RESPONSE TIMES
We introduce the 4-part series this week,
A 4-part series
SEPTEMBER 24 - SEPTEMBER 30, 2021
VOLUME 2 ISSUE 13
$2
page A5
PART ONE
Ocala Votes
MARI0N FUND RAISED IN MANY WAYS Left: Joy Zedler of the Pearl project, checks out her foster closet. Below: Ambleside School 7th graders work on class work in Carli Phillips class. [Alan Youngblood/ Special to the OG]
Voter turnout soars for Ocala city election By Carlos Medina carlos@ocalagazette.com
The Ocala city election on Sept. 21 saw voter turnout soar compared to other city elections in recent history. “I was hoping for 20% but when I saw it was almost 26%, I was pleasantly surprised. From a turnout perspective compared to the prior turnout average over the last decade of about 14%, we by far surpassed that,” said Wesley Wilcox, Marion County Supervisor of Elections. All told 25.96% of the 38,257 registered voters living in the city cast a ballot. Election day also brought out more in-person voters than Wilcox expected. He predicted the number of voters would split about 60% for mail-in and 40% in-person. But the 9,932 total ballots cast split down the middle between mail-in and in-person ballots. “I believe the turnout was driven by the candidates. There was added interest in the candidates which drives turnout,” Wilcox said. “I saw more general interest in this election than I have in a long time.” He also reported no major problems at any of the 19 precincts across the city. “Everything went extremely well other than the normal stuff that happens.,” Wilcox said. He said another issue was people trying to vote that did not live in the city. “People go to a polling place whose mailing address says Ocala, but they don’t technically live in the city limits,” Wilcox said. The election results were official at 5 p.m. on Sept. 23.
Far top: Giovanna Marciano, 7, and Vinent, 9, enjoy the Teak Lane photo booth at the Pearl Project. Above: Lauren Delorio, left, grabs a quick interview with Renee Arnett during Give4Marion. [Alan Youngblood/Special to the OG]
Give4Marion a win for area nonprofits By Lisa McGinnes Ocala Gazette
F
ollowing the leaderboard on give4marion.com was a bit like a horse race: On the night of Sept. 21, Transitions Life Center & Community was in the lead … then next morning Project Hope of Marion County had squeezed by and was at the head of the field. By the time it was over, Interfaith Emergency Services was in first place. But in this race, everyone was a winner. Give4Marion, held Sept. 21-22, was the Community
Fundraising event helps 75 local agencies Foundation Ocala/Marion County’s second online day of giving. This year, 2,265 donors contributed more than $531,000 to 75 nonprofit agencies that serve our community in many ways, from helping the homeless to
improving the lives of children, senior citizens and those with disabilities to sharing the arts with all of us. “Wow. I am just blown away at the generosity in this community,” remarked Lauren Deiorio, Community Foundation president and executive director. “All our nonprofits in our community will be the winners. We helped them raise over half a million dollars in a 24-hour period. I’m so excited about it.” R.J. Jenkins, president of the board of directors of the Marion County Literacy Council, got emotional sharing his heartfelt See Thousands, page A11
Election results Bold indicates winner *Run-off election required
MAYOR
Kent Guinn Manal Fakhoury
# of votes
6,497 3,358
CITY C0UNCIL DISTRICT 1 Brent Malever Barry Mansfield
4,395 4,779
43.2% ✓ 26.5% 30.3% ✓
CITY C0UNCIL DISTRICT 4* Kristen M. Dreyer 2,822 Alexander Everts 332 Barbara Fitos 2,212 Lori Martin Gregory 2,443 Curtis Jones 736 Kevin Lopez 574 Jim Hilty Greg Steen
4,503 4,377
RAISED
47.9% 52.1%
3,981 2,443 2,788
CITY C0UNCIL DISTRICT 5
2,265
65.9% 34.1%
CITY C0UNCIL DISTRICT 3* Jay A. Musleh Russell Juergens Ty Schlichter
DONORS
% of In votes runoff
30.9% ✓ 3.6% 24.3% 26.8% ✓ 8.1% 6.3% 50.7% 49.3%
For a more election coverage, see page A6-A7
The program prepares to go live during the Community foundation of Ocala-Marion County’s annual Give4Marion fundraiser. [Alan Youngblood/Special to the OG]
$531,000
Beacon Point to offer residental treatment By Matthew Cretul matthew@ocalagazette.com Beacon Point, a comprehensive substance abuse treatment campus in Ocala, will begin offering a 30-day residential drug treatment program on Oct. 1. It’s the latest in a growing list of programs available for those in the county struggling with opioid addiction. The campus is a project of the Marion County Hospital District and opened in 2019. Services are provided at no cost to the patient. “The vision here is there is a place where you can go to receive a full system of care. If you need anything from inpatient to outpatient, to medication See Facility, page A3
Dawn Rivera, a peer recovery specialist, left, talks with Jelecia Reid, a substance abuse counselor, at LifeStream Beacon Point. [Bruce Ackerman/OG]
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Commentary............................ A4 COVID Update........................ A9 State News..............................A10 Sports........................................ B1 Creative's Corner....................C2 Calendar................................... C5