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  • ‘No Place Like Home’: Expanding access to homeownership in South St. Petersburg

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    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — A St. Petersburg realty group is taking a hands-on approach to revitalizing South St. Pete while helping more residents become homeowners.


    What You Need To Know

    • Mo & Sam Franklin of Franklin & Associates Realty combine ministry and real estate to expand homeownership in South St. Pete
    • The Franklins plan to welcome first-time buyers into The Deuces Rising Townhomes, a 24-unit affordable housing development on 22nd Street South.
    • Their third annual “No Place Like Home” event will be held at St. Petersburg College’s Midtown Campus on Jan. 31st
    • More than 300 people have attended “No Place Like Home” over the past two years, seeking guidance on credit, mortgages and affordable housing options


    Pastors Mo and Samantha “Sam” Franklin are working to turn longstanding community ties into new opportunities for local families.

    Whether through faith or financial education, the Franklins say their mission is the same: to build up South St. Pete.

    Bishop Mo Franklin was ordained in 2004 — the same year he earned his real estate license. Pastor Sam Franklin followed soon after, and together they founded Franklin & Associates Realty.

    “We have been involved in ministry and real estate kind of from the beginning,” Bishop Franklin said. “And so even though we sell real estate, obviously you carry the heart of the pastor and the first lady as you do it. So it kind of has really steered us towards those who are in need most being first-time homebuyers.”

    The couple says expanding homeownership in South St. Pete is deeply personal — especially in The Deuces Live District, a historic hub of the city’s Black community where Samantha Franklin grew up.

    “We want to see the people really, you know, become homeowners in the areas that they’ve grown up in,” she said. “So, you know, this is a real blessing for us, really.”

    In addition to real estate development, the Franklins host an annual community event aimed at helping residents navigate the homebuying process.

    Their third annual “No Place Like Home” event will be held at St. Petersburg College’s Midtown Campus. More than 300 people have attended over the past two years, seeking guidance on credit, mortgages and affordable housing options.

    “In the last three years we’ve seen it fluctuate,” Samantha Franklin said of the housing market and need for affordable housing.

    Bishop Franklin says economic shifts often hit low- and moderate-income communities first, making the path to homeownership more difficult.

    “We’ve seen quite a change over the last few years,” he said. “You know, three years ago you had low interest rates in the twos and 3%, and now interest rates are at 6%.”

    This spring, the Franklins plan to welcome first-time buyers into The Deuces Rising Townhomes, a 24-unit affordable housing development on 22nd Street South.

    The project received a $19 million contribution from the St. Petersburg City Council.

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  • Feeding Tampa Bay holds volunteer event for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day

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    TAMPA, Fla. — More than 1,000 volunteers converged across Feeding Tampa Bay sites Monday to honor Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. with a day of service, packing and preparing meals for people facing food insecurity across the region.


    What You Need To Know

    • Up to 1,000 volunteers helped at Feeding Tampa Bay for Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day
    • Feeding Tampa Bay helped to serve more than 87 million meals last year
    • The Dr. MLK Jr. Day holiday is considered a day of service


    Volunteers worked in warehouses, supermarket-style pantries and bistros, repackaging meals, packing produce and assembling boxes for distribution across the organization’s 10-county service area. Organizers said participation this year surpassed last year’s event, which drew about 700 volunteers, and they expect the effort to continue growing.

    “People reflect on what we should be doing and how we can help out — spread love,” volunteer Mike McNulty said. He volunteers with Feeding Tampa Bay regularly, and says it’s rewarding to see the immediate results of helping neighbors in need.

    Feeding Tampa Bay officials say the need for food assistance is growing: the organization provided some 87 million meals last year. Event leaders said service is a meaningful way to honor Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s legacy of justice and community involvement.

    “One of the ways we think we can honor Dr. King’s legacy best is by service,” said Feeding Tampa Bay CEO Thomas Mantz.

    View information about volunteering and learn more about Feeding Tampa Bay.

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    Jeff Van Sant

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  • Needs increasing in the mountains as cold weather moves in

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    BOONE, N.C. — With low temperatures in the mountains and some snowfall expected in the next few days, a pantry meant to help Helene victims is now seeing people in need of all types of help.


    What You Need To Know

    • Foscoe Home Team helped more than 600 people in five days
    • The nonprofit was started after Helene to help victims but has grown fast
    • They are in need of donations as temperatures are dropping in the mountains


    In just one hour, Foscoe Home Team Executive Director Sherrye Trice said two conversations had already brought her to tears. One, a woman calling to say she had no running water and no one to help. Another, a family in need with a 9-month-old baby.

    “It’s -11 degrees, wind chill faster and there’s tent communities in Foscoe,” Trice said.

    These are just two examples of what she says are the many people in need every day, which is why she is working tirelessly for the Foscoe Home Team. The team says it served hundreds of people in just five days last week.

    Trice started Foscoe Home Team after Helene. It started with food and grew fast. Now, people can come get food, diapers, hygiene items, blankets, heaters and warm clothing to get through the winter.

    “We need warm shoes, we need thick socks, we need sweaters; lined leggings would be great,” Trice said.

    They only have a handful of heaters left and three packs of water, according to Trice, and are in need of donations, fast.

    “This is the first interview. I’m begging, I’m begging someone to pay attention. I’m begging someone to take this up the chain to someone who has influence and funding,” Trice said.

    She says people here are struggling.

    “How many people in Foscoe have to live in a hot tent before people pay attention?” Trice said.

    The weather could make the struggle even more severe.

    “This is constant. There is no running water. There is no heat. Can you help us with our septic? We lost it during the flood. We applied with FEMA, we applied with Renew NC, we are paying our rent. Can you help us?” Trice said.

    Distribution and receiving worker Brandi Karlick said the organization has seen hundreds in need just in the last two days.

    “It’s not just hurricane relief; it’s life storm when you were originally financially fragile before the storm and then you lost the little bit you have. What is the plan for recovery here?” Trice said.

    Any donations can be sent directly to Foscoe Home Team.

    Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.

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    Rose Eiklor

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  • New Polk County play café welcomes children of all abilities

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    AUBURNDALE, Fla. — For families of children on the autism spectrum, a trip to the playground can sometimes feel overwhelming.


    What You Need To Know

    • Color Me Included Play Café has opened in Auburndale to provide an inclusive, sensory-friendly indoor playground for children of all abilities
    • Parents of children on the autism spectrum say traditional public spaces can be overwhelming, making safe, structured play environments like this one especially valuable
    • The café was created in response to a growing need, as autism now affects 1 in 31 children, according to the CDC


    But Color Me Included Play Café on Havendale Boulevard offers kids a safe place to explore, while parents can take time to relax. A moment of peace is something resident Kadie Blossom says she doesn’t get very often.

    “There’s always somebody’s need that needs addressing,” she said.

    Like many mothers, Blossom dedicates most of her time to her daughter, Winter, who is on the autism spectrum. While Blossom tries to fill their days, she says taking her daughter into public spaces can be challenging.

    “We can’t take her to the park because she’ll try to run off and leave,” she said. “I’ve been saying for months, I wish I had some place where I can take her where I knew she would be safe and I didn’t have to watch her every move.”

    She says her prayer was answered when she learned about Color Me Included Play Café. Owners Kimberly McLendon and Melissa Arroyo say they opened the inclusive indoor playground about a month ago to help meet a growing need. According to the most recent data from the CDC, 1 in 31 children are diagnosed with autism — five times higher than the rate in 1992.

    “We need more inclusive places, and it is very hard to find, not even in just Polk County, but everywhere,” Arroyo said. “We could use more places where all children with all capabilities can feel more safe and play at ease.”

    To ensure every child feels included, the sisters have a behavioral consultant, Erika Calderon, on site. There is also a sensory-friendly room where kids can take a break. Blossom says it’s one of the few areas where her daughter can play freely on her own terms.

    “We need more places like this. We need places where we can bring our kids and not get stared at, and we need people to be understanding,” she said. “We don’t want to be out with a screaming child either. We’re doing the best we can, and they deserve their place in society too.”

    Learn more about Color Me Included’s services, memberships and programs.

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    Alexis Jones

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  • Ms. Wheelchair Florida and her mom inspire children with their books

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    TAMPA, Fla. — The reigning Ms. Wheelchair Florida and her mother are taking a message of joy and hope to kids through their books and public appearances.

    Schuyler Arakawa and mom, Meridith Alexander, have published a series of children’s books about overcoming obstacles.

    In 2016, Arakawa was on a fellowship from Yale to South America, working to expand opportunities for women, when she took a trip to Colombia. She went rafting with a group and then not long after that while exploring a grotto, a boulder fell on her. It caused injuries in many parts of her body, including a traumatic brain injury.

    She was taken to a hospital in Columbia for treatment and later flown to a hospital in Miami, where she underwent multiple brain surgeries. She also underwent rehab. It has been a long road to recovery.

    On a recent morning, Arakawa and Alexander appeared together at the Southshore Montessori School in Apollo Beach to read to a group of children.

    “So, we are going to read our newest book, which is all about fear and doubt and doing hard things even if you are not sure you can do them,” said Alexander.

    A few minutes later, about two dozen children came into the room, where the mom and daughter greeted them enthusiastically. “We are so glad to see you,” said Alexander.

    “Welcome in, guys,” said Arakawa.

    Then Alexander started reading from one of their books that includes Arakawa in a wheelchair. She is called “Princess Happiness.” The books feature children overcoming obstacles like a boulder.

    The life-changing event of being struck by the boulder in Columbia resulted in limits to Arakawa’s speech and mobility, but she turned those limits into a purpose for her life.

    “It is hard. But the way I see it, some people say I’m positive in my recovery,” said Arakawa. “But I really think there is no other way to be, because if you were upset you would just hurt yourself. I have learned that you can not control the outcome. So, I might as well make the best of it.”

    Alexander said she and Arakawa try to stay focused on looking for the positive and life. That is what they hope people get from their appearances.

    “Joy is all around us the same way the oxygen is around us. You don’t always see it,” Alexander said. “But you have access to it.”

    Would you like to nominate an Everyday Hero? Click here and fill out the submission form.

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    Rick Elmhorst

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  • First family moves in under Habitat’s Advancing Black Homeownership Program

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    MANATEE COUNTY, Fla. — Habitat for Humanity has launched a new push to expand Black homeownership. For many families, owning a home has felt out of reach.

    It’s called the Advancing Black Homeownership Program. It started last year, and now its first recipient moved in last week.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Advancing Black Homeownership Program started in 2024
    • The program had an increase in applicants from just 50 in 2024 to 150 in 2025
    • The application period for the Advancing Black Homeownership Program runs from Tuesday, Feb. 10 through Tuesday, Feb. 17

    She already has the keys to her new home, but today Princess Cummings is volunteering, helping make this house a home for another family.

    “I just closed on my home on Jan. 9 of this year, so I’m super, super happy,” she said.

    Princess is the first person in Manatee County’s Advancing Black Homeownership Program to buy a home.

    “My house is about $317,000, but overall with my mortgage, homeowner’s insurance, and property taxes, everything comes out to almost $1,300,” she said.

    The goal of the Advancing Black Homeownership Program is to help more Black families achieve homeownership.

    For Princess and her three children, that help came at a critical time. She says they could no longer afford their rent and had been homeless since March of last year.

    “I lived in a hotel before. I stayed at an extended stay, and I stayed with family before,” she said. “It was very difficult, extremely difficult,” she said.

    Now, moving into a three-bedroom home, she says a weight has been lifted.

    “All the glory to God. I’m super excited,” she said.

    The task force started in 2024 with just 50 applicants. That number grew to 150 the following year. Now, in 2026, officials expect an even bigger increase.

    “We are definitely seeing an increase in applicants due to the affordability crisis,” she said.

    Kaveecia Moore is the director of homeowner services with Manatee Habitat for Humanity. The goal is to have 15 families in homes by 2031.

    “The Advancing Black Homeownership Program is really to address the racial gap in homeownership and to increase involvement in our community,” she said.

    Giving Princess and her family a place to call their forever home.

    The application period for the Advancing Black Homeownership Program runs from Tuesday, Feb. 10 through Tuesday, Feb. 17.

    Manatee Habitat for Humanity as a whole also saw a 51 percent increase in applicants from 2024 to 2025.

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    Julia Hazel

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  • Lakeland recovery home looking to expand to serve more residents

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    LAKELAND, Fla. — One recovery home is looking to expand its services to help both its residents and the community.


    What You Need To Know

    • Addicted to God Ministries was founded in 2024 to help people facing addiction, homelessness and mental health challenges
    • Residents participate in recovery while giving back, helping operate the organization’s food pantry
    • The recovery home is looking to expand its services to better support residents and increase food pantry outreach in the community

    Pastor Lazaro Castellon opened Addicted to God Ministries in 2024 after experiencing a relapse. Since then, he said the faith-based recovery home has helped dozens of people struggling with addiction, homelessness and mental health challenges.

    “I’ve sold my jewelry, I’ve sold things that I have, because for me it’s materialistic things that I don’t need no more, just to see another life change and go in a new direction. The righteous direction,” Castellon said.

    From an early age, resident Chad Case struggled with addiction. After a more than 30-year battle, he said his girlfriend forced him to make a difficult decision in November.

    “Like, ‘A hundred times was a hundred times ago. I love you enough that… if you have to go somewhere, if I got to get you in somewhere and us be not together anymore,’” he said.

    With the help of loved ones, Case found Addicted to God Ministries. While completing the 12 steps of recovery, each resident helps with the organization’s food pantry.

    Donations are currently stored at the recovery home. Recently, Castellon turned to Lakeland city commissioners and asked for help expanding the ministry.

    “Specifically helping securing a warehouse, storefront, or facility, a box truck, or a 15-passenger van. These resources would immediately and directly translate into more food, more outreach, and more lives transformed right here in our city,” he said during a commission meeting.

    Castellon said that includes the lives of those in his home, ultimately providing individuals like Case with a new source of happiness.

    “This is really a place touched by God man. It is,” Case said.

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    Alexis Jones

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  • 2026 events honoring Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day around Tampa Bay

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    BY

    Spectrum News Staff

    Tampa

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    Spectrum News Staff

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  • Seniors 65+ qualify for new $6,000 tax break

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    GULFPORT, Fla. — Some senior citizens may get more money back on their tax returns this year.

    Seniors 65 and older can claim an additional $6,000 for a single person, and $12,000 for married couples, without having to itemize their deductions.

    The new tax deduction is part of the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” that was signed into law by President Donald Trump on July 4 of last year. To be eligible for the new senior tax deduction, you need to turn 65 by Dec. 31, 2025.

    This tax write-off is in addition to the longtime standard deduction. It’s set to expire in 2028, when Trump’s term in office ends.


    What You Need To Know

    • Seniors 65+ eligible for $6,000 deduction 
    • The new tax deduction is part of the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act”
    • Tax forms look different this year, seniors urged to pay extra attention when filing 
    • SAMPLE FORMS: Draft U.S. income tax return for seniors


    The take-home amount per senior depends on income. For example, the deduction is reduced if your modified adjusted gross income exceeds $75,000.

    Michael Price, C.P.A with St. Pete-based Ralph, Price, McAuliffe & Associates, P.A., says the deduction is not like the child tax credit, which is historically dollar for dollar. It’s a deduction, which means the senior would receive a percentage back.

    “I think they could be looking at for each individual, probably somewhere in the neighborhood of $600 to $1,000 would be my guess,” Price said.

    Price says the 1040 tax forms also look different this year. He says seniors should take their time and not be afraid to ask for help with filing.

    “The form has changed quite a bit from the prior years,” he said. “You definitely want to take your time and make sure that extra line with the senior deduction is filled out.”

    Shane Borchardt just retired last year. He said for the first time since he started working in 1976, he owed money after filing his 2024 taxes. Borchardt says he wishes taxes on social security would be eliminated altogether, but he’s happy to hear he qualified for the $6,000 deduction.

    “We put into it our whole lives, we deserve to get something back,” he said. “At least they’re doing something.”

    If a senior is filing jointly and using the additional standard deduction for seniors, and then the new enhanced deduction, Price says the take home could be significant.

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    Angie Angers

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  • Buddhist monks captivating U.S. on ‘Walk for Peace’ to arrive in North Carolina

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    A group of Buddhist monks and their rescue dog are striding single file down country roads and highways across the South, captivating Americans nationwide and inspiring droves of locals to greet them along their route. On Thursday, Jan. 15, the group is expected to arrive in Charlotte, North Carolina.


    What You Need To Know

    • A group of Buddhist monks is getting viral attention with their 2,300-mile Walk for Peace from Fort Worth, Texas, to Washington, D.C.
    • The monks say their aim is to promote mindfulness and healing and finding inner peace
    • When they reach the nation’s capital, they plan to request official recognition of Vesak, the day which marks the birth and enlightenment of the Buddha, as a federal U.S. holiday
    • Their journey has already attracted large crowds across five southern states and they are expected to arrive in Charlotte, North Carolina on Thursday


    In their flowing saffron and ocher robes, the men are walking for peace. It’s a meditative tradition more common in South Asian countries, and it’s resonating now in the U.S., seemingly as a welcome respite from the conflict, trauma and politics dividing the nation.

    Their journey began Oct. 26, 2025, at a Vietnamese Buddhist temple in Texas, and is scheduled to end in mid-February in Washington, D.C., where they will ask Congress to recognize Buddha’s day of birth and enlightenment as a federal holiday. Beyond promoting peace, their highest priority is connecting with people along the way.

    “My hope is, when this walk ends, the people we met will continue practicing mindfulness and find peace,” said the Venerable Bhikkhu Pannakara, the group’s soft-spoken leader who is making the trek barefoot. He teaches about mindfulness, forgiveness and healing at every stop.

    Preferring to sleep each night in tents pitched outdoors, the monks have been surprised to see their message transcend ideologies, drawing huge crowds into churchyards, city halls and town squares across six states. Documenting their journey on social media, they — and their dog, Aloka — have racked up millions of followers online. On Saturday, thousands thronged in Columbia, South Carolina, where the monks chanted on the steps of the State House and received a proclamation from the city’s mayor, Daniel Rickenmann.

    The physical toll of the monks long walk

    At their stop Thursday in Saluda, South Carolina, Audrie Pearce joined the crowd lining Main Street. She had driven four hours from her village of Little River, and teared up as Pannakara handed her a flower.

    “There’s something traumatic and heart-wrenching happening in our country every day,” said Pearce, who describes herself as spiritual, but not religious. “I looked into their eyes and I saw peace. They’re putting their bodies through such physical torture and yet they radiate peace.”

    Hailing from Theravada Buddhist monasteries across the globe, the 19 monks began their 2,300 mile (3,700 kilometer) trek at the Huong Dao Vipassana Bhavana Center in Fort Worth.

    Their journey has not been without peril. On Nov. 19, as the monks were walking along U.S. Highway 90 near Dayton, Texas, their escort vehicle was hit by a distracted truck driver, injuring two monks. One of them lost his leg, reducing the group to 18.

    This is Pannakara’s first trek in the U.S., but he’s walked across several South Asian countries, including a 112-day journey across India in 2022 where he first encountered Aloka, an Indian Pariah dog whose name means divine light in Sanskrit.

    Then a stray, the dog followed him and other monks from Kolkata in eastern India all the way to the Nepal border. At one point, he fell critically ill and Pannakara scooped him up in his arms and cared for him until he recovered. Now, Aloka inspires him to keep going when he feels like giving up.

    “I named him light because I want him to find the light of wisdom,” Pannakara said.

    The monk’s feet are now heavily bandaged because he’s stepped on rocks, nails and glass along the way. His practice of mindfulness keeps him joyful despite the pain from these injuries, he said.

    Still, traversing the southeast United States has presented unique challenges, and pounding pavement day after day has been brutal.

    “In India, we can do shortcuts through paddy fields and farms, but we can’t do that here because there are a lot of private properties,” Pannakara said. “But what’s made it beautiful is how people have welcomed and hosted us in spite of not knowing who we are and what we believe.”

    Churches, families and towns host the monks along their path

    In Opelika, Alabama, the Rev. Patrick Hitchman-Craig hosted the monks on Christmas night at his United Methodist congregation.

    He expected to see a small crowd, but about 1,000 people showed up, creating the feel of a block party. The monks seemed like the Magi, he said, appearing on Christ’s birthday.

    “Anyone who is working for peace in the world in a way that is public and sacrificial is standing close to the heart of Jesus, whether or not they share our tradition,” said Hitchman-Craig. “I was blown away by the number of people and the diversity of who showed up.”

    After their night on the church lawn, the monks arrived the next afternoon at the Collins Farm in Cusseta, Alabama. Judy Collins Allen, whose father and brother run the farm, said about 200 people came to meet the monks — the biggest gathering she’s ever witnessed there.

    “There was a calm, warmth and sense of community among people who had not met each other before and that was so special,” she said.

    Monks say peace walks are not a conversion tool

    Long Si Dong, a spokesperson for the Fort Worth temple, said the monks, when they arrive in Washington, plan to seek recognition of Vesak, the day which marks the birth and enlightenment of the Buddha, as a national holiday.

    “Doing so would acknowledge Vesak as a day of reflection, compassion and unity for all people regardless of faith,” he said.

    But Pannakara emphasized that their main goal is to help people achieve peace in their lives. The trek is also a separate endeavor from a $200 million campaign to build towering monuments on the temple’s 14-acre property to house the Buddha’s teachings engraved in stone, according to Dong.

    The monks practice and teach Vipassana meditation, an ancient Indian technique taught by the Buddha himself as core for attaining enlightenment. It focuses on the mind-body connection — observing breath and physical sensations to understand reality, impermanence and suffering. Some of the monks, including Pannakara, walk barefoot to feel the ground directly and be present in the moment.

    Pannakara has told the gathered crowds that they don’t aim to convert people to Buddhism.

    Brooke Schedneck, professor of religion at Rhodes College in Memphis, Tennessee, said the tradition of a peace walk in Theravada Buddhism began in the 1990s when the Venerable Maha Ghosananda, a Cambodian monk, led marches across war-torn areas riddled with landmines to foster national healing after civil war and genocide in his country.

    “These walks really inspire people and inspire faith,” Schedneck said. “The core intention is to have others watch and be inspired, not so much through words, but through how they are willing to make this sacrifice by walking and being visible.”

    On Thursday, Becki Gable drove nearly 400 miles (about 640 kilometers) from Cullman, Alabama, to catch up with them in Saluda. Raised Methodist, Gable said she wanted some release from the pain of losing her daughter and parents.

    “I just felt in my heart that this would help me have peace,” she said. “Maybe I could move a little bit forward in my life.”

    Gable says she has already taken one of Pannakara’s teachings to heart. She’s promised herself that each morning, as soon as she awakes, she’d take a piece of paper and write five words on it, just as the monk prescribed.

    “Today is my peaceful day.”

    Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.

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    Spectrum News Staff, Associated Press

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  • Steve Githens gives dictionaries to third-grade students in Polk County

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    BARTOW, Fla. — The former mayor of Bartow loves passing on his passion for the power of words. Steve Githens has been delivering thousands of special dictionaries to third-grade students in Polk County for many years.


    What You Need To Know

    • Former Bartow mayor Steve Githens takes thousands of dictionaries to Polk County third graders
    • It’s a project of the Bartow Rotary Club
    • Githens believes a strong vocabulary is a key to success in life
    • Would you like to nominate an Everyday Hero? Click here


    On a recent morning, Githens was loading up a dolly with boxes of the books from the back of his car and taking them inside Eagle Lake Elementary School. “So, they say there are 120 students here at Eagle Lake Elementary,” said Githens as he loaded the books onto his dolly.

    “I’ve probably been in and out of the school ten times over the years I’ve been doing this dictionary program,” he said. Githens raises funding for the Bartow Rotary Club project that he took over about 14 years ago. He was able to raise about $20,000 for this year’s program. That allowed him to purchase 5,000 of the books that cost about $4 each.

    Once inside the school’s media center, Githens started pulling the dictionaries from the boxes. “Although we call them dictionaries, they actually have a fair amount of information inside of them,” he said. That includes the Declaration of Independence, the U.S. Constitution, maps and short biographies of U.S. presidents, among other things.

    Once the students arrived at the media center, teachers helped Githens pass out the books, and he delivered a one-hour presentation about them to the students who sat on the floor.

    “But if you want to dedicate yourself to educating yourself, there is no telling where you will go, right?” said Githens to the children.

    He had the children follow along with their books as he pointed out the contents. “A dot. You mean a period? I think a period works,” he said as he went through a section about punctuation.

    Githens believes that learning words in a dictionary will give the kids power to excel in the world around them. “I do hope that when they open it up, they will learn every time they touch the book,” he said. “And the more words, the bigger the vocabulary, the more the power.”

    Student Noah Green loved his dictionary and the presentation. “I think it was amazing. Because I read books a lot and this one is way better than any book I have read,” he said.

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    Rick Elmhorst

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  • JWU Charlotte providing excess food to community partners

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    CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A North Carolina university is giving surplus food a second life, repurposing it into meals for students and neighbors across the Charlotte region.

    Johnson & Wales University in Charlotte offers a wide selection of majors and programs, like culinary arts and business administration, preparing students for high-demand industries.

    At the heart of that mission sits the university’s culinary storeroom, often described as the backbone for daily operations. 


    What You Need To Know

    • JWU Charlotte is well known for majors and programs that prepare students for high-demand fields 
    • The campus is also helping community partners, feeding neighbors across the Charlotte area 
    • The university runs a weekly distribution, providing excess food to partners 
    • Nonprofits share how the partnership is strengthening their reach and mission 


    Staff, culinary assistants and federal work-study students are managing daily inventory, orders and distribution needs, while keeping activities running smoothly campuswide.

    Product Manager Sierra Curtis oversees storeroom operations.  

    “We are responsible for ordering and receiving all the product once it comes into the storeroom,” Curtis said. “We store it properly and use reports to fill daily requisitions for all the labs and any events we might have on campus. I like to tease — if there was no storeroom, there would be no culinary without us.”

    Beyond the day-to-day responsibilities, the storeroom is also empowering nonprofits and neighbors across the Charlotte area, sharing excess food with community partners for people who need it most.

    JWU Charlotte operates a weekly rotation of distributing quality food items to groups and organizations, helping to feed neighbors, all while reducing waste.

    One of those partners is the Community Culinary School of Charlotte, a nonprofit providing workforce training and job placement support in the food service industry.

    Executive Director Ronald Ahlert, also known as “Chef Ron,” makes regular donation pickups from the JWU Charlotte campus.

    “They give us really nutritious [food], a lot of different unique items our students may not get a chance to work with because sometimes the cost can be tough,” Ahlert said. “I put people to work that might have a barrier to successful long-term employment. This relationship [with JWU] is paramount.”

    Ahlert said the boxes of surplus food are supporting hands-on training while stretching resources needed for its program.

    “Money can be tight. We rely on donations and grants,” Ahlert said. 

    Another partner, The Bulb, is operating a mobile farmers market, delivering fresh produce to underserved neighborhoods across the region.

    “It allows us to redistribute surplus produce that otherwise would have been thrown away and it directly contributes to our mission of putting food back into the economy, back into the environment, communities that need it the most,” said Emma Start, sustainability coordinator for The Bulb. “We’re taking it away from landfills.”

    Culinary assistants and staff at Johnson & Wales University in Charlotte finish helping Emma Start (left), with the nonprofit The Bulb, pack up boxes filled with healthy food items. (Spectrum News 1/Jennifer Roberts)

    “Community partners supporting each other is invaluable. You can’t compare it to something like this,” Start said.

    The support is extending to students on campus who may need meals as well, through a commuter lab. 

    “We take food from labs that we’ve repurposed as meals for people in between classes and commuters that have busy schedules and don’t have time to go home in between classes,” student and culinary assistant Macie Braymiller said.

    “Helping out people who truly need our assistance, that’s what makes this meaningful,” said Isabella Mock, JWU student and culinary assistant. 

    Kaden Rogers is a JWU Charlotte student and culinary assistant.

    Rogers said he’s grateful to be in a learning environment that’s also giving back to neighbors.

    “It’s an amazing opportunity that we get here as students, every day, to be able to contribute to the city while we’re students,” Rogers said. “It’s a powerful thing.”

    JWU Charlotte leaders said the storeroom also serves as a training ground for students interested in careers beyond the kitchen, teaching skills like supply-and-demand operations that translate directly into today’s workforce.

    “Some come in as a work-study student, get promoted to a culinary assistant and go out and get jobs in the industry,” Curtis said.

    Curtis said it’s a great feeling to see the storeroom giving back in so many ways.

     I like that JWU is donating to these community organizations all year-round,” Curtis said. “It takes a village.”

    JWU Charlotte food donation partners also include Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools, churches and soup kitchens.

    Follow us on Instagram at spectrumnews1nc for news and other happenings across North Carolina.

     

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    Jennifer Roberts

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  • Munchies Live BBQ takes grilling to the next level

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    TAVARES, Fla. — If you think you know your way around a grill, this guy will blow your mind. In this week’s Chef’s Kitchen, Spectrum News heads to Lake County for a place creating quite the spectacle.

    As you approach Munchies Live BBQ, you might inhale the scent of BBQ before you see it. And you will see it, as the smokers are fierce!

    With two locations — one in downtown Mount Dora and one in Tavares — Chef Alfred Mann said he’s living inside the culinary world for a simple reason. 

    “Everything is connected to food,” Mann said. “Weddings, funerals, billion-dollar deals, breakups, makeups. Everything.”

    Chef Mann chose to demo a three-pack of protein, starting with his chop chicken.

    “BBQ is spiritual,” Mann said. “It’s a ritual you do over and over again.”

    Hungry? Let’s cook!

    MUNCHIES LIVE BBQ — (NOTE: The below recipes are provided by Chef Alfred Mann)

    BBQ CHOP CHICKEN (chop chicken hoagie and BBQ Fries)

    Method:

    1. Season the chicken lightly on all sides with SPS. Marinate 12 to 24 hours.

    2. Cook over an aged wood-burning grill.

    3. Allow to rest for one to two minutes. Then chop or slice and serve.

    Application/Usage — BBQ Fries, BBQ salad or Mac and Cheese Bowl, hoagies & sandwiches, platters with two sides, everyday use.

    Note: They serve as a hoagie with two of their soulful sides (Hoppin John & Baked Mac-n-Cheese) and BBQ Fries, day of visit.

    2: BBQ CHOP PORK (smoked pork Cuban and BBQ fries)

    Method:

    1. Season the pork generously on all sides with all-purpose seasoning. Marinate 12 to 24 hours.

    2. Cook over an aged wood-burning smoker at 400 F until bark forms. Cover and cook at 225 F for 10 to 12 hours until tender enough to pull apart.

    3. Allow to rest for 10 to 20 minutes, chop or pull and serve.

    Application/Usage — BBQ Fries, BBQ salad or Mac and Cheese Bowl, hoagies & sandwiches, platters with 2 sides, smoked pork Cuban sandwich, everyday use.

    Note: They serve a Smoked Pork Cuban sandwich with 2 of their soulful sides (BBQ Beans & Apple Coleslaw) and BBQ Fries, day of visit.

    3: BBQ SHRIMPS

    • Six extra-jumbo peeled and deveined shrimp with tail on.

    • 1 oz. avocado oil

    • 1/2 oz. shaved garlic

    • 2 oz. Munchies Live BBQ “Classic BBQ Sauce” or Munchies Live BBQ “Florida Citrus BBQ Sauce” (or similar sauce)

    • 1 tablespoon whole cold butter

    Method:

    1. Season the shrimp lightly on all sides with all-purpose seasoning. Marinate for 5 to 10 minutes.

    2. Dust lightly in rice flour, add oil to pan, cook over medium-high heat. Then sauté in a pan for two to three minutes — turning on all sides for even texture — until golden brown.

    3. Add BBQ sauce.

    4. Finish with “monter au beurre” — swirl butter in pan and plate, scrape with a rubber spatula over shrimp.

    5. Sprinkle with shake rub and garnish with sliced chives.

    Application/Usage — BBQ Fries, BBQ salad or Mac and Cheese Bowl, hoagies & sandwiches, platters with 2 sides, everyday use.

    The Mount Dora location is at 100 E. 4th Ave., and the new Tavares location is at 110 N. New Hampshire Ave. 

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    Allison Walker

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  • Plant City private school looks to expand as interest increases

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    PLANT CITY, Fla. — Choosing the best education for a child comes with a lot of decisions, whether it involves selecting a public school, homeschooling or a private school. In Florida, that decision is leaning more toward a private education for many parents.


    What You Need To Know

    • School officials say the number of parents interested in a private education has increased
    • They are looking to expand and build a new building to accommodate the growth


    From home life to education, Elizabeth Phillips, the PTO president at Faith Christian Academy private school in Plant City, loves being involved with her children and helps with events like the maji market.

    “Every time they look around, they can see my face and I’m always there for them, that’s the main reason why I do it,“ she said.

    Phillips says her children were enrolled in a public school until about two years ago when she decided to make the switch to a private education.

    “My older two were struggling, the classes were a lot bigger, and they couldn’t get that one-on-one attention, and they were, in my opinion, just kind of falling through the cracks,“ she said.

    She says smaller student-teacher ratio has helped her children succeed.

    This comes as private school enrollment in Florida continues to grow. The latest report available from the Department of Education shows enrollment from the 2022 to 2023 school year increased by more than 28,000 students from the previous school year.

    Enrollment specialist Nylah Williams says it’s a trend they’re experiencing firsthand. “Our elementary is growing very fast, we currently have 191 students here at Faith Christian Academy, and we are still growing for next year.”

    The growth is so much that they’ve had to divide classrooms to accommodate more students.

    Assistant principal Benimowei Jombai says they’re planning an expansion to meet the growing demand.

    “As they say if you build, they will come and we built this; they’re coming so we need to build more so that more can come so that we can serve more people here in Plant City and the surrounding area,“ he said.

    Head of school Nicole Williams says the expansion will also include additional amenities that will help preserve its faith-based education and sense of security. “A new athletics center, a welcome center, we want to make our center even more safe with gates and security.”

    Phillips hopes the expansion will mean more opportunities for her children. “Once we get into more classrooms, they can have more socialization with more students.”

    Faith Christian Academy is looking to start off the expansion by adding a modular building on its property, and school officials hope to host a groundbreaking for the new building in April, with a completion date in 2027.

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    Lizbeth Gutierrez

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  • William Dunn takes kids fishing and gives them gear for Christmas

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    POLK COUNTY, Fla. — Polk County resident William Dunn is dedicated to helping kids get a chance to go fishing. It’s something he does all year, but especially this year for Christmas.


    What You Need To Know

    • William Dunn learned to love fishing from his father, Joe
    • Dunn started the Take a Kid Fishing organization
    • The group takes kids fishing, which includes an annual fishing event with Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd
    • Nominate an Everyday Hero


    Dunn spent countless hours traveling from home to home to hand out fishing gear to underserved kids. He was able to purchase the gear because of a generous donation to his Take a Kid Fishing nonprofit. Dunn hoped to reach more than 200 children.

    “There is so much tackle in here, the boys are going to love it,” said Dunn as he was going through the fishing gear in his pickup. In this case, he was preparing to deliver it to Elissa Staff’s boys.

    “That’s for you, Jacob. And here’s a spin rod and reel combo for you guys,” said Dunn.

    “This is awesome,” said Staff as she watched Dunn hand out the gear. “He is sharing his joy and sharing love.”

    Dunn said he got his love of fishing from his father, Joe. They started fishing together in Miami when Dunn was a boy, and they continued fishing together until his father passed away several years ago.

    Dunn regularly takes groups of kids on fishing outings, sometimes for freshwater fishing and sometimes offshore. “It just gives them patience,” said Dunn. “It gets them outdoors and off the computer and off the tablets and phones. I can get them out about five miles offshore where there is no phone service. And all they have is a fishing rod in their hand and the joy for the day catching fish.”

    Dunn conducts an annual fishing event for kids with Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd.

    Dunn also delivered fishing gear to Hanna Collier’s boys. She was dealing with a serious autoimmune disorder, and the Christmas gifts were a blessing. “And when I got sick, we couldn’t do these things anymore,” she said. “Then somebody giving me this is a big blessing right now.”

    “This is pretty much my ministry on the weekends with these kids,” said Dunn, who has a full-time job as a tire salesman. “Taking them out and showing them life skills. That there are still people out here who still care and want to spend time with them,” he said.

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    Rick Elmhorst

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  • Port Tampa Bay making upgrades after a record-breaking 2025

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    TAMPA, Fla. — Port Tampa Bay is preparing for a busy year after a record-setting 2025. Last year, the port saw over 1.6 million cruise passengers, which is a new record for Tampa. It also saw over 262,000 shipping containers.

    Those cruise passengers generated over $400-thousand dollars in economic impact per ship call. Port Tampa Bay is growing, and new changes are coming this year as it is working on its “Master Plan Vision 2030.”

    Port Tampa Bay’s plan for expansion. (Spectrum News)

    They are building warehouses, expanding terminals for containers and ordering new cranes. A new cruise terminal is also in the works, along with new passenger bridges for some current terminals.

    Port officials said they will work with stakeholders to make sure these changes are balanced with the growing residential population in downtown.

    “For us, it’s playing, maintaining the maritime industry, protecting it, allowing it to grow, prosper and integrating ourselves with our future plans and the growth of the region — the city of Tampa,” said Port Tampa Bay Executive Vice President and Chief Commercial Officer Raul Alfonso.

    Port Tampa Bay leaders said that one of their most important projects for a successful future is deepening the channel by four feet. It is a $1.2 billion project.

    They hope to begin construction on that in 2028.

     

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    Spectrum News Staff

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  • Protesters rally against ICE, actions in Venezuela

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    COLUMBUS, Ohio — Activists gathered in Columbus on Saturday to protest recent immigration enforcement actions in Ohio and U.S. foreign policy decisions involving Venezuela, arguing that both contribute to fear and instability in immigrant communities. 


    What You Need To Know

    • According to the Ohio Immigrant Alliance, Operation Buckeye has led to more than 200 arrests in Ohio, approximately 80% Latino and roughly 93% men

    • Protesters said recent ICE activity and U.S. foreign policy decisions are increasing fear in local immigrant communities

    • Organizers are encouraging residents to report ICE activity to immigrant support networks rather than intervene directly


    The protest, organized by the Party of Socialism and Liberation, followed a recent enforcement effort by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement known as Operation Buckeye. The Ohio Immigrant Alliance reported that more than 200 people were arrested during the operation. Approximately 80% were Latino, and roughly 93% were men.

    “What we’re seeing right now is a war on immigrants here at home, and a war on Latin America abroad,” said Shenby G, a staff member with the Columbus Liberation Center. “And we understand the root cause of migration across Latin America has been U.S. imperialism and the looting of countries.”

    Some families said they are avoiding public places out of concern that any interaction could lead to separation of their loved ones.

    “Any country has to take care of the borders to a certain extent,” said Rick Wilhelm, a member of the Veterans For Peace. “But the way this is done is just inhuman. I mean, separating little kids from their parents.”

    Organizers said the effects of immigration enforcement, combined with foreign policy decisions, are fueling fear, but many are ready to stand up.

    “It’s basically the standard playbook of make people afraid. Keep them nervous, keep them unwilling or unconfident, not wanting to go out,” said Carter Mason, a protester at the event.

    Organizers said U.S. actions in Venezuela add another layer to the crisis facing immigrant communities in the United States.

    “We know that the Venezuelan people will continue to resist… just as immigrants here at home will resist the terror that ICE has launched on us and our communities,” said Shenby G.

    ICE has said it is focused on arresting individuals with serious criminal records, referring to them as “the worst of the worst.”

    Organizers said the protest is part of ongoing efforts to connect local immigration concerns with global conflicts they believe are affecting communities in Central Ohio.

    They said community members should only document and report ICE activity — including times, dates and locations — to immigrant support organizations rather than intervene directly.

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    Saima Khan

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  • Lakeland nonprofit says it needs support to continue helping homeless

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    LAKELAND, Fla. — Imagine not knowing where your next meal will come from or where you’ll stay the night.

    That’s the reality many people that are homeless face. In Lakeland, one nonprofit said the need has grown over the past year. And they need support too, so they can continue to help.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Cosmo Project is a nonprofit organization that serves food, provides clothing and hygiene products to the homeless every Sunday at 11 a.m. in Munn Park in Lakeland
    • They say that over the past year, the number of people they serve and the need for volunteers have both increased 
    • The nonprofit’s founder, Michael Carrano, said he’s focused on giving the homeless community the resources that will help them get back on their feet during a tough time


    Sorting through piles of donations, it’s become an everyday thing for Michael Carrano and his team with The Cosmo Project.

    It’s a nonprofit focused on providing resources to the homeless community.

    Carrano founded The Cosmo Project in 2023 to give back.

    “When you’re unhoused and you need clothing, nine times out of 10, you get what’s handed to you — you don’t get to pick your own clothing,” he said.

    The clothing is set up on racks, along with food and hygiene products for the homeless community, which is given out to them at Munn Park in Lakeland every Sunday at 11 a.m.

    But Carrano said the need has grown over the past year.

    “Last year, we served about 4,000 to 5,000 people. This year, we clocked in about 6,300,” he said.

    Carrano also said that several factors could be contributing to the increase in the homeless population they serve.

    “Housing market is insane, food prices are high,” he said.

    With the increased need, the nonprofit is also in need of more helping hands, like Oliver Lamy. He started volunteering with his parents about a year ago.

    “I mostly do the smaller parts like hanging the clothes, organizing stuff, but it just feels satisfying to see them having things they need,” said Lamy.

    He encourages the younger generation to go out and help. For Carrano, it’s about giving the homeless community the resources that will help them get back on their feet during a tough time.

    “It is harder now to be homeless than it has ever been,” said Carrano.

    The Cosmo Project said that right now, they’re most in need of men’s clothing items and volunteers.

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    Lizbeth Gutierrez

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  • Pinellas County strengthens retail pet store regulations

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    CLEARWATER, Fla. — Pinellas County’s Board of Commissioners has voted to strengthen oversight of retail pet stores.

    In December, commissioners voted unanimously to pass an ordinance after years of discussions and workshops.

    It comes after officials with Pinellas County Animal Services said a retail pet store in the county lost its license and closed. An investigation revealed that nearly 200 puppies were living in unsanitary conditions.

    Investigators said they also found that the store had not reported more than 70 puppy deaths over two years.


    What You Need To Know

    • Pinellas County’s Board of Commissioners voted unanimously to strengthen oversight of retail pet stores
    • The ordinance will double unannounced permit inspections to twice a year, at least half of the kennels must have solid flooring, and puppy deaths will need to be reported in three days instead of 15
    • People who violate cruelty and neglect regulations can face citations and a seven-day permit suspension with an officer follow-up within three days
    • In six months, the Board of County Commissioners will discuss the effectiveness of the ordinance


    With a record number of adoptions, it’s been a busy year for the nonprofit Friends of Strays.

    “We’re the oldest no-kill shelter. We take in cats and dogs, mostly from low resource shelters across the state to prevent euthanasia,” said Mo Eppley, chair of the board of directors for Friends of Strays.

    While they were busy finding homes for animals, Eppley said they’ve been a voice for more oversight in local retail pet stores.

    “A lot of the puppies that come in from the puppy mills where they’re purchased from the businesses, they don’t receive that care there,” Eppley said. “So when any puppy needs boosters, they need medical care. Parasites are easily transmitted.”

    But now, Pinellas County commissioners passed an ordinance that Pinellas County Animal Services said will strengthen oversight of retail pet stores.

    The ordinance will double unannounced permit inspections from once to twice a year, and facilities will have to have solid flooring for at least half of the kennels.

    Puppy deaths will need to be reported in three days instead of 15, among other changes.

    “For now, the animals that are in their care to make sure they’re not being neglected and dying needlessly, then these new safety measures and the new inspections will help that,” she said.

    Retail pet store, All About Puppies, said they are fully prepared to take on the new rules, but managers want to see forms developed by the county that explain what the expectations are. 

    Cruelty and neglect violations can face citations and a seven-day permit suspension with an officer follow-up within three days.

    “We love what we do, and we are extremely proud of the work that we do,” All About Puppies manager Alexandria Julian said at the commission meeting. “We stand behind our puppies, we stand behind out customers, our breeders, and most of all our word.”

    While the ordinance won’t impact Friends of Strays, Eppley said it’s a positive change for animal welfare.

    “So, the welfare and the health and safety of the animals, I think should be the most important thing that everyone should care about,” Eppley said. “And now, these businesses have to have those inspections.”

    In six months, the Board of County Commissioners will discuss the effectiveness of the ordinance.

    During that meeting, they also plan to explore if more retail pet stores should be allowed to open in the county.

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    Tyler O’Neill

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  • Pinellas County strengthens retail pet store regulations

    [ad_1]

    CLEARWATER, Fla. — Pinellas County’s Board of Commissioners has voted to strengthen oversight of retail pet stores.

    In December, commissioners voted unanimously to pass an ordinance after years of discussions and workshops.

    It comes after officials with Pinellas County Animal Services said a retail pet store in the county lost its license and closed. An investigation revealed that nearly 200 puppies were living in unsanitary conditions.

    Investigators said they also found that the store had not reported more than 70 puppy deaths over two years.


    What You Need To Know

    • Pinellas County’s Board of Commissioners voted unanimously to strengthen oversight of retail pet stores
    • The ordinance will double unannounced permit inspections to twice a year, at least half of the kennels must have solid flooring, and puppy deaths will need to be reported in three days instead of 15
    • People who violate cruelty and neglect regulations can face citations and a seven-day permit suspension with an officer follow-up within three days
    • In six months, the Board of County Commissioners will discuss the effectiveness of the ordinance


    With a record number of adoptions, it’s been a busy year for the nonprofit Friends of Strays.

    “We’re the oldest no-kill shelter. We take in cats and dogs, mostly from low resource shelters across the state to prevent euthanasia,” said Mo Eppley, chair of the board of directors for Friends of Strays.

    While they were busy finding homes for animals, Eppley said they’ve been a voice for more oversight in local retail pet stores.

    “A lot of the puppies that come in from the puppy mills where they’re purchased from the businesses, they don’t receive that care there,” Eppley said. “So when any puppy needs boosters, they need medical care. Parasites are easily transmitted.”

    But now, Pinellas County commissioners passed an ordinance that Pinellas County Animal Services said will strengthen oversight of retail pet stores.

    The ordinance will double unannounced permit inspections from once to twice a year, and facilities will have to have solid flooring for at least half of the kennels.

    Puppy deaths will need to be reported in three days instead of 15, among other changes.

    “For now, the animals that are in their care to make sure they’re not being neglected and dying needlessly, then these new safety measures and the new inspections will help that,” she said.

    Retail pet store, All About Puppies, said they are fully prepared to take on the new rules, but managers want to see forms developed by the county that explain what the expectations are. 

    Cruelty and neglect violations can face citations and a seven-day permit suspension with an officer follow-up within three days.

    “We love what we do, and we are extremely proud of the work that we do,” All About Puppies manager Alexandria Julian said at the commission meeting. “We stand behind our puppies, we stand behind out customers, our breeders, and most of all our word.”

    While the ordinance won’t impact Friends of Strays, Eppley said it’s a positive change for animal welfare.

    “So, the welfare and the health and safety of the animals, I think should be the most important thing that everyone should care about,” Eppley said. “And now, these businesses have to have those inspections.”

    In six months, the Board of County Commissioners will discuss the effectiveness of the ordinance.

    During that meeting, they also plan to explore if more retail pet stores should be allowed to open in the county.

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    Tyler O’Neill

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