCER ST DELAND, FL 32720 YOU ARE NOTIFIED that an action for Foreclosure of Mortgage on the following described property: LOT 4, YOAK SUBDIVISION, ACCORDING TO A PLAT THEREOF, AS RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 28 AT PAGE 158 OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF VOLUSIA COUNTY FLORIDA

GRANTED BY THE SELLER TO THE BUYERS AND THEIR HEIRS OR ASSIGNS OVER AND ACROSS THE SOUTH 25 FEET OF THE EAST 201.23 FEET OF THE NORTH 355 FEET OF GOVERNMENT LOT 5, SECTION 25, TOWNSHIP 15 SOUTH, RANGE 29 EAST, VOLUSIA COUNTY, FLORIDA. 1973 BROADMORE DOUBLEWIDE MOBILE HOME, ID#33B34CS2026U,

HEALTH GUY. NIC MARTIN (YOUR)

IMPORTANT DATES:

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Ormond Beach Observer 10-30-25 by Observer Local News - Issuu