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County administrator chooses to resign
A classic drive back to the 1980s
River Club’s Bob Dydo took a Wednesday drive into the past at the Classic Car Show held on Main Street at Lakewood Ranch on Feb. 1.

Dydo purchased the DMC DeLorean, the same model featured in the Back to the Future films, in February of 1981 from a Maryland car dealership while he was living in Washington D.C.

When the first film debuted in 1985, he was pleased to see the car, of which only 9,000 units were manufactured, in a starring role.
“It was enjoyable. There was an element of ownership to it,” he said. He said although he would sometimes take the car to running events he raced in around the Lincoln Monument and Jefferson Memorial, it increasingly stayed in his garage over the years.

“I take it out every now and then and run it, just to keep the juices going,” he said.

Honored to meet the author
Waterlefe’s Jan Hooten lined up and patiently waited her turn to get her book signed.
Hooten was excited to meet author Mamta Chaudhry, who wrote “Haunting Paris” and was the guest author during the Literary Society at Waterlefe’s author luncheon Feb. 4.

“It was great,” Hooten said of the luncheon. “(Chaudhry) is funny and very interesting. I loved the book and had fun reading it. It was a wonderful experience meeting her.”
Members of the literary society, which includes about 10 book clubs in Waterlefe Golf and River Club, gathered for the luncheon to hear from Chaudhry during a moderated discussion as well as participate in the raffle that benefited G.D. Rogers Garden-Bullock Elementary School.
A hero’s welcome
Retired Army Sgt. Lucio Gaytan said his physical condition left him feeling like “I was gone” after 22 years of military service.
“I lost my identity,” said Gaytan, who retired from the Army in 2018 due to severe spinal injuries. “It was hard to move on medically.”
Due to the PulteGroup’s Built to Honor program, which included a partnership with Building Homes for Heroes and Schroeder-Manatee Ranch, Gaytan will be able to move on.


Or better said, move in.
On Feb. 3 at Sapphire Point of Lakewood Ranch, Gaytan and his family were welcomed to their future mortgage-free home with a parade and ceremony. More than 300 people were in attendance to line the parade route and welcome Gaytan, who had been living in Ruskin, to his new community.
The ceremony ended with a groundbreaking, but Gaytan said he hasn’t been given a move-in date yet.
Gaytan lived in Imperial Beach, California, when he joined the military in 1996. In 2005, he was injured during a parachute jump while training for deployment to Afghanistan.
He still went on his deployment and served the rest of his Army career despite herniated discs, a degenerative disc disease, a lumbar sacral injury and spinal stenosis.
Medical procedures have not
Local Salute
Who: Retired U.S. Army Sergeant Lucio Gaytan
What: Presented a mortgagefree home from the PulteGroup’s Built to Honor program
Where: Sapphire Point of Lakewood Ranch


About Sgt. Gaytan: Injured in a parachute jump in 2005; still served 13 more years in the military
Injuries during his service: Herniated discs, a degenerative disc disease, a lumbar sacral injury, spinal stenosis, traumatic brain injury
Family: Wife Ivette, and their two children 1-year-old Lyanna and 5-year-old Lucious stopped his chronic pain from his back or from other injuries suffered in the parachute jump. He has been able to participate in adapted sports, such as wheelchair basketball and football.
Those in Sapphire Point will be getting a new neighbor who has earned a Bronze Star, Afghanistan Campaign Medal, Defense Meritorious Service Medal, and several other medals.
“You can rest assured that you are moving to a community that will embrace you and support you,” said Laura Cole, a senior vice president of SMR. “We will be there for you.”
Cole said he can be assured that Lakewood Ranch will be honored to be referred to as Gaytan’s home.
Rep. Tommy Gregory, District 73, told Gaytan, “You have shown the world there are things worth fighting for.”


Gregory looked around at the huge crowd which surrounded the home site.
“We have come to pay tribute to the sacrifices that you and your family have made,” said Gregory, a 20-year U.S. Air Force veteran who retired as a Lieutenant Colonel.




Manatee County Commissioner Vanessa Baugh said Gaytan gives the people of America, and Manatee County, a great example of what it means to be a good American.
“You truly have done that,” Baugh said. “You give us hope. We can’t thank you enough for what you have done ... No way.”
Retired U.S. Marines Sgt. Geoffrey Heath, who received a mortgage-free home in 2016 from Operation Finally Home, said such a home is a major game-changer.
Heath, who was hit by enemy ricochet fire in the legs and helmet in Ramadi, Iraq in 2005 and struck by an improvised explosive device in Marjah, Afghanistan in 2008, said transitioning back to civilian life has been hard for him.
“By the Grace of God organizations like this exist,” he said of the Built to Honor and Operation Finally Home programs. “Though the war is over, it’s not over for us.
“I had been out of the Marines 10 years, and I didn’t think things would get better.”
But he was there to tell Gaytan that things would get better in his new home.
“I hope you will have as much love, and as many laughs, as we have had in our home,” he said Gaytan. Gaytan is looking forward to his new home with his wife Ivette, and their two children 1-year-old Lyanna and 5-year-old Lucious. He called his wife of 10 years his hero.
Ivette Gaytan expects their everyday life will get a major boost from the mortgage-free home.
“I believe this will take a lot of the stress off,” Ivette Gaytan said of her family’s new home. “It gives us a peace of mind.”
Gaytan said neurosurgeons have been working to ease his constant pain, but haven’t come up with any new suggestions.
“We’re in limbo,” he said.
On Feb. 3, though, he was all smiles as he watched Lyanna and Lucious playing in the dirt of his future home site.
PulteGroup’s Built to Honor Program, launched in 2013, has built more than 75 mortgage-free homes throughout the U.S.
