VOLUME 1 ISSUE 25
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DECEMBER 18 - DECEMBER 24, 2020
Vaccinations to start here this week and next Officials say nursing home residents, front-line medical workers will get vaccines first By Brendan Farrell Ocala Gazette
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ith COVID-19 cases skyrocketing in Marion County, help is on the way. Pfizer’s vaccine has been shipped to Florida, and Marion County is prepared to start giving residents shots starting as early as this week.
Gov. Ron DeSantis ordered 179,400 doses of the vaccine for the entire state of Florida. The first group to get the vaccine will consist of frontline workers and residents and staff at longterm health care facilities. People who are 65 and older, first responders and essential workers would then be next in line. According to the Florida
Department of Health, Marion County reported 143 new cases on Monday, pushing the county’s total to more than 15,000 positive cases in all. Marion has reported under 100 new cases just three days in December. In all, 428 people have died from COVID-19 since the beginning of the pandemic. Of the 428 deaths,
159 have occurred in longterm care health facilities. The county doesn’t know how many doses it will have yet, but long-term care residents and staff may get some as early as this week, according to Christy Jergens, the public information officer for the Florida Department of Health. Marion County hospitals may have some doses by next week.
The herd is here
By Ainslie Lee Ocala Gazette
T
Horse Fever 20/20 horses arrive in Ocala
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he Horse Fever 20/20 herd of horse statues thundered into Ocala on Dec. 10. The statues arrived by semitruck at the site of the “stable,” which is the Transformco facility in southwest Ocala. From there, they will be paired up with the artists
who will turn them into exquisite works of art. The first Horse Fever public art project was launched in 2000, followed by Horse Fever in Motion in 2005 and Horse Fever II in 2011. The initial Horse Fever was the seed for formation of the Marion Cultural Alliance. Since its inception, the alliance has given more than $350,000 in grants to local artists and organizations.
“This is the anniversary collection,” noted Laurie Zink, who has been involved in every campaign and is committee cochair with Jo Salyers for this endeavor. “We have 15 horses to mark this milestone and I’m so excited for the representation we will give the community.” The original Horse Fever kicked See Horse Fever, page 5
Ocala woman storms to USEA Rider of the Year honors Liz Halliday-Sharp becomes first female rider in 40 years to achieve the title By Ben Baugh Correspondent
O
cala’s Liz Halliday-Sharp achieved a rare milestone recently, becoming the first woman in nearly four decades to win the overall United States Eventing Association Rider of the Year.
Halliday-Sharp secured the title with 590.5 points, 18 better than runnerup Boyd Martin. It was the first time HallidaySharp has based herself fulltime in the United States, coinciding with 2020’s pandemic, which would have had its own set of problems had she been travelling to the United Kingdom for the summer as she has in the past.
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See Vaccine, page 2
Saving Mercy gets final blessing from City Council
Lauri Zink, the co-chairwoman for Horse Fever 20/20, kisses one of the 15 Horse Fever horses as they are unloaded from a semi-tractor trailer at the Transformco warehouse in Ocala on Friday, Dec. 11. [Bruce Ackerman/Ocala Gazette]
By Susan Smiley-Height Ocala Gazette
According to the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey’s fiveyear estimates, 29.3 percent of Marion County residents are 65 or older, the 10thhighest in the state of Florida. The Pfizer vaccine, which was given emergency use authorization on Dec. 11,
“It turned out it was the right year to do it,” said Halliday-Sharp. “Every year I’ve sort of been up in the point standings when I’ve left for the U.K, but obviously I’ve missed out on half the season. So, this is my first full season back in the U.S. in 20 years, so it’s kind of cool to win the title my first time
he non-profit Saving Mercy group received City Council approval Tuesday to break ground on a development that will transition the homeless into stable housing. During Tuesday night’s City Council meeting, the council unanimously passed a zoning change for Saving Mercy’s property at 3601 W. Silver Springs Blvd. The property’s change from B-2, community business, to PD, planned development, allows for Saving Mercy’s mixed-type residential development. The housing community is set to be constructed in five phases, with the first breaking ground as early as the summer of 2021. According to Rick Casey, Saving Mercy’s executive director, phase one includes construction of 22 units a client service center and a laundry facility. Casey said the organization is still acquiring funding. “It’s dependent on money,” Casey told councilmembers on Tuesday night. “The project, we estimate, is about $13.5 million. I’m currently assimilating the financing for phase 1 of 22 units, which I hope to accomplish next year.” Phase 2, which would add 28 units to the community, has a proposed completion date of 2023. The remaining three phases, which would help the community reach its total of 144 units, are heavily dependent on financing, Casey said. Saving Mercy bought the 9.31acre parcel in 2018. Since then, they’ve used the former motel and RV park to get a head start on helping some of Ocala’s homeless population. According to Casey, Saving Mercy will operate under a “housing first” philosophy, meaning it will welcome anyone needing housing, regardless of possible addictions or mental health disorders. “Entry to homeless with low barriers or almost no barriers,” Casey explained. “And once they have housing then we all need to improve ourselves and provide
See Halliday-Sharp, page 5
See Saving Mercy, page 2
Inside: COVID Funds.......................... 3 Mask Ordinance Extended... 4 Recovery Program Success... 10 Dunnellon Football................. 12 Belleview Coach Named........ 13 Calendar................................... 15