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Tag: Erin Murray

  • Doctors stress importance of eye exams before back to school

    Doctors stress importance of eye exams before back to school

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    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Many kids are visual learners, needing to see something to process and understand it. 


    What You Need To Know

    • A comprehensive eye exam is critical because children might not even realize they have a vision problem.
    • Kids might not know what clear versus blurry vision is, and not all eye conditions have symptoms.
    • Dr. Derek Hess, an ophthalmologist at John Hopkins All Children’s Hospital in St. Petersburg, said ages 4 to 5 are good years to make sure kids begin those comprehensive eye exams.
    • Even if your child doesn’t have a vision issue, annual exams can help establish a baseline for their eye health over time. 


    With the first day of school on Aug. 12, pediatricians and eye doctors recommend getting kids’ eyes checked. 

    “Making sure your child can see in the classroom has a huge impact on their learning, it can have a huge impact on behavior,” said Dr. Rachel Dawkins, Pediatrician, Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital.

    The reality is most vision problems can be picked up by a basic screening at the pediatrician’s office. 

    “So it is really important. It has a huge impact on school attentiveness and cooperation, participation,” said Dr. Derek Hess, Pediatric Ophthalmologist, Johns Hopkins All Children’s Hospital.

    If a vision screening test is failed, kids then get referred to ophthalmologists or optometrists. 

    “A problem that goes undetected,” said Hess. “It can really cause problems essentially for the rest of your life. So there’s a developmental window in childhood where your vision is developing. And beyond that window, if you haven’t sort of taken care of that problem, it can lead to a permanent decline in vision one way or another.”

    Hess said the window to start checking for serious problems is around 4 to 5 years old.

    “They’re just old enough to report to you what their subjective vision is probably, 3 or 4-year-olds could as well. But by the time you’re 5, you’re really going to read the alphabet and cooperate properly. And there’s still plenty of time within that window to fix things that, you know, you need to kind of address earlier,” said Dr. Hess. 

    Most screenings check for refractive errors and misalignment of the eyes. 

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    Erin Murray

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  • HCA Florida Largo Hospital successfully implants new type of pacemaker

    HCA Florida Largo Hospital successfully implants new type of pacemaker

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    LARGO, Fla. — A new type of pacemaker is on the market and now helping patients with heart issues in Florida. 


    What You Need To Know

    • HCA Florida Largo Hospital is first on the west coast of Florida to implant a dual chamber leadless pacemaker system outside of a clinical trial setting
    • This innovative treatment option reduces the risk of infection and other complications for the estimated millions of people nationally needing pacing in both upper and lower chambers of the heart
    • The leadless pacemakers are only about 1/10 the size of conventional pacemakers
    • Danette Strange-Gay, the patient, hopes to be a kidney transplant recipient after years of dialysis, has left her with no suitable location for traditional pacemaker or defibrillator implantation


    Danette Strange-Gay, 52, says she lives her life blessed and highly favored, even though life has thrown her some curve balls healthy-wise. 

    “I wasn’t feeling good at all,” said Strange-Gay. “I couldn’t walk, walk straight. My husband or my son or my granddaughter have to hold my hand with how I walked.”

    She got leukemia as a child, and over the years her kidney function declined. She does dialysis and is in need of a kidney transplant. 

    But before that could happen, her slow heart rate needed improving. Her doctors recommended a pacemaker.

    “I didn’t want that. The wires, all in your heart,” said Strange-Gay, thinking back to her first reaction. “So I opted for the defibrillator.”

    But the defibrillator placed in her chest only made things slightly better. In truth, doctors say she was never an ideal candidate for a conventional pacemaker because of the defibrillator and her other health issues. 

    A conventional pacemaker required surgery, including placing wires through a person’s veins that go into their heart. 

    Thankfully for Strange-Gay, a new pacemaker was recently approved for use and Dr. Jeffrey Brumfield at HCA Florida Largo Hospital felt she was the perfect candidate. 

    “The leadless pacemaker is a small, self-contained unit that goes in through a catheter in the femoral vein down in the groin. So the catheter goes up. We put the pacemaker in the pumping chamber of the heart and then take the catheter back out. No incision, no wires, no leads,” said Brumfield. 

    It is clearly much smaller when compared to a conventional pacemaker. 

    The new pacemaker has two parts that communicate with one another. One is placed in the right upper chamber and one the other in the right lower chamber of the heart. The pacemakers are inserted using a tube inserted in the vein in the groin while the patient is sedated. 

    The smaller of the two is what is really brand new, the arterial pacemaker. 

    Strange-Gay already had a ventricular pacemaker put in ahead of her recent surgery. 

    “That’s why we brought her back. Once the atrial pacemaker became commercially available and we implanted the atrial leaderless system,” said Dr. Brumfield. 

    The arterial pacemaker was implanted on July 12. 

    “It is a blessing, and I am so glad I waited. Because I sure didn’t want all those wires up in my heart,” said Strange-Gay. 

    The lack of wires, plus the fact this pacemaker works between both chambers of the heart, Dr. Brumfield said it is the future of this technology. 

    “There really is no reason not to use the leadless technology. It’s obviously better in some patients, but it’s really suitable for just about any patient,” said Dr. Brumfield. 

    “He is fabulous,” gushes Strange-Gay. “Thank you! For putting up with me and my nonsense.”

    The battery life on the device is often seven to ten years, sometimes longer. Once the battery gets low, doctors can remove it and implant a new one using the same procedure via a person’s vein in the groin.

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  • Girls-only construction summer camp boosts interest among Pinellas teens

    Girls-only construction summer camp boosts interest among Pinellas teens

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    SEMINOLE, Fla. — Far from the days of Rosie the Riveter, a group of teenage girls are finding a love for handiwork, not because they have to but because they want too. 


    What You Need To Know

    • A new camp is building girls’ interest in construction careers. Richard O Jacobson Technical High School in Pinellas County teamed up with iBuild, the National Association of Women in Construction, and Pinellas County Schools to host a girls-only construction camp from July 22-25
    • With women making up just 10.8% of the workforce in construction, according to a 2023 Bureau Labor of Statistics report, this camp is all about changing that statistic
    • The camp offers hands-on construction skills, personal projects, and inspiring talks from industry leaders. Students are working together to build benches for Habitat for Humanity
    • The camp is designed to inspire and prepare the next generation of women in construction with support from top industry partners and educational institutions


    “I’ve learned how to cut wood, in case I want to like add like a wood exterior to something, I can cut it,” said Pinellas Girls Construction Camp participant Nova Comey. “I’ve learned how to use a drill and screw stuff in. I learned how to use like a hammer and how to hammer it in correctly.”

    Comey is 13, and said she is excited to be a part of Pinellas County’s first-ever, girls-only construction camp. The camp is put on by Pinellas County Schools, iBuild, and the National Association of Women in Construction at Richard O. Jacobson Technical High School. 

    On this day, the girls were learning about electrical wiring and how to add that to the framework of a building. 

    “They’ll show me how to do it, and then they’ll be like, ‘OK, your turn.’ And I’m like, ‘OK, I’ll try,’” Comey said. “Like, don’t be afraid of it. If you mess up, you mess up. You can just do it again.”

    The U. S. Bureau of Labor Statistics shows women only make up 10.8% of the construction workforce. 

    Christine Ferry is the Tampa Chapter President of the National Association of Women in Construction. She works across Tampa Bay in the construction field. 

    While she has seen an increase in the number of women in the field over the years, she said it is far from equal. 

    “Is it as many as I’d like to see? No, but I think there’s a reason why,” said Ferry, the site superintendent at Construction Services Inc. of Tampa. “I think there’s also some women are worried about how they’re going to be treated when they get on a job site.” 

    She said that was a big reason she decided to participate in the camp — she wants young girls to see and learn from a woman in the field. 

    “We already know women can do it,” Ferry said. “We remember World War II. The men went off to fight and the women were able to build those bombers and build those munitions and help win the war. So we already know women can do it. I think the problem is just social messaging.”

    “A lot of girls want to do this, but they’re scared because of what the world will say that they can’t do,” Comey said. “So, like, coming here is like making them feel better about wanting to be in the construction site.”

    Along with daily speakers from Tampa Bay Construction Companies, the girls also built benches for Habitat for Humanity. 

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  • HCA Largo hospital performs new FDA-approved tricuspid regurgitation procedure

    HCA Largo hospital performs new FDA-approved tricuspid regurgitation procedure

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    LARGO, Fla. — A breakthrough heart procedure was just completed successfully for the first time in the Tampa Bay area at HCA Florida Largo Hospital, and only the second time in Florida. 


    What You Need To Know

    • HCA Florida Largo Hospital is the first on the Gulf Coast of Florida to successfully perform the innovative procedure for a patient affected by severe tricuspid regurgitation. 
    • Tricuspid regurgitation is a valve disease in which the valve between the two right-sided heart chambers does not close properly. It affects 1.6 million people in the United States every year. 
    • This procedure was just approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in April 2024. 
    • Patient Lucien Bouchard, an 87-year-old male, had severe tricuspid regurgitation and was experiencing dizziness, fatigue, shortness of breath with activity and lower extremity swelling. 


    It involves tricuspid valve regurgitation, which affects 1.6 million Americans each year. If left untreated, it can lead to organ damage and right-sided heart failure. 

    Lucien Bouchard, 87, was getting dizzy, struggled to breathe and his legs swelled just a few months ago. Turns out, the right chambers of his heart were not closing properly and leaking. 

    Until April, open heart surgery and/or medication were the only available solutions. 

    “Well, it kind of makes you worry. You know, how long? But you never know. But they did a good job,” Bouchard said. 

    Thankfully for Bouchard, a new option was approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration in April. It is called tricuspid clipping, and it saved his life. 

    “Historically, the tricuspid valve has been called the forgotten valve by cardiologists because, in many cases, the treatment options for this disease were very limited,” said Dr. Saurabh Sanon, structural interventional cardiologist, HCA Florida Largo Hospital. “You either started the patient on diuretic therapy, hoping to reduce the amount of leakage, or you referred the patient for open heart surgery.”

    With Bouchard not a candidate for open heart surgery, Sanon said he knew Bouchard would be the perfect first candidate for tricuspid clipping. 

    “This has opened up a whole new space for cardiologists to treat, and we can really offer our patients — millions of patients in the country that were previously untreated — now an option which is simple. It’s safe, and it’s easy,” Sanon said. 

    A small clip-like device is inserted through a vein in the leg, and guided to the right side of the heart. 

    The clip is secured into place to stop the leaking between the two chambers.

    “You start off with a whole lot of leakage, a whole lot of red color here, and the end up with no leakage over here. This is a fantastic result for a patient,” Sanon said. 

    “No pain. Just a couple of little holes. That’s all,” Bouchard said. 

    He was out of the hospital the next day, and back to walking a mile a day just days after that. 

    “Oh yeah, feel like doing a little bit more now. If my wife don’t stop me. She puts a stop to me sometimes,” Bouchard said lovingly of his wife. 

    Currently, HCA Florida Largo Hospital is the only hospital in Tampa Bay doing this procedure. 

    Anyone with symptoms of tricuspid regurgitation, like shortness of breath, swelling in the legs, and dizziness, should ask their cardiologist if that is what they have. Sanon accepts referrals.

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  • Tampa Bay sends large showing to AAU karate nationals

    Tampa Bay sends large showing to AAU karate nationals

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    LAND O’LAKES, Fla. — Competing at a high level takes dedication, practice and a little noise. 


    What You Need To Know

    • AAU Karate Nationals started on July 2 and runs through July 6
    • 36 students from the Mark Pinner Karate Club are competing
    • The AAU Karate Program offers opportunities for boys, girls, men and women, ages five to senior adults, in all skill levels to participate
    • Events are held throughout the country

    “Actions speak louder than words. You can say you are the best, you gotta show us you are the best,” Mark Pinner shouted to a group of eager kids. 

    They are all preparing for AAU Karate Nationals in Fort Lauderdale. 

    Joined by many adults also, the group is training both body and mind inside the Mark Pinner Karate Club.

    “It’s a really big deal,” said Pinner. “It really is. They’ve actually held it here several times because Florida is one of the biggest regions in the AAU.”

    The biggest, baddest and fiercest fighters in the country will compete. 

    Fighters like 6-year-old Madison Gozalez. 

    “When I do my Kata, I do like mean looks,” she said with a glare on her face. 

    Her competitors learn quick to not let her small stature fool them — she is fierce. 

    “She just turned six. But she is so talented. She uses her body dynamically that most of the time teenagers and adults have a hard time to do,” said Pinner. 

    Madison is so good, in part from a training technique older than the art of karate itself. She learned from sibling rivalry. 

    “We want to be a black belt,” said her brother Danick. 

    “I want to be a brown belt,” chimes Madison.

    “That is our goal. We want to be a black belts,” said the oldest, Scarlett. 

    The Gonzalez kids are the youngest siblings in the dojo and all three are competing at Nationals this week. 

    “To them, it’s like just another day in the office. For me, my blood pressure spike through the roof, especially in tournaments,” said Ramiro Gonzalez, their father. 

    Scarlett is 10, Danick is eight, and Madison is six.

    “They’re so talented,” said Pinner. “Especially little Maddy. She started by sitting here watching when she was three years old and she kept saying, ‘I want to get in karate and I want to get in karate.’ And I thought she was too young. And then one day she got up and said, can I do my Kata for you?”

    They are competing in a series of events including Kata, Kumite, Kubota and even family Kata. 

    “Cause you work as a team. It’s like, it’s like one person going at the same time,” said Danick. 

    A team that must be siblings and be in unison as they show their skill at the art of karate. 

    “When you first learn new things, it’s kind of hard to get it down. But then when you start practicing, it kind of gets easy,” said Scarlett.

    The AAU Karate Nationals started July 2 and run through July 6 in Fort Lauderdale. Thirty-six students from Pinner’s dojo are attending.

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  • BayCare nurse camp hopes to inspire next generation of health care workers

    BayCare nurse camp hopes to inspire next generation of health care workers

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    DUNEDIN, Fla. — It only takes a second to create that spark of interested needed to shape a child’s life. And a camp is hoping to do that as it exposes students to nursing and other health care careers.

    “This is how we do blood draws for babies,” said a BayCare nurse at Diane Rauch Camp Nurse Jr. 


    What You Need To Know

    • The camp, held at Mease Dunedin Hospital, is offering students entering seventh and eighth grade the opportunity to explore nursing and other health care careers
    • Students get exposure to a multitude of health care fields during the three-day camp and receive hands-on training in vital signs and CPR
    • Students must apply to get into the camp by email: campnursejr@baycare.org
    • 24 students were accepted into the camp this year. 


    Patricia Cronin is a rising eighth grader at Palm Harbor Middle School. She knew she wanted to be a part of this camp for a while, with family members who are nurses. 

    “How the nurses were helping patients with their medications, helping patients get up and moving around,” said Cronin. “I just talked about how like it’s like how much stuff they have to do because it’s really crazy how much they have to handle.”

    Cronin is one of 24 students who applied to be BayCare’s Diane Rauch Camp Nurse Jr.

    “So, this is the sixth year since the camp has been renamed. And I just can’t wait to see what you guys do in the future in health care,” said Heather Peirce-Wheeler, the daughter of the camp’s namesake. 

    The goal of the camp is to educate middle schoolers on many health care jobs. 

    “I’m hoping that I make this fun enough where they realize they can have a job they love. And thankfully, even last year I had two campers who are now BayCare employees, and one is a nurse and one is currently a tech in nursing school. And they came to Camp Nurse Junior as children,” said Megan Tartaglia, BayCare Nursing Professional Development practitioner.

    They have learned a lot this week, from vital signs, CPR and lab and pathology. 

    For Cronin, it has already inspired her to think about other careers beyond nursing. 

    “I’m thinking about a pharmacy being a pharmacist, but I’m not sure yet. Maybe a nurse, maybe a pharmacist,” said Cronin.

    Students must apply to be in the camp. The application process usually opens in February for that year. Students are accepted on a first come, first served basis.

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  • St. Pete city leaders discuss stadium deal ahead of first official votes

    St. Pete city leaders discuss stadium deal ahead of first official votes

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    There was no opportunity for public comment, but the city encouraged anyone who would like to watch the discussion to do so online. During the meeting, city council members reviewed the multiple proposed agreements related to the stadium and Gas Plant District and the city’s financial involvement.

    On Thursday, a St. Pete City Council meeting set for 4 p.m. could end with members taking their first official votes on the project. In order to be in favor, five city council members must vote yes. A tie would mean the deal would not move forward as it stands now.

    The agreement states the City of St. Pete would contribute $287.5 million towards the new stadium and an additional $142 million for the surrounding infrastructure. The proposal also states the city would agree to sell public land needed for the project at below appraised value.

    On Wednesday, City Administrator Robert Gerdes talked about his memories of downtown and how that has changed with the Rays.

    “You know, I have been here all my life. I remember what downton was like in the 1980s, I remember what Kenwood was like, I remember what Old North East was like. Now people may say MLB (Major League Baseball) had nothing to do with the renaissance in this city. I’m not so sure about that.”

    In addition to the ballpark, the latest plans from the Rays-Hines development team include 5,400 residential units with roughly 1,250 to be designated as affordable or workforce housing. It also includes a $50 million investment from Rays-Hines for a new Woodson African American History Museum, spots for retail, restaurants, conference centers, offices, and an outdoor space for gatherings.

    Council member Brandi Gabbard shared her concerns about the project and cited hurricane activity in the area.

    “We are a costal community, we see that hurricane season, we have a lot of vulnerabilities around that potential for a major catastrophe to happen in our city,” Gabbard said. “And when you are building an asset of this size, you have to look and see how it could correlate to response.”

    She added, “I have a lot of concern around verbiage that I am not seeing here in this agreement. Specifically there is a lot of glass on this particular (proposed) building, and can you tell me what category that would be rated?”

    Council member Lisset Hanewicz cited feedback from residents.

    “We get questions. And I get questions definitely about whether or not it’s appropriate to put that much money and whether it’s necessary on the public end,” Hanewicz said.

    During a community meeting Tuesday, St. Pete residents voiced their concerns about the makeup of the current plan. Many who attended the meeting felt the deal wasn’t fair to taxpayers, that more attention needs to be paid to infrastructure, and that the needs of those nearby are getting overlooked.

    “I see how this translates into opportunities for business owners, for corporations,” said Brian Peret, president of the Campbell Park Neighborhood Association. “But I don’t see how it translates to small business owners or local individuals or people who make at or below 80% of the AMI and my concern is without significant incentives or requirements to make that happen, it’s not going to happen.”

    Mayor Ken Welch openly backs the plan and during the last meeting on the Gas Plant District in May, stated he feels the proposal strikes a good balance for everyone involved.

    “Having lived this experience I believe the set of agreements that we have developed with input and extensive community engagement are the key to completing this journey in a manner that’s fiscally responsible, equitable, and honors the promises of jobs and inclusive economic opportunity,” he said.

    A formal and final vote on the plan is currently scheduled for July 11. Pinellas County commissioners will have to hold a similar vote on whether to approve their share of the costs. No date has been set for that vote.

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  • New St. Pete Program works to combat crime amongst teens

    New St. Pete Program works to combat crime amongst teens

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    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Days before St. Pete Mayor Ken Welch and Police Chief Anthony Holloway announced the new Youth Cares Program, Lisa Wheeler-Bowman was already out doing her job connecting with teens to prevent crime. 


    What You Need To Know

    • The Youth Care Program is a new initiative to help prevent young felony offenders from repeating the cycle of crime through early intervention
    • The new Community Impact and Safety Liaison, Lisa Wheeler-Bowman, will provide individualized support and resources to youth offenders of non-violent felonies and their families
    • The goal is to redirect at-risk youth early to reduce recidivism and promote positive pathways for development and success

    She is the new community impact and safety liaison. Through the Youth Cares Program, she will be tasked with reaching out to non-violent teens arrested for felonies and their families to try to stop a crime cycle from beginning. 

    “This will fill that gap in a personal one-on-one way with someone. And Lisa will have someone who has exemplary street connections in our community to help some of these parents who are really overwhelmed,” said Welch. 

    “This is not a diversion program,” said Chief Holloway. “I want to repeat that. This is not a diversion program. The kids will still face consequences of the charges that they’re being charged with.” 

    The new program is designed to reach young, non-violent felony offenders and their families, and offer them recommendations and resources. 

    Holloway said they cannot arrest their way out of the current cycle of teen violence happening within St. Pete. 

    He provided an example of a 16-year-old that already had 44 charges from various crimes over the years. Those crimes did not start out violent, but eventually ended violent. 

    “What this program is going to do is hopefully intervene and stop this,” said Holloway. 

    This is where Wheeler-Bowman comes into the picture. Once an arrest is made with a non-violent felony offending teen, she will make contact with them and their families within 72 hours. 

    She will then make recommendations and connect them to community resources.

    “My heart is engaged. It has been in this area since I have been out there hitting the streets, trying to find out who murdered my son,” said Wheeler-Bowman. “It’s my life’s mission because no mother should have to bury a child. It’s not a day that goes by that I don’t think about my son.”

    It is personal for Wheeler-Bowman when it comes to addressing the cycle of crime in the city. 

    “I’m not going to just stop with one phone call, one visit. You are going to continue to see this face,” said Wheeler-Bowman.

    As for funding, the NFL granted the City $450,000 to run this program for the next two years. 

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  • Water Management District upgrading structure protecting Lake Tarpon

    Water Management District upgrading structure protecting Lake Tarpon

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    PALM HARBOR, Fla. — Hurricane season is just days away, and preparations on many levels are being made just in case a storm heads toward Tampa Bay area counties.


    What You Need To Know

    • The S-551 water control structure on Lake Tarpon’s outfall canal is currently receiving upgrades to extend the life of the structure
    • The structure protects from saltwater intrusion and flooding, helps protects the lake’s freshwater ecology
    • A technique called cathodic protection is used to protect the rebar inside the structure against saltwater corrosion
    • The upgrades are expected to be completed by the end of July, with final touches done by October

    The Southwest Water Management District is updating a water control structure, S-551, on Lake Tarpon’s outfall canal.

    The structure, which was built in the 1970s, protects saltwater intrusion into Lake Tarpon and flooding during high water events.

    “It prevents salt water intrusion, it maintains the fresh water ecology and maintains water levels in Lake Tarpon,” said Sammy Huey, a senior professional engineer with the Southwest Florida Water Management District.

    The engineers and construction crews are making repairs to the structure through a method called cathodic protection. 

    The method works to protect the concrete and rebar, which holds this structure up, from saltwater and corrosion. 

    “These are the bulk anodes that are going to be installed on the outside of the structure,” Huey said. “These are made out of zinc anode metal material.”

    The metal anodes are installed and they attract the corrosive element in the water, which then corrode the anode and not the rebar. 

    “What we are looking at are the anodes that are being installed inside of the concrete,” Huey said. “We have the form work in place, and we will be removing that once the concrete has cured.”

    Anodes have been placed all over the structure, including below the water and inside the concrete. 

    “This gives it a fresh bill of health,” said Huey. 

    Huey said they expect to complete the project by the end of July, and finish up all final touch ups by the end of October.

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  • Thousands of grandparents are raising their grandchildren in Tampa Bay counties

    Thousands of grandparents are raising their grandchildren in Tampa Bay counties

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    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — The role of parent does not always fall to a child’s mother or father. In Tampa Bay counties, there are thousands of  grandparents taking on that role.


    What You Need To Know

    • Joan Broughton is raising six of her grandchildren permanently
    • The Juvenile Welfare Board of Pinellas County (JWB) is hosting a series of family-friendly events across Pinellas County to celebrate and support grandparents raising their grandchildren
    • According to the ACS, in Pinellas County just over 6,000 grandparents are the sole providers for their grandchild or grandchildren
    • Mid-County Grand Families Event is happening Saturday, May 4 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Pinellas Park Performing Arts Center. It is located at 4951 78th Ave. N., Pinellas Park

    Joan Broughton knows the job of being a parent well. She has three children.

    In her St. Petersburg home, a 16-year-old boy sits at her dining room table.

    “This is Daevon,” said Broughton. “Only no one calls him Daevon. What does everybody call you, baby?”

    He smiles and says, “Jack.”

    Despite Jack calling Broughton momma, he is not her son. He is her grandson.

    He is diagnosed with cerebral palsy.

    “It is harder for you with your hands,” said Broughton, ripping the plastic around an eight pack of juice boxes. “Momma got it, and I will open up your juice because you can’t do it.”

    Tuesday and Thursday are good days in her home, because her church family brings over food, like the pizza they were eating when we visited.

    “Right now, since I do not have to cook, wash dishes and whatever, I can actually do homework and spend time with them,” said Broughton.

    She said the word them because Jack is not the only one coming home from school, hungry for dinner.

    “How was school?” said Broughton, as three more kids, elementary aged, walk up her front steps and into the house.

    There is Diezel, Dominic, and Arianna. They all make themselves a plate and happily talk about their day at school.

    Minutes later, Da’Mya comes in and begins helping with homework. She is the oldest of Broughton’s grandchildren.

    Finally, the door swings open one more time, and in walks Annie, smiling. She is in middle school.

    In total, Broughton has six of her grandchildren permanently living under her roof.

    “So you got first grade, third grade, fifth grade, ninth grade, senior and eighth,” said Broughton, pointing to each one as they eat or do homework.

    In a few months, Broughton will take in a seventh grandchild, and within a year, most likely, an eighth grandchild.

    “When school starts, I will have seven. I will have seven,” she repeats, closing her eyes. “I will have seven. I don’t know how, but…”

    Broughton’s children had kids young, work unusual schedules, and are working to support themselves right now. That is why, from the birth of her first grandchild, Broughton and her husband Tyrone chose to take on the roles of caregivers.

    “Thirty-nine years,” said Broughton, when asked how long she and Tyrone had been married. “And we dated for three.”

    But then tears fill her eyes, and she begins to weep. The high school sweethearts will not make 40, because this past year Tyrone died of a heart attack.

    “I still don’t believe he is gone. I still don’t know why God took it from me,” said Broughton.

    The hardest job in the world, that of being a parent, has now been made harder because she must be both the father and mother.

    In April, she decided to seek out help by attending a Grandfamilies event hosted by the Juvenile Welfare Board of Pinellas County.

    “Sometimes they’re taking care of the children informally,” said Yardis Garcia, Community Engagement Manager, Juvenile Welfare Board. “They’re not the formal provider. So we want to make sure that we have legal organizations that they can ask questions.”

    Garcia says in Pinellas County, there are almost 6,000 grandparents who are the sole providers for their grandchildren. Twenty-two percent of those families live below the poverty line.

    The reason as to why grandparents are having to parent their grandchildren varies from family to family.

    “Unfortunately, we have mental health issues in our communities substance abuse, domestic violence, family separation for a lot of reasons that are affecting our families,” said Garcia.

    Despite those hardships, there are many resources available within the county. 

    Overall, many of the grandparents watching their grandkids do it willingly, knowing they are the best chance for their grandkids to grow up healthy and happy.

    “That misconception of they’re just taking care of them because it is a task they were they were forced to do that. They are there because they want to raise those kids. They want to make sure that they’re getting the resources and they’re thriving in their school, in their community and in their homes,” said Garcia.

    Broughton’s home is certainly a place of learning, love and laughter. She just has one hope for each of them.

    “Each one of them, I just want to be productive citizens. I’m not going to sit here and say they must be a doctor, they must be a lawyer. That’s not for everyone. But I want them to be God fearing good people,” said Broughton.

    The last Grandfamilies Event of the year is happening on May 4 with over 46 community resources available. It is happening from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Pinellas Performing Arts Center.

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    Erin Murray

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  • On the Town: Earth Day Celebration in Dade City

    On the Town: Earth Day Celebration in Dade City

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    DADE CITY, Fla. — Workers and volunteers are all ready for Saturday’s Earth Day Celebration in Dade City at the Pasco County Extension One Stop Shop. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Celebrate Earth this Earth Day! Join UF/IFAS Pasco County Cooperative Extension for our Earth Day 2024 Celebration Saturday, April 20, 2024, at One Stop Shop in Dade City
    • This family-friendly, educational event aims to increase environmental stewardship and awareness
    • Representatives from various Pasco County Departments and state agencies will help visitors become better Earth ambassadors and introduce them to a variety of free or low-cost county and state services
    • The event is taking place from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Pasco County Extension One Stop Shop located at 15029 14th St, Dade City

    “We have Pasco Utilities, which is bringing in touch ID trucks for kids, also having swag bags. They are also going to be cooking and donating hot dogs for free for while supplies last while everyone’s here,” said Aimee Schlitt, One-Stop-Shop Program manager. 

    The family-friendly event will focus on keeping the planet cleaner, with a specific emphasis on Florida living. 

    “We’re going to have ask a master gardener here and any questions that you might have about gardening. We also will have Florida-friendly landscaping here. So, any questions that you might have about landscaping bug identification,” said Schlitt. 

    But it is not all about plants, bugs and wildlife, it is also about trash and the best ways to get rid of it. Recycling is a big point of emphasis. 

    “With all of the different recycling programs we now have within schools, and we have recycling within your home and also just being better and more cognizant of that,” said Schlitt. 

    Plus, visitors are encouraged to bring old cell phones, computers and TVs. There will be a place to recycle them safely. 

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    Erin Murray

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  • Pipeline for new nurses: AdventHealth and Saint Leo University form partnership

    Pipeline for new nurses: AdventHealth and Saint Leo University form partnership

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    ZEPHYRHILLS, Fla. — There are many reasons to choose the path of nursing as a career. 


    What You Need To Know

    • New Saint Leo University nursing students have been working 12-hour shifts, side-by-side with their AdventHealth mentors
    • The program is part of a state-wide effort to help curb the nursing shortage expected in Florida by 2035
    • The Saint Leo nursing program received $740,000 from the state of Florida’s 2023-2024 budget
    • Saint Leo’s Bachelor of Science in nursing program is expected to add as many as 200 nurses to the workforce

    A desire to help, a need to give back, or for Grace Lundfelt, it was a pull from a higher power. 

    “I felt like it was a path that God was directing me towards,” said Lundfelt of the nursing program at St. Leo University.

    Then, there is Emily Gray. As a kid, she had cancer and spent many days in and out of hospitals, so she knows well the importance of good nursing care. 

    “It can make a big difference on a person’s life,” said Gray.

    The pair are not nurses yet, but they soon will be. They are part of Saint Leo University’s first nursing class. 

    When we visited, they were doing clinical work and training with RNs at AdventHealth Zephyrhills

    “This is our first dedicated education unit model that we have followed at AdventHealth Zephyrhills, and we are hoping to make a pipeline for our new nurses,” said Kim Friedmeyer, Nursing Education Manager at AdventHealth Zephyrhills.

    Hospitals across the state are not getting enough people applying to become nurses. Because of this, there is a push to change the strategy on recruiting. 

    This program between AdventHealth and Saint Leo’s is government funded. The Saint Leo’s program received $740,000 from the 2023-24 state budget.

    The hope is that the investment into the Saint Leo program will add 200 nurses into the state. 

    AdventHealth Zephyrhills hopes to fill its halls with several of those new nurses. 

    “We really were trying to target, getting students within a 30-minute radius, so with those intentions that we would actually bring them on as new team members when they were finished,” said Friedmeyer. 

    Both Gray and Lundfelt have thought about applying to AdventHealth Zephyrhills after graduation.

    “Possibly yeah,” said Lundfelt. “I have had a really good experience here.”

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    Erin Murray

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  • Bradenton Sgt. Lee R. Cosens Memorialized in an Eternal Reef

    Bradenton Sgt. Lee R. Cosens Memorialized in an Eternal Reef

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    SARASOTA, Fla. — After stage four cancer diagnosis, Bradenton Police Sgt. Lee Cosens was not given a lot of time.


    What You Need To Know

    • Bradenton Police Officer and U.S. Army veteran Lee R. Cosens passed away April 16, 2023 from kidney cancer
    • Amy, his wife, and their 7- and 8-year-old daughters placed some of his remains into an eternal reef, which now sits underwater in the Silvertooth Coral Reef
    • An Eternal Reef combines a cremation urn, ash scattering, and burial at sea into one meaningful, permanent environmental tribute to life
    • As of 2023, more than 2,500 Eternal Reefs have been placed in about 25 locations off the coasts of Florida (the panhandle, Gulf Coast and Atlantic Coast), Maryland, New Jersey, North Carolina, South Carolina, Texas and Virginia

    For just over two years, his family lived a motto they called, “Do the Things.”

    “We lived a life in two years. I always tell people to buy the tickets, take the trips, do the things,” said Amy Cosens, his wife.

    But on April 16, 2023, Lee passed. Two weeks before, he told his wife he wanted part of his remains to be turned into an eternal reef in Sarasota.

    “In the end, he said I want somewhere the girls can visit. The cemetery is one thing, but I want somewhere where the girls can go to feel like I am there,” said Amy.

    This month, Amy and her two daughters Savannah and Margaret showed up to Eternal Reefs to fulfill his wish. It is a four-day process that begins with mixing the cremated remains into cement to be placed into a porous reef ball.

    Those large balls are then placed into the Silvertooth Coral Reef site to help preserve and help marine life. The ocean is a place Lee always had a connection to.

    “Lee was larger than life. He was one of the best people I have ever met at switching between police officer and dad. He could be a tough guy police officer when he needed to be, and he also had a giant heart when he needed that also,” said Amy.

    After mixing in the remains and decorating the reef ball with mementos, the family waits for a few days for it to dry. A few days later, they boarded a boat to see the large ball placed in the ocean.

    The ride out to the reef is usually solo, but when other police agencies heard, they showed up in force.

    “It is amazing,” said Amy, looking out at eight different boats with lights on, escorting them to the reef. “They talk about it being a brotherhood, and it truly being a family, and this is such a good reminder for us, for myself and for the girls. It is truly a family.”

    When the time came for Lee’s reef ball to be placed in the ocean, Amy and the girls watched, sad but hopeful.

    “I am hoping when that time comes that we will be able to get them scuba certified, and we can come out, and at that point it will hopefully just be overflowing with fish and creatures,” said Amy.

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    Erin Murray

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  • Brain surgery at HCA Largo helps patient with rare neurological disease

    Brain surgery at HCA Largo helps patient with rare neurological disease

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    LARGO, Fla. — Getting diagnosed with a rare disease is often scary, because it can often be hard finding a doctor trained in that type of care. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Neurosurgeon Dr. Abilash Haridas recently performed life-saving cerebral artery surgery, also referred to as brain bypass surgery, for a 40-year-old patient diagnosed with moyamoya
    • This disease, first identified in Japan in the 1950s, is caused by blocked arteries at the base of the brain, which can lead to frequent strokes, seizures, headaches, paralysis and vision issues
    • After two surgeries, Ricky Ortiz is home and recovering
    • This rare and complex surgery is now available in the Tampa Bay area

    Dr. Abilash Haridas is a neurosurgeon at HCA Florida Largo Hospital. He has dedicated his career to cranial vascular pathology — conditions that affect blood flow to the brain.

    “There are four major highways that take blood from your heart to your brain,” Haridas said. “There are two carotid arteries in the front and two retrieval arteries in the back. The two highways in the front, the carotid arteries are very, very major highways and when they go into the skull and they start to narrow, that leads to a condition called moyamoya.” 

    Moyamoya is a rare disease, and most people have never heard of it. But a local case recently came before Haridas. 

    “Good to see you,” Haridas said as he walked in a room where his patient was sitting. “Ricky, how are you? Good to see you.”

    Ricky Ortiz, 40, was next to his father, Daniel.

    “I am happy you are feeling better, and I am happy we were able to help you out in a positive way,” said Haridas. 

    Ricky lived a normal life until a series of strokes and seizures changed everything. 

    “I was concerned because my mom died of vasculitis of the brain, so I thought it was connected somehow,” said Ricky. 

    “Real scary. Yea scary, as a parent, doesn’t matter how old your kid is. He is 40, but you know as a parent you are constantly worried so,” said Daniel. 

    Ricky was diagnosed with moyamoya, a condition that leads to blocked arteries in his brain, which caused the strokes. To help him, he needed two brain bypass surgeries. 

    Haridas completed both surgeries. 

    “This little white area is holding up the blood vessel that we are going to hook up to, and you can see how tiny that vessel is that we are going to hook up to,” Haridas said while pointing to a screen with a view of Ricky’s surgery. 

    The surgery was a success. 

    Going forward, Ricky will continue with checkups.

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    Erin Murray

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  • Hunt For the Cure: Manatee family raises money for childhood cancer research

    Hunt For the Cure: Manatee family raises money for childhood cancer research

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    ANNA MARIA ISLAND, Fla. — Creating good out of tragedy is a Manatee County family’s mission after losing their 9-year-old daughter to cancer. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Grace Irwin, 9, died from rhabdomyosarcoma, a soft tissue cancer, in July 2023
    • The Grace Irwin Memorial Fund is dedicated to funding childhood cancer research
    • Saturday Feb. 17, her family is launching the Hunt for the Cure Scavenger Hunt on Anna Maria Island
    • To donate, click here

    That’s why for the past few weeks, family members of little Grace Irwin have been going to businesses from Bradenton to Anna Maria Island collecting donations for Saturday. 

    Her uncle, Scott Viehman, stopped by the Shiny Fish Emporium to get a gift basket to auction. 

    “Hey guys. Oh look at this,” he says upon seeing the basket.

    Inside are items Grace would have loved. 

    “Little mermaid dolls, ukuleles, sunglasses, beach goggles,” said Rebecca Preston, the Shiny Fish Emporium owner.

    Viehman is collecting these and other donations for the Hunt for the Cure Scavenger Hunt.

    “It is kind of helping us keep her name alive,” he said. “She passed at such a young age, that was one of our worries. Is she going to be remembered? What is she going to be remembered for? And if she was still, she would be wanting to help as many people as she can.”

    Said Preston: “She was just a sweetie pie, a sweet heart,”

    Grace was diagnosed with rhabdomyosarcoma, a soft tissue cancer, in 2022, right before Christmas. 

    Viehman said doctors put her on an aggressive chemo and radiation plan, but the cancer spread. 

    “They were forced with the almost impossible task of deciding: Do we continue treatment, and extend life for another couple weeks? Or do we take her home and make her comfortable?” said Viehman. 

    Her family brought her home and filled her remaining days with as much fun and laughter as possible. 

    Grace died in July 2023 at 9 years-old. 

    “Basically, we looked at this situation as the worst tragedy that has ever happened to our family. But we knew in all the darkness we had to find the light,” said Viehman. 

    In the time following, the family started the Grace Irwin Memorial Fund, with the goal to raise money for childhood cancer research. 

    The first big event is the Hunt for the Cure Scavenger Hunt. 

    “This is going to be the event space,” said Viehman in the Anna Maria Island Community Center. “We are going to have some live entertainment. We will have complimentary beverages, we will have a food truck right outside. And a huge silent auction.” 

    The money raised during the scavenger hunt will go to the Children’s Cancer Research Fund

    People can still sign up, with the event kicking off at 11 a.m. on Saturday Feb. 17.

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    Erin Murray

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  • Love and volunteering at AdventHealth Wesley Chapel

    Love and volunteering at AdventHealth Wesley Chapel

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    WESLEY CHAPEL, Fla. — Bay area couple Dwight and Laurie Raines have been together for more than half a century, and stay busy by helping out their community. AdventHealth Wesley Chapel is just one of the spots where they give back.

    Tucked away behind the concierge desk at AdventHealth Wesley Chapel, Dwight works away. 

    “Right now I am putting together some pre-admission testing packets,” said Dwight. “This helps out the nurses, back in the back. Because they can go through well over 100 of these in a week.”

    As a volunteer, he does whatever he is asked, and loves it. 

    “I am starting to train on how to use the computer. Because we are here Monday morning and Wednesday evening.”

    A few feet away, Laurie helps out in the gift shop. 

    “I do the register. But I also do anything the ladies ask me to do,” she said with a smile, as she picks up a duster. “I am funny about everything clean, so I take care of this like my house.”

    Between the pair, they complete hundreds of small tasks that help make the big hospital system function. AdventHealth Wesley Chapel currently has 125 active volunteers. 

    Laurie and Dwight are a bit different, though. 

    “Let’s see if he will want to go to lunch with me?” said Laurie, walking out of the gift shop. “Sir, would you like to go to lunch with me? I am paying.”

    “You are paying,” Dwight said with a smile, as he puts away a wheelchair. 

    The pair takes each other’s hand and walks toward the cafeteria. They have been married for 50 years. 

    Volunteering is a big part of their lives. They help at Feeding Tampa Bay, the Humane Society and Dream Lovers Rescue. 

    AdventHealth Wesley Chapel is special to them because they often have small dates in the cafeteria during their shift. 

    “We come as a pair,” they say together. “We come as a pair, everywhere. Every place we have ever volunteered, we always do it at the same time.”

    Two for the price of one, and in their opinion, it is one of the best ways to spend time together. 

    “Hospitals always need help, schools always need help, animal shelters,” they suggest if anyone is thinking of a place to start volunteering. 

    The Raines said after their son passed away, they began volunteering in his honor.

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    Erin Murray

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  • Peer specialists find addiction recovery for themselves and others

    Peer specialists find addiction recovery for themselves and others

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    PASCO COUNTY, Fla. — There are some things in life that must be done for oneself. Success won’t come if it is done for others — addiction is like that. 

    To recover from addiction, you have to do it for yourself. Cherrice Peters-Tanksley and Wendy Dillingham know that well. 


    What You Need To Know

    • BayCare Peer Recovery Specialists are people in recovery who are trained and certified to help others achieve and maintain recovery from mental health and substance use issues
    • BayCare Behavioral Health offers many services for individuals dealing with addictions
    • BayCare offers substance abuse services for people throughout Hernando, Hillsborough, Pasco, Pinellas and Polk counties 
    • If you would like to learn more about BayCare’s comprehensive array of services, you can call the registration center to schedule an appointment (877) 850-9613

    “We have the gift that keeps on giving,” said Peters-Tanksley, a Mental Health Tech III at BayCare. “We can be firm, yet hold them accountable, yet show care and compassion at the same time.”

    For people suffering from addiction, it can often feel like no one understands — no one has walked a mile like yours.

    BayCare has created a program where people who are certified and have shown years of sobriety are hired to help people wanting to get out of addiction. 

    “This is why we, as peers, are invaluable because we have walked the mile down their shoes. We can relate,” said Peters-Tanksley.

    Peters-Tanksley and Dillingham both used to abuse drugs and alcohol. 

    “I was always using. I was always drinking. I didn’t even have aspirations of even trying to do anything else,” said Dillingham, who is a Case Manager and Peer Recovery Specialist at BayCare.

    Like many addicts, both women started young. 

    “It wasn’t abnormal. I used to go pick up drugs with my father and my mother. We used to travel back and forth,” said Peters-Tanksley.

    At 7 years old, Peters-Tanksley was drinking. By 11, she had tried heroin and was addicted by 16. 

    “I actually had a warrant for my arrest for over a year with four children. Running from the law with four sons for over a year,” said Peters-Tanksley, thinking back. 

    Dillingham’s story is different, but the same. She would use, get caught, and then get locked up. 

    She has gone to prison more than once. 

    “Then I got hard, because I learned from a bunch of other women I was incarcerated with,” said Dillingham. 

    Their mugshots show the revolving door of addiction. But then, both had that moment where they couldn’t live that life anymore. They chose to get help. 

    “I was ready to give up. I really was ready to give up,” said Peters-Tanksley, wiping tears from her eyes. 

    “I am sitting in a booking cell in 2006, and I looked around, and I said, ‘I am not doing this anymore.’ And I am like, ‘Lord, I need your help,’” said Dillingham. 

    In her final prison stay, Dillingham attended every Alcoholics Anonymous meeting, Narcotics Anonymous meeting and Bible study. Once out, she kept attending those meetings. 

    “Everybody wants to be a substance abuse counselor when you get clean right. I am like, ‘I just want to help other people. I want to be a substance abuse counselor.’ So about four years after I had been clean, I went back to school,” said Dillingham. 

    She then applied to be part of BayCare’s Peer Specialist Team.

    “I knew that I was called to help other people. I just knew that I was still alive, and I was saved,” said Dillingham. 

    Four years into Dillingham working for BayCare as a peer specialist, she met Peters-Tanksley. She was trying to beat her addiction.

    “Cherrice is, we call her our unicorn. I mean, seriously, I have never had a client to do everything I have ever suggested. Never,” said Dillingham. 

    “I met Wendy. And she stayed on me, she stayed on me,” said Peters-Tanksley. “She was like, ‘We will put you in detox.’ I said, ‘Well, when I get out of detox, I don’t have a place to stay.’ She said, ‘We will hook you up with a place to stay.’”

    Peer specialists provide resources at every step of recovery. 

    Peters-Tanksley was connected to Metropolitan Ministries, which helped her with housing and more. 

    She went back to school and eventually applied to be a BayCare Peer Recovery Specialist, too. 

    “Surely, who am I not to give back what was so freely given to me?” said Peters-Tanksley.

    On top of her BayCare job, she often volunteers at Metropolitan Ministries

    Dillingham gives her time outside of work, too. She guides a Bible study for those battling addiction at Cornerstone Baptist Church in Hernando County. 

    The pair are connected in a way that is stronger than friendship. 

    “I love her,” said Dillingham.

    “Yeah, I love you too. You are the best,” said Peters-Tanksley.

    The BayCare Peer Recovery team is just one of many groups that helps people get out of the addiction cycle. The health system also helps people with crisis stabilization, detox, outpatient and urgent family care. 

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    Erin Murray

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  • Catching up with Floridians whose stories inspired us in 2023

    Catching up with Floridians whose stories inspired us in 2023

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    FLORIDA — As we reach the holiday season’s peak and look back at a year that brought happy times for many people but major struggles for even more, the stories of those who found the strength to overcome adversity often make the most inspiring impression.

    Spectrum News catches up with some of the incredible individuals who taught us all a little bit about the best of humanity in 2023.

    Storm devastation reveals strength of spirit

    When Category 4 Hurricane Idalia stormed Florida’s Big Bend, it sent destructive storm surge into the Tampa Bay area and left parts of Central Florida flooded.

    The floors of Beatrice Hall’s Rubonia home buckled and collapsed, but the great grandmother stood tall. She made fast friends with David Couzens, when he generously brought her a new refrigerator.

    Days later, when a fall landed Hall in the hospital for 60 days, Couzens and a friend got to work, making her home safe to live in once again.

    Some parts of hurricane recovery occur pretty rapidly, and areas that avoid a storm’s most destructive effects can sometimes slip from the headlines even fasterIn Orlo Vista, it didn’t take long for the waist-high flood waters to recede from Willie Wright Jr.’s family home on Hope Circle, but he’s been working to repair all the damage for more than a year.

    Help from neighbors and kindhearted strangers meant the world in the beginning. Now, Wright’s mission to move his father back into the home he built decades ago fuels his determination to complete the massive task at hand.

    Life’s obstacles provide unique perspectives

    At 15 years old, Jasmine Zipperer found herself in the foster care system. When she aged out and faced the prospect of figuring life out all alone, she found a place to call home — and a family to help her prepare for the opportunities and responsibilities of adulthood.

    It’s all because of a former NFL player, who was adopted by a loving family when he was just a week old. Jeff Faine says he always felt an obligation to share his blessings and give back. So he and his wife opened Faine House for 18-23-year-olds on the verge of homelessness.

    When James McCallum was born with a large, bulging birthmark on his neck and back, his parents didn’t know how it would affect him. But after three surgeries and numerous trips to his doctor in Chicago, the two-year-old continues to inspire with his simply effortless smiles.

    The painful process may not yet be over, but the McCallum family is certainly looking to the future. James’ mom, Kaitlyn, is pregnant.

    She shared the moment of concern they made their way through, wondering if their second child would face the same struggles as their first. Then, they realized — they would just have to follow James’ example.

    At this time last year, Janet Thompson had just undergone surgery for stage 1 pancreatic cancer and was scheduled to start chemotherapy right after Christmas. 

    The treatment took an expectedly harsher toll than she expected, but Thompson fought her way to ringing the cancer-free bell.

    With her follow-up scans since then all giving her a clean bill of health, she’s back in the holiday spirit at her home in Titusville and grateful for life’s simply joys — like gathering with family in the kitchen to decorate Christmas cookies.

    Culture fuels entrepreneurial purpose

    Floridians are from everywhere, and that natural diversity of culture has cooked up a wide range of culinary options in small towns and big cities across the state.

    An Orlando restaurant is serving up Filipino food that feeds a growing sense of community and is turning its small bungalow-style building into somewhat of a cultural center.

    Milosz Gasior doesn’t speak much — but he doesn’t have to. The 2023 Gibbs High School graduate has developed a remarkable talent for talking with 88 black and white keys that, his mother hopes, will open doors to a bright and successful future.

    Gasior has autism and is mostly non-verbal.

    With prospects for holding down a job after graduation unlikely to manifest, he was connected with a professional musician who has since gotten him several paid piano gigs. 

    Good people find cool ways to help

    Reasons for helping others vary as much as the ways people go about doing it.

    For Brian Farr, a family tragedy moved him to put smiles on the faces of some incredible children — and keep them safe.

    His daughter, Maddie, died three years ago. She had White-Sutton syndrome, a rare neurodevelopmental disorder, that caused her many difficulties in life. But every Friday night, they would head to the pool for swimming lessons, loving every minute of it.

    Farr created a foundation in his daughter’s name to help special needs children learn swimming safety.

    Now, Maddie’s legacy and love of the water lives on through other kids.

    At 10-years-old, Greshaun Dabrezil has already made quite a name for himself.

    You can call him “Cooler Boy.” It’s a moniker he both relishes and counts on to continue his mission, which is as simple as it is successful.

    Dabrezil is a decorated gymnast and certainly understands the importance of hydration. So when he noticed the people who spend hot days on street corners, he decided to help.

    For a while now, he has been handing out free bottles of water and leaving coolers at bus stops around Orlando. Each one has a straightforward sign on the handle. And Dabrezil isn’t finished. He hopes to partner with Lynx to put coolers on buses, too. 

    Sports can facilitate healing

    On a sports field, the prospect of injury always lingers. But when an athlete gets badly hurt away from the game, sport can drive them down the road toward recovery. 

    Mona Rodriguez was a professional soccer player, and fitness has always been paramount. She was riding her motorcycle to the gym, when a driver making a turn didn’t see her. 

    Rodriguez woke up in the hospital with multiple major injuries — but her spirit never shattered.

    Now, she lives by a simple mantra, and she’s using soccer to regain her mobility.

    When a player suffers a personal loss, teammates often help heal the invisible wounds. 

    Bella Rodrigues was a flag football star at Robinson High School, where she helped lead the team to their 7th-straight championship her senior year. She did that while dealing with the loss of her father, who died of cancer during the season.

    The Knights, and the rest of the school, rallied around her.

    Now, even though she’s in college, Rodrigues loves to return and just enjoy a grueling workout with her family.

    Faith inspires grand transformations

    From barber to YouTube star, life looks a lot different for Travis Settineri these days.

    He spent 18 years cutting hair for a living, but decided to take a leap of faith. He put a longtime passion for filming to use and started a channel focused on spreading kindness around Plant City and Lakeland.

    A year-and-a-half later, he’s introducing his almost 4 million subscribers to the many different people he meets and helps with food, finances and shelter.

    The massive following has given him the financial freedom to expand and focus all his time on making a difference.

    When a group of teenage boys dove into Spring Bayou in January on a quest to retrieve the Epiphany cross, they continued a 118-year Tarpon Springs tradition. 

    George Stamas surfaced victorious, and he says, as promised by his Greek Orthodox faith, the cross brought him numerous blessings over the last year. 

    He led his high school football team to a 9-1 season, and his coach says he’s made a number of positive changes in his life. 

    Stamas’ family is no stranger to the Epiphany cross. His cousin retrieved it a few years back, and his great grandfather did the same 85 years go.

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    Curtis McCloud

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