Teacher exchange program


Slow down, Palm Coast




Upgrades planned for cell tower off Rymfire Drive
The cell tower in Ralph Carter Park on Rymfire Drive should receive an equipment upgrade in the coming weeks and months.
The cell tower is up for a third update to the leasing agreement.
The first two updates happened in 2008 and 2012 in reference to rent and rental payments, according to meeting documents.


Director of Information Technology Doug Akins said the tower was built in 2008. T-Mobile is the sole provider on the tower, since it bought out MetroPCS over a decade ago, and Sprint more recently in 2020.
The lease agreement is for 30 years, Akins said, but T-Mobile is looking to upgrade its equipment at the site. Since that requires an update to the leasing agreement, Akins said, staff is updating the language in the lease at the same time.
Akins said T-Mobile will be putting up new antennas to provide better service to its customers, and could begin work as soon as the agreement is approved at the following City Council meetings.
Affordable housing incentives considered City prepares to update priority projects
The Affordable Housing Advisory Committee has presented its annual recommendation report for the City Council’s review, and some council members have concerns.
The Palm Coast City Council heard the report and AHAC’s recommendations at a council workshop on Tuesday, Jan. 10. The recommendations, if approved, would allow members on AHAC to further investigate and explore affordable housing development possibilities.
Under state law, the committee must annually review and recommend incentive strategies to promote affordable housing, said Joseph Hegedus, Flagler County’s health and human services director. Hegedus, alongside Housing Program Manager Devrie Paradowski and Jose Papa, senior planner for the city, presented the recommendations to the council.
The committee is required to review 10 incentives from the state, Hegedus said. While AHAC is required to submit some incentive strategies, those 10 listed incentives are not required to be among them.
“It is really meant to provide a menu of ideas for communities to consider,” Hegedus said.


The incentives presented on Tuesday are part of an annual update to incentives in the Local Housing Assistance Plan, which is a joint housing program under both the city and county. LHAP is a subsection of the county’s State Housing Initiative Partnership program.
The committee had three recommendations for the council to consider. First, to develop an ordinance for planned affordable housing developments.
Flagler County has already adopted one such ordinance, Papa said: It defines and outlines the requirements developers must meet for a development to be considered an affordable housing development.
The second recommendation would be to publish on the city’s website an inventory of surplus lands owned by the city that are suitable for housing development.
The goal, Papa said, would be to allow nonprofits like Habitat for
Humanity to see what land might be suitable for building a single-family home, for example.
Flagler County has its own published list of surplus land suitable for housing on its website.

Finally, the committee recommended creating an affordable housing trust fund to help fund affordable housing development incentives. Papa said the broadness of that trust fund would allow the funding to be used for multiple different affordable housing development programs.
“These are recommendations; these are not going to establish policies,” Papa said. “It allows us to move forward and investigate [the possibilities].”
Councilwoman Cathy Heighter — who has recently assumed a position on AHAC — and Councilman Ed Danko were both skeptical about the recommendation to list surplus land.

Danko said that he was somewhat confused by the recommendation; he said if the city had a surplus of city-owned lands, the city should be selling it to the highest bidder to gain extra revenue for the city’s budget.
“I’m not in favor of just giving away property, if that’s what this means,” Danko said. “And I’m not quite sure what this really means.”
Heighter, meanwhile, had questions about whether the surplus land would be sold to the highest bidder or handed out to nonprofits.
Hegedus said state law doesn’t dictate what has to be done with a property, and instead focuses on identifying opportunities.
“My understanding of the statute is that it mainly requires identifying, it doesn’t actually dictate sale or development,” Hegedus said. “It doesn’t require that it be sold to a nonprofit or a developer.”
Papa reminded the council that these recommendations are a required part of their annual report, to be submitted by the state. They remain recommendations, not policy, and give AHAC room to investigate, he said.
Palm Coast Mayor David Alfin commended the presenters and AHAC on its growth since he was last on the committee as chair. AHAC puts the council members in a better place to ask informed questions, Alfin said.
“Certainly,” Alfin said, “the county is taking note of these ad-hoc recommendations — and the city will as well.”
The City Council heard updates on the city’s Strategic Action Plan on Tuesday, planning for the city’s westward expansion and potential field trip initiative for middle schoolers, among other items.

At the Jan. 10 workshop, council members and the public heard which projects the city is focusing on in the SAP, which Palm Coast Mayor David Alfin called a “cornerstone and fundamental building block” of the city’s budget process.



The SAP process assembles each council member’s initiatives to define a vision for staff to budget, Alfin said.
“[The] city council vision is an ongoing process built on past and current council priorities and initiatives,” he said.
The SAP is built upon four core “pillars” or priorities, Assistant City Manager Lauren Johnston said: a strong resilient economy, safe and reliable services, civic engagement and sustainable environment and infrastructure.
Projects under these areas vary from ongoing focus areas — like the westward expansion — to newer initiatives, like creating a school field trip for seventh graders to learn more about local government.
The council will meet individually with staff and then again throughout the spring collectively to update and modify the SAP. SAP priorities will be updated in May and presented again in June.
“It is my intention to accept our council responsibility for achieving a financially conservative budget that supports council’s vision with the least tax liability to residents possible,” Alfin said.
City Council looks for proactive solutions for roadway safety
After hearing a presentation from city staff on how the city handles traffic safety concerns, the council is hoping to find solutions.
SIERRA WILLIAMS STAFF WRITERMembers of Palm Coast’s City Council on Tuesday said they want to be proactive about roadway safety.
In a Jan. 10 City Council workshop meeting, city staff gave a presentation on the city’s process for investigating roadway safety, discussing issues like speed radar studies, signage, sidewalks and preventative safety measures as well as how city staff responds to safety concerns.
The presentation outlined several pros and cons for preventative safety measures, and Councilman Ed Danko suggested the city try to bring awareness to safety concerns in the city.
“We’ve seen an increase in bad driving,” Danko said. “And not just in Palm Coast.”
Danko suggested the idea, brought up in a one-on-one discussion he’d with Michael Grunewald, the traffic engineer who presented the study on Tuesday,Jan. 10, to work with the public, the Flagler County Sheriff’s Office and media for a public awareness push for safe driving.
“Maybe a driving safety month of some degree, where we really make a push on getting people to pay a little more attention behind the wheel,” Danko said.
Grunewald said the presentation was intended to inform council members and the public about the policy and process in place to handle traffic safety.
The city follows a process to investigate, identify and then apply solutions for traffic safety concerns, Grunewald said.
Palm Coast has 439 miles of residential roadways and 103 miles of arterial roadways, which are designed to carry heavy levels of traffic, Grunewald said.
Each month, the city receives
between 10 and 15 resident-submitted concerns through various sources like Palm Coast Connect, calls to City Hall, comments at City Council meetings and staff observations.
“Without these reports from our residents, we couldn’t possibly know where the problems might be,” Grunewald said.
The city has implemented several safety initiatives in Palm Coast, Grunewald said, including conducting a feasibility study for retrofitting residential areas with sidewalks.

The results of that study, however, were less positive than some had hoped: Adding sidewalks is “not feasible,” the study found, because of high installation costs.
Retrofitting residential areas with sidewalks would also require easements from each property owner, plus driveway reconstruction, Grunewald said.
The city also conducts speed studies when it receives concerns, Grunewald said.
The studies are conducted by placing radar speed recorders in position for seven days. The data from the studies is analyzed and later forwarded to the Flagler County Sheriff’s Office.
Ideally, Grunewald said, if 85% of traffic is found to be going in a “normal” speed range — defined as 7 mph above or below the speed limit — the area is considered in a normal range, and no action is taken.
Many residents, he said, ask about adding speeding-deterrents speed radars on signs and speed bumps.
Grunewald said deterrents like those are called “traffic calming” methods and come with their own pros and cons.
Traffic calming is using mainly physical means to “reduce the negative effects of motor vehicle use, alter driver behavior and improve conditions for non-motorized street users,” according to the Institute for Transportation Engineers.
Landscaped median roadways on residential streets, speed limit radar signs and speed bumps, humps and tables are all considered traffic calming method, Grunewald said.
Palm Coast has landscaped roadway medians already in many residential neighborhoods, Grunewald
said.
These medians, like speed bumps, are meant to slow traffic.
But anything that slows regular traffic will also slow down emergency service vehicles.
The city cited several sources studying the effect speed humps had on fire rescue times.
A study from Portland, Oregon, found that 14- and 22-foot speed humps could cause up to a 9-second delay in fire rescue, per speed hump.
Fire Chief Kyle Berryhill said it takes longer for larger vehicles like fire trucks to slow down and accelerate, which adds to the response time.
“Everything that calms traffic calms a fire truck and calms a police car and an ambulance,” Berryhill said. “There’s a double-edged sword.”
While speed bumps do work to slow drivers, Grunewald said they also have other unintended consequences like high acceleration rates after the hump, extreme road noise and more, according to a study from the Iowa Department of Transportation.
On the other hand, speed radar signs — already present in Palm Coast on Florida Park Drive and Casper Drive — do mildly reduce speed in the short term.
But studies show that the more radar signs there are, the less effective they are, Grunewald said.
Speed radar signs also become less effective overall as more time passes.
“As drivers get used to them over time, they start ignoring them, because it’s just part of the landscape,” Grunewald said.
One way around that would be to move the radars around to new areas every few weeks, he said.
Councilwoman Theresa Carli Pontieri expressed concern that the public had not been engaged about the listed unintended consequences.
“I don’t want our residents to be discouraged,” Pontieri said. “Because from the presentation it kind of seems like we’re doing everything we can. ... In my mind, this is kind of a report as to where we are right now.”
Grunewald said one of the benefits of getting reports from residents is that the reports don’t get forgotten. Even if city staff goes out multiple times to study the same spot, he said, every time staff members go out adds another data point toward finding a solution.
“The door is never shut,” he said.
Pontieri said she wanted to reassure residents that the city will continue looking for solutions.
“I don’t want us to be sitting here six months from now talking about a child that got hit by a car,” she said. “I don’t want us acting retroactively rather than proactively.”
City Council hears plan for saltwater canal survey
The council heard from city staff and project engineers on what the first phase of the project will look like.
SIERRA WILLIAMS STAFF WRITERSome of Palm Coast’s saltwater canals are no longer deep enough for boats at low tide. An engineering firm is proposing a three-phase process to study the problem and dredge the canals.

At a Jan. 10 meeting, the Palm Coast City Council heard from city staff and representatives of Taylor Engineering, Inc., the consultation firm that will be handling the study and, potentially, the dredging work.

The firm has more than 30 years of experience in water-related issues, according to its website.
Councilman Ed Danko has been vocal in his support of a saltwater canal survey and said he was excited to see representatives from the firm at Tuesday’s meeting.
“I started pushing for this over a year and a half ago,” Danko said.
Taylor Engineering’s proposal was one of three proposals submitted last spring to conduct the survey. The city committed to the firm in May of 2022.
Deputy Director of Stormwater & Engineering Don Schrager presented Taylor Engineering’s three-phase approach to the project.
Phase 1 would be the initial assessment, taking from six to seven months. Phase 2 is design and per-
mitting, estimated to take 18 to 24 months, followed by the construction Phase 3.
“Once we’re at a base level, [then] we can talk about establishing ongoing maintenance,” Schrager said.
The city budgeted $180,000 in the capital projects fund for the saltwater canal study, and Taylor Engineering’s phase one is estimated to cost $175,952, leaving a surplus of just over $4,000, the report said.
In Phase 1, Taylor Engineering will research existing information and permitting requirements for dredging. Since the canals were designed and built in the ’70s and ’80s, Schrager said, the firm will need to research what legal requirements they might need to meet.
“The meat of the whole Phase 1 is data collection,” Schrager said.
The firm’s services, according Schrager’s presentation, will also include sampling material from the canal floor and conducting a bathymetric survey of the existing canals.
A bathymetric survey will measure the actual depth of the canal’s floor and map it.
That data will will help teams decide priority areas for dredging, phasing recommendations and even where to dispose of the dredged material.
“What we dig out of there,” Schrager said, “determines how we stockpile it, where we dispose of it — or even if we can repurpose it.”
The firm will also search for potential sources of funding for the project, design a schedule and then
CANAL PRESENTATION
Who: Taylor Engineering, Inc. — a consulting and engineering firm with over 30 years of experience in water-related challenges and solutions, according to its website.
What: The saltwater canal dredging study will study the current state of Palm Coast’s canals and design and, later, implement the
present a final report to City Council. Terrance Cake and Ken Craig, both with Taylor Engineering, will be in charge of the project. Craig said they have a lot of experience working on similar projects of varying scales.
solutions. Afterward, the city hopes to develop a maintenance program.
When: Taylor Engineering has proposed a three-phase approach. Phase 1 is the study, including research and sampling, and is expected to take six to seven months. Phase 2 could take 18 to 24 months for design and permit-
“I’m excited to see what you guys come up with,” Danko said.
Danko asked if part of the study would include a plan for future maintenance, such as occasional dredging or a permanent system for the city.
ting. Phase 3 does not have an estimated timeline.
How much: Phase one is expected to cost $175,952. The city had budgeted $180,000 for the study, leaving just over $4,000 remaining. While there is not a cost estimate for the later phases yet, part of Phase 1 will include searching for funding sources, including grants.
Cake said the last step of the study will include working out a proactive plan for the city.
“I just don’t want to see us in this situation — 20 years from now — again,” Danko said.
“I just don’t want to see us in this situation — 20 years from now — again.”
“Once we’re at a base level, [then] we can talk about establishing ongoing maintenance.”
DON SCHRAGER, deputy director of Stormwater & Engineering
SALTWATER
“I don’t want us to be sitting here six months from now talking about a child that got hit by a car. I don’t want us acting retroactively rather than proactively.”
THERESA CARLI PONTIERI, CouncilwomanThe dredging study will focus on the state of Palm Coast’s saltwater canals and later implement design solutions. Photo by Jonathan Simmons
United Way report: Over 19,000 local veterans struggling financially
CHALLENGE OF RISING COSTS



Affordable housing is one of the critical factors for veterans in ALICE households.
The report found that 78% of ALICE veterans in Volusia and Flagler are rent-burdened, meaning they are spending more than onethird of their income on housing.
JARLEENE ALMENAS SENIOR EDITOROver a third of veterans living in Volusia and Flagler counties are living in financial hardship, according to findings from a report by United Way of Volusia-Flagler Counties and United For ALICE.
United Way’s latest “ALICE in Focus: Veterans” report found that more than 19,000, or 34%, of veterans in the two-county area are considered “ALICE” households — ALICE stands for Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed — or live below the ALICE threshold.
ALICE households earn more than the federal poverty level, but less than is needed due to the cost of living, according to a press release by United Way.
The number seems higher than people would expect given the number of resources that are available to veterans, such as access to health care, home loans and the GI Bill, which covers college tuition, said Amanda Lasecki, vice president of operations at United Way of VolusiaFlagler Counties.



The ALICE report found that over 54% of eligible ALICE veterans don’t have health insurance. Over 34% are not receiving Supplemental Security Income.
“One would think, because they have access to those benefits, that they would actually have a higher standard of living, and would be less likely to fall into the ALICE population,” Lasecki said. “So what I think was a surprising takeaway was just the amount of veterans that are not accessing those benefits.”

The report examines barriers keeping veterans below the ALICE threshold.
A higher percentage — 82% — are cost-burdened, which mean they spend over 35% of their income on rent or mortgage, plus utilities, taxes and insurance. They are more likely to experience housing insecurity and are at a greater risk of becoming homeless, United Way reported.
With the increasing cost of rent, it’s becoming more difficult for organizations like Halifax Urban Ministries to connect people with housing they can afford, said HUM Executive Director Buck James. HUM’s free Barracks of Hope program provides transitional housing to veterans who have struggled with homelessness, addiction and mental health.
“I think more people in every category are reaching out for help, and that would include veterans,” James said. “As costs continue to escalate, it’s just becoming more difficult for everyone.”
In addition to Barracks of Hope, HUM also has homeless prevention programs to help people with onetime emergency costs, and operates several food local pantries. The fact that the number of veterans who are ALICE is over 19,000 is not a big surprise, given the significant number of ALICE households overall, James said.
In the 2020 ALICE reports, 33% of Volusia County households were ALICE. In Flagler County, it was 30%.


“There are many people in Volusia County who are struggling, that are living paycheck to paycheck,” James said. “I think with recent economic issues it’s probably even getting worse.”
TRAINING FOR BETTER JOBS
Lasecki echoed James’ observations. The availability of affordable housing is very low, and housing for
Section 8, the federal government’s housing choice voucher program, is just “non-existent,” Lasecki said.


One solution is to help veterans get higher-paying jobs to be able to afford the rising cost of rent. Initiatives such as CareerSource’s Veterans Services are a great resource, Lasecki said.
CareerSource provides employment training to dislocated workers and adults who need skills to compete in the market, and veterans and their eligible spouses have first priority, said Robin King, president and CEO of CareerSource Flagler Volusia.


CareerSource has five veteran representatives who work specifically with disabled veterans or veterans who are dealing with extra barriers, such as homelessness. In addition, she said, all of her staff are always updated with the latest information to make sure they can better help whoever walks in seeking assistance.

And as someone who is on the board of United Way, she concurred that the statistics about veterans in ALICE households are not surprising.
“It helps validate to potential funders and others saying we have a need,” King said. “These are men and women who served our country, and
we need to be working with them.”
Helping veterans access and understand their GI bill benefits can also make an impact. The ALICE report found that only 22% of ALICE veterans have an associate or bachelor’s degree. Lasecki said that was one of the most surprising findings of the report. She explained that United Way discovered many veterans are going straight into the workforce after being discharged from the military.
“They’re raising their families,” Lasecki said. “A lot of times at this point in their life, they’re a little bit older than a traditional 18-year-old who’s going straight into college, and just along the lines of others that work full time, it’s hard to go to school as well and balance those.”
But a bachelor’s degree isn’t always the answer, King said. Education certainly is, but in Volusia County, one of the highest paying labor sectors is manufacturing.

“It has such a career pathway that — like all jobs, occupations, or careers — you start off at entry level, but we have more companies that are doing apprenticeship programs ... and building their own pipeline of talent,” King said. “I think more businesses are going to start doing
that, because there aren’t a lot of other people to attract. So you need to build your own.”
ACCESSING BENEFITS



When separating from active duty, veterans typically face specific challenges that the general population may not, Lasecki said. She listed mental health and difficulty accessing services as examples.
“Some of the services are very paperwork-oriented, where it’s going to require a lot of documentation and a lot of paperwork,” she said. “Although they’re entitled to those benefits, they may not be able to actually get all of their benefits just because of the burden that’s required to access those benefits.”
That may be the case for the number of veterans who are not receiving SSI, so raising awareness of these challenges and encouraging programs to assist veterans in this regard “is going to have a huge return on investment,” Lasecki said.

Spreading the word about the resources available is a challenge, King said. Sometimes, programs find that some veterans may not trust government-funded initiaves, she added, and that’s where CareerSource’s vet reps can help. One of the first questions her team asks people who walk into the center is if they are veterans.
“I’m very proud of my team that they come from this background,” she said. “They understand who they’re working with, and they just are always coming up with innovative ideas on how to better serve our community.”
HUM tries to do its part to help. James said it works with veterans to ensure they are receiving all of the benefits for which they are eligible. It’s an issue that’s important to address, he added.
“Certainly when we’re talking about serving our veterans, we should do everything that we can to serve those who had done so much to serve us,” James said. “And so we’re committed to that, and I know so many people in our community are.”
County Commission approves funding for northern dune project
project.
Of the overall $3.6 million project cost, 75% will be reimbursed by FEMA, Financial Services Director John Brower told commissioners.
The agenda item had several parts, which Brower and County Engineer Faith Alkhatib explained to commissioners.
opment Council’s Capital Projects Fund to support the restoration project. The $2 million would be an inter-loan, to be reimbursed through the $5 million for emergency sand the county received in December, according to meeting documents.
SIERRA WILLIAMS STAFF WRITERThe Flagler County Commission met for its first regular meeting of 2023 on Monday, Jan. 9, approving funding for a dune restoration project in the northern part of the county and a land use change in Plantation Bay.
All five commissioners were present, with Commissioner David Sullivan back at work after he had a stroke in December.
NORTH FLAGLER DUNE RESTORATION PROJECTThe commission voted unanimously to approve funding for the North Flagler County Dune Restoration
The first two parts were to approve a bid for for Eastman Aggregate Enterprises, LLC, for the construction of the North Flagler project, and to approve a professional services agreement with Eisman & Russo for the construction engineering and inspection services for the project, according to meeting documents.
The county’s 25% funding match for the North Flagler restoration will come from the county government and the Florida Department of Emergency Management.


Because of higher than anticipated costs, an additional $118,124 is needed for the local match, Brower said.
Alkhatib also asked the board for $2 million from the Tourist Devel -
Sullivan was concerned about approving the $2 million without leaving room for the TDC to approve or not, since the money would be coming from the TDC’s budget.
Alkhatib said the item was added to the board’s agenda to avoid delays. The TDC doesn’t meet until Jan. 18, so if the commission waited for the TDC’s approval, the commission would not be able to vote on the item until February, which would further delay the start of the project.
The board voted 5-0 to approve the bid and service agreement and to pay for the $118,000 out of the TDC budget, since that item had been approved in a TDC meeting.
The $2 million, however, will be taken out of the county’s general fund rather than the TDC’s Capital
Projects Fund.
It will be reimbursed using either the $5 million or TDC money, if the TDC approves the item at its next meeting.
HUNTER’S RIDGE DEVELOPMENT

The Hunter’s Ridge Development was up for a seventh amendment to its development order agreement, but most of the items county staff and the applicant disagreed with coming into the meeting were changed during discussion at the podium.
The items that spurred disagreement ranged from an equestrian trailhead access to notifying Ormond Beach about development changes.
So many changes were made to the requests while staff and the applicant were at the podium that several commissioners at one point said they found it hard to follow along.
Commissioner Andy Dance said several items staff had listed seemed like “overduplications.”
“It wasn’t ready for us today,”
Palm Coast’s 30/30 health challenge begins
This year, citizens are encouraged to focus on their mental wellness as well as their physical fitness.
SIERRA WILLIAMS STAFF WRITERThe city of Palm Coast is beginning another year of the Mayor’s 30/30 Challenge, and the annual challenge — which has primarily focused on physical fitness in past years — will have a broader scope for 2023, according to a press release from the city of Palm Coast. This year, participants are encour-
aged to dedicate 30 minutes every day for the next 30 days to focus on their overall health and wellness, from exercise to self-care and stress relief. The challenge runs from Jan. 6 to Feb. 4.
“The beginning of a new year is a great time for a fresh start and a fresh outlook on your overall personal wellness,” Director of Parks and Recreation James Hirst said.
While participants can work on their own chosen 30-minute activity each day, the city has also put together a series of community activities for the month-long event.
On the first day, Jan. 6, the city hosted a “Kick-Off Walk” at Central Park. The other activities will be held over the coming weeks, culminating in the Tunnel To Towers 5K Run/
Walk on at 8 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 4, the press release said.
Residents can register for activities at the city’s website.
Palm Coast’s Parks and Recreation staff are hosting the activities and have worked to incorporate all aspects of wellness into this year’s challenge, the release said.

Kim Brown, Palm Coast’s Parks and Recreation coordinator of marketing, said the shift from a sole physical-fitness focus to overall health stems from mounting evidence that mental health and nature exposure are connected.
“We are realizing more and more that mental health plays a large part in quality of life,” Brown said.
A recent study from the National Recreation and Park Association
shows that nature and parks have a positive effect on mental health, Brown said, and it is already known that physical activity can also help improve a person’s mental health.
Brown said the challenge’s divergence from the standard physical focus is part of expanding overall wellness as a city initiative.
“The hope is for this to grow into a citywide initiative for an overall, yearlong commitment to residents’ health,” Brown said.
But even for those who don’t want to participate in a physical activity, she said, Parks and Recreation offers craft activities, or residents can try something out at home.
The point is to carve out time for self reflection and “indulge in something that satisfies the soul,” Brown


Dance said.
Sullivan said the county ought to give the developer the go-ahead on the project, rather than bringing them back to the commission repeatedly.
The commission voted 4-1 to continue the item to a February meeting in the hope that staff and the applicant can finalize agreements. Sullivan dissented.
PLANTATION BAY DESIGNATES
ACRES FOR RECREATION
40
Plantation Bay requested and received approval to change the future land use designation for 40 acres in its development.
The land will now be designated mixed use.
The applicant’s representative, Jerry Finley of Finley Engineering Solutions, said the applicant intends to turn the land into recreational use for residents in the Plantation Bay. The County Commission approved the request 5-0.
The city of Palm Coast is hosting several events for anyone who wants to participate in the 30/30 challenge. Here are the times and dates:
RUCK WITH JARED 8:30-9:30 a.m. Jan. 13 Wadsworth Park
PICKLEBALL TOURNAMENT 9 a.m. to 12 p.m. Jan. 14 Holland Memorial Park
GOPHER TORTOISE NATURE WALK 10-11 a.m. Jan. 19 Waterfront Park
NATURE WALK 10-11 a.m. Jan. 26 Linear Park
DOG WALK 10-11 a.m. Feb. 1 Central Park in Town Center
TUNNEL TO TOWERS 5K WALK/RUN 8 a.m. Feb. 4 Central Park in Town Center
said.
This year’s challenge is intended to encourage participants to take stock of their overall health by dedicating 30 minutes of their time each day.
“Whether that’s taking part in a nature walk, taking your dog for a walk, going to a yoga class or playing in our pickleball tournament, we wanted to make this year’s event something that was accessible to everyone and help them develop good habits that they can continue to use throughout 2023 and beyond,” Hirst said.
Flagler’s recent commission meeting saw approval for bid awards and funding for the North Flagler Dune Restoration Project.
Volusia County Council sets new meeting times
The Volusia County Council unanimously approved a hybrid start time for its meetings in 2023 in hopes of attracting greater public participation. Starting in February, the first meeting of every month will begin at 10 a.m., and the second meeting at 4 p.m.

The Jan. 17 meeting will remain at 9:30 a.m., as it has already been publicly advertised.
The County Council will gauge the public participation using the new start schedule to determine if it needs to be altered during a future meeting.
The schedule for the remainder of the 2023 County Council meetings is:
9:30 a.m. — Jan. 17
10 a.m. — Feb. 7, March 7, April 4, May 2, June 6, July 11, Aug. 1, Sept. 5, Oct. 3, Nov. 7, Dec. 5

4 p.m. — Feb. 21, March 21, April 18, May 16, June 20, Aug. 15, Sept. 19, Oct. 17, Nov. 21, Dec. 19
In 2024, the first meeting will be held on the first Thursday of the calendar year, Jan. 4. This meeting will start at 10 a.m.
The next meeting in 2024 will begin at 4 p.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 16.
Volusia County appoints two to leadership roles

The Volusia County Council approved the promotions of two employees to leadership roles within their divisions on Thursday, Jan. 5.
Joe King, a firefighter for 32 years, was named director and fire chief for Volusia County Fire Rescue, which has 221 employees and 19 fire stations.
He joined Fire Rescue in 2021 as deputy fire chief and was named interim director in July, when Howard Bailey retired.

Previously, he worked for Flagler County Fire Rescue as deputy fire chief from 20172021, and division chief and fire marshal from 2013-2017.

He also worked for the Ormond Beach Fire Department from 1990-2013, rising to the rank of captain.
After serving as the county’s assistant traffic engineer for the past 16 months, Jay Williams was selected to head the Traffic Engineering Division.

He will oversee transportation planning, traffic studies and the construction, operations and maintenance of traffic signals for the county.
Before joining the county’s staff, Williams spent 10 years with the Florida Department of Transportation, where he held various roles in the Traffic Operations Department.
While there, he oversaw FDOT’s traffic signal system, managed transportation infrastructure and technology projects and developed reports to improve roadway safety.

COPS CORNER
DEC. 3 DRY HANDS, STICKY FINGERS 7:15 p.m. — 1300 block of Hand Avenue, Ormond Beach Vandalism. A fast-food restaurant employee was sitting in the back office, which is near the men’s restroom, when he heard the paper towel dispenser being used. The machine emits a loud sound when it is dispensing paper towels, according to a police report.

The employee didn’t pay much attention to it until he heard the sound grow louder. Deciding to go see what was going on, he started making his way to the men’s restroom, and just as he was about to enter, he came face to face with a man between the ages of 30 and 40. The man was wearing a blue hoodie and had a shaved head, and looked the employee up and down before leaving the restaurant, the employee told police.
When the employee checked the restroom, he noticed the paper towel dispenser was no longer on the wall, and that it looked like a hole had been punched through the wall. He also noted that the changing station was damaged to the point that it no longer closed.
The employee, on behalf of the restaurant chain, wished to press charges.
DEC. 4
DRUNK DINING 3:36 p.m. — First block of South Atlantic Avenue, Ormond Beach
Obtain food or lodging with intent to defraud. Police arrested a 24-year-old Ormond Beach man who “dined and


dashed” from a local restaurant after ordering over $70 worth of food.
According to a police report, the man was identified by the restaurant’s manager after she spotted him behind a nearby funeral home. Police approached him, and the reporting officer noted the man appeared drunk, and that he was “verbally abusive and not cooperative.” The man was placed in handcuffs and refused to speak to police.

A witness told police that the man had left the restaurant without paying his $71.75 bill, leaving behind a bag, hat and sunglasses. Police discovered the man had less than $5 in change in his backpack, according to the police report, as well as a pipe and less than a gram of marijuana.
The man was taken to jail.
HOPS IN HAND 8:09 p.m. — 200 block of East Granada Boulevard, Ormond Beach Larceny. A retail pharmacy store manager called police after an unknown man in his 50s stole a four-pack of beer valued at $5.99.
The manager told police that the man had come in with a black bag and approached the beer coolers, and that when the man walked away, the bag “appeared fuller,” according to a police report.
The man, who had left the store, was spotted by police nearby carrying the pack of beer. He denied stealing the beer, and

claimed he “just had them.”
The beer was returned to the store, and no charges were filed. Police gave the man a courtesy ride to the city limits, according to the report.
DEC. 28
FAMILY FRAUD 12:12 p.m., Woodside Drive, Palm Coast Scheme to defraud. An 18-year-old was arrested on felony fraud charges after taking over $13,000 from his aunt’s bank account in just over a month.
The 18-year-old’s father, who has power of attorney over the aunt, pressed charg es against his son after re peatedly telling him to stop taking the money out, the report said. FCSO detectives found the 18-year-old had made 51 transactions in total — 47 to the man’s Cash App, one for PayPal and three to one of the man’s friends’ Cash App.
Deputies made contact with the 18-year-old, who admitted to them that he’d been taking money through his Cash App, the report said; the man also told deputies he’d taken a picture of the bank card “a long time ago.”
The man was arrested and taken to jail on fraud charges.
JAN. 1 CHECK YOUR (F)AXE 4:31 p.m., Llewellyn Trail, Palm Coast Burglary of a dwelling A man was arrested on Jan. 1 after attempting to break into a home with an axe.

A Flagler County Sheriff’s Office deputy was responding to an automated residential alarm on Llewellyn Trail in Palm Coast. When he got there, the deputy found three screens taken out from various windows and an
axe leaning against the wall beside a cracked window. The deputy then saw a man in the neighboring house’s back yard exiting the shed and walking toward the home. The man saw the deputy and approached him saying, “Oh, I think you’re here for me,” according to the report. The man tried to claim the home was his and the call was made because he’d lost his keys to get in.
When the deputy asked him for the home’s address, the man said initially said Jacksonville and then Africa, and claimed he was a deputy. The man admitted he used the axe to try to break the window, again claiming the house was
Contact was made with the actual homeowner and the suspect was arrested.
JAN. 2 LIVE IN DAYTONA BEACH 8:11 p.m. — 900 block of South Ridgewood Avenue, Daytona Beach Discharge firearm in public.
A man was walking on the sidewalk while filming himself live on social media when he heard someone walk up behind him. It was a woman, the man noted, and she was talking to herself — “gibberish,” according to a police report.
The woman, a 42-year-old Ormond Beach resident, was walking faster, and he let her pass him on the sidewalk before resuming his livestream.
Suddenly, the man saw her stop directly in front of a local motel and pull out a firearm.


She fired a single round, according to the report. The woman then fled east across South Ridgewood Avenue and entered a black pickup truck before the vehicle drove off.
Police spotted the pickup truck in a neighboring city and arrested the woman, a convicted felon.




































District eyes international teacher program
Teachers would be certified in areas of critical need and would stay in Flagler for up to five years.
BRENT WORONOFF ASSOCIATE EDITORFlagler Schools has had trouble filling some teaching positions. The district believes the answer is to go beyond borders by contracting with TPG Cultural Exchange to bring in certified teachers from other countries for a temporary stay of one to five years.


Fifteen Florida school districts are already using TPG, and that number is expected to rise to 18 next year, Flagler Schools’ Chief Human Resources Officer Robert Ouellette told the School Board on Jan. 4 at an agenda workshop. TPG currently has 500 teacher placements in Florida and 2,000 nationwide, Ouellette said.
The exchange teachers would fill critical shortage areas in math, science and teachers of student disabilities, areas where the district has been advertising but can’t fill vacancies, Ouellette said.
“Right now we have science positions filled with longterm subs since the beginning of the (school) year, because we haven’t been able to find somebody,” he said.
The district would use TPG on a small scale, filling probably less than a dozen positions, “but it definitely fills a need,” Ouellette said.
TPG is a J-1 visa sponsor and takes care of health insurance and process/sponsor expenses. The district would pay the exchange teachers’ salaries on the same salary scale as its full-time teachers. It would also pay TPG about $11,500 per teacher in fees, but the district would not be responsible for health insurance, FICA or retirement contributions, which would be an overall savings for the district.
“They match certifications with the needs of the district,” Ouellette said, noting that the district does a needs assessment that it would share with TPG, which would then provide a list of candidates.
“Our principals and hiring


VOLUSIA NEGOTIATES CONTRACTS TO HIRE FOREIGN TEACHERS

Volusia County Schools is reviewing contracts with two international teacher companies, and hopes to start planning and preparing for candidates for a new teacher pool next month to fill instructional vacancies.
During a School Board workshop on Tuesday, Jan. 10, Human Resources Director Stephanie Workman reported that the district is in negotiations with Educational Partners International and the TPG Cultural Exchange Program, both J-1 visa programs, and intends to have up to 50 candidates ready to hire by the time the district’s job fair takes place in April.
From April to July, the district is planning to assist the international candidates with their arrival in the U.S., including helping them find housing.
“We would hope that they would be able to start on Aug. 2 when all of our other teachers do,” Workman said.
Volusia isn’t the only one looking at hiring international teachers to fill vacancies. In nearby Flagler County, the district is looking at contracting with TPG Cultural Exchange.
How much will it cost the district?
The teachers will be paid the same increased base salary of $48,042 as other new hires. But the district would save money — estimated at $635 per teacher in a three-year contract — because it would not have
committee interview those folks, and we have the final say as to whether or not we believe they would be a good fit,” Ouellette said.
Board Chair Cheryl Massaro said she has spoken with a School Board member from Polk County, which contracts with TPG, and also met one of the exchange teachers from India. Massaro said the district was “amazed with how good the service was.”
The board is scheduled to
to pay health insurance, since the host company would provide it. The district also would not have to contribute toward the teacher’s retirement, and for the first 18 months the teacher is in the U.S., the district would not have to pay the taxes associated with Social Security and Medicare.
Workman said that $635 may not seem like a lot of money, but that it’s “still an overall savings.”
The district hopes to bring the contracts to the School Board for review at its next meeting on Jan. 24.
Instructional vacancies at VCS totaled 272 on the first day of school. By December, that number had dropped to 194, and to date, there are 141.
The drop during the winter break is a result of contract language and temporary statuses being invoked starting the second semester for any teacher that is hired, said Mark West, the district’s chief human resource officer.
“So what we do is we take down all of those vacancies and then allow those principals to repost those vacancies as temporary for those that they feel are needed at that time,” West said.
Support vacancies (custodial, paraprofessionals, transportation, etc.) total 239 to date, down from 347 on the first day of school.
–JARLEENE ALMENASvote at its Jan. 17 business meeting on whether to sign a contract with TPG to provide a limited number of educators in critical shortage areas.
“I think it’s something we can benefit from if we take it slow and not impact our current staff, but support our current staff,” Massaro said.

Board members Christy Chong and Sally Hunt asked if the exchange teachers could potentially take positions that local candidates could apply for.
“We, by no means, want to replace our existing folks or candidates that would be highly qualified coming out of our area,” Ouellette said.
Board member Colleen

Conklin said that, like Massaro, she has heard only positive feedback about TPG.
“I think we’re at a point where we don’t have a choice but to look at creative options like this,” Conklin said. “If we had local Floridians that would be available to fill those positions, that would be the best way to go, but obviously we’re not there. And unfortunately I think this problem will become more challenging (in the future).”
Hunt said she would like to see a two-tiered approach where the district uses the exchange program and also conducts a search to hire citizens for permanent positions.
“As long as everybody knows we’re working to improve recruitment and retention,” she said.
If the district signs with TPG immediately after board approval, the program would begin with the 2023-2024 school year. From February to May, TPG would place teachers in a portal for principals to select.
The exchange teachers have a non-immigrant visa for up to five years, are fluent in English, have an equivalent of at least a four-year bachelor’s degree and a minimum of two years’ experience, according to a TPG slide presentation.
TPG also performs a health and criminal background check.
TPG has a 95% retention rate, according to the TPG document.
Ouellette said the district’s long-term substitutes are in various stages of reaching certifications. The exchange teachers will all be certified for their positions.
Using the company on a small scale, he said, will allow the district to evaluate the program over the three to five years the teachers are working in the district.
AN ORDINANCE OF THE CITY OF BUNNELL, FLORIDA, APPROVING AN AMENDED PLANNED UNIT DEVELOPMENT (PUD) DEVELOPMENT AGREEMENT FOR MODIFICATIONS TO APPROVED TOTAL OF LOTS IN PHASE 3, 5, AND 6; PROVIDING FOR SEVERABILITY; REPEALING AND SUPERCEDING ALL PORTIONS OF ORDINANCES, RESOLUTIONS AND SITE DEVELOMPENT ORDERS IN CONFLICT; 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-todate 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 prior to the meeting.
NOTICE: If a person decides to appeal any decision made by the City Commission on this matter a recording of the proceeding may be needed and for such purposes the person may need to ensure that a verbatim record is made which includes the testimony and evidence upon which the appeal is based. (Section 286.0105, Florida Statutes) January 12, 2023 22-00258F 395535-1

"Right now we have science positions filled with long-term subs since the beginning of the (school) year, because we haven't been able to find somebody."
OUELLETTE, Flagler Schools’ chief human resources officer
“I think we’re at a point where we don’t have a choice but to look at creative options like this.”
COLLEEN CONKLIN
PALM COAST
A ‘stroke of luck’: Commissioner Dave Sullivan on health scare

‘I was very lucky that I was able to call 911 quickly, EMS was fast, and AdventHealth was well-prepared for stroke patients,’ Sullivan writes.
DAVE SULLIVAN FLAGLER COUNTY COMMISSIONER DISTRICT 3Wednesday, Dec. 7, I was sitting at home in front of my computer when the left side of my body started going numb. A week earlier I had a similar feeling, but it stopped
LETTERS
Expert to speak on human trafficking

Dear Editor: January is National Human Trafficking Awareness month, and the Flagler Tiger Bay Club welcomes Tomas Lares, award-winning advocate and leader of United Abolitionists, as our luncheon speaker at the Hammock Dunes Club on Thursday, Jan. 19.
We don’t see much human trafficking in Flagler County, just like I didn’t see much human trafficking in Orange County prior to 2011.
That was despite it competing annually with Las Vegas for conven-
quickly, and I was able to resume normal life after a check with my doctor and scheduled tests for Dec. 9.
However, this time the condition was getting worse, and I was alone, so I immediately called 911.
The response was immediate. The operator kept me on the phone until the ambulance arrived at my house, and the Flagler County Fire Rescue team raced me to the emergency department at AdventHealth Palm Coast.
Every moment matters in a medical emergency like this, and tests started immediately.
Every team member at the hospital involved in my care treated me with utmost care and expert knowledge.
By the time I was in my hospital room, it was clear I’d had a stroke, and remedial treatment was already started.
tion center space and hotel rooms.
Following training, my eyes were opened to the state of this issue, and I had the opportunity to help my agency redirect our response to commercial sex trafficking as well as other forms of exploitation.
The legal definition of human trafficking is compelling people to act against their own interests by using force, fraud and coercion.
The child wearing a traffic vest and carrying a plastic bin going door to door in a neighborhood is being exploited by an adult. The college-age people selling subscriptions for scholarships at your door ride in passenger vans from state to state, not knowing where they are waking up tomorrow. (They are not getting a scholarship, and you have
Make yourself at home
After my stroke, I was numb on my entire left side from head to toe. But I could still speak, think and see clearly. That’s important, because it meant I could start rehabilitation and get on the road to recovery as soon as possible.
But my care didn’t stop in Palm Coast.
I’d made enough progress with physical exercise that just days later, I was moved to AdventHealth’s inpatient rehabilitation facility in Daytona Beach.
It’s a truly world-class facility on the 12th floor of the hospital you see on I-95. All of the doctors, nurses, and team members treated me with expert care, focused on getting me back on track.
I was in that facility for 10 days, going home on Dec. 20, in time to spend Christmas with my daughter, who traveled here from Texas.
AdventHealth is still supporting
just been defrauded.)
As we see on the news too often, online classifieds front for prostitution activities.
During my quarter-century career in law enforcement, I never saw crime perpetuated with such evil arrogance as the modern enslavement of people.
I hope every student, advocate, counselor, detective, and emergency room nurse who desires to come to this luncheon is encouraged by their employer to attend. Check out our website, Flaglertigerbayclub. com, to register.
ROLAND CLEE Executive Director, Flagler Tiger Bay Club, Flagler Beachmy recovery, providing in-home care as I continue to make progress towards a full recovery.
To boil this down: I was very lucky that I was able to call 911 quickly, EMS was fast, and AdventHealth was well prepared for stroke patients. There are more than 795,000 stroke victims each year, and every four minutes, someone dies from a stroke.
As a current Flagler County commissioner, I thought it appropriate to make public this situation for a couple of reasons. First, to let our citizens know that we have an excellent emergency response team here in the county; second, as an elected official, I thought it was important to let people know what my medical situation was to avoid rumors that things might be worse than they are. God was looking out for me this time, but a little luck does not hurt either.
R.I.P Barbara Walters
Dear Editor:
When people of note pass away, you often read that in lieu of flowers you can donate to their or your favorite charity.
May I suggest a different tack for the passing of Ms. Walters. For those of you with daughters, find some biographical material on her life. Then use it to show your child that she can accomplish anything in this world. Certainly anything that a man can achieve.
God bless you, Barbara Walters. You left this world a better place. There truly is no greater legacy.
EARL HAMILTON Palm Coast
‘You don’t need an answer’: Game theory, according to a 4-year-old
climbing on jungle gyms, we finally said it was time to leave. I was getting antsy, feeling ready to get home and be productive.
Luke begged for one more round on the swings. Trying to be a good dad, I caved.
“Why do you like swings and games so much?” I asked, as I pushed him another 10 times.
BRIAN MCMILLAN CONTRIBUTING WRITERFor my 4-year-old son, Luke, games are what life is all about. For me, someone who always has one eye on my to-do list, games can be stressful time-wasters.

Recently, on the way to Holland Park, which has a green hill that kids slide down on cardboard “sleds,” he suggested that my wife and I guess animal sounds.
“What says this: meow,” he said.
“Cat,” my wife, Hailey, said.
“Yes!” he said. “Now you go.”
“Whoo, whoo,” I said.
“An owl!”
“That’s right.”
It was the kind of game that I grow weary of quickly. What is the point? It’s predictable and accomplishes nothing. What’s next? Let me guess: Oink=pig.
After an hour on the swings and
He just kept smiling.
“I need an answer,” I said.
“No,” Luke said finally, “you don’t need an answer.”
Later, Luke painstakingly set up the board for Sorry!: The Disney Edition. Captain Hook, Hades, Maleficent and Cruella were his red team. I half-heartedly agreed to play, adding it to my mental to-do list so that I could mentally cross it off later. I asked to be the blue team.
“You can’t be blue because you can’t reach across the board,” Luke said.
“I have really long arms. See?” I said, raising my arms.
“Whoa!” Luke said.
Ellie, my 13-year-old daughter, observed dryly from the other couch, “It’s amazing how easy it is to impress Luke.”
Deciding not to prolong the debate, I agreed to my new assignment, the yellow team: Cinderella,
bridge Road in Volusia County.
BOY SCOUTS PREPARE FOR 34-MILE
HIKE
If you drove down A1A at some point during the day on Saturday, Jan. 7, you might have spotted a group of Boy Scouts hiking down the historic roadway.
Seventeen Scouts and adult leaders from Palm Coast’s Troop 281, which is based at Trinity Presbyterian Church, were preparing for the upcoming 34-mile, two-day Barefoot Mailman Hike in South Florida.
The Jan. 7 hike was a 20-miler. The Scouts started at sunrise from Marineland and finished at High-
“This group had been preparing for three months,” Troop 281 Scoutmaster Jason Wheeler said. “It’s a grueling event, hiking these distances with a full pack and in full uniform. These kids have done these shakedown hikes with very little complaining and with a ton of Scout spirit. I could not be prouder of them.”
The Barefoot Mailman Hike has been held in Broward and Dade counties for 58 years. Scout units from across the state gather on the first Saturday of February to begin the first leg. It starts in Pompano Beach and ends on South Beach in Miami the next day. It commemorates carriers on the first U.S. mail route (1885-1892) between Palm Beach and Miami, years before roads connected the cities. The mailmen typically walked barefoot
Luke isn’t picky about
Ariel, Snow White and Jessie (from “Toy Story 2”).
Round and round the board we went, and, as always, Luke wore down my crankiness. His smile became contagious. I kept thinking about Luke’s wisdom on the swings, his refusal to assign a higher purpose to playing games: “You don’t need an answer.”
Maybe not everything has to have a purpose, other than simply having fun. Maybe I should try being as un-uptight as Luke.
But at the same time, I was trying to multitask and get some things done on my laptop, and when I
looked up next, Luke was gone.
Captain Hook was in the Safety Zone, about to reach Home, and Luke had just walked away.
“Hey, Luke! Come back! We need to finish our game!”
“I don’t know whose turn it is!” was his response.
“I don’t know, either. Let’s say it’s your turn.”
He came back to Sorry! carrying a lid to a pizza box. “Perfect for the next time we go to Holland Park,” he said. Then, holding it close like it was a prized possession rather than a piece of trash, he repeated, quietly, “Perfection.”
Friedrich Hayek
“Road to Serfdom,” 1944
Publisher John Walsh, jwalsh@palmcoastobserver.com
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VETERAN OF THE WEEK
Danny Peyton
Branch
Dates of service: 1960-1964
Rank/occupation: Lance corporal/anti-tank assaultman
Hometown: Leesburg, Virginia
along the coastal sand.
“During our four hikes, many of us took our shoes and boots off during the last mile,” Wheeler said. “While none of us will walk the entire hike barefoot, we plan on taking our shoes off when we walk the sands of South Beach.”
GALA RAISES $31,000 FOR JOSH CREWS
WRITING PROJECT
The Flagler County Education Foundation held its annual Josh Crew Writing Project Gala on Nov. 18 at Princess Place Preserve. The event raised over $31,000, according to a news release from the Education Foundation.
The Josh Crews Writing Project is in its 12th year and was started by former Education Foundation Execu-
tive Director Joe Rizzo and Flagler Beach business owner Carla Cline.
The project is named in memory of Josh Crews, a Flagler County resident and business owner who was killed in a car accident.
The money raised supports creative writing clubs in the nine schools in the Flagler County School District and funds the publication of a book of essays by student authors.
The club sponsors select the finest essays from each school, and the book is published with the students’ scripts, according to the release. The writing clubs will hold a book launch this year on April 11 in the cafeteria between Buddy Taylor Middle School and Wadsworth Elementary School. The published students will be present and will hold a book signing.
Danny Peyton was an apprentice carpenter before enlisting in the Marine Corps. In the Corps, he was assigned to Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, and Marine Corps Station, Quantico, Virginia. Peyton went underway aboard the USS Monrovia, APA 31, to Purto Scudo, Sardenia; Naples, Italy; and Corsica, France. He, along with fellow Marines, was dispatched to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in support of the Cuban missile blockade in 1962. When Peyton was honorably discharged from the Marine Corps, he returned to Virginia and worked as a crane operator in the Washington, D.C. area for the next 40 years. He moved to Palm Coast in 2002 after discovering the city during a trip to Daytona Beach Bike Week. Peyton is a race car enthusiast and has owned some fast cars of his own. He’s a big fan of Chick-fil-A.

NEED HELP WITH VETERAN SERVICES?
For information about benefits available to veterans and other support organizations 386-313-4014.

“If we are to build a better world, we must remember that the guiding principle is this — a policy of freedom for the individual is the only truly progressive policy.”
BUSINESS RECOVERY

CENTER TO OPEN
The U.S. Small Business Administration will open a Business Recovery Center at the Daytona Beach Regional Library at 105 Jackie Robinson Parkway in Daytona Beach.
The BRC will open at 11 a.m. Monday, Jan. 9, and close at 6 p.m. After the first day, the BRC will be open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Thursday and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday and Saturday. It will not operate on Sundays.
Homeowners, renters, business owners, homeowners associations and most private nonprofit organizations impacted by Hurricane Ian and/ or Hurricane Nicole may apply for a low-interest, long-term disaster assistance loan to assist with their recovery.
The SBA offers a physical property damage loan as well as an economic injury loan.
The economic injury loan is only available to businesses and most private nonprofit organizations.
Before applying for a loan, an applicant must register with FEMA.
Interested applicants are encouraged to register with FEMA before visiting the BRC.
To register with FEMA, visit disasterassistance.gov, the FEMA mobile app or call 800621-3362.
In addition to starting a loan application at the BRC, applicants may submit documentation for a current application, appeal a denied application or speak to a representative about their application’s status.
For those impacted by both Ian and Nicole, separate loan applications must be submitted for each storm.
The deadline to submit loan applications, by storm and type
of loan, are: Jan. 12: Hurricane Ian
Physical Property Feb. 13: Hurricane Nicole —
Physical Property June 29: Hurricane Ian Economic Injury Sept. 13: Hurricane Nicole Economic Injury
A loan application may also be submitted online at disasterloanassistance.sba. gov/ela/s/ or by visiting the Disaster Recovery Center at the Florida Department of HealthVolusia at 1845 Holsonback Drive in Daytona Beach.
For additional information about SBA loans, call 800-6592955 or email disastercustomerservice@sba.gov.
TOURNAMENT RAISES $30,000 FOR NONPROFIT
The Southern States Management Group Foundation’s leadership delivered a $30,000 check to Family Renew Community in December 2022 from funds raised during the foundation’s golf tournament in September 2022 at the Conservatory at Hammock Beach in Palm Coast.

“The proceeds from the golf tournament couldn’t come at a better time for Family Renew Community and the population of hardworking yet financially struggling families that we serve through the generosity of our supporters,” Rev. Tony Deobil, executive director of Family Renew Community, said in a press release. “Escalating costs for housing and essentials such as food and clothing are pushing more families who live paycheck to paycheck over the brink of homelessness. This infusion of funds will allow us to keep up with our own rising costs as we offer them a safe, stable home and equip them with the tools they need to be self-sufficient.”
The press release states that
the foundation’s purpose is “to improve the standard of living for those in need in Volusia and Flagler counties with specific emphasis on transitional and permanent housing, physical and mental wellness, social stability, and educational opportunities.”
LOCAL EARNS MARKETING RECOGNITION
Edelyn Parker-Frye, director of Brand Events, Communications and Partnerships at Red Roof, was selected as one of the Hospitality Sales and Marketing Association International’s “Top 25 Extraordinary Minds” for 2022.
Parker-Frye, a Flagler Beach resident, will be recognized by HSMAI at a reception at the JW Marriott in Los Angeles on Feb. 23 along with the other 24 people on the list, according to a press release from Red Roof.
Parker-Frye leads the brand’s corporate social responsibility program, supporting nonprofit organizations; in 2021, she guided the program to a recordbreaking year of donations, the press release said.
The annual list celebrates leaders and innovators in the industry, and honorees are judged by a panel of senior industry executives, the press release said. Red Roof Chief Marketing Officer Marina MacDonald said Parker-Frye is a highly valued member of Red Roof who deserves the recognition.
Parker-Frye has worked in marketing for 17 years and joined Red Roof in 2017, the release said.
“This recognition as a ‘Top 25 Extraordinary Mind’ by HSMAI is such a rewarding accomplishment,” Parker-Frye said. “I look forward to another year of breaking new records and reaching new heights.”
CRIME REPORT
Victim dies, suspect faces murder charge
After almost two years, a woman who was shot in the head in 2021 has died from complications of the injury.
The woman’s then-boyfriend, Brenan Robert Hill, 33, had been charged with attempted second-degree murder in connection to her shooting.
With the victim’s death due to the injuries, Hill’s charges have been upgraded to second-degree murder, according to a press release from the Flagler County Sheriff’s Office.
“Unfortunately, the victim never recovered from her injuries. We extend our deepest condolences to the victim’s family, whose lives were permanently altered nearly two years ago,” Flagler County Sheriff Rick Staly said.
The Medical Examiner’s Office ruled the victim’s cause of death as complications of a gunshot wound to the head, the press release said.
“I applaud our entire team, including our Major Case Unit who investigated this difficult case. It is my hope he will spend a long time in prison for his actions that day, and then trying to cover up his crime before getting the victim medical help,” Staly said.
Three arrested in catalytic converter thefts
The Flagler County Sheriff’s Office found 13 catalytic converters in the trunk of a BMW that was pulled over for a stolen license plate.
FCSO deputies were initially responding to a BMW driving eastbound on Palm Coast Parkway using plates that were stolen out of Osceola County on Dec. 17.
Deputies used stop sticks to deflate the vehicle’s tires, but the driver was able enter onto Interstate 95 southbound at a “high rate of speed,” according to a press release from the Sheriff’s Office.
The vehicle eventually became disabled near the 279 mile marker, the release said.
The three men inside were from South Florida — two from Miami and one from Port St. Lucie — and were arrested on a variety of charges, including grand theft, petit theft, criminal mischief, possession of burglary tools with intent and burglary of a conveyance, according to the press release.
“These three dirtbags from South Florida thought they could successfully commit crime in Flagler County without getting caught,” Flagler County Sheriff Rick Staly said. “Unfortunately for them, the quick and efficient work of our deputies has landed them in the Green Roof Inn, and
they found out the hard way coming to Flagler County to prey on our community was a mistake.”
Deputies searched the vehicle and found a second stolen license plate, this one from New York, which had been registered as stolen from Palm Beach County on Dec. 1, according to the arrest reports.
While clearing the vehicle, deputies also found ski masks and a reciprocating saw with saw blades, all tools used in catalytic converter thefts, the report said.
Some of the blades, the report said, had clearly been used.
In the trunk, they found 13 catalytic converters.
Deputies were able to identify one of the converters in the BMW as stolen from a vehicle near where the BMW had initially been seen, the report said.
“The theft of catalytic converters is a nationwide problem involving criminals that know no boundaries,” Staly said. “I commend our deputies for another outstanding job and safely apprehending them.”
While searching the suspects, deputies found around five grams of marijuana on the 18-year-old driver, the report said.
He was also charged with several drug possession charges, as well as fleeing and eluding, reckless driving and failure to obey police/fire.
The men were taken to the county jail.
Man flees deputies, crashes in drainage ditch
Flagler County Sheriff’s Office deputies arrested a man from Hastings after he fled a traffic stop, driving through a farm field and crashing his car.
The pursuit began when a deputy attempted a traffic stop on a white Pontiac sedan on County Road 304 in Bunnell the afternoon of Jan. 3.
The vehicle sped up instead of pulling over and led the deputy on a chase down a service road in Flagler Farms, according to an arrest report.
The vehicle drove recklessly along the dirt service road in the fields, the report said.
When it reentered C.R. 304, the Pontiac was going over 100 mph.
The vehicle continued fleeing south, speeding recklessly through traffic, the arrest report said.
The deputy briefly lost sight of the Pontiac, then found it overturned in a drainage ditch on Old Haw Creek Road.
The female passenger had minor injuries from the crash, the report said, and she and a bystander who had stopped to help told the deputy that the male driver had run into the woods.
Deputies and K-9 units were called in to search the
woods, and found the suspect.
He was arrested on charges of aggravated fleeing with injury or damage; leaving the scene of a crash with injury; driving with license suspended/revoked; reckless driving with damage to person or property; possession of MDMA; possession of drug paraphernalia; three counts of violation of probation–felony.
The man had no prior criminal history in Flagler County, the press release said, but had narcotic and burglaryrelated charges from Putnam County.
Man charged with throwing paver at pet dog
A Bunnell man was arrested on Saturday, Jan. 7, after allegedly hitting a dog with a landscaping paver.
The Flagler County Sheriff’s Office was called to a home in the 6600 block of Tangerine Avenue in Bunnell.
A woman at the home called deputies after a man, John Vincent Benning, 56, threw the stone at the dog, according to the arrest report.
The two adults and the woman’s son had been sitting on the house’s porch when one of the woman’s dogs, a 10-month-old German Shepherd, picked up an old ball in the yard and began to play with it, the report said.
Benning “became angered” by that, yelling and screaming at the dog, the woman told the deputy.
Benning stepped off the porch, picked up the paver and threw it at the dog, hitting it, according to the woman’s account in the arrest report.
The woman told the deputy that the German Shepherd was limping when she brought it inside.
The woman had Ring camera footage of the incident, and shared it with the deputy, the report said.

In the video, the dog is off screen when Benning throws the stone, but “the dog is heard whimpering in pain,” the report said.
When the woman confronted Benning about throwing the stone, he could be heard in the video threatening to kill all of the dogs, the report said.
Benning refused to talk to the deputies and was arrested on a felony animal cruelty charge and taken to the county jail, the report said.
He bonded out by 6 p.m. on Jan. 7, but was arrested again by 10 a.m. Sunday, Jan. 8 on two misdemeanor charges of false reporting a crime and misuse of 911 in connection with an unrelated Dec. 10 incident in which he’d called 911 and falsely reported that someone was chasing him with a sword, according to the Flagler County inmate booking site.
Benning is now being held without bond, according to the site.
Councilman pushes for dogfriendly stretches of beach New diabetes prevention program offered
Volusia Councilman Troy Kent suggested creating 100-yard sections of beach where people may bring their dogs on a leash.
JARLEENE ALMENAS SENIOR EDITORCould Volusia County soon allow dogs on its beaches? The County Council will discuss this idea at its meeting at 4 p.m. on Feb. 21.
Shortly after taking his oath of office on Thursday, Jan. 5, District 4 Volusia County Councilman Troy Kent said he would begin addressing issues on his to-do list that very day. And during his closing comments at the meeting, he made a motion to add an agenda item about creating new dog-friendly beaches to next months’s meeting agenda.
“We have too many dog lovers in our community, and it just to me is a commonsense thing that we can do rather quickly,” Kent said.
Kent’s suggestion is to create 100yard sections of beach in all coastal unincorporated areas and municipalities where people may bring their dogs on a leash.
He recommended adding signage, trash cans and waste stations at each, as well as having a lifeguard station to ensure people follow the rules the county chooses to instate, if the council does approve of the idea.
Currently, dogs are only allowed in two beach parks, both in the south end of the county: Smyrna Dunes Park in New Smyrna Beach and Lighthouse Point Park in Ponce Inlet.
This is not the first time the issue will come before the council for consideration.
In June 2021, the council voted 5-1 against opening additional sections of the beach to dogs due to concerns about sea turtle nesting areas and the cost of adding staff needed to enforce regulations.
In 2014, the council also voted
TRIBUTES
Jan Ellen Doak 1951-2022Jan Ellen Doak passed away unexpectedly at 71 years of age in Greenville, SC on December 12, 2022, from complications of the flu and ARDS.

Jan was born in Lynn, Massachusetts on May 3, 1951, the daughter of the late Victor and Helen Phillips. She was a chatty gal who loved to dance and pal around with her older sister Gail Phillips (Dandelion Oquitadas) at Lynch Park. She loved being a big sister to Nancy (Nichols) and her baby brother Johnny. Jan graduated from Beverly High School in 1969 and began her search for peace and truth. Attracted to the hope of a united world she tried becoming a hippie and even attended Woodstock. Jan soon found the path she was seeking and was baptized as one of Jehovah’s Witnesses on December 19, 1970. Jan remained steadfast in her beliefs until her death.
Jan welcomed her daughters Celeste Carter (Gowens) in June of 1977 and Sarah Carter (Stone) in October of 1978. She raised her beloved girls successfully as a single parent and gained tremendous support and friendship from her in-laws Arthur and Karen Carter, her sons-inlaw Terry Stone and Adrian Gowens, and the congregations in Peabody and Gloucester, MA, Salem, NH and Dexter, ME. Jan married the kind and hardworking
against a proposal that would allow dogs on the beach for a trial period.
County Council Chair Jeff Brower was the only member in support of dog-friendly beaches in June 2021.
There was some confusion among the council members when Brower first called for a second to Kent’s motion, leading him to pass the gavel to new Vice Chair Danny Robins to be able to second the motion himself and not have it die.
Kent said he was confused about why no one would second the motion when he was asking only to have a discussion, and Robins replied that he didn’t second it because the beach was “a disaster” right now, and due to looming economic issues.
“I’m a dog guy just like you, just like everybody up here,” he said. “But there’s a lot of history with this.”
Kent said staff would provide background information on the issue when it’s placed on the agenda, and that, while the beach is in poor condition now, it won’t always be.
If the council doesn’t talk about it now, Kent speculated that the issue would fall to the wayside.
All the while, Councilman Jake Johansson was waiting to second Kent’s motion, which led to a brief discussion about rules and clarifications about how to second motions and what is needed to place an item on the agenda.
“I don’t want for you all here to presuppose anything that I may or may not do until I do or do not do it,” Johansson said. “And I suspect that we don’t want to do that for anybody else. You were perplexed that it wasn’t going to get seconded. I was ready to second it.”
Brower explained that Johansson’s name hadn’t come up on his screen as wanting to speak, and that it was likely a technical glitch.
He said the issue is an important item that needs to be revisited, and that he wouldn’t have passed the gavel if he had seen that Johansson was ready to second the motion.
“We discussed it with the last council,” Brower said. “It failed. I’m glad to see it come back, so I at least wanted it seconded to discuss it.”
The online, interactive program, valued at $650, is free of charge at the Flagler County Health Department.
BRENT WORONOFF ASSOCIATE EDITOROne in three adults nationwide have prediabetes, and 80% of them don’t know it, according to a report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The Diabetes Education Center at the Flagler Health Department is offering the year-long online Health and Lifestyle Training (HALT) National Diabetes Prevention Program. The program is for overweight adults 18 and over who have prediabetes or are high risk of getting Type 2 diabetes.
The interactive program is valued at $650, but, through a federal grant, the Health Department is offering it free of charge, said Melody Pierre-
Jean, a registered dietician who is facilitating the program.
Pierre-Jean would like to begin the program in February, but it won’t start until at least 10 qualified participants register, she said. Participants can qualify with a blood test through their doctor, or they can take a risk test at doihaveprediabetes.org/takethe-risk-test. Participants can’t be pregnant or have diabetes.
The program is proven to prevent or reduce people’s risk of getting Type 2 diabetes, Pierre-Jean said. It focuses on healthy eating, stress management and physical activity.
The program’s objective is to help people lose weight, eat better, get active, reduce stress and improve their energy.
Participants reduce their risk of getting diabetes by losing 5-7% of their body weight by the end of the year, Pierre-Jean said.
Pierre-Jean serves as program’s lifestyle coach. Participants spend 60 minutes a week engaging with their lifestyle coach and reviewing
content on a website or with an app on their phone. They are required to exercise 150 minutes a week on their own.
If you’re interested in participating in the program, call Pierre-Jean at 386-313-7264. For more information on the program go to haltdpp. org.
The Health Department’s Diabetes Education Center also offers a Diabetes Self Education Program, facilitated by Health Education Program Manager Alana Shawah, and other programs related to diabetes education.

Shawah and Pierre-Jean also lead a community walking group each Tuesday and Thursday beginning at 8 a.m. at Palm Coast’s Central Park in Town Center. Participants walk around the lake at their own pace and can rest on the many benches along the way. For more information, call 386-313-7263 or 386-313-7264 or email alana.shawah@flhealth.gov.
Jan fell asleep in death peacefully, knowing that God’s promise of an earthly resurrection would soon be realized, and she would be with her loved ones in a peaceful and united world. Acts 24:15,16; Psalm 37:11.
David Richard Doak on June 12, 1993, and happily inherited his eight children, Danny, Billyray, Deean, Melanie, Laurie, Trudi, Jody and Chris, becoming Grammy Jan to eighteen grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. Dave and Jan enjoyed their later years together as full-time ministers in Palm Coast, Florida until David’s death on December 23, 2010. Jan
continued
Jan recently moved to Greenville, SC to be near her daughter Celeste and her grandson, Trace Carter Gowens. She often said enjoying and caring for Trace felt like she was living in a dream. Sadly, this time was cut short. Jan fell asleep in death peacefully, knowing that God’s promise of an earthly resurrection would soon be realized, and she would be with her loved ones in a peaceful and united world. Acts 24:15,16; Psalm 37:11.
The memorial service will be held on January 14, 2023, on Zoom at 4:00 P.M. EST Meeting ID: 850 5718 4907 Passcode: 752386
Raymond Bradley 1936-2022
Went to be with lord on December 25, 2022. Born on July 13, 1936 in New York City, New York. He was preceded in death by his parents Joe and Rose Bradley. The youngest of 3 children, he was 86 years old.
He was a proud US veteran, having served honorably in the United States Army. While stationed at Kagnew Station in Asmara, Ethiopia he was awarded soldier of the month multiple times.


He was also a devout Catholic and volunteered and served in a variety of positions over the years within his parish St. Elizabeth Ann Seton in Palm Coast, Florida.
Jim relocated his family to Florida from New York in 1971 and eventually moved to Palm Coast in 1997.
He was a devoted husband, father and grandfather.
He was married to the love of his life Roseann McLaren in 1963. They spent 45 incredible years together before her passing in September 2008.
He is survived by his 2 sons and their spouses, James & Charlotte Bradley, Palm Coast, Fl and Thomas & Sally Bradley, Casselberry, Fl.
Grandchildren, Caitlin Bradley, Ormond Beach, Morgan Bradley, Sarasota,
Fl and Brandon Bradley, Casselberry, Fl.
As well as several nieces and nephews.
In accordance with his wishes he will be cremated and his remains will be eternally interned next to his wife Roseann in the Columbarium located at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Church.

There will be a Celebration of Life / Mass of Christian Burial on January 21, 2023 at 1 pm at Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton Catholic Church located at 4600 Belle Terre Parkway Palm Coast, Fl 32164.
SERVICE: Saturday, January 21, 1PM
Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton Catholic Church 4600 Belle Terre Parkway Palm Coast, Fl 32164
DONATIONS:
In lieu of flowers the family asks that a donation be made in his name to either St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Catholic Church 4600 Belle Terre Parkway Palm Coast, Fl 32164
Or American Legion Post 115 47 N Old Kings Road Palm Coast, Fl 32137
While stationed at Kagnew Station in Asmara, Ethiopia he was awarded soldier of the month multiple times.to stay busy in her ministry and by volunteering at the Daytona Beach Assembly Hall. Courtesy photo Alana Shawah, left, and Melody Pierre-Jean facilitate the programs at the Flagler Health Department’s Diabetes Education Center.
YOUR NEIGHBORS
Tiny dancers
to hear. For some of them, it was their first time on stage, and to be part of a professional production, it was pretty dazzling, a memorable experience.”
BRENT WORONOFF ASSOCIATE EDITORTwenty-six dancers from Mia Bella Academy of Dance in Palm Coast shared the stage with the State Ballet Theatre of Ukraine in its performance of Tchaikovsky’s “Sleeping Beauty” on Wednesday, Jan. 4, at the Flagler Auditorium.


The dancers ranged in age from 3 to 14 and had fewer than 10 rehearsals to prepare for their performances, said Brie Valenti Crane, Mia Bella’s owner and artistic director.

SOUP FOR EVERYONE FROM OKSA CAKES
Flagler Auditorium Director Amy Fulmer said the auditorium staff had been preparing for more than a year for the State Ballet Theatre of Ukraine's performance of "Sleeping Beauty” on Wednesday, Jan. 4.
“It was everything we hoped it would be,” she said of the sold-out performance, “from the (Mia Bella Academy of Dance) auditions in Ocotober to the soup for the dancers.”
Oksa Cakes Bakery & Bistro of Flagler Beach, which is owned and operated by Ukraine natives Oksana Petrova and her husband Sergiy Petrov, delivered the hot borscht soup with sour cream to the auditorium for the performers and crew, Fulmer said.
“This was a special treat for the performers. Their special recipe smelled heavenly in our green room, and the ballet consumed every drop,” Fulmer said.
Oksa Cakes' recipe for their borscht soup can be found at https://thezestpodcast.com/standardborsch.
The Mia Bella dancers had a live audition in October and were provided videos to learn the choreography. They spent all day on Jan. 4 at the auditorium, receiving their costumes, doing dress rehearsals and finally performing in the show.

The auditions were open to all Flagler County dancers, Flagler Auditorium Director Amy Fulmer said. Mia Bella Academy volunteered to contract and coordinate auditions and rehearsals, working closely with parents, and representatives from State Ballet Theatre of Ukraine, Fulmer added.
“For the kids not seeing the set or the professionals before (Jan. 4), I was impressed with how well they handled themselves,” Valenti Crane said. “They were saying, ‘This is so much fun,’ and that’s what you want
The girls were a part of eight numbers in the two-act ballet. Four of the dancers were on stage for as long as seven minutes, Valenti Crane said.
“There was a lot of interacting (with the professional dancers). A couple of the kids had props,” Valenti Crane said. “Even the 3-yearolds had to exactly know their marks. They all handled themselves like the little professionals they are.”
The show was sold out, which gratified Valenti Crane.
“With the climate of the world right now, everyone wants to support Ukraine,” she said.
The State Ballet Theatre of Ukraine is in the midst of a tour of the east coast of the United States and Canada, performing “Sleeping Beauty.”
Local ballet students are included in the performances at each venue. The 55-member troupe had to rehearse covertly in Ukraine and transporting the company, sets and costumes out of the war-torn country was not easy, Ekaterina Vaganova-Yachmennikova, the company’s co-artistic director, told Pointe magazine.
“Dancers already have a very short artistic life,” she told the magazine.
“Our priority has to be the human life. So the fact that they are able to continue to do their job is priceless given the surrounding circumstances.”
Valenti Crane said because the ballet was sold out, some of the family members of the Mia Bella dancers were unable to get tickets. But when the young dancers came out for the first time, the audience applauded loudly, she said.
Mia Bella Academy of Dance was the official sponsor for the “Sleeping Beauty” performance at the Flagler Auditorium.
Valenti Crane founded the academy 13 years ago. Her husband, Braham Logan Crane, is the director of Artists Simply Human dance conventions.
“Dance is the business of our family,” Valenti Crane said.
She said that as a patron of the arts, she was excited to see all 1,150 seats in the auditorium were filled.
“Flagler Auditorium does such a great job involving the community,” Valenti Crane said. “We’re always so thankful to (Auditorium Director) Amy Fulmer and all the things the auditorium does to keep arts alive in our community. All around, it was a wonderful experience.”
“Even the 3-year-olds had to exactly know their marks. They all handled themselves like the little professionals they are.”BRIE
VALENTI CRANE, owner and artistic director of Mia Bella Academy of Dance
When: 7 p.m.
MEETING
Where: 56 N. Halifax Drive, Ormond Beach

Details: The January meeting of the Ormond Beach Area Democratic Club will be held in person and on Zoom. Social visiting will be from 6:30-7 p.m. The meeting will begin at 7 p.m. Precinct captains will be at the meeting for comments, questions and answers. Like-minded nonmembers are welcome to attend as guests. The Zoom link and club information are available at ormondbeachdems.org. The club meets on the second Thursday of each month.


42ND ASBURY SHORT FILM

CONCERT
When: 7 p.m.

Where: Museum of Arts and Sciences, 352 S. Nova Road, Daytona Beach

Details: Asbury Shorts USA is returning to MOAS for an evening of globally honored, independently produced comedy, dramatic and animated shorts, from the past and present. The first film will be shown at Root Auditorium at 7 p.m. The screenings are strongly recommended for ages 16 and older. Tickets cost $20 for members and $25 for nonmembers. Visit moas.org.
FRIDAY, JAN. 13
DAYTONA BOAT SHOW
When: 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Friday, Jan. 13; 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 14; 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 15
Where: Daytona International Speedway, 1801 W. International
Speedway Blvd., Daytona Beach
Details: The Marine Industry Association of Central Florida is presenting a three-day boat show, featuring 15 of Central Florida’s top boat dealers representing over 80 manufacturers. Tickets cost $5 per car, per day, and includes parking. Purchase them at daytonaboatshow. com/tickets or at the event.

HONKY TONK ANGELS
When: 7:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, Jan. 13, 14, 20 and 21; 3 p.m. Sunday Jan. 15 and 22
Where: City Repertory Theatre, 160 Cypress Point Parkway Suite B207, Palm Coast

Details: See this show about three gutsy gals from different backgrounds who take charge of their lives by choosing to follow their honky tonk dreams to the city of Nashville. It features 30 classic country tunes including “Stand By Your Man,” “9 to 5” and “Harper Valley PTA.” Tickets cost $30 for adults and $15 for students.
SATURDAY, JAN. 14 MDC’S 2023
WINTER BIRDING TOURS
When: 8:30 a.m. Where: Marine
Discovery Center dock, 116 North Causeway, New Smyrna Beach
Details: Join the first Marine Discovery Center’s first birding tour of the season. Learn more about migratory birds from naturalists and local Audubon members on a boat tour to Disappearing Island. Once at the island, you will walk the shoreline to observe these bird species. The trip lasts three hours and is open for birding enthusiasts of all levels. Bring binoculars, scopes, water and snacks, and wear comfortable watertolerant shoes. The tour costs $40 for adults; $37 for seniors 62 years and older and students; and $22 for children under 12. For reservations, call the MDC at 386-428-4828 or visit marinediscoverycenter.org.
SUNDAY, JAN. 15
NON-DENOMINATIONAL BLESSING OF THE PETS
When: 12-4 p.m. Where: Temple Beth Shalom, 40


Wellington Drive, Palm Coast
Details: Temple Beth Shalom Palm Coast is inviting the local pet-owner community to bring their furry, feathered and scaly friends for a non-sectarian blessing for good health and safety. Rabbi Rose Eberle and her four-legged assistant, Lila, will conduct personalized blessings all afternoon. Refreshments will be available for sale. Pet services, vendors, educators and entertainers are invited to participate by calling or texting Marylynne Newmark at 954-401-1144.
THE SOUNDS OF THE SOUL
When: 7-9:30 p.m. Where: Flagler Auditorium, 5500 State Route 100, Palm Coast Details: Relive the Motown sound with this high-energy group. The Sounds of Soul have been performing across the nation since 1996 and is composed of six performers. The show is a combination of Motown classics mixed with some of the greatest songs of all time, featuring the hits of The Temptations, The Four Tops, Aretha Franklin, Whitney Houston, The Supremes, Lionel Richie, Tina Turner, Barry White, and more. Tickets cost $44$54. Visit flaglerauditorium.org.
MONDAY, JAN. 16
ANNUAL DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. BREAKFAST CELEBRATION

When: 8:30 a.m. Where: South Ormond Neighborhood Center, 176 Division Ave., Ormond Beach Details: Enjoy a free carry-out hot breakfast, in honor of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. The breakfast, held in partnership with the city, celebrates the progress of social change and honor King’s accomplishments. For more information, call Tina Carlyle at 386-527-5918 or Livingston Edwards at 386-676-3231.
FRIDAY, JAN. 20
FLAGLER FILM FESTIVAL




When: 6-10 p.m. Friday, Jan. 20; 12-11 p.m. Saturday, Jan. 21; and 129:30 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 22 Where: Best Western Plus Flagler


Beach Area Inn and Suites, 200 Flagler Plaza Drive, Palm Coast Details: Attend this film festival, formed to showcase the work of new and emerging filmmakers as well as that of experienced filmmakers. There will be over 30 films of diverse genres, Q+As with filmmakers, and, on Sunday, an awards ceremony. Businesses and organizations are invited to participate by purchasing a package; deadline to do so is Jan. 13. Tickets cost $10 a day and $25 for the weekend if purchased in advance; $13 a day and $35 for the
Where: First Baptist Church Of Palm Coast, 6050 Palm Coast Parkway, Palm Coast Details: Presented by Synergy Senior Fitness, attend upbeat classes with Senior Fitness Specialist Artie Gardella. Classes are ongoing. Insurances that cover fitness accepted, or a donation for those with no coverage. Visit Synergyseniorfitness.com.
MOAS EXHIBITIONS
When: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday; 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday Where: Museum of Arts and Sciences, 352 S. Nova Road, Daytona

Details: The Museum of Arts and Sciences has the following shows on display: “Every Girl Deserves Flowers”; “Minor Masterpieces: Porcelain Painted Scenes from the Collection”; “Magical: The Art of Susan Zukowsky”; “Selections from the MOAS Contemporary Art Collection”; “A Beautiful Mess: Weavers & Knotters of the Vanguard” ; and “Pacific Exotics: The Woodblock Prints of Paul Jacoulet”(through Jan. 15).
EXERCISES FOR
THE MATURING BODY When: 10:30 a.m. Mondays and Thursdays
*Other providers are available in the CarePlus network. Provider may also contract with other Plans/Part D sponsors. Flagler County. CarePlus is an HMO plan with a Medicare contract. Enrollment in CarePlus depends on contract renewal. Important: At CarePlus, it is important you are treated fairly. CarePlus Health Plans, Inc. complies with applicable Federal civil rights laws and does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, ancestry, ethnicity, sex, sexual orientation, gender, gender identity, disability, age, marital status, religion, or language in their programs and activities, including in admission or access to, or treatment or employment in, their programs and activities. The following department has been designated to handle inquiries regarding CarePlus’ non-discrimination policies: Member Services, PO Box 277810, Miramar, FL 33027, 1-800-794-5907 (TTY: 711). Auxiliary aids and services, free of charge, are available to you. 1-800-794-5907 (TTY: 711). CarePlus provides free auxiliary aids and services, such as qualified sign language interpreters, video remote interpretation, and written information in other formats to people with disabilities when such auxiliary aids and services are necessary to ensure an equal opportunity to participate. This information is available for free in other languages. Please call our Member Services number at 1-800-7945907. Hours of operation: October 1 - March 31, 7 days a week, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. April 1 - September 30, Monday - Friday, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. You may leave a voicemail after hours, Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays and we will return your call within one business day. Español (Spanish): Esta información está disponible de forma gratuita en otros idiomas. Favor de llamar a Servicios para Afiliados al número que aparece anteriormente. Kreyòl Ayisyen (French Creole):
ki nan lis anwo an. H1019_MKDMFNPRproviderloc2023_C

THE SWAN Christine Broussard has always been drawn to art history and decoration, she wrote in a statement. Now, she paints in multimedia “to create harmonious relationships with colors and shapes,” both in representative and abstract work.

“Pens, brushes, paint and travel journals are the tools of the explorer,” Broussard said.
“Sketching and painting on site is a great way to take the pulse of a country and render it on paper. Later on, those quick paintings on small surfaces become an inspiration for larger renderings.”
Her work will be on display at The Casements Jan. 13-31 in an exhibition titled, “Symphonie de Couleurs.”
Broussard is a member of several artist associations in the greater Ormond Beach area and regularly exhibits her art at different galleries and museums.
–JARLEENE ALMENASTHE FINE ARTS
MS TRIDENT Weldon Ryan enjoys painting the human form.
According to his artist bio, the Palm Coast artist was fascinated in his youth with the human form and how it works. As an adult, he paints Caribbean women in carnival costumes. A native of Trinidad and Tobago, he notes that painting women from carnival festivals gives him “the best of both fantasy and real world representations.”

Ryan’s work will be on display for the Art League of Daytona Beach’s annual members’ awards exhibit, which opens Jan. 15 and runs through Feb. 12 at 433 S. Palmetto Ave. in Daytona Beach.
The opening reception and awards presentation is scheduled for 1-4 p.m. on Sunday, Jan. 15.
Ryan will give a painting demonstration from 1-2 p.m. during Sunday’s opening reception.
–JARLEENE ALMENASLEAP OF FAITH
pressuring the defender, even though she’s a defensive mid,” Hald said. “The defender made a mistake, and she just slotted one to the far post.”
BRENT WORONOFF ASSOCIATE EDITORHeidi Michaels started the game on the bench and ended it leaping out of her seat, celebrating the save of the game.
In between, the junior midfielder scored the go-ahead goal to help the Flagler Palm Coast girls soccer team defeat New Smyrna Beach 2-1 in a first-round Five Star Conference tournament game Saturday, Jan. 7, at the Ormond Beach Sports Complex.

The FPC boys team gave up four second-half goals to fall to Spruce Creek, 5-2.



The Bulldogs’ girls team (11-3-1) advanced to the tournament semifinals. But the road stopped there as Spruce Creek defeated FPC 5-1 on Tuesday Jan. 10.
“Heidi was a call-up from the JV team,” FPC coach Pete Hald said of Michaels. “She didn’t start, but she got in there, worked hard.”
Michaels, playing in just her fourth varsity game of the season, came up from her defensive midfield position, touched the ball away from a defender and scored with 2:32 left in the first half to put FPC ahead 2-1.


“On that particular play, she kept
Savannah O’Grady scored FPC’s first goal on a free kick outside the 18-yard box.
“It just kind of bobbled on the ground and (the goalkeeper) didn’t get to it,” O’Grady said. “But a goal’s a goal. I’ll take it.”

“That’s exactly what she needed to do,” Hald said of O’Grady’s 11th goal of the season. “A low, hard driven ball and made the keeper make the save.”
Natalie Neal, FPC’s freshman goalkeeper, made a couple of key saves in the final minutes to preserve the lead. Her leaping save with 1:13 left started the celebration.
“Everyone was out of their seats, and everyone was screaming (when Neal made the save),” Michaels said.
“Natalie’s a superstar,” O’Grady added. “She definitely comes up big in the big games.”
Neal said high shots have given her trouble this year, but this one she reached and tipped over the crossbar.
“That was scary,” Neal confessed. “Normally the shots that go over my head, I time them wrong, and they go in. But I timed that one perfectly. I got scared because one of the girls started running at me, but I made the save.”
Neal had left the game for a few minutes in the first half after getting stepped on during a collision. New Smyrna Beach (3-6) scored on a long ball over substitute keeper Kaitlyn Holley’s head.
Holley was FPC’s keeper last season, but she has been a valuable addition at right back this year, Hald said, while Neal has been solid in the net, allowing 12 goals and making 57 saves in 15 games.
“Kaitlyn hasn’t been playing much goalkeeping, and she has been playing awesome at right back,” Hald said. “Maybe I should have given Kaitlyn a little more time in the goal in other games, just in case this happened.”
Hald was pleased with Neal and the defense but said the Bulldogs had gotten away from possessing the ball late in the game the way they did in the first half.
“That gave them numerous opportunities,” Hald said. “New Smyrna got the ball a lot in the last 20 minutes.”
FPC will host Bolles at 11 a.m. on Saturday, Jan. 13.
CREEK SURGES PAST FPC BOYS
At halftime, it appeared FPC’s boys Five Star Conference game against Spruce Creek could go either way, but the Hawks quickly broke open a 1-1 tie to defeat the Bulldogs 5-2 on Jan. 7 at the Ormond Beach Sports

Complex.
“We came out too flat-footed and conceded three goals in the first six minutes of the half,” FPC coach Ramtin Amiri said.
“At that point we were just chasing the game. We did all the good work in the first half to get back in the game to make it 1-1, but we have
“We did all the good work in the first half to get back in the game to make it 1-1, but we have to collectively learn to not make the same mistake over and over again.”
to collectively learn to not make the same mistake over and over again. All their goals in the second half were set pieces or balls into the box, and we continued to let them get on it unmarked.”
FPC’s Jace Zecca scored with 18:09 left in the first half to tie the score at 1-1. Mikhail Zysek scored the Bulldogs’ second goal with 2:32 left off a rebound shot.
“(The players) kept working. We did good to score twice,” Amiri said. “But you cannot concede five goals in a game.”
The Bulldogs (8-6) host Beachside at 7:20 p.m. on Thursday, Jan. 11, and then they will be back home on Friday, Jan. 12, for senior night against St. Joseph. Game time is 6 p.m.
Senior Knighten, freshman Davis lead Matanzas to 76-54 win over FPC
Karl Knighten scored 28 points against his former team; Alex Davis had 13 points and 13 rebounds in his high school debut.


Matanzas boys basketball coach Henry Robinson knew Karl Knighten was going to have a big game against his former team. But he didn’t think the senior guard was going to connect on his first four shots from behind the 3-point arc.



Knighten went on to score 28 points and hit six 3-pointers — five in the first half — as the Pirates rolled
to a 76-54 victory over Flagler Palm Coast on Friday, Jan. 6, at a packed Matanzas gym.
“We drew up the first couple of sets in the game for Jude (Lukaszewski),” Robinson said. “But after Karl hit that second 3, we said, ‘forget about the offense, just go with it.’”


Knighten is one of the top scorers in the state, averaging 27.2 points per game, but he is not normally a 3-point shooter. In his first 14 games, he had hit just 19 shots from behind the arc.
“I’ve always been able to shoot,” Knighten said. “It’s just that nobody has been able to stop me from going to the rim.”
With Knighten on fire, Matanzas opened up a 22-4 lead against the Bulldogs. Knighten said he felt he had a point to prove.
“The whole summer they’ve been talking crazy about me and about our team, telling us we’re not that good,” said Knighten, who played for FPC last season. “I just had to come show them.”
But the biggest revelation of the game was Matanzas big man Alex Davis dominating near the basket. The 6-foot-8 freshman was making his high school debut after recovering from a broken tibia, which he sustained in an AAU game last May.
Davis finished the game with a double-double of 13 points and 13 rebounds.
“He grabbed a lot of rebounds and made it hard for them to get shots off,” Knighten said. “He impacts the game in multiple ways. He’s going to
be special.”

The Pirates improved to 6-9 after losing five of their previous seven games. But Robinson said with the addition of Davis, Matanzas will be a different team heading into the last month of the season.

“With Alex on the court, it changes everything,” Robinson said. “It allows (guard) Roman Martin to pressure the ball. If he gets beat, we have Alex back there guarding the basket. With Alex inside, Jude can play out on the perimeter more. And he’s not even in shape yet. The way he looked tonight, that’s not Alex at his best.”
Javius Burrell added 12 points and eight rebounds for the Pirates.
FPC (6-10) opened the third quarter with a full-court press and went on a 10-2 spurt to pull within 10 points at 45-35, but Matanzas closed the quarter on a 15-6 run.

“We knew they were going to try to press,” Robinson said. “We told (the players) at halftime that they’re going to give us their best shot in the first two or three minutes. ‘Let’s weather the storm and close it out.’”
FPC is scheduled to host St. Augustine on Tuesday, Jan. 10. Matanzas’ next home game is Tuesday, Jan. 17, against Palatka.

“I’ve always been able to shoot. It’s just that nobody has been able to stop me from going to the rim.”KARL KNIGHTEN Lucaszewski grabbed nine rebounds. Jameer Clark led the Bulldogs with 13 points. Clark hit 7 of 10 free throws. BRENT WORONOFF ASSOCIATE EDITOR
TOUGH LOSS FOR BUCS
Mainland’s boys basketball team fell to 10-4 with a 72-69 loss in double overtime to Lakeland Jan. 7. Lakeland improved to 10-2 with the home victory.
“It was a playoff-type atmosphere. My kids fought hard,” Mainland coach Joe Giddens said.
Bucs freshman Nate Kirk hit a 3-pointer at the buzzer in regulation to send the game to the first overtime. The Bucs hosted two tournaments over the break — the Florida Classic Shootout, with 10 boys teams and six girls teams, and the Mainland Christmas Shootout, with 18 boys teams.
Mainland went 5-1 over the two shootouts with its only loss coming on the last day of the Christmas Shootout to Lauderdale Lake Boyd Anderson. The Bucs beat two Georgia teams in the Christmas Shootout — Miller Grove, which has won seven state championships since 2009, and Windsor Forest, which made the final four in its classification last season.
The Bucs host Spruce Creek on Friday, Jan. 13, and Winter Haven on Saturday, Jan. 14. They’re back home Tuesday, Jan. 17, against FPC.
Matanzas’ Jordan Mills returns to wrestling mat UMPIRE SCHOOL IN
Matanzas junior Jordan Mills returned to the wrestling mat for the first time since injuring his shoulder during football practice in October.
Mills was the Class 2A state runner-up at 170 pounds last year. In his first action back, he went 3-0 to win the 182-pound title at the Marine Corps Challenge on Saturday, Jan. 7, at Jacksonville Riverside.
“Jordan went out there working on getting his timing back,” coach T.J. Gillin said.
Mills was one of six Pirates to win titles in the 11-team tournament as Matanzas cruised to the team title, defeating runner-up Wolfson, 236140. Freshman Mikey Fries won the 138-pound title with three consecutive pins. Also winning their weight class were Landon Wright (170), Tim McLean (113), Kaden Golder (120) and Samuel May (160).
McLean (25-4) will be returning to the 106-pound class this weekend at the Wolfpack Challenge in Jacksonville. McLean is ranked among the top three in the state at 106. All three wrestlers are in the same district.
The second-ranked Matanzas girls wrestling team finished second at the Lady Wildcat Scramble at McKeel Academy in Lakeland on Nov. 7. The Pirates’ girls team also traveled to Columbia, Missouri, over the Christmas break and finished fourth among 82 teams at the high-powered Wonder Woman Girls Wrestling Tournament on Dec. 29-30. Matanzas was the only Florida team in the tournament.

The Pirates have six wrestlers ranked among the top 10 in the state girls rankings. Brielle Bibla (130 pounds) is ranked first, while her sister, Kendall Bibla (140 pounds) is ranked third, and Christina Borgmann (120 pounds) is ranked second.
Brielle has a 24-2 record, with her only losses coming to the same wrestler in the Wonder Woman tourney.
“In my opinion, Brielle is the best female wrestler, pound for pound, in the state,” Gillin said.
Matanzas’ other top-10 wrestlers are Mariah Mills (sixth, 110 pounds); reigning state champ Tiana Fries (sixth, 125 pounds); and Gabrielle Proctor (10th, 145 pounds).
Mainland’s Cheyenne Wigley (third, 235 pounds) and Trinya Tillman (10th, 155 pounds) are also ranked in the top 10.
Matanzas will host the Lady Pirate Classic on Saturday, Jan. 14, with matches starting at 9 a.m.
FPC WINS FOUR MATCHES AT EAGLE DUALS
Flagler Palm Coast went 4-1 at the Eagle Duals at George Jenkins High School on Jan. 7. Through the first half of the season, 132-pounder Kole Hannant has just one loss. Hannant placed sixth at the Class 3A state championships last year.
The Bulldogs’ other top wrestlers have been 138-pounder Johnny Hald
(two losses) and 195-pounder Dalton Schell (three losses).
Freshman Joslyn Johnson, who will compete in the girls’ events in the postseason, has been wrestling in dual events for the FPC boys. Johnson has wrestled at 106 pounds.
“She’s done a phenomenal job for us,” said first-year FPC coach David Bossardet. “Her weight is pretty (competitive) for girls, but she has beaten a couple of ranked girls, and she keeps getting better.”
Another girl, 130-pounder Ana Vilar, was scheduled to return to the Bulldogs this week. Vilar was a state qualifier last season. Wrestling with the Flagler Wrestling Club, Vilar finished fourth at the Knockout Christmas Classic on Dec. 21-22 at Silver Spurs Arena in Kissimmee.
The Bulldogs have four more dual matches on their schedule — at home Jan. 11 against Palatka, Jan. 18 against Lake Mary and Jan. 19 against Deltona, and at county rival Matanzas on Jan. 25. FPC hosts the 37th annual Flagler Rotary tournament Jan. 27-28.
SESSION
Most people might think baseball season starts in earnest when pitchers and catchers report to spring training in late February.
Veteran major league umpire Hunter Wendelstedt disputes that.
“Baseball actually starts on Jan. 2 with the beginning of the Wendelstedt Umpire School,” he said.
The umpire school runs from Jan. 2 to Feb. 2 at the Ormond Beach Sports Complex. It has been in the Daytona Beach area since the 1930s. Hunter’s father, Harry Wendelstedt, took it over from fellow major league ump Al Somers in 1976. Harry moved it to Ormond Beach in 1990.

Hunter Wendelstedt, who has been a major league ump since 1998, took over the school in 2003.
This is a big year for the school, Wendelstedt said. Four women with major league aspirations are enrolled this year. Getting women in the school and a chance to umpire in the majors was always a priority for his dad, Wendelstedt said.
The school will also have a student this year who is making the trip from Nigeria.
“He lives in Nigeria, so he’s the first person from Africa to attend an umpire school,” Wendelstedt said.
This year, 10 major league umpires have announced they will be retiring at the end of the upcoming season. Their replacements have been hired, pending physicals, Wendelstedt said, and six of them are alumni of the Wendelstedt School.
“We continue to bring in good ones,” Wendelstedt said.
Email results and story ideas to brent@palmcoastobserver. com.
celebrity cipher

"In my opinion, Brielle (Bibla) is the best female wrestler, pound for pound, in the state."
T.J. GILLIN, FPC wrestling coachFile photo by Brent Woronoff
Highest seller: Home on saltwater canal

Ahome on a canal with access to the Intracoastal Waterway was the top real estate transaction for the week of Dec. 1-7 in Flagler County in the Multiple Listing Service. Brian Hogan sold 9 Flametree Court to Austin Morgan and Mark Morgan, of Charlotte, North Carolina, for $858,000. Built in 2007, the house is a 3/2 and has a fireplace, swimming pool, boat dock, boathouse and 2,652 square feet. It sold in June for $850,000.

Condos OP Gold LLC, of Chandler, Arizona, sold 104 Surfview Drive, Unit 2603, to Nicholas Voigt, of Jacksonville, for $469,900. Built in 1992, the condo is a 2/2 and has 1,158 square feet. It sold in August for $448,000.

Karen Hegarty, of Ormond Beach, sold 70 San Juan Drive, Unit D104, to Antonio and Sharon Testa, of Wilmington, Ohio, for $265,000. Built in 2001, the condo is a 3/2 and has 1,463 square feet.
Belle Terre D.R. Horton Inc. Jacksonville, of St. Johns, sold 24 Princess Luise Lane to Norman and Lynda McBride, of Palm Coast, for $338,990. Built

in 2022, the house is a 4/2 and has 1,862 square feet.
Daytona North Jacqueline and Ivar Bauer, of St. Marys, Georgia, sold 4495 Butternut Ave. to Lois and Danny Billingsley, of Bunnell, for $219,000. Built in 2022, the house is a 2/2 and has 1,008 square feet.
Grand Haven
Mario Cabrera and Carolyn Crowder, of Port Orange, sold 20 Creekside Drive to James and Elaine Waeber, of Palm Coast, for $606,000. Built in 2016, the house is a 3/2 and has a swimming pool and 2,208 square feet. It sold in 2016 for $289,700.
Grand Landings
Dream Finders Homes LLC, of Jack-

sonville, sold 129 Nighthawk Lane to Christopher and Kristina Walker, of Palm Coast, for $385,000. Built in 2022, the house is a 4/3 and has 2,036 square feet.
Grand Haven North Bruce and Shirley Douglas, individually and as trustees, sold 17 Lakeside Drive to Shelby and Donna Oatts, of Palm Coast, for $625,000. Built in 2006, the house is a 3/2.5 and has a fireplace and 2,218 square feet. It sold in 2017 for $395,000.
Hamptons
Rebecca Burch and John McElhinny, of Ellijay, Georgia, sold 2 Cedar Point Drive to Mauricia Alo, of Palm Coast, for $410,000. Built in 1995, the house is a 4/2 and has a swimming pool and 1,888 square feet. It sold in 2019 for $248,000.
Indian Trails
Joseph Benza Jr., of Ponte Vedra Beach, sold 75 Beaverdam Lane to Rafael Carrasquillo Jr. and Leana Albuquerque, of Palm Coast, for $335,000. Built in 1989, the house is a 3/2 and has 1,613 square feet. The house sold in 2021 for $230,000.

INB Fund 1 LLC, of Orlando, sold 207 Boulder Rock Drive to Andrew Burden and Erin Poulin-Harding, of Palm Coast, for $319,900. Built in 2022, the house is a 3/2 and has 1,500 square feet.
Derek and Madison Faivre, of Palm Coast, sold 9 Buffalo Grove Drive to Katy Gantz, of Palm Coast, for $311,000. Built in 2005, the house is a 3/2 and has 1,408 square feet.
Lakeside at Matanzas Shores Robert and Virginia Sanders sold 32 San Carlos Drive to Chandra and Gary Holback, of Palm Coast, for $450,000. Built in 1994, the house is a 3/2 and has 1,805 square feet.
Lehigh Woods
Jessica McCamant, and Larry and Cynthia McCamant, of Palm Coast, sold 8 Rocking Horse Drive to Michael and Christine Pollock, of Palm Coast, for $485,000. Built in 2009, the house is a 3/2 and has a fireplace, swimming pool and 1,903 square feet. It sold in 2015 for $214,900.

Jonathan and Jennifer Doogan, individually and as trustees, sold 28 Roxbury Lane to Gerlande Guillaume, of Daytona Beach, for $292,000. Built in 2005, the house is a 3/2 and has 1,515 square feet.

Matanzas Woods
Shane Dennis Jr., of Palm Coast, sold 7 Lemay Place to Bruce and Debra McClenithan, of Tavenier, for $380,000. Built in 2004, the house is a 4/2 and has 2,287 square feet. It sold in 2021 for $270,000.
Philip Onofrio, as representative, sold 47 Laramie Drive to Jeffrey and Theresa Arlaud, of Palm Coast, for $309,500. Built in 2003, the house is a 3/2 and has a swimming pool and 1,576 square feet.

Not in Subdivision
Maronda Homes LLC, of Jacksonville, sold 31 Seagoing Trail to John and Catherine Wells, of Palm Coast, for $313,600. Built in 2022, the house is a 3/2 and has 1,988 square feet.
Holiday Builders Inc., of Melbourne, sold 31 Ryley Lane to Steven Hegedusch, as trustee, for $285,240. Built in 2022, the house is a 3/2 and has 1,284 square feet.
Christophe and Nelly Moran sold 60 Riverina Drive to Michael and Karen Mitchell, of Palm Coast, for $270,000. Built in 2003, the house is a 3/2 and has 1,244 square feet. It sold in 2010 for $100,000.
Palm Harbor
Richard and Susan Eaker, of Cheraw, South Carolina, sold 12 Collinson Court to Kseniia Iatcunenko and Denis Busalaev, of Jacksonville, for $530,000. Built in 1984, the house is a 3/2 and has a boat dock and 1,696 square feet. It sold in 2014 for $259,900.
Eleanor Krabichler, of Fort Lauderdale, sold 41 Fairmont Lane to Vitor Mira and Christina Torossian-Mira, of Palm Coast, for $470,500. Built in 2007, the house is a 3/3 and has 2,329 square feet.
Pine Grove
Founders Capital LLC, of Orlando, sold 51 Point of Woods Drive to Charnita and Earl Dickerson, of Palm Coast, for $464,900. Built in 2022, the house is a 3/2 and has 2,306 square feet.
Seminole Woods
D.R. Horton Inc. Jacksonville, of St. Johns, sold 182 Underwood Trail to Mark and Lucimar Hoerber, of Palm Coast, for $414,990. Built in 2022, the house is a 3/3 and has 2,363 square feet.
Adams Homes of Northwest Florida Inc., of Pensacola, sold 127 Sea Trail to Michael and Diana Galloway, of Palm Coast, for $340,000. Built in 2022, the house is a 4/2 and has 1,755 square feet.
Toby Tobin, of gotoby.com, contributed to this report.
CORPORATE OFFICE - 386-677-SOLD (7653) 900 West Granada Blvd., Ste. 3, Ormond Beach, FL 32174
BEACHSIDE OFFICE - 386-441-SOLD (7653) 2110 Oceanshore Blvd., Ste. B, Ormond Beach, FL 32176

PORT ORANGE OFFICE - 386-767-SOLD (7653) 840 Dunlawton Ave., Ste. D, Port Orange, FL 32127
COMMERCIAL OFFICE - 386-253-8565 140 S. Atlantic Ave., Suite 102, Ormond Beach, FL 32176
DAYTONA BEACH SHORES OFFICE - 386-766-SOLD (7653) 3118 S. Atlantic Ave., Daytona Beach Shores, FL 32118

DAYTONA
North Peninsula condo leads sales list

Acondo facing the ocean in Ormond-by-the-Sea was the top real estate transaction in Ormond Beach and Ormond-by-the-Sea for the week of Nov. 27 to Dec. 3 in the Multiple Listing Service. Danny Renshaw, of Bowling Green, Kentucky, sold 1239 Ocean Shore Blvd., Unit 3-A-1, to Rodney Angstadt and Joan Sarcona, of Ormond Beach, for $710,000. Built in 1984, the condo is a 3/2.5 and has 1,853 square feet. It sold in 2017 for $394,500.


ORMOND BEACH
Halifax Plantation
D.R. Horton Inc., of Orlando, sold 2885 Monaghan Drive to Frank and Andrea Plescia, of Ormond Beach, for $478,000. Built in 2022, the house is a 4/3 and has 2,115 square feet.
Mez Edward Rossario, individually and as trustee, sold 77 Nicholas Court to Katherine Stewart, of Ormond Beach, for $482,000. Built in 1964,
the house is a 3/2 and has a fireplace and 1,977 square feet.
Northbrook
OP SPE TPA1 LLC, of Chandler, Arizona, sold 1302 Wandering Oaks Drive to Brittany Phillips and Deborah Phillips, of Ormond Beach, for $350,000. Built in 1979, the house is a 3/2 and has a fireplace and 1,771 square feet.
Ormond Terrace Joseph and Julie Mazzuca, of Reddick, sold 72 Hernandez Ave. to Clay Stewart, of Ormond Beach, for $379,900. Built in 1955, the house is a 3/2 and has 1,325 square
feet. It sold in February, 2022, for $339,900.
Park Place
Tania Marchand sold 41 Park Place to Carrie and Michael Garman, of Ormond Beach, for $269,900. Built in 1981, the townhouse is a 2/2 and has 1,477 square feet. It sold in 2020 for $172,500.
Rio Vista Gardens David and Martha Blumenauer, individually and as trustees, sold 601 Orchard Ave. to Richard and Teresa Kasper, of Ormond Beach, for $440,000. Built in 1970, the main house is a 4/3 with 2,204 square feet. A second house is a 2/1.5 with 1,140 square feet.
River Oaks Steven and Michelle DeMay, of Daytona Beach, sold 226 River Vale Lane to Stephen and Alyse Thompson, of Ormond Beach, for $450,000. Built in 2018, the house is a 4/3 and has 2,345 square feet. It sold in 2018 for $278,100.


The Trails Rian and Mina Kubannek, and Harold Kubannek, sold 226 Pine Cone Trail to Yechiel Sprei, of Spring Valley, New York, for $265,000. Built in 1978, the townhouse is a 3/2 and has a fireplace and 1,696 square feet. It sold in 2020 for $175,000.
Frank Stankus, of Daytona Beach,

NOV. 27 - DEC. 3


Velaquez, of Ormond Beach, for $305,000. Built in 1979, the house is a 3/2 and has a fireplace and 1,336 square feet. It sold in January, 2022, for $230,000.
The Woodlands Clay and Elaine Kisamore, of Ormond Beach, sold 53 Sandpiper Circle to Melissa Mier and Emogene Howerton, of Ormond Beach, for $349,950. Built in 1984, the townhouse is a 4/3.5 and has 2,640 square feet.
ORMOND-BY-THE-SEA
The Center for Investments LLC, of Ormond Beach, sold 51 Capistrano Drive to Deborah Cabaniss, of Ormond Beach, for $365,000. Built in 1986, the house is a 2/2 and has 1,258 square feet. It sold in September for $296,000.
Marjorie Colarossi, of Ormond Beach, sold 20 Nina St. to Stanley Mikulka Jr., of Ormond Beach, for $349,000. Built in 1956, the house is a 2/1 and has 1,206 square feet.
Jolinda McLellan, Don Haney, Cheryl Hamrick, Starla HaneySwart and Terri Price sold 16 Pinta St. to Zamira Monsalvo and Belkis Fernandez, of Hasbrouck Heights, New Jersey, for $290,000. Built in 1956, the house is a 2/1 and has 1,076 square feet.
Adams, of Adams, Cameron & Co. Realtors, contributed to this report.

FIRST INSERTION
Notice Under Fictitious Name Law
According to Florida Statute Number 865.09
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage in business under the Fictitious Name of Your Driver plus located at 23 Casper Dr, in the City of Palm Coast, Flagler County, FL 32137 intends to register the said name with the Division of Corporations of the Department of State, Tallahassee, Florida.
Dated this 4th day of January, 2023.
Edwin McCarren January 12, 2023 22-00265F
FIRST INSERTION
Notice Under Fictitious Name Law
According to Florida Statute Number 865.09
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage in business under the Fictitious Name of Sable Sands Realty located at 48 Rocking Horse Drive, in the City of Palm Coast, Flagler County, FL 32164 intends to register the said name with the Division of Corporations of the Department of State, Tallahassee, Florida.
Dated this 5th day of January, 2023.
Dorothy Sperber January 12, 2023 22-00267F
FIRST INSERTION
Notice Under Fictitious Name Law
According to Florida Statute Number 865.09
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage in business under the Fictitious Name of Chariot Chains located at 40 Lloyd Trail Unit B., in the City of Palm Coast, Flagler County, FL 32164 intends to register the said name with the Division of Corporations of the Department of State, Tallahassee, Florida.
Dated this 10th day of January, 2023.
John E Michaud January 12, 2023 22-00273F
PUBLIC NOTICES
FLAGLER COUNTY LEGAL NOTICES
FIRST INSERTION
Notice Under Fictitious Name Law
According to Florida Statute Number 865.09
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage in business under the Fictitious Name of Hollory located at 17 Magnolia Street, in the City of Flagler Beach, Flagler County, FL 32136 intends to register the said name with the Division of Corporations of the Department of State, Tallahassee, Florida.
Dated this 5th day of January, 2023.
Lauren Bonomo January 12, 2023 22-00266F
FIRST INSERTION
Notice Under Fictitious Name Law
According to Florida Statute Number 865.09
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, desiring to engage in business under the Fictitious Name of Sunset Virtual Services located at 17B Rosecroft Ln., in the City of Palm Coast, Flagler County, FL 32164 intends to register the said name with the Division of Corporations of the Department of State, Tallahassee, Florida.
Dated this 6th day of January, 2023.
Antonia Mariano January 12, 2023 22-00272F
FIRST INSERTION
OF PUBLIC MEETING
NOTICE
CITY OF BUNNELL, FLORIDA
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE CITY OF BUNNELL, FLORIDA will hold a
Hearing as authorized by law at 7:00 P.M. on the 23rd day of January 2023, for the purpose of approving an Administrative Development Order, in the Chambers Meeting Room of the Flagler County Government Services Building (GSB) located at 1769 East Moody Blvd, Bunnell, Florida 32110.
ADMNISTRATIVE ORDER NO. 2022-01 AN ORDER OF THE CITY OF BUNNELL CITY COMMISSION APPROVING MINOR RURAL SUBDIVISION REPLAT APPLICATION NO. PZA 2022-69, ALLEN LANDS RURAL SUBDIVISON, A REPLAT OF LOT BLOCK 4, TRACTS 2-3, PARCEL NO. 18-12-30-5550-00040-0020 OF ST. JOHNS DEVELOPMENT COMPANY
SUBDIVISION, TO LEGALLY SUBDIVIDE THE LOT INTO FOUR SEPARATE 5+ ACRE PARCELS FOR THE ALLEN LANDS RURAL SUBDIVISION; 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-todate 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 prior to the meeting.
NOTICE: If a person decides to appeal any decision made by the City Commission on this matter a recording of the proceeding may be needed and for such purposes the person may need to ensure that a verbatim record is made which includes the testimony and evidence upon which the appeal is based. (Section 286.0105, Florida Statutes) January 12, 2023 22-0027 1F
FIRST INSERTION
RADIANCE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DISTRICT
NOTICE OF BOARD OF SUPERVISORS REGULAR MEETING
Notice is hereby given that a regular meeting of the Board of Supervisors of the Radiance Community Development District (the “District”) will be held on Monday, January 23, 2023, at 11:00 0.m. at the Hilton Garden Inn, 55 Town Center Blvd., Palm Coast, FL 32164.
The purpose of the meeting is to discuss any topics presented to the board for consideration.
Copies of the agenda may be obtained from the District Manager, DPFG Management & Consulting LLC, 250 International Parkway, Suite 208, Lake Mary, Florida 32746, Telephone (321) 263-0132, Ext. 193.
The meeting is open to the public and will be conducted in accordance with the provisions of Florida law for community development districts. The meeting may be continued in progress without additional notice to a date, time, and place to be specified on the record at the meeting. There may be occasions when Staff and/or Supervisors may participate by speaker telephone.
Pursuant to provisions of the Americans with Disabilities Act, any person requiring special accommodations to participate in the meeting is asked to advise the District Manager’s office at least forty-eight (48) hours before the meeting by contacting the District Manager at (321) 263-0132, Ext. 193. If you are hearing or speech impaired, please contact the Florida Relay Service at 711, for assistance in contacting the District Manager’s office.
A person who decides to appeal any decision made at the meeting, with respect to any matter considered at the meeting, is advised that a record of the proceedings is needed and that accordingly, the person may need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made, including the testimony and evidence upon which the appeal is to be based.
Radiance Community Development District David McInnes, District Manager (321) 263-0132, Ext. 193
January 12, 2023 22-00275F

FIRST INSERTION
FIRST INSERTION NOTICE TO CREDITORS

IN THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT COURT, IN AND FOR FLAGLER COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File No. 2022-CP-0842
Division 48 IN RE: ESTATE OF CONSTANCE LOIS LEPERA, Deceased.
The administration of the estate of CONSTANCE LOIS LEPERA, deceased, whose date of death was November 6, 2022, is pending in the Circuit Court for Flagler County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 1769 E Moody Blvd, Building #1, Bunnell, Florida, 32110. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative’s attorney are set forth below.
All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court ON OR BEFORE THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM.
FIRST INSERTION
SEMINOLE PALMS COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DISTRICT NOTICE OF BOARD OF SUPERVISORS REGULAR MEETING
Notice is hereby given that a regular meeting of the Board of Supervisors of the Seminole Palms Community Development District (the “District”) will be held on Monday, January 23, 2023, at 11:00 0.m. at the Hilton Garden Inn, 55 Town Center Blvd., Palm Coast, FL 32164. The purpose of the meeting is to discuss any topics presented to the board for consideration.
Copies of the agenda may be obtained from the District Manager, DPFG Management & Consulting LLC, 250 International Parkway, Suite 208, Lake Mary, Florida 32746, Telephone (321) 263-0132, Ext. 193.
The meeting is open to the public and will be conducted in accordance with the provisions of Florida law for community development districts. The meeting may be continued in progress without additional notice to a date, time, and place to be specified on the record at the meeting. There may be occasions when Staff and/or Supervisors may participate by speaker telephone.
Pursuant to provisions of the Americans with Disabilities Act, any person requiring special accommodations to participate in the meeting is asked to advise the District Manager’s office at least forty-eight (48) hours before the meeting by contacting the District Manager at (321) 263-0132, Ext. 193. If you are hearing or speech impaired, please contact the Florida Relay Service at 711, for assistance in contacting the District Manager’s office.
A person who decides to appeal any decision made at the meeting, with respect to any matter considered at the meeting, is advised that a record of the proceedings is needed and that accordingly, the person may need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made, including the testimony and evidence upon which the appeal is to be based.

Seminole Palms Community Development District
David McInnes, District Manager (321) 263-0132, Ext. 193
January 12, 2023
SECOND INSERTION
NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR FLAGLER COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File No. 2022 CP 000754
IN RE: ESTATE OF DONALD LLOYD MAXAM, Deceased.
The administration of the estate of DONALD LLOYD MAXAM, deceased, whose date of death was November 29, 2021, is pending in the Circuit Court for Flagler County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 1769 E. Moody Blvd. Bldg., Bunnell, FL 32110. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative’s attorney are set forth below.
All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate, on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served, must file their claims with this court ON OR BEFORE THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM.
SECOND INSERTION
NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR FLAGLER COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File No. 2022 CP 797 Division: Probate IN RE: ESTATE OF SANDRA CALDERON TEXEIRA a/k/a SANDRA TEXEIRA Deceased.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT, pursuant to the Order Granting Motion to Reschedule Foreclosure Sale entered on January 3, 2023 in the above-captioned action, the Clerk of Court, Tom Bexley, will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash www.flagler.realforeclose.com in accordance with Chapter 45, Florida Statutes on the 10th day of February, 2023 at 11:00 AM on the following described property as set forth in said Final Judgment of Foreclosure or order, to wit: Lot 1, Block 22, of Palm Coast, Map of Laguna Forest, Section 64, Seminole Woods at Palm Coast, according to plat recorded in Map Book 18, pages 36 through 43, of the Public Records of Flagler County, Florida.
Property address: 17 Lloshire Path, Palm Coast, FL 32164 Any person claiming an interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, other than the property owner as of the date of the lis pendens, must file a claim before the clerk reports the surplus as unclaimed.





Pursuant to the Fla. R. Jud. Admin. 2.516, the above signed counsel for Plaintiff designates attorney@padgettlawgroup. com as its primary e-mail address for service, in the above styled matter, of all pleadings and documents required to be served on the parties.
AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT. IF YOU ARE A PERSON WITH A DISABILITY WHO NEEDS AN ACCOMMODATION IN ORDER TO ACCESS COURT FACILITIES OR PARTICIPATE IN A COURT PROCEEDING, YOU ARE ENTITLED, AT NO COST TO YOU, TO THE PROVISION OF CERTAIN ASSISTANCE. TO REQUEST SUCH AN ACCOMMODATION, PLEASE CONTACT COURT ADMINISTRATION IN ADVANCE OF THE DATE THE SERVICE IS NEEDED: COURT ADMINISTRATION, 125 E. ORANGE AVE., STE. 300, DAYTONA BEACH, FL 32114, (386) 2576096. HEARING OR VOICE IMPAIRED, PLEASE CALL 711. Respectfully submitted, PADGETT LAW GROUP HEATHER GRIFFITHS, ESQ. Florida Bar # 91444 6267 Old Water Oak Road, Suite 203 Tallahassee, FL 32312 (850) 422-2520 (telephone) (850) 422-2567 (facsimile)
NOTICE OF SALE PURSUANT TO CHAPTER 45 IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR FLAGLER COUNTY, FLORIDA CIVIL ACTION CASE NO.: 18-2022-CA-000190 WELLS FARGO USA HOLDINGS, INC., Plaintiff, vs. CHRISTOPHER J. WATSON AKA CHRISTOPER JAMES WATSON, et al, Defendant(s).
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Pursuant to a Final Judgment of Foreclosure dated December 21, 2022, and entered in Case No. 18-2022-CA-000190 of the Circuit Court of the Seventh Judicial Circuit in and for Flagler County, Florida in which Wells Fargo USA Holdings, Inc., is the Plaintiff and Christopher J. Watson aka Christoper James Watson, Christine L. Watson, Unknown Party#1 N/K/A Vincent Sapuppo, Unknown Party#2 N/K/A Dallas Watson, are defendants, the Flagler County Clerk of the Circuit Court will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash in/on online at www.flagler.realforeclose.com, Flagler County, Florida at 11:00AM on the February 3, 2023 the following described property as set forth in said Final Judgment of Foreclosure:
LOT 13, BLOCK 133, OF PALM COAST, MAP OF BELLE TERRE, SECTION 35, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF, RECORDED IN PLAT BOOK 11, PAGES 2 THROUGH 26 OF THE PUBLIC RECORDS OF FLAGLER, COUN-
TY, FLORIDA. A/K/A 15 BILL CT PALM COAST FL 32137 Any person claiming an interest in the surplus from the sale, if any, other than the property owner as of the date of the Lis Pendens must file a claim before the Clerk reports the surplus as unclaimed.
ATTENTION: PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES
If you are a person with a disability who needs an accommodation in order to participate in this proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. Please contact Court Administration, 125 E. Orange Ave., Ste. 300, Daytona Beach, FL 32114, 386-257-6096, within 2 days of your receipt of this notice. If you are hearing impaired, call 1-800-955-8771; if you are voice impaired, call 1-800955-8770.
THIS IS NOT A COURT INFORMATION LINE. To file response please contact Flagler County Clerk of Court, 1769 E. Moody Blvd., Building 1, Bunnell, FL 32110, Tel: (386) 313-465; Fax: (386) 437-1928.
Dated this 06 day of January, 2023.
ALBERTELLI LAW P. O. Box 23028 Tampa, FL 33623 Tel: (813) 221-4743 Fax: (813) 221-9171 eService: servealaw@albertellilaw.com
By: /s/ Nathan Gryglewicz Florida Bar #762121 Nathan Gryglewicz, Esq. CT - 22-002109 January 12, 19, 2023 23-00006G

FIRST INSERTION
RADIANCE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DISTRICT
NOTICE OF BOARD OF SUPERVISORS MEETING AND NOTICE OF AUDIT COMMITTEE MEETING
The Audit Review Committee for the Radiance Community Development District (“District”) will hold an audit review committee meeting on January 23, 2023 at 11:00 a.m., and located at the Hilton Garden Inn, 55 Town Center Blvd., Palm Coast, FL 32164. At the meeting, the Audit Review Committee will review, discuss, and approve the selected auditor. The audit committee meeting will be held in conjunction with the regular meeting of the District’s Board of Supervisors, which regular meeting will be held at the same date, time, and location as the audit review committee meeting.
The meetings are open to the public and will be conducted in accordance with provisions of Florida law for community development districts. A copy of the agendas for the meetings may be obtained from the District Manager, at the office of DPFG Management and Consulting, LLC, located at 250 International Parkway Suite 208, Lake Mary, FL 32746.
The meetings may be continued to a date, time, and place to be specified on the record at the meetings.


There may be occasions when one or more Supervisors will participate by telephone. At the above location will be present a speaker telephone so that any Board Supervisor or Staff Member can attend the meeting at the above location and be fully informed of the discussions taking place either in person or by telephone communication.
Any person requiring special accommodations to participate in these meetings is asked to advise the District Office at (321) 263-0132 X-193, at least 48 hours before the meetings.
If you are hearing or speech impaired, please contact the Florida Relay Service at 1 (800) 955-8770, who can aid you in contacting the District Office.
A person who decides to appeal any action taken at the meetings is advised that this same person will need a record of the proceedings and that accordingly, the person may need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made, including the testimony and evidence upon which such appeal is to be based.
12, 2023
McInnes District Manager
All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE.
ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN FLORIDA STATUTES SECTION 733.702 WILL BE FOREVER BARRED.
NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIOD SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED.
The date of first publication of this notice is January 12, 2023.
Personal Representative: GREGORY CHARLES LEPERA 250 Rosario St. St. Augustine, FL 32086
Attorney for Personal Representative: Heather S. Maltby HEATHER@EPPGLAW.COM Florida Bar No. 116571 E.P.P.G. Law of St. Johns, PLLC 200 Malaga Street, Suite 2 St. Augustine, FL 32084 Telephone: 904-875-3774 January 12, 19, 2023 23-00003G
All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE.
ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN FLORIDA STATUTES SECTION 733.702 WILL BE FOREVER BARRED.
NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIOD SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED.
The date of first publication of this notice is: January 5, 2023. Signed on this day of, 1/3/2023.
DONALD JEFFERY MAXAM
Personal Representative 1101 Instrument Drive Rocky Mount, NC 27804
Heidi S. Webb Attorney for Personal Representative Florida Bar No. 73958 Law Office of Heidi S. Webb 140 South Beach Street, Ste. 310 Daytona Beach, FL 32114 Telephone: (386) 257-3332 Email: heidi@heidiwebb.com Secondary Email: filing@heidiwebb.com January 5, 12, 2023 23-00001G
The administration of the Estate of Sandra Calderon Texeira a/k/a Sandra Texeira, deceased, whose date of death was September 26, 2022, is pending in the Circuit Court for Flagler County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 1769 E Moody Blvd, Bldg 1, Bunnell, FL 32110. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative’s attorney are set forth below. All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court ON OR BEFORE THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM. All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE.

ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN FLORIDA STATUTES SECTION 733.702 WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. The date of first publication of this notice is January 5, 2023.
Personal Representative: Crystal Van Over 9030 Grey Pointe Dr. Knoxville, Tennessee 37922

Attorney for Personal Representative: Tina M. Mays, Attorney Florida Bar Number: 0726044 Mizell & Mays Law Firm, PA 331 Sullivan Street, Punta Gorda, FL 33950 Telephone: (941) 575-9291/ Fax: (941) 575-9296
E-Mail: tmays@mizell-law.com
Secondary E-Mail: ndotres@mizell-law.com January 5, 12, 2023 23-00002G
FIRST INSERTION
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Notice is hereby given that on dates below these vehicles will be sold at public sale on the date listed below at 10AM for monies owed on vehicle repair and storage cost pursuant to Florida Statutes 713.585 or Florida Statutes 713.78. Please note, parties claiming interest have right to a hearing prior to the date of sale with the Clerk of Courts as reflected in the notice. The owner has the right to recover possession of the vehicle without judicial proceedings as pursuant to Florida Statute 559.917. Any proceeds recovered from the sale of the vehicle over the amount of the lien will be deposited clerk of the court for disposition upon court order.
“No Title Guaranteed, A Buyer Fee May Apply” at 10:00 AM 02/06/23 Spanos Imports 525 W International Speedway Blvd Daytona Beach, FL 32114 2021 CHEV 1G1FF1R71M0122654 $8,923.57 January 12, 2022 22-00135V
FIRST INSERTION
NOTICE TO CREDITORS
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR VOLUSIA COUNTY, FLORIDA
PROBATE DIVISION No. 2022-13106 PRDL IN RE: ESTATE OF LYNANNE M. JORSEY Deceased.
The administration of the estate of, LYNANNE M. JORSEY, deceased, File Number 2022-13106-PRDL, is pending in the Circuit Court for Volusia County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 101 N. Alabama Ave., Deland, FL 32724.
The name and address of the personal representative and the personal representative’s attorney is set forth below.

All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate, on whom a copy of this notice is served must file their claims with this court ON OR BEFORE THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM.
All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate, must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE.

ALL CLAIMS NOT SO FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN FLORIDA STATUTES SECTION 733.702 WILL BE FOREVER BARRED.
NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED.
The date of the first publication of this Notice is January 12, 2023.
Personal Representative: Allen Jorsey 106 Kon Tiki Terrace Port Orange, FL 32199
Attorney for Personal Representative: PETER A. COHEN, P.A., Attorney Florida Bar No. 302521 19 W. Flagler St., Suite 810 Miami, FL 33130
Telephone: (305) 358-9251 pcohen1@bellsouth.net January 12, 19, 2023 23-00004I


VOLUSIA COUNTY LEGAL NOTICES
FIRST INSERTION NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING
ONE DAYTONA COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DISTRICT
The Board of Supervisors of the One Daytona Community Development District (“District”) will hold its regular meeting on Friday, January 20, 2023, at 10:00 a.m. at Interna-

tional Motorsports Center, located at One Daytona Boulevard, Daytona Beach, FL 32114. A copy of the agenda for the meeting can be obtained from the District Office at PFM Group Consulting LLC, 3501 Quadrangle Boulevard, Suite 270, Orlando, FL 32817 or by phone at (407) 723-5900. Additionally, a copy of the agenda, along with any meeting materials available in an electronic format, may be obtained at www.OneDaytonaCDD.org.
The meeting is open to the public and will be conducted in accordance with the provisions of Florida law. There may be occasions when one or more Board Supervisors or staff members will participate by telephone. The meeting may be continued in progress without additional notice to a time, date, and location stated on the record. Meetings may be cancelled from time to time without advertised notice.
Any person requiring special accommodations to participate in this meeting is asked to advise the District Office at (407) 723-5900, at least 48 hours before the meetings. If you are hearing or speech impaired, please contact the Florida Relay Service by dialing 7-1-1, or 1-800-955-8771 (TTY) / 1-800-955-8770 (Voice), for aid in contacting the District Office.
Any person who decides to appeal any decision made by the Board with respect to any matter considered at the meeting is advised that the person will need a record of the proceedings and that accordingly, the person may need to ensure that a verbatim record of the proceedings is made, including the testimony and evidence upon which the appeal is based.
Jane Gaarlandt District ManagerJanuary 12, 2023
FIRST INSERTION
NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR VOLUSIA COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File No. 2022 13150 PRDL Division: 10 IN RE: ESTATE OF JULE WILLIAM HARKE, aka JULIUS W. HARKE, aka JULIUS HARKE Deceased.
The administration of the estate of JULE WILLIAM HARKE, also known as JULIUS W. HARKE, deceased, whose date of death was December 2, 2022, is pending in the Circuit Court for Volusia County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 101 N. Alabama Ave, DeLand, , FL 32724.
The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative’s attorney are set forth below.
All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate, on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served, must file their claims with this court ON OR BEFORE THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM.
All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE.
ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN FLORIDA STATUTES SECTION 733.702 WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIOD SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED.
The date of first publication of this notice is: January 12, 2023. Signed on this day of, 1/9/2023.
HEIDI S. WEBB
Personal Representative 140 S. Beach St., Suite 310 Daytona Beach, FL 32114 Heidi S. Webb Attorney for Personal Representative Florida Bar No. 73958 Law Office of Heidi S. Webb 140 South Beach Street, Ste. 310 Daytona Beach, FL 32114 Telephone: (386) 257-3332 Email: heidi@heidiwebb.com January 12, 19, 2023 23-00005I
FIRST INSERTION NOTICE OF SALE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR VOLUSIA COUNTY, FLORIDA CASE NO. 2018 30823 CICI
SELENE FINANCE LP; Plaintiff, vs. CHAD MICHAEL JOHNSON, ET.AL;

Defendants NOTICE IS GIVEN that, in accordance with the Order granting Plaintiff’s Motion to Schedule Foreclosure Sale dated January 03, 2023, in the above-styled cause, I will sell to the highest and best bidder for cash beginning at 11:00 AM at WWW. VOLUSIA.REALFORECLOSE.COM, on February 3, 2023, the following described property: LOT 110 DOUGLAS PARK NO. 3, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT RECORDED IN MAP BOOK 19, PAGE 65, PUBLIC RECORDS OF VOLUSIA COUNTY, FLORIDA.
Property Address: 1332 MOORE STREET, DAYTONA BEACH, FL 32114 ANY PERSON CLAIMING AN INTEREST IN THE SURPLUS FROM THE SALE, IF ANY, OTHER THAN THE PROPERTY OWNER AS OF THE DATE OF THE LIS PENDENS MUST FILE A CLAIM BEFORE THE CLERK REPORTS THE SURPLUS AS UNCLAIMED. THE COURT, IN ITS DISCRETION, MAY ENLARGE THE TIME OF THE SALE. NOTICE OF THE CHANGED TIME OF SALE SHALL BE PUBLISHED AS PROVIDED HEREIN.
If you are a person with a disability who needs an accommodation in order to access court facilities or participate in a court proceeding, you are entitled, at no cost to you, to the provision of certain assistance. To request such an accommodation, please contact Court Administration in advance of the date the service is needed: Court Administration 125 E. Orange Ave., Ste. 300, Daytona Beach, FL 32114, Phone: (386) 257-6096, Hearing or voice impaired, please call 1 (800) 955-8770. /s/ Donna Evertz, Esq. Florida Bar No. 19232
Attorneys for Plaintiff Marinosci Law Group, P.C. 100 West Cypress Creek Road, Suite 1045 Fort Lauderdale, FL 33309 Phone: (954) 644-8704; Fax: (954) 772-9601 ServiceFL@mlg-defaultlaw.com ServiceFL2@mlg-defaultlaw.com MLG NO.: 18-03831 January 12, 19, 2023 23-00006I
SECOND INSERTION
NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR VOLUSIA COUNTY, FLORIDA CASE NO.: 2022-11603-PRDL IN RE: ESTATE OF: MICHAEL HAROLD CHILDRESS, Deceased.
The administration of the estate of MICHAEL HAROLD CHILDRESS, deceased, whose date of death was May 24, 2022, File Number 2022-11603-PRDL, DIVISION 10, is pending in the Circuit Court for Volusia County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is Post Office Box 6043, DeLand, Florida 32721. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative’s attorney are set forth below.
All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate, including unmatured, contingent or unliquidated claims, and whom have been served a copy of this notice, must file their claims with the Court WITHIN THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM.
All other creditors of the decedent and persons having claims or demands against the decedent’s estate, including unmatured, contingent or unliquidated claims, must file their claim with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE.
ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN SECTION 733.702 OF THE FLORIDA PROBATE CODE WILL BE FOREVER BARRED.
NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED.


The date of the first publication of this Notice is: January 5, 2023 ROBERT ROBINS, ESQUIRE P.O. Box 1649 Daytona Beach, FL 32115 (386) 252-5212 RobertRobinsLaw@hotmail.com Fla. Bar #356026 Personal Representative January 5, 12, 2023 23-00003I
SECOND INSERTION
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Notice is hereby given that on 1/20/2023 at 10:30 am, the following mobile home will be sold at public auction pursuant to F.S. 715.109. 1990 SKYL HS 23630188AZ & 23630188BZ . Last Tenants: CAROLYN L DAVIS AND DARLENE LASH and all unknown parties beneficiaries heirs . Sale to be at MHC PICKWICK LLC, DBA PICKWICK VILLAGE, 4500 S CLYDE MORRIS BLVD, PORT ORANGE, FL 32129. 813-282-5925.
January 5, 12, 2023 22-00131V
SECOND INSERTION
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Notice is hereby given that on 1/20/2023 at 10:30 am, the following mobile home will be sold at public auction pursuant to F.S. 715.109. 1972 GREE HS GF1017F .
Last Tenants: MICHAEL LEE NOBLE, CHRISTOPHER LEE NORMANDIN and all unknown parties beneficiaries heirs . Sale to be at MHC LIGHTHOUSE POINTE LLC AND MHC OPERATING LIMITED PARTNERSHIP DBA LIGHTHOUSE POINTE AT DAYTONA BEACH, 155 SPRING DRIVE, PORT ORANGE, FL 32129. 813-282-5925. January 5, 12, 2023 22-00134V
SECOND INSERTION
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Notice is hereby given that on 1/20/2023 at 10:30 am, the following mobile home will be sold at public auction pursuant to F.S. 715.109. 1980 SHER HS 13003086 . Last Tenants: ROBERT THOMAS CANTONI and all unknown parties beneficiaries heirs . Sale to be at MHC LIGHTHOUSE POINTE LLC, 155 SPRING DRIVE, PORT ORANGE, FL 32129. 813-282-5925.
January 5, 12, 2023 22-00133V
SECOND INSERTION NOTICE OF ADMINISTRATION IN THE CIRCUIT COURT, SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT, IN AND FOR VOLUSIA COUNTY, FLORIDA CASE NO.: 2022-11603-PRDL IN RE: ESTATE OF: MICHAEL HAROLD CHILDRESS, Deceased.
The administration of the estate of MICHAEL HAROLD CHILDRESS, deceased, File Number 2022-11603-PRDL, is pending in the Circuit Court for Volusia County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is Post Office Box 6043, DeLand, FL 32721. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative’s attorney are set forth below.
ALL INTERESTED PERSONS ARE NOTIFIED THAT:
All interested persons who have objections that challenge the validity of the will, the qualifications of the personal representative, venue, or jurisdiction of the court are required to file their objections with this court, WITHIN THE LATER OF THREE MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR THIRTY DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM.
All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate must file their claims with this Court WITHIN THE LATER OF THREE MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR THIRTY DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM.


All other creditors of the decedent and persons having claims or demands against the decedent’s estate must file their claims with this Court WITHIN THREE MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE.
ALL CLAIMS, DEMANDS AND OBJECTIONS NOT SO FILED WILL BE FOREVER BARRED.
Publication of this Notice has begun on January 5, 2023.
ROBERT ROBINS, ESQUIRE P.O. Box 1649 Daytona Beach, FL 32115 (386) 252-5212 RobertRobinsLaw@hotmail.com Fla. Bar #356026 Personal Representative January 5, 12, 2023 23-00002I
SECOND INSERTION
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
Notice is hereby given that on 1/20/2023 at 10:30 am, the following mobile home will be sold at public auction pursuant to F.S. 715.109. 1981 LIBE HS 10L13204 . Last Tenants: JENNIFER BERNADETTE MC GOURAN and all unknown parties beneficiaries heirs . Sale to be at MHC LIGHTHOUSE POINTE LLC AND MHC OPERATING LIMITED PARTNERSHIP DBA LIGHTHOUSE POINTE AT DAYTONA BEACH, 155 SPRING DRIVE, PORT ORANGE, FL 32129. 813-2825925.
January 5, 12, 2023 22-00132V
SECOND INSERTION
NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR VOLUSIA COUNTY, FLORIDA PROBATE DIVISION File No. 2022-12832-PRDL IN RE: ESTATE OF FARNUM C. SHASTEEN AKA FARNUM CHARLES SHASTEEN Deceased.
The administration of the estate of FARNUM C. SHASTEEN AKA FARNUM CHARLES SHASTEEN, deceased, whose date of death was September 12, 2022, is pending in the Circuit Court for Volusia County, Florida, Probate Division, the address of which is 101 North Alabama Avenue, Deland, Florida 32724. The names and addresses of the personal representative and the personal representative’s attorney are set forth below. All creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate on whom a copy of this notice is required to be served must file their claims with this court ON OR BEFORE THE LATER OF 3 MONTHS AFTER THE TIME OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE OR 30 DAYS AFTER THE DATE OF SERVICE OF A COPY OF THIS NOTICE ON THEM. All other creditors of the decedent and other persons having claims or demands against decedent’s estate must file their claims with this court WITHIN 3 MONTHS AFTER THE DATE OF THE FIRST PUBLICATION OF THIS NOTICE.
ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN FLORIDA STATUTES SECTION 733.702 WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH ABOVE, ANY CLAIM FILED TWO (2) YEARS OR MORE AFTER THE DECEDENT’S DATE OF DEATH IS BARRED. The date of first publication of this notice is: January 5, 2023.
Personal Representative: /s/ BEVERLY ANN SMITH 712 Pelican Bay Drive Daytona Beach, FL 32119
Attorney for Personal Representative: /s/ Nicholas J. Grimaudo NICHOLAS J. GRIMAUDO Florida Bar Number: 71893 JOHNSON, POPE, BOKOR, RUPPEL & BURNS, LLP 911 Chestnut Street Clearwater, FL 33756 Telephone: (727) 461-1818 Fax: (727) 462-0365 E-Mail: nicholasg@jpfirm.com Secondary E-Mail: ssigner@jpfirm.com January 5, 12, 2023 23-00001I

Help Wanted

JOB FAIR 200 Ocean Crest Drive Palm Coast
JOB FAIR
200 Ocean Crest Drive Palm Coast


Room for Rent
Health Services


TUSCANY
January 18th
JOB FAIR 200 Ocean Crest Drive Palm Coast
January 18th
10AM-2PM
January 18th
MUST:
interviews will be conducted
Bring your Resume Business Attire Required
An Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/D/V & Drug Free/Smoke Free Workplace Criminal Background Checks/Drug Screens (certain positions) and References Performed










































































































