CITY WATCH
OMAM proposed as historic landmark
The Ormond Memorial Art Museum’s gardens may soon be added to the city’s Historic Landmarks List within the Land Development Code.
The Ormond Beach Planning Board will meet on Thursday, June 13, to discuss an amendment to its LDC to add the museum, located at 78 E. Granada Blvd., to the list. The museum was founded in 1946 and underwent a $4 million renovation completed in 2022, but its relevance to the community’s history may date back much farther.
According to a city staff report, a large “hill” located near the museum garden’s waterfall — installed in 1998 — was evaluated by the Smithsonian Institute in the 1920s and determined to be a burial mound for the Timicua.
Based on the Florida State Antiquities Act of 1906, the mound is a protected site, according to the city staff report.
In addition to this amendment, the board will also hold two discussions. One to review six zoning districts — including B-8 Commercial and I-1 Light Industrial — and the other on electronic changeable signs.
As mayor runs for state house, candidates seek local election
The qualifying period for the 2024 elections will wrap up at noon on Friday, June 14. So, who’s running for the Ormond Beach City Commission?
As of Wednesday morning, seven candidates have filed to run for one of the five seats, which are all up for reelection.
Incumbent Mayor Bill Partington is not running for reelection; he is running to represent District 28 in the Florida House.
Running for mayor is incumbent
Zone 3 City Commissioner Susan Persis, who filed to run in March 2023. Persis, a former teacher and principal, has served on the commission since 2018. She was reelected in 2020 and 2022 without opposition. She has raised over $97,000 in campaign funds.
Also running for mayor is local
businessman Jason Leslie, who filed to run in June 2023. Leslie owns commercial real estate and an online e-commerce business. He has raised almost $39,000 in campaign funds.
Two candidates are running to represent Zone 3 on the City Commission since Persis is vying for the mayoral seat.
Barbara Bonarrigo, chief executive officer for CJ Manufacturing in Daytona Beach, filed to run for the seat in March 2023. She previously ran in 2020 to represent District 4 on the Volusia County Council, losing the race to then-incumbent Heather Post. Bonarrigo serves on three city advisory boards, including the Leisure Services Board. She has raised over $21,000 in campaign funds.
Kristin Deaton, a sales manager with Guild Morgage, is also running for the Zone 3 seat. She filed to run in
“Today is a momentous day — not just for Embry-Riddle or for the city of Daytona Beach, but for all of Florida.”
March 2023 as well, and is a gradu-
ate of the Ormond Beach Chamber of Commerce Leadership Class of 2019 and a board member of the city’s Municipal Police Officers’ Pension Trust Board. She has raised almost $33,000 in campaign funds.
As for the Zone 1, 2 and 4 seats, only the incumbents — City Commissioners Lori Tolland, Travis Sargent and Harold Briley, respectively — have filed to run, as of Wednesday morning. They were all first elected in 2020. Tolland has raised almost $33,000 in campaign funds. Sargent has raised $9,600 and Briley has raised almost $14,000.
If no other candidates file to run against them by noon on Friday, they will be reelected. For the other two city races, a primary election will be held on Aug. 20. The general election this year falls on Nov. 5.
Mori Hosseini, chairman of Embry-Riddle’s Board of Trustees, on partnership with Boeing. See Page 4A
City board to discuss home demolition
The Ormond Beach Historic Landmark Preservation Board will meet at 4 p.m. Monday, June 17, in the City Commission Conference Room 103, where they will consider a request to demolish a single-family home at 130 N. Beach St. The property, though not on the Ormond Beach Historic Landmarks List or a contributing property within the Lincoln Overlay District, according to a city notice, must go before the board because it was built in 1940. Cities form crisis negotiation team
The cities of Ormond Beach, Port Orange, Daytona Beach Shores, Edgewater, New Smyrna Beach, Holly Hill and South Daytona are now part of a Coastal Cities Negotiations Team. The Ormond Beach City Commission approved a mutual aid agreement at its June 4 meeting. According to a city staff report, the seven cities “are so located in relation to each other that it is to the advantage of each to share special law enforcement resources and services to adequately respond to exceptional situations, circumstances and events requiring personnel with special skills, training and equipment.” Joining the CCNT, the report stated, has no additional financial impact on the city.
EDC begins summer
hours
The Environmental Discovery Center’s summer hours began on June 3. The EDC will be open only on Fridays and Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. as the facility hosts its summer camp. Normal hours will resume on Aug. 5.
Florida’s Live Local Act
JARLEENE
ALMENAS MANAGING EDITORWhen it comes to a 2023 law aimed at increasing affordable housing units in the state of Florida, local officials state that clarifications are still needed.
Last July, Senate Bill 102, known as the Live Local Act, went into effect. The law grants developers the right to build multifamily or mixed use residential buildings at the highest allowed density — without needing authorization from local governments — on land zoned commercial, industrial or mixed-use. Developers only needed to ensure at least 40% of the units fell under the affordable housing umbrella. Then, they would be eligible for a 75% or 100% property tax exemption, to be renewed annually, for 30 years.
Following the recent passing of SB 328, which granted local governments the right to restrict the height of developments built under the Live Local Act, the Daytona Beach Area Association of Realtors and Daytona Regional Chamber of Commerce hosted a panel at Daytona State College on Thursday, June 6, to provide an update on what the law’s implementation may look like in Volusia County.
“If there’s anything that denigrates home rule, this is one of them,” said Shari Simmans, director of economic development, communications and government affairs in the city of DeBary.
No building permits have been pulled in any of Volusia’s 16 cities to construct an apartment complex under the Live Local Act.
But three complexes have applied this year for a 75% tax exemption, Simmans said. Under the law, owners of apartment complexes built in the last five years can qualify for a 75% property tax exemption if 40% of their tenants have an annual household income that “is greater than 80% but not more than 120% of the median annual adjusted gross income for households within the metropolitan statistical area,” according to the Live Local Act. To qualify for a 100% tax exemption, the units need to be rented to people whose median income doesn’t exceed the 80% median annual adjusted gross income.
The current median income for the Deltona-Daytona Beach-Ormond Beach metropolitan area is $82,800, according to the Florida Housing Finance Corporation. Based on this, an apartment complex could rent a one-bedroom unit for $1,864 a month and still be eligible for a 75% tax exemption.
In DeBary, Simmans said one of the apartment complexes that applied for a 75% tax exemption used to rent one-bedroom units for $1,400. They raised the rent to $1,800, she said.
“And they still get the tax exemption, even by raising the rent,” Simmans said.
LIVE LOCAL ACT NEEDS TIME
It’s too early to tell whether the Live Local Act is accomplishing what it was meant to do, said Murphy Kennedy Giering, a public policy representative with Florida Realtors.
“Live Local was passed as an emergency measure to address Florida’s affordable housing crisis,” Giering said. “... We also know that it takes on average three years for an affordable housing development to go through the zoning, the approvals, construction, to finally get those units online.”
As part of the law, the state also
BRIEFS
Governor commits to $200 million increase for teacher salaries
As he makes final decisions about the state budget for the 2024-2025 fiscal year, Gov. Ron DeSantis on Monday, June 10, touted a $200 million increase to help raise teacher salaries.
Lawmakers included the teacherpay money in a $117.46 billion budget they passed in March. DeSantis
Legislature has made changes to the controversial affordable housing law. Are more changes needed?
created a Local Tax Credit Program, which allows a private business to contribute to the Florida Housing Finance Corporation to benefit the State Apartment Incentive Loan Program, known as SAIL. This program provides low-interest loans for the development of affordable rental units. For every dollar given to SAIL, Giering said, the business owner can receive a dollar credit against corporate income tax liability or their insurance premium tax liability.
A total of $150 million in SAIL funding for the next 10 years was also made available through the Live Local Act.
Giering added that the Live Local Act also helps the Florida Hometown Heroes Housing Program, which provides funds to help with down payments and closing costs for firsttime, income-qualified homebuyers.
SB 328 granted the program an additional $100 million dollars.
Giering said over 15,000 Florida families have benefited from the Hometown Heroes program.
“These are phenomenal accomplishments,” Giering said. “And really, that we’re talking about affordable housing solutions, I think for the first time in many years in a realistic way, means that this is an accomplishment of the Live Local Act.”
LOCAL IMPACTS
In June 2023, the Ormond Beach Commission approved a 270-unit apartment development at 36 N. Tymber Creek. If they hadn’t, the developer of the project, known as the Tymber Creek Apartments, expressed he may have pursued a development under the Live Local Act instead. He could have built upward of 525 units, under the law.
The city of DeBary is now under a temporary building moratorium as it updates its Land Development Code, a process three years in the making, Simmans said. The moratorium was approved last October and lasts for nine months.
The city of Daytona Beach has adopted an ordinance that exempts golf courses from being developed under the Live Local Act.
Daytona Beach Deputy City Manager Jim Morris said the ordinance passed because many golf courses don’t have covenants or restrictions that require them to always be used as a golf course.
He referenced the ongoing Tomoka Oaks golf course development proposal, for which the city of Ormond Beach denied a zoning change in
has line-item veto power and indicated Monday that final decisions on spending are being made this week.
The budget will take effect July 1.
“The budget, we’re going through kind of the last stages of that,” DeSantis said during an appearance at a Hialeah charter school. “Some of these legislators that may have different projects, this is going to probably be the week that that all comes to a head. We haven’t made final decisions on every little line item in the budget, but we have approved, I would say, probably 90 percent of the budget at this point.”
Lawmakers in recent years have
April. The developers’ attorney said this could leave the city open to a $40 million lawsuit.
The statutes haven’t been clear on whether Live Local could extend to golf course properties.
“So we chose to make it clear,” Morris said.
Cobb Cole Attorney Jessica Gow said there is a lawsuit in Plant City regarding whether a golf course qualifies as a commercial use. The lawsuit, she explained, was filed after the city denied a preliminary plat for an affordable housing development on a golf course.
“The Live Local Act, as it stands today, has been greatly untested,” Gow said.
‘NO BILL IS PERFECT ON THE IMPLEMENTATION’
Florida House Rep. Chase Tramont, who dropped by the event, said he doesn’t agree with what he described as “demonization of developers.”
“This idea that people are coming in to tear down everything and destroy our economy and destroy our way of life, and then profit from there,” Tramont said. “I just don’t hold that view.”
People today likely live in homes that another person didn’t want to see built, he said.
“I’ve always found it fascinating that the same people who complain about the lack of affordable housing — or obtainable houses is the word I like to use — are the same ones that complain about overdevelopment,” Tramont said. “You can’t have it both ways. We can’t say that we need the cost of living to go down, we need the price of homes to go down, yet meanwhile, stop all the ability to create the greater supply to meet the demand that we’re having.”
The Live Local Act is not perfect, he said. Tramont added that he believes it will need to be continually adjusted for as long as it exists.
“No bill is perfect on the implementation of the document,” he said. “But that’s the point of having session after session after session. You have to come back in to address those deficiencies and try to resolve those issues.”
One change that the Volusia Legislative Delegation, Simmans said, is still seeking is the elimination of the 75% tax exemption for property owners who rent units at prices based on the 80-120% of the median annual adjusted gross income.
“I think the numbers I’ve described show that it’s not meeting the needs
gradually increased money to raise teacher pay. In all, the budget includes about $1.25 billion for the Teacher Salary Increase Allocation. Political committee raises nearly $11.8 million in support of abortion rights
A political committee leading efforts to pass a constitutional amendment aimed at ensuring abortion rights raised nearly $11.8 million from April 1 through May 31. The Floridians Protecting Freedom
Palm Coast has a need for more affordable housing and some elected officials believe the Live Local Act to be a step in the right direction.
When City Council member Cathy Heighter talks about “affordable” housing, though, she said she means workforce housing that the city’s seniors, teachers and first responders can afford to rent or own. The Live Local Act offers an incentive for developers to include affordable priced units when building multifamily residential housing.
“There’s more need for affordable housing [in Flagler County],” she said.
According to the Florida Housing Finance Corporation, Flagler County has a median income of $88,700. To qualify for a 75% property tax exemption, 40% of tenants have to have an income between 80 to 120% of the median income, according to the Live Local Act.
For a one-bedroom apartment, at the top of that range, a developer could charge $1,954 a month in Flagler County. To qualify for a 100% property tax exemption, tenants can only be at 80% the median income. At the 80% rate, the monthly rate for a one-bedroom goes down to $1,300.
Heighter said that rents around $1,800 are not affordable by most people’s standards. While the Live Local Act is a step in the right direction to gaining access to more affordable housing options, the city, she said, can take other steps to ensure residents have that access too.
One way, she said, would be by changing the city’s land development code to allow for smaller homes. Smaller homes or lot sizes would make
of the true missing middle,” Simmans said. “So if it’s 80% and under, I think you’re going to find that will be much more palatable for some local governments.”
committee brought in $11,796,620 in cash after the Florida Supreme Court on April 1 approved placing the proposed constitutional amendment on the November ballot, according to a finance report posted Monday, June 10, on the state Division of Elections website. Contributions included $2.8 million from the San Francisco-based Tides Foundation; $1 million from the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida; $1 million from the Palo Alto, California-based Advocacy Action Fund, Inc.; $1 million from the Washington, D.C.-based Open Society Action Fund; $1 million from the
housing more affordable for families just starting out, she said.
“A family that’s just starting out, a young couple, they only may need a one- or two-bedroom house,” Heighter said. Not everyone needs a large home, she said.
According to the Florida Housing Coalition, housing is considered affordable when a person spends no more than 30% of their income on housing.
Mayor David Alfin agreed that Live Local still needs some review; he said he believes the Act should be more dynamic and follow market conditions to maximize the number of residents who can benefit from it. But programs like Live Local are ideal, he said, to balance the city’s demographics. When first designed by ITT, he said, 50% of Palm Coast’s dwelling units were meant to be apartments. Live Local could bring those apartments to the city.
“It will allow older residents and younger families to enjoy housing that is within their income reach,” Alfin said. “I’m very much a believer that a city must balance itself in order for it to be healthy and financially sustainable for the long term.”
For residents who don’t want to see more apartments or affordable housing in the city, Alfin said they should think about their grandparents and children.
“Where would you like your grandmother and grandfather to live, who are on a fixed income? And where would you like your children, who are just coming out of school with a first job, to live,” he said. “Both of those groups need the housing that they can afford.”
the Washington, D.C.-based Sixteen Thirty Fund; and $1 million from The Fairness Project, also based in Washington, D.C. Floridians Protecting Freedom had about $7.37 million in cash on hand as of May 31, the finance report shows.
The proposal will appear as Amendment 4 on the November ballot and says, in part, that no “law shall prohibit, penalize, delay, or restrict abortion before viability or when necessary to protect the patient’s health, as determined by the patient’s healthcare provider.”
Embry-Riddle lands Boeing as partner,
State funding, combined with philanthropy of Cici and Hyatt Brown made the deal happen.
OBSERVER STAFF
In front of Gov. Ron DeSantis and other dignitaries, EmbryRiddle Aeronautical University and Boeing formally announced a new partnership Tuesday, June 11, that will bring 400 high-paying jobs to Volusia County, through 2026.
Among the speakers at the ceremony was Steve Nordlund, who is not only a member of the Board of Trustees at ERAU, but is also vice president and general manager of air dominance at Boeing.
“Boeing Daytona Beach will be a very important strategic site for us, not just for Boeing but for our nation,” Nordlund said. “The 400 engineers that will be based here will be working on some of the
most complex and important problems facing our global military customers. They’ll be using their talents and skills to develop aircraft, spacecraft, equipment and capabilities around these systems that will enable our uniformed personnel to win the fight of today, but more importantly, deterring the war of tomorrow.”
He continued: “The 400 people who will work here will be dedicated to helping the bravest among us, our uniformed men and women, do their jobs and return home safely.”
In the partnership, Boeing will lease the entire Cici and Hyatt Brown Center for Aerospace Technology, located in Embry-Riddle’s Research Park, on the university’s Daytona Beach Campus. The center, which has been under construction for the past two years, will open for business by fall of 2024.
By year’s end, Boeing has committed to employ 200 highly trained workers at its new facility, Boeing Daytona Beach. The other 200 roles are
FIRST INSERTION NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING CITY OF BUNNELL, FLORIDA NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE CITY OF BUNNELL, FLORIDA will hold a Public Hearing as authorized by law at 7:00 P.M. on the 24th day of June 2024, for the purpose of Second and Final Reading of Ordinance 2024-10, in the Chambers Meeting Room of the Flagler County Government Services Building (GSB) located at 1769 East Moody Blvd, Bunnell, Florida 32110. ORDINANCE 2024-10 AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF BUNNELL, FLORIDA, ANNEXING BY VOLUNTARY PETITION CERTAIN REAL PROPERTY TOTALING 0.28± ACRES, OWNED BY JM PROPERTIES X LLC, LOCATED APPROXIMATELY 0.2 MILES SOUTHEAST OF THE INTERSECTION OF CAULEY LANE AND COUNTY ROAD 65, BEARING PARCEL IDS: 13-12-29-1250-00100-0360 AND 13-12-29-1250-00100-0380 WHICH IS CONTIGUOUS TO THE CITY OF BUNNELL IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE VOLUNTARY ANNEXATION PROVISIONS OF SECTION 171.044, FLORIDA STATUTES, AND OTHER CONTROLLING LAW; REDEFINING THE BOUNDARIES OF THE CITY OF BUNNELL TO INCLUDE SAID PROPERTY; PROVIDING FOR FINDINGS; PROVIDING FOR CONDITIONS; DIRECTING THE CITY CLERK TO RECORD THE ORIDNANCE WITH THE CLERK OF THE CIRCUIT COURT, WITH THE CHIEF ADMINSTRATIVE OFFICE OF FLAGLER COUNTY AND WITH THE DEPARTMENT OF STATE; PROVIDING FOR LEGAL DESCRIPTION AND A MAP; REPEALING ALL ORDINANCES IN CONFLICT HEREWITH; PROVIDING FOR SEVERABILITY; PROVIDING FOR NON-CODIFICATION AND THE TAKING OF ADMINISTRATIVE ACTIONS AND PROVIDING FOR AN EFFECTIVE DATE. ALL INTERESTED PERSONS ARE INVITED TO PARTICIPATE as may be legally permitted on the day of the meeting. Instructions on how to participate by electronic or other means, if legally permitted, would be found on the City of Bunnell’s website at www.bunnellcity.us on the homepage. The public is advised to check the City’s website for up-to-date information on any changes to the manner in which the meeting will be held and the location. The failure of a person to appear during said hearing and comment on or object to the proposed Ordinance, either in person or in writing, might preclude the ability of such person to contest the Ordinance at a later date. A copy of all pertinent information this ordinance can be obtained at the office of the Bunnell Customer Service Office, 604 E. Moody Blvd. Unit 6, Bunnell, FL 32110. Persons with disabilities needing assistance to attend this proceeding should contact the Bunnell City Clerk at (386) 437-7500 x 5 at least 48-business hours
which the appeal is based. (Section 286.0105, Florida Statutes)
set to be filled over the course of 2025-2026.
“Today is a momentous day — not just for Embry-Riddle or for the city of Daytona Beach, but for all of Florida,” said Mori Hosseini, chairman of Embry-Riddle’s Board of Trustees, in a press release. “... And it wouldn’t have been possible without the state of Florida, and Cici and Hyatt Brown.”
The partnership was made possible by philanthropists Cici and Hyatt Brown, who pledged $25 million to EmbryRiddle in 2022 — matching $25 million in support approved by Florida legislators that year and marking the single largest gift in university history.
Hosseini, DeSantis and others praised the Browns for their generosity. Hosseini called the couple “the lifeblood of our community.”
“This is an investment in the community that has wings way beyond Volusia County,” Hyatt Brown said at the event. He called ERAU a “bedrock of this community.” He also thanked DeSantis and other public officials for helping to make the Boeing-ERAU partnership a reality.
“This is an economic engine that spawns educated people who will be leaders of the future,” Hyatt Brown said.
COMMUNITY IMPACT
As part of its transition into the area, Boeing will make a $100,000 investment into several Volusia County nonprofit organizations.
To kick off this effort, the company will provide funding to support the Second Harvest Food Bank of Volusia County Schools Partnership Program, which offers a student-centered approach to increasing access to nutritious food for students facing hunger.
Additional funding has been designated for local organizations supporting veterans and environmental programs in the area.
Later this fall, Boeing will also launch the DreamLearners Program in Volusia County Schools. The award-winning program offers students the opportunity to participate in hands-on Science, Technol-
ogy, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) programs, and learn about careers in aerospace.
According to Embry-Riddle President P. Barry Butler, Ph.D., community impact has
always been a priority for the university — both in developing the next generation of highly skilled workers to step into high-paying positions, but also in creating a hub where the business and education sectors can meet and collaborate.
“The launch of our Research Park in 2017 marked a new era for Embry-Riddle,” Butler said. “By leveraging corporate partnerships, we’ve created a career pipeline that initially funnels students toward hands-on learning opportunities and, ultimately, fills jobs in the critical sectors of aviation, aerospace and STEM-related fields.”
According to an independent economic assessment released in 2021, Embry-Riddle’s Research Park generated $137 million in total economic impact in Florida, increasing the facility’s previous impact, reported in 2019, by 50%. In that same assessment, the park’s cornerstone facility, the “MicaPlex” (John Mica Engineering and Aerospace Innovation Complex), was also shown to have directly created over 120 jobs with an average salary of over $78,000.
Boeing’s arrival promises to further expand those career, economic and community benefits.
DESANTIS COMMENTS ON FUNDING AT ERAU
After noting that he has vetoed billions of dollars in local projects as governor, DeSantis joked with the June 11 audience about Hosseini’s influence in higher education funding.
“I don’t know how he does it,” DeSantis said, “but whatever he wants — whether it’s Embry Riddle, UF, Daytona State — it’s not always there at the beginning of the legislative session, but at the end of the legislative session, it always shows up, one way or another. ... I’ve actually learned that if there’s something I really want that Mori also wants, I just don’t fight for it because I know he’ll end up getting it, so I can fight for other things.”
DeSantis explained why he supported state funding for the new facility at ERAU, which is not a state-run school.
“While I wish the private universities well, typically that’s not our focus because we have a state university system,” he said. “So, to get us to support something private like this, at that level, we would only do that if there’s clearly benefits to the state of Florida.”
In a time when DeSantis sees many problems with higher education, he said, “Embry-Riddle really shows how you do it right, how you give a high quality education in things that really matter.” Brian McMillan contributed to
VCS works to combat student vape use
Strategies include new vape detectors, educational programs and a lot of disciplinary referrals.
JARLEENE
Volusia County Schools reported 521 referrals issued due to vapes from Jan. 1 to March 31.
This is an 80% increase from last year’s number of referrals for the same time period, as 289 referrals for vapes were issued then. The increase in referrals — VCS staff said during a presentation at the Volusia County School Board workshop on Tuesday, June 11 — is a result of the district’s “zero tolerance” policy, as administrators are following through with consequences for vaping, or being found in possession of vapes, on campus.
VCS Student Services Executive Director Mike Micaleff said Superintendent Carmen Balgobin “did not wait to just watch our numbers continue to rise.”
“She took a comprehensive approach with a team of individuals that range from school leaders, Student Service members, State’s Attorney’s Office and safety and security team members to ensure that we have clear policies in place against the use of vapes,” Micaleff said. “She instructed us that we set a tone, and we must be consistent with this, and as you can see from our numbers, our schools and our administrators are adhering to this policy.”
VCS installed 141 vape detectors throughout its secondary schools and trained staff on how to use them,
Micaleff said. He added that the district has rolled out a safety campaign for all students to educate them on the dangers of vaping, including a partnership with the four Students Working Against Tobacco clubs found at schools across the county.
Micaleff said the district also has a collaborative partnership with the Volusia County Sheriff’s Office, which has conducted operations targeting shops that sell vapes to underage children.
“Educating the youth and holding them accountable for poor decisions and working and educating our parents to reduce the nicotine abuse is something that we must do,” he said. “We’re partnering with all of our stakeholders to help influence the change in holding the sellers accountable and ensuring that it’s as complicating as possible to get any kind of vapes in the hands of our children.”
Student Services has also met with local officials to speak about educating elementary school students on the use of vapes and Marion County agreed to share an educational program to supplement any disciplinary actions.
How does Volusia County’s referral rates compare to neighboring school districts?
Based a poll conducted by VCS, Seminole County reported 75 referrals for Jan. 1 to March 31, while Lake County had 76 and
Osceola reported 322.
According to the Centers for Disease Control, about 1 in 10, or 2.55 million middle and high school students used a vape, also called an e-cigarette, at least once in a 30-day period in 2022.
At the workshop, Micaleff also referenced an incident at a VCS school campus this year where a student got “incredibly sick” from vaping.
“This is really another pandemic that we have been hit with nationally here in the United States, so we have to get in front of it,” Balgobin said.
School Board member Carl Persis said he’s been working to raise awareness about the issue of vapes in schools for a long time, particularly because of the higher doses of nicotine kids take in while vaping, leading to addiction.
However, he agreed with School Board member Ruben Colon — who spoke about the importance of an educational component — in that the issue won’t be resolved through punitive measures alone.
“You can’t punish kids out of it,” Persis said. “You can’t just send them home for vaping. There has to be that educational piece.”
School Board Chair Jamie Haynes supported an educational approach, but said discipline must also occur. Haynes suggested that the district could consider an in-school suspension where students would be responsible for both their schoolwork and completing a curriculum about vaping.
Haynes thanked administrators for filling out the referrals so that the board could see the numbers.
“We need to understand the sheer number of students that are bringing vapes onto campus,” Haynes said.
The city’s proposed Capital Improvements Program includes design for new police department.
JARLEENE ALMENAS MANAGING EDITORThe city of Ormond Beach is planning for over $25 million in capital improvement projects for next fiscal year.
On June 4, the City Commission was given an overview of the proposed fiveyear Capital Improvements Program for fiscal year 20242025 to 2028-2029. The fiveyear CIP is budgeting for over $164 million of projects.
Included in the upcoming fiscal year is funding for public art, the replacement of city and police vehicles, the $800,000 reconstruction of the Ormond Beach Sports Complex softball fields (half of which is funded by a Volusia County ECHO grant) and the design for a new police station and emergency operations center.
Of the 10 categories included in the CIP, the ones with the largest cost is General Improvements at $54,044 million. Some of the projects that fall under this category include the installation of new ADA-compliant sidewalks at Military Boulevard, the design for the new EOC and an upgrade to the city’s data center infrastructure.
Over $85 million of the revenue to be used for the CIP projects comes from bonds and leasing. The city is also counting on over $31 million in grants and planning for about $19.5 million in property tax revenue; a tentative millage rate will be set by the Ormond Beach City Commis-
sion on July 23, for fiscal year 2024-2025.
Public hearings for the tax rate will then follow.
FUTURE PROJECTS
The city of Ormond Beach is only budgeting to use Community Redevelopment Area dollars on two projects next fiscal year: $100,000 for the implementation of public art and $120,000 for infrastructure and hardscape improvements to the downtown.
Why only two projects?
Because the city is looking ahead to its redesign of Cassen Park.
“What we’re doing is we’re taking the majority of the dollars that we currently have, and the majority of the dollars we’re going to get next year, and we need to get projects done that we’ve already committed to,” Finance Director Kelly McGuire said.
The city is also planning to replace the playground at Fire Station 91, repair the Magic Forest Playground at Nova Community Center and repair the fishing pier at Sanchez Park.
As for the $2.9 million design for a new police station and EOC, the city received $1.45 million in legislative funding for the project. At its meeting on June 4, the City Commission approved
a $200,000 work authorization with JL2 Architecture for a space and needs analysis for the proposed facility. The city is estimating a new police station and EOC will cost about $50 million, according to the CIP.
PUBLIC WORKS Water and wastewater projects are another category with high-ticket items on the CIP. The city is budgeting over $45 million for projects.
One of the main projects will be designing a new force main and reclaimed water pipe across the Halifax River. According to the city’s CIP, the existing force main was installed in 1981.
The new secondary force main is also being proposed to comply with Senate Bill 64, passed in 2021, which mandates cities reduce their discharge of treated wastewater effluent into water bodies within 10 years.
“We want to make sure that we have some redundancy,” Public Works Director Shawn Finley said.
Three Public Works dump trucks will also be replaced for $850,000. These have been a challenge to get for the city, Finley said.
“Very specific and very expensive,” he said.
JUNE 6
IN THE RED
3:10 p.m. — 300 block of East
Moody Boulevard, Flagler
County Battery. After a Palm Coast man found out his bank account was over-drafted he ended up arrested after punching a cop.
A bank manager called law enforcement because the man began making threats and refused to leave after he found out the account had been over-drafted by $10. A police officer arrived at the bank just as the suspect was stepping outside, according to the suspect’s arrest report.
The suspect immediately walked up to the officer, aggressively asking if he was here to arrest the suspect. The suspect continued on, saying he came to the bank to withdraw $5,000 because he owned the bank, the report said. The employees didn’t believe him.
The suspect then continued yelling at the deputy, saying he wanted the officer’s badge and getting in the officer’s face. When the officer told the suspect to back up, the man cursed at him and punched the officer in the arm.
The officer then wrestled the suspect to the ground where he was placed under arrest.
JUNE 3 TAGGED OUT
8:12 a.m. — Mile marker 284, Interstate 95 northbound, Flagler County Counterfeit license plate
A Jacksonville woman was arrested after she admitted to purchasing two counterfeit
tags and driving an uninsured car with a suspended license.
A Sheriff’s Office deputy was patrolling the interstate when he noticed a Toyota that had a discolored temporary tag, according to an arrest report. The tag also had improper spacing and font and, when searched in the motor vehicles database, the tag came up as unregistered. When the deputy pulled over the car to ask about it, the driver immediately began to cry.
She admitted to the deputy that she had purchased that tag and one other from an online marketplace so she could get to work. She also admitted to the car being uninsured, her license suspended and having a small amount of marijuana in her car, the report said.
The officer placed her under arrest.
MAY 24
ROOM AND BOARD
11:55 a.m. — 500 block of Collins Street, Ormond Beach
Burglary of an unoccupied dwelling. Police arrested a 25-year-old woman and a 27-year-old man after they were found inside an abandoned home.
A concerned neighbor called police after she suspected there were people in the home, according to a police report. When the reporting officer arrived, he noticed significant amount of trash and debris around the home. The officer noted in the report that he had spoken to the home’s owner several times, and that she’s voiced a clear desire to ensure that the home remains empty, including pursuing charges against anyone found inside.
The officer heard the two individuals moving around
inside, and spotted the pair leaving from a broken window.
He ordered them to stop and were held at gunpoint until other officers arrived on the scene, according to the report.
The pair told police that they were granted permission to stay in the home by a woman who works at a nearby bar, and were told to just clean and repair the home.
The man later told police that his brother had caused damage to the property and that he just wanted to fix it.
Both suspects were taken to jail.
MAY 26
GOING FOR A ‘LONG REPORT’
6:27 p.m. — 100 block of South Atlantic Avenue, Ormond Beach
Disorderly intoxication. A 48-year-old Daytona Beach man was arrested after police say he tried to start a fight with a restaurant’s staff and patrons.
Police responded to the restaurant after receiving a call about a disturbance, according to the man’s arrest report.
The restaurant employees had asked the man, who was drunk, to leave multiple times before he tried to cause fights and had to be escorted out.
The reporting officer noted that the man’s intoxicated state was evident due to his slurred speech and “glossed over eyes.”
When placed in handcuffs, the man told the officer he would fight him.
While in the back of the officer’s patrol car, the man said, “I’m gonna make you call me an ambulance,” according to his arrest report. He also asked the officer if he wanted a “short report or a long report,” before bashing his forehead against the partition in the car.
Police pepper sprayed him and pulled him out to wait for medical attention. He was then taken to jail.
Arrest in Flagler after 6-hour standoff
Robert Shawn Detherow, 55, was arrested on five charges, including assault on officer.
SIERRA WILLIAMS STAFF WRITERA man Sheriff Rick Staly described as a “religious fanatic” was arrested on June 5 after a six-hour standoff with law enforcement outside of 94 Forsythe Lane.
The suspect, Robert Shawn Detherow, 55, who lives at the home, has been charged with aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer, two counts of assault on a law enforcement officer, resisting arrest and exposure of sexual organs. A second man who was also in the home during the standoff, Kaleb Smith, 23, was also arrested and has been charged with resisting arrest.
While no one was injured in the standoff, Detherow was hit multiple times with a 40-millimeter rubber bullet while Smith was hit once with one after refusing to comply with FCSO orders.
In a FCSO Facebook video statement, Staly described Detherow as having a sovereign-citizen mentality and called him a “religious fanatic.” The rubber bullets, he said, are “less lethal” rounds meant to disable a suspect.
“Thankfully, we were able to resolve this situation without anyone getting hurt,” Staly said. “This was a very dangerous situation for the deputies and his neighbors. I commend our deputies for the patience they displayed and their ability to deescalate the situation for a successful resolution.”
The incident began at 6:33 that morning when Flagler
County Sheriff’s Office deputies were called to the address for a disturbance, a FCSO press release said. A dispatch call said Detherow had placed a table, chairs and other debris in the middle of the street and had been playing loudly music throughout the night.
The caller told dispatch that Detherow is the father of Hunter Detherow, a stabbing suspect who was arrested in March 2024 and has since been incarcerated, the press release said. Because of the previous investigation, FCSO knew firearms were in the home.
Deputies — one of which was a female deputy, Staly said — arrived at 94 Forsythe Lane and Detherow began masturbating in front of them, according to Staly’s video statement. Detherow then began throwing bottles at the deputies when they called for backup.
Detherow retreated into his home, only briefly exiting several times to yell at deputies, the press release said. As the standoff began, the FCSO
closed Forsythe Road and evacuated the neighboring homes.
Several FCSO units responded to the standoff: FCSO’s Crisis Negotiation Team, Behavioral Response Unit and SWAT team. Because of the debris on the road, the St. Johns County Sheriff’s Office Bomb Squad was also requested. No explosives were found on the scene. A search of Detherow’s social media found several Facebook posts and YouTube videos alluding to “suicide by cop” and becoming a martyr, the press release said. Some of the posts also were directed at Staly and the FCSO over Detherow’s son’s arrest. Detherow refused to communicate with the FCSO, but eventually the FCSO was able to breach the garage and front door, arresting Detherow and Smith, the press release said. Several firearms were seized in a search of the home and the two men were taken to the county jail.
Zest for life: Flagler Beach restaurateur remembered for love of family, community
Rosario “Rocky” DiBella, former owner of LaBella Pizzeria and Rocky’s Pizzeria in Flagler Beach, died unexpectedly on June 3.
JARLEENE
MANAGING EDITORRosario “Rocky” DiBella loved his family. He loved life. He loved good food.
And, he took pride in ensuring others loved his food too.
DiBella, of Palm Coast, spent over 20 years operating two different pizzerias in Flagler Beach: LaBella Pizzeria and Restaurant and Rocky’s Pizzeria. He was known as the “pizza man,” said his son, Joey DiBella, and though he appeared to be a tough Sicilian on the outside, his heart was rooted in community service.
“He was just a gentle soul,” Joey DiBella said. “He wanted to help anybody that he could. He loved giving back to the community.”
Through the years, giving back took on different forms — coordinating the Columbus Day Festival in Flagler Beach in the mid-1990s, supporting Flagler County Youth Soccer, donating his time to Flagler Volunteer Services, and feeding kids slices of pizza when they didn’t have the money to pay.
“He would not want anything in return, and it sounds so small,” Joey DiBella said. “I know a slice of pizza is not an expensive item, especially back then, but that I feel like explains and defines who he was, and how he just never thought twice about it.”
Rocky DiBella died unexpectedly on June 3. He was 72 years old. He is remembered by his wife Angela, daughters Aggie Goodman and Lina Williams, son Joey DiBella, and seven grandchildren. He is preceded in death by his son Paul DiBella, his parents, three brothers and one sister, according to his obituary.
A funeral service was held on Tuesday, June 11, at Santa Maria Del Mar Catholic Church in Flagler Beach.
A SLICE OF LIFE
Rocky DiBella was born on Sept. 12, 1951, in Castiglione, Sicily. He immigrated to the United States in 1974, two years after he met the woman who would become his wife of 49 years, Angela. The two married on March 16, 1975, settling down in Mt. Vernon, New York, where he opened his first pizza restaurant in 1980.
DiBella operated the restaurant, Pizza City, until 1986 when he and his family moved to Palm Coast.
Two years later, he opened LaBella Pizzeria, located at 308 S. Ocean Shore Blvd., a space now occupied by Romero’s Tuscany By The Sea. Joey DiBella, who was 5 years old at the time his father opened the pizzeria, said he spent a lot of time hanging out at the restaurant. All of his sisters worked there, and when he got older, so did he.
Rocky DiBella often worked long hours at the restaurant, but he cherished the time he spent with family, his son said.
“He was one of those personalities that when you were around, you had a smile on your face,” Joey DiBella said. “He loved to entertain. He loved to spend time with us.”
His father also had “one of those laughs,” Joey DiBella said.
“There’s certain people in this world that just have one of those laughs that, when you hear them, you know exactly who that is,” he said. “You know who’s behind that laugh and he was one of those people. I mean, his laugh was an infectious laugh.”
Rocky DiBella ran LaBella Pizzeria until 2006. Then, in 2008, he opened Rocky’s Pizzeria in Flagler Beach. He then retired in 2011, closing an almost 30-year chapter of being a restaurateur.
And opened a new one: As a grandfather who got to enjoy spending time with his grandkids and as a community volunteer, both with Flagler Volunteer Services and the Flagler County Health Department.
ALWAYS A PHONE CALL AWAY
Rocky DiBella was “larger than life,” said longtime friend, Carl Laundrie.
That was the first impression DiBella had on Laundrie, former longtime Flagler County Communications Manager and News-Journal reporter. The two worked on the Flagler Beach Columbus Day Festival together, which was held annually in the ‘90s.
DiBella started the festival to help draw customers to Flagler Beach businesses during that time of year.
“We had fireworks,” Laundrie recalled. “We set up a stage in the middle of Veterans Park right across from City Hall in Flagler Beach and had entertainment, and it was just a good thing for businesses in Flagler Beach at the time.”
Laundrie, who retired from his position with Flagler County in 2015, said DiBella helped him with his job as well. One time, he catered a lunch for a legislative delegation. County staff had discovered that they had mixed up the date for the caterer they originally hired, two hours before the event.
“I picked up the phone, called Rocky, and he threw his entire restaurant into high gear,” Laundrie recalled.
An hour later, Laundrie was ready for the event with two huge pans of baked ziti, bread and salad. The delegation loved the food.
HELPING NEIGHBORS
During the wildfires of 1998, when the entire population of Flagler County was told to evacuate, DiBella stayed behind to help first responders. He and his family stayed at the restaurant and DiBella and his wife worked tirelessly to help the community at that time, Joey DiBella recalled.
“It was a scary time — a lot of people didn’t know if they were going to be coming home to their home anymore,” he said.
Most businesses were closed, but LaBella Pizzeria stayed open to provide food to police officers, firefighters and those who remained in Flagler Beach.
He didn’t do it to make money, Laundrie said, “but to provide something for those people who were
fighting the fires and keeping the order.”
That was just who he was, Laundrie said. He always offered up discount cards for fundraisers. He sponsored his son’s soccer team every year and threw them pizza parties. DiBella was also a longtime member of the Rotary Club of Flagler Beach.
“Growing up in a small town in Sicily, community and closeness was a big part of the area that he grew up in,” Joey DiBella said. “And when he came here, I think that carried on with him and he just absolutely loved to provide and do what he could to help out his neighbors and to do what he could to help out local organizations.”
LA VITA È BELLA
The last time Laundrie saw Rocky DiBella was the Thursday before he died.
It was routine for Laundrie, DiBella and their friend Giulio Lancia to get together every Thursday for lunch.
DiBella, Laundrie said, was the “connoisseur of restaurants.”
“He loved to talk about how they set up, knew all the people involved in restaurants and who owned what restaurant and what cook worked where — all that,” Laundrie said.
“You got him going on restaurants, and he’s got a chapter and verse.”
"There's certain people in this world that just have one of those laughs that, when you hear them, you know exactly who that is. You know who's behind that laugh and he was one of those people. I mean, his laugh was an infectious laugh."
JOEY DIBELLAA favorite restaurant? Terranovas in Bunnell.
“I used to love to listen to Rocky talking about picking the fresh oregano in Sicily — how great it smelled, hanging up oregano to dry in his house in Sicily and about his country,” Laundrie recalled.
DiBella was also adept at making cork crafts. Laundrie has a few in his house, and a lot of wine corks he was saving for his friend.
“Rocky expressed himself in his art, in his food and in his cooking,” Laundrie said.
A few days before his death, DiBella got to see all of his grandchildren. It was a last minute plan, Joey DiBella said, but one that has become all the more cherished.
The very last photo he has of his father is one of him holding his granddaughter, Joey DiBella’s two year old daughter. When he first saw the photo, Joey DiBella thought it was a great photo. Now, he said he treasures it even more.
“It’s just yet another example that we are aware of that life is precious, and life changes very, very quickly,” Joey DiBella said. “We really have to always focus on what’s important in life, and that’s our family, that’s our friends, that’s the people who matter most to us, because everything can change in the blink of an eye.”
Fernando
Melendez running for Flagler County Commission
Palm Coast resident Fernando Melendez is running for the Flagler County Commission District 1 seat.
Melendez is a former board member on the 2021 Palm Coast Redistricting Commission Board and a former board member and former chair on the Flagler County Planning and Development Advisory Board. In 2022, Melendez ran for a Palm Coast City Council seat.
Melendez moved to Flagler County six years ago from upstate New York, according to his biography on the Flagler County Supervisor of Elections website. Flagler County has faced multiple challenges, including fiscal shortfall, lagging infrastructure improvements, rising crime, bad investments, bad costly policy decision making, and irresponsible rezonings, Melendez said. If elected, he said, he wants to restore “integrity and confidence” back into the Flagler County Commission through bold new leadership. Melendez said he wants to use a comprehensive new strategy of working together to advance the interest of all citizens by implementing sound and limited self-governance.
“The people of Flagler County want a new approach,” he said.
Melendez said his main qualifications are a combination of experience, skills, and resources, the press release said. Melendez is an elected union official representing over 14,000 drivers and has a bachelor’s degree in human services and psychology from Boricua College in New York, a master’s degree in political science.
Andrew Werner runs for Palm Coast’s City Council District 3
Andrew Werner is running for Palm Coast’s City Council District 3 seat.
Werner is a Palm Coast resident with an undergraduate degree in criminal justice, master’s degrees in counseling psychology and school psychology. A nationally certified school psychologist, Werner currently works as an advocate and educator for students and families in the public school system, according to his biography on the Flagler Supervisor of Elections website.
Since the beginning of his career, Werner has worked as an advocate in his community, not only through his work with youth organizations but also helping adults suffering from substance abuse, mental health issues, and with people experiencing housing
crisis issues, the biography said.
Werner said he and his family love that Palm Coast is a beautiful and safe place to live with a great quality of life. He believes a representative’s responsibility is to “listen, advocate and problem solve for the people they serve.”
“The city belongs to the people, and it is the people who should decide how we preserve our quality of life and grow forward,” Werner said.
Former St. Johns sheriff throws his hat into Senate District 7 race
In what could be one of this year’s highest-profile legislative primary elections, former St. Johns County Sheriff David Shoar has opened a campaign account to run for a seat that will be vacated by term-limited Sen. Travis Hutson, R-St. Augustine.
Shoar, a Republican, opened the account Friday, June 7, according to the state Division of Elections website.
House Appropriations Chairman Tom Leek, R-Ormond Beach, also is running for the Senate District 7 seat.
The district is made up of St. Johns, Flagler and Putnam counties and part of Volusia.
Leek has gained support from Republican leaders, including Gov. Ron DeSantis and incoming Senate President Ben Albritton, R-Wauchula.
Shoar was first elected St. Johns County sheriff in 2004 and served until 2020. He joined the law firm Woolsey Morcom in 2023 as director of investigations, according to the firm’s website.
Candidates will formally qualify this week for legislative races. Other candidates with open accounts in Senate District 7 are Republican Gerry James, Democrat George Anthony Hill II and
unaffiliated candidate Michael
Levone Gist.
Primary elections will be held Aug. 20. The online site Florida’s Voice first reported Shoar’s candidacy last week.
Financial disclosures law blocked by judge
A federal judge has blocked a 2023 Florida law that required municipal elected officials to disclose detailed information about their personal finances, ruling that the law likely violated First Amendment rights.
U.S. District Judge Melissa Damian on Monday issued a preliminary injunction, siding with municipal officials throughout the state who challenged the law. The decision came three weeks before a July 1 deadline for filing the information.
Damian, who is based in Fort Lauderdale, wrote that the Legislature did not adequately justify a need for the law after decades of the state requiring less-detailed financial disclosures by municipal officials. She wrote that a law “compelling speech, as with a statute forbidding speech, falls within the purview of the First Amendment.”
“After a thorough and careful consideration of the record, this court concludes that defendants have failed to establish that the state seriously undertook the consideration of less intrusive means to address the identified interests,” Damian wrote.
The law (SB 774) required mayors and other elected municipal officials, such as members of city councils, to file annual reports detailing issues such as their net worths, incomes and assets. Other elected officials, such as the governor and state legislators, have long faced such requirements. The requirements caused an uproar among local governments, with more than 125 municipal elected officials resigning.
Former Volusia official runs for county chair
Deb Denys filed to run for the seat on June 6.
JARLEENE ALMENAS
MANAGING EDITORThe Volusia County Council Chair election has now become a four-person race.
Former District 3 County Councilwoman Deb Denys filed to run for the seat on June 6. Denys, a real estate agent with Weichert Realtors, served on the council from 2012 to 2020 when she ran for County Council chair against incumbent Jeff Brower.
Denys said she was asked a year ago if she would consider running again. At the time, she said no. Two months ago, she changed her mind.
“Finally, I said, ‘I think there’s an opportunity,’”
Denys said. “My skill sets, my leadership abilities, my connections — I’m going to bring all that strength and leadership skills back to the dais.”
Denys is a member of Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University’s College of Arts and Sciences Industrial Advisory Board, as well as serves as a governing board member of the Florida Communities Trust, a position she was appointed to by the governor.
She’s also the former board of directors chair of the Indian River Lagoon National Estuary Program, the Central Florida Metropolitan Planning Organization and the River To Sea Transportation Planning Organization and served on the Volusia County School Board from 1994-1998.
Denys said she would use all of her experience to lead the County Council, if elected.
Leadership, she said, comes down to listening, coming to
a consensus and moving an item forward, or choosing not to.
During her time as a County Council member, some of her accomplishments included helping the city of Oak Hill with acquiring funding for its ongoing septic to sewer conversion, the hiring of an internal auditor for the county, and leaving Volusia County debtfree in its general fund when she stepped down in 2020.
“That’s the most important thing as a council member, is our fiduciary responsibility with the tax dollars and to our citizens, and to be accountable and transparent,” Denys said.
Denys said she looks forward to speaking with citizens once again about local issues and said she believes Volusia is in a position to “pick up some momentum here with good leadership” in regards to economic development. If elected, Denys will be the only woman on the County Council. She is running against incumber Chair Jeff Brower, Port Orange Mayor Don Burnette, and local businessman and former race car driver Randy Dye, who has raised over $295,000 for his campaign. Brower has raised almost $45,000 and Burnette has raised about $32,500.
decided in the Primary. Nonpartisan contests include School Board members, City of Palm Coast Mayor and Council Members. Primary elections are also important for partisan offices. If a candidate does not win the Primary, they will not appear on the ballot in November. Don’t skip the Primary! Visit FlaglerElections.gov or scan the QR code to learn about the candidates. Be an informed voter! YOUR VOTE COUNTS!
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
Flagler Beach home sells for over $1.3 million
Ahouse in Painters Walk subdivision was the top real estate transaction for April 18-24 in Palm Coast and Flagler County. Ivor and Anita Wigham, as trustees, sold 3010 Painters Walk to James Steven Tuckers and Mary Tucker, of Flagler Beach, for $1,335,000. Built in 2003, the house is a 3/3 and has 2 half baths, a pool, an elevator, a boat house, a dock and 3,090 square feet. It sold in 2020 for $855,000.
Condos Christopher and Debra Parent, as trustees, sold 21 Viscaya Lane to Lori Wild, of Palm Coast, for $526,000. Built in 1999, the condo is a 2/2.5 and has 2,186 square feet. It sold in 2007 for $66,600.
Cynthia Haines, a trustee, sold 700 Cinnamon Beach Way, Unit 644, to Richard Schlinkman Jr. Ellen Schlinkman, of Palm Coast, for $895,000. Built in 2004, the condo is a 3/2 and has 1,682 square feet. It sold in 2021 for $690,000.
Lori Curtiss, of Palm Coast, sold 800 Canopy Walk Lane, Unit 823, to Deborah Branham Wallingford and John Wallingford, of Lexington, Kentucky, for $360,000. Built in 2004, the condo is a 2/2 and has 1,238 square feet. It sold in 2016 for $207,000.
Travis and Amanda Thaxton, of Bossier City, Louisiana, sold 200 Ocean Crest Drive, Unit 715, to Joao and Maria Monteiro, of Colts Neck, New Jersey, for $780,000. Built in 2003, the condo is a 3/3.5 and has 1,676 square feet. It sold in 2022 for $735,000.
Darrell Alan Crawford and Vedia Jean Crawford, of Simpsonville, South Carolina, sold 101 Palm Harbor Parkway, Unit C427, to Chased By An Angel LLC, of Rocky Point, New York, for $180,000. Built in 2005, the condo is a 1/1.5 and has 670 square feet. It sold in 2018 for $118,000.
EJ McCallum Inc, of Palm Coast, sold 200 Ocean Crest Drive, Unit 217, to Jorge and Norah Salhuana, of Acworth, Georgia, for $660,000. Built in 2003, the condo is a 3/3 and has 1,676 square feet. It sold in 2003 for $635,000.
FLAGLER BEACH
Fuquay
Sean Sackett, of Flagler Beach, sold 1507 South Central Ave. to Alexander Vorgias, of Flagler Beach, for $762,000. Built in 2019, the house is a 4/3 and has 1,642 square feet.
PALM COAST
Belle Terre
Seagate homes, LLC, of Palm Coast, sold 27 Pepper Lane to Richard and Barbara Von Langen, of Palm Coast, for $369,700. Built in 2024, the house is a 4/2 and has 1,871 square feet.
Hammock Dunes
Jeffrey Friedman and Susan Roese, as trustees, sold 21 Island Estates Parkway to Robert and Vickie Shaffer, of Arvada, Colorado, for $1,300,000. Built in 1999, the house is a 3/3 and has a pool, a hot tub, a fireplace, an outdoor kitchen and 3,323 square feet. It sold in 2016 for $640,000.
Toby Tobin, of gotoby.com, contributed to this report.
John Anderson Drive home tops Ormond area sales list
Ahouse in Ormond-by-the-Sea was the top real estate transaction for April 28 to May 4 in Ormond Beach and Ormondby-the-Sea. Dorothy Holmes, of Ormond Beach, sold 2571 John Anderson Drive to Richard and Elizabeth Rhoden, of Ormond Beach, for $975,000. Built in 2012, the house is a 4/2 and has two half baths, a fireplace and 3,487 square feet.
ALEXIS MILLER CONTRIBUTING WRITER
Condos
Dante Leon, of College Place, Washington, sold 89 S. Atlantic Ave., Unit 1203, to Paul Villani, of New Windsor, New York, for $270,000. Built in 1979, the condo is a 2/2 and has 1,200 square feet. It sold in 2016 for $230,000.
Joseph Hamilton Jr. and Colleen Fooshkill, as co-trustees, sold 1 John Anderson Drive, Unit 520, to James Baliker, as trustee, for $465,000. Built in 1996, the condo is a 2/2.5 and has 2,170 square feet. It sold in 2011 for $255,000.
Robert and Marlena DeWitt, of Cairo, New York, sold 65 Seton Trail, Unit 80, to Damien Curry, of Ormond Beach, for $220,000. Built in 1971, the condo is a 2/1.5 and has 1,080 square feet. It sold in 2012 for $62,500.
ORMOND
BEACH
Ann Rustin Estates
Raymond Komara and Sandra Ann Komara, of Gainesville, sold 230 Ann Rustin Drive to JM Contracting Group, Inc., of Daytona Beach Shores, for $525,000. Built in 1965, the house is a 3/3 and has a pool, a fireplace and 2,371 square feet. It sold in 1973 for $64,000.
Fiesta Heights
Joanne Elizabeth Garnett, of Ormond Beach, sold 111 Pinion Circle to Gilbert Keisse, of Ormond Beach, for $300,000. Built in 1978, the house is a 2/2 and has 1,343 square feet. It sold in 2020 for $210,000.
Hunters Ridge
Richard and Sherry Smith, of Ormond Beach, sold 30 Dormer Drive to William and Demra Ashmore, of Ormond Beach, for $780,000. Built in 2008, the house is a 4/2.5
and has a pool and 3,458 square feet. It sold in 2020 for $390,000.
Ronald and Reba Barker, of Ormond Beach, sold 104 Pergola Place to Brooke and Justin Romero, of Ormond Beach, for $360,000. Built in 2017, the house is a 3/2 and has a hot tub and 1,913 square feet. It sold in 2021 for $325,000.
Plantation Bay
Shelia Burns, as trustee, sold 812 Aldenham Lane to Daniel and Jeanne Cox, of Ormond Beach, for $380,000. Built in 2016, the house is a 3/3 and has 2,078 square feet. It sold in 2016 for $223,100.
Trails Keith and Leanne Lutz, of Ormond Beach, sold 115 Shady Branch Trail to Zeev Kessler and Shayne Epstein, of Ormond Beach, for $919,000. Built in 1981, the house is a 6/5.5 and has a firepit and 3,974 square feet. It sold in 2022 for $679,900.
ORMOND-BY-THE-SEA Island
Barbara Fitiles, of Pittsboro, North Carolina, sold 19 Island Cay Drive to David and Jodie Carlson, of Ormond Beach, for $400,000. Built in 1986, the house is a 3/2 and has 1,447 square feet. It sold in 1989 for $95,000.
Ocean Shores
Catherine Shaw, a personal representative, sold 6 River Shore Drive to George Michael Dutcher and Heather Amanda Dutcher, of Ormond Beach, for $325,000. Built in 1956, the house is a 3/2 and has 1,032 square feet.
John Adams, of Adams, Cameron & Co. Realtors, contributed to this report.
Make yourself at home
Quality time with dad: soggy cones and no iPads
Father’s Day is around the corner. Enjoy the moments.
BRIAN MCMILLAN PUBLISHERAs Father’s Day approaches, I celebrate the dignity of fathers, the respect we all owe them, the honor and love we learn from them — and their willingness to eat soggy ice cream cones.
Or maybe that’s just me.
The other night, I was home alone with my two youngest children, 9-year-old Kennedy and 6-yearold Luke, so we debated for a while on what to do. Too hot to go outside to play. Too boring to stay home.
“Can we go to the iPad McDonald’s?” Luke begged.
YOUR TOWN
Volusia teens invited to design a limited edition library card
Teens ages 13 to 19 can enter the Volusia County Public Library’s design contest for a limited edition teen library card. Entry forms will be available starting July 1 in the library branches and online at https://www.volusialibrary. org. Entry forms must be signed by a parent or legal guardian if the teen is under 18. Up to five entries may be submitted. Artwork must be original, previously unpublished, and free of copyright restrictions.
Entries must be received by 7 p.m. Wednesday, July 31.
“We have so many creative, talented teens, and we want to give them an opportunity to feature their artwork on these teen library cards, which will reach thousands of library users and promote the love for reading and learning,” Library Services Director Lucinda Colee said.
The public can vote for their favorite design between Sept. 3 and Sept. 13. The winner will be announced Oct. 9. For more information, visit https://www.volusialibrary.org.
The Pilot Club of the Halifax Area installs new officers for 2024-2025
The Pilot Club of the Halifax Area’s Officers Installation Ceremony was held on Tuesday, June 4.
Missy Ridgway, incoming Pilot International Florida district governor,
BIZ BUZZ
Lifestyle Realty Group adds new agent in Ormond Beach
Lifestyle Realty Group has welcomed real estate agent Alexis Labrada to its Ormond Beach brokerage, a press release announced. Labrada joins the company as a new agent from Miami, where he was born and raised.
“With a long standing passion for real estate, he is looking forward to growing his career and helping people to find their dream homes,” the press release states. “Outside of work, Alexis cherishes moments spent with his wife and two lovely daughters.”
For those who aren’t McDonald’s connoisseurs, you may not realize that, of the four in Palm Coast, the only McDonald’s featuring tablets loaded with video games is the one on Old Kings Road near Palm Coast Parkway.
I do have some principles left.
“No,” I said, “let’s spend some quality time together at McDonald’s, not play more electronics at McDonald’s.”
I tried not to take Luke’s continued protests as an insult.
When we arrived at a non-iPad
McDonald’s (the horror!), Kennedy and I ordered McFlurries, while Luke, uncharacteristically, wanted an ice cream cone.
Knowing that Luke often lets his ice cream melt everywhere and drip down his cheeks and wrists, I tried to talk him into a plain sundae instead. When he insisted, I decided to outsmart him and plop his vanilla cone upside down in a plastic cup so that he’d have to eat it with a spoon anyway.
He insisted that he wanted the true cone experience, so I compro-
installed the officers and appointees.
The officers for 2024-2025 are:
President Janet Bryant
President Elect: Elissa Thomas
Secretary: Tish Gressang
Treasurer: Shirley Pyle
Directors (one year): Muriel Fuqua and Essina Robinson
Directors (two years): Debby Tucker and Jocelyn Uzzell
Past President Director: Laurie Kaye
The Pilot Club of the Halifax Area is a nonprofit service organization for the Volusia County area. Learn more about how the Pilot Club of the Halifax Area serves the community at www.facebook.com/pilothalifax.
City Youth Photography Contest now open
The city of Ormond Beach’s Young Adult Photography Contest is now accepting entries.
Children ages 12-17 are invited to submit a maximum of three photos for the city’s “Park Perspectives” contest, according to an announcement on the city’s website. The young photographers are invited to showcase their favorite park or green space.
The deadline to enter the contest is Friday, June 14. Awards will be given to Best in Show, first, second and third place winners. All entries will be displayed at The Casements during July, with an award ceremony scheduled for Saturday, July 6. Visit https://bit.ly/3Vd159n.
Have news to share about your organization? Email Jarleene@ observerlocalnews.com
Pictona at Holly Hill appoints Ormond resident as new CEO
Ormond Beach resident and former Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Director of Athletics John Phillips has been hired as the new chief executive officer for Pictona at Holly Hill, effective July 1.
Phillips will report to the board of directors, according to a press release. He will succeed Rainer Martens, current CEO of Pictona, who announced his retirement in March.
Julie Martens, player shops director and CEO advisor, is also retiring.
“The impact that the Martens have had on the development of Pictona cannot be overstated,” the press release states. “Their vision to see the
mised with him, scraping most of the ice cream into the cup, and then handing him the cone with a mound of vanilla only about 1 inch tall. (Don’t worry, he also got the cup.)
A few minutes later, he had licked off the ice cream but didn’t take a single bite out of the cone itself. Instead, he handed it to me, flat on top but with plenty of ice cream still stored inside the cone.
“You don’t want it?” I asked.
He shook his head, no.
Kennedy asked the obvious question, with big-sister attitude: “Luke, why did you get the cone if you don’t want to eat the cone?”
He simply smiled and shrugged. He handed me the cone.
It was soggy around the edges. I didn’t know why he didn’t want it, and I sensed that he didn’t know, either. I realized that maybe, just maybe, he had never ordered an ice cream cone before — or at least not for a very long time, probably because of my aversion to ice cream messes. He was just a little boy, unsure how to respond to an unfamiliar situation.
I didn’t want to throw the cone away, so after a moment’s hesitation, while he took a few bites of ice cream from his plastic cup, I ate away the upper wafery walls, exposing a new mound of unnaturally white vanilla.
Luke’s eyes suddenly got wide with surprise, and he asked for it back. I laughed at his surprised expression and handed it to him, then watched him lick the rest of the ice cream away. Kennedy rolled her eyes but couldn’t help from smiling.
It was a nothing moment: A kid gets a second chance at eating an ice cream cone, with renewed glee.
But for me, it wasn’t nothing; it was just the kind of quality time I needed: a series of smiles on the faces of my children.
Happy Father’s Day to all the dads out there who eat soggy cones without asking too many questions.
What’s your favorite Father’s Day memory, as a father or a child?
Email brian@observerlocalnews. com.
Meet OMAM’s featured art night family for June
The Guerra family — Natalia, Alejandro and their children Simon and Eloisa — were selected as Ormond Memorial Art Museum’s featured family from the museum’s June 7 Free Family Art Night event.
The family is originally from Colombia, according to a statement to the Observer from the museum. Alejandro Guerra is a psychologist and Natalia Guerra is a social communicator and journalist.
“We’ve called Ormond Beach home for the past six years, and from the moment we arrived, we felt warmly welcomed,” Natalia Guerra said in the statement. “Places like the library, the Ormond Memorial
explosive growth in the sport of pickleball and build a world-class facility to support that growth, along with the dedication of time, energy and investment of their own money to bring this vision to life is simply remarkable. Additionally, Julie and Rainer are directly responsible for the development of the relationship with the city of Holly Hill, Volusia County and the ECHO Grant Board.”
The Martens plan to transition out of their current roles over the next several months.
“I am excited to have the opportunity to work alongside Julie and Rainer Martens to learn the history of Pictona and better understand their vision for its future growth,” Phillips said in the press release.
For the last 10 years, in his role as director of athletics at ERAU, he led
Art Museum Gardens, and Andy Romano Park are our favorite haunts, where we’ve not only met wonderful people but also continued our journey of learning English as a second language. Alejandro and I believe that mastering a new language, especially one as nuanced as English, is a lifelong endeavor.”
The family’s passions include art, music and the great outdoors.
The museum’s Family Art Night takes place from 5:30-7 p.m. on most first Fridays of the month. All art supplies are provided, and the program is sponsored in part by the Women United Volusia Chapter.
the Eagles from an NAIA school to a NCAA Division II athletics program with 20 sports and more than 450 student-athletes. He is also an active volunteer in the greater Daytona Beach community and a frequent public speaker.
New assisted living facility opens in Ormond Beach
A new assisted living and memory care senior living community has opened in Ormond Beach.
AgeWell Solvere Living’s Aden Senior Living, located at 1211 W. Granada Blvd., celebrated its grand opening on June 6 with self-guided tours of its apartments, amenities and grounds. “We are delighted to celebrate
Publisher Brian McMillan, brian@observerlocalnews.com
Managing Editor Jarleene Almenas, jarleene@observerlocalnews.com
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Volusia County Schools offers Summer Food Service Program
School Way Café, a department of Volusia County Schools, will provide meals to children 18 or younger during the summer at no charge through the USDA Summer Food Service Program and the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.
Select school sites will offer breakfast and lunch meals. Students attending VCS Summer Programs in person will receive their breakfast and lunch meals at no charge at the school they are attending. Children 18 and under who are not on campus during the summer may also participate in the meal program. For security and preparation purposes, parents or guardians of children not participating in a school program will need to place an order for meals 24 hours in advance, by contacting the front office of the participating school site as registration is required. During the designated mealtime service, the registered families must check in at the office. School Way Café Summer Food Service will operate Monday, June 10, to Thursday, July 26, 2024. . All sites will be closed June 19 in observance of Juneteenth and July 4 in observance of Independence Day. Children must eat their meals on site. For a list of sites, visit bit. ly/4ck0tG2.
the grand opening of Aden Senior Living,” said Kristin Kutac Ward, CoCEO of AgeWell Solvere Living, in a press release. “The Aden team has worked tirelessly to create a warm and inviting environment where residents can thrive and enjoy life to the fullest. Aden represents our commitment to providing unparalleled lifestyle and support for older adults in Florida.”
Amenities include dining rooms, a library, on-site salon and spa, art
YOUR NEIGHBORS
Focus on Ormond Art Spotlight
In this new photo series, the focus is on a local gallery with a mission to advance the arts in Ormond Beach.
SUZANNE MCCARTHY
CONTRIBUTING WRITER
Joy and laughter permeate the atmosphere of Art Spotlight.
The Ormond Beach art gallery is the vision of Thays França and Teri Althouse, once acquaintances and competitors, now friends who have worked to create a space to advance the art scene of Ormond Beach. They are joined by Althouse’s son Jon Benjamin and fellow artist Barbette Jenson who have added their talent and insight to this concept.
“Every single one of us have different strengths and we have learned how to work with each other and each other’s strengths.“ França said.
The art gallery’s mission statement is simple: ”Create, Collaborate, Elevate.” To accomplish this, Art Spotlight is open to all artists, from beginners to experienced.
“We wanted to offer a safe place where artists can come and do whatever it is they need at the moment,” França said.
“We are very community-orient-
ed; we want the community to come in,” Althouse added.
Weekly events also help to fulfill their mission.
The third Saturday of the month is reserved to “create.” Althouse said they open the gallery to any artist, and invite them to sit and paint.
The second week of the month is to “collaborate.” Artists are then invited to come, support each other and listen to other artists speak, Althouse said.
Then, at the beginning of each month, they “elevate” with a new exhibition to showcase emerging artists and add vibrancy to the local art community.
On the first Saturday of the month, from 3-7 p.m. during Ormond Beach’s monthly Art Walk, the artists are joined by locals and visitors who come to see their work.
“We elevate the arts in our town to the best it can be shown,” França said.
Art Spotlight is located at 67 W. Granada Blvd. The gallery is open Wednesday to Saturday, from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday to Tuesday by appointment. Artists can find information about events and open calls for art on Art Spotlight’s Instagram and Facebook pages.
ART PAGE 2B
Art Spotlight
THE FINE ARTS
UNWANTED
The sculpture, which won first place for 3D art for the Tradewinds show at OMAM last month, depicts a shattered face. It’s based on a poem De-Via wrote about her family friend from Israel, Yael Idan, who is experiencing the impact of the war firsthand.
“The poem tells the tragic story Yael went through; how she and her family had to witness the murder of her older sister, Mayan Idan, while being held captive inside their family home,” De-Via said in her artist’s statement. “My sculpture has no eyes and a shattered surface to project the fact that the Idan’s family saw no future after the bloodshed but were forced to break through the cracks and continue living within the grief. My hope for this artwork is to share Yael’s story with the world and to reveal the truth behind this torturous war that became my people’s reality.”
–JARLEENE ALMENAS
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LOCAL EVENTS
THURSDAY, JUNE 13
DAYTONA STATE COLLEGE
SUMMER JAZZ CONCERT
When: 7-9 p.m.
Where: News-Journal Center, 221 N. Beach St., Daytona Beach
Details: Kickstart the summer with a jazz concert. Free event. Open to the public.
FRIDAY, JUNE 14
TURTLE TALK: A SEA
TURTLE’S JOURNEY
When: 10-11 a.m.
Where: Gamble Rogers Memorial State Recreational Area, 3100 S. Oceanshore Blvd., Flagler Beach
Details: Learn about the role sea turtles play and how our actions can help preserve this species for generations to come. All ages are welcome. Minors must be accompanied by an adult. Program included with paid park entry fee of $5 per car.
CELEBRATE AMERICA! A CONCERT FEATURING THE AMERICAN SIRENS
When: 5-8 p.m.
Where: MetroHealth Stadium at Pictona, 1060 Ridgewood Ave., Holly Hill
Details: Celebrate Flag Day with a concert by The American Sirens. This harmonic trio will sing classic patriotic songs, as well as modern hits with a vintage flair. Floor and bleacher seats are free. Box seats (includes four seats and a small table) are available for $20. Add a barbecue meal by The Kitchen at Pictona for $20. Meal tickets must be purchased in advance. Visit hollyhillevents.org.
SATURDAY, JUNE 15
DAYTONA BEACH
JUNETEENTH FAMILY FESTIVAL
When: 10 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Where: Cypress Park, 925
George W.
Details: The 26th annual Daytona Beach Juneteenth Family Festival, presented by the Juneteenth Festival Group, Inc. of Daytona Beach, will begin with a parade in the city’s historic midtown district, from Dr. Mary McLeod Bethune Boulevard to George Engram Boulevard, at 10 a.m. This year’s theme is “Celebrating Unity in the Community.” After the parade, head to Cypress Park for live entertainment, food trucks, vendors, children’s activities, the Sankofa African Traveling Museum, a poundcake competition and more. Free event. Visit juneteenthdaytona.com.
JUNETEENTH CELEBRATION
When: 12-6 p.m.
Where: African American Cultural Society, 4422 U.S. 1, Palm Coast
Details: Celebrate Juneteenth with the African American Cultural Society. The event will feature bounce houses, games, music, entertainment, vendors and food. Free event.
ECHOING AIR CONCERT
When: 3 p.m.
Where: Jeanne M. Goddard Center, Daytona State College, 1200 W. International Speedway Blvd., Daytona Beach
Details: Echoing Air, an Indianapolis-based Baroque chamber ensemble, will present a free concert at Daytona State College. The concert will be the culmination of the ensemble’s week of work with high school and college students from around the United States who are attending the fourth-annual Exploring Vocal Arts summer camp.
‘LET’S SHAKE, RATTLE, AND ROLL FATHER DAUGHTER’ SOCK HOP
When: 5-7 p.m.
Where: The Casements, 25 Riverside Drive, Ormond Beach
Details: The Casements Guild is inviting fathers, grandfathers, uncles, big brothers, guardians and their special little ladies for a night of dancing, poodle skirts and leather jackets. There will be dinner, giveaways and prizes. Tickets cost $25 per couple. Advanced tickets required. Call 386-676-3216.
SUNDAY, JUNE 16
LOW-COST PET SHOT CLINIC
When: 9-11 a.m.
Where: Big Lots Plaza, 122 N. Nova Road, Ormond Beach
Details: Get your pet vaccinated at a lower cost. Rabies shots will cost $5 for 1-year vaccinations. Other shots offered include dog distemper/parvo combo, dog flu, cat distemper combo, feline leukemia and more. Heartworm prevention and flea control products will be available for purchase. All vaccinations are administered with a licensed veterinarian. No appointment needed. Clinic is open to everyone. Call or text 748-8993 or visit spcavolusia.org
FATHER’S DAY BBQ BASH
When: 12-4 p.m.
Where: Palm Coast United Methodist Church, 6500 Belle Terre Parkway, Palm Coast
Details: Enjoy some barbecue and celebrate fathers with Palm Coast Methodist Church. The menu includes barbecue chicken, choice of smoked sausages or smoked ribs, coleslaw, corn, mac and cheese and corn bread. Event costs $25 for adults; $10 for children, who get choice of a hot dog or cheeseburger and fries. A portion of the proceeds will benefit the church’s community programs. Visit https://bit.ly/3yX12H4.
‘FIGURATIVELY SPEAKING’ OPENING RECEPTION
When: 1-4 p.m.
Where: Art League of Daytona Beach, 433 S. Palmetto Ave., Daytona Beach Details: The Art League will
hold an opening reception for its upcoming exhibit, “Figuratively Speaking,” to open Sunday, June 16. It will run through July 19. Ongoing watercolor classes with Elaine Vice will also continue through the summer on Fridays from 1-4pm. For more information, visit www. artleague.org.
TUESDAY, JUNE 18
FOOD TRUCK TUESDAY
When: 5-8 p.m.
Where: Central Park at Town Center, 975 Central Ave., Palm Coast Details: Order appetizers, main dishes, side dishes and desserts. Registration is not required. Presented in partnership with the Observer
THURSDAY, JUNE 20
ORMOND BEACH AREA
DEMOCRATIC CLUB MEETING
When: 7 p.m.
Where: 56 N. Halifax Drive,
Ormond Beach Details: Join the Ormond Beach Area Democratic Club for its June meeting. Checkin and socializing will begin at 6:30 p.m. Information and activities for the Aug. 20 and Nov. 5 elections will be presented, discussed and planed. Like-minded non-members are welcome to attend as guests. Visit ormondbeachdems.org.
FRIDAY, JUNE 21
MOONRISE AT THE BEACH
When: 8:15-9 p.m.
Where: Gamble Rogers Memorial State Recreational Area, 3100 S. Oceanshore Blvd., Flagler Beach Details: Take in the view of the moon rising over the Atlantic Ocean. Bring binoculars and a camera for photo opportunities. Program included with paid park entry fee of $5 per car.
SATURDAY, JUNE 22
SUMMER BOOK AND BAKE SALE
When: 9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Where: Flagler County Public Library, 25500 Palm Coast Parkway NW, Palm Coast
Details: The Friends of the Flagler County Public Library are hosting a book and bake sale.
REMEMBERING HEROES
COUNTRY BBQ When: 12-4 p.m.
Where: 2K Ranch of Bunnell, 6067 Tangerine Ave., Bunnell
Details: Remembering Heroes and 2K Ranch are hosting a fundraiser to support veterans, first responders, Gold Star military families and local community heroes. There will be food, games, vendors and raffles. Donations of $25 per person requested; children 6 and under are free.
Young historians: Historical Society hosts first summer day camp
The OBHS “Discover and Explore Ormond Beach Summer Camp” aims to teach youth about their hometown’s local history.
JARLEENE ALMENAS
MANAGING EDITORNova Neumann was at Fortunato Park with his mother when he first heard about the Ormond Beach Historical Society’s first summer day camp.
The 11-year-old knew immediately he wanted to be a part of it.
“This summer camp has just been amazing so far,” Nova said.
The historical society’s “Discover and Explore Ormond Beach Summer Camp” started on Monday, June 10, and runs through Friday, June 14. A total of 19 children enrolled for the inaugural camp, which is aimed at educating the campers about Ormond Beach’s history — the people, places and events that shaped the town.
The summer camp has 30 volunteers in total, many of whom were teachers.
When Jayne Fifer — who retired from her position as president and CEO of the Volusia Manufacturers Association in December 2023 — became part of the OBHS board, she was asked to find ways to enhance the organization’s children’s program.
Fifer suggested a summer camp,
It’s an initiative that had long been a dream of Erlene Turner, who serves as the education chair for OBHS.
and when OBHS President Mary Smith heard about it, she was onboard right away.
“They came to me and I’m like,
‘That’s the best idea I’ve ever heard,’” Smith said.
Fifer has worked with boards for many years. She said she has never
seen support for a volunteer initiative like this one.
“I have never, in my 40 professional years, have I ever worked with a volunteer team as committed and enthusiastic and engaged as the core group, the planning group, that put this together,” Fifer said.
The mission has always been the education and preservation of Ormond Beach history and surrounding areas, Turner said.
“It has always been my mindset and my understanding that when we teach a skill at a young age, they remember it more and then it becomes a part of them,” Turner said.
When children get excited about learning, she said, they share their knowledge with their parents and their peers.
“Then, they’ll take this history out to the community,” she added.
The summer camp taught students about the Timicua Indians on the first day, which included a field trip down the street from the Anderson-Price Memorial Building to see the Ormond Beach Indian Mound and making their own mounds out of clay. On the second day, campers learned about plantations, the Three Chimneys Sugar Mill, important early settlers and made molasses cookies.
For Nova, baking the cookies was the highlight of the camp so far.
“The most super cool thing about the cookies is – not just how they tasted — it’s just because we put molasses inside of the cookies,” Nova said.
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SPORTS
Summer kicks
FPC, Seabreeze soccer players square off on 7v7 opening night.
BRENT WORONOFF
ASSOCIATE EDITORLast year, Flagler Palm Coast had two girls teams in the 7v7 high school summer soccer league. This year, coach Pete Hald decided to go with one team of 13 players.
“It’s kind of like a stacked team vs. last year when we split everything up,” Hald said.
FPC’s team — the Palm Coast Blasters — defeated the Crabsters 5-1 on Wednesday, June 5, on the opening night for the girls teams in the Royal Palms SC 7v7 High School Soccer League at the Indian Trails Sports Complex.
None of the Crabsters, representing Seabreeze and the Ormond Beach Soccer Club, have played high school soccer yet. Most of the players are incoming freshmen with a few seventh and eighth graders mixed in.
Unlike FPC, Seabreeze has two teams in the six-team league. The Claw fell to a Spruce Creek squad 7-0.
Christine Goebel, the coach of the Crabsters, said her young players held their own against the Blasters’ stacked team. The score was 3-1 before the Blasters added two late goals.
“That was not a 5-1 game,” Goebel said. “They did a good job finishing their chances, and we didn’t. We didn’t have as many chances to capitalize on, but we got a goal, and I was thrilled with that. The score doesn’t really portray how well we played the majority of the game.”
Gabby Dioquino scored for Seabreeze. Erin Hughes had two
goals for FPC, while Skyler Strickland, Hailey Sammons and Isabella Kummernes each added a goal.
“The competition was good,” said Hald, who played two groups of field players, substituting six players at a time in three- to five-minute increments.
“It’s a hard game because there’s so much more movement,” Hald said. “In 11 on 11, you’re off the ball a lot, you can rest. Here, you don’t have a whole lot of time to rest. You get more touches on the ball. You’re
involved more, which is makes it a better game, to get better at the game.”
The atmosphere is more relaxed, Hald said.
“We want them to be serious, but I want them to have serious fun.”
The boys opened league play on Tuesday, June 4, with FPC’s two teams each winning. FPC’s Team 2 defeated the Panthers of Palatka 6-0. FPC Team 1 defeated the Flashes FB Club, representing St. Joseph Academy, 8-4.
There are six boys and teams and six girls teams in the league which will continue on Tuesday and Wednesday evenings through the end of July, said Ramtin Amiri, FPC’s boys soccer coach, who runs the summer league.
The other boys teams in the league are from Crescent City and St. Augustine Pedro Menendez. The girls teams include two teams from Spruce Creek and one from Menendez in addition to FPC and two Seabreeze squads.
“We
want them to be serious, but I want them to have serious fun.”
Matanzas wrestling teams to have new coach after entire staff resigns
Head coach Mike Fries resigned, effective at the end of the year, but tried to withdraw his resignation, parents say
BRENT WORONOFF
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
In the past three seasons, Matanzas High School’s wrestling program earned a state team championship while four wrestlers won individual state titles.
Now the program will be starting from scratch. All of the school’s wrestling coaches have resigned, according to school administrators and wrestlers’ parents.
The Pirates are finalizing the hiring of a new head coach, Principal Kristin Bozeman said.
“We hope to be able to make that announcement here in the next few days or weeks,” Bozeman said on
“He submitted his resignation. We accepted that resignation. And we’re moving forward. Of course, I wish Mike the best. The record speaks for itself.”
Thursday, June 6. “We’re looking to move forward for the future of our program and for the betterment of our students.”
Head coach Mike Fries originally resigned during this past wrestling season, effective at the end of the year, but later tried to withdraw his resignation, according to parents. The withdrawal was not accepted, parents said, even after some parents met with school administrators asking to allow him to come back. One parent said they spoke with Flagler Schools Superintendent LaShakia Moore, and she told them it was the principal’s decision.
Bozeman said Fries continues to be a teacher at Matanzas.
“Mr. Fries submitted his resignation and that’s really about all I can tell you. I’m really not supposed to talk about personnel matters,” she said. “He submitted his resignation. We accepted that resignation. And we’re moving forward. Of course, I wish Mike the best. The record speaks for itself.”
Fries did not respond to texts and phone messages from the Observer for this story other than to say he is no longer with the team.
He led the Pirates’ girls wrestling team to the 2023 state championship, the first team championship in school history. The girls team also placed third at state in 2022 and 2024.
Fries’ daughter, Tiana Fries, won a state championship in 2022, the first year the Florida High School Athletic Association sanctioned a girls wrestling state tournament. Kendall Bibla won a state title in 2023, and Jordan and Mariah Mills won championships this year, becoming the first brother and sister to win state wrestling titles in the same season.
Five Matanzas wrestlers have also been state runners-up since 2022,
including senior Brielle Bibla in 2023. The Bibla sisters live in St. Johns County. They had attended Tocoi Creek High School in 2021-22, but their parents decided to home school them the following year so that they could wrestle for Fries at Matanzas.
Kendall Bibla will be a senior in the upcoming school year.
Fries, the former head wrestling coach at Seabreeze High, had been with the Pirates’ program since 202122. He took over the girls team the following season when John White stepped down. With head boys coach
T.J. Gillin deciding this past season to step back to an assistant’s role to spend more time with his family,
Fries became lead coach for both the boys and girls. The Pirates had six wrestling coaches, including Fries and Gillin, on staff this past school year. With the girls and boys teams often traveling to separate tournaments throughout the season, Fries had requested additional coaches, parents said. After Fries resigned, the rest of the staff followed him, Matanzas athletic director Jordan Butler said. Butler said the school has selected a new head coach who is going through the school district’s onboarding process. Rachel Mills said Fries was more
than a coach for her four children who have wrestled with the Pirates and Fries’ Legend Athletics wrestling club.
“Coach Fries was not just a coach, he was a friend and a mentor for life,” she said. “I can’t even count how many hours he spent outside of school hours teaching and encouraging my children and other athletes to reach all their goals that didn’t even pertain to wrestling. He encouraged his athletes to become better humans and sincerely wanted them to succeed in all aspects of life.”
Elite eight: Flagler Palm Coast’s Halliday is finalist for Coach of the Year
For the second time, David Halliday has been chosen as one of eight finalists for the National Boys Track and Field Coach of the Year award.
BRENT WORONOFF
ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Win or lose, Flagler Palm Coast’s David Halliday is honored to be a finalist for the second time for the National Boys Track and Field Coach of the Year award.
The winner will be announced at the National High School Athletic Coaches Association’s Coach of the Year banquet on June 26 in Bismarck, North Dakota.
Halliday is one of eight finalists for the award. He was nominated by the Florida Athletic Coaches Association to represent the state. He was also nominated by the FACA in 2018 and was a finalist that year too.
“It’s always nice to be recognized,” said Halliday, who has been a track and field and cross country coach for 30 years, including the past 20 at FPC. “If you get nominated representing the entire state of Florida that’s a nice thing, and be picked as the final eight, that’s pretty good. It’s a tribute to the kids and coaches who work with me. Obviously, I’m not a one-man show. You’ve got to
have great kids and great assistant coaches. It’s nice to be recognized, but it takes a lot people behind the scenes.”
The award is based on career achievement, and Halliday has accomplished a great deal during his career. His boys track and field teams have won three state championships. He led FPC to state titles in 2007 and 2009 and also coached Lake City Columbia to a state championship in 2002. Since he was last nominated for the award, he has led the Bulldogs to a state runner-up finish in 2019
and a fourth-place finish in 2023.
Halliday was inducted into the FACA Hall of Fame in 2014 and the Florida Track and Field Hall of Fame in 2017.
He considers one of the other finalists, Scott Christensen of Stillwater High in Minnesota, as a mentor.
“When I got my USA Track and Field Level 2 Coaching Certification in 1998, he was one of the instructors,” Halliday said. “He invited me in 2014 to speak to the Minnesota coaches association, and he spoke in
FPC wrestlers win freestyle titles
BRENT WORONOFF ASSOCIATE EDITORFlagler Palm Coast wrestling coach David Bossardet doesn’t want Joslyn Johnson to worry about cutting weight. The high school girls state champion cut a lot of weight to stay at 100 pounds during the season, Bossardet said.
27th in the nation at 100 pounds, qualified for the Nationals in Fargo, North Dakota, in July. Mills, who won the 107-pound title in April at the NHSCA High School Nationals in Virginia Beach, will also be at Fargo. Mills is ranked 13th nationally at 110 pounds.
Florida in 2016 and 2020.”
Halliday will be one of the speakers at the week-long coaches convention in Bismarck
“If you’re one of Coach of the Year finalists you can speak,” he said. “That’s always fun, sharing with other coaches.”
Halliday is a graduate of Seabreeze High School and the University of Florida, and before moving to Flagler County, he earned his master’s degree in sports management at Florida State while his wife, Kim Halliday — who is Flagler Schools’
COACH OF YEAR FINALISTS
The eight finalists for the 2024 NHSACA Boys Track and of Coach of the Year award:
David Halliday, FPC, Florida Josh Allmaras, Kindred High, North Dakota
Shane Baltz, Senatobia High, Mississippi
Scott Christensen, Stillwater High, Minnesota
Tim Daggert, Classicao Academy, Colorado
Dave Sellon, Fremont High, Nebraska
Rob Stanton, Billings West High, Montana
Clinton Tabb, Pennsauken, New Jersey
director of Exceptional Student Education — was earning her PhD.
“He’s one of the best coaches I’ve seen in the state of Florida in any sport,” FPC Principal Bobby Bossardet said, noting that Halliday’s athletes are as accomplished in the classroom as they are on the track.
“At the track and field banquet there were a number of kids with GPAs above 3.0, 4.0 and 5.0,” Bossardet said. “That’s exactly what you want in a head coach. He cares about his kids and holds them to a high standard academically.”
Bulldogs’ signees
FPC had another athletic celebration before the end of the school year as 10 athletes signed national letters of intent to continue their athletic careers in college.
The signees were:
Sidney Vinnick — Cheerleading (Florida Atlantic University)
Lily Puritis — Volleyball (Coker University)
Brandon Calidonio — Lacrosse (Wingate University)
Hayden Herndon — Cross Country (Daytona State College)
Kaitlyn Holley — Soccer (Webber International University)
Ethan Laupepa — Wrestling (Northeastern Oklahoma A&M; College)
Johnson avenged a loss earlier this spring to South Dade’s Beyonce Espinosa. She won by technical fall over Espinosa to advance to the final against Mills.
Alyssia Ray — Cheerleading (Austin Peay University))
Gwen Vargas — Lacrosse (St. Thomas University)
Toryion Stallings — Wrestling (Northeastern Oklahoma A&M; College)
Track appreciation
Mainland’s track and field coaches recently honored Observer photojournalist Michele Meyers. New volleyball coach
Lindsey Stewart is FPC’s new volleyball coach. Stewart played volleyball at Bryan College and Webber International University. She coached Power Volleyball and OTVA Volleyball clubs. She will also teach social studies at the school.
Pirates’ Miller named top libero Matanzas rising junior Rylan Miller has been named the top volleyball libero in Florida by Prep Dig.
So, Johnson has jumped up to the 115-pound class this spring. In her fourth tournament in that weight class, she won the junior title at the Florida Amateur Wrestling Association Freestyle State Championships on June 1 at the Silver Spurs Arena in Kissimmee.
Johnson beat another state champ in the title match, winning by technical fall over Matanzas’ Mariah Mills.
“Mariah is one of the best in the country,” Bossardet said. “Joslyn won that match that day, but it’s very important we keep things in perspective. Mariah Mills is as tough as they come. And we better be ready if we wrestle her again.”
FPC’s Alisha Vilar also won a title at the FAWA Freestyle State Championships. Vilar won the 145-pound class in the 16U division. Kevin McLean, who will be a freshman at FPC in August, placed third at 113 pounds in the boys 16U division.
Johnson, who is currently ranked
Johnson, who will be a junior in August, has been adjusting to the 115-pound weight class, Bossardet said.
“It’s a big jump from 100 to 115,” he said. “You have to make soe adjustments and I think she’s been doing that. We’ve spent a lot of time in the weight room, and we want Joslyn focusing on getting stronger and getting better technically rather than losing weight.”
Vilar, an incoming sophomore, won her second tournament of the spring.
“She’s still relatively new to the sport,” Bossardet said. “But she continues to get better every time she steps onto the mat.”
As an eight grader, McLean wrestled for St. Johns Country Day and placed third at the Class 1A state championships at 106 pounds.
Kelton Howard — Wrestling (Neosho Community College
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