Plant City Times &
Observer YOU. YOUR NEIGHBORS. YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD.
A PARTNERSHIP WITH
SCHOOLSPIRIT
New work of art donated by former students.
RELAYFORLIFE
REVVED TO GO
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Participants rocked out the 2015 event.
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FREE • FRIDAY, APRIL 17, 2015
Memorial ride to be held for motocross dad.
by Catherine Sinclair | Staff Writer OUR TOWN wlca
New Walden Lake leaders elected Dan Orrico and Dave Sollenberger will now serve on the board of directors, and Jan Griffin was reelected.
Courtesy of the The Plant City Photo Archives and History Center
+ Archives ready for intern program
The Plant City Photo Archives and History Center’s intern program is open for applications for the 2015 summer and fall terms. The program is designed to provide students the opportunity to learn museum, archives and history center skills in a real-life setting. The intern program was initiated in 2010 and has provided high school-level students, college undergraduate students and graduate students learning opportunities in institution operations, historical research, library procedures, historical research and writing, and archiving techniques. The program is structured to be flexible in scheduling, and each intern will be monitored by both a mentor and by the organization’s executive director. Programs of work are set out in advance and interns are provided with formats for daily journal entries and checklists. After the completion of the schedule, the intern is presented with an evaluation and a final report. Applications may be submitted for the 2015 summer term until July 3 and up until August 14 for the fall term. Interested students can obtain additional information and an application form by visiting the Photo Archives office or by emailing the executive director at gil@ plantcityphotoarchives. org. The office is open for business Mondays from 10 a.m. until 4 p.m. at 106 S. Evers St. in downtown Plant City. The office telephone number is (813) 7541578 and the website is PlantCityPhotoArchives. org.
OUR TOWN / PAGE 4
, 3&
This week’s winner is
Dan Middlebrooks See his photo on PAGE 15.
At the Walden Lake Community Association’s annual meeting Thursday, April 9, residents voted for Jan Griffin, Dan Orrico and Dave Sollenberger to fill the three open positions on the board of directors. Griffin was reelected. Orrico and Sollenberger will take the
places of Jim Chancey, who resigned last fall, and Bruce Rodwell, who had served on the board for 20 years. Sollenberger was the city manager for Plant City from 2002 to 2010, and again as an interim city manager for six months in 2014. During these times, he led the master plan-
ning for development in the northeast region of the city, streamlined the development review process and focused on neighborhood revitalization efforts. Sollenberger has lived in Walden Lake for 12 years. He ran for the board of directors in last year’s WLCA election,
but he withdrew because he was serving as city manager at the time and wanted to avoid any appearance of a conflict of interest. “I think that Walden Lake has a lot to offer,” Sollenberger said. “I think it’s a very nice community.” He said he does not think it is a good idea to move forward with the proposed rezoning of
SEE WLCA / PAGE 4
VOTES PER CANDIDATE
Joshua Hall: 67 Blake Meinecke: 73 Robert Rogers: 76 Robert Farkas: 167 Daniel Pinero: 260 Lynn Buehler: 289 Jan Griffin: 293 Dave Sollenberger: 330 Dan Orrico: 356
eco event
AGRICULTURE by Catherine Sinclair | Staff Writer
by Catherine Sinclair | Staff Writer
Community garden hosts first Earth Day festival Garden members expect the festival to become an annual event.
Carl Grooms savored the final berries of the season last week.
Catherine Sinclair
BYE-BYE, BERRIES The 2015 strawberry season has come to a close in Plant City, but it was a unique year impacted by weather and new varieties of fruit.
C
arl Grooms, president of Fancy Farms, says there are only two things a grower can know for sure about each strawberry season: There’s a start, and there’s an end. Every season is unique because of factors such as weath-
er, expenses, and supply and demand. And within any given year, different growers around Plant City can have varying levels of success. Fortunately for Grooms, Fancy Farms was relatively successful this season. “In comparison to the past
four years, this would be considered a better year,” he said. Kenneth Parker, executive director of the Florida Strawberry Growers Association, said the biggest challenge this year was weather-related —
SEE BERRIES / PAGE 4
For the first time, residents of Plant City have an opportunity to learn how to become more eco-friendly and celebrate the natural resources the world has to offer. The Plant City Commons Community Garden is hosting Earth Day Fest, which is expected to become an annual event. “We always do (an event) in the fall for Food Day, and we decided that we needed an additional fundraiser,” Karen Elizabeth, community garden director, said. “Earth Day seemed like a good fit.” Throughout the day there will be free, half-hour workshops on a variety of topics to help attendees make their lives a little more eco-friendly. Your Green Comfort Zone will be led by Cecilia Yocum, a licensed psychologist with more than 35 years as a mental health professional. The workshop will be an interactive experience, where participants will be asked to consider what extra steps they would be willing to take in order to be more
SEE EARTH DAY / PAGE 4
WRITTEN UP by Catherine Sinclair | Staff Writer
Student wins contest for essay about Tomlin Middle teacher Lisveth Trejo’s essay about her former reading teacher, Theresa Rice, scored highest in the local Barnes and Noble ‘My Favorite Teacher’ contest.
Lisveth Trejo was reading at a second-grade level when she walked into Theresa Rice’s double-intensive eighth-grade reading classroom at Tomlin Middle School. But it turned out to be one of the most transformative years of Trejo’s life,
both academically and personally. So when Trejo found out about Barnes and Noble’s “My Favorite Teacher” essay contest, choosing a subject to write about was easy for her. Her essay was so moving
that she was given the top score among 65 entrants from Hillsborough County, and she will have the opportunity to advance in the contest at the regional and national levels.
SEE ESSAY / PAGE 4
Catherine Sinclair
Theresa Rice was Lisveth Trejo’s eighth-grade reading teacher, tutor and mentor.
INDEX Calendar.......................9
Vol.2,No.29 | Twosections Crossword...................15
Obituaries...................14
Sports...........................5
Weather......................15
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