Ocala Gazette | May 14 - 20, 2021

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VOLUME 1 ISSUE 46

Cares Act Spending Page A6

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MAY 14- MAY 20, 2021

A place to lay their head

Apprenticeship program at CF garners attention By Carlos Medina carlos@ocalagazette.com

The Ordinance The City of Ocala introduced its open lodging ordinance in 2002. Part of the original ordinance stated a person was subject to arrest in the city if they were sleeping in public and admitted to being homeless. After the court ruling, the Ocala

It was no easy task getting the new Lockheed Martin apprenticeship lab at the College of Central Florida off the ground, but now organizers hope it will serve as a pilot program for similar sites across the nation. Two years of planning between several state and local organizations went into establishing the apprenticeship program, which teaches Lockheed Martin employees how to solder electronic components on circuit boards. On Tuesday, CF unveiled the new lab at a ribbon-cutting ceremony attended by state and local representatives. “It took a while to get all the partners involved on the same page with how we could work this because it’s not a traditional apprenticeship,” said Jim Henningsen, CF president. “We were looking for something a little more innovative … Now, others are wanting to emulate what we’re doing.” Traditionally, apprenticeship programs center around the construction trades. Employees work during the day and then attend evening classes in plumbing, air conditioning, framing and other specialties. The Lockheed Martin apprenticeship program starts in the classroom. Newly hired employees attend two weeks of soldering training and then continue their two-year apprenticeship as electronics associates at Lockheed Martin’s Ocala facility, where they manufacture components used in defense and aerospace systems.

See Open Lodging, page A2

See Apprenticeship, page A3

Karla Grimsley, the CEO of Interfaith Emergency Services, talks with Sammy Dyers. [Bruce Ackerman/Ocala Gazette]

By Ainslie Lee ainslie@ocalagazette.com

B

etween September 2015 and December 2020, Robert Leach, 67, spent 278 days in jail for sleeping on the streets. He also racked up more than $12,000 in fines and fees after nine convictions under Ocala’s open lodging ordinance. His mugshots over the years are intermittently clean shaven and bushy bearded with the deep lines from a life on the street apparent on his face. Leach’s convictions are an

example of the 406 open lodging convictions highlighted in a lawsuit filed against the city in 2019 by the ACLU of Florida, Southern Legal Counsel and Andy Pozzuto. Those convictions resulted in 264 people spending 5,393 days in jail at a cost of roughly $360,000, according to the lawsuit. In February, U.S. District Judge James Moody ruled that arresting homeless people who don’t have access to shelters is cruel and unusual punishment violating the Eighth Amendment of the US Constitution. The court also found issuing trespass warnings without a process for appeal violated the 14th

Amendment’s due process clause. In the months since the decision, the city’s approach to the homeless shifted, but there is no comprehensive strategy to address the homeless issue.

All eyes on Medina Spirit By Carlos Medina carlos@ocalagazette.com While at least six of the 10 horses in Saturday’s Preakness Stakes boast ties to the Marion County area, all eyes are on locally-bred Medina Spirit as he makes his first start since failing a drug test after the Kentucky Derby. The specter of a disqualification in the Derby hangs over the colt even as he tries for the second jewel of the Triple Crown at Balitimore’s Pimlico Race Course. While Pimlico officials gave the horse the green light to run in the Preakness, it is contingent on several factors, including additional testing and monitoring of the horse. The colt’s breeder, Gail Rice, earlier this week said she was staying positive and praying. Medina Spirit

was born on her son’s farm in Sparr in 2018 and sold for just $1,000 at the Ocala Breeders’ Sales in 2019. The colt later sold for $35,000 also at OBS to his current owner Zedan Racing Stables. Despite losing money on Medina Spirit, Rice was thrilled with the horses victory. She had hoped to race him herself, but had to sell the colt after she separated from her now exhusband. Despite the controversy surrounding the colt, the colt is still the favorite to win the race. Rice hopes to attend the race and is expecting a quality start. “The horse can win the Preakness,” she said. “He can win at (Belmont) too.” Belmont Park is the site of the third jewel of the Triple Crown. The Belmont Stakes is set for June 20. While Bob Baffert, the colt’s trainer, initially denied ever treating the colt with

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betamethasone, a topical steroid used to reduce inflammation. The colt had more than the allowable level of the steroid in his system, according to a post-race test. This week, Baffert said an ointment used to treat dermatitis in Medina Spirit may have contained betamethasone. The trainer was already suspended by Churchill Downs, pending the results of a second sample. Medina Spirit exercises at Churchill Downs on April 28 ahead of the Kentucky Derby. Medina Spirit Despite failing a drug test after the Derby, the colt is set to run in the Preakness Stakes on drew the No. 3 post Saturday. [Coady Photography] position and is listed at opening odds of 9-5. of Paul Sharp Training. breaks from the No. 8 spot. In the No. 1 spot, is Crowded Trade is the He is owned by Marion 30-1 longshot Ram, who 10-1 pick and starts from County’s Whisper Hill Farm. was broken and trained the No. 4 post position. He Risk Taking is an Eisaman locally by Randy Bradshaw. was broken and trained by Equine graduate and starts Next to him, at 15-1, is Nick de Meric. Unbridled from the No. 9 post at odds Keepmeinmind, a graduate Honor opens at 15-1 and of 15-1.

Inside: Commentary............................ A4 State News................................ A8 State Budget...........................A10 Sports........................................ B1 Creative’s Corner.................... B3 Calendar................................... B5


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