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MARCH | 2020
Boca National Golf Course awaits design approval from city By: Diane Emeott Korzen Contributing Writer The clock is ticking for the Boca Raton City Council to approve the Greater Beach & Park District’s ‘Price-Fazio Design’ for Boca National Golf Course. The Beach & Park District Executive Director Briann Harms said the district anticipates a response from the city on its proposed design by March 9. The two boards have been at odds over plans for the new golf course at the former site of Boca Tecca’s Ocean Breeze course. FAU staff join Avron Fogelman and his family for the ribbon cutting of the Avron B. Fogelman Sports Memorabilia Collection. Staff photo.
New sports memorabilia collection on display, open to public at FAU By: Marisa Herman Associate Editor
American history comes alive through the lens of sporting events in a new, free, open-to-the public museum on the campus of Florida Atlantic University. The Avron B. Fogelman Sports Memorabilia Collection opened to students, faculty and the general public last month. Located inside the new Schmidt Family Complex for Academic Excellence, the collection was donated by Boca resident, former Kansas City Royals owner and sports fan Avron Fogelman. Considered to be one of the largest private
collections owned by an individual, the $10 million worth of memorabilia is now housed on campus and is free to view in perpetuity.
“It will redefine our campus,” FAU president John Kelly said during a preview reception debuting the museum. “I think people will fly out from all over to see this.” Inside, there is a display of Olympic torches including ones used in the 1936 Berlin, 1948 London and 1972 Munich games; the 13 original rules of basketball by James Naismith; first pitch baseballs thrown by various United States presidents and celebrities; a football signed by the undefeated 1972 Miami Dolphins and hundreds of other items.
olest Place on Earth Th e C o ! TM
The collection houses more than 1,200 sports artifacts that reveal pivotal moments in American history.
Per a 2018 agreement, the district must receive city approval on design before moving forward with construction on a new golf course. The approval is needed even with the district agreeing to foot the bill for the cost of the design they want to see. City council members have opposed the design calling it too expensive. The city council had offered to take over some of the financial aspects and plans, but the district board vehemently op[CONT. PG 2]
“It’s a true public treasure,” said Danita Nias, Vice president of Institutional Advancement and CEO of the FAU Foundation as she announced Fogelman before the ribbon cutting of the museum. Nias said he explored donating his collection to Memphis University, Tulane and the Memphis airport before he met with FAU president Kelly and their vision for the collection aligned. “This is a very special day for me,” Fogelman said. “This museum represents so much to me. For over [CONT. PG 2]
It was a packed house crowd for a Jan. 27 meeting between the Boca City Council and Beach and Parks District board. Photo by Diane Emeott Korzen.
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YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
New sports memorabilia collection on display, open to public at FAU 50 years, sports, education and history have been intertwined in my life.” [FROM PG 1]
He said each exhibit has a story and visitors should read all they can and try to imagine what they see and hear with each piece. The 1996 MLB National League Rookie of the Year and Miami Marlins co-announcer Todd Hollandsworth got to see his Rookie of the Year baseball on display. “I am proud to be a part of it,” he said of the exhibit. The former outfielder played on the Florida Marlins 2003 world series team and said seeing his Rookie of the Year ball made him emotional. “The only thing I have seen in my lifetime that rivals it is the Hall of Fame,” he said. Other notable items: • Items signed by crew members of the Enola Gay, the mission responsible for dropping the atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan • Golf memorabilia from legends such as Ben Hogan, Arnold Palmer, Jack Nicklaus and Tiger Woods • A 1930s-era football signed by Jim Thorpe and helmet autographed by Bronco Nagurski • An array of pieces from Muhammad Ali • The 1969 Ryder Cup Trophy • Interactive displays including a recording of Fogelman’s phone call with President Ronald Reagan after the Royals won the 1985 World Series • A pair of the late Kobe Bryant’s autographed sneakers and a jersey from his rookie season
The Avron B. Fogelman Sports Memorabilia Collection The Avron B. Fogelman Sports Memorabilia Collection Avron Fogelman with President John Kelly opened to students, faculty and the general public last houses decades of sports history on FAU’s campus/ Sub- holding a pair of Babe Ruth’s pants. Submitmonth at FAU. Submitted photo. mitted photo. ted photo.
We had a chance to ask Avron Fogelman some questions about his collection and decision to donate it. Here is what he had to say:
name on a baseball, they’ll now be able to wonder who he was and they’ll know now that he was the first person to cure polio.
How did you get into collecting sports memorabilia?
Why did you choose FAU as the home for your collection?
I’ve always been a sports fan and collector. Ever since I owned a major league baseball team, I’ve been enthralled with the history of sports and the uniqueness of the game. Being a collector is what I’ve been passionate about for the past 50 years.
I had the opportunity to donate my collection to a number of different institutions and facilities but after speaking to FAU’s President, Dr. John Kelly, and listening to his vision of how he thought this museum could be used, I decided to let it be housed at FAU.
Why did you decide to donate your collection?
What is your favorite item in the collection?
I think it’s important to leave something to society and to the next generation. This sports museum is a way for the next generation to know about the previous generation.
Oh, I can’t pick a favorite – they’re all important and valuable to me. I truly love every aspect of these items. They each represent a particular purpose and give a specific explanation of our history and culture through sports. Babe Ruth is iconic and represents Americana at its finest.
It’s very important not just for me but for the sake of students and for the university and for the city of Boca Raton to be able to have something so unique and unusual, and be able to tie in sports, history, politics, and all the different aspects of our society in this museum, captured through the lens of sports. For example, there’s a baseball in the museum signed by Jonas Salk, who created the polio vaccine – and many people still don’t know about him. When they see his
ball and to have it on display…well I think that’s pretty special. What was your reaction when you saw the exhibit for the first time? I thought it was just terrific. It’s exactly as I had imagined it. Dr. John Kelly and the entire FAU team I worked with have done a marvelous job of putting it all together. I’m just very proud of this museum and of the ability to have my accomplishments on display in the sports world. This collection pretty well captures the embodiment of my exposure to sports and the people I knew and the experiences I had.
What item in the exhibit is most meaningful to you? Probably one of the most valuable artifacts we have in the museum is the 13 original rules of basketball, written by James Naismith. I also have the pen that he used to write them. To be able to have the handwritten notes of the man who invented basket-
Avron Fogelman speaks to a crowd at FAU during a ribbon cutting for his sports memorabilia museum on campus. Staff photo.
Boca National Golf Course awaits design approval from city [FROM PG 1]
posed the offer.
No headway on design approval was made during a joint meeting between the boards at the end of January. Mayor Scott Singer maintained that the city is willing to finance construction of the golf course. “Our offer still stands... You don’t want our help, I respect that.”
The district met with representatives from the National Golf Foundation to talk about phasing construction of the golf course. Harms said she expects a report ready for the district’s March 2 meeting.
The District also voted unanimously to select a credit rating firm Moody’s or Standard & Poors – and ultimately get a credit rating, as is done by municipalities for determining their borrowing potential.
In another step to get the ball rolling on the golf course, Commissioners directed Harms to write a request for proposals for a Project Manager for Boca National, to have it ready to go -- but not go out to bid until design approval is received from the city. The two parties are set to meet again for a joint meeting at 6 p.m. on April 13 at the Boca Raton Community Center.
Council Member Andrea Levine O’Rourke called the matter, “A very frustrating, long, drawn-out ordeal.” Something that pleased both boards was a price cut down from $28 million to about $13.5 million for the course construction attributed to “value engineering.” District staff said the savings will continue during construction and selecting cost effective products. The project will feature an 18-hole golf course on the west side, a temporary clubhouse, a tunnel, and a driving range, short course and putting range on the east side. While the district awaits city approval, it has made some other progress.
The Beach & Park District board stands firm with their decision to con- Boca Councilman Andy Thomson questions Beach & Park District struct a Price Fazio designed golf course. Photo by Diane Emeott Korzen. over financials. Photo by Diane Emeott Korzen.
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YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
things you need to know this March in Boca Raton 1 The Honor Your Doctor
luncheon
presented
by
the
Truck Friday on March 13. Food trucks
his uncanny homage to legendary singer,
will be stationed from 11:30 a.m. to 2
Nat King Cole. Donny’s warm personal-
p.m. at the park.
ity, embracing bass baritone voice and
6 The 3rd annual
Rotary Club Down-
We Are Stoneman
town Boca Raton will
Douglas Winemaker
take place on March 18 from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at Boca West Country Club. The luncheon recognizes physicians and medical professionals. Attended by healthcare, community and civic leaders, the event funds the Helen M. Babione Medical Scholarship that benefits medical, nursing and health related students attending four local universities: Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine at FAU, Christine E. Lynn College of Nursing at FAU, Lynn University and Palm Beach State College.
commanding stage presence captures the very essence of Mr. Cole. Unforgettable, Mona Lisa, Rambling Rose, Too Young and Route 66 are just a taste of the many
al Palm Yacht and Country Club. The chefs
Dinner
will go knife-to-knife in this Iron Chef-
Parkland Cares re-
style competition. Each chef will create a
turns to Woodfield
signature dish using the same secret ingre-
Country Club on March 13. The Wine-
dient. A panel of celebrity judges will de-
maker Dinner will feature a cocktail hour,
termine the winner, who will have the op-
where participating wineries will pour a
portunity to host next year’s event. Guests
variety of both red and white wines. This
9 Hang out with sea turtle ambassador
can sample each of the chef ’s creations, sip
will be followed by a 4-course dinner by
Luna at Gumbo Limbo’s Sea Turtle Day
savory cocktails and bid on silent auction
Executive Chef Bart Messing. The event
Festival. Head to the Boca nature cen-
prizes throughout the evening. Competing
begins at 6:30 p.m.
ter from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on March 7 to
benefiting
Nat Cole hits in this show. Tickets $65.
chefs are: Quinn Alexander of The Little
watch a play by the Sol Children Theater
Club; Joe DiPrima of Royal Palm Yacht and
Troupe, try food from food trucks, get
Country Club; Joe Longo of Broken Sound
your face painted and enjoy the exhib-
Country Club; and Glenn Matusik of De-
Lois Pope will
its. Entry and activities are free. Park at
laire Country Club. The esteemed panel of
return to the stage
Spanish River Park and take a free shuttle
experts judging their creations are: Kather-
in Jan McArt and
to the event. Parking is $20 per car. Visit
ine Barnhart of Truist; Arturo Gismondi
Live at Lynn produc-
gumbolimbo.org/Sea-Turtle-Day
of Trattoria Romano; Nick Morfogen of
tion of Lerner and
Little Pine Golf Club; and Burt Rapoport of
Loewe’s classic musi-
Rapoport Restaurant Group. Tickets $200.
who you want to serve the city as may-
4 The Boca Cham-
challenger Bernard Korn. Council mem-
2
cal Gigi on March 14-15 at Lynn’s Keith C. and Elaine Johnson Wold Perform-
ber
ing Arts Center. Shows will take place at
“Aunt Alicia.” Tickets start at $50.
3 Trustbridge Hospice Foundation is hosting “Chef Showdown Country Club Competition” a battle of the best country club chefs in Boca on March 10 at the Roy-
its
Cookout on March
p.m. on March 15. Palm Beach philanactress earlier in her career, will appear as
hold
annual Community
2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. on March 14 and 4 thropist Lois Pope, who was a singer-
will
7 at the YMCA of
7 Hit the polls on March 17 to vote for
bers Andy Thomson and Andrea Levine O’Rourke retained their seats as they faced no challengers.
8
Memorial
Park for Food
place on March 8 at Boca West Country Club. Cocktails and silent auction begin
Wick Theatre to see
at 6 p.m. followed by dinner at 7 p.m.
Donny
Evins
Tickets $250 per person. JARC programs
“Soul and Cole” at 8
include residential homes and apart-
p.m. on March 7 and
ments, community case management
8. The internationally acclaimed singer
and employment training for people of
amazes audiences around the world with
all abilities.
free.
to
10 The 34th annual JARC Gala will take
Head to the
take place from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Entry is
Head
more information.
or. Incumbent Mayor Scott Singer faces
South Palm Beach County. The BBQ will
5
for
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MARCH 2020 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER
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Boca man to cycle down state to raise awareness, money for Hodgkin’s Lymphoma ily,” he said. “It’s because of these two great friends, Duben and Ian, that raising money for LLS is so important to me. I want to do all that I can to help fund the research that will end cancer someday and will stop the terrible suffering of all those with cancer and the family members and friends who love them.”
By: Marisa Herman Associate Editor Josh Ladle likes to push himself. Whether the Boca resident is competing in a triathlon or an open water swim, the father of four is always looking for a challenge that tests his limits. His next endurance test: a 575 mile bike ride from the Florida/Georgia border down to Key West in 60 hours.
To prepare for the ride, Ladle recently cycled from Boca to Key West, which was about 218 miles.
“I have never done anything this long or this crazy before,” he said. “I am really excited about it.” This time, the challenge is more than just pushing his own physical limits. The ride is to honor his friends who have battled Hodgkin’s Lymphoma and to raise money for the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, Palm Beach-Treasure Coast Chapter (LLS). “I was thinking of doing it, just to do it and say that I did it,” he said of the upcoming bike ride. “I have always tried to do things that push my physical limits. Why not ride the entire state of Florida?” Then, he decided there was a better reason out there for the ride. And he thought of two of his friends, one who died, and one who survived. “I decided to do the ride in honor of them,” he said. “And to bring awareness to cancer in general.”
He said that ride was great practice for what he is about to take on. He is most nervous about traffic and a stretch of the ride where cars speed along at 55 miles per hour on bridges in the Keys. Josh Ladle will bicycle 575 miles next month to raise money for Leukemia & Lymphoma Society, Palm Beach-Treasure Coast Chapter (LLS). Submitted photo.
His goal is to raise $100,000 for his ride, which will take place from March 25-27. Before two of his friends were diagnosed with cancer, he said he really didn’t know anyone close to him impacted by the disease. Then, it become personal when his friend Duben Wilde died at the age of 33 and left behind a wife and two young children. Ladle’s other friend Ian Patton is in remission. “I want to help and prevent that from happening to another friend or another fam-
The test ride helped him figure out what foods to pack along and how to hydrate properly. He also learned that he needs to bring extra batteries for his lights for night rides. And beyond the physical exhaustion and how his body performs, he knows getting over the mental hurdles will be a big component of his ride, too. Ladle said he has gained greater perspective on endurance because of his two friends. “I’ve come to better understand that not all ‘endurance’ events have a finish line,” he said. “For those that do, well, sometimes those finish lines move. I always knew when my races would be over, but my friends didn’t
know when their fight with cancer would end. I chose to participate in my endurance events; my friends didn’t choose to endure cancer.” Ladle is encouraging other cyclists to join in on his ride, even if it is just for a mile or two. He is also still looking for sponsors and donations to hit his goal. LLS’s continued advancements over the years are responsible for the blood cancer survival rate doubling and tripling; in some cases, the survival rate has even quadrupled. Many LLS supported therapies not only help blood cancer patients but are now used to treat patients with rare forms of stomach and skin cancers and used in clinical trials for patients with lung, brain, breast, pancreatic and prostate cancers. LLS funded drugs are also now being tested for patients with other non-cancerous diseases like diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis and multiple sclerosis. Donations support LLS research as well as patient services, advocacy, public and professional education, and community services. His endurance races are his passion. During the day, he owns his own real estate company where he focuses on buying shopping centers. For more information on Ladle’s ride or to make a donation, visit events.lls.org/pb/circleofhope2020/bikeflorida. For more information about LLS, please visit lls.org.
‘Slingshot right turn’ at Federal & Mizner to be eliminated there, with a traffic light. The Community Redevelopment Agency board approved the change at a recent meeting. The decision needed approved from Florida Dept. of Transportation (FDOT) because Federal Highway is a state road. City of Boca Communications & Marketing Manager Chrissy Gibson said the project should start in June and will take several months to complete. “We are waiting on the signal mast arm,” she said. Boca’s CRA voted to replace the slingshot turn at northbound Federal Highway and Mizner Boulevard with a perpendicular right hand turn with a traffic light. Photo by Diane Emeott Korzen.
The city began looking into changing the design of the current free-flow traffic lane several years ago. An evaluation of the intersection was requested in July 2017.
By: Diane Emeott Korzen Contributing Writer
In May 2018, FDOT analyzed the intersection and submitted a Road Safety Audit. Kimley-Horne & Associates, Inc. prepared a Traffic Impact Report.
The so-called ‘slingshot’ right-hand turn on northbound Federal Highway at eastbound Mizner Boulevard in Boca Raton is about to undergo a transformation to become more pedestrian-friendly. Due to safety concerns for pedestrians and bicyclists trying to cross the street between CVS at 520 Federal Hwy. and busy Royal Palm Place with its international restaurants and shops– a perpendicular right-hand turn is to be put in
A second left-turn lane is now to be added to the east approach, a right-turn lane to the south approach, and a leftturn lane to the west approach as part of the amendment. Rowing classes offered at Boca Resort Guests and members at the Boca Raton Resort & Club can now take rowing classes on the Hydrow.
Hydrow is a simulated on-water rowing workout led by worldclass athletes, streamed live and on-demand from scenic waterways around the world. Guests will be able to take instructor-guided Hydrow classes twice a day on property, blending live, in-person instruction with Live Outdoor Reality Classes. In addition to Hydrow, the resort offers other fitness alternatives through its artists-in-resident program including a residency with Orangetheory Fitness, stand up paddle boarding with Paddle Divas, yoga with Karma Vibes, and more. Hab Center receives $50,000 grant The Hab Center in Boca Raton recently received a $50,000 grant from the Quantum Foundation. Grant money will be used to fund health access, awareness and education programming. The Habilitation Center’s mission is to equip adults with special needs with knowledge, skills and behavior needed to lead useful and productive lives with dignity, respect and independence.
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YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
Jay Van Vechten, co-founder of Boating and Beach Bash for People with Disabilities 1 Tell us about yourself and how you came up with Boating and Beach Bash for People with Disabilities.
trolley and Express mini-train will run continuously during the entire duration of the event until 3:30 p.m.
The Bash had existed in a different format, as an annual picnic for people living in group homes. I was serving on the City’s Disability Advisory Board. Our chairman was Shawn Friedkin of Stand Among Friends. I told Shawn I had an idea for how the event could be broadened and expanded by adding boats and opening it to all people with disabilities living in Boca versus the previous attendees, who were only people living in group homes. Shawn and I met with Mayor Susan Whelchel. She loved the idea, and we were off and running. Three hundred and fifty people attended the first event in 2009.
We will also have new amenities for guests on the autism spectrum. Thanks to a $3,500 grant from Autism Speaks, South Florida chapter, the Bash will add amenities to be more accessible to those on the autism spectrum. Amenities will include “Quiet Comfort/Break” zones and free “comfort supplies,” such as ear plugs, sensory toys and sunglasses for guests. The grant will also allow for the purchase of developmental play items and crafts for the Bash’s Kids Zone.
2 The 12th Annual Boating & Beach
Bash for People with Disabilities returns on March 1. Tell us about the event. On Sunday, March 1, the nation’s largest, free, one-day event for people with disabilities, both seen and unseen, will welcome more than 6,000 guests to Spanish River Park. Every element of the Boating & Beach Bash for People with Disabilities is designed to welcome those with disabilities, their family members and their caregivers. Every year, the Bash has grown with new features and attractions. There is literally something for everyone: boat rides, beach access, sporting events, ponies for petting, costumed action heroes, local
entertainment, wheelchair yoga, miniature train rides, a Kids Fun Zone, food, music, a vendors’ row, and dance parties. New this year, we will offer yoga and surfing lessons at 10 a.m. on the beach with Shellie and Sam Chiet.
3 We heard some celebrities will be in attendance. Can you tell us who? Coming back for her third year with us will be singer Kechi Okwuchi, a Nigerian-American singer and motivational speaker. She was one of two survivors of the 107 passengers aboard Sosoliso Airlines Flight 1145, which crashed in Nigeria in 2005. Kechi suffered severe thirddegree burns all over her body. To date, she has endured more than 100 surgeries. A finalist on the 12th season of America’s Got Talent in 2017, and in the 2019 AGT’s Champions rendition, Okwuchi headlined the Bash in 2018 and 2019. Also returning for 2020 is Rion Paige, a finalist on the X Factor. A Jacksonville native, who now lives in Nashville, Paige was born with a rare condition called arthrogryposis multiplex congenita, which caused permanent damage to her arms, resulting in her hands being in a fixed, bent position. A country-and-western musician, Paige was mentored on the X Factor by Demi Lovato.
We are extremely excited that Kellye Cash is joining our national lineup. Cash is a former Miss America and niece of country super star Johnny Cash. Known for her extraordinary singing voice and bigger than life personality, Cash will perform the National Anthem.
4 What is new at this year’s bash? In addition to the fleet of yachts and boats, manned by volunteer captains, the Freedom Boat Club will provide extra pontoon boats. One of our biggest draws, the free boat rides along the Intracoastal Waterway are offered the entire length of the event, from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. These pontoon boats are a huge game changer in our efforts to get as many people with disabilities as possible out onto the water. Boarding and disembarking will be greatly eased for those with mobility challenges. It will cut down on dock turnaround time, it will allow more people to get on each boat, and it promises to make Captain Tyler’s job a bit easier, as he directs all operations that day. We’re blessed indeed to be partnering with such kind people. Also, a trolley shuttle and a second Catabello Express mini-train – which is ADAaccessible – will be added to assist guests from the parking lot to the Bash area. The
5 What is the most rewarding part
about putting on the annual bash?
For me, the most rewarding part about putting on the Bash are the smiles we generate, the laughter we hear and the stories that we’re told by grateful family members. My favorite story of the 2019 Bash was a dad who said how much he and his family love the event. When pressed, he said, “It is the one day a year our son feels normal.” There’s no question that this event fills my heart with joy. It has given my wife, Lowell, and I something meaningful to do in our golden years. Frankly, I think the Bash keeps us younger in my ways that many of our contemporaries – people our age who feel unneeded and inconsequential in their retirement years. I don’t think I’ve ever felt more needed, nor have I ever worked harder than I do on this event. The same is true for Lowell, my bride. We love it. And we’re having a ball helping people with special needs find true joy and the opportunity to share a day of laughter with their family members and caregivers.
Junior League of Boca to participate in ‘Little Black Dress Initiative’ and awareness for the needs of underserved women and children. The Initiative will coincide with The Association of Junior Leagues International’s Day of Impact, March 10, and International Women’s Day, March 8.
If you see Junior League of Boca Raton members around town between March 9-13, you may notice they are repeating outfits, specifically little black dresses. This isn’t an accident or fashion faux pas. The league is participating in the “Little Black Dress Initiative,” a social media awareness campaign designed to raise funds
This is the first year the Junior League of Boca Raton will be participating. The goal for the initiative is to raise $20,000 dollars for diapers, training, and developing the potential of women. League members will be tasked with raising funds via their personal social media channels.
During the five-day initiative, League members will wear the same black dress or outfit, along with an “Ask Me About My Dress” button. The purpose of the initiative will enable members to address the somber reality of the limited resources many women have; the impact of poverty and the lack of choices people have who live in poverty on a daily basis.
“Our members will wear the same dress every day for five days to illustrate the fact that many people who live in Florida have very little money to live on. Our goal is to raise funds for diapers for women in need,” Cristy Stewart Harfmann, President of the Junior League of Boca Raton said. “The Little Black Dress Initiative illustrates how limited resources affect daily life.”
Founded in 2014 by the Junior League of London, the Little Black Dress Initiative is a social media-driven awareness campaign and fundraiser that has been adopted by other chapters.
After the week is over, Junior League members will hold the Little Black Dress Drive on March 25 and ask members to dry clean and donate the dress they wore, along with accessories, to Dress for Success.
Boca Raton Jewish Film Festival brings variety of films from documentaries to short films to local big screens this month Staff report Movie buffs will be able to catch 55 different films during the Levis JCC Sandler Center’s 4th annual Judy Levis Markhoff Boca Raton Jewish Film Festival. The line-up includes 55 films from 22 countries that will be screened at the Cinemark Palace 20 Theaters in Boca Raton, Movies of Delray and in the Beifield Auditorium at the Levis JCC Sandler Center. The festival runs March 8-March 29 and is considered one of the top 10 Jewish Film Festivals in the country. Films, shorts and even television series cover topics including the Jewish experience, culture, history, identity and topics relevant to Jewish life. Festival artistic director Wendy Honig said there are options for everyone. “The Festival has become one of the most-anticipated events of the year in the Boca Raton community and we could not be prouder,” she said.
Opening night will kick off at 7 p.m. on March 8 with the Florida premiere of “I’ll Find You.” The film takes audiences back to 1939 during the German invasion of Poland. Two young lovers, Robert, a Catholic opera singer and Rachel, a Jewish violin virtuoso, dream of one day performing together at legendary Carnegie Hall. When they are torn apart, Robert vows to find Rachel, no matter what the war may bring. His search leads him on a life-threatening journey through the heart of Nazi Germany. Director Martha Coolidge (former President of the Directors Guild) and Producer Fred Roos (The Godfather, Apocalypse Now) will be making special guest appearances, and will host a post-screening discussion. Films scheduled for the first two weeks will be screened at Cinemark Palace 20 Theaters in Boca Raton and then at Movies of Delray the third week. Some films will be shown at the JCC.
Since the festival is spread out over three weeks, you could catch all 55 films, “If you’re really ambitious,” said Lesley Rich, festival program and production director. Honig and Rich estimate about 15,000 people will attend the films while the festival is going on. “We started with 21 films in this festival and it has grown to be 55 films,” Honig said. “We have grown the number of places where we show films. Our audience has grown and our patrons have grown. The festival is so popular that our phone is ringing off the wall before we open up for ticket sales.” And while the festival is only around for a few weeks, Rich said putting it on is a year-round commitment. “We really enjoy film,” he said. “We are constantly seeking out films and we try to stay on the cutting edge.” The goal is to create a destination film festival. Some highlights of the festival:
Stand! – East Coast Premiere of a musical inspired by a true story. 1919 Stefan and his father Mike fled Ukraine for the New World, where they struggle to earn enough to reunite the family. Stefan is instantly smitten with the Jewish suffragette neighbor, Rebecca – but Rebecca’s brother Moishe and Mike oppose the would-be Romeo and Juliet. Returned soldiers, angry at the lack of jobs after the war, violently threaten the city’s immigrants, including Emma, the refugee from racial persecution in Oklahoma. When a movement develops for workers to leave their jobs in protest, AJ Anderson, a wealthy lawyer, pits all against each other in a dramatic and inspirational final stand.
Incitement - This rigorous psycho-
logical thriller by American-Israeli director Yaron Zilberman depicts the lead-up to the 1995 assassination of Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin through the worldview of his assassin, Yigal Amir. Photo by Yael Ilan.
LIFE
MARCH 2020 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER
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Golden Voices - Southeast U.S. premiere - Victor and Raya Frenkel were the golden voices of the Soviet film dubbing. In 1990, with the collapse of USSR, they decide to immigrate to Israel, just like hundreds of thousands of Soviet Jews. Victor and Raya’s attempts to use their distinctive talent in a country that doesn’t need it, will turn the beginning of the new chapter of their life into an amusing, painful, and absurd experience. Radical Obsession – U.S. premiere - A documentary about the unholy truth about Iran and terrorism. The closing day will take place at 2 p.m. on March 29 at Zinman Hall where “The Automat” will be shown. The film transports movie-goers to a time when Americans once sipped coffee and ate pie around communal tables, sharing their struggles and dreams with strangers at Horn & Hardart’s iconic Automat. More than just entertainment, The Automat is a parable of how Americans once dined happily together before turning to the isolated experience offered by fast food.
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The documentary is directed by Lisa Hurwitz and stars Mel Brooks, Elliott Gould, Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Colin Powell, Carl Reiner, Bruce Vilanch, Ed Rendell, Wilson Goode, Stephen Tobolowsky and Howard Schultz. The screening will be preceded by an Automat-themed party commencing at noon. For a full schedule and ticket information, visit http://bocajff.org/ the-festival/2020-films/
Nostalgic concert series at Mizner [15]
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YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
Don’t miss events 1 Dress for Success Palm
Beaches will honor Lilly Pulitzer with its Style Icon award at its seventh annual Style for Hope fundraising luncheon on March 6 from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. at Kravis Center. A highlight of the luncheon will be a “Conversation With…”, when emcee Kelley Dunn, the WPTV-Ch. 5 news anchor, interviews onstage Pulitzer’s granddaughter Lilly Leas Ferreria and Mira Fain, executive vice president of design and development at Lilly Pulitzer. Making a special appearance will be Emmy Award winning TV personality and style expert Carson Kressley. Tickets start at $150.
2 Kidnapping activist Elizabeth Smart will be the keynote speaker for the Angel Moms Brunch and Benefit at 10:30 a.m. on March 31 at Royal Palm Beach Yacht and Country Club. The event raises funds for the Place of Hope Rinker campus, which is home to survivors of human trafficking and foster children. 3 Christine Pedi is bringing Broadway legends to the Wick Theatre stage in “Forbidden Dames” at 8 p.m. on March 24. Christine is better known as the lady of 1,000 voices. She will bring songs and uncanny impressions that will leave you laughing all night. Tickets start at $65. 4 Florida Atlantic University’s Dorothy F. Schmidt College of Arts and Letters will host the sixth annual Palm Beach Book Festival with a group of New York Times bestselling authors, several of whom have books featured on the New York Times list of books to watch in 2020. The festival will take place on March 21 from
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in FAU’s University Theatre. Tickets for the full day are $75, and individual panel tickets are $20-$25, and can be purchased at fauevents.com or by calling 561297-6124. Free parking is included with admission, and lunch will be for sale at the event.
5 The 18th annual Boca Bac-
chanal will return on March 6 with Vintner Dinners held at elegant private homes and historic venues at 7 p.m. Guests will feast on five-course meals, created by chefs working in tandem with acclaimed vintners, for the ultimate dinner party experience. $350, per person. Featured vintners, for the five Vintner Dinners, are Katie Griesbeck from Cakebread Cellars in Sonoma, CA; Anthony Truchard of Truchard Vineyards in Napa, CA; Anita Correas of Montes Alpha in Santa Cruz, Chile; Tim Duncan of Silver Oak Cellars & Twomey Cellars in Napa, CA; and John Schultz of Flora Springs Winery & Vineyards in Napa, CA. The Grand Tasting, dinner-bythe-bite from 25 local restaurants with 130 different wine samples, will return to the Boca Raton Resort’s Great Hall on March 7 at 7 p.m. Tickets $125. All funds raised from the events benefit the Boca Raton Historical Society & Museum. Photo courtesy of Michele Sandberg.
6 Tovah is Leona! will return to Boca’s Mizner Park Cultural Center on March 28-29. Six-time Tony and Emmy nominee Tovah Feldshuh is back by popular demand for a limited engagement with her Broadway-bound musical Tovah is LEONA! The show, in which Feldshuh assumes the persona of real estate mogul and hotelier Leona Helmsley, played to sold-out houses
in January. Tickets $39-$59. Shows at 3 and 8 p.m. on March 28 and 2 and 7 p.m. on March 29.
7 Get ready to run while helping Boca Helping Hands. MobileHelp is hosting “Bridging the Distance” 5K to benefit the nonprofit at 7 a.m. on March 14 at the Boca Raton Innovation Campus. Race entry is $30 until March 10 and then $35. Kids 10 and under run for free at 8 a.m. Registered runners will receive an AccuChip to record their net times. First, second and third place awards will be presented in five age groups, including under 10 and over 80. T-shirts and participation medals will be given to the first 300 runners. 8 YMCA of South Palm Beach County’s 18th Annual Inspiration Breakfast will feature Super Bowl winning Washington Redskins quarterback, entrepreneur and Emmy award-winning NFL Analyst for ESPN and NFL Network, Joe Theismann. Theismann was awarded NFL’s Man of the Year in 1982 and MVP in 1983. The breakfast will take place at 7:30 a.m. on March 4 at Office Depot Global Headquarters. Funds raised from the event will go toward supporting scholarships for youth development programs which provides everyone, regardless of income, the ability to participate in YMCA programs. 9 Celebrate International Women’s Day from 10 a.m. to noon on March 8 at Mizner Park. Lululemon at Mizner Park will host a Super Woman Sunday. The free event will include an hour-long collaborative workout starting at 10 a.m., followed by browsing booths sponsored by Mizner Park merchants, restaurants and local vendors. The morning will start with a yoga warm-up by Mary Ann Morgan Fried, followed by HITT tabata by Sara at Sweat 561; shadow boxing with Stephanie of intensityX3; and barre cool-down with Rachel of Barre3. Optional cash donations and gently used women’s business attire will be accepted the day of the event to benefit The Women’s Circle. 10 Spanish River Library will host Touch a Truck from 9 a.m. to noon on March 21. In partnership with the City of Boca Raton’s Municipal Services, Utility Services, Recreation Services, and Police and Fire Departments, the Spanish River Library will bring the event to its parking lot for the third year. Truck operators will be on hand to demonstrate how their vehicles work and explain what they do. Check out a fire engine, sanitation truck, aerial bucket truck, dump truck, beach tractor, rescue boat and much more! Find out why they are such an important part of our community. Visitors are also invited inside the library for special story times and coloring pages featuring the trucks on display. The free program will take place rain or shine! Children must be accompanied by an adult. Food will be available for purchase.
MARCH 2020 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER
March calendar
Tickets $39 (includes lunch catered by Too Jays)
Levis JCC West Boca Theatre
Three celebrated actors from Words… Alive present a reading of THE BRIDGE GAME, an original play written by Carole Geshlider. Based on her years of competition bridge, friendships, and bridge club, the play is a wacky comedy about friendship, survival and forgiveness.
The Marvelous Wonderettes March 5 - 8 Thursday, March 5, 2 pm & 7:30 pm; Saturday, March 7, 7:30 pm; Sunday, March 8, 2 pm. Tickets: $30 - $40 At the 1958 Springfield High School prom, the audience meets Betty Jean, Cindy Lou, Missy, and Suzy, four girls with hopes and dreams as big as their crinoline skirts. This musical trip down memory lane features classic ‘50’s and ‘60’s hits. Barefoot in the Park March 12 – March 25 Thursday, March 12, 2 pm & 7:30 pm; Thursday, March 19, 7:30 pm; Saturdays, March 14 & 21, 7:30 pm; Sundays, March 15 & 22, 2 pm; Wednesday, March 25, 7:30 pm.
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MusicWorks &
Michael D’Amore – Lead Singer of the Capris: The Very Best of the 50’s & 60’s Hits March 11 12:30 p.m. Tickets $39 (includes lunch catered by Too Jays) Veteran New York entertainer, Michael D’Amore performs his one-man show, celebrating the best of the 50’s and 60’s. As a member of The Capris, D’Amore sings lead on the their hits “There’s A Moon Out Tonight” and “Morse Code Of Love” for music fans around the world.
Live & Let Die The Music of Paul McCartney March 4, 2020 Crest Theatre
Ticket to the Moon, A trip through the music of Electric Light Orchestra March 11, 2020 Crest Theatre
Tickets: $30 - $40 Neil Simon’s romantic comedy focuses on newlyweds Corie and Paul as they begin married life in a tiny, 5th-floor walkup apartment in a Manhattan brownstone.
Delray Beach Playhouse Daughter of a Garbageman
Florida’s Funniest Comedians: James Yon and Juanita Lolita March 13 8 p.m.
March 5
Tickets $20
8 p.m.
James Yon is a Florida native and one of America’s hottest up and coming comedians. He can be seen every Sunday at 11 p.m. hosting his own show, “Viral Breakdown,” on the Afrotainment Channel. Juanita Lolita was voted Tampa’s funniest female with her Latin flair and hillbilly background. She takes pride in the fact that she can make you laugh hysterically without profanity.
Tickets: $29 Maureen Langan’s one-woman show is a tale of her 1970’s upbringing in New Jersey, in which her Irish mother and Bronx-born father, a New York City sanitation worker, told her to work hard, get educated and life would reward her. But is that true? Langan lambasts today’s “reality show culture,” while revealing her parents’ strengths, struggles and secrets, as well as her own, and how that made her who she is today.
March 14
Tickets $37/$45
March 10 12:30 p.m.
Space Oddity: The David Bowie Music Experience March 25, 2020 Crest Theatre
Tea for Three: Lady Bird, Pat and Betty
8 p.m.
The Bridge Game
Pink Floyd: The Wall March 20, 2020 Pavilion
Emmy award-winning actress, Elaine Bromka collaborated with playwright Eric H. Weinberger to create this one-woman show that reveals life and love in the White House. TEA FOR THREE humanizes the political scene with a whimsical and deeply moving story – a behind-the-scenes look at Lady Bird Johnson, Pat Nixon, and Betty Ford.
Fleetwood Mac's Greatest Hits April 11, 2020 Pavilion
Peter Asher April 8, 2020 Crest Theatre
51 N Swinton Ave, Delray Beach, FL 33444
TO PURCHASE TICKETS: www.OldSchoolSquare.org
Box Office: 561.243.7922 Ext. 1
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YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
STAGE STRUCK: A Play by Simon Gray March 20-April 5
Put on a Happy Face: Gower Champion on Broadway March 30-April 9
Friday, 8 p.m.; Saturday, 2 & 8 p.m.; Sunday 2 p.m.; Wednesday (3/25 only), 8 p.m.; Thursday, 8 p.m.
Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday, 2 & 7:30 p.m.
Tickets $35 (adults); $15 (students); $25 (groups)
Tickets $35 (adults); $15 (students); $25 (groups)
Night at the Movies – with Svetlana and the New York Swing Collective March 6 8-10 p.m.
$5 for patrons | Free for performers
Voices of Women of the 60s: Joan, Joni, Judy, Janis, Carly and Carole
Arts Garage
March 24-25
Elaine Dame presents the Lady Lyricists: Queens of Tin Pan Alley
Singing duo Bill Bowen and Joan Friedenberg retrace the steps of six female music legends and bring you with them. Slides illustrate as the inspiring presentation wends its way through the lives of Joan Baez, Joni Mitchell, Judy Collins, Janis Ian, Carly Simon and Carole King with commentary that recalls both their challenges and stunning achievements.
Comedy Night
8-10 p.m.
When the philandering husband of a successful London stage actress is advised by her psychiatrist to leave him, he realizes he only has two alternatives: to be thrown abruptly onto the street...or to become a wealthy widower.
Tickets $25
emerging artists Eliza Singerman, Katrina Stautihar and Marcia Bukowski. The event is free!
March 3
Gower Champion first rose to stardom as half of the most celebrated dancing team since Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers. Marge and Gower Champion appeared in a popular series of MGM musicals and eventually became household names when they were given their own television show.
2 p.m.
American popular song, paving the way for future female artists and making their mark in a male-dominated field.
Try your hand at stand-up, sing a comedic tune, or tap into your literary side with a funny poem during an hour of open mic. Two regional stand-up comedians take the stage in the second hour to close the night with gut-busting laughs.
March 7 8-10 p.m.
7-8:30 p.m.
We Can Do It! Art Exhibit Opening Reception
General Admission $35 | Reserved $40 | Premium $45
March 6
Though not as famous as their male counterparts, women lyricists like Dorothy Fields, Carolyn Leigh, and Betty Comden made vast and varied contributions to
SUNDAY
MARCH 1
HOME
GAMES
Night at the Movies takes listeners on a dynamic musical journey that ranges from the French New Wave and Soviet Cinema, to modern day Academy Award-winners, and animated classics. It is presented by the exciting ensemble of exciting New York jazz stars. Diana Rein
March 1
UPCOMING
General Admission $35 | Reserved $40 | Premium $45
6-8 p.m. Join us for Happy Hour from 5-7pm and enjoy the art at the opening of the WE CAN DO IT! EXHIBITION featuring local
General Admission $35 | Reserved $40 | Premium $45 Diana Rein just finished in the studio, for her new 2019 release, ”Queen of my Castle,” which promises not only to be a highly anticipated release, but a tribute to her influences. Coast Records signed Diana Rein, the guitarist and vocalist, perfectly dubbed as the ‘Six-String Siren of Blues.’ This is the
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MARCH 2020 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER
March 18
follow up to her sophomore album ”Long Road.”
8-10 p.m.
On the Radio: A Tribute to Donna Summer March 8 7-8:30 p.m. General Admission $35 | Reserved $40 | Premium $45 A vibrant, explosive, exciting eruption of music and talent is awaiting your arrival as ”ON THE RADIO” opens their hearts and souls to show you the best of The Queen of Disco Donna Summer. This is the show for everyone who feels the rhythm and wants to take part in the sights and sounds of the music that made us all get on our feet. Arts Garage All Arts Open Mic Night March 10
$5 for patrons | Free for performers Arts Garage presents our ALL ARTS OPEN MIC NIGHT. If you’ve been working on a song, a poem, a rap, or a riff that you want to show off, this is the place for you.
Premium $45
General Admission $25 Victoria Vox is an award-winning, ukulele-toting songwriter and performer. She performs mostly as a one-woman-band, incorporating a loop pedal and bass effect on her ukulele, while taking her own solos (on mouth-trumpet), and cutting through it all with her genuine lyrics and pure voice. Hotel California March 19, 7-9 p.m. March p.m.
20,
2020
8-10
General Admission $40 | Reserved $45 | Premium $50
8-11 p.m.
Today Hotel California continues to tour internationally, and their stage show has evolved into one of the most impressive and popular productions on the North American soft-seat and festival circuits. The Manny Echazabal Quintet
Kristina Koller
March 21
March 13
8-10 p.m.
8-10 p.m.
General Admission $35 | Reserved $40 | Premium $45
General Admission $35 | Reserved $40 |
Always innovative and pushing the limit, Kristina Koller is making her mark in the music world. With such a diverse artistic foundation, it is no surprise that her innovation for new sounds drives Kristina’s creative flow, melding jazz, funk, R&B & alternative genres into her music. Tas Cru and his Band of Tortured Souls March 15 7-8:30 p.m. General Admission $30 | Reserved $35 | Premium $40 Tas Cru’s show is an eclectic mix of songs across the wide spectrum of blues styles. He’ll swing you with a traditional shuffle, swoon you with a sultry ballad, lull you into a trance with deep Hill-country blues and then rock your knobs off. The performance features stellar vocals with rich layers of harmony. Solos are shared between Tas and his other guitarist and saxophone. Out of the House Series: Victoria Vox
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A celebration of the auspicious debut CD, Short Notice, by Miami-born saxophonist Manny Echazabal, is a fun post-bop ride that reveals compositional ingeniousness and an adventurous side that draws from Wayne Shorter and Michael Brecker, but still brandishes a valid signature. Miami Girls Tumbao
Pineapple Grove ART & MUSIC FEST Roaring into the 20s with Art & all that Jazz
Thursday, April 16th 6-10pm Step back into the 20s on NE 2nd Avenue in Downtown Delray Beach. Stroll this closed street event in the Pineapple Grove district and enjoy live big band music, photo booths, fabulous food, art exhibits, and meet the merchants throughout the 4 blocks. Twenties Attire Suggested!
March 22 7-8:30 p.m. General Admission $30 | Reserved $35 | Premium $40 This Miami based group began in 2017 and all the women of this ensemble are professional musicians that happen to all be from Cuba with similar musical backgrounds. They come together to play their own kind of Afro-Cuban, World Latin music, powerfully virtuosic yet elegant and contemporary music. These seven women all with formal musical training in their respective instruments have assumed the task of rescuing the traditional dance music of Cuba.
Produced by: The Downtown Development Authority Event Information: www.downtowndelraybeach.com/pgfest 561.243.1077
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YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
Spend spring break in South Florida By: Heather McMechan Special to the Boca and Delray newspapers Not every family has the opportunity to travel during spring break. But if you live in South Florida, then there is a vacation right in your back yard. The palm trees, the ocean breeze and so many things to do. Here are a few of our favorite things to do when we stay local for spring break. Visit The Local Greenmarkets The West Palm Beach GreenMarket takes place every Saturday from 9 a.m. – 1 p.m. and is free to the public. The GreenMarket will take place weekly on Saturdays now through April 18, except for March 28, due to the Palm Beach International Boat Show. The West Palm Beach GreenMarket is located at 100 Clematis Street.
The 23rd Annual Boca Raton GreenMarket happens Saturdays from 9 a.m.-1 p.m. at Boca Raton City Hall north parking lot, 201 W. Palmetto Park Road. You can find over 40 vendors with fresh foods, plants, flowers, and produce as well. The Boca Raton GreenMarket is a great place to bring along the family, the pups and enjoy music as you shop! The Boca Raton GreenMarket will be open until May 9.
to Downtown Miami. Over the top shipping containers have landed in Downtown Miami to create an immersive “selfie” experience with 20 interactive art installations like never before. Enter Euphoric Emporium, your ultimate Instagram backdrop of the Venetian Causeway on Bayshore Drive and 15th Street this month. The Euphoric Emporium is located at 511 NE 15th St., Miami, FL 33132, and open Monday – Friday from 4 p.m. – 1 a.m., and Saturday – Sunday from noon-1a.m. Beginning at 7 p.m. you must be 18 or older to enter. For more information visit euphoricemporium.com. Take family surf, paddleboard lessons
There is also the Delray Beach GreenMarket on Saturdays at Old School Square Park and a new Sunday Fresh Market at Mizner Park. Calling all mini-fashionistas Get your child becoming the next fashion influencer as they learn to sew their way on the the runway. The Fashion Arts Sewing Studio offers Spring Break Fashionista Camp 2020 for ages 7-14. Week-long camp: March 2327 for a full day 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m. $260 week. Half day 8:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m. $225 week. The Fashion Arts Sewing Studio is located at 7025 Beracasa Way Suite 101 in Boca Raton. Call 561-9451920 for more details or go to fashionartsewingstudio@gmail.com Day trip out of your zip code Visit the NTERACTIVE POP-UP EUPHORIC EMPORIUM in MIAMI. This full sensory experience is coming
Island Water Sports has been providing free lessons on Deerfield Beach every Saturday morning for the past 30 years. All experience and age levels are welcome as long as you can swim. All the equipment is provided. You’re welcome to bring your own. On Saturdays and you must pre-register as “this is free.” Island Camps is located at 1987 NE 2nd St. in Deerfield Beach. Register online or in store today. Call 954-427-4929.
TO PURCHASE TICKETS, VISIT TICKETMASTER.COM OR CALL 800-653-8000.
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MARCH 2020 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER
Magazine publishers turn tribute concert promoters Nostalgic Magazine to bring trio of tribute concerts to Mizner Park fun, it’s never serious. We aren’t political and we aren’t religious.” A few years ago, Berns had the idea to get some of the readers together with a tribute band concert. “People loved it and it fit into what we were doing,” he said. “We said, ‘This is a great way to get people together.’”
Staff report Bruce Berns and his wife Marcia have an affinity for all things nostalgic. It’s the basis of their magazine Nostalgic Magazine, which highlights photos from decades ago. “The magazine used to be Elizabeth Taylor and Frank Sinatra,” he said. “Now, it is Bruce Springsteen and Linda Ronstadt.” The Baby Boomer generation flocks to the publication, which has been around for the past decade. It is free and can be found at delis, diners and markets around Palm Beach County and North Broward County. “People love it,” Berns said. “We make it
Last year, he brought a Beatles night to Mizner Park paired with an expo for local businesses to participate in.
The first event will also feature a community networking event geared to Baby Boomer and active adult attendees. It is free and open from 4:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Food trucks with offerings such as lob-
Vacation at
Absolute Queen Absolute Queen is a realistic Queen show that replicates the songs and effects and music note for note live. Lead singer and Welshman Martyn Jenkins fronted the European Touring Queen show “Night at the Opera” for years in Europe, playing for The Queen Fan Club and performing for Brian May and Roger Taylor.
About the bands:
This year, he is bringing three tribute bands to Mizner Park Amphitheater.
“While our tribute concerts reflect the tastes and times of our readership base, this ‘tribute trio’ promises to appeal to fans of all ages,” Berns said.
with percussion, horns and backing vocals, The U.S. Stones delivers a high energy show.
ster rolls, Greek food, wood fire pizza, vegan fare and Good Humor ice cream will be on-site for each show, along with several cash bars.
The expo and show attracted about 3,500 people, he said.
The trio of tributes starts March 12 at 7 p.m. with The U.S. Stones, followed by Absolute Queen at 7:30 p.m. on March 20 and Almost ABBA at 7:30 p.m. on March 28.
Almost ABBA U.S. Stones The U.S. Stones is the ultimate American Rolling Stones tribute band, featuring Doug Baird and Eric Anderson both portraying the classic “Glimmer Twins” Mick Jagger and Keith Richards. The U.S. Stones not only captures the looks, moves and styles of The Rolling Stones, but also fully recreates the Stones concert experience. A six-piece band augmented
Almost ABBA is widely known as the No. 1 tribute to ABBA, and has been touring for 18 years. This costumed, choreographed sound-a-like show recreates the nostalgia of ABBA like no other. South Florida-based Almost ABBA has performed for the PGA, NBC, Universal Studios, The Grand Prix, the U.S. military troops and also at the release of the movie, Mama Mia! Tickets start at $40 per show.
your own pace.
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Make this summer amazing with a one of a kind destination experience. Discover Crane’s Beach House, a boutique hotel getaway for those seeking coastal comfort. Relax and enjoy one of two saltwater pools, unwind at the Tiki Bar with a cold drink, or soak in the warmth of the sun on the sandy beaches. All of this and more awaits you at Crane’s.
Book your slice of summer today and escape the ordinary.
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YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
Sick Puppies Comedy troupe to perform in Delray, Boca Staff report Looking to laugh? You can now catch a Sick Puppies Comedy performance in Delray Beach. The longtime Boca improv and comedy group is now putting on shows at the Doghouse Theater, 105 NW Fifth Ave.
Sick Puppies Comedy will be performing improv Catch a Sick Puppies Comedy improv show at the Looking to laugh? Boca’s Sick Puppies Comedy has shows in Delray Beach at Doghouse Theater. Photo Delray Beach Doghouse Theater. Photo courtesy of performances in Boca and Delray. Photo courtesy of courtesy of Sick Puppies Comedy. Sick Puppies Comedy. Sick Puppies Comedy.
“We have been homeless for the last year
in Boca, one in east Boca for a few years
and a half,” Sick Puppies founder and di-
before moving to a space in West Boca.
rector Casey Casperson said. “We are su-
Sick Puppies Comedy. Currently, Sick Puppies Comedy’s pro-
to those numbers and has about 17 active cast members and 30 students.
When their space in West Boca went
fessional cast consists of seasoned im-
They will have improv shows every Sat-
out of business, they bounced around to
provizationists and comedians who have
urday and in the coming months every
Casperson started Sick Puppies in 2012
various venues including Organic Move-
been working together for over 5 years.
Friday and Saturday night. Classes will
after a group he was performing with in
ments, a dance studio in Boca.
per excited to have a home.”
Miami Lakes called Laughing Gas went out of business. He invited 13 people he knew to audition for a new troupe and they began Sick Puppies Comedy in Boca Raton. Since then, they were located in two theaters
They also offer classes to people who
be offered monthly.
They have also added Delray’s Doghouse
want to learn more about improv or
“If you’ve never seen an improv show it’s
Theater as a performance venue and plan
stand up comedy.
a must to try it because they make every-
to put on shows in several locations.
In its height, the group had 60 students
thing up on the spot,” he said.
Doghouse Theater is owned and operat-
and 30 active cast members. Casperson
For more information, visit sickpuppi-
ed by Tom Neile, an original member of
said the group is working its way back up
escomedy.com
106 S. Swinton Ave. Delray Beach, FL 33444
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Marcus Foundation gifts Boca Regional $15 million for fundraising campaign Staff report The Marcus Foundation has made its second multi-million dollar donation to Boca Raton Regional Hospital. In 2012, the foundation donated $25 million to create the Marcus Neuroscience Institute. Last month, philanthropists Billi and Bernie Marcus made an additional gift for $15 million toward the hospital’s $250 million fundraising effort “Keeping the Promise…The Campaign for Boca Raton Regional Hospital.” “No matter how big or small, giving back is critically important,” said Bernie Marcus, Chairman of the Marcus Foundation and co-founder and former CEO of The Home Depot. “At some point in your life, you or your family are going to need Boca Regional and you can play a role in making it better. You can be part of the game. You can be involved.” Keeping the Promise has already raised $153 million toward its goal. The grant will help renovate and expand the Marcus Neuroscience Institute. “There are few who understand the value of ensuring the next generation of healthcare better than Bernie and Billi Marcus,” said Lincoln Mendez, President and CEO of BRRH. “We are forever grateful to them for their foresight, relentless spirit, selfless generosity, and commitment to their passion - the Marcus Neuroscience Institute (MNI). They are responsible for enhancing neurological care that ultimately saves lives, as well as supporting the many patients and their families at MNI. There is no greater legacy than that.” The Marcus Neuroscience Institute includes a comprehensive Stroke Center, a Center for Memory Disorders and Alzheimer’s disease, the Center for Movement Disorders – Parkinson’s Disease, Epilepsy and Multiple Sclerosis, and the Center for Neuro-Oncology. The Institute boasts some of the world’s most advanced technology. These state-of-the-art advanced capabilities are housed in the Schmidt Family Pavilion, a two-story facility, adjacent to the main hospital with a spacious lobby, connecting garage, an art gallery, and outdoor courtyards. Upon its launch in 2012, the Institute transformed the landscape of clinical capabilities at Boca Regional and quickly became one of South Florida’s preeminent neuroscience centers and the provider of choice for patients, physicians, employees. Recent data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services reveal that with an aging population, one of the largest anticipated needs in healthcare will be in the neurosciences. The type of care needed will include the treatment of vascular diseases of the brain such as stroke and transient ischemic attack, Alzheimer’s disease and other memory disorders, Parkinson’s disease and other movement disorders, multiple sclerosis, epilepsy and malignant and benign brain tumors. Over the last several years, the demand, and Institute distinction has combined for a utilization explosion…from 360 surgeries in 2015 to 930 surgeries in 2019 and from 2,506 encounters in the MNI outpatient clinic in 2015 to
Philanthropists Bernie and Billi Marcus donated $15 million to Boca Regional’s “Keeping the Promise…The Campaign for Boca Raton Regional Hospital.” Submitted photo.
nearly 32,000 encounters in 2019. In order to meet these demands and better serve the patients in the region, the Marcuses gift enabled a Phase I expansion of MNI clinic space and the creation of a new MNI Interventional Radiology room. The new space will elevate and streamline neurological and neurosurgical care at MNI. The renovations will increase capabilities including a MNI controlled Interventional Radiology room adjacent to the Emergency Department. Construction of the second Biplane Angiography Suite is already underway in the Marcus Neuroscience Institute and is expected to be operational this summer. Beyond Phase I is a vision for the development of a Stem Cell program, an enhanced outpatient interventional pain program; and an increase in the number of step down/critical care patient rooms. The Marcuses are ardent philanthropists who have donated around $2 billion to more than 300 organizations worldwide. Their intention is to give away billions more, accounting for most of their remaining wealth. Bernie Marcus was an early signer of the Giving Pledge, started in 2010 by Bill and Melinda Gates and Warren Buffett, in which billionaires commit to giving away at least half their fortunes during their lifetime. Their philanthropy and giving spirit has not gone unacknowledged. Bernie and Billi have received The Woodrow Wilson Award for Public Service, which is given to individuals who have served with distinction in public life. Mr. Marcus was named the inaugural recipient of Inc. 500’s Bernard A. Goldhirsh Award, was inducted into the Junior Achievement U.S. Business Hall of Fame, and has received the USO Patriot Award, the SeaKeeper Award for promoting the restoration and protection of the world’s oceans, and the Anti-Defamation League’s Democratic Legacy Award. “Bernie and Billi Marcus are among our most vital family members at Boca Raton Regional Hospital,” said Mendez. “There are no accolades that measure their value to our healthcare future.”
HEALTH
MARCH 2020 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER
17
INSIDE
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Maria Shriver speaks at Lynn [18]
Try non-surgical weight loss program [20]
18
YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
Maria Shriver speaks to crowd at Lynn University
a voice to inspire others. Now is the time to have your voice heard – the world needs that.”
By: Diane Feen Contributing Writer
Shriver also spoke about redefining the notion of success. “Success is having friends who have your back to go through the ups and downs of life with. It is not about having a fancy extraordinary life. I feel successful when I have dinner with friends or go for a bike ride.”
When you think of Maria Shriver the words Kennedy, celebrity, TV reporter and former wife of a bodybuilder turned governor come to mind. But when Shriver showed up at Lynn University in Boca Raton she was just Maria - mother, meditator, healthcare advocate, friend and single woman. And that was a good thing. She didn’t talk about her great life or about the celebrities she knows. Instead she spoke about her life, her loves and the sage-like lessons she’s learned on her earthly journey.
But unlike the public persona of a Kennedy, it was anything but an easy charmed life. “My parents said that everyone should start changing the world at the age of five or six. As kids we were drafted to work for the special Olympics because my parents saw it as an extension of Jesus’s work in the world.” Her parents – Eunice Kennedy Shriver and Sargent Shriver – did not consider peacefulness and mindfulness to be sacrosanct. Instead they were always in a hurry. But not to shop at the mall or have parties. They were in a hurry to create programs like The Special Olympics, the Peace Corps, Head start and others.
Their daughter Maria was also in a hurry. She followed the success driven superhighway her parents paved in front of her eyes. “About eight or nine years ago someone said to me, ‘where are you going?’” That’s when Shriver began to relish a slower more deliberate pace. She was looking for inspiration online when she came across Barb Schmidt’s Peaceful Mind Peaceful Life website and began to read about mediation and spirituality. Though Schmidt has a platform that many subscribe to, Shriver wanted everyone to know that they too can make a difference. “Everyone in this room has a platform and
Part of her success included learning to meditate. Shriver talked about how she couldn’t sit still after her divorce. But with her TM teacher’s patience she learned to meditate and now does it twice a day – 20 minutes in the morning and 30 minutes at night. “Meditation helped me like myself better and come from a better place. We all have mental health issues. Everyone has a mind and it drives everyone crazy.” Say what? This statuesque Goddess of good karma has problems? The woman with a Peabody Award, two Emmy Awards, the former first lady of California, TV anchor, bestselling author and Alzheimer’s advocate has thoughts that get in her way of a sunny day? If was a relief to know that this woman of broadcast brilliance and breeding (with the historical reference point) was like us. Perhaps she is, but one can’t help but wonder how the daughter of Eunice and Sargent Shriver could be like us.
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She is concerned about the loneliness epidemic and goes to senior centers to visit the elderly. Though Shriver seems to walk with a golden aura wrapped around her, she seemed well aware of key spiritual values. “Kindness is an underrated value. It really takes inner strength to be kind in a mean world.” Shriver is also contemplating the bigger issues of the new age. One being the concept of love. “We need to expand our vision of love. It’s not just about two people in romantic love. It’s about how the world makes you feel – accepted and understood – that’s love.”
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The 700 people (mostly women) who came to hear Shriver seemed to love what they were hearing. “It’s OK to say, ‘I need help.’ Everyone goes to an exercise coach, but people are afraid to talk about their marital or mental health coach - and that’s more important.” The woman who has worked in the field of journalism for 42 years confessed she loves her career so much she’s never worked a day in her life. “It’s my passion and it brings me joy. Journalism can be a force for good but it’s an incredible responsibility. Good journalism informs and inspires you.” Good people do too. When asked what she wants in the coming year, Shriver said: “I hope to go on a date and be part of a more caring, kind and compassionate world. If you have a vision of it, you can go there.” For information on upcoming events go to: peacefulmindpeacefullife.org or call 561955-7227. The evening was sponsored by Barb Schmidt, Elaine Wold and Christine E. Lynn.
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YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
Delray Medical Center starts non-surgical weight loss program a piece of paper with a meal plan. That is not the type
By: Marisa Herman Associate Editor
of lecture she is giving. Rather, the goal is to talk about
Looking to shed a few extra pounds and don’t know
making small changes that will impact people’s overall
where to begin? Delray Medical Center has developed a
weight loss goals.
four-week weight management course for people looking
“There is no magic diet,” she said, adding she will debunk
to lose weight.
myths behind some diet trends and fads.
The first session of Winning at Weight Loss, a non-surgi-
While Barone will be leading the new program, it was
cal weight loss program, launched last month. Meetings
formed by the hospital’s surgical weight loss team. Bar-
were held Tuesday evenings with weight management
one is on that team along with Certified Bariatric Nurse
dietitian Samantha Barone. Barone is the only full time bariatric dietitian on staff at a local hospital. She already works with patients seeking surgical weight loss at the hospital, so the team decid-
Classes will last about an hour and a half and cover topics like how food affects the body, hydration, exercise, food behaviors and ways to set goals to plan and prepare for
ed to expand its services to help people looking to lose
the future.
weight without necessarily going under the knife.
“We can’t cover everything, but we can provide tools and
The program is geared toward adults over 18 who are ei-
knowledge necessary to help keep going,” she said.
ther looking to lose a few pounds, need to lose weight in
Once the class ends, Barone hopes to reassemble every-
order to qualify for weight loss surgery or aren’t consid-
one 6-8 weeks later to check in on progress, pitfalls, pla-
ering surgery at all but want to learn some tools to help
teaus and any other topics.
with weight loss.
The goal is to offer the course on a rolling basis. The four-
“Education is necessary to be successful,” Barone said. “My goal is to promote tools people need to succeed long term.”
week class costs $150 total. Barone said participants should not expect to be handed
Diane Schofield, medical director and bariatric surgeon Erica Podolsky and bariatric surgeon Ariel Rodriguez-Pimental. With the introduction of the non-surgical weight loss program, Dr. Rodriguez-Pimental said the hospital is offering something for everyone. For some people they are seeking structure or a first step, he said. The team agrees the program will help make an impact on people who fall in between obese and not having a large enough body mass index to qualify for weight loss surgery. For more information, visit 1-800-897-9789.
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MARCH 2020 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER
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Traumatic brain injury: Modern technology is game changer in diagnosis treatment By: Dr. John Conde DC, DACNB Special to the Boca and Delray Newspapers Traumatic brain injuries (TBI) are usually caused by a bump, blow, penetrating injury or jolt to the head. The jolt can be described as an acceleration/deceleration force put upon the head where the brain “shakes violently” within the skull. In many instances, the trauma does not have to be overwhelmingly violent to affect the function of the brain. Everyone’s nervous system is different therefore not all individuals respond the same to injury. A trivial blow can induce lifelong handicaps for some individuals. The major concerns immediately following a head injury are making sure that there is adequate oxygen supply, maintaining blood flow to the brain, and controlling raised intracranial pressure. Axonal injury is typically a direct result of the accident as well as blood supply compromise which can lead to intracranial hemorrhaging (brain-bleed) or ischemia which robs the brain of oxygen. This is termed the acute stage of injury and is the most critical for sustaining life and may last for a couple of weeks. The chronic stage, however, describes the significant impairments left in the wake of the injury which can have a detrimental impact on activities of daily living such that it can
leave an individual in a vegetative state. In regard to the chronic state some of the main signs and symptoms are the following: motor signs such as spasticity or hemiplegia/ quadriplegia, mood impairments such as docility or aggresivity, emotional impairments such as anxiety or depression, impairments of executive function such as difficulty with planning and problem solving and short term memory, and lastly difficulty with cognition such as visuo-spatial awareness and focus and attention. The chronic state is where technology can truly change lives through the physiological phenomenon of plasticity, the ability for the brain to change and re-organize according to the environmental stimulus applied. The most essential component in the management and treatment of a chronic brain injury is the examination. Isolating the injury to a generalized area is of upmost importance in setting up the correct treatment regimen. The following technological advances set the stage for proper targeted treatment; video-oculography (VOG) evaluates the precision of eye movements and the correlation to brain dysfunction, computerized dy-
namic posturography (CAPS) essentially looks at balance as this is most often affected with TBI, pupillometry investigates the relationship with pupillary diameter and responses to light and compares it to norms in identifying dysfunction in brain, Dynavision D2 is a visuo-motor-spatial assessment LED computerized board that measures processing speeds, and EQ Active Brain Tracking software is able to quantify cognitive impairment from the comfort of your own home. These are just some of the new tools available for creating a precise treatment plan. Brain-based rehabilitation is truly where technology shines for TBI patients. Current treatments are highly objective and
usually can generate statistically significant, real-time numbers for patient progress. The main objective of any cutting-edge, evidence-based rehabilitation program is to be able to quantify results, not just rely on subjective input. These therapeutic tools do just that; Interactive Metronome is a computer-generated timing program which improves cognitive and motor timing and processing, FitLights Trainer is a wireless RGB LED powered light system which focuses on speed and cognitive training and allows the doctor to customize the rehabilitation for the deficiency of the patient, Dynavision D2 promotes significant integration and activation of key regions in the brain affected by TBI especially the frontal lobe network, and repetitive peripheral somatosensory stimulation (RPSS) is a technology that enhances the appreciation of the affected body region by the brain thus creating a larger representation in the brain and increasing function. These are just a small list of technological innovations which have changed the landscape of TBI rehabilitation.
Dr. John Conde is a Board Certified Chiropractic Neurologist. His office is located at the Atlantic Grove in Delray Beach and can be reached at 561-330-6096, drconde@ thecondecenter.com, www.thecondecenter. com
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Three YEA students take top honors at Boca Chamber’s ‘Pitch’ competition By: Dale King Contributing Writer
A high school junior from Davie notched first place in the Boca Raton Chamber’s Elevator Pitch Contest last month, coming up with a proposal for a business that provides roadside assistance for electric cars that run out of juice. Jacob Wise, an 11th grader from the David Posnack Jewish Day School, impressed a three-judge panel with “Get Amped,” a company he created while participating in the Young Entrepreneurs Academy at the Greater Boca Raton Chamber of Commerce. During his one-minute “pitch” to judges, Wise described his firm as “a mobile electric car servicing company.” Two other students placed among the top three finishers. Christian Frenette, a sixth grader at Franklin Academy in Boynton Beach, came in second with his plan to create “Teen Chess,” a company offering teen-agers chess lessons, costing $20 per lesson. Taking third place was Cole Fendelman, a 10th grader at St. Andrew’s School, who came up with “Toe Guard,” a protective piece that athletes can wear to prevent their toes from being bruised during sports competition. YEA students will be back before a panel of local business people in April to elaborate on their plans and request funding for their business proposals in a “Shark Tank”-style presentation. The Boca Chamber’s Golden Bell Education Foundation sponsors the Young Entrepreneurs Academy which conducts a CEO Round Table and Elevator Pitch Contest each February. This year’s event, held Feb. 12 at the Boca Raton Innovation Campus, allowed students to hear about the journeys of actual CEOs. Then, they pitched their business ideas to the public as they began their own journey into entrepreneurship. The YEA class meets after school one day a week from September through May. Classes are held at Saint Andrew’s School in Boca Raton. Through the class, students develop business ideas, write business plans, conduct market research, pitch their plans to a panel of investors, and actually launch and run their own real, legal, fully formed companies. Part 1 of last month’s session included five of Palm Beach County’s top CEOs as part of a
Winners of this year’s Young Entrepreneur’s Academy Elevator Pitch Contest are, from left, Cole Fendelman, third place; Christian Frenette, second place and Jacob Wise, first place. Photo courtesy of Mariana Griswold.
BIZ
MARCH 2020 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER
23
Chuck Stout, chairman of the Boca Chamber’s Golden Bell Education Foundation, addresses the audience last month at the CEO Round Table and Elevator Pitch Contest. Photo by Dale King.
moderated panel. Participating business leaders included Robert Finizio, CEO of TherapeuticsMD; Jennifer Jager, CEO of Plum Productions; Randy Nobles, CEO of Habitat for Humanity South Palm Beach County and Sam Zietz, CEO of TouchSuite. “The CEO Round Table is an integral part of the YEA! Program,” said Troy McLellan, president & CEO of the Boca Chamber. “It gives students participating in the YEA program an opportunity to hear first-hand from business owners and industry leaders about their success and what it takes to get there.” “Since the fall, students have been working with mentors and program instructors developing their business plans and acquiring the tools they need to turn their ideas into successful products or services that can be introduced into the marketplace. Their ability to interact with this panel is an important step in the young entrepreneur experience.” As part of the Elevator Pitch contest, 18 students between the ages of 11-17 gave voice to their business ideas. They have been working for more than four months in cooperation with local leaders of industry, community members, educators and entrepreneurs, who use their personal experiences to walk students through the steps of creating their own businesses from the ground up.
Contact us today for your complimentary 15 minute consultation.
Members of a CEO Round Table field questions about their drive to become business leaders. From left are Robert Finizio, Casey Hill, Jennifer Jager, Randy Nobles and Sam Zietz. Photo by Dale King.
YEA students are taught skills through in-class lessons, guest speakers and business mentors. “I am extremely proud of how hard this YEA class has worked to understand concepts, work on business plans, and practice public speaking so far this year,” said Sherese James-Grow, foundation manager for Golden Bell and YEA. Other “pitch” participants were: Amelie Bertrand de Balanda and Jasminesoye Thomas, “Tenn Ace”; Harlan Burnstad and Justinsoye Thomas, “Project Flight Photography”; Ethan Faust, “LugXury Rentals”; Imaara Koreth and Val Sylvain, “At the Spot”; Joah Levine; Joshua Maizes, “Build-A-Botics”; Ben Rosenthal, “Opportunas”; Sarang Shravan, “Stat Analytics” and Maya Stagman, “Enhancing Dancing.”
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24
YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
West Delray businessman promoted to president of global consulting company OZ Staff report
The newly named president of global consultants OZ Ric Cavieres said companies like Uber and Apple have conditioned consumers on what great service looks like.
A recent project included building a suite of apps for a major cruise company to enhance the vacationer’s experience.
One function of the app streamlines the immigration process. Another allows a guest to order a drink from the pool deck on the app and a waiter knows exactly where to bring that drink when it’s ready. The app can unlock that guest’s cabin door and be used to turn on the television, open or close the curtains and adjust the thermostat. The app can be used to look up and book excursions once in port.
Now, it is his job to make sure clients that OZ is serving are offering those same expectations that customers are accustomed to. OZ works with clients in the hospitality, health care and financial service industries. The company uses technology to create ways to make the end user of their clients have an enjoyable experience. The company is based in Fort Lauderdale and employs about 350 people in three locations, Florida, Argentina and Asia. It has been around since 1997 and recently went through a rebranding.
Overall, OZ is all about enhancing the customer’s experience through innovation. Cavieres joined the team just 15 months ago and has already been promoted to president. He started as EVP, Markets and Consulting. He came from Cognizant, a $16 billion global consulting and digital ser-
vices company, where he was the Global Consulting and Digital Leader for Life Sciences. Previously, he was a Partner at the big 4 firms EY, PwC/IBM and Capgemini where he drove digital innovation, consulting and solutions. He helped the company rebrand and shift its focus. Now, he said, OZ is poised to grow 50 percent in the next year. “We are delighted that Ric has stepped into the role of President,” said Amjad Shamim, CEO of OZ. “He has been instrumental in the rebrand of OZ, this past year, and is a proven leader in driving digital innovation and CX consulting services across industries. Since leading the shift in focus, Ric has grown our client base, developed new strategic partnerships and helped expand our leadership team.” And Cavieres has his eye on the future. “It is really growing the company and doing impactful work,” he said. “We want to be on the edge of innovation and help our clients make an impact.”
2nd Annual Bresky Bash brings out lawyers, community to support Legal Aid Society of Palm Beach County By: Jan Engoren Contributing Writer
The show must go on and despite the rain, the second annual Bresky Bash 2020 – “A Concert for Community,” valiantly forged ahead bringing out a decent crowd
on Jan. 23 at the Mizner Park Amphitheater in support of the Legal Aid Society of Palm Beach County. The Legal Aid Society provides high quality civil legal advice, representation and
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Robin Bresky and Executive Director of the Legal Aid Robin Bresky and Bob Bertisch in center of photo Society Bob Bertisch at the 2nd Annual Bresky Bash. at the Bresky Bash. Submitted photo. Submitted photo.
education to the county’s underserved populations and this year is expanding their outreach and advocacy to veterans and their families. “We’re happy people came out tonight for our concert and our efforts to raise funds and awareness for the Legal Aid Society, especially in the South County area,” said Robin Bresky, whose firm, the Law Offices of Robin Bresky sponsors the event. Featuring live music from the 60s and 80s, by Decades Rewind, the show featured 60 songs, 100 costume changes and favorites from Queen, Billy Joel, Whitney Houston and Earth Wind & Fire, among others. Bob Bertisch, the Executive Director of the Legal Aid Society for more than 30 years says, “Robin is a big supporter of our Legal Aid Society and this fundraiser will help us expand our veterans’ advocacy project.”
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“We want to serve those individuals who have served us,” Bertisch said. Also in the crowd was South Palm Beach
County Bar Association’s Executive Director, Seema Patel. “It’s great to see so many in the legal profession turn out to support Robin’s efforts on behalf of the Legal Aid Society of Palm Beach County,” Patel said. “People come from all counties and it’s a well-respected event, with all the proceeds benefitting Legal Aid.” Food trucks lined the perimeter of the amphitheater, and people were mixing, mingling and sipping cocktails under a large tent. Tequisha Myles, supervising attorney with the elder law and fair housing departments of the Legal Aid Society came out despite the threat of rain. “We’re excited to increase our presence in the South County area, especially Boca Raton, Delray and Boynton Beach,” said Myles, who notes that the Legal Aid office is based in West Palm Beach. “Robin does a great job in getting the word out. We want people to know we are here to serve as a resource and available to serve these communities as well.”
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26
YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
Eight local Delray, Boca students named to 2020 Philanthropy Tank Class Students to pitch their projects to philanthropy investors this month
Staff report
Out of the dozen students selected to pitch their philanthropic ideas to investors this month in a Shark Tank style presentation, eight attend local Boca and Delray schools. The Philanthropy Tank Finalists applied to participate in the program that grants them mentorship from leading philanthropists and local business leaders and a chance to present their charity program ideas live in front of philanthropist investors and an audience. Each pitch can receive up to $15,000 in funding during the live pitch event, which will take place on March 19 at the Kravis Center. Here are the local students and their projects: Empower Your Hour - Cameron Newman, 10th grade, Saint Andrews Teens can visit the Empower Your Hour online marketplace, where they can filter their interests and preferences, and find
meaningful service opportunities listed by nonprofit organizations.
Hello Hygienics Nishah Jaferi and Jonathan Beres 11th grade, Spanish River High School (Boca Raton) In Palm Beach County, the is- Cameron Newman is a 10th grader at Saint Ansue of homeless- drews who started Emness is marked power Your Hour. Submitted photo. by limited access to basic needs such as dental care, skin care, feminine products, and more. Hello Hygienics strives to combat this barrier to proper sanitation by providing handy, on-the-go, wellness kits to prioritize health for the less fortunate. Idea Lab - Angel Rojas, Pierce Dono, and Oliver Charles-Pierre - 8th grade, St.
11th graders at Spanish River Nishah Jaferi and Jonathan Beres are behind Hello Hygienics. Submitted photo
Vincent Ferrer School These students aim to start an Idea lab in the library of the Glades based Hope Rural School based on the principles they have learned in Design Thinking class. Students will have a setup where they can gather tools and materials to create, invent, tinker, and fabricate as a community through hands on design and construction. MoneyBuddies - Gabriel Sun and Brendan Detamore - 11th Grade, American Heritage MoneyBuddies is a program that in-
Eighth graders at St. Vincent Ferrer School Angel Rojas, Pierce Dono, and Oliver Charles-Pierre created Idea Lab. Submitted photo.
tends to inspire the youth of Palm Beach County by providing them with fun, free lessons in basic principles of financial literacy and proper money management. This is Philanthropy Tank’s fifth year of supporting local student’s ideas. In that time, students have created and continue to run organizations supporting music/ art education, women’s empowerment, underprivileged children, pediatric cancer patients and more. The nonprofit Philanthropy Tank has awarded more than $400,000 in funding and provided hundreds of hours of mentorship for teens who have started nearly three dozen local charities.
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YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
Biz Briefs Applications open for Jim Moran Institute for small business, nonprofit exec programs The Jim Moran Institute for Global Entrepreneurship, in the Florida State University College of Business, is accepting applications for its Small Business Executive Program (SBEP) and Nonprofit Executive Program (NPEP) held in Broward and Palm Beach counties. Offered at no cost to participants, the programs are funded by The Jim Moran Foundation and Jim and Jan Moran. The deadline to apply is March 31. The programs consist of nine sessions, each focusing on a specific aspect of growing and managing a business or nonprofit organization. Starting in July and running through November, the sessions will be held once every other week from 8:30 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Applicants must be actively involved in running a business, be a key decision-maker and their company must have been established for at least three years and have five or more employees (or volunteers if the company is a nonprofit). The SBEP will be offered in both Broward and Palm Beach counties, while the NPEP will be offered in Palm Beach County. The executive programs are designed for CEOs, entrepreneurs, business owners, presidents and executive directors of small businesses and nonprofit organizations. Graduates emerge with the skills and training needed to capitalize on business opportunities, implement best practice management and turn challenges into strategic advantage. Participants represent a variety of industries, including construction, technology, healthcare, fashion and law. “Last year we celebrated our tenth anniversary in South Florida, and we are
honored to have been a part of the leadership journeys of so many wonderful leaders,” said Jennifer Kovach, director of the Jim Moran Institute’s South Florida Operations. “We are thrilled to continue working with local entrepreneurs and nonprofit executives to enhance South Florida’s vibrant business community.” Program graduates receive a certificate and have the opportunity to be a part of an ongoing peer roundtable. They are also encouraged to participate in workshops, conferences and other Jim Moran Institute events. Since 2009, the South Florida team graduated 26 classes through its programs. To apply, visit jimmoraninstitute.fsu.edu/programs
Jeff Dash named Delray Beach Chamber of Commerce 2019 Ambassador of the Year Jeff Dash, Vice Presdient of Marketing & Promotion for the Pineapple Grove Arts District (PGAD) and President of Dash Travel, was selected as Ambassador of the Year 2019 for the Delray Beach Chamber of Commerce. “The Pineapple Grove Arts Distict wants to congratulate Jeff on this great honor,” said David Beale, attorney and President of the PGAD. “He has worked tirelessly to promote Delray as the place to come for work and play. His enthusiasm is infectious.” Chamber Ambassadors are members who volunteer their time to provide a crucial link between the Chamber and its members. They ensure all members receive the maximum benefit from their membership. The mission of the Ambassadors is to represent the Chamber by exhibiting the highest degree of professionalism, knowledge and integrity to their members and the business community. Ambassadors serve as the greeting arm of the Chamber to promote new member participation and retention.
“I joined the Delray Chamber because it is an amazing organization whose main purpose is to support local businesses and bring out the best that Delray Beach has to offer,” Dash said. “There is a lot of enthusiasm and devotion in the local business community because of what the Chamber does.”
Florida Democratic Party names Joy Howell as Communications Director The Florida Democratic Party recently announced that political campaign veteran Joy Howell is the new communications director for the party. Howell comes to the party after serving as communications director and senior strategist for the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). She has a long history in Democratic campaigns including as a communications director for the Gore/Lieberman Presidential Campaign and the 2000 Democratic National Convention. More recently, Howell served as founder of a national consulting firm and has had senior strategy roles on dozens of US Senate, Congressional and issue-based campaigns in Florida and across the nation. Howell holds an MPA from Harvard and an MBA from the University of Redlands. She is a Delray Beach resident.
Rex Ciavola, Co-Founder/President of STRAX Intelligence Group, Paul Loucas, Joseph Ourtesis, Michael Levin, Scott Adams, Co-Founder and CEO STRAX Intelligence Group. Submitted photo.
Strax Intelligence Group adds additional advisors to team Boca-based STRAX Intelligence Group, a software development firm that brings cutting edge technology with real-time information and data to public safety and commercial security by unifying video, sensors and alerts during an emergency has added two additional advisors to its team of experts. “Our new advisors bring a unique understanding of how technology is rapidly evolving the public safety landscape and the need for advanced solutions that allow law enforcement to stay ahead of crime and enhance community safety,” Scott Adams STRAX
CEO and Co-Founder said. “Together, our advisors’ collective experience brings unparalleled direction to the STRAX Intelligence Group’s road map and future products.” Joseph Courtesis is a 26-year veteran of the New York Police Department and finished his career as the Commanding Officer of the NYPD’s Real Time Crime Center. He is a graduate of the Police Management Institute at Columbia University and holds a Bachelor’s degree in Criminal Justice. In addition, he is an active member of the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP) committee on Crime Prevention. Paul Loucas is the Managing Partner at SME Partners, Inc. As a former Law Enforcement Officer and subject matter expert in the Public Safety technology arena, Loucas brings over 30 years of State & Local Government Security Systems and Public Safety Software Solutions expertise to this new role with the company. His expertise will be used to develop strategic partnerships and sales opportunities as well as advise on future technology critical to the industry and our customers. Launch Potato promotes Rich Fatigate to Vice President, Sales Delray-based Launch Potato, a leading connector of advertisers and customers through digital brands and technologies, announced Rich Fatigate has been promoted from Senior Director, Sales to Vice President, Sales. “We could not be more thrilled to have an incredible team that has flourished together as a unified company. As Launch Potato grows it is important to empower our staff to lead the direction of our future,” said Greg Van Horn, CEO of Launch Potato. “Rich has spearheaded our most expansive growth period since joining the team last June and I am confident he will push us to new boundaries in this new role.” As Vice President, Fatigate will assist in executing the company’s overall vision and release of Launch Potato’s newest technology platform that focuses on helping clients meet their customer acquisition needs. He joined Launch Potato in June 2019 to build the company’s sales organization into a high-performing unit aligned under a single goal. This included leading and ensuring the client’s needs are met to the highest standard of excellence. He quickly showed his expertise in sales growth strategy and overall leadership.
MARCH 2020 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER
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Boca Raton mom makes waves in local art scene By: Joanie Cox-Henry Contributing Writer There’s a story deeper than the ocean behind Karim Aboud’s mermaid tail jewelry holders and seashell serving trays. After her second daughter, Alaia, died in a car accident, she found herself escaping to the ocean on a constant basis. “I was working with resin at the time and I was inspired by how the resin could be molded into waves,” Aboud said. “It was my therapy that got me through the hardest time of my life. Even though she was so little, Alaia loved the ocean and when I design the waves in my art, I feel her here with me.” Wanting to bring that peace into people’s homes, Aboud has found healing through her line, Aria Marli Art, which is named after her older daughter. “I’ve always been creative, but I never knew I could actually paint until I was pregnant with Aria,” Aboud said. “I was going
to design my daughter’s nursery and I hated all the art work I was seeing. I decided to start creating my own.” Inspired by a photo of an online blogger’s daughter, Aboud painted a portrait, tagged the blogger in it and essentially went viral on social media over night. “My art career really just took off from there,” Aboud said. “I was immediately asked to start painting portraits through online orders.” Specializing in portraits, Aboud still accepts orders for custom paintings and portraits and has expanded her line to include everything from resin art ceramic containers and cutting boards to key chains, clutches and coasters. “I really wanted everything to be ocean-related in my line,” Aboud said. “So that’s exactly what I did.” Originally from Miami, Aboud, 34, is happy to be raising Aria
Boca mom and artist Karim Aboud paints outside with her children, Aria and Jackson. Submitted photo.
and her six-month-old son Jackson in Boca Raton. “Working as a full time artist from home has really allowed me to be there for every moment with my kids and that’s everything to me,” Aboud said. “But working from home, you’re essentially always working. There’s no life balance. I’ve even Googled ‘Time Management!’ But my business is doing great and so what if the laundry is piling up?” Aboud is also always eager to include her children in the process of creating new art. “One day, Aria was slamming a mermaid tail on a plate and I soon realized that the concept of what she was doing could make a great ring holder,” Aboud said. “And so I decided to make one using resin. It’s now one of my bestsellers.” When she’s not taking her daughter to preschool or children to the park or YMCA, Aboud is kickboxing or binge-watching reality TV. Her latest indulgence is “90 Day Fiance” on TLC.
Boca mom and artist Karim Aboud works with resin and creates pieces inspired by the ocean. A ring dish created by Boca artist Karim An ocean inspired coaster created by Boca artAboud. Submitted photo. ist Karim Aboud. Submitted photo. Submitted photo.
But most nights, after her children are in bed, she’s working until 1 a.m. on her art work. “When I’m making my art, I listen to music or sometimes audio books,” Aboud said. “Right now I’m listening to Super Attractor. It’s all about the laws of attraction.”
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YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
Chef Eric Baker takes over kitchen, ownership of Boca’s The Rebel House By: Shaina Wizov Contributing Writer
huge part of their history together.
The Rebel House has been exciting guests with its progressive menu of food and drinks since it opened in East Boca Raton in 2012. Then, it was one the only restaurants in the area serving out-of-the-ordinary cuisine, and it certainly was the only place in town with such a unique atmosphere and vibe. But it’s no longer alone, and that means it’s time for a little change to spruce things up and breathe new life into The Rebel House.
Baker continued his relationship with the owners, so when they decided they wanted to devote their time to other endeavors, it was obvious Baker was the right person to continue The Rebel House’s legacy. As fate would have it, Baker was also in the process of moving on from Mazie’s, and wanted to pursue something in his own community of Boca Raton. He wanted to work in the city he calls home — where he and his family live, where his children go to school, and where his friends and family reside as well.
That’s exactly what Chef Eric Baker has done since taking over ownership of this popular “renegade” restaurant and bar a few months back.
“We were seeking a restaurant of our own, one where we could make an impact in our community,” Baker said. “We could not possibly have found a better fit.”
Baker is most well known as most recently opening Mazie’s in West Palm Beach, and before that, serving as executive chef at Max’s Harvest in Downtown Delray for four years. His cooking is inspired by sheer passion for his craft.
Although Baker has almost completely revamped the menu, those familiar with The Rebel House will be happy to know that yes, you can still get the flavored popcorn-of-the-day upon arrival, and no, the decor has not been changed in the least. A few dishes have been kept on the menu due to popular demand, but otherwise, Baker has put his heart into creating new dishes that will impress and keep guests coming back for more.
“[I’m driven by] my desire to create a truly unique experience for my guests every day,” Baker said. So what brought Baker to The Rebel House? Turns out, back when the former owners were in the planning stages, they had approached him about partnering and being the executive chef. Although this did not happen, The Rebel House still became a special place for Baker. About a year later, on a random night when he came in, he met his future wife at the bar. The Rebel House became their go-to spot, and is a
His favorite new entree is the horseradish crusted salmon, served with red wine-braised cabbage and root vegetable puree. “Salmon is a fish with broad appeal, but could be monotonous on many local menus,” Baker said. “I feel that this dish
Thai crispy duck with red curry is one of Chef Eric Baker’s new menu items at The Rebel House. Photo courtesy of Craft Collective.
takes salmon to new levels, while still reaching those looking for a safe option.” Other new additions to the menu include Thai crispy duck with red curry, butternut squash and farro, lobster meatballs in a vodka sauce with house-made naan bread, and the cauliflower Caesar with crispy quinoa, anchovy and peppadews. There is also now a daily late night happy hour from 10 p.m. until midnight, in addition to the regular happy hour, daily from 4-7 p.m, and live music every Thursday night starting at 8:30 p.m. The Rebel House is located at 297 E. Palmetto Park Road, Boca Raton. The restaurant is open for dinner daily from 4 p.m. to midnight. Brunch is served on Saturday and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Florida Prepaid lowers plan prices, open enrollment going on now Staff report
already purchased them for her children.
Florida Prepaid just announced it is lowering plan prices by $1.3 billion, which will impact current plan holders who purchased plans in 2008 or later and new customers. Open Enrollment is now through April 30.
First, for our readers who might not know, what is Florida Prepaid?
We sat down with Meredith Westheimer, Florida Prepaid College Plans Spokesperson, and Boca resident, to give us the scoop on the plans and what the lower prices mean for your wallet. She can also speak from personal experience as someone who had a plan in college and as a mom who has
Florida Prepaid is a state-backed college savings program where families can lock in future college tuition rates now for less. Essentially, you are pre-paying for college on a monthly basis to ensure your child’s tuition is covered. Florida Prepaid was founded on a mission of helping more families find an affordable way to save for college. This mission is also about building a stronger Florida. The more stu-
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dents that can go to college – and graduate without debt – the more opportunities we can see created for future generations to find strong careers, and to live free of debt. This makes future generations more likely to buy houses, to start families, and to start building lives, which benefits the local economies of Florida. The average graduate with student loan debt in Florida owes about $24,000.
What does it mean that Prepaid Plan Prices are being reduced by $1.3 billion? The Florida Prepaid Board closely monitors tuition inflation and its long-term obligations to pay for college. Due to successive years of lower than anticipated tuition and fee increases the Board determined it could go back and lower plan prices, without jeopardizing their ability to cover future college costs. The price reductions apply to plans purchased since 2008 and impact a total of 224,000 families by lowering their monthly payments, paying off plans earlier than expected, or providing refunds. Additionally, families who sign up this year will see the lowest plan prices in five years. How does this price reduction make college more affordable for people living in Florida?
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This year prices start as low as $44 - $174 a month for a newborn, depending on which plan you choose. With a Florida Prepaid Plan, you pick the plan that fits your savings goals and we handle the rest. We hope this price reduction will allow more families the opportunity to affordably save for college in
a stress-free way.
Tell us about the different plans. There are five different plans to choose from: • 1-year Florida University Plan • 4-year Florida University Plan (most popular) • 2+2 Florida Plan (two years at a college and then two years at a university) • 2-Year Florida College Plan • 4-year Florida College Plan One of my favorite insider tips is to get the whole family involved! Maybe mom and dad buy a year and then grandma and grandpa buy a year. The 1-year Florida University Plan can be stacked up. In addition, families can add on a dormitory package, if they’d like to pay for housing in advance. Can this plan be used at other colleges and universities outside of Florida? While Florida Prepaid Plans are designed to be used at Florida Colleges or State University, plans can be used at in-state, out-of-state, public or private colleges and universities around the country – or even the world. They can also be used at technical colleges. With your Florida Prepaid plan, the value we pay to other schools is the same as we would have paid to a Florida school. This all sounds great. How can we sign up? Parents can enroll online in less than 15 minutes at myfloridaprepaid.com. Open enrollment ends April 30.
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MARCH 2020 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER
Delray’s Shamrock Restoration team helped raise money for and donate turkeys to families on Thanksgiving. Submitted photo.
Delray’s Shamrock Restoration raised $3,200 for the Miracle League. Submitted photo.
Delray’s Shamrock Restoration partners with local nonprofits to give back Staff report
When Johnny Mackey isn’t helping someone remove mold from their home or repairing water damage, you can find the CEO of Delray-based Shamrock Restoration lending a hand at local community events. Mackey and his partners at Shamrock Restoration are all about giving back. Since they founded their business in 2017, they have partnered with several nonprofits to raise money and awareness for their causes. This past Thanksgiving, Shamrock Restoration raised enough money, over $2,000, to provide 100 turkey meals to 100 families with the HATT Foundation. Mackey and his team then helped distribute the meals the weekend before Thanksgiving. Last year, the group also paired up with the Miracle League through Shamrock Restoration’s referral program. The company donated $100 to the nonprofit, which gives kids of all abilities a place to play baseball, for all referrals that mentioned Miracle League. This year, the company is working with Delray’s Roots and Wings, a nonprofit that gives back to teachers with awards
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and gifts of appreciation and works to get kids reading on grade level with a tutoring program.
Mackey said the referral program will be in effect as well as fundraising efforts at events. Last month, Shamrock Restoration manned a 15 by 15 foot inflatable fast pitch area at Garlic Fest with help from The Palm Beach County Sheriff ’s Office Explorers. The fast pitch was free to play with all donations directly benefiting Roots and Wings. This month, the fast pitch will make an appearance at Wellington’s Bacon and Bourbon Fest on March 21-22. Mackey said combining the efforts of a local business, local law enforcement and a local charity help build up the community.
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By the end of the year, he said Shamrock Restoration will attend about five different local events and work to give back to local nonprofits at each event. He said attending events is the best way to spread the word about what Shamrock Restoration does so if someone needs their services, they know who is showing up at their door. Mackey values customer service and wants customers to know Shamrock Restoration will help them get through what can often be a stressful time. To put a personal touch on the experience, Shamrock Restoration sends out bios and photos of the technicians servicing a person’s home before they arrive so the homeowner knows who to expect at their home.
Delray’s Shamrock Restoration teamed up with the Palm Beach County Sheriff ’s Office Explorers at Garlic Fest to help raise money for Roots and Wings through a fast pitch game that collected donations. Submitted photo.
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The company services Broward, Palm Beach and Martin Counties, but Mackey estimates about 70 percent of their business is from the Boca, Delray and Boynton area. Shamrock Restoration helps remedy issues from water, fire and mold damage.
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YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
La Boulangerie Boul’Mich expands brand to Boca Raton Staff report
Escape throngs of shoppers and grab a pastry, lunch or coffee inside a European-inspired bistro at Boca’s Town Center Mall. Miami-based La Boulangerie Boul’Mich has opened its sixth location at the mall near Saks Fifth Avenue. The French artisanal deli, bakery and café with a Latin American twist is inspired by the Bohemian and informal ambience along the Boul’Mich, the nickname given to the Boulevard St. Michel in the Latin Quarter of Paris known for its cafés, coffee shops, bookstores and boutiques. This is the sixth location of La Boulangerie Boul’Mich. Villa Sota Holding LLC restaurant group, established in 2014, has locations in Key Biscayne, Aventura, Coral Way, Pinecrest and Fort Lauderdale. Now, they have expanded into Palm Beach County with the mall location. “La Boulangerie Boul’Mich guests look for a new experience while discovering delicious flavors,” said Villa Sota Holding LLC Partner Avy Cohen. “They want to taste something different where food quality is excellent and always fresh, and enjoy international artisanal and homemade style cuisine with the best local ingredients.”
the products you find in Europe, you will find with a twist in Latin America.” All menu items are made fresh daily, in house and from scratch. Prep work is done from a state-of-the-art 3,000-square-foot commissary in Miami. The group has its own distribution systems that delivers all the ingredients and supplies daily to all the stores. They use their own proprietary recipes for its artisan breads, pastries, pastas, juices, soups, omelets, quiches, gourmet sandwiches, fresh salads, entrees and desserts. Many recipes have been passed down from the partners’ grandmothers. Desserts do not use preservatives, gelatins, or additives and are served in recyclable glass jar containers that guests can take home. Using recycled and reclaimed items is important to the restaurateurs, which is evident in the decor. Vintage antiques line the
walls from baking tools to old cameras. Booth seating uses old coffee bags to create back rests. The industrial era vibe meets cozy cafe provides a meeting spot that is ideal for both a business meeting and a get together with friends. The restaurant can be accessed from inside the mall or outside. It opens for breakfast at 8 a.m. before the mall is open. Breakfast options, which come with freshly squeezed orange juice and American coffee with free refills, are served all day— and night. Menu items fuse Europe and Latin American flavors. “We believe the European and Latin American cultures are a perfectly natural fit at the table at family gatherings, business meetings and more,” Cohen said. “So many of
For example, Cohen shares that there is a variety of influences served up for breakfast. There are omelets, quiches, the Perico (scrambled eggs typical from Venezuela and other Latin American countries) and Huevos Rancheros (from Mexico). An example of “a mix” is the La Boulangerie Boul’Mich Chocolate Croissant. It is deliberately not called a “Pain au Chocolat” as is the name of the traditional French chocolate version of a croissant because the La Boulangerie Boul’Mich recipe uses chocolate chips and is baked in a half-moon croissant shape, not the traditional French shape. Other menu offerings include dessert in jars, empanadas, sandwiches, vegetarian soups and salads. There are plenty of coffee options including a Nutccino, a cappuccino made with Nutella.
East Side Café: Fun, flavorful, filling By: Natalya Jones Contributing Writer Want a restaurant that offers fresh food when you’re sticking to a diet but savory “fun” food when you’re not? East Side Café has both. The restaurant opened this past November is owned by veteran restaurateur Todd Weiss. It’s apparent looking at the menu items what his intent at the Café is: he wants to provide fresh, healthy food that doesn’t deplete taste (along with some not-so-healthy favorites, of course). All cold subs and breakfast sandwiches are made with Boar’s Head meats and
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cheeses. Both the chicken salad and tuna salad don’t come from a can, but are homemade with solely all white meat chicken and albacore tuna. Vegan items, salads, acai bowls and more healthy items can also be found on the menu. A variety of shaved ribeye Philly cheese steaks, burgers and subs can also be ordered, a commonality that’s rare in the diet culture nowadays.
East Side Café isn’t Weiss’s first restaurant venture. For about 14 years, Weiss has owned the four Draft House restaurants in Boca, West Palm, and Lake Worth as well as a catering company called Affordable Catering. As if that wasn’t enough, he was awarded the food and beverage contracts for Sugar Sand Park, Osprey Point Golf Course, Spanish River Library and Pompano Pier concessions. His contract is presently at the Boca Raton Municipal Golf Course and has been there for over 10 years. Hosting a party or need lunch for the office? Catering menus for meetings, large groups and events are an option. Netflix and chilling? Online ordering as well as delivery service through local delivery companies (Grub Hub, Doordash, Uber Eats, Postmates and Delivery Dudes) is also an option. The East Side Café is open from 8 a.m. – 4 p.m. daily and is located at 159 East Palmetto Park Road in Boca Raton. Call (561) 617-1500 or visit theeastsidecafe.com.
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YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
Boca’s economic development report New York. If a picture is worth a thousand words, this picture could be worth thousands of dollars.
By: Jessica Del Vecchio Special to the Boca and Delray newspaper Boca. Business. Briefs. We had so much fun guest hosting a recent episode on the Shrimp Tank’s podcast. Shrimp Tank interviews some of the most successful business owners and entrepreneurs in the region. We were lucky to guest host the interview with Ceebz Gerard, the founder of DNC Media. The 175,715 square-foot building at 700 Banyan Trail sold for $32 million, equating to $178 per square foot. The building includes a warehouse and an office and sits on 11 acres. The property sold for nearly double its last sales price in 2017.
The 47,585 square-foot Class A office building at 950 Peninsula Corporate Circle sold for $13 million, equating to $273 per square foot. Women owned True Green Enterprises’ bamboo recyclable and compostable beverage cups and bamboo straws were used by PepsiCo, the official soft drink of Super Bowl LIV on Sunday Feb. 2 at the Hard Rock Stadium in Miami. We read numerous business outlets and came across the following graphic comparing taxes in Florida versus taxes in
Live Better. Live Boca. ALINA Residences celebrated its topping off last month. The views from this downtown project are incredible. Alina is a nine-story building featuring 121 residences. The property has amenities ranging from an elite performance fitness center and private yoga room, his and her spa with treatment rooms, relaxation room, steam rooms, saunas and private lockers, a sculpture garden and dog park.
The expected occupancy is slated for late 2020. Royal Palm Residences celebrated the grand opening of its sales center in Downtown Boca Raton. The ultra-luxury boutique condominium will be comprised of three towers, with residences ranging from 2,425 square feet to over 7,100 square feet, including six penthouses and 4 villas. The property will combine a state-of-the-art fitness center, tranquility pool & relaxation spa, lounge & wine cellar and a fully equipped lobby with quiet meeting areas. Each of the 48 boutique residences will have 270 degrees of natural light. Have corporate news to share or looking to relocate/expand your company to Boca Raton? Contact the city’s economic development office at economicdevelopment@ myboca.us or 561-393-7761. Want to see what we are up to? Follow us on Facebook @BocaEconomicDevelopment.
March: ‘Get Your House in Order’ month at the Delray Chamber By: Stephanie Immelman president and
But don’t just focus on the household. It’s also the perfect
CEO of the Greater Delray Beach Chamber
time to get your legal and financial house in order. I plan
of Commerce
to.
Special to the Boca and Delray newspapers
Doing your taxes, planning for retirement, drawing up
It’s time for spring cleaning! Chamber members such as
a will, or conducting an insurance check-up --these are
Shamrock Restoration or 24/7 Perfect Cleaning Service
things we tend to put off. But if you are like me, there
can help you get your house in order.
is such a sense of accomplishment once these legal and
If you want to go beyond a spring clean and go for a
financial priorities are done and dusted!
refresh or remodel you can access interior designers or
The Chamber has so many Members that can help you
contractors through our Chamber website.
with these important personal business items. We can
And don’t forget Sklar Furnishings or brand new mem-
put you in touch with accountants, financial planners,
ber Suns Furniture to get the perfect indoor or outdoor
insurance agents and attorneys. It is so important to sup-
look once that house is in order!
port our local Delray Beach businesses.
The Greater Delray Beach Chamber of Commerce is all about spring cleaning. Photo courtesy of Emiliano Brooks, Studio B Squared.
To check these priorities off your To Do List, go to www. DelrayBeach.com/directory. There you will find a complete list of Chamber members that can help you Get Your House in Order.
Everybody calls Lee! 74 N.E. 4TH AVENUE, SUITE #1, DELRAY BEACH | CallLee.com
Staff report
Get a glance inside some of Delray’s Lake Ida homes during the 19th Annual Delray Home Tour benefiting Achievement Centers for Children & Families. The event returns from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. on March 18 with a focus on nine properties in the Lake Ida neighborhood. Guests will visit eight homes and one garden and enjoy a lunch and trolley service. “Each year we select a different Delray Beach neighborhood where homeowners can showcase different interior designs and architectural styles,” said Kari Shipley, the co-chair of this year’s organizing committee. “The Home Tour, will feature a variety of homes that range from elegant Florida bungalows, lakeside estates and lush tropical gardens providing home and garden decorating enthusiasts with an inside look into the world of distinctive Delray living.” All Home Tour ticket sales and sponsorships benefit
Proceeds from the 19th Annual Delray Home Tour will benefit Delray’s Achievement Centers for Children & Families.
Achievement Centers for Children & Families. The event typically draws about 600 guests. Tickets are $125. Call 561-822-6248 or visit www.delrayhometour.com
Establishing your Domicile in Florida By: Jennifer L. Fulton, Esq., The Law Offices of Robin Bresky Special to Boca and Delray newspapers There’s no place like home . . . and from an estate and tax planning perspective, there is no place to call home like Florida. In addition to all that sunshine, Florida has no state income, fiduciary, estate or inheritance tax, and offers strong constitutional homestead creditor protection, making it a great place to retire. But you must take proactive steps to establish yourself as a resident of Florida. Some states are reluctant to accept that you have abandoned your domicile with them, and require substantial proof. Some people meet the criteria required in Florida to be a resident, but fail to satisfy another state that they have transferred their domicile to Florida. Each state is different, but New York and New Jersey are two of the most aggressive. There is no such thing as a “complete list” of what one must do persuade your former state that you have established your domicile in Florida, but the more you do, the better. Here are some general guidelines: • Obtain a Florida Driver’s license or State ID card, and surrender your license from your former state. • Register your automobiles and boats in Florida.
REAL
19th Annual Delray Home Tour highlights Lake Ida neighborhood, benefits Achievement Centers
ESTATE
MARCH 2020 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER
• Obtain a new passport with your Florida address. • Register to vote—and vote—in Florida. • File your taxes using your Florida address, and file a final return of any pro-rated state taxes from your former state. If you continue to earn income in another state, file as a non-resident using your Florida address. Notify the Social Security Administration and all former state taxing authorities of your Florida domicile. • Create a Florida will and living trust, and in some cases name a Florida resident as trustee. • See Florida physicians, and have Florida health care directives and powers of attorney. • Change your membership in clubs outside of Florida to non-resident status, or withdraw from membership if residency in that state is required. • Transfer your financial accounts to Florida, and change your statement address. Establish a relationship with Florida professionals, such as bankers, financial planners, accountants and attor-
neys. • Spend more than half the year here, and keep a log of which days. • File a Declaration of Florida Domicile in your county official records, indicating you intend to be a Florida resident. • Establish homestead. If you own and occupy your home as your permanent residence on Jan. 1, you can timely file your application with the county tax assessor through March 1. Once approved, you will continue to benefit from the homestead tax exemption and cap on increases in real property taxes annually, for as long as you continue to qualify for the exemption. • If you travel (somewhere other than the state from which you are relocating), come and go from your Florida residence, and keep a log of where you are each day. Jennifer L. Fulton, Esq. is an attorney, of counsel, at The Law Offices of Robin Bresky (www.breskylegal. com) focusing on Estate Planning, Probate, and Estate and Trust Administration. A member of the Florida Bar since 1996 with a Juris Doctor degree from Nova Southeastern University, Fulton works with clients to plan for the milestones of life (college, “adulting”, marriage, children, grandchildren, aging parents, preand post-divorce, loss of a spouse, aging, diminished mental capacity) and administration upon death. She can be reached at 561-994-6273 or EstatePlanning@BreskyLegal. com.
INSIDE
Palm Beach County
Akoya West opens doors [38]
Sign up for Habitat Women’s Build [39]
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YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
What’s up in the real estate market… Christel Silver Named 2019 Broker of the Year by RAPB/GFLR Christel Silver, Broker/ Owner of Silver International Realty in Delray Beach was named 2019 Broker of the Year by the Realtors Association of the Palm Beaches and Greater Fort Lauderdale Realtors (RAPB/GFLR) now renamed as Broward, Palm Beaches, and St. Lucie Realtors®. She also serves on the Board of Directors of the organization for South Palm Beach. The Broker of the Year award selection criteria includes production volume, real estate related involvement, national association recognized designations, community service involvement, and number of years in the real estate industry. Silver said she was drawn to the human element of real estate from day one, and nearly three decades later, developing relationships with her clients is still the most rewarding part of her job. “I’ve forged new friendships with so many interesting and charismatic people,” she said. “My clients come from all walks of life
and I love to collaborate with them.”
the Delray Housing Group and Jeff Graeve, Project Manager. We thank Colome & Associates for their design and Bespoke Construction who served as the General Contractor for this project.” ALINA Residences developers celebrate topping off of project’s phase one Mizner Country Club’s COO Larry Savvides with Laura Ferrara, Mizner Country Club’s Employee of the Year 2019.
Delray Beach Housing Authority rehabs, leases public housing units
Mizner Country Club’s Employee of the Year 2019.
The Delray Beach Housing Authority recently completed rehabbing and leasing four 2-bedroom public housing units located at 702 SW 2nd Court.
The announcement was made by the club’s General Manager & COO Larry Savvides last month.
The total renovation cost $302,602. The project added to the public housing inventory and increased it from 9 to 13 units. One unit is reserved for the on-Site maintenance person. “Public housing programs provide decent and safe affordable housing for eligible low-income families, the elderly, and persons with disabilities,” said Shirley Erazo, President and CEO of the DBHA. “We commend the staff especially Jakeleen Fernandez, Vice President of Operations for
Soon To Be Completed Ocean to Intracoastal A JAG Design and Development Original 16,000 total square feet • 140 ft Oceanfront • 145 ft Intracoastal
Jessica Del Vecchio, Noam Ziv, Yoel Shargian, Robert Weinroth, Pamela Weinroth, Andrea Levine O’Rourke, Andy Thomson attend ALINA Residences topping off ceremony. Photo courtesy of David Sutta Photography.
Phase one of Boca’s ALINA Residences is nearly completed. The topping off of the nine story luxury condo project was completed late January and celebrated with brunch. The first phase of the project is slated for total completion in quarter four of this year. “Topping off phase one of ALINA is a major milestone for us,” said Noam Ziv, Executive Director of Development of El-Ad National Properties. “We are very proud of the incredible work done by our contractor, Moss Construction, and our entire construction team. We are moving forward rapidly to complete this luxury residential development, and we are looking forward to delivering ALINA to our future residents. Downtown Boca Raton is currently undergoing a development economic boom, and we are excited to be developing one of the projects leading the charge.” Designed by acclaimed architectural firm Garcia Stromberg/GS4 Studios, ALINA offers one to four-bedroom residences that showcase sweeping golf course and city views through floor-to-ceiling glass doors, which open to expansive terraces.
Julie Ann Giachetti LUXURY WATERFRONT & BEACH AREA SPECIALIST
www.Jaghomes.com Julie@Jaghomes.com 561.212.0022
Attending the event from New York, Yoel Shargian, CEO of Elad Group said, “While our company is known for luxury developments, this project was our first step into the Boca market. The recent announcement of the upcoming Boca Raton Brightline Station further expands the area’s appeal. We are excited to offer our residents a walkable lifestyle close to a number of nearby entertainment and cultural options including Mizner Park and the Boca Raton Museum of Art.” Mizner Country Club names Tennis Pro Shop coordinator employee of year Laura Ferrara, Mizner Country Club’s Tennis Pro Shop Coordinator, was named
“Laura is the role model of an outstanding employee,” Savvides said. “During her 18-month tenure with the Club, we have marveled at her incredibly outgoing, friendly and compassionate personality. She is creative, kind, thoughtful, intuitive, and an inspiration to all of us. She is truly the ultimate team player and a joy to everyone who interacts with her. Laura not only makes the tennis experience at Mizner great but sets the standard for excellence of which Mizner Country Club has built its reputation. We are so fortunate to have Laura on the team and wish her many more years of success at Mizner.” Vernon Gettone, Mizner’s Director of Tennis, notes, “Laura has received the Employee of the Month and now she is the Employee of the Year! It’s an honor to be working with her as she exemplifies the selflessness and dedication of our work culture. Laura continually goes above and beyond member expectations. To be here for over 18 months and receive this award is remarkable. Thank you, Laura, for not only making tennis great but setting the standard for taking Mizner Country Club to the next level.” Kaufman Lynn Construction promotes two employees to leadership positions Kaufman Lynn Construction, has promoted two executives into leadership roles. Tim Bonczek was promoted to Vice President of Operational Excellence and Innovation and Elaine Hinsdale has been promoted to Vice President of Integrated Marketing. In this newly created position, Bonczek, the former Operations Vice President, will be responsible for the construction company’s quality control, safety, training, technology research and the implementation of operational and interdepartmental efficiencies across the company. Bonczek has been with Kaufman Lynn for more than 12 years.
Luxe
LIVING
Luxury Properties
OVER $1 MILLION
In the heart of Boca Raton and Delray Beach from ocean front estates to luxury homes and condominiums, Lang Realty is here for you.
www. LangRealty.com Toll Free: 1 -800-632-4267
TROPIC ISLE
RX-10550134 $12,950,000 Bill Giberson 561-305-0505
BOCA VILLAS
RX-10565091 $2,900,000
Stephanie Kaufman 561-929-1770
INLET CAY
RX-10599526 $ 1,750,000 David Gunther 954-651-4789 Geoff Braboy 561-699-3455
THE BRIDGES
RX-10589289 $1,295,000
Maria Kovachev 772-633-8771
BOCA HIGHLANDS
REIDS JOHN B. VILLAGE
Blake Morris 561-901-6960 Jeannine Morris 561-706-8287
M. Peg Delp 561-436-5560
RX-10581049 $3,995,000
LES JARDINS
RX-10599903 $2,950,000 Tom Walsh 561-573-2226
TRADE WINDS ESTATES RX-10600080 $1,600,000
Robert MacKinnon 617-354-7000
AZURA
RX-10568439 $1,250,000 Frank Tipton 561-703-0065
RX-10567255 $3,150,000
POLO CLUB
RX-10599433 $1,899,000 Tripta Chawla 561-998-0100
BOCA HARBOUR
RX-10554442 $1,450,000
Brian Pearl 561-245-1541 Vincenza Antonacci 561-714-8464
MIZNER COUNTRY CLUB RX-10591646 $1,099,000
Ryan Greenblatt 561-350-1850
View more Million Dollar listings visit: langrealty.com or call 800.632.4267
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YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
Spring home design tips with Laetitia Laurent of Boca’s Laure Nell Interiors
Akoya Boca West opens doors to first residents Staff report
Want to wake up in a luxury building with golf course views from every unit? That is what Akoya Boca West offers its residents. A former golf maintenance area and dog park on the grounds of Boca West Country Club was transformed by Siemens Group into a 113unit high-end condo building. On move in day on Feb. 12, the building had already sold 65 percent of the units.
ishes are modern and elegant.
There are about 10 units that are move-in ready including furniture. There is an on-site card room with poker tables, social room that opens to an outdoor patio with a catering kitchen, gym and swimming pool. Each owner receives two parking spaces in a private, enclosed garage. There is complimentary valet for guests. Each unit is accessed by a privacy-controlled elevator system that opens to the homeowners private foyer.
If you are looking to do some sprucing up this spring, we have all the latest trends thanks to Laetitia Laurent and her Boca interior design company Laure Nell. Laurent is the principal and lead designer of the company and we were able to get her to share some of the latest spring tips when it comes to home decor.
1 Tell us about yourself and how you got into interior design. I studied art and history at the Sorbonne in Paris, where I grew up. I moved to South Florida 15 years ago and I started my business. It grew very organically through word of mouth from helping friends rearrange their furnishings to full remodels and large constructions.
2 Where is Laure Nell located
Akoya offers two-to-four bedroom residences plus den options that are priced from $1 million to over $4 million. Units feature floor to ceiling windows with sweeping golf course views. Designed by architecture firm Garcia Stromberg/GS4 Studios with interiors by Steven G, the fin-
Residents also have access to Boca West’s amenities including golf, a 29-court tennis complex, a European inspired spa, dining, and year-round private club activities. Membership at the social level is the minimum requirement for the country club.
and what kind of work do you offer clients?
We are located in east Boca Raton. We offer the full gamut of residential interior design services from breathing fresh air into spaces with new furnishings all the way to big remodels or new build.
3 How would you describe
your design style? I grew up in France surrounded by the work of the masters. Architecture and scale are paramount there, so you could say I’m more structured, and process driven, but then I moved to South Florida, where things tend to be more relaxed, and I’ve learned to really enjoy that. Today my style marries European principles with a coastal relaxed vibe.
4 Where do you get your design inspiration from? Travel. Nothing inspires me more than jumping on a plane and discovering a new place, a new culture, a new way of living. From the colors to the rituals I always try and bring that inspiration back with me and infuse my client’s home with something aesthetically unique. I’m not a cookie-cutter type designer.
5 What is your favorite room
in a home to design?
I love designing kitchens because they are often the hub of the house, and kids’ rooms are always so fun, very freeing.
6 What are the newest trends
for spring that you are seeing/ implementing?
I would have to say clean lines with warmth. Call it the California Modern trend where spaces that are clean but still feel lived in with character. I love mixing wood floors with clean cabinets and surfaces for example. Twotone cabinetry is also very ontrend for that same reason: mixing clean and warm.
7 What is the easiest change someone can make in their home? Spring is a great time to revamp your accessories: from pillows and throws to artwork. Those small touches can go a very long way in setting the tone and breathing in a totally new design vibe.
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39
Habitat for Humanity of South Palm Beach County looking for women builders for annual WOMEN’s Build Staff report Ladies, ever want to help build a home? Get ready to pick up power tools and put on a hard hat during the Habitat for Humanity South Palm Beach County’s WOMEN Build 2020. This year, the annual women build will deliver two homes for two working moms and their families just in time for Mother’s Day. The build will take place on May 7-9. “Because Habitat for Humanity recognizes that women are uniquely positioned to nurture families and build communities, the South Palm Beach County annual build event is purposely timed during the three days leading up to Mother’s Day,” said HFHSPBC President & CEO Randy Nobles. The event is part of the Habitat for Humanity National “Women Build” — founded in 1991 — that enlists and encourages women across the country, with or without any construction skills, to fundraise and build homes for families in their local communities.
In the months leading up to the on-site build days, each registered WOMEN Builder commits to “give or get” a minimum of $1,000 each through their personal fundraising efforts or making the donation to help underwrite construction materials for the two homes they will build. Once an individual meets or surpasses her personal $1,000 fund commitment, she will be eligible to pick from five on-site build sessions.
“There is no other fundraiser like this… gala gowns are replaced with jeans, WOMEN Build T-shirts and pink hard hats and the participants get to see, meet and be a part of what they are fundraising for,” said Co-Chair Raphael-Dynan. “Being able to see and feel the impact of your investment goes well beyond the physical construction to authentic humanitarianism.” Because no construction experience is required, WOMEN Builders span business, civic, community and philanthropic
sectors. The volunteer builders work under the guidance of construction professionals.
“Those who have stepped out of their comfort zone at previous WOMEN Builds to help change the lives of others, have shared that the rare build experience changed their lives forever as well,” said Co-Chair Beverly Raphael Altman. “Robyn and I are honored and propelled to ‘up the game’ this year as WOMEN Build Co-Chairs as we welcome the return of our Women Builders for their third or fourth consecutive year and recruit new women to grow our WOMEN Build sisterhood and fundraising dollars.” This year’s WOMEN Builders get to celebrate their commitments together during a private mix-and-mingle launch reception on March 19 at 6 p.m. at Royal Palm Yacht & Country Club. To learn more about the HFHSPBC 2020
WOMEN Build Co-Chairs Robyn Raphael-Dynan and Beverly Raphael Altman don their pink construction hats as they recruit more women builders. Submitted photo.
WOMEN Build sponsorships, register as a builder or team captain, contact HFHSPBC Manager, Donor Engagement & Special Projects Marta Knowles at mknowles@habitatsouthpalmbeach.org or 561.819.6070, Ext. 208 or visit www.habitatsouthpalmbeach.org.
Returning as mother/daughter WOMEN Build Co-Chairs are Beverly Raphael Altman and Robyn Raphael-Dynan, who are women builders every day as the CEO and Vice President of Operations of RCC Associates. Supported by a committee of community-driven women leaders, Altman and Raphael-Dynan are recruiting 250 builders.
Habitat for Humanity South Palm Beach County’s WOMEN Build 2020 will take place in May. Submitted photo.
Sign ups to participate in Habitat for Humanity South Palm Beach County’s WOMEN Build 2020 are underway. Submitted photo.
Ask an expert: Your HOA, condo questions By: Harris B. Katz, Esq. Special to the Boca and Delray newspapers
Q: The roofs in our condominium are over twenty years old and leaking. The board recently commissioned a reserve study and the engineer opined that the roof has exceeded its useful life. The board is refusing the replace the roofs. What can we do to force the board to replace the roofs? H.H., Boca Raton A: The board has the fiduciary duty to maintain, repair and replace the common elements. The roof is arguably the most important common element and roof leaks can range from minor to disastrous – but often expensive. This is a very fact specific analysis, but if the board
has a professional opinion that the roofs have zero years remaining, the board could be breaching its duty to the members with every passing day. Often, the decision to forego replacements is because of cost and the desire to avoid special assessments or reserve contributions. Although this is understandable, it is also a necessary part of owning property. The board needs to consider multiple funding issues such as whether loans are available, whether membership approval is required for certain options like special assessments, and the current balance of the reserve accounts. My recommendation is to write a letter to the board to remind the board that the roof ’s useful life has expired and remind the board of its fiduciary obligations. The simple fact is that if the condominium experiences catastrophic damage that could have been avoided by following the recommendations of the engineer and timely replacing a common element component, the association could be responsible for damages caused by the roof leak.
Absent a change in board composition through election or recall, there is no direct mechanism to compel roof replacement, but you can take actions to protect your interests in the event the board continues to ignore the roof condition. Harris B. Katz, Esq., is Partner of the Law Firm Goede, Adamczyk, DeBoest & Cross, PLLC. Visit www.gadclaw. com or to ask questions about your issues for future columns, send your inquiry to: question@gadclaw.com. The information provided herein is for informational purposes only and should not be construed as legal advice. The publication of this article does not create an attorney-client relationship between the reader and Goede, Adamczyk, DeBoest & Cross, PLLC. or any of our attorneys. Readers should not act or refrain from acting based upon the information contained in this article without first contacting an attorney, if you have questions about any of the issues raised herein. The hiring of an attorney is a decision that should not be based solely on advertisements or this column.
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YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
Jewish author speaks at annual Lion of Judah Luncheon
Her father left when she was young and told the kids to think of him as the favorite uncle. Her mother raised Weiner and her three siblings on her own.
By: Jan Engoren Contributing Writer Jennifer Weiner, author of “Good in Bed,” “In Her Shoes,” and her latest, “Mrs. Everything,” was the guest speaker Jan. 30 at the Jewish Federation of South Palm Beach County’s annual Lion of Judah Luncheon, held at the Polo Club.
Always the outsider, Weiner said she learned to observe and this became the catalyst for her writing life. After college she took a job as a reporter for a small paper in Pennsylvania, then moved on to a medium-sized paper in Kentucky, before eventually landing at the Philadelphia Inquirer.
The Lions of Judah, comprised of philanthropic Jewish women, contribute a minimum $5,000 per year to the 2019 UJA/Jewish Federation of South Palm Beach County Annual Campaign. Hosted by co-chairs Shelly Snyder and Jeanne Fibus, the Boca Raton chapter boasts more than 700 Lions of Judah, one of the largest Lions of Judah memberships in the country, and is a leader in the number of endowments greater than $100,000. “This luncheon is every season’s premier event in local women’s philanthropy,” Fibus said. “We invite women of all ages to join our powerful, caring and fulfilling sisterhood, and be part of the vital difference our Lions make in countless lives.” In fact, Snyder noted that since last year’s luncheon 55 new lions have joined their philanthropic group and highlighted their efforts around the globe, including working to resettle Russian Jewish refugees into Palm Beach County during the 1970s and continuing the fight against anti-Semitism. More than anything, Weiner, a New York Times best-selling novelist, is a storyteller and she launched into a number of stories in front of approximately 400 attendees who came to hear her speak about her creative process, her personal experiences and writing for and about Jewish women. “I’m happy to be here, although it’s bittersweet,” said Weiner, who would come to Florida to visit her “Nana,” who lived in Century Village in Deerfield before relocating to an assisted living facility in her native city of Detroit.
Gail Lichtman, Jill Rose, Jeanne Fibus, Jennifer Weiner, Karen Dern, Shelly Snyder at the annual Lion of Judah Luncheon featuring guest speaker author Jennifer Weiner. Photo courtesy of Jeffrey Tholl.
“Come speak at my assisted living,” she said and Weiner did. “It felt good to finally make her happy,” she remembered. She recalled the fact that her grandmother only had an eighth grade education and worked in a candy store before eventually marrying and running a furniture business with her husband.
One day her brother called to tell her, “There’s a woman living in the house with Mom.” It turned out Weiner’s mom had entered into a relationship with her JCC swim coach, Karen – becoming more fodder for Weiner’s fiction. During that time Weiner had broken up with a long-time boyfriend and wasn’t sure she was going to get the happy ending she’d longed for. She decided to write a book and give her protagonist the happy ending she wanted.
Some of these real-life people and events are fictionalized in Weiner’s latest book, “Mrs. Everything,” which follows the lives of two sisters as they navigate a changing America over the course of their lives.
That book became her first bestseller, “Good in Bed.” (It’s interesting to note that on her website Weiner states, “I did not quit my day job until Book One was published, Book Two was written, and Books Three and Four were under contract.”)
“What would Nana’s life have been like if she had more opportunities?” Weiner wondered. “I wanted to look at the life of women and their choices.”
When she revealed the title of the book to her mother, her mother responded, “How much research did you have to do?”
She quoted poet Muriel Rukeyser, “‘What would happen if one woman told the truth about her life? The world would split open.”
Her second book “In Her Shoes” was made into a 2005 film starring Cameron Diaz, Shirley MacLaine and Toni Collette.
She set out to analyze some of those pieces and tackle some of these issues in her novel.
Nana had a role as an extra in the film.
A large presence and influence in Weiner’s life, Nana was at once doting, but critical.
Her Jewishness infuses her novels; most of her characters are Jewish with a Jewish sensibility of fairness and freedom. She’s inspired by Tikkun Olam, the Jewish concept of healing the world.
For her 100th birthday Weiner begged her to know what she could give her, as she usually declined Weiner’s efforts at gift-giving.
She recalls growing up in mostly non-Jewish Connecticut, one of only 9 Jewish kids in her high school graduating class of 400.
“I always knew I wanted to tell her story,” noted Weiner. “I wanted to tell the stories of the women I knew and the lives they led.” We can all see a piece of ourselves in the characters Weiner has brought to life in-between the covers of her books. For information on the Jewish Federation of South Palm Beach County, visit jewishboca.org.
All People’s Day Diversity Kapow takes home best bite at Junior Festival returns to Delray Beach League of Boca Raton’s Annual Culinary Festival Flavors 2020 Staff report
The 11th annual All People’s Day® Diversity Festival will return to Pompey Park on March 21 from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
All People’s Day®, Inc, and Delray Parks & Recreation present the free, family friendly festival with food, entertainment and activities. Enjoy food from different ethnic restaurants and 15 performances from different nationalities. Music will be provided by the Spotlighters, Milagro Center kids, Drum Circle, PinkSlip, Angele,
Staff report The best dish of the Junior League of Boca Raton’s Annual Culinary Festival Flavors 2020 was awarded to Kapow.
Cecelia St. King, S. Fl Taiko Dojo’s huge Japanese Drums, and the Raging Grannies, as well as dance by Chinese Performing Arts, Mexican Folklore Dance, African American Step dancing from the Delray Divas, and Zionic Dance and Fitness with audience participation.
Guests enjoyed food from a number of top South Florida restaurants, including The Addison, Poke Jay, Touch of Spain, Kapow, Lemongrass, Ramen Lab Eatery, Harvest Seasonal Grill, M.E.A.T Eatery, Loch Bar, Just Salad, Bolay, Benihana’s, Burton’s, Lionfish, The Melting Pot, Crazy Uncle Mike’s, Raw Juce, Haute Tea Party and Gourmet Phile. Guests in the VIP area enjoyed desserts from Two Fat Cookies.
Funds raised by the event will support the Junior League’s focus areas of Hunger, Child Welfare and Nonprofit Support.
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YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
Recognize your favorite doctor when Rotary Club Downtown Boca Raton’s 22nd Annual ‘Honor Your Doctor’ luncheon returns scholarship fundraiser continues to grow in nominations and attendees, and thus funds available for deserving students who want to attend our local universities. By engaging these students from the very beginning in the community through generous and meaningful local support, we hope to encourage them to launch their careers and remain in practice here in Boca Raton.”
Staff report Like your doctor? Show them some love while supporting scholarships for future doctors and nurses. The 22nd Annual “Honor Your Doctor” luncheon will take place on National Doctors Day, March 18 at Boca West Country Club. While recognizing favorite physicians from Palm Beach and Broward counties, the event raises funds for the Helen M. Babione Medical Scholarship that benefits medical and nursing school students attending four local universities: Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine at FAU, Christine E. Lynn College of Nursing at FAU, Lynn University and Palm Beach State College. Rotary Club of Downtown Boca puts on the luncheon and it will be chaired by Alan Kaye and Janice Williams and the Honorary Co-Chairs Debbie and Steve Schmidt and Honorary Physician Advisor Dr. Jeffrey Stein, who was named the
You can cast a vote for your favorite physician online now at www.rotarydowntownbocaraton.org
Honor Your Doctor co-chair Alan Kaye, co-chair Janice Williams, Honor Your Doctor Founder Helen Babione and Honorary Co-Chair-Debbie Schmidt. Submitted photo.
2019 “Doctor of Distinction.” Speakers include Dr. James Galvin, a board certified neurology specialist, and students who have benefitted from the scholarships. “The Honor Your Doctor Luncheon has
Beethoven Birthday Bash with the Eroica Trio & The Symphonia
The Empire Strikes Back film With Live Orchestra
© 2019 & TM Lucasfilm Ltd. All Rights Reserved © Disney.
Nu Deco Ensemble
become a heartwarming annual tradition for many of Boca Raton’s community leaders, medical community and philanthropists,” said HYD Luncheon Co-Chair Alan Kaye. Co-Chair Janice Williams added, “This
A SEASON OF HEROES
It costs $50 per nomination or $125 for three nominations. There is no limit to how many doctors a patient can nominate or how many times they nominate each of them. Patients are encouraged to attend the event with their nominee(s). All nominated physicians are invited to attend the luncheon as a guests of the Rotary Club of Downtown Boca; tickets for the luncheon are available to the public for $150 per person.
Postmodern Jukebox
Feb 28-Mar 8, 2020 festivalboca.org 561-300-4138
Amy Walter
Jesmyn Ward
Miloš
Laurie Santos
Authors & Ideas Series Documentary film about four women vying for success in classical music
Roz Chast
Presented by The Schmidt Family Centre for the Arts, Mizner Park, Boca Raton – Constantine Kitsopoulos, Music Director. Sponsored in part by the Board of County Commissioners, the Tourist Development Council, and the Cultural Council for Palm Beach County.
Troupe Vertigo
MARCH 2020 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER
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Split Boca City Council votes to lift ban on medical marijuana situation and came out in the end opposing the lifting of the ban.
By: Dale King Contributing Writer On a split vote of 3-2, the Boca Raton City Council has chosen to allow medical marijuana dispensaries within the city’s borders, overturning a local prohibition on use of the drug for treatment of illnesses dating back to 2014.
Mayor Singer said the council’s “hands are tied” by state laws impacting the dispersal of medical marijuana. Once the final vote was taken, he even asked for more ideas from colleagues on how to come up with a better solution. “We have tried our best,” he added.
Councilman Andy Thomson led the drive for the ordinance change that came on a vote Feb. 11 that followed a lengthy public hearing and considerable debate by council members. He voted in favor of getting rid of the ban, and was joined by Mayor Scott Singer and Councilwoman Monica Mayotte. Voting against lifting the proscription on medicinal pot use were Deputy Mayor Jeremy Rodgers and Councilwoman Andrea Levine O’Rourke. Both suggesting delaying action on the proposal until further changes to the laws controlling medical marijuana are adopted either at the state or federal level. In fact, after the 3-2 rejection, Rodgers brought the same measure back to the floor and called for another vote on it, with the addition of a date that it would go into effect June 1, 2021. He and O’Rourke voted in favor; Singer, Thomson and Mayotte voted in the negative. The votes followed the second public hearing on a plan to eliminate the ban. As at the first hearing Jan. 28, citizens spoke both for and against it. Shari Kaplan Stellino, founder and CEO of the medical marijuana assistance organization, Cannectd Wellness, said
During the voting and discussion, council members on both sides of the issue acknowledged other’s efforts to reach a decision that could please all.
the substance has helped her son overcome a central nervous system disorder. She said he grew from a non-communicative, seizure-riddled four-year-old to a 17-year-old who is about to graduate from Boca Raton High School and move on to Florida Atlantic University without any need for assistance. Several residents voted in opposition, expressing concerns that a change in the zoning law could have “unintended consequences” and could open the city to proliferation of medical marijuana dispensaries. Some also said the presence of marijuana sales locations could increase crime. Council members said studies have shown no connection between medical marijuana dispensaries and hikes in criminal activity. The city’s development services staff created a report on the
As the vote approached, Rodgers said he had “some concerns overall. I am inclined to wait. I am not happy with this. I feel better off waiting” until further action is forthcoming from the state legislature. Thompson, Singer and Mayotte all said they feel no changes are coming from the state legislature this year. O’Rourke pointed out that three marijuana dispensaries have opened on the other side of Boca Raton’s southern border in Deerfield Beach. She said she has “heard minimal outreach from the public” and has “tried to make something fit into what doesn’t fit.” In his comments, Thompson said a lot of sick people need medical marijuana to ease the pain of their maladies, and can’t wait another year for relief. He said he is trying to balance their need for medical aid with the city’s need to avoid unexpected zoning consequences and the proliferation of dispensaries.
Boca Raton Museum of Art brings in over $1.5 million donation during 70th Anniversary Gala
Jewish Federation holds Super Sunday Phone-a-thon
Staff report
firing the imaginations of new generations of students in South Florida,” Jody Grass said. “For 70 years, the Museum has created unique pathways where people make personal connections with art by looking, learning, and creating.”
Staff report
Another family has also been instrumental in supporting the fund, the Wolgin family. Dan Wolgin is the newest and youngest member of the Museum’s Board of Trustees and represents the third generation of Wolgins to support the museum. Twenty years ago, Dan Wolgin’s grandfather and grandmother, Bill and Acey, and great uncle and aunt, Sidney and Jacquee, supported the building of the current Museum in Mizner Park.
With a theme of “Call. Connect. Community,” you can call members of the community to spread the word of what the Federation has going on and offers to the community.
The Boca Raton Museum of Art hit two major fundraising milestones during its 70th Anniversary Gala held late January at the Boca Raton Resort and Club. The gala’s honorary chairs Jody Harrison Grass and Martin Grass donated $1 million to the museum’s s 70th Anniversary Education Fund and the gala event raised more than $630,000, the highest amount of money the museum has ever raised at a gala. The funds raised during the gala were thanks to record-setting sponsorships and a live auction. This year’s event also featured a special “Gift from the Heart” callto-action that encouraged guests to donate in honor of the Museum’s 70th anniversary – kicked off with Executive Director, Irvin Lippman’s announcement of the $1 million donation by the Grass family. Jody Grass also serves as the Chair of the Museum’s Board of Trustees. “These two philanthropic milestones represent the generosity of
Jody Harrison Grass & Martin Grass donate $1 million to the Boca Raton Museum of Art during the museum’s annual gala. Submitted photo.
Boca Raton, and the personal commitment to the Museum’s trajectory of making a difference for the community,” Lippman said. “The Museum is honored to receive such a groundswell of support for our new programs.” The Museum’s 70th Anniversary Education Fund has re-focused the orientation of the building, bringing the new Education Center space front and center as the cornerstone of both the building and the museum’s mission. “The art education programs are
“Thanks to the major gift from Jody and Martin, and the ongoing support from the Wolgin family and so many others, the Museum will open two newly transformed spaces in the Spring of 2020 — the Jody Harrison Grass Lobby and the Wolgin Education Center ─ creating greater visibility for its awardwinning educational programs,” Lippman said.
Volunteers will hit the phones on March 15 for the Jewish Federation of South Palm Beach County’s Super Sunday Phone-a-thon.
Volunteers will be able to enjoy breakfast, snacks, dinner and raffle prizes including a large television donated by Hotwire Communications will make the day fun. From newcomers to seasoned callers, volunteers are asked to sign up for shifts from 9:30 am-11:30 pm or 4:00-6:30 pm. Teens can receive community service hours for their volunteer time. “Call. Connect. Community is a terrific theme for this year’s Super Sunday,” said the day’s Co-Chair, Jeff Bovarnick. “It’s
Hundreds of volunteers of all ages from across the entire Jewish community will come together again at the Jewish Federation of South Palm Beach County on Super Sunday. Photo courtesy of Jeffrey Tholl.
a day of engaging our neighbors in conversation, educating them about our Federation’s critical work, and giving them the opportunity to make a vital difference here, in Israel and around the world for our Jewish family in need near and far. And with a $25,000 match from the Jacobson Jewish Community Foundation for all new or increased donations, volunteers can see the results of their efforts double!” Phone callers will gather in Zinman Hall on the Federation campus at 9901 Donna Klein Boulevard, Boca Raton. For more information or to RSVP, visit jewishboca.org/supersunday, call 561.852.3121 or email hannahc@bocafed.org.
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YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
FAU, Palm Beach Book Festival bring ‘New York Times’ best-selling authors to Boca Staff report Voracious readers may be able to hear from their favorite authors during the sixth annual Palm Beach Book Festival. The event brings New York Times bestselling authors to Florida Atlantic University for a day of panels.
James Bond,” which have been translated into multiple languages and published around the world. His third nonfiction spy thriller, “The Princess Spy,” will hit bookstores in March 2021. Prior to becoming a full-time writer, Loftis was a corporate attorney and adjunct professor of law.
This year’s event will take place from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on March 21 at FAU’s University Theatre. The first panel will start at 10 a.m. and is titled “Twisted History: Larry Loftis in conversation with Louis Bayard.” Loftis is the USA TODAY and international bestselling author of the nonfiction spy thrillers “Code Name: Lise—The True Story of the Woman Who Became WWII’s Most Highly Decorated Spy” and “Into the Lion’s Mouth: The True Story of Dusko Popov—World War II Spy, Patriot, and the Real-Life Inspiration for
The second panel, which starts at 11 a.m., is titled “You Don’t Have to be Jewish (to love this panel).” Patricia Marx, in conversation with Cathleen Schine, will talk about Jewish mothers, spouses and siblings. Marx has been contributing to The New Yorker since 1989. She is a former writer for “Saturday Night Live” and “Rugrats,” and is the author of several books. Marx was the first woman elected to the
Harvard Lampoon. She has taught screenwriting and humor writing at Princeton, New York University, and Stonybrook University and she was the recipient of a 2015 Guggenheim Fellowship. “The Grammarians” is Cathleen Schine’s 11th novel. Often compared to Nora Ephron, Nancy Mitford, and Jane Austen, Schine is one of our great comic novelists. Her much-loved novels include “The Love Letter,” “Alice in Bed,” “Rameau’s Niece,” “The Three Weissmanns of Westport,” and “They May Not Mean To, But They Do.” At 12:10 p.m., the Oprah Book Club panelists Leigh Haber (O Magazine), Jeanne Cummins, Kate Elizabeth Russell, and Liz Moore will address the social issues of immigration, #MeToo and the opioid epidemic. Russell was born and raised in eastern Maine. She holds a Ph.D. in creative writing from the University of Kansas and an M.F.A. from Indiana University. Her work has appeared in Hayden’s Ferry Review, Mid-American Review, and Quarterly West, among other literary journals. She currently lives in Madison, Wisconsin. This
is her first novel, hailed by Stephen King as “a well-constructed package of dynamite.” Cummins three books include “The Outside Boy,” “The Crooked Branch,” and the bestselling memoir “A Rip in Heaven.” Her upcoming novel “American Dirt” is one of the most anticipated books of 2020 and has already been sold as an adaptation for a motion picture. Following a lunch break, the 2 p.m. panel titled New York Times: #RealFakeNews (Politics, Trump and the Future of News) will feature Mark Thompson in Conversation with Joy-Anne Reid and David Kogan. Tickets for the full day are $75, and individual panel tickets are $20 and $25, and can be purchased at fauevents.com or by calling 561-297-6124. Free parking is included with admission, and lunch will be for sale at the event.
Town Center Mall owner sues former Photo exhibits on display at FAU tenant Boston Market for back rent Staff report
Take a look through the lens of a photographer in two photo exhibits on display at FAU’s Boca campus this month.
By: Dale King Contributing Writer The owner of Town Center at Boca Raton Mall has filed a lawsuit against one of its former food court tenants, Boston Market, claiming the fastcasual food chain best known for its rotisserie chicken and family style dishes “materially breached the lease by failing to pay rent and state sales taxes.” According to court records, the litigation was filed Jan. 30 by the law firm of McKenna, McCausland & Murphy of Fort Lauderdale, and seeks “in excess of $30,000” to cover unpaid rent, attorney fees and “other relief,” the document states. Phone calls for comment made to the law firm’s office and to Boston Market’s corporate headquarters in Golden, Colo., were not answered or returned. In the suit, the law firm claims Boston Market Corporation signed a lease for 3,357-square-feet of space in the mall’s food court in June of 2015. The lease, which the suit says was to run for 10 years, required a base rent payment of $74,000 for the first year, running up to $96,553 for the 10th year. The restaurant was also required to pay a portion of sales receipts to the mall, according to the
The first, “Shared History: Photographs from the Martin Z. Margulies Collection,” will be presented in the Ritter Gallery until March 7.
suit. Newspaper records say Boston Market opened in the mall’s food court in the latter part of 2015. The suit says the restaurant chain “permanently vacated and abandoned the [food court] premises on or about Jan. 20, 2020.” According to the internet, Boston Market, which opened in 1985 as Boston Chicken, in an empty store in Newton, Mass., just west of Boston, experienced tremendous growth during its first few years. The internet says the corporation expanded rapidly, running up considerable debt in the process. In October 1998, the company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and nearly 400 locations were closed down. Burger giant McDonald’s Corp. purchased the company in 2000 for $173 million. Seven years later, McDonald’s sold the struggling firm to Sun Capital Partners in Boca Raton.
The second, “Shared Space: A New Era | Photographs from the Bank of America Collection,” will be on display in the Schmidt Center Gallery through April 11. Together, the exhibitions represent a broad view of 20th century history through more than 150 photographs by 52 international photographers. Daily gallery hours are free and open to the public. “Shared History: Photographs from the Martin Z. Margulies Collection” presents photographs from the early 20th century through the 1970s and examines the historic way in which photography has brought unknown spaces and peoples to the public. Pre-dating digital photography and the rise of social media, the works in the exhibition ask viewers to consider how images were shared prior to our contemporary access to technology. Included are works by international photographers Lewis Hine, Berenice Abbott, August Sander, Dorothea Lange, Walker Evans, Mario Algaze, Fan Ho, Malick Sidibé and Bernd and Hilla Becher, among others. “Shared History” is on loan to FAU by the Martin Z. Margulies Collection, Miami.
A photo by Shirin Neshat on display at Florida Atlantic University’s Schmidt Center Gallery. Photo courtesy of FAU.
“Shared Space: A New Era | Photographs from the Bank of America Collection” represents a time capsule of our era, traversing social landscape from 1987 to the present through photographs and two videos curated entirely from the Bank of America Collection as part of the Bank’s “Art in our Communities” program. The exhibition explores the nature of public “shared spaces” in an era marked by increasing globalization and the proliferation of the internet. The exhibition includes photographs by 23 international artists including Thomas Struth, Gregory Crewdson, Raghubir Singh, Barbara Klemm, Sze Tsung and Shirin Neshat, among others. The “Shared Space” exhibition is made possible through Bank of America’s Art in Our Communities program. The University Galleries are open Tuesday through Friday from 1 to 4 p.m. and Saturday from 1 to 5 p.m. School and group tours can be scheduled by appointment.
MARCH 2020 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER
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Mayor Scott Singer gives first ever Boca ‘State of the City’ address By: Diane Emeott Korzen Contributing Writer Boca Raton Mayor Scott Singer’s vision to hold a State of the City address came to fruition on a Tuesday night last month in the revamped Mizner Park Cultural Arts Center.
About 200 people signed up online to attend Boca’s inaugural State of the City event. Singer thanked Peg Anderson for being instrumental in the choice of venue.
Singer petitioned to get the City of Boca Raton to hold its own State of the City Address.
The birthplace of the Personal Computer (PC) [by Philip “Don” Estridge and his IBM team in 1981], Boca Raton today is home to half the corporations headquartered in Palm Beach County, said Singer.
“We have a national State of the Union address (held this year on Feb. 4 by President Donald Trump), and a State of the State address (on Jan. 14 by Gov. Ron DeSantis). Why not a State of the City?” Singer said previously. Larger cities like Ft. Lauderdale and Miami hold State of the City addresses – Ft. Lauderdale’s was on Jan. 8 by Mayor Dean Trantalis, and Miami’s was on Jan. 30 by Mayor Francis Suarez. Boca Raton, with its about 100,000 residents, is a force to be reckoned with. “It starts in the imagination of our residents. What do you picture as your ideal city? Are you connected and involved?” Singer challenged the audience.
Carrying on the tradition of innovation started in the 1970s and ‘80s on IBM’s research and development campus, the City’s new Office of Innovations nurtures start-up companies, helping to make them sustainable. One success story is Deputy Mayor Jeremy Rodgers, a local FAU grad, who lives and works here in the high technology field. Singer spoke on Boca’s low tax rate – with no millage rate increase in 7 years. His presentation showed comparisons to other cities. For example, the average Boca resident pays $1,832 in taxes, compared to $3,444 in neighbor-tothe-south Deerfield Beach.
Boca Mayor Scott Singer delivers inaugural State Boca Mayor Scott Singer welcomes crowd and speaks on of City address. Photo by Diane Emeott Korzen. innovation in Boca. Photo by Diane Emeott Korzen.
Regarding financial soundness, the city has received a AAA bond rating, the highest possible rating available. In terms of public safety, since 2016, Boca Fire Rescue has earned an ISO class 1 rating – an honor only 186 of more than 50,000 fire departments receive. Via onscreen video, Fire Chief Tom Wood and Interim Police Chief Michele Muccio elaborated on key accomplishments and programs their departments each offer. Also part of Boca’s world-class municipal services was a decision to retain 57 sanitation employees in-house. Singer concluded his 38-minute address promptly at 7:10 p.m., saying, “The people of Boca are the heart of our city – the employees, community partners, residents,” – a statement
that drew thunderous applause from the audience. Resident Karin Nordlander said she attended the State of the City because “I’m just interested in what’s going on with my taxes.” Asked afterward how she thought it went, Norlander added, “I wish he had addressed a little bit about the homeless problem, the homeless live on the beach.” Among the guests were Palm Beach County Commissioner Robert Weinroth, the Boca City Council (except Deputy Mayor Jeremy Rodgers who was not able to attend), City Manager Lief Ahnell, City Attorney Diana Grub Frieser, Assistant City Managers Mike Woika and George Brown, city staff, a couple of Boca Regional Board members.
Council Members Andy Thomson and Andrea Boca residents begin to fill the black box theater at Levine O’Rourke attend the State of the City Address. Mizner Mizner Park Cultural Arts Center. Photo by Photo by Diane Emeott Korzen. Diane Emeott Korzen.
Horses & Hounds event raises money for Tri County Animal Rescue Staff report The 11th annual “Horses & Hounds” fundraiser raised money for Tri County Animal Rescue in Boca Raton. The event was held last month at The Farm in Lake Worth.
Joining in the fun during the 11th annual “Horses & Hounds” fundraiser Feb. 15 to benefit Tri County Animal Rescue in Boca Raton are, from left, Kim Champion, Francesca Daniels and Arlene Herson.Photo by Julia Hebert. Kids and adults meet a horse named Junior in the barn at The Farm in Lake Worth during the 11th annual “Horses & Hounds” fundraiser Feb. 15 for Tri County Animal Rescue in Boca Raton. Photo by Julia Hebert.
Guests were allowed to bring their dogs to participate in the dog show. There were horses and other animal-themed activities.
Speaking to the crowd at the 11th annual “Horses & Hounds” fundraiser Feb. 15 for Tri County Animal Rescue in Boca Raton are Suzi Goldsmith, left, TCAR executive director, and Sharon DiPietro, chairwoman of the board. Photo by Dale King.
YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
Boy Scout Troop No. 333 serves spaghetti for a cause By: Diane Emeott Korzen Contributing Writer It’s been 44 years since Boca Boy Scout Troop No. 333 served their first Spaghetti Dinner. “The older people in the community automatically know the first Saturday in February is our Annual Spaghetti Dinner,” enthused Troop Leader Leonard Chapman on Feb. 1. “It’s a labor of love. We were outside, boiling water on a double burner camp stove starting at 5 a.m. We made fresh pesto, one sauce is seasoned with beef; the other is meatless. The kids do the work, and their friends come out to help.” The annual event is also big business for the Scouts. It’s their only fundraiser of the year to cover activities including 6 to 8 camp-outs per school year, 1 week of local summer camp, plus one outof-state-trip. Last year the Boy Scouts sat 1,100 people in the rented out gymnasium at Grace Community Church, transformed for a night into an Italian restaurant complete with red-checked tablecloths on a multitude of tables and a redwhite-and-green Italian flag on the wall. They served an additional 400 people via the “drive-thru.” Asked what his favorite part of the dinner is, charismatic waiter Ian, 14, who has been with the Boy Scout 4 years, said. “Meeting people. Get-
Boy Scouts servers include John, Ian, Hazen, Mason pictured with Nathalie. Photo by Diane Emeott Korzen.
ting to know them. I also did some cooking. Earlier today I helped make some of the sauces. We used 110 pounds of beef!” Around the dining room, Boy Scouts in their uniforms took dinner guests’ drink, dinner and dessert orders with a little help from their friends wearing white dress shirts and dark pants as servers. Several “flower girls” floated around the room, charming diners and asking them if they’d like to purchase a rose from their armfuls of red and white blooms. Little flower girl Kayley, 6, seemed like a natural, skipping around the room. Her mom said her daughter was actually a little bit nervous. “This is her first year,” she added. For just $5 a person, the menu included: iced tea, lemonade, or water to drink; salad; a plate full of spaghetti with choice of sauce and garlic
bread; and vanilla or chocolate buttercream-frosted cake. Troop #333 is reportedly one of the oldest and most successful troops in South Florida. In the boy-run Scout troop, Scouts ages 10 to 18 learn to plan and run the troop under adult leader supervision -helping them to develop character, citizenship, and personal fitness in keeping with Boy Scouts of America objectives. The 12 points of Scout Law teach old-fashioned values in a modern world. A Scout is: Trustworthy, Loyal, Helpful, Friendly, Courteous, Kind, Obedient, Cheerful, Thrifty, Brave, Clean, Reverent. In fact, one of the local Troop’s success stories, Eagle Scout Matthew Martin (son of Cheryl Martin), just got his first job! For more information about the Boy Scouts, go to www. troop333.com.
Kayley, 6, (R) asks dinner guest Gena (L) if she would like to Gymnasium is decked out Italian style with red checked tabuy a rose to support the Boy Scouts. Photo by Diane Emeott blecloths for Boy Scouts Spaghetti Dinner. Photo by Diane Emeott Korzen. Korzen.
MARCH 2020 | YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER
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Impact 100 Palm Beach County announces semi-finalists for 2020 awards at The Residences at Mandarin Oriental Staff report
Impact 100 Palm Beach County. “We strive to connect, engage and inspire women to improve our community by collectively funding impactful $100,000 grants to nonprofits in our area that are dedicated to addressing the challenges facing our community. The more members we have, the more money we can give to nonprofits in Palm Beach County.”
Impact 100 Palm Beach County narrowed down a large list of nonprofits vying for $100,000 grants to a list of 26 semi-finalists. That list will be carved away again this month when finalists are announced in advance of the April 15 Grand Awards event. Nonprofits in five different focus areas will present their projects to members who will vote on the winners. The winning nonprofits take home $100,000 grants to fulfill their project pitches. Impact 100 Palm Beach County began 9 years ago. It is a women’s organization to funds local nonprofit initiatives. There are over 500 members who donate $1,000 annually, pool all funds and vote to award grants to nonprofits serving southern Palm Beach County in five focus areas: Arts, Culture and Historic Preservation; Education;
Pictured are the 2019 Impact 100 Palm Beach County grant winners. Submitted photo.
Environment and Animal Welfare; Family; and Health and Wellness. Since its inception, the chapter has awarded more than $3.3 million in grants. “Since we founded our organization 9 years ago, Impact 100 Palm Beach County has become a major grant funder in our community,” said Kathy Adkins, President of
This year’s semi-finalists are American Association of Caregiving Youth, Inc., Blue Planet International Explorers’ Bazaar & Writers’ Room, Inc., Boca Raton Museum of Art, Inc., Boca Helping Hands, Inc., Center for Trauma Counseling, Inc., City House-Delray Beach, Inc., Clearwater Marine Aquarium, Inc., Coastal Conservation Association, Inc., Community Greening Corp., Compass Inc., Delray Beach Youth Tennis Foundation, Digital Vibez, Inc., Expanding and Preserving Our Cultural
Heritage, Inc. (SPADY), Florida Atlantic University Foundation, GIVT, Inc., Junior Achievement of South Florida, Junior Achievement of the Palm Beaches & Treasure Coast, Milagro Foundation, Inc., Mind & Melody, Inc., Network for Teaching Entrepreneurship, Peggy Adams Animal Rescue League of the Palm Beaches, Inc., Roots and Wings, Inc., Ruth & Norman Rales Jewish Family Services, Inc., Samaritan 365 Foundation, The Children’s Place at Home Safe, Inc. and 4KIDS of South FL. Representatives from the nonprofits and Impact 100 members gathered at the The Residences’ Sales Gallery in downtown Boca Raton to hear the names of the semifinalists. Membership for Impact 100 2020 is open through March 31. For more information or to join this chapter, visit www.impact100pbc.org or call 561-336-4623.
Commission Corner: Addressing homelessness in Palm Beach County By: County Commissioner Robert Weinroth Dist. 4 Special to the Boca Newspaper Homelessness in Palm Beach County? Unfortunately the answer is yes. For many of us, South Florida is our slice of paradise. When compared to the cost of living in the northeast, South Florida is downright reasonable. But for many, notwithstanding the relative reasonableness of living expenses, they still place the ability to afford a decent place to live out of reach. It is estimated that a person would need to earn an annual salary of over $57,000 to afford a two bedroom apartment in Palm Beach County where the average rent is around $1,400 per month. Add in utilities, and other routine household expenses and that apartment will cost no less than $20,000 a year. Since 2011, the County’s median family income has increased about 20 percent while the median sales price of a single-family home has increased 83 percent. In 2017, nearly 40 percent of all households in the County spent more than 30 percent of their income on housing costs. The problem is much more acute for renters who spend, on average, over 50 percent of their gross income on housing. Recently, the “tent city” located in John Prince Park has garnered a good deal of attention. The County has dispatched employees to the encampment to assess the needs of the individuals living there.
The County has four homeless outreach teams to facilitate this effort. We also maintain a robust partnership with the Health Care District to provide medical care for the homeless through an on-site clinic at the Lewis Center (which has 60 beds) and a mobile health care unit. In addition to the Lewis Center, the Board of County Commissioners recently gave its approval to the construction of a second homeless resource center (HRC2) and is already discussing the need for a third in the western portion of he County. The County, in partnership with the development community, has required new projects to set aside up to 25 percent of the new housing as “workforce housing” units. Between 2017 and 2019 over 1,600 housing units were created through new construction, acquisition, rehabilitation and foreclosure prevention. However, this is truly a drop in the bucket as demand keeps increasing as the gap between wages and rents continues to widen. In 1991, the Florida Home Builders Association and Florida Realtors intent on creating jobs in the housing construction industry and getting more low and moderate income families into home ownership, respectively, asked the Florida Legislature to increase the transfer fee on all real property transactions and dedicate that increment to the state and local housing trust funds. The Sadowski Fund, officially the William E. Sadowski Affordable Housing Trust Fund, was created as a dedicated source of revenue to help pay for local and state housing programs across Florida.
The proceeds of the Fund were supposed to be split roughly 70/30 between local governments, for programs offering downpayment assistance to homeowners and to pay for repairs to existing housing, and state programs that help fund affordable-housing development. Unfortunately, the funds have been swept and used for other legislative priorities on a regular basis. Last year, Palm Beach County should have received $17 million from the trust but ultimately only received $2 million! Since 2003, the fund has been continually raided with $2 billion diverted away from the housing programs it was created to address. Palm Beach County has seen over $200 million that should have been dedicated to affordable/workforce housing reallocated by the state. Against this backdrop, the Board of County Commissioners is considering the possibility of placing on he November ballot a proposal to issue $150 million in General Obligation Bonds. The proceeds of those bonds would be dedicated to workforce and affordable housing and to address homelessness. However, with respect to homelessness, it is clear a broader approach is necessary to address its causes. In many instances, the seeds of homelessness are sewn in elementary school with literacy being the clearest indicator of success or failure as early as the end of third grade. Absent an ability to read at grade level upon completing third grade, students will be scholastically handicapped. Up until that point in time, the students learn to read. Thereafter, the paradigm shifts and the students read to learn.
Deficient reading skills create deficient learning ability. Over 50 percent of our students in Palm Beach County do not meet this milestone. Coupled with an effort to improve literacy is a concerted effort to attract high paying jobs to our county. Again, with the cost of housing outpacing the increases in wages, we must work to address that disparity. These are not issues that will be easily cured. But, we can improve incrementally and with those improvements the financial pressure on individuals trying to afford a place to live will ease.
Meet the team Reach us at: BocaNewspaper.com 561-819-1109 info@bocanewspaper.com
Jeff Perlman, Editor-in-Chief and Principal Scott Porten, Chief-Financial-Officer and Principal Craig Agranoff, Content Director and Principal Fran Marincola, Adviser and Principal Marisa Herman, Associate Editor Kelly McCabe, Account Manager Ginger Novak, Account Manager Kylee Treyz, Account Manager
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YOUR COMMUNITY NEWSPAPER | MARCH 2020
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