VOLUME 1 ISSUE 17
Good luck at state, ladies!
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OCTOBER 23 - OCTOBER 29, 2020
Ocala will light up, without the crowd Lights will still come on, but Light Up Ocala event canceled By Brad Rogers Ocala Gazette
W
ary of creating a coronavirus superspreader event, the Ocala City Council voted unanimously Tuesday night to cancel this year’s downtown holiday kickoff celebration, Light Up Ocala. The hundreds of thousands of lights that bedeck downtown
each Christmas season will still light up Ocala, but city administration officials recommended against holding the event because of the size of the crowd it draws and the threat of spreading the deadly virus. Assistant City Manager Ken Whitehead told the council that based on the guidelines the council had instructed city staff to follow, the administration was recommending against holding the gathering.
He said city officials estimated 10,000 to 15,000 people would show up this year, if it were held. Other years it has drawn as many as 25,000 to 30,000 people. See Lights, page 3
City will hold series of holiday events downtown in place of Light Up. Page 2
A worker puts up Christmas lights in downtown Ocala this week. The Light Up Ocala display features more than 320,000 lights. [Bruce Ackerman/Ocala Gazette] 2020.
‘Something for everyone’
Wilcox watching the watchers Supervisor of elections says parties’ poll watchers can’t, won’t disrupt voting
New 5,000-home Calesa Township will bring family-oriented vibe to State Road 200 corridor By Brad Rogers Ocala Gazette Look at the promotional ads for the new Calesa Township on Ocala’s westside, and you’ll notice something different, at least for a major housing development along the State Road 200 corridor. There are children in picture after picture. It is a departure from what most people associate with the 200 corridor, an enclave of retirement communities that stretches 10 miles from Interstate 75 to the
Withlacoochee River. And it is being built by the granddaddy of all Marion County retirement community developers, On Top of the World. Calesa Township was unveiled earlier this year by Colen Built Development, a sister company of On Top of the World Communities Inc. It will be built on 1,500 acres along Southwest 80th Avenue and 38th Street. When it reaches buildout – expected in 15 to 20 years – it will have an estimated 5,000 homes in 19 neighborhoods that are being designed to emphasize healthy living
By Bill Thompson Ocala Gazette
O
Ken Colen, president of Colen Built Development. Photo by Lyn Larson of Mahal Imagery.
and outdoor activities. It is clearly a departure for the Colen family, who started developing neighborhoods in the 1947 in St.
Petersburg. Those first developments were family oriented. But the family made its name with its first On Top of the World See Colen, page 5
ne of the dominant themes of the 2020 election has been the possibility of voter fraud, a refrain that President Trump, in particular, has uttered often and loudly in recent weeks and months. But neither side is taking chances. Democratic contender Joe Biden has hired 600 lawyers who could be deployed to challenge election results state by state, media reports indicate. Likewise, President Donald Trump is backed by a group called Lawyers for Trump!, which includes former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi, and which, according to Politico, has recruited “thousands” of attorneys to guard the president’s interests on election night. Both sides also have enlisted volunteer “poll watchers” -tens of thousands of them for each side, news reports say -- to monitor activity within the individual precincts. Yet in Marion County, where a couple hundred people have volunteered to be poll watchers during early voting and on Election Day, Elections Supervisor Wesley Wilcox is not worried. Despite a bitterly contentious presidential race, Wilcox predicted a long local tradition of peace at the polls will prevail. And if not, he added, there is a plan to deal with that. While the hysteria about voting has been ratcheted up in this election, poll watchers are nothing new. Reuters reported this month that such observers were on duty during U.S. elections back in the 18th century. More recently, poll watchers ensured newly enfranchised black Americans could vote in parts of the South See Poll Watchers, page 8
Calessa Township will be a collection of 19 neighborhoods with an estimated 5,000 homes. Construction on the first neighborhood is expected to begin in January 2021. The development will feature extensive outdoor and recreational facilities and activities. Courtesy of Colen Built Development.
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Inside: Holiday Events........................ 2 CEP Commentary................... 3 Trump Rally............................. 6 Mask Ordinance..................... 7 Volleyball Champs.................. 12 Huge Growth Here................. 17