VOLUME 1 ISSUE 51
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JUNE 18- JUNE 24, 2021
Development vote postponed again By Carlos Medina carlos@ocalagazette.com The Marion County Commission postponed a final decision on a proposed 800-plus-unit residential development near Marion Oaks after the property owner submitted several changes to the plans just before the June 15 meeting. It is the second time the controversial proposal was postponed. In May,
the property owners, Maro Investment Ocala LLC and Rock Cloutier, asked for a continuance to work on changes. On Tuesday, it was county staff that asked for a delay so they could study the changes. The development plan for 221 acres originally included 891-units, including multifamily residences. The latest plan reduced the units to 801 and eliminated the multifamily component. The commission
approved a development plan for the property in 2014 for more than 750 residential units, but that approval lapsed. Despite the changes, concerns remained about the impact on traffic in the area. Traffic and population have surged near Marion Oaks in recent years. The proposed development would run along Southwest 20th Avenue, which intersects with County Road 484
near Interstate 75. Traffic on CR 484 near the I-75 interchange backs up for miles during rush hour. The state plans improvements to CR 484 and the Southwest 20th Avenue intersection by 2024. Still, some residents of nearby SummerGlen, which is south of the proposed development on Southwest 20th Avenue, want no part of the new community. SummerGlen has nearly 1,000 homesites.
State of Affairs
Both properties border the nearly 15,000-acre mega community of Marion Oaks, which was planned some 50 years ago with 28,000 subdivided lots. About 20,000 of those lots are still vacant, but construction is picking up thanks to continued growth along State Road 200. The area is also near the site of a new Dollar Tree distribution center. The distribution See Development, page A3
OBS sets record sales numbers By Carlos Medina carlos@ocalagazette.com
Sandra Wilson, the Ocala City Manager, gives her state of the city presentation during the Ocala Metro Chamber & Economic Partnership exCEPtional Mornings breakfast. [Bruce Ackerman/OG]
Sandra Wilson offers highlights in first State of the City address By Ainslie Lee ainslie@ocalagazette.com
O
cala City Manager Sandra Wilson had no shortage of listeners as she gave her first State of the City address at the Ocala Metro County Chamber and Economic Partnership’s exCEPtional Mornings breakfast on June 16 at the Church of Hope. The event was the first since the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention eased COVID-19 guidelines. A full house showed up, almost all without masks. Many hugged and shook hands for the first time in more than a year. And while the challenges of the pandemic are not over, Wilson offered that Ocala has a lot to celebrate. According to U.S. News and World Report, the Ocala Metro area was recently ranked the fifth-fasted growing metropolitan statistical area in the country.
“That’s huge for us,” Wilson said. And the effects of the city’s growth are apparent, she said. Residential developments are sprouting all around. The massive housing project known as West Oak Development at the former Pine Oaks golf course is leading the way. The West Oak project is slated to bring 386 single-family homes, 832 multi-family homes, 150
What a difference a year makes. The Ocala Breeders’ Sales Co. just closed out it 2-year-old thoroughbred season with back-to-back record sales in April and June. The June sale ended with 560 two-year-old thoroughbreds sold for a record $24,492,950. That figure topped the previous high mark for a June sale set in 2015 when the auction took in $23,608,500. The record comes a year after 519 horses sold for $15,864,300. It closed out a year upended by the COVID-19 pandemic that saw demand for racehorses crater along with prices. “I think we were all expecting a much more stable market, but I don’t think anyone expected the market to move up that significantly. It certainly was welcome for everyone involved,” said Tom Ventura, OBS president. June’s record was no fluke. In April, the sales company posted another record after 723 horses sold for $73,907,900. Last year, 634 horses sold for $57,715,000. The previous record was set in 2019 when 674 horses sold for $72,945,000. While the March OBS sale did not set a record, it did beat 2020 sales totals. This year, 327 horses sold
See City State, page A3
See OBS, page A2
Reddick couple shares Black history collection By Ainslie Lee ainslie@ocalagazette.com The Rev. Leroy Chandler was volunteering at a state prison, like he and his ministry often did, in 2003 when someone asked if he could give a presentation in celebration of Black History Month. Chandler, who lives in Reddick, was happy to do it but hoped to brush up on the subject. Despite it being February, the month in which Black History Month is celebrated, Chandler
couldn’t find any exhibits in either Alachua or Marion County. The experience led him to start amassing his own collection that now includes more than 2,000 artifacts that he exhibits across the state. The next stop for the display is at Master the Possibilities, a learning center at On Top of the World. The exhibit, which runs from June 22-25, coincides with Juneteenth celebrations that recognize the Emancipation Proclamation, an executive
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order by President Abraham Lincoln that freed the slaves. Chandler’s collection is displayed throughout the learning center’s Live Oak and Cypress Halls, where visitors are welcome to browse the artifacts which recount more than 150 years of Black history. “It’s hard to find a venue that I can set it up at so that actually all of it can be viewed,” Chandler said. It would take more than 5,000-square-feet and more than 100 8-foot tables to See Chandler, page A2
Rev. Leroy S. Chandler of Shamgar Ministries Pathways To Freedom describes Minillas, a type of money used in slave trade. [Bruce Ackerman/OG]
Inside: Commentary............................ A5 State News................................ A8 Attorney Reprimanded........A10 Filipino Independence........... B1 Creative’s Corner.................... B2 Calendar................................... B5