




Saying that a city government survey question about gender was too “woke,” Palm Coast’s vice mayor proposed at a March 21 meeting that the City Council vet city surveys in the future.
Vice Mayor Ed Danko said he received multiple calls and complaints from residents about the survey for the joint city and county Planning Our Parks initiative. During council member comments at the end of the meeting, Danko motioned that City Council should receive the surveys for review before they are available to the public .
The City Council has filled three open positions on two of the city’s advisory boards.
At a March 21 meeting, the council approved the appointment of David Ferguson to the Planning and Land Development Regulation Board and Kenneth Jones and Zachary Marciano to two open positions on the Beautification and Environmental Advisory Committee.
Ferguson is a corporate executive and former City Council member. He served from 2012-2014 when he was appointed to replace former City Council member Frank Meeker. Ferguson will replace Christopher Gabriel for the District 3 seat. Gabriel resigned just months after his October 2022 appointment.
Ferguson was one of two applicants for the seat. He was unanimously approved by the council.
Jones and Marciano will replace Sabrina Rinaldi and Robert Branin — who both resigned — on the BEAC, a five-person board. Jones is an international research planner while Marciano is a medical facility administrator. Jones’ and Marciano’s appointments were approved unanimously.
The specific question is at the end of the survey and asks participants what gender they identify as. Participants could select one of the following as answers: “male,” “female,”
“prefer not to answer,” or “I identify as:” which also has a fill-in text box.
Danko said the question had nothing to do with parks and facilities and that he considered it a part of “insane liberal wokeness.”
“This is nothing more than woke indoctrination to me,” he said. “I don’t ever want to see a question like that again.”
Mayor David Alfin said he had an issue with the survey, too, but for a different reason — he felt the survey’s length could deter people from finishing it.
While none of the council members explicitly agreed with Danko about the gender question, the council unanimously reached a consensus to review surveys before they are released to the public.
“That’s a great expectation to have that we’ll have at least one shot to look at it as a council before it goes out to the public,” Klufas said.
The city and county typically contract with a third party for surveys.
Consulting firm Berry Dunn was contracted for the Parks Master Plan, and the firm contracts with another company for the surveys, Palm Coast Director of Communications and
The gender identity question is one of several demographics questions at the end of the survey. Kershaw wrote that Berry Dunn indicated that the demographic questions are standard questions.
The demographic questions also ask participants their age range, if they need ADA accessible facilities and services, if they own a dog or have children, rent or own their home, are a registered voter, what race they consider themselves and their household’s income range.
This has been the second time a survey’s question did not meet the “vision” of City Council, Alfin said, though neither he nor Danko remembered the time of the initial incident.
Danko told the Observer that the survey in the first incident had contained leading questions. As a result, the council asked to review future surveys, but, he said, nothing came of that.
Danko said he made the motion at this business meeting to ensure action would be taken in the future.
“It has to be established that this is what we expect as a council,” he said to the Observer. “[The public] thinks it’s our policy now. And it’s not our policy.”
Going forward, staff will send the proposed surveys to council members individually. If www member has an objection, the survey could discussed during a council meeting.
“People think we wrote this, they don’t realize that staff put it together,” Danko said. “So we’re accountable.”
Palm Coast’s city staff will apply for a $360,000 Florida Inland Navigation District grant to prepare for the second phase of construction at Waterfront Park.
The City Council on March 21 unanimously approved staff’s request to begin the application process.
The second phase of construction would expand parking and amenity accessibility, Director of Stormwater and Engineering Carl Cote said.
The second phase is budgeted at $1.18 million dollars. The city expects to pay $688,528 for the project, with another $134,852 set aside for contingency costs.
Construction on the first phase began in October. The project will add a nonmotorized boat launch, kayak launch and staging area.
Here is a breakdown of the projected costs for Phase 2 of the Waterfront Park construction project, which will expand parking and amenity accessibility.
$1,183,381.68
Total projected project cost
$360,000
Potential FIND grant for Phase 2 $688,528.80
The city’s match amount $134,852.88
The budgeted contingency cost
Date/Time: Saturday, April 1, 2023 (10:00 am to 2:00 pm)
Place: Anderson-Price Memorial Building 42 N Beach Street, Ormond Beach
Free Admission: (Open to the Public)
Office: (386) 677-7005
FREE Parking www.OrmondHistory.org
* Feel free to wear historic clothing.
Folklorist Program: 12 noon to 1:00 pm
The Festival will include several museums, authors, artists, and historical artifact collectors and exhibitors, some offering various items for sale. Folklorist Diane Jacoby will be telling the story, while in tantalizing period dress, of the life of the elegant 16th century Spanish noblewoman, Dona Maria de Menendez.
*
“It has to be established that this is what we expect as a council. ... [The public] thinks it’s our policy now. And it’s not our policy”
ED DANKO, vice mayor
“This is nothing more than woke indoctrination to me ... I don’t ever want to see a question like that again.”
ED DANKO, vice mayor
Flagler Beach’s next recycling initiative would pay the city for plastic.
SIERRA WILLIAMS STAFF WRITERFor Flagler Beach Sanitation Supervisor Rob Smith, recycling isn’t just about the environment — it’s common sense.
“I’m a realistic person,” Smith said. “It’s not rocket science — any city can do this.”
By “this,” Smith means making the city’s recycling an in-house process, both to save on costs and to ensure that the recyclable materials are actually recycled.
The next step is recycling thin plastics known as film plastics, and the commission at a March 7 meeting approved a contract with Trex Inc. — a film plastic recycling company.
Smith said that when he took over as the sanitation supervisor three years ago, the city wasn’t really recycling when residents placed their blue bins on the side of the road.
Private companies usually handle recycling, he said, and if there isn’t a market for the materials, the materials end up in the landfill anyway. And the company still charges fees.
“This bother[ed] me, personally, because I can do something about it,” Smith said.
So, Smith began by completely stopping the old process, adding back in what he was able to recycle in-house with his team: aluminum, tin and cardboard. Glass was added
to the list in 2022.
“We weren’t really recycling anything. Now we have 100% control over it,” Smith said. “We are truly recycling; It’s not a façade.”
RECYCLING AND BIG BLUE
Former Commission Chair Ken Bryan said he and Smith were at a recycling conference last year when they heard about Trex’s plastic recycling program.
Trex gives cities receptacles, and, once the city has collected enough tons of plastic, Trex sends out a truck to pick it up and pay the city for the plastic, creating revenue from the trash.
“So I got excited,” Bryan said. “Rob got excited.”
Film plastic is any packaging plastic — like the plastic around toilet paper and paper towels — as well as the plastic grocery bags most stores use.
Film plastic would be the first plastic the city could recycle.
Bryan said the city gets calls all the time asking why it doesn’t recycle plastic bottles.
“We have to explain to them … there isn’t a market for it,” Bryan said. “We can’t do them all, but we thought we would at least start with the film plastic.”
Smith said he hopes to have the film plastic recycling up and running in the next month or so, with dropoff receptacles around town.
This is just the next step in recycling for Flagler Beach after Smith acquired Big Blue for the city last year, Smith said.
“Big Blue” is what Smith named the city’s glass recycling machine: it turns glass into 3/8-inch gravel and fine sand.
The city got the machine in early 2022 and had its first glass pickup last May. Sanitation employees hand-sort the glass, which is then dumped into Big Blue.
Residents can buy the gravel for $35 for a 25-pound bag. The city has also used the sand for some of its hurricane sandbags, he said, and public works and landscaping have used them in projects for the city.
He won’t know the numbers until April, Smith said, but he knows Big Blue has saved the city money just because it doesn’t have to transport the glass. The city has saved about $700 a week on dump fees and trucking, he said.
That also means that the sanitation crews can move more garbage, faster, Smith said. They used to do 80-85 tons of garbage a week, but now do around 125 without the recyclable materials taking up space.
Flagler Beach is one of the few cities to do its own glass recycling, Smith said. Even locally, the rest of Flagler County is serviced by WastePro for all of its recycling, including glass.
In January, Flagler Beach won an award for environmental stew-
ardship at the Northeast Florida Regional Council awards banquet.
But trying to recycle from the city’s end doesn’t work if residents don’t pitch in and sort their material, Smith said.
“It takes the whole city, and then some, to make it work,” Smith said.
Bryan said that Smith has been at the front of these recycling initiatives, even going door-to-door to educate residents and pushing for brochures with the information.
Bryan has always been supportive of recycling initiatives, he said, but it was difficult sometimes getting the rest of the commission on board. He is not running for reelection, but if he had decided to run for another term, he said, an advertising campaign would have been his next push.
“It’s just a constant type of education with people,” he said. “Because you have new people coming in, new residents, you have local tourists coming in. So not everyone is aware.”
Smith said the recycling program is about more than just what happens with the recyclable materials. It’s also about reducing the city’s carbon footprint, the wear on the trucks, the oil use and, ultimately, the cost.
“To me, that all enters into recycling,” he said. “The key to doing this is doing it with the least amount of output.”
Much of that is done in small ways: Instead of buying a new cardboard baler at $14,000, Smith said, he bought a used one for $6,000 — it just needed a new part. Instead of buying a full set of new tires, he uses recaps for as long as it is safe to do so, saving $300 per tire on a truck, except for the front two, which must be new for safety reasons.
To make sure the glass gravel and sand is clean, his team uses a cement mixer to filter out paper and other debris — no special machinery needed. He even kept an old dump truck with a rusted out truck bed, using the truck’s crane to dump glass into Big Blue.
For the city’s next recycling initiatives, Bryan said, there are a lot of state and federal grants the city can apply for.
“You will not believe the grants that are available,” Bryan said. “And they are focusing on anything that has to do with environment.”
The city’s recycling saves residents $4-$5 on their $23 monthly sanitation bill, Smith said. That $23 includes a $2 recycling fee. Smith said he hopes it can one day become a credit on residents’ bills at the end of the year.
With more ideas for what to do next and a contract with Trex on the horizon, Smith said, the city’s new, in-house recycling process is better and more accountable than the old process.
“Saving money and doing something good for the environment,” Smith said. “That’s what’s important at the end of the day.”
“We weren’t really recycling anything. Now we have 100% control over it. ... We are truly recycling; It’s not a façade.”
ROB SMITH, Flagler Beach sanitation supervisorFlagler Beach’s glass recycling machine, Big Blue, sorts debris from glass before the glass is made into sand and gravel. Flagler Beach’s glass recycling machine, nicknamed “Big Blue,” has been in use for almost a year and saves the city hundreds of dollars a week on dump fees and trucking, Sanitation Supervisor Rob Smith said.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service raised concerns about the impact of dogs in the initially proposed dog-friendly beach pilot program location.
JARLEENE ALMENAS
EDITORSENIOR
A letter by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has cast a shadow of doubt over a proposal to try allowing dogs on a local stretch of beach. In response, the Volusia County Council discussed an alternate dog beach “test area” in Ormond Beach and voted 5-2 at its meeting on Tuesday, March 21, to direct staff to return to the council with more information.
Council members Danny Robins and Matt Reinhart voted against.
The council was initially looking to implement a dog-friendly beach pilot program near Michael Crotty Bicentennial Park in Ormond-bythe-Sea, but county staff received a letter on Monday from U.S. Fish and Wildlife expressing concerns about dogs in the natural beach management area, which begins at Granada Boulevard and runs north to the Volusia-Flagler county line. There are other BMAs in the southern part of the coast as well.
“It wasn’t a final determination on whether or not that would be permissive or not,” Deputy County Manager Suzanne Konchan said. “But they
did indicate, somewhat to our surprise, that [U.S. Fish and Wildlife] felt it would require an amendment to the Habitat Conservation Plan, and potentially a major amendment, because of its location in the natural beach management area.”
The letter, Konchan said, said that some review of the plan would be required regardless of the area chosen for the pilot program, but follow-up conversations with city staff determined that areas not part of the BMA would likely undergo a less rigorous process.
A proposal emerged to implement the pilot program on the stretch of beach in the city of Ormond from either Milsap Road to Rockefeller Drive, or a shorter stretch from Cardinal Drive to Rockeller Drive.
County Councilman Troy Kent said he liked the alternate location more as it was centrally located and is on a section of drivable beach.
But he had questions about the letter from FWS — for instance, why is St. Johns, which he said has a take permit strikingly similar to Volusia’s, allowed to have dogs on its beach? He said that when staff members asked FWS, they were told the agency had “no substantive reply.”
“What’s right today is right tomorrow,” Kent said. “What’s wrong today is wrong tomorrow. Don’t treat us differently. ... I felt like Volusia sometimes gets treated differently.”
County Council Chair Jeff Brower agreed with Kent.
“It felt like a threat,” he said. “Governments should work together well and not threaten one another.”
THE COST OF THE PILOT PROGRAM
The county has determined that one full-time animal control officer would be needed to staff the pilot program area for four 10hour days a week, at an estimated cost of $104,000 the first year.
Dog waste bag dispensers would be added at walkovers and at the ends of the beach area, at a
cost of about $300 per dispenser and about $3,500 for bags.
Nancy and Lowell Lohman have pledged a one-time donation of $100,000 to offset costs, however, and Daytona Dog Beach said it would commit to funding the dispensers and waste bags.
Dogs have been largely banned from Volusia County beaches since 1987, when Volusia took over regulating the beach.
Dogs are currently 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.
The majority of comments made by the public at the meeting concerned implementing the pilot program at Bicentennial Park, with residents stating concerns about dog feces, disturbing sea turtle nests and birds, and dogs posing threats to children on the beach.
“This area, Ormond-by-the-Sea, currently lacks the infrastructure to mitigate pollution and disruption to the biosphere that this zone will likely nurture,” Ormond-by-theSea resident Christopher Proctor said. “I’m worried about the impact the proposed dogs will have on the resource, this being the beach.”
Ormond Beach resident Laura McGuinness said “hundreds of people” sneak dogs onto the beach, and that she’s never seen one person pick up the dog’s waste in the 30 years she’s lived in the area.
“In those 30 years, I have witnessed, personally witnessed, them take after cars, take after kids, take after people, take after birds,” she said. “That’s what dogs do. They chase things. ... There are plenty of other available places for these dogs to go that don’t have to involve those beaches.”
Nanette McKeel Petrella, president of Daytona Dog Beach, said her organization has provided the council with three different proposals for dog-friendly beach areas since 2021. She said that, should a test site be successful, Daytona Dog Beach will commit a volunteer group to monitor and maintain the area.
“The demand and support for dogfriendly beach areas is undeniable, and yet there are those who seek to ignore it and potentially undermine it,” Petrella said. “In listening to all those expressing their viewpoints
today, what makes me the most sad is that we are allowing ourselves to be pitted against one another in an effort to derail this proposal instead of coming together to agree on something that would be fair to all.”
‘FEAR MONGERING’
Volusia’s incidental take permit is what lets the county allow beach driving, and council members were concerned about whether implementing a pilot program for dogs on the beach would put the permit in jeopardy.
Kent felt the concerns were driven by fear.
“Now, fear mongers will have you believe that if you value beach driving, then you should not allow dogs on the beach,” Kent said.
A lot of the concerns he heard from the public, he added, made it sound like dogs would be running wild on the beach, when the county would actually require them to be leashed.
The proposal comes up every few years, said Councilman David Santiago.
Prior pushes to allow dogs on the beach have been unsuccessful.
“Maybe it keeps coming up because there’s still enough public interest,” Santiago said. “And I’m all for trying something within the right parameters.”
For the dog-friendly beach pilot program, the county has recommended that:
Dog-friendly beach hours be limited from sunrise to sunset.
The pilot begin Nov. 1, after sea turtle nesting season.
Dogs must be leashed, licensed and fully vaccinated.
The council will not implement a user fee during the pilot program due to legal concerns and enforcement challenges.
Robins argued against the idea that “fear-mongering” has prevented the council from allowing dogs on the beach.
“Since when are the facts and other people’s points of view fear mongering?” he said. “... I call that looking at all sides of the issue. It’s also called looking at the big picture. What’s good for all, not what’s best for one person or what they’ve said to people.”
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Help plan the future of parks & recreation in Palm Coast & Flagler County by taking our planning survey. Your feedback will help develop a new Parks Master Plan! Scan the QR code to visit the site.
5-1 on March 15.
SIERRA WILLIAMS STAFF WRITERA developer has the Palm Coast Planning Board’s support for a proposal to build a 316-unit gated apartment complex off Whiteview Parkway.
The Planning and Land Development Regulation Board voted 5-1 on March 15 to recommend that the City Council approve a site plan for the complex. Alternate board member Larry Gross was the dissenting vote.
The application will next go before the City Council for final approval.
The complex would be part of the Whiteview Master Plan Development, which extends along White Mill Drive between Whiteview Parkway and Pine Lakes Parkway.
The multifamily development would be in the southeast corner of the Whiteview MPD, next to a planned city park at the northeast corner of the property.
The developer is in the process of building a 205-lot, single-family, gated residential community on the west side of the property.
The proposed apartments — owned by Miral Corp. — would be “high-end” apartments, though no price has been set yet, according to Curt Wimpée, representing the applicant.
The complex would have 14 residential buildings for a total of 316 units over 18.84 acres, a density of 10.9 units per acre density.
There would be 10 threestory, 30-unit buildings, and four two-story, four-unit buildings.
Gross said he was concerned that the market in Palm Coast is not ready for high-cost apartments.
“I don’t know if Palm Coast can support expensive apartments,” Gross said.
Vice Chair Sandra Shank said she also had concerns about not being able to fill the apartments with resi -
dents, since the market has changed since the original 2018 approval of the MPD. Wimpée said the new owner still thinks it is a good fit for the market.
Planning Director Ray
Tyner reminded the board members that they could only approve or deny based on whether the development meets certain code requirements — like parking, which Gross said he also had concerns about.
The site plan listed a total of 544 parking spaces: 525 for residents — including 108 garages —and 19 for the clubhouse.
That breaks down to less than two parking spaces per unit, which is less than most homes use, Gross said.
“Nobody has one car,” Gross said. “Most houses have two.” Wimpée said that Miral Corp. has built over 30,000 similar apartments and knows how to accurately gauge its parking needs.
“They do not want to have not enough parking — that’s detrimental to their business,” he said. “They’re definitely not trying to shortchange people.”
Wimpée said that according to a recent parking study, Miral Corp. provides more parking than most of the multifamily developers and agencies in the nation.
For Gross, that claim did not match what was on the paper.
“I think we need to be careful about sales pitch for a project, versus reality,” Gross said.
Pitch aside, the site plan does meet the city’s code standards across the board, including parking spaces, said city planner Bill Hoover, who presented the application to the board.
The apartment complex would also have two dry ponds, a dog park, a pool and a clubhouse.
If the master site plan is approved by the City Council, the applicant must then to submit a technical site plan for approval.
CURT WIMPÉE, Alliant Engineering, representing Miral Corp.
“They do not want to have not enough parking — that’s detrimental to their business.”
“I don’t know if Palm Coast can support expensive apartments.”
LARRY GROSS, alternate Planning and Land Development Regulation Board memberImage courtesy of Palm Coast Planning and Development Regulation Board meeting documents. The Whiteview MPD will have a city park on the northeast corner, a 205-house single-family home development, and, if approved, a 316-unit apartment complex.
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property. A Pennsylvania man was arrested after failing to return a rented dump trailer to a local hardware store.
Deputies became involved on March 13 when the local store, located off Boulder Rock Drive, decided to press charges two months after the man was supposed to return the trailer, on Jan. 20, according to the man’s arrest report.
Coincidentally, the man, 43, was arrested that afternoon when he returned to the store to speak to employees at the rental counter.
The dump trailer was found that day as well, at the dead end of Pirate Nation Way.
ULTERIOR MOTIVE
4:49 p.m. — 500 block of Shadow Lakes Boulevard, Ormond Beach Criminal mischief. Police responded to a local apartment complex after receiving reports that a man was slashing tires in the parking lot.
The reporting officer spotted the suspect, a 26-year-old Daytona Beach man, riding a bicycle behind a nearby bank.
He was holding a knife, according to a police report, and threw it when police ordered him to get on the ground.
He told officers that he was “not going to stop” and that he wanted to be kicked out of the country, the report states. He refused to answer officers’ questions.
Multiple businesses in the area also reported that three or more vehicles in their lots had slashed tires.
MARCH 14 MAN TRACKS STOLEN PHONE TO RESTAURANT
4:03 p.m. — 100 block of Flagler Plaza Drive, Palm Coast Grand theft. A man was arrested by deputies after he stole a phone from a smoke shop.
The man went into the store asking about the price of different items, and when he left, the store owner realized that his iPhone 12, which had been sitting on the counter, was missing, according to the suspect’s arrest report. The phone was priced at around $1,200.
The owner immediately called his wife, who tracked the phone’s GPS to a nearby fast-food restaurant.
The owner went there and confronted the thief, who took the phone out of his pocket and handed it back.
When deputies arrived at the restaurant, the suspect told the deputy he’d thought the phone was his. But a pat down revealed that the suspect’s own phone was in his coat’s right pocket. Surveillance footage from the store showed the man taking the phone from the counter before leaving.
He was charged with grand theft and taken to jail.
WITH FRIENDS LIKE THESE...
3:37 a.m. — 1600 block of North U.S. 1, Ormond Beach Loitering or prowling. A 30-year-old Middleburg man was arrested after he entered a closed restaurant and sat down on its patio.
It wasn’t his first encounter with police: He had just received a courtesy police ride to a local gas station after he was spotted running nude in a resident’s yard, according to a police report.
The resident, who did not press charges, gave the man clothes. The man told police he had been in town for Bike Week and was traveling with
friends when they kicked him out of their truck and drove off with his clothing.
Once at the gas station, the man was given food, and said that he would be on his way once he finished eating.
But the reporting officer soon returned to the gas station when an employee called and said they wanted the man to leave.
The man approached the officer’s car, expecting another ride. The officer told him she would not be driving him anywhere. The man walked toward a nearby closed restaurant.
He later told police he’d entered the patio to get out of the wind. He was taken to jail.
MARCH 16
FRUIT NINJA
8:08 a.m. — 1500 block of West Granada Boulevard, Ormond Beach Criminal mischief. Police responded to a local gas station convenience store to find several bags of chips and candy thrown all over the floor. Two displays were broken, and there were pieces of fruit on the floor.
The store clerk told officers that the man responsible for the damage, a 32-yearold from Ormond Beach, frequently comes by and purchases one or two small cigars. He’s always short a few cents though, up to 10-15 cents, and each time, tells the clerk he will pay her back.
This time, he was “short quite a bit,” the report states, and when he left to grab more change from his car, the clerk told him to come back and collect his money since she was refusing to sell him the cigars. Surveillance footage showed the man take his change, then push the fruit displays off the counter and begin throwing the snacks and candy all over the store. The store wanted to press charges.
A DoorDash delivery driver was robbed while delivering a bottle of wine on March 14.
The driver was delivering the order to a home on Breeze Hill Lane in Palm Coast that night when the person he was delivering to robbed him of the alcohol.
The suspect, 20, had placed the order, but tried to provide another person’s identification as proof of age, according to his arrest report.
When the driver refused to turn over the alcohol without the correct identification, the driver told Flagler County Sheriff’s Office deputies, the suspect grabbed him from behind and took the wine, the report said.
The driver left and called 911. DoorDash and other delivery services allow alcohol orders, but customers are
A Florida House panel has backed a proposal that would expand a controversial 2022 law barring instruction about sexual orientation and gender identity in early grades and restrict the way students and teachers can use their preferred pronouns in schools.
The House Choice & Innovation Subcommittee voted 14-4 on March 14 along almost-straight party lines to approve the proposal (HB 1223), after LGBTQ advocates slammed the bill as harmful to vulnerable youths. Rep. Lisa Dunkley, D-Sunrise, voted with Republicans.
The 2022 law prohibited instruction about sexual orientation and gender identity in kindergarten through third grade and required it to be “age-appropriate or developmentally appropriate” in higher grades. The new bill would extend the prohibition through eighth grade.
The measure would also prevent school employees from telling students their preferred pronouns if those pronouns “do not correspond to his or her sex,” would bar asking students about their preferred pronouns, and states that it “shall be the policy” of every Florida public school that “a person’s sex is an immutable biological trait and that it is false to ascribe to a person a pronoun that does not correspond to such person’s sex.”
— THE NEWS SERVICE OF FLORIDA
Varn Park will be closed beginning March 27 for about three months as Flagler County undertakes two emergency sand operations – the first in Painters Hill and Beverly Beach, and the second north through the park into the Hammock Dunes Homeowners Association property.
“There will be a steady stream of dump trucks and heavy equipment in the park, and we need to keep the job site as safe as possible,” County Engineer Faith
required to provide identification as proof of age upon delivery.
The driver said the suspect tried to give him a woman’s identification as proof, even though the suspect’s name was on the order.
When FCSO deputies confronted the suspect, he admitted to taking the wine bottle and trying to use someone else’s identification to accept the wine delivery.
He was arrested and taken to the county jail on a felony robbery charge.
An Ormond Beach man was arrested on charges of possessing child pornography after a tip led sheriff’s detectives to find sexually explicit photos on his computer.
Raymond L. Brown, 61, was arrested Tuesday, March 14, on a warrant for 23 counts
Alkhatib said.
Residents will not be able to access the beach from Varn Park during the two projects.
“Those who live in Painter’s Hill should know that the dune restoration project will extend from the first house south of Varn Park through the Town of Beverly Beach,” Alkhatib said. “We want the residents to know that we will only be placing this emergency sand in front of houses – not in front of undeveloped lots, unless it fills a gap in between two adjacent houses and is not in front of seawalls.”
This project is for emergency sand only. The engineering department is also working on a larger dune and beach restoration project.
The Flagler County Public Library Palm Coast Main Branch will have new hours effective Monday, April 3.
The new hours will be Monday through Thursday from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., and Friday and Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. It will be closed on Sunday. The library is located at 2500 Palm Coast Parkway NW, Palm Coast.
“This new, simplified schedule will be easier for patrons to remember,” said Chief of Special Projects and Library Director Holly Albanese. “It will also help with staffing levels to ensure we can provide the best level of service.”
Hours at the Bunnell Branch Library, at 4601 E. Moody Boulevard, Suite F1, will remain Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and closed on Saturday and Sunday.
The Volusia County government will receive $328,910,000 in Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery funds from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.
CDBG-DR funds are to be used for disaster relief and mitigation in the most impacted and distressed areas after a presidentially declared disaster.
“Everyone with an interest in our recovery efforts and addressing affordable housing should be elated with
of possessing sexual performance by a child.
He remains at the Volusia County Branch Jail on $460,000 bail pending a first court appearance.
His arrest followed a tip from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, which alerts local law enforcement to reports of exploitation and child pornographic material that have been shared online.
The tip led detectives to execute a search warrant at Brown’s home on Valencia Avenue in Ormond Beach.
Detectives seized cell phones, laptop computers and a camera for forensic examination. They located multiple photos of sexual exploitation of girls estimated to range from 4-12 years old.
The investigation indicated that Brown had uploaded files containing suspected child pornography. The Sheriff’s Office is asking anyone who may have more information to contact the VSO Child Exploitation Unit at 386-323-3574.
this news,” County Manager George Recktenwald said. “HUD’s most generous award will significantly advance current objectives and allow us to explore other avenues of increasing affordable housing in Volusia County for renters and homeowners alike.”
Representatives from HUD will contact the county with additional information about the program, and the county will formulate a plan for how the funds will be used. There will be a public comment period and meeting for residents to provide feedback. The plan will be taken before the Volusia County Council and, upon its approval, submitted to HUD for execution. Other counties in Florida — such as Lee, Orange and Sarasota — also received a direct CDBG-DR allocation from HUD.
Flagler County Sheriff’s Office deputies resolved a 4.5-hour standoff with a resident in the R-Section of Palm Coast without any injuries.
The standoff began at around 5 p.m. on Monday, March 20, near Rickenbacker Drive and Richardson Drive when deputies tried to serve a warrant, according to a post on the FCSO’s Facebook page.
The FCSO gave the all clear to residents at about 9:30 p.m. Sheriff Rick Staly gave an update on Facebook Live just after 9 p.m., saying residents were able to return home if they had evacuated and that those who sheltered in place were safe.
“Thanks to the good work of our SWAT team, our negotiators and our deputies in general,” Staly said, “we were able to successfully resolve the situation with no one being hurt. Everyone gets to go home.”
Staly said the suspect is in custody and would be taken to the hospital.
“We want to make sure he is OK before he goes to the jail,” he said.
Staly thanked the community for understanding while deputies handled the situation.
“These things take time to make sure nobody gets hurt,” Staly said. “And that was the ultimate goal, that nobody got hurt.”
The Flagler County Commmission is setting aside $500,000 and seeking grant funding to build a proposed visitor center.
The County Commission voted 5-0 to approve a request for the Tourism Development Council to apply for a Federal Highway Administration’s National Scenic Byways Program grant to build a historical and ecological visitor’s center, and the commission is also earmarking $500,000 out of the Tourism Development Council’s reserves for the project.
The TDC is working with the Friends of A1A and Heritage Crossroads to apply for the grant.
The TDC also applied last year, said Tourism Development Director Amy Lukasik, but did not get the grant because of the tight deadline and the lack of an identified property for the center.
Lukasik said the TDC has since identified a plot of county land that could house the visitor center.
The land is on the south side of State Road 100, near a pedestrian path that is being build across the road.
The parcel is 23 acres, Lukasik said, but the visitor center would primarily be on the front three acres.
Lukasik said the site would hold a gift shop, rental space, offices for tourism staff and more, including a potential lake overlook.
The $500,000 would bring the project’s earmarked total to $1.6 million, Lukasik said, which would allow the TDC to potentially qualify for $6.4 in grant funding based on a 80% federal-20% local match.
Lukasik said that 20% match would come from visitor tax funds, not the general fund.
“So, the [county’s] visitors are paying the 20% local match,” Lukasik said.
The money would not be needed immediately, Lukasik said, and would come out of the TDC’s reserve fund.
The project is expected to cost $8 million overall.
The dune renourishment project from MalaCompra Park to South Washington Oaks Gardens State Park has been completed, and the county is looking to begin new dune initiatives.
The Flagler County Commission unanimously agreed to amend the county’s construction contracts with Eastman Aggregate Enterprises and Eisman and Russo to place emergency sand on another section of Flagler County’s coastline.
The amendments are for the second emergency sand restoration project at Varn Park, which is expected to be closed for around three months, County Engineer Faith Alkhatib said.
“We are doing everything we can do to expedite this project,” she said.
This second emergency sand project will cover two sections of the coastline.
One section will be in Painters Hill and Beverly Beach, and the second will be through Varn Park and extend north into Hammock Dunes.
Both projects are funded through a $5 million grant from the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, Alkhatib said.
Alkhatib also asked the commission and residents to be mindful of the newly created dunes.
Right now, she said, there is no beach in those areas during high tide, so people have been using the dunes instead.
“People need to understand that the dunes are not there for them to go out there,” she said. “It’s not a beach, it’s a dune.”
Commission Chair Greg Hansen said he has seen people going over the dunes and wants to remind residents and visitors that money to fix the dunes to protect the community is scarce.
There is not enough to replace the beaches right now, he said.
“We get enough money to put sand out there,” he said. “We don’t have any extra money to do anything else.”
The work on the Varn Park area is expected to begin Monday, March 27.
Kayhan “Ky” Ekinci liked to call his company a small business percolator.
Ekinci, the co-founder of Office Divvy in Palm Coast, died unexpectedly on March 12 at age 53.
Ekinci and his wife, Lisa, have provided a boost to scores of businesses and business people since they opened Office Divvy with partner Sim Taing 15 years ago.
Ekinci helped companies scale and grow through education, using data in new ways and building custom platforms.
“Ky was such a great guy. He was solution oriented and very smart,” said Craig Straky, who started Luxury Team of Florida Real Estate Group and grew the firm from two agents to 40 before selling the business to Coldwell Banker.
“In 2009, when I started Luxury Team of Florida Real Estate Group, Divvy was my call center solution for seven offices,” Straky said.
Straky said Ekinci helped devise a lead routing system for Luxury Team that ensured phone calls were always answered by an agent and never went to voicemail.
“Our after-hours number would ring eight agents simultaneously and whoever answered got the lead,” Straky said.
Attorney Raven Sword of Livingston and Sword P.A. in Palm Coast said Office Divvy has been answering her law firm’s phones for nearly 13 years.
“When my partner and I got together, I think we tried to do it the old-fashioned way with voicemail and a receptionist, but it wasn’t productive,” she said. “We’re able to be more efficient to make sure our phones are answered, our clients speak with people who are pleasant, and they can make an appointment. That frees up office work inhouse.”
Ekinci mentored young people through Office Divvy’s internship program.
Kedron Abbott began as an intern at Office Divvy when he was a sophomore at Flagler Palm Coast High School nine years ago.
“I was in a class that worked with the Observer , writing articles,” he said. “When I heard about the internship opportunity for Office Divvy, I thought this was a perfect thing to write about.”
But as he learned more, he decided the internship was perfect for him. Abbott is now a software engineer at the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative.
Abbott said Ekinci was always interested in people and always listened.
“A lot of people ask about you as sort of the polite thing to do, but to actually hear and be interested in what you have to say is something different,” Abbott said.
Abbott said that after college he returned to Office Divvy to work on projects.
“It’s been awesome to work with (Ekinci),” Abbott said. One thing I don’t think I’ll ever let go of, he taught me to always think about the person who comes after you, whether that’s keeping good documentation on a project that someone else will pick up or something as simple cleaning up your table at a coffee shop.”
Abbott said he learned what co-office space was through
Office Divvy.
“The skills I learned there helped me get (to where I am now),” he said.
People who knew Ekinci said one of his passions was technology and helping businesses scale by embracing new ways of doing things.
He brought thousands of business people together for Office Divvy’s annual Entrepreneur Night until it was halted by COVID-19. He was also well-known as the former co-owner of the Humidor Cigar Bar and Lounge in European Village.
Originally from Istanbul, Turkey, Ekinci earned his master’s degree at Cambridge College in Boston. He and Lisa married in 2004 before moving to Palm Coast.
“I am shocked and saddened,” Straky said. “Words I would use to describe Ky are optimistic, friendly, collaborative, kind and intelligent. Ky and Lisa are of the best people that I know.”
The co-owner of Office Divvy and former coowner of the Humidor Cigar Bar died at 53.Courtesy photo Ky Ekinci at Atlantic Grille at Hammock Beach Golf Resort and Spa in February.
“People need to understand that the dunes are not there for them to go out there. It’s not a beach, it’s a dune.”
FAITH ALKHATIB, county engineer
School Board member Sally Hunt said discussion with Dusty Sims was not part of a grand plan to install him as superintendent.
Superintendent Cathy Mittelstadt’s contract expires at the end of June, and the School Board is scheduled to discuss her future with the district at an agenda workshop on April 4, with a potential vote at the April 18 board meeting.
But School Board member Sally Hunt met independently with former Flagler Palm Coast High School
Principal Dusty Sims in February and asked him if he’d be interested in becoming Flagler Schools’ next superintendent. Hunt had been introduced to Sims by Wadsworth Elementary School Principal Paul Peacock, who has an ongoing grievance case against the school district and Mittelstadt over a demotion.
Hunt met with Sims twice at Wadsworth. She told the Observer she was just doing her due diligence.
Sims, who is now the Florida Department of Education’s lead state executive director for school improvement, said he told Hunt that he “was always open to conversations about positions, but that position is not open so the conversation can go no further.”
In a phone interview with the Observer, Hunt said she is concerned about the state of Flagler Schools and Mittelstadt’s leadership. She cited an audit showing that a large percentage of background checks were not being completed, and said that while student safety is her priority, she is also concerned about the state of “communication, culture and fiscal responsibility in the district.”
Hunt said that as the district is the largest employer in Flagler County, the role of the superintendent is like a CEO and goes beyond education.
“It’s a very large organization and really needs a leader who understands HR law and just so many competencies, above and beyond what a principal would need to know, for instance,” she said.
When asked if she thought Mittelstadt was not the type of leader the district needed, Hunt said that’s what she hopes to find out.
“I’m asking some follow-up questions right now, but there are some things that have concerned me that could show me that perhaps her background is more on the academic side. In our county, we have very specific needs, where we do need someone who is crystal clear on policies,” she said.
“I don’t want to get into it, but there are some reasons why I am not comfortable bringing my phone into the district office.”
Hunt is upset that she has been the subject of two public records requests, by a community member and the FlaglerLive news site, concerning her conversations with Peacock.
Peacock filed a grievance against the district in December, and the School Board will hear his appeal at its meeting on March 28.
School Board Attorney Kristy Gavin said the district requested
that Hunt provide her phone to the technology department to ensure all messages are offloaded to comply with the record requests.
Gavin said government entities must treat requests for text messages the same as requests for written documents, “by reviewing each record, determining if some or all are exempted from production and disclosing the unprotected records to the requester.”
But Hunt said she has not turned in her phone and that she had been given the option of choosing which texts to submit.
“My only phone is my business phone, and I also use it as my personal phone. And I was advised that for convenience that I could bring in my phone to have it downloaded, but that I am not required to do that, and that I can just produce my documents,” she said. “I don’t want to get into it, but there are some reasons why I am not comfortable bringing my phone into the district office.” Gavin did not immediately respond to a text from the Observer asking if Hunt was given a timeline for when she had to submit her phone.
FEBRUARY MEETING
Hunt is the School Board’s liaison to Wadsworth Elementary School. She said Peacock, the district’s former operations chief, has provided her with tremendous background on the district.
“He’s been there supporting me as I’ve had questions as a new board member,” she said.
Hunt said she met with Sims at Wadsworth in February and asked him about his interest in the district’s superintendent position should it be open.
“He was a really successful administrator here in Flagler County for many years,” Hunt said. “And now with this new state-level experience, in the short period of time I spent with Dusty, I just really appreciated who he was and the professional that he is. And so, I was thinking about the superintendent role, not knowing which way the vote was going to go. And at that time, we didn’t even
Florida doctors could lose their medical licenses if they order puberty blockers, hormone therapy or surgery for minors diagnosed with gender dysphoria, under a Florida Board of Medicine rule that took effect Thursday, March 16.
Opponents of the ban, pushed by Gov. Ron DeSantis’ administration, pledged to file a lawsuit challenging the rule.
“When a school board member contacts me, it’s part of my job to meet with them.”
know for sure if Superintendent Mittelstadt was going to continue the contract. And so … I did ask Dusty if he’d be willing to talk with me a little bit more about that role.”
Sims said that in his role with the DOE’s Bureau of School Improvement, he regularly meets with school board members.
“When a school board member contacts me, it’s part of my job to meet with them,” he said.
Sims said they had conversations regarding Flagler County’s data, and through those conversations, Hunt asked Sims if he was interested in the position.
When asked if he was interested in becoming a superintendent, Sims told the Observer that was his goal when he became an administrator 14 years ago.
“Maybe that’s changed a little bit,” he said. “But I’m always interested in how I can make the most impact.”
Hunt believes her inquiry has been blown out of proportion.
“The thing that I just I don’t really understand,” she said, “is I’m one vote. I’m one vote, and so I think it’s being put out there that I had this grand plan of installing Dusty Sims as superintendent. But I am one vote. I cannot do anything on my own.”
A Florida Board of Osteopathic Medicine rule with identical prohibitions will take effect March 28.
The state Department of Health in July filed a petition seeking a rule-making process on the contentious issue of treatment for gender dysphoria, which the federal government defines clinically as “significant distress that a person may feel when sex or gender assigned at birth is not the same as their identity.”
DeSantis is among GOP politicians nationwide targeting genderaffirming care for minors.
DeSantis and Florida Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo argue that gender-affirming treatment for youths is experimental and not backed by robust clinical research.
But dozens of medical associations contend that the state’s approach is at odds with widely accepted guidelines and that genderaffirming treatment is safe, effective and medically necessary.
Under the new rules, minors currently being treated with puberty blockers or hormone therapies would be allowed to continue the treatment.
Children who have begun to socially transition but have not started puberty blockers, however, would be ineligible for such treatment.
The new Board of Medicine rule took effect as lawmakers consider proposals that would enshrine the prohibition against gender-affirming treatment for minors in state law and impose other restrictions.
–THE NEWS SERVICE OF FLORIDA
Solberry opened on March 7 at the Granada Plaza in Ormond Beach.
JARLEENE ALMENAS SENIOR EDITORWhen it comes to creating her ideal açaí bowl, Jessi McClary is all about the toppings — peanut butter, fruit, granola.
But everybody is different, which is why she built her new smoothie bar in Ormond Beach around the “build your own” concept. Customers choose a base, then their “crunch,” what fruit they would like, and, finally, an unlimited number of toppings.
“It’s different, and people seem to really enjoy it,” McClary said. “The thing these days is people want quality, and they want quantity and they want it to be healthy. I’ve tried hard to hit all those marks.”
Solberry opened on March 7 at the Granada Plaza, at 205 E. Granada Blvd. It’s a business a couple years in the making.
McClary and her family returned to town in 2022 following about two years of traveling around the country in their RV. She recalled one day when they were in the “middle of nowhere Utah” and she decided to look for a smoothie bar that offered açaí bowls in the area.
The closest one was two hours away, and when they arrived, she discovered it had a “build your own” concept.
“I was like, ‘This is bril -
liant,’” McClary said. A nurse for about 8 years, McClary always had an interest in health. While traveling the country, she developed a deeper love for creating healthy snacks and foods for her family, all as she navigated the challenges of a small RV kitchen.
The family grew homesick, though, and on their return to Ormond Beach, her fiancé — who is an ICU nurse — spoke about her going back to work as a nurse too. But McClary knew she wanted to pursue a
different path.
In May 2022, she started looking for a place to open her smoothie bar. When she noticed a space open at Granada Plaza, she went for it.
In addition to açaí bowls, Solberry offers coffees, teas, smoothies and baked goods.
It’s been rewarding, McClary said. Since she opened, customers have been coming and going in a steady flow, and she even got to participate in the annual Taste of Ormond event on March 5, two days before Solberry was
officially open.
“This was a long journey, a very long journey, and to finally have opened my doors and not feel like I’m struggling is very, very, very comforting,” McClary said.
There are touches inside her smoothie bar that remind her of family — down to its name, inspired by her 20-month-old daughter, Rae. The smoothies were named after things her three children love too, and the art on the walls was done by her fiancé’s cousin, local artist Natasha Azari.
AdventHealth is launching a platform in March during Women’s History Month to celebrate the women working in NASCAR, including women drivers and the business professionals who serve as the backbone of race teams, tracks, agencies and media organizations.
The platform includes a partnership with AdventHealth, NASCAR CraftsmanTruck Series and ThorSport Racing driver Hailie Deegan, Women in NASCAR and female members of the motorsports media.
WIN is an employee resource group that aims to create a supportive community for women and allies in NASCAR offices.
As part of the partnership, during the March 18 race at Atlanta Motor Speedway, the deck lid of Deegan’s No. 13 Ford F-150 will feature the names of many of the women working in NASCAR.
The name of Sara Christian, who was the first female driver to compete in NASCAR, will also appear above the passenger-side door.
Creating a sense of community through Solberry is an important goal for McClary.
It’s not something one finds in every town, and it’s something she missed while on the road, she said.
“I want people to feel a connection when they come in,” McClary said. “... I just want them to feel good, whether it’s the environment or the food or learning about the food.”
Solberry is open daily from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Visit solberrybowls.com.
“I’m excited to partner with AdventHealth on this important initiative to honor Women’s History Month,” Deegan said. “It’s an honor to recognize the incredible women who paved the way for female drivers, as well as the female business professionals who are important to the day-to-day operation of our sport.”
AT
REM is the objective calibration of the prescription in your hearing aids.
It is how we make sure that the sounds that your hearing aids produce in your ear are appropriate for your hearing loss and that speech is as clear as possible. This calibration optimizes the way your hearing aids sound. We make precise adjustments in the physical and acoustic fit so the sounds coming out of your hearing aids in your ear match your prescription, which are the levels where you will hear the best.
You will be positioned in front of a set of speakers with your hearing aids and a small probe in each ear. Your provider will play a series
of calibrated sounds that include all the frequencies of speech, and program the settings in your hearing aids as they measure the output of sound from your aids. Realear measurements are important because they measure how a hearing aid’s volume and pitch are affected by your individual ear size and shape. Finally, we make the appropriate adjustments based on your audiogram, the response we see on the computer screen and your feedback. We also use evidence-based amplification targets to help guide our decisions as to how to set the volume of the hearing aids. Real-ear measurements allow us to apply the hearing aid fitting to your specific ear.
The result is that your hearing aid settings are accurate for the size and shape of your ear and for your hearing loss.
Our mission is to practice audiology to the gold standard of care,
using evidenced-based practice and protocols; which means we practice audiology based on information and evidence from our audiology research community. The audiology research community continuously publishes peer reviewed studies to help doctors better understand and treat hearing loss.
Real-ear measurements have been proven by the audiology research community as the gold standard for hearing aid fitting verification.
Unfortunately, there are many hearing care providers who do not use real-ear measurements in their practice. This results in less accuracy and satisfac tion with hearing aids for many patients. We use real-ear measurements
because our mission is to serve our patients by providing the best care possible. According to evidence-based practice, the best audiological care cannot be provided without the use of real-ear measurements.
Who decides which gods are ‘fake’?
Dear Editor:
I was very saddened to see the headline, “I don’t want to pray to fake gods.” And it made me wonder how you would define a “fake god.” Would it be any god other than the one you believe in? Are other “Christian” gods OK? Is a Jewish or a Buddhist one not real? What about Hindu? Or a belief one has never been exposed to? Who decides?
I think the City Council had better stay with their current moment of silence. Or, even better, do their contemplation before they arrive at the meeting.
BARBARA CERYAK Flagler BeachMoment of silence accommodates all
Dear Editor: The potential new Palm Coast
City Council meeting format that begins with some type of religious convocation reminds me of the old adage, “If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”
The previous format for meetings has served the city and “we the people” very well for a very long time. We have so many issues to deal with in the city; perhaps spiritual guidance is in order, but should be left up to the individual to decide if and when that time has come.
The expression of a particular religious faith could be seen as the city endorsing that faith if it is expressed more often at meetings than other beliefs.
Take for instance the Christian faith. If a priest, pastor, or minister were to speak each week praising Jesus, this would give the impression that a belief in Jesus is the predominant faith of the City Council and therefore the city.
As a secular society by design, America must be able to accommodate all faiths and even no faith if we are to be true to our basic values, which have served us well for these over 200 years.
Best to leave well enough alone and focus on the more concrete task of improving our city, and leave to
the houses of worship the task of improving our souls.
JEFFERY C. SEIBPalm Coast
Pontieri’s remarks were divisive
Dear Editor: Given that it made the headline of the Palm Coast Observer’s edition last week, the paper may have been as surprised as we should be by a City Council member’s remark during a recent discussion about whether the council should have an opening invocation.
Currently, the council opens its meetings with just a moment of silence, but an invocation, as Webster defines it, is the summoning of a deity.
Even though council member Theresa Carli Pontieri supported retaining the moment of silence, her reasoning was provocative and offensive. She feared that the deity that could be summoned by those giving an invocation would not be a deity to her liking. She stated that
“people don’t want to pray to fake gods, and I don’t want to pray to fake gods either.”
We can assume that Pontieri would likely have some difficulty defining “fake” gods without denigrating and offending about half the world’s religious, but non-Christian, population.
Just when we thought things had maybe calmed down a bit regarding the council’s history of unwelcome divisive controversies, that history has unfortunately resurfaced with Pontieri’s troubling, intolerant comment.
And it’s a comment that harkens back to her City Council candidacy, when we learned that she was forced to resign from the Sheriff’s Office for her controversial racial remarks, which were likewise deemed offensive and divisive.
ROBERT GORDON
Palm Coast
Send letters to jonathan@observerlocalnews.com. Include first and last name, as well as city of residence. Editor may alter the letter for clarity and/or length.
Luke’s
BRIAN MCMILLAN CONTRIBUTING WRITERAs my wife and I were lying in bed the other night, about to turn out the lights and go to sleep, my 4-year-old son, Luke, barged into our bedroom, turned the corner like the expert Mario Kart racer that he is, and barreled down the short hallway yelling, “Bathroom!”
Apparently, a sibling was hogging the kids’ bathroom on the other side of the house, and this was no time for pleasantries.
A minute later, I heard the toilet flush, and then a squeal of joy. He sprinted out of the bathroom as fast as he had gone in, this time yelling, “I weighed the pounds I’m sup-
Three students who attend Flagler County schools have been recognized by the Flagler County Sheriff’s Office for March’s “Great Kid” award. Flagler County Sheriff Rick Staly met with each student on Wednesday, March 15, and presented them with their awards, according to a press release from the FCSO. March’s “Great Kid” awards went to Larry Covington from Bunnell Elementary School, Makayla Golding from Indian Trails Middle School
posed to!”
“What are you talking about?” my wife, Hailey, asked.
“I weighed 40-point-oh!” Luke said. He kept repeating, “Yes! Yes!” Then we realized the significance of his announcement. Whenever Luke travels in our car or minivan, we always strap him into a threepoint harness car seat. He’s not a fan, and I can understand why: With all those straps and the cinching mechanism right, it resembles a medieval torture device. When he complains about it, however, we tell him that we cannot get rid of the car seat and get a simple booster seat until he weighs 40 pounds, because the booster seat says it’s for 40 pounds and up.
The thing is, Luke knows that some of his friends are already out of their car seats, so he feels like the only kid who has to live by this strict rule. But, as with many parenting decisions made by Hailey and me, it’s motivated by a fear of regret: What if we let him out of the
and Kamisha Lewis, a senior from Matanzas High School.
“I congratulate each of these amazing students who represent their schools and our students in Flagler County so well,” Staly said. “This is a way to recognize our kids that make the right decisions that you rarely hear about.”
The “Great Kid” award is a monthly award given to one elementary, middle and high school student.
The recipients are nominated by FCSO’s School Resource Deputies and employees of Flagler Schools. .
Covington was recognized for his “great attitude and his respectful personality towards his teachers and classmates. He’s dependable, hardworking and always determined to succeed,” the press release said. Golding, the press release said, is a role model to her peers and is “always respectful, responsible and is an enthusiastic student who provides guidance to others.” She was recognized for her positive attitude and leadership skills.
Lewis wants to go into nursing when she graduates and works in the nursing field outside of school to gain experience for her future career. She was recognized for being “an enthusiastic, dedicated, hardworking” student, the press release said.
car seat at 39 pounds, and the next day, we get into a car crash, and he gets hurt?
Nope, not worth it. The booster is only for kids who weigh 40 and up. If you want the booster, finish your sandwich.
In his quest to hit 40, he has learned some distorted views of dieting, just by listening to the chatter about nutrition facts around the house.
One day at lunch, I heard Luke rattling off some numbers: “Sixtynine grams of protein, 44 grams of fiber, zero cholesterol,” he said.
“Oh yeah?” I asked. “What’s that?”
He held up a ketchup bottle.
“I think you’re making that up, Luke.”
At the conclusion of one trip to Publix, Luke insisted on walking by the enormous scale, which he calls The Pound Weigher. But even with his clothes and shoes on, he was still under 40.
Occasionally, he would give us updates: 37.8, 38.6, 39.8.
But not tonight. He hit the magic
The Florida Department of HealthFlagler is celebrating National Nutrition Month.
The Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics created the annual campaign 50 years ago, in March 1973, to promote healthy eating and physical activity. This year’s theme is “Fuel for the Future.”
Recognizing the importance of a exercise and a good diet is especially important Flagler County, where 13.6% of the population has diabetes — nearly 2% above the state average — and 64.4% of the population is overweight or obese, according to Health Department statistics.
PALM COAST Observer
“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.”
Friedrich Hayek “Road to Serfdom,” 1944
Publisher John Walsh, jwalsh@observerlocalnews.com
Managing Editor Jonathan Simmons, jonathan@observerlocalnews.com
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Associate Editor Brent Woronoff, brent@observerlocalnews.com
Staff Writer Sierra Williams, sierra@observerlocalnews.com
Design Editor Hailey McMillan, hailey@observerlocalnews.com
Media Director Holly Oliveri, holly@observerlocalnews.com
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number. It was a moment of pride. A rite of passage. Freedom from the three-point harness.
At breakfast the next morning, Luke told his 8-year-old sister, Kennedy, the news: He would be sitting in a booster seat today. Kennedy responded: “He achieved something. Now he gets to have a normal life.”
For Luke, it seemed life would be much better than “normal.”
As he got in his booster on the way to school, he started singing, “This is going to be the best day of my li-i-i-ife.”
Luke is a naturally happy person, and it’s contagious. As I watched him in my rearview mirror as he smiled and exulted in the back seat, as he reached up and touched the light above his seat for the first time, I was genuinely happy for him, and even more, I was happy for the many milestones and rites of passage to come. Life gets better and better, my son, just you wait. Just keep smiling and celebrating.
Locally Owned / Publishers of The Palm Coast Observer Palm Coast Observer, LLC P.O. Box 353850 Palm Coast, 32135
Flagler Broadcasting’s March 18
“Flagler Health Matters” podcast conducted a panel discussion led by department Public Information Officer Jaffy Lee with dietary specialists in the Women, Infants and Children Program and the Diabetes Education Center.
Flagler’s WIC program served 2,300 clients last year. The women who work at WIC spoke about what gives them the most joy in serving their clients.
“Providing comfort and support for moms and helping moms feel heard,” Danielle Dragon said.
“Teaching skills by educating and supporting families to reach their goals and watching them thrive and find success in their own way,” Mary Kauffman said.
Branch of military: U.S. Army
Dates of service: 1952-1954
Rank/occupation: Corporal/Artilleryman
Hometown: Rockford, Illinois Gerald Ambach is a veteran of the Korean War. He was assigned to the 13th Field Artillery Battalion, 24th Infantry Division. During his time in service, he also made it to Japan. After honorably serving his country as a combat veteran, Ambach returned to his hometown and worked in the dairy industry for the next 39 years. He and his wife, Rae, have been married for 61 years. Ambach has been a member of the Veterans of Foreign Wars since 1956, and joined VFW Post 8696 when he moved to Palm Coast in 1995. He served as post commander from 1999-2000. He and his wife, Rae, are still active in post activities. In fact, for the last 20 years, Ambach has dutifully been responsible for ceremoniously destroying unserviceable United States flags. He disposes of an average of 200 flags turned in each month by Flagler residents. A dog lover, Ambach formerly volunteered at the Flagler County Humane Society for 13 years. Ambach will be 92 years old this year.
NEED HELP WITH VETERAN SERVICES?
For information about benefits and other support organizations available to veterans, call 386-313-4014.
Attendees at a UF Whitney Lab Lifelong Learning workshop learned about the impacts of phosphorus and nitrogen on estuaries and wetlands.
CHRISTINE RODENBAUGH
CONTRIBUTING WRITER
Summer camp signups are coming to a close — for grade school students. But adult learners still have opportunities to engage in Lifelong Learning Workshops at the University of Florida Whitney Laboratory in the town of Marineland.
Module 1 investigated “Nitrogen and Phosphorus: Why Nutrients Matter in the Environment,” presented by Todd Osborne, associate professor of biogeochemistry.
Primarily a teaching and research facility, the Whitney Lab also seeks to inform the public and answer questions to encourage lifelong learning and enrich the daily lives of Floridians.
Curious adults arrived at the
Marine Science Center a few minutes before the March 18, 9 a.m. class to sip coffee, have a donut and enjoy the panoramic view of the Intracoastal Waterway.
Karen Young moved from New Jersey 37 years ago and lives in Palm Coast. Young taught English at Cathedral Parish in St. Augustine, but always had a keen interest in science.
Now retired, she pursues educational opportunities and volunteers with the Marineland Right Whale Project to support conservation efforts and stewardship for endangered North Atlantic Right Whales.
“I love science,” Young said. She believes awareness is key to solving environmental issues. “People care about things they love and don’t think about things they’re ignorant of,” she said.
Osborne led the group upstairs for an informal lecture about the elements phosphorus and nitrogen and the impact they have on Florida’s environment, especially in estuaries and wetlands.
“Nitrogen makes up about 78% of our atmosphere,” Osborne said. “Outside of carbon, it’s the most important element on the planet. But too much of a good thing can be bad,” he said.
Algal blooms in Florida’s ponds, lakes, rivers and bays are often caused by nitrogen and phosphorus imbalances, resulting in fish kills.
The Indian River Lagoon is an example of a stressed ecosystem impacted by algal blooms which cause hypoxia — extremely low oxygen levels — suffocating fish and other marine life.
“The question is,” Osborne said, “where does this come from, and what can we do to help?”
With that, Osborne moved the class to a lab for hands-on experiments testing five soil samples collected nearby.
The first step was to measure exactly 10 grams of soil into a foil “boat,” transfer the soil to a test tube, then add 15 milliliters of distilled deionized water and close the lid.
The samples were shaken for 15
minutes to mix the soil and water, then placed in a centrifuge to separate the solids from liquid.
Next, students used a pipette to carefully draw 2.0 milliliters of only liquid, no solids, for transfer to a separate vial. After adding 0.2 milliliters of the test solution and closing the vial, they inverted it a few times and noticed the vessel heating up.
“It’s an exothermic (heat gener-
ating) reaction,” Osborne said, “We can read the results of the colorimetric analysis in 15 minutes.”
Sample 1 was taken from Osborne’s St. Augustine Shores yard and, even though he has not fertilized since he bought the house 10 years ago, the sample showed three times the limit of phosphorus allowable in wastewater treatment plant effluent. The nitrate level was also very
high, indicating additional fertilizer was unnecessary.
In regards to the negative impact of nitrogen and phosphorus on Florida’s environment, Osborne said, “There are ways we can all contribute to solutions. Our single family home can have an impact.”
Before fertilizing, consider having a soil test through the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences. For more information, go to soilslab.ifas.ufl. edu/ESTL%20Tests.asp. Reduce household use of cleaners containing nitrogen and phosphorus. Encourage the preservation of wetlands to allow nature to filter runoff naturally.
The next Adult Lifelong Learning Workshop, “Soil Microbial Chemistry,” is scheduled for April 8.
Professor Sandra Loesgen will help students extract compounds from soil and find out if there is a new antibiotic waiting to be discovered in a local soil sample.
For more information, go to whitney.ufl.edu/education/adult-lifelong-learning-workshops/ or email brenda@whitney.ufl.edu. Workshops cost $50 per person, space is limited and participants must be at least 18 years old.
“I love science,” Karen Young said. She believes awareness is key to solving environmental issues. “People care about things they love and don’t think about things they’re ignorant of,” she said.
Observer salutes Adams, Cameron & Co. Realtors, for 60 years of serving the Real Estate needs of Volusia and Flagler!
joined the company in 1971 and became a partner and sales manager of Helen Adams Realty in 1974. In 1978, Helen Adams Realty merged with Cameron Realty, and Bob was appointed President & Chief Executive Officer of Adams, Cameron & Co., REALTORS. Together, Bob and Helen swiftly grew Adams, Cameron & Co. into the area’s largest real estate company, redefining the
way real estate was transacted in the local area.
John Adams joined Adams, Cameron & Co., Realtors in 2004 to work for his father and grandmother after working for accounting giant Arthur Andersen and as chief operating officer of an online marketing company in Chicago. He is currently President, CEO and Broker.
Thank you for Bringing Families Home Since 1963!
Thanks for your advertising support in the Observer and all newspapers throughout the years!
Teens-in-Flight’s mission is to help as many kids become pilots as it can, Executive Director Ric Lehman said.
So when someone anonymously donated $500 for 16-year-old Austin Booth to take a few lessons, Teensin-Flight’s staff members were ready to do what they could to help.
Austin is terminally ill. He has heart and lung failure, among other illnesses, and doctors didn’t expect him to live long past birth.
“He got dealt a bad hand,” Lehman said, “and we’re going to make the best of it that we can.”
For Austin, living with his illnesses is normal, he said. He can still run and play football with his friends, he said, even if he has to take more breaks.
But he said he’d rather play video games anyway — especially flight simulator games. He first became interested in planes when he was 10 and flying back from Missouri.
“I saw the cockpit and everything,” he said. “It was pretty cool.”
He had his first lesson two years ago when he was 13, also at Teensin-Flight, when a statewide biker club called The Punishers paid for him to take lessons.
“I had no idea what I was doing. I couldn’t even see over the dashboard,” he said.
Now, after a few years and lessons, he said, he can see over the dashboard better and feels like he knows what he’s doing more.
“I like looking down and seeing how small everything is,” he said. “We flew over the beach, and I was trying to find sharks.”
Austin said he loves everything about being in the air and taking lessons.
Teens-in-Flight teaches a terminally ill 16-year-old to fly.
“I thought was pretty cool that someone helped me do [this],” he said.
Angelina Booth, Austin Booth’s mother, said she would never have been able to afford these lessons for her son on her own.
She raised Austin on her own. For the longest time, she said, it was just her, Austin, and Austin’s older sister.
She drives Austin to Palm Coast from Keystone Heights, outside Gainesville, for these lessons, she said, but it’s worth it. He’s had 24 surgeries already, she said, and was on a feeding tube from 3 months old until he was 6.
“The doctor literally tells him that he’s a miracle every time he sees him every six months,” she said.
Austin has already spent several days in March in the air at Teens-inFlight, learning to fly a plane.
His final pre-paid lesson is on Thursday, March 23. He likes taking off the most, Angelina Booth said.
Will Patin, Austin’s flight instructor at Teens-in-Flight, said Austin has taken to lessons quite well. At their second lesson on March 16, Patin said, they encountered more turbulence than expected, but it didn’t bother the 16-year-old.
“The turbulence was pretty bad but it was pretty fun,” Austin said with a laugh. “It threw us up in the air.”
Patin said he doesn’t teach Austin differently than he does his other students. The only difference is that for Austin, Patin tries to be more flexible and focus on the teen’s experience, since they don’t have to worry about Austin passing a test.
“To teach anyone to be able to fly is
To contact Teens-inFlight about Austin Booth, call the office at 386-345-2FLY [2359].
awesome,” Patin said. “But to teach Austin … I can’t say that I’ve necessarily ever been a part of something that’s so special to an individual.”
Even if he was not ill, Austin would have been a candidate for TeensIn-Flight’s scholarship programs, Lehman said.
Scholarships are given on a caseby-case basis, he said, usually to candidates who could not afford the classes on their own.
Learning to fly isn’t just a great experience, Lehman said. It also teaches kids life skills, like personal accountability, problem solving and attention to detail.
Lehman said he was impressed with Austin’s ability to stay positive.
“I’m not sure I know any other kid who would have as good an outlook as Austin has with his situation,” he
said.
Lehman said Teens-in-Flight staff members hope more people donate so the 16-year-old can continue receiving lessons. Classes are normally $185 per lesson, but $150 atcost. Lehman said that if 15 people donate $10, Teens-in-Flight would be able to give Austin another lesson.
“Austin’s got some serious bragging rights now,” Lehman said. “We’ll take donations of any kind to get him up in the air.”
In the meantime, Austin is accomplishing what many people don’t get a chance to do: fly a plane and live their dreams.
“With any child, you want to make sure they fulfill their dreams,” Angelina Booth said. “I didn’t know that Austin would be able to fulfill his.”
“I had no idea what I was doing. I couldn’t even see over the dashboard. I still can’t.”
“To teach anyone to be able to fly is awesome. But to teach Austin … I can’t say that I’ve necessarily ever been a part of something that’s so special to an individual.”
WILL PATIN, Teens-in-Flight flight instructorPhotos by Sierra Williams Austin Booth takes the driver’s seat in a Teens-in-Flight plane.
THURSDAY, MARCH 23
FPC HOSTS FRIENDS AND FAMILY SHOWCASE
When: 6:30 p.m.
Where: Flagler Palm Coast High School, 5500 S.R. 100
E., Palm Coast
Details: Flagler Schools invites the local community to a Friends and Family Showcase at FPC. See dance performances by the school’s varsity and junior varsity Starlets and the Buddy Taylor Middle School Eaglettes. Free and open to the public.
FRIDAY, MARCH 24
URINETOWN
When: 7:30 p.m. March 24, 25, 31, April 1, 7 and 8; and 2 p.m. Sunday, March 26 and April 2, 9.
Where: Daytona Playhouse, 100 Jessamine Blvd., Daytona Beach
Details: See this play about what happens when a 20-year drought leads to a government ban on private toilets. This comedic show features a cast of 27 locals. Tickets cost $25 for adults, $24 for seniors and $15 for youths. Visit daytonaplayhouse.org.
SATURDAY, MARCH 25
66TH ANNUAL CRACKER DAY
When: 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Where: Flagler County Fairgrounds, 150 Sawgrass Road, Bunnell
Details: The 66th annual Cracker Day, presented by the Flagler County Cattlemen’s Association, features bull riding, steer riding, steer saddling, sack races, jackpot barrel racing, pig chases and more. The rodeo begins at noon. Admission cost $20 per person. Children 3 and under are free. Visit https:// fb.me/e/TJJ2sXVm.
HERB FAIRE
When: 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Where: Bailey Riverbridge Gardens, 1 N. Beach St.
Details: The Seaside Herb Society of Ormond Beach is hosting its 27th annual Spring Herb Faire, to take place outside the meeting
house. Buy herbs that have been locally grown and enjoy live music and baked goods. Club members will provide information on cultivation, recipes and health benefits of herbs. Vendors will be selling products for the home and garden. Free. Call Denny Lee Snyder at 443-497-0044 for more information. Visit seasideherbsociety.com.
JAMES WELDON JOHNSON
PARK AND LOCAL BLACK
HISTORY
When: 10 a.m.
Where: Anderson-Price Memorial Building, 42 N. Beach St., Ormond Beach
Details: Join the Ormond Beach Historical Society for this presentation by Felicia Bevel, an assistant professor of history at the University of North Florida, on James Weldon Johnson Park in Jacksonville. It will discuss the park as a lens to understand Black history in Florida. Free.
WARBIRDS OVER FLAGLER
When: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Where: Flagler Executive Airport, 201 Airport Road, Palm Coast
Details: See static vintage and modern military aircraft and vehicles, as well as warbird fly-bys. Enjoy music, food and beverage from vendors. Free admission. Parking costs $5 per car. Visit warbirdsoverflagler.com.
SUNDAY, MARCH 26
‘THE WAY I SEE IT’
OPENING RECEPTION
When: 1-4 p.m.
Where: Art League of Daytona Beach, 433 S. Palmetto Ave., Daytona Beach
Details: See this exhibit featuring abstract, surrealist and impressionist art by Florida artists. The exhibit runs through April 22. Visit artleague.org.
MONDAY, MARCH 27
IMPACT FEE UPDATE
PUBLIC MEETING
When: 10 a.m.
Where: City Commission Conference Room, 22 S. Beach St., Ormond Beach
Details: The city of Ormond Beach, in conjunction with Raftelis Financial Consultants, will hold a public meeting to discuss its future impact fee
update. See ormondbeach. org/1028/Impact-Fees for more information.
ONGOING SCAPINO!
When: 7:30 p.m. on Fridays and Saturdays, 24 and 25; 3 p.m. Sunday, March 26
Where: City Repertory Theatre, 160 Cypress Point Parkway, Suite B207, Palm Coast
Details: The City Repertory Theatre is presenting “Scapino!,” a comedy about a quick-thinking rascal who cleverly manipulates and cajoles people into doing what he wants them to do. Tickets cost $20 for adults; $15 for students. Visit crtpalmcoast. com.
VOLUSIA COUNTY SENIOR SOFTBALL
When: 6:45 p.m. and 8 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays
Where: Derbyshire Park and Sports Complex, 849 Derbyshire Road, Daytona Beach
Details: This 50-and-older men’s senior softball league is now forming. It’s both recreational and competitive. Call Joe Daly at 954-732-0992 or visit nsbseniorsoftball.com.
EXERCISES FOR THE MATURING BODY
When: 10:30 a.m. Mondays and Thursdays
Where: First Baptist Church of Palm Coast, 6050 Palm Coast Parkway, Palm Coast Details: Attend upbeat classes presented by Synergy Senior Fitness and taught by 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 Beach
Details: Want to spend a day looking at fine art? The Museum of Arts and Sciences has the following shows on display: “A Treasury of Indian and Persian Miniature Paintings,” and “Sensations: Florida Artists Group Statewide Exhibition.”
Matanzas catcher Reece Monroe was on deck when Gabe Breckenridge singled to center with two men on base and one out.
“I was dialed in,” Monroe said. “The next thing I know, it was the end of the inning.” Monroe thought a runner would score. Or maybe he would bat with the bases loaded. He didn’t expect a double play.
But it was that kind of night for the Pirates, who fell to Flagler Palm Coast for the second time in two days on Friday, March 17.
Kevin Maya and Jesse Baugher combined on a four-hit shutout as the Bulldogs defeated Matanzas 5-0 at the Pirates’ field.
“I just tried to get ahead on my pitches,” said Maya, who gave up four hits and one walk and struck out six in 5.2 innings. “My changeup was working.”
Baugher came on with two outs in the sixth, hit the first batter he faced and then retired four in a row to complete FPC’s sweep of its crosstown rivals.
“It’s really hyped up,” Maya said of the rivalry. “This is a big win for our team. Now we’ll have fun on the ride home.”
The Bulldogs led 5-0 in the fifth inning and then took the wind out of the Pirates’ sails with a preposterous double play in the bottom of the inning.
With men on first and second, Breckenridge singled to center. Maya took the cutoff throw and threw to shortstop Cody Clymer, who tagged out Alonso Quintana, who over-ran second base. Ethan DiGuglielmo then took off from third base, but Clymer threw him out at home.
Catcher Thomas Seeley tagged the Matanzas junior for the final out of the inning.
“At the end of the day, we ran ourselves out of the inning,” Matanzas coach Jim Perry said. “We have a lot of inexperience across the board. We’re going to have growing pains.”
Monroe is a senior, but this is his first year on varsity after missing last season with an injury. He plays a variety of positions, Perry said, but with the Pirates starting left-hander Seth Avellar on the mound, Monroe got to play behind the plate.
With Braden Russell returning as the starting catcher, Monroe asked if he could catch lefties this season.
“A few of my friends are lefthanders, and I like catching them,” Monroe said. “They can locate the ball real well. The ball seems to come in crisper from left-handers.”
Monroe made his presence felt in the field, framing pitches, throwing two runners out trying to steal and making a sliding catch on a foul pop in front of the Matanzas dugout.
“That was a big-time play,” Perry said.
Avellar, a sophomore, allowed just three hits in four innings, but the Bulldogs were able to take a 3-0 lead without getting a base hit.
FPC loaded the bases in the first inning on a hit-batter and two walks.
Brayden Stuart and Dalton Schell then followed with sacrifice flies. Schell hit another sacrifice fly in the third, scoring Tristen Miller, who walked, went to second on a long flyout and stole third.
The Bulldogs scored two more runs in the fourth as Maya helped his own cause with a warning-track double to score a run.
FPC finished up a 6-2 raindelayed win over the Pirates on March 15. That game was suspended in the bottom of the fourth inning on March 10.
Matanzas (3-5) followed the two losses to its rival with a 12-3 victory at Atlantic on Monday, March 20. The win ended the Pirates’ fivegame losing streak. Ben Apfelbach went 4-for-4 with two doubles. Apfelbach drove in three runs. FPC (6-5) began a spring break tournament in Sanford with an 11-0 loss to Delray Beach American Heritage.
“It’s really hyped up, This is a big win for our team. Now we’ll have fun on the ride home.”
KEVIN MAYA, FPC pitcher on the rivalry
“At the end of the day, we ran ourselves out of the inning. We have a lot of inexperience across the board. We’re going to have growing pains.”
JIM PERRY, Matanzas coachPhotos by Jake Montgomery
mer college lacrosse player already on the Matanzas campus who had been an assistant coach for 12 years at a successful high school program in New York State.
When Jordan Butler became Matanzas High School’s athletic director in August, 2021, he knew the boys lacrosse program was in danger of folding.
The previous coach had been fired, and several players had transferred to Flagler Palm Coast High School.
He had to find a new coach, and they had to find enough players to field a team.
Butler asked for advice from former Pirates’ head coach Efrain Gutierrez, who had become an assistant coach at Flagler College.
“I remember him telling me if we don’t forfeit a game, it’s a win,” Butler said. It turned out that there was a for-
Adam Frys, a Matanzas algebra teacher, reached out to Butler, but he wasn’t sure he wanted the job.
“Going away from coaching and coming back to it, you know what a huge commitment it is, and you know what a strain it can put on your family,” Frys said.
If Frys, who played lacrosse at Hartwick College, wasn’t sure he was the right man to lead the Pirates, Butler was.
“The first time I met him I knew he was the guy I wanted to lead the program,” Butler said.
Frys sought advice from wrestling coach TJ Gillin, with whom he coteaches.
Gillin and the other wrestling coaches showed Frys how they built a successful program at the school and that he could do it too.
Frys took the job.
“I kind of went back to why I got into teaching in the first place,” he said. “And part of it was to be a lacrosse coach, and I just really couldn’t pass up the opportunity to do it my way. The fact that it was torn down to the ground, to me, was a good thing, because that meant I got to build it with my own vision.”
At Johnson City High School, outside of Binghamton, New York, Frys was on a coaching staff that turned around a struggling program, so he had the blueprint.
But he may not have been ready for the first day of practice when he was greeted by all of seven players, three short of fielding a team with no substitutes.
The returning players went to work recruiting the school.
“We asked a lot of the sophomores and freshmen if they wanted to play,” midfielder Bryson Williams said. “We got a whole bunch of people out through friends and networking around the school.”
The new players had a short period of time to learn a game that was foreign to them.
“It was definitely a struggle,” Williams said. “The newer kids didn’t really know how to play, so we were trying to teach them at the same time we were playing.”
The transition was also difficult for the returning players, he said. Frys had a different philosophy than the previous coach.
“We had newer plays and a different formation than what we used to run,” Williams said. “Coach Frys is from up north where they play fast paced with a lot of different formations.”
Not only did the Pirates not forfeit a game last season, they won three games, including their seasonopener against St. Joseph. They finished with a 3-9 record.
HUGE STRIDES This season, Matanzas is 4-5. The gap between Matanzas and FPC is still palpable, as the Bulldogs’ 14-3 win on March 15 attests, but the
Pirates’ progress has been unmistakable. And interest in the team has skyrocketed.
“I’m not turning kids away, but I had up to 40 kids interested this year,” Frys said. “I think that a lot of kids have seen us out there and they see the shiny helmets, they see the kids enjoying the game. It’s recruited itself now. And I think that momentum is going to keep building.”
Last year, Frys said, the Pirates were unable to run an organized offense.
“This year, we’re running a set that we can run over and over and over again and possess the ball for long periods of time,” he said. “We’re seeing big improvements, and it’s not just from a skill level, but it’s in the IQ level as well in understanding the game.”
But the biggest difference in the Pirates this year from two years ago is discipline.
“In the past, we struggled a lot with keeping our cool,” Williams said. “We had a lot of hotheads. This year, we have higher positive energy around the team and we’re cheering each other, not letting our mouths get ahead of us.”
Butler said Frys has proven to be one of the best coaches on campus.
“He’s very passionate,” Butler said. “He brought discipline and pride into the program, and that’s what we were looking for.”
The Pirates are led by four seniors: Williams, a dual midfielder, who has an offer to play next year at Webber International University; faceoff midfielder Brett Furey; attacker Jimmy Kelly; and defenseman Thomas Reilly, who Frys calls the heart and soul of the team.
“He’s a bit undersized, but he’s a sparkplug out there,” Frys said.
FPC coach Tom Morgello said the two programs are working together now. He and Frys trained players together last summer, Morgello said.
“We’re a unified county,” Morgello said. “This (rivalry) is real friendly, where in years past it wasn’t friendly. There’s some animosity between people, but that’s the way lacrosse and sports work in this lifetime. But
we try to help them out as much as possible, help them with equipment, training.”
Frys stresses that he’s a teacher first and a coach second, but he is happy that lacrosse is back in his life.
“Obviously, I love lacrosse,” he said. “I tell the guys all the time that lacrosse gave me a lot in my life. You know, I met my wife at a lacrosse party. It’s given me so much, and I just feel obligated to give it back.
“I know our goal is to win games ultimately, but I want (the players) to love the game of lacrosse like it is a passion sport and it’s an addiction. When you pick it up, kids don’t quit lacrosse, you know? It’s that level of fun, and I just really felt obligated to give back to the game that has given me so much.”
“The fact that it was torn down to the ground, to me, was a good thing, because that meant I got to build it with my own vision.”ADAM FRYS, Matanzas coach
When lacrosse player Dylan Toriello wants to work on his game, he can just walk next door.
“My next-door neighbor, I was fortunate enough to have him open up a lacrosse store when we were a little younger,” the Flagler Palm Coast senior midfielder said. “So, that’s closed down now, but all the equipment he had in that shop is at his house still. So, he has a cage in his backyard with a shot clock, netting in the back, everything like that. So, any time I want to go outside and shoot around, it’s there for me.”
Toriello has been working on his game since he first picked up a stick at a young age. Now, he is one of the leading goal scorers in the state, with 42 in nine games.
“Dylan is obviously one of the best midfielders in North Florida,” FPC boys lacrosse coach Tom Morgello said. “Many teams can attest to that, because many teams can’t guard him. With stats, they know who the guys are, and they try to lock him off. Dylan is an all-around athlete, whether he’s doing mountain biking, running, surfing, whatever. Everything he does, he excels at.”
Toriello has been in love with lacrosse since he picked up that first stick.
“My uncle played in high school,” Toriello said. “He left one of his sticks at my house one day, and I found it in the garage and just picked it up
and started messing with it, and ever since then I’ve had a stick in my hand.”
Toriello has been playing lacrosse since he was 8 or 9 years old. He and a few other FPC seniors have trained with high-level club teams to raise their game.
Toriello is one of 14 seniors on FPC’s team. With next year a likely rebuilding season, the Bulldogs have set a goal this year to win the district championship. Last year, they lost to Creekside, 18-6, in the district title game but earned a spot in the regional playoffs.
“Our schedule is a lot tougher this year,” Morgello said. “We just played Creekside (March 9) and lost in overtime (8-7), so our team is definitely better than last year.”
The Bulldogs (5-6) followed the overtime loss with a 14-3 win over Matanzas on March 15 and another close loss, 13-11, to Orlando Boone on March 16. Toriello scored eight goals in the two games, including five against the Pirates.
“We’re doing alright this year,” Toriello said. “But we tend to come together more in
“My uncle played in high school. He left one of his sticks at my house one day and I found it in the garage and just picked it up and started messing with it, and ever since then I’ve had a stick in my hand.”
DYLAN TORIELLOthe second half of our games, and we need to come out in the beginning and play hard.”
The Bulldogs have four games left before the district tournament. Their next game is at home against Cocoa Beach on March 27.
Morgello knows he can continue to count on Toriello down the stretch to be a leader on the team.
“He’s obviously a senior leader,” Morgello said. “He rallies the guys real well. A lot of the energy that Dylan puts out gets spread to the rest of the team. What he does definitely boosts the rest of the guys’ morale and their ability to play.”
Four swimmers from the USRP Racers qualified for the National Club Swimming Association’s Age Group Swimming Championships, also known as the Age Group Nationals.
The meet is March 22-25 at the Rosen Aquatic and Fitness Center in Orlando.
It is the first year the Racers have qualified swimmers for the nationals.
Matthew Alvarez, 13, qualified in six events — the 50 and 100 freestyle, the 50, 100 and 200 breaststroke and the 200 intermediate medley.
Blake Allender, 14, qualified in the 100 and 200 freestyle and the 50 and 100 backstroke. Evie Kate Carnathan, 12, qualified in the 50 and 100 breaststroke.
Charlee Anderson, 10, also qualified, but she will compete at the Florida AllStars in Fort Pierce instead. The top six Florida swimmers in each age group qualify for that meet. Charlee will compete in the 50 and 100 freestyle, 50 and 100 backstroke, the 50 butterfly and the 100 IM.
The Age Group National brings together the top 900 swimmers in the nation between the ages of 9 and 14.
The USRP Racers train at the Cypress Aquatic Center in Daytona Beach.
“This incredible achievement is a testament to the swimmers’ hard work and dedication in and out of the pool,” Racers head coach Rob Klotzbach said. “More importantly, each of the swimmers are A students and quality young men and women. Each and every one of them inspire, push, support and genuinely enjoy the company of all of their teammates.”
A week after the Flagler Palm Coast 4x800 boys relay won at the North/South Florida Challenge, the Bulldogs’ 4x400 relay won at the Bob Hayes Invitational track and field meet.
FPC’s Isaiah Joseph, Dennis Murray, Thomonte Curry and DZ Steward ran a 3:21.35 to win at the elite meet on a cold, wet day, March 18, at the University of North Florida in Jacksonville.
Meanwhile, the Bulldogs’ 4x800 relay of Joseph, Brandon Kalasnik, Peyton Woodward and Kamron Davis finished third with a time of 8:09.3. The team’s North/ South time of 7:55.08 is still the fastest time in the state.
Joseph also finished fifth in the 400 hurdles with a time of 57.46 seconds, while FPC’s Gerod Tolbert was third in the long jump at 21 feet, 11.5 inches and Colby Cronk was sixth in the shot put at 50
feet, 1.25 inches.
Other top finishes at the Bob Hayes Invitational included: Seabreeze’s Mackenzie Roy third in the girls 1,600 (5:15.78), while her twin sister Arianna was seventh (5:21.10). Mackenzie Roy also finished third in the 3,200 with a time of 11:40.59.
Seabreeze’s Chandler Mitzo finished second in the boys javelin with a throw of 151 feet, 4 inches.
FPC’s Ashton Bracewell and Jake Blumengarten each won the James Day College Scholarship. Three scholarships of $2,500 were awarded to boys and three to girls at the meet.
Lester Davis, Mainland’s co-defensive coordinator, returned to his alma mater to be the head football coach at Seabreeze. Davis played linebacker for Seabreeze and South Carolina State University.
FPC graduate Michael DeAugustino of Northwestern won one match in the 125-pound classification at the NCAA Division I wrestling championships. DeAugustino lost in overtime by a 3-1 decision in the first round, won 7-2 in consolation round 1 and lost 7-2 in consolation round 2.
Email brent@ observerlocalnews.com.
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Puzzle One
Clue:
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“ZKGN OWS IDS RSNI FOWI JX UT GOT. K GJP’I LOZS VF IJ UOZS UJCKSN. K LOZS VF IJ DOPB JVI LKID UT XOUKET.” WSSNS LKIDSWNFJJP
Ahouse in Palm Harbor was the top real estate transaction for Feb. 9-15 in Palm Coast and Flagler County. Robert and Mary Jean Kambar, of Palm Coast, sold 4 Cherry Court to LAJ Corporation, of St. Johns, for $765,000. Built in 1996, the house is a 3/2 and has a pool, custom-built hot tub and private boat dock, with 2,094 square feet of living space.
Cypress Knoll Piotr Rowicki and Elzbieta Dragan, of Palm Coast, sold 32 Evansville Lane to James Burns and Beth Brimer, of Palm Coast, for $657,000. Built in 2022, the house is a 5/3 and has 2,717 square feet.
Robert and Donna Wyder, of Oakland, New Jersey, sold 41 Egan Drive to Margretta and Michael Franklin, of Palm Coast, for $520,000. Built in 2004, the house is a 3/2 and has a pool, hot tub and 2,470 square feet.
Indian Trails
Jenna Dalton, of Palm Coast, sold 9 Barrington Drive to Dylan Doherty, of Palm Coast, for $358,500. Built in 2006, the house is a 4/3 and has 2,386 square feet. It sold in 2019 for $214,900.
Marc Tourville and Mary Shapiro, of Palm Coat, sold 12 Barring Place to Phillip
and Maria Boudreau, of Palm Coast for $417,000. Built in 1996, the house is a 3/2 and has a pool, shed and 1,820 square feet. It sold in 2020 for $83,600.
Lehigh Woods
National Home Corporation, of Roswell, Georgia, sold 4 Rickenbacker Drive to Thomas Stein, of Palm Coast, and Deborah Stein, of Boston, Massachusetts, for $295,000. Built in 2022, the house is a 4/2 and has 1,517 square feet.
Wimsatt Rentals, LLC, of Owensboro, Kentucky, sold 29 Raintree Place to Adam and Hilary Brown, of Palm Coast, for $314,900. Built in 2001, the house is a 4/2 and has 1,730 square feet. It sold in 2019 for $156,100.
Palm Harbor Home Buyers of Northeast Florida LLC, of Flagler Beach, sold 21 Coral Reef Court South to Manny and Mariana Gandarez, of Long Branch, New Jersey, for $484,200. Built in 1982, the
house is a 4/3 and has 1,992 square feet. It sold in 2022 for $260,000.
Pine GroveRobert and Danielle Galloway, of Palm Coast, sold 150 Point Pleasant Drive to Ramon and Larysa Andersen, of Palm Coast, for $340,000. Built in 2001, the house is a 3/2 and has a pool and 1,331 square feet. It sold in 2001 for $94,400.
Pine Lakes
Natalya Shvets, of Brooklyn, New York, sold 42 Waters Drive to Pedro Gonzalez Gorbea and Maria Montenegro, of Palm Coast, for $370,000. Built in 2022, the house is a 3/2 and has 1,905 square feet.
Elizabeth Becker, Patricia Auriemma, and Susan Kern, of Palm Coast, sold 33 Wellstone Drive to Tina and Robert Escalante, of Palm Coast, for $220,000. Built in 1984, the house is a 3/2 and has a fireplace, pool, hot tub and 1,245 square feet. It sold in 2009 for $94,000.
Jennifer McCain, of Palm Coast, and Elizabeth Douglas, of Sylva, North Carolina, sold 4 Woodglen Place to Steven Kraeger, of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, for $260,000. Built in 1990, the house is a 2/2 and has a pool and 1,854 square feet. It sold in 2015 for $145,000.
Sawmill Creek Holiday Builders, Inc., of Melbourne, sold 5 Ridge Road
Ahouse along the Ormond Scenic Loop and Trail was the top real estate transaction for Feb. 5-11 in Ormond Beach and Ormondby-the-Sea. Todd Whitten and Robert Maloy, of St. Augustine, sold 113 La Toscana Rotonda to Russell and Patti Wallace, of Moorseville, North Carolina, for $2,200,000. Built in 2020, the house is a 4/5 and has a pool, three fireplaces and 4,343 square feet of space.
Halifax Plantation
Lawrence Breen and Michelle Zajac-Breen, Individually and as Trustees of the Breen Revocable Trust, of Ormond Beach, sold 3647 Mallow Drive to Thomas and Sarah Lairson, of Ormond Beach, for $590,000. Built in 2003, the house is a 3/2 and has a fireplace, a pool and 2,268 square feet. It sold in 2018 for $353,000.
Not in a subdivision Thomas and Erinn Ganz, of South Daytona, sold 1533 Harmony Avenue to Dwayne and Jennifer Dixon, of Ormond Beach, for $750,000. Built in 1986, the house is a 3/3 and has a fireplace, a pool and 2,468 square feet. It sold in 2016 for $340,000.
Hunter Ramirez, of Ormond Beach, sold 112 South Ridgewood Avenue to Lenore Montgomery, as Trustee
of the Montgomery Family Revocable Trust, of Saint Petersburg, for $247,500. Built in 1907, the house is a 2/1 and has 1,301 square feet. It sold in 2017 for $130,000.
Oak Forest
Allan Trueblood, of Ormond Beach, sold 1526 Poplar Drive to Mark LeClere, of Ormond Beach, for $495,000. Built in 1986, the house is a 3/2 and has a fireplace and 2,185 square feet. It sold in 2017 for $236,900.
Ormond Lakes David and Catherine Melton, of Ormond Beach, sold 8 Grackle Lane to Edward Greth and Shannon Levesque, of Ormond Beach, for $435,000. Built in 2005, the house is a 3/2 and has 2,169 square feet. It sold in 2017 for $277,000.
Ormond Shores Jefferey and Jonathan Rufenacht, individually and as successor co-trustee of the Roger Allen Rufenacht and Carol Carnahan Rufenacht Revocable Trust, of Mait-
land, sold 66 River Beach Drive to Jinger Hall and Monty Anderson, of Ormond Beach, for $376,000. Built in 1928, the house is a 3/1 and has a fireplace and 1,310 square feet.
Plantation Bay
Luke and Jessica Brown, of Ormond Beach, sold 1410 Regal Pointe Lane to David and Roxanne Jeghers, of Ormond Beach, for $620,000. Built in 2006, the house is a 4/2 and has a fireplace, a pool and has 2,459 square feet. It sold in 2016 for $285,000.
Stephan and Lisa Sanville, of Manchester, Connecticut, sold 848 Aldenham Lane to Paige and Jason Lemberg, of Westfield, New Jersey, for $370,000. Built in 2018, the house is a 3/3 and has 2,078 square feet. It sold in 2019 for $285,000.
Ray Mar Heights
Terry and Marcia Willbanks, of Gainesville, Georgia, sold 119 Ray Mar Drive to Rochelle Cannon, of Ormond Beach, for $420,000. Built in 1961, the house is a 3/2 and has 1,350 square feet. It sold in 2022 for $395,000.
Reflections Village
David and Carole Benson, of Jacksonville, sold 32 Reflections Village Drive to Sylvia Harton-Robbins, of Ormond Beach, for $310,000. Built in 1996, the house is a 2/2 and has 1,518 square feet. It sold in 2018 for $205,000.
2017 Energy efficient home is ready to move in. 3 bedroom with bonus/flex room. Open floor plan with center island kitchen. Upgrades include recessed lighting, volume ceilings, hurricane shutters and newer pvc fence. Master suite with extra large walk-in closet. Relax on the extended back porch. MLS#1106776 $419,000 Call Carly Krajewski 386-872-0878.
RARE True double lot, 160 foot wide backyard. Possibly sell 2nd lot, build for loved one or install garage/workshop. NEW: solar-paid off, 12’ GATE, fence, pavered screened back porch, pavered patio. LARGE OPEN KITCHEN, open layout, split floor plan. $390k w/only main lot. With both lots $424,000
MLS#1106535 Call Christina Daugherty 386-299-3179.
INDIGO LAKES
NEW 2022 ROOF WITH 5 YEAR WARRANTY AND SOLAR
HEAT SALT WATER POOL. This 4 bed/ 4bath beautiful estate is located on Big Lake and is move-in ready. The double door entrance leads into the sophisticated great room, including a gas fireplace, built-in speakers, and a breathtaking view of the travertine lanai and lake.
MLS#1106440 $942,500
Call Julia Laoun 386-301-0983.
Don’t miss this spectacular & spacious 3 bedroom, 3 full bathroom Garden Villa with attached 2 car garage. Nestled at the end of a cul-de-sac, this 2 story model comes with 2 primary suites; 1 upstairs and 1 down. The living room features a corner stone fireplace for chilly evening. MLS#1106804 $319,000 Call Amy Kathryn Beals 386-852-1400.
Charming, tasteful & completely updated home in quiet, central Ormnd Beach neighborhood. Movein ready condition. Look out over your delightful oversized fenced backyard, a gardener’s paradise, with spacious screened back porch and outdoor patio. Four sizeable bedrooms PLUS bonus office and inside laundry with storage. MLS#1105718 $442,900
Call Maureen France 386-479-2151.
Beautiful two story, 4 bedroom, 3.5 bath with a two and a half car garage. With the Stunning master downstairs and the rest of the bedrooms upstairs there is plenty of room for entertaining and still enjoying your privacy! This gorgeous property boasts cathedral ceilings, built ins upstairs and down, and enough yard space. MLS#1106482 $610,000 Call Lindsey Wolf 407-432-3849.
PALM COAST
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7B
to Nicole Mateo and Pedro Mateo Jr., of Palm Coast, for $339,400. Built in 2022, the house is a 3/2 and has 2,003 square feet.
Seminole Woods
Carolyn Ovenshire, of Flagler Beach, Milton Ovenshire, of Bunnell, Derek Ovenshire, of Lansing, Michigan, sold 27 Seneca Path to Almanac Group Inc., of Bunnell, for
$275,000. Built in 2006, the house is a 3/2 and has 1,988 square feet. It sold in 2009 for $137,000.
Christopher and Heather Binder, of Clarksville, Tennessee, sold 32 Selborne Path to Luis and Yvette Ramirez, of Palm Coast, for $309,900. Built in 2003, the house is a 3/2.5 and has 2,034 square feet. It sold in 2015 for $155,000.
Woodlands Joshua and Jennifer Jaillet, of Palm Coast, sold 16 Blackwell Place to Gary and Kathleen Casteel, of Palm Coast, for $285,000. Built in 1978, the house is a 3/2 with an inground pool and has 1,769 square feet. It sold in 2014 for $138,000.
Toby Tobin, of gotoby.com, contributed to this report.
CONTINUED FROM PAGE 7B
River Oaks David and Martha Ayer, of Ormond Beach, sold 485 River Square Lane to Jeffrey and Jessyca Hogan, of Ormond Beach, for $536,000. Built in 2018, the house is a 4/3 and has a pool and 2,345 square feet. It sold in 2018 for $313,000.
ORMOND BY THE SEA Wildes and Maria Actis, individually and as trustees of the Wildes and Maria Pia Actis Trust, of Flagler Beach,
FIRST INSERTION NOTICE OF PUBLIC MEETING CITY OF BUNNELL, FLORIDA
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE CITY OF BUNNELL, FLORIDA will hold a Public Hearing as authorized by law at 6:00 P.M. on the 4th day of April 2023, for the purposes of hearing a request to amend the City of Bunnell Comprehensive Plan Future Land Use map from Flagler County “Residential Low Density/Rural Estate” to City of Bunnell “Agriculture”, at the Flagler County Government Services Building (GSB) 1st Floor Conference Room/Chambers Meeting Room located at 1769 E. Moody Blvd, Bunnell, Florida 32110. FLUMA 2023-08
sold 4040-3370 Ocean Shore Blvd. Unit 404 to William and Patricia Elmore, of Athens, Ohio, for $345,000. Built in 1987, the condo is a 2/2 and has 1,275 square feet.
Rochelle Cannon, of Ormond Beach, sold 7 Buckingham Drive to Charles and Jan Penrow, of Ormond Beach, for $750,000. Built in 2013, the house is a 3/2 and has a pool and 2,379 square feet. It sold in 2015 for $305,000.
Southern Title Holding Company, LLC, of St. Augustine, sold 2 Sea Shore Drive to
Sheila and Mark Cooper, of Orlando, for $642,000. Built in 1957, the house is a 3/2 and has 1,222 square feet. It sold in 2015 for $260,000. OP Gold, LLC, of Chandler, Arizona, sold 25 Palmetto Drive to Thomas and Joyce Mills, of Owensboro, Kentucky, for $284,500. Built in 1954, the house is a 2/1 and has 1,004 square feet. It last sold in 2022 for $316,500. John Adams, of Adams, Cameron & Co. Realtors, contributed to this report.
FROM FLAGLER COUNTY “MH-1, RURAL MOBILE HOME” TO CITY OF BUNNELL “AG, AGRICULTURE”.
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 Planning, Zoning and Appeals Board 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)
REQUEST TO AMEND THE CITY OF BUNNELL COMPREHENSIVE PLAN FUTURE LAND USE MAP FOR CERTAIN REAL PROPERTY, OWNED BY DALE BOUDREAUX, BEARING PARCEL ID: 16-13-31-2000-00030-0070 FROM FLAGLER COUNTY “RESIDENTIAL LOW DENSITY / RURAL ESTATE” TO CITY OF BUNNELL “AGRICULTURE”.
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 Planning, Zoning and Appeals Board 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)
a request to amend the City of Bunnell Comprehensive Plan Future Land Use map from Flagler County “Residential Low Density/Rural Estate” to City of Bunnell “Agriculture”, at the Flagler County Government Services Building (GSB) 1st Floor Conference Room/Chambers Meeting Room located at 1769 E. Moody Blvd, Bunnell, Florida 32110. FLUMA 2023-07
REQUEST TO AMEND THE CITY OF BUNNELL COMPREHENSIVE PLAN FUTURE LAND USE MAP FOR CERTAIN REAL PROPERTY, OWNED
ALL INTERESTED PERSONS ARE
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 Planning, Zoning and Appeals Board 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)
23-00052F
March 23, 2023
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 NO -
TICE. ALL CLAIMS NOT FILED WITHIN
THE TIME PERIODS SET FORTH IN FLORIDA STATUTES SECTION 733.702
WILL BE FOREVER BARRED. NOTWITHSTANDING THE TIME PERIODS
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. 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
RE-NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR FLAGLER COUNTY, FLORIDA CIRCUIT CIVIL DIVISION CASE NO.: 2010-CA-000223 THE BANK OF NEW YORK MELLON FKA THE BANK OF NEW YORK, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE CERTIFICATEHOLDERS OF CWALT, INC., ALTERNATIVE LOAN TRUST 2006-OC9, MORTGAGE PASS-THROUGH CERTIFICATES, SERIES 2006-OC9 Plaintiff(s), vs. DEBORAH WINKER; et al., Defendant(s). NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT, pursuant to the Order Granting Motion to Reschedule Foreclosure Sale entered on February 28, 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 21st day of April, 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
March 23, 2023 23-00054F
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 ACCOMMODA-
TION, PLEASE CONTACT COURT ADMINISTRATION IN ADVANCE OF THE DATE THE SERVICE IS NEEDED: COURT ADMINISTRATION,
Board of Accountancy. Audits shall be conducted in accordance with Florida Law and particularly Section 218.39, Florida Statutes, and the rules of the Florida Auditor General.
NOTICE OF SALE IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SEVENTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT IN AND FOR VOLUSIA COUNTY, FLORIDA
NO. 2022 11164 CIDL
REGIONS
v. RONANITA J RAHL; UNKNOWN SPOUSE OF RONANITA J. RAHL;
UNKNOWN TENANT 2; UNKNOWN
TENANT 1 ; REGIONS BANK
Defendants.
Florida, described as: THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED LOT, PIECE OR PARCEL OF LAND, SITUATE, LYING AND BEING IN THE COUNTY OF VOLUSIA, STATE OF FLORIDA, TO WIT: COMMENCE AT THE SOUTHEAST CORNER OF LOT 2, HATCH`S HOMESTEAD IN U.S. LOT 1, SECTION 2, TOWNSHIP 18 SOUTH, RANGE 34 EAST, AS RECORDED IN MAP BOOK 3, PAGE 81, PUBLIC RECORDS OF VOLUSIA COUNTY, FLORIDA, THENCE NORTH 89°18` WEST, 135 FEET ALONG THE SOUTH LINE OF SAID LOT 2, THENCE NORTH 400 FEET PARALLEL TO THE EAST LINE OF SAID LOT 2 FOR THE POINT OF BEGIN-
NING, THENCE NORTH 89°18` WEST 107 FEET, THENCE NORTH 80 FEET; THENCE
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGS TO CONSIDER THE IMPOSITION OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENTS PURSUANT TO SECTIONS 170.07 AND 197.3632, FLORIDA STATUTES, BY THE WAYPOINTE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DISTRICT
NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING OF THE WAYPOINTE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DISTRICT
In accordance with Chapters 170, 190 and 197, Florida Statutes, the Waypointe Community Development District’s (“District”) Board of Supervisors (“Board”) hereby provides notice of the following public hearings and public meeting:
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGS
DATE: April 14, 2023
TIME: 11:00 a.m.
LOCATION: Downtown Executive Center of Deland
120 S. Woodland Boulevard
Deland, FL 32720
The purpose of the public hearings announced above is to consider the imposition of special assessments (“Debt Assessments”), and adoption of assessment rolls to secure proposed bonds, on benefited lands within the District, and, to provide for the levy, collection and enforcement of the Debt Assessments. The proposed bonds secured by the Debt Assessments are intended to finance certain public infrastructure improvements, including, but not limited to, stormwater management, water and sewer utilities, landscape, irrigation, lighting, and other infrastructure improvements (together, “Project”), benefitting certain lands within the District. The Project is described in more detail in the Engineer’s Report, dated March 6, 2023 (“Engineer’s Report”). The Debt Assessments are proposed to be levied as one or more assessment liens and allocated to the benefitted lands within the assessment area, as set forth in Master Special Assessment Methodology Report, dated March 6, 2023 (“Assessment Report”). At the conclusion of the public hearings, the Board will, by resolution, levy and impose assessments as finally approved by the Board. A special meeting of the District will also be held where the Board may consider any other business that may properly come before it.
The District is located entirely within the City of Daytona Beach, Florida, and covers approximately 426.70 acres of land, more or less. The site is generally located in the southwest corner of the intersection of Interstate 4 and Interstate 95.
(NOTE: The District is undertaking a process to remove certain property (“Contraction Parcel”) from within the boundaries of the District that are planned for commercial and apartment development because such areas will not be part of the CIP, and, as such, these areas will not be subject to the Debt Assessments.) A geographic depiction of the District is shown below. All lands within the District are expected to be improved in accordance with the reports identified above.
A description of the property to be assessed and the amount to be assessed to each piece or parcel of property may be ascertained at the “District’s Office” located at c/o DPFG Management & Consulting LLC, 250 International Parkway, Suite 208, Lake Mary, Florida 32746. Also, a copy of the agendas and other documents referenced herein may be obtained from the District Office.
The proposed Debt Assessments are as follows:
Proposed Debt Assessments
The assessments shall be paid in not more than thirty (30) annual installments subsequent to the issuance of debt to finance the improvements. These annual assessments will be collected on the County tax roll by the Tax Collector. Alternatively, the District may choose to directly collect and enforce these assessments.
The public hearings and meeting are open to the public and will be conducted in accordance with Florida law. The public hearings and meeting may be continued to a date, time, and place to be specified on the record. There may be occasions when staff or board members may participate by speaker telephone. Any person requiring special accommodations because of a disability or physical impairment should contact the District Office at least forty-eight (48) hours prior to the meeting. 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.
Please note that all affected property owners have the right to appear and comment at the public hearings and meeting and may also file written objections with the District Office within twenty (20) days of issuance of this notice. Each person who decides to appeal any decision made by the Board with respect to any matter considered at the public hearings or meeting is advised that person will need a record of 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.
District Manager
RESOLUTION 2023-25
A RESOLUTION OF THE BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF THE WAYPOINTE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DIS-
TRICT DECLARING SPECIAL ASSESSMENTS; DESIGNATING THE NATURE AND LOCATION OF THE PROPOSED IMPROVEMENTS; DECLARING THE TOTAL ESTIMATED COST OF THE IMPROVEMENTS, THE PORTION TO BE PAID BY ASSESSMENTS, AND THE MANNER AND TIMING IN WHICH THE ASSESSMENTS ARE TO BE PAID; DESIGNATING THE LANDS UPON WHICH THE ASSESSMENTS SHALL BE LEVIED; PROVIDING FOR AN ASSESSMENT PLAT AND A PRELIMINARY ASSESSMENT ROLL; ADDRESSING THE SETTING OF PUBLIC HEARINGS; PROVIDING FOR PUBLICATION OF THIS RESOLUTION; AND ADDRESSING CONFLICTS, SEVERABILITY AND AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
WHEREAS, the Waypointe Community Development District (“District”) is a local unit of special-purpose government organized and existing under and pursuant to Chapter 190, Florida Statutes; and
WHEREAS, the District is authorized by Chapter 190, Florida Statutes, to finance, fund, plan, establish, acquire, install, equip, operate, extend, construct, or reconstruct roadways, sewer and water distribution systems, stormwater management/earthwork improvements, landscape, irrigation and entry features, conservation and mitigation, street lighting and other infrastructure projects, and services necessitated by the development of, and serving lands within, the District; and
WHEREAS, the District hereby determines to undertake, install, plan, establish, construct or reconstruct, enlarge or extend, equip, acquire, operate, and/or maintain the portion of the infrastructure improvements comprising the District’s overall capital improvement plan as described in the District Engineer’s Report, dated March 6, 2023 (“Project”), which is attached hereto as Exhibit A and incorporated herein by reference; and
WHEREAS, it is in the best interest of the District to pay for all or a portion of the cost of the Project by the levy of special assessments (“Assessments”) using the methodology set forth in that Master Special Assessment Methodology Report, dated March 6, 2023, which is attached hereto as Exhibit B, incorporated herein by reference, and on file with the District Manager at c/o DPFG 250 International Parkway, Suite 208, Lake Mary, Florida 32746 (“District Records Office”);
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE BOARD OF SUPERVISORS OF THE WAYPOINTE COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT DISTRICT:
1. AUTHORITY FOR THIS RESOLUTION; INCORPORATION OF RECITALS. This Resolution is adopted pursuant to the provisions of Florida law, including without limitation Chapters 170, 190 and 197, Florida Statutes. The recitals stated above are incorporated herein and are adopted by the Board as true and correct statements.
2. DECLARATION OF ASSESSMENTS. The Board hereby declares that it has determined to undertake the Project and to defray all or a portion of the cost thereof by the Assessments.
3. DESIGNATING THE NATURE AND LOCATION OF IMPROVEMENTS. The nature and general location of, and plans and specifications for, the Project are described in Exhibit A, which is on file at the District Records Office. Exhibit B is also on file and available for public inspection at the same location.
4. DECLARING THE TOTAL ESTIMATED COST OF THE IMPROVEMENTS, THE PORTION TO BE PAID BY ASSESSMENTS, AND THE MANNER AND TIMING IN WHICH THE ASSESSMENTS ARE TO BE PAID.
A. The total estimated cost of the Project is $82,130,400 (“Estimated Cost”).
the
be apportioned and paid is set forth in Exhibit B, as may be modified by supplemental assessment resolutions. The Assessments will constitute a “master” lien, which may be imposed without further public hearing in one or more separate liens each securing a series of bonds, and each as determined by supplemental assessment resolution. With respect to each lien securing a series of bonds, the special assessments shall be paid in not more than (30) thirty
SECOND INSERTION NOTICE OF FORFEITURE
A 2011 Hyundai Sonata, Florida tag#40AMMC (VIN: 5NPEB4AC8BH141209 ) was seized for forfeiture by the Flagler County Sheriff’s Office on January 10 , 2023. The item was seized at or near London Drive, Palm Coast FL.
yearly installments. The special assessments may be payable at the same time and in the same manner as are ad-valorem taxes and collected pursuant to Chapter 197, Florida Statutes; provided, however, that in the event the uniform non ad-valorem assessment method of collecting the Assessments is not available to the District in any year, or if determined by the District to be in its best interest, the Assessments may be collected as is otherwise permitted by law, including but not limited to by direct bill. The decision to collect special assessments by any particular method – e.g., on the tax roll or by direct bill – does not mean that such method will be used to collect special assessments in future years, and the District reserves the right in its sole discretion to select collection methods in any given year, regardless of past practices.
5. DESIGNATING THE LANDS UPON WHICH THE SPECIAL ASSESSMENTS SHALL BE LEVIED. The Assessments securing the Project shall be levied on the lands within the District, as described in Exhibit B, and as further designated by the assessment plat hereinafter provided for.
6. ASSESSMENT PLAT. Pursuant to Section 170.04, Florida Statutes, there is on file, at the District Records Office, an assessment plat showing the area to be assessed certain plans and specifications describing the Project and the estimated cost of the Project, all of which shall be open to inspection by the public.
7. PRELIMINARY ASSESSMENT ROLL. Pursuant to Section 170.06, Florida Statutes, the District Manager has caused to be made a preliminary assessment roll, in accordance with the method of assessment described in Exhibit B hereto, which shows the lots and lands assessed, the amount of benefit to and the assessment against each lot or parcel of land and the number of annual installments into which the assessment may be divided, which assessment roll is hereby adopted and approved as the District’s preliminary assessment roll.
8. PUBLIC HEARINGS DECLARED; DIRECTION TO PROVIDE NOTICE OF THE HEARINGS. Pursuant to Sections 170.07 and 197.3632(4)(b), Florida Statutes, among other provisions of Florida law, there are hereby declared two public hearings to be held as follows:
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARINGS
DATE: April 14, 2023
TIME: 11:00 a.m.
LOCATION: Downtown Executive Center of Deland 120 S. Woodland Boulevard Deland, FL 32720
The purpose of the public hearings is to hear comment and objections to the proposed special assessment program for District improvements as identified in the preliminary assessment roll, a copy of which is on file and as set forth in Exhibit B. Interested parties may appear at that hearing or submit their comments in writing prior to the hearings at the District Records Office.
Notice of said hearings shall be advertised in accordance with Chapters 170, 190 and 197, Florida Statutes, and the District Manager is hereby authorized and directed to place said notice in a newspaper of general circulation within the County in which the District is located (by two publications one week apart with the first publication at least twenty (20) days prior to the date of the hearing established herein). The District Manager shall file a publisher’s affidavit with the District Secretary verifying such publication of notice. The District Manager is further authorized and directed to give thirty (30) days written notice by mail of the time and place of this hearing to the owners of all property to be assessed and include in such notice the amount of the assessment for each such property owner, a description of the areas to be improved and notice that information concerning all assessments may be ascertained at the District Records Office. The District Manager shall file proof of such mailing by affidavit with the District Secretary.
9. PUBLICATION OF RESOLUTION. Pursuant to Section 170.05, Florida Statutes, the District Manager is hereby directed to cause this Resolution to be published twice (once a week for two (2) weeks) in a newspaper of general circulation within the County in which the District is located and to provide such other notice as may be required by law or desired in the best interests of the District.
10. CONFLICTS. All resolutions or parts thereof in conflict herewith are, to the extent of such conflict, superseded and repealed.
11. SEVERABILITY. If any section or part of a section of this resolution be declared invalid or unconstitutional, the validity, force, and effect of any other section or part of a section of this resolution shall not thereby be affected or impaired unless it clearly appears that such other section or part of a section of this resolution is wholly or necessarily dependent upon the section or part of a section so held to be invalid or unconstitutional.
12. EFFECTIVE DATE. This Resolution shall become effective upon its adoption.
PASSED AND ADOPTED this 6th day of March, 2023 ATTEST:
INFORMATION & RATES: 386-447-9723
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Notice: All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis.
COLLECTIBLE GERMAN Beer
Steins $30 and up, Hummel Figurines $30 and up
386-445-6533
CORNING WARE, blue corn ower pattern, 4 piece set with lids $135
386-562-2540
EASTER DECORATIONS baskets, bunnies, beautifully decorated eggs and so much more! $1-5 814-574-6387
EASTER DECORATIONS, baskets, plastic eggs and much more! Fill a big box for $8
386-672-5545
FREEZER, FRIGIDARE upright, used only 6 months $165, under counter microwave $25 386-597-7579
LIFESTYLER 550 Exercise Stationery Bike $125.00 or best offer (386) 597-7196
LIGHT WOOD 3 sectional cabinet and shelves 44”H x 72”L $150 386-676-1363
EFFECTIVE MARCH 31, 2023, Sharrell Cooper, MD will no longer see patients at AdventHealth Medical Group Family Medicine at Palm Coast located at 120 Cypress Edge Drive, Suite 202, Palm Coast, FL 32164. Patients should have received communication regarding transition of care. If you are a patient and did not receive communication or have additional questions, please call the of ce at 386-586-4462.
EFFECTIVE MARCH 7, 2023
John Bolla, MD will no longer see patients at AdventHealth Medical Group Family Practice at Palm Coast located at 61 Memorial Medical Parkway, Ste 3803, Palm Coast, FL 32164. Patients should have received communication regarding transition of care. If you are a patient and did not receive communication or have additional questions, please call the of ce at 386-586-1760.
Chefman XL 3.5 liter
$40, Rice Cooker Steamer $20 (386)283-7172
BROWN LEATHER Chair and matching Ottoman $125.00 or best offer (386) 597-7196
Charbroil gas grill, 4 burner, good condition, $99, product guide included 386-852-9116
LUCKY FINDS HERE! PalmCoastObserver.com/RedPages
CHOCOLATE NAUGAHYDE recliner rocker, excellent condition $100 609-408-2205
POOLGUARD POOL alarm MODEL PGRM 2 NEW IN BOX $180 302-682-0538
SOFA/CONSOLE TABLE slate top. 48 X 20 & 28 inches high.
Black $100 (386) 283-4802
TARGUS TSB 212 Laptop Backpack. New, tags, 12 compartments, warranty, $65. (386) 316-9990.
THULE AUTO roof carrier, 18 cu ft with all hardware $199 like new (386) 446-8146
WERNER EXTENSION ladder, 24 ft. extension, excellent condition $175 386-446-0034
Estate Sales
45 Families and a Food Truck!
Saturday, March 25, 8:00 -1:00 Tymber Creek SBDV Go-cart, pet items, exercise equip, outdoor heater, Coke, Nascar, & Disney collectibles, furniture, vacuum, air compressor, art, motorized bikes, vionic shoes, jewelry, ceramics, Barbie house, quilts, toys, toddler bed, HH items and décor. Tymber Creek SBDV off Granada in Ormond- pass 95, right at Walgreens (Tymber Creek Rd), 1st SBDV on right.