08.08.19 West Orange Observer

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W EST O RA N G E

Observer Windermere, Horizon West, Dr. Phillips

Kids enjoy a clay play day at Rosen JCC. SEE 8.

YOU. YOUR NEIGHBORS. YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD.

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VOLUME 4, NO. 45

THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 2019

Anything can happen ‘Mary Poppins: The Broadway Musical’ is soaring into St. Luke’s. SEE PAGE 3.

FIRED UP!

YOUR TOWN FOUNDATION YEARBOOK WINS NATIONAL AWARD Foundation Academy’s yearbook staff attended the Florida Yearbook Institute and returned home with the National Yearbook Program of Excellence Award for a second year. Attending were editors-in-chief Kassie Kimpel and Grace Langhoff, and sports editor Kylie Rowell. More than 80 schools from all over the state participated in the conference hosted by Jostens. The Pawprints was one of only five school yearbooks out of thousands in the state of Florida to win this award. The editors were given the Gold Award of Achievement for Outstanding Yearbook Portfolio, as well.

Dr. Phillips native Eric ‘The Fireboy’ Aach recently became an honorary firefighter for the Orange County Fire Rescue Department. PAGE 4.

Residents brace for school traffic Eric “The Fireboy” Aach showed off his very own OCFRD E30 helmet.

Orange County teachers voted to send their union back to the bargaining table with the district. DANIELLE HENDRIX ASSOCIATE EDITOR

For the first time in Orange County history, teachers have voted down a proposed teacher-compensation contract. Following the rejection — by about a four-to-one margin — the Orange County Classroom TeachPRSRT STD ECRWSS US POSTAGE PAID WINTER GARDEN, FL PERMIT NO. 81

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Postal Customer

ers Association will begin renegotiations with Orange County Public Schools. The package agreed upon in June by the CTA and the district included salary increases but also an increase in family health-insurance costs — which many teachers argued would mean less take-home pay than last year. The CTA mailed ballots to teachers in mid-July, and the final verdict came in Monday, July 29. Out of SEE TEACHERS PAGE 2

SPORTS

Contract rejected

Danielle Hendrix

Orange County officials hope to calm cut-through traffic in Horizon West ahead of the upcoming school year. HANNAH SWAYZE NEWS EDITOR

Wolverine machine The Horizon West Wolverines youth football team is ready to hit the gridiron. SEE PAGE 11.

With school set to resume next week, some Horizon West residents are worried traffic in their community is going to get much worse. Newbury Park residents and their neighbors gathered around small lunch tables at Sunset Park Elementary School Thursday, Aug. 1, to hear the latest on what Orange County officials intend to do to address traffic problems in the Lakeside Village area. According to District 1 County Commissioner Betsy VanderLey, the county started SEE TRAFFIC PAGE 4


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