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Tag: Jeff Butera

  • Spooky, low-cost Halloween trail returns to Brooksville

    Spooky, low-cost Halloween trail returns to Brooksville

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    BROOKSVILLE, Fla. — Thousands of visitors are expected to return this year to the Halloween Trail of Terror in Brooksville.


    Jim Bravico, commandant of the Marine Corps League, designed the trail a few years ago because he wanted to give kids a chance to go somewhere fun during the pandemic.

    He said he’s been stunned by the number of people who have come to his Halloween adventure ever since.

    “The reason it’s been a success story — let’s not kid ourselves — we keep it affordable so families can come,” Bravico said. “If you’ve taken the time to bring your family out and show (them) a good time, this is where you want to go.”

    This year, the venue includes a haunted trail, a nearly 100-foot cave and numerous activities for kids.

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    Jeff Butera

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  • Monster Jam’s ThunderROARus takes over Tampa

    Monster Jam’s ThunderROARus takes over Tampa

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    TAMPA, Fla. — Monster Jam invades Tampa this weekend with multiple events at Amalie Arena. You’ll get the opportunity to see 12,000-pound monster trucks perform tricks on dirt, showing off their speed and skill.

    There are two events on Saturday happening at 1 p.m. and 7 p.m. Then Monster Jam will host another event on Sunday afternoon at 1 p.m.

    You can buy tickets through MonsterJam.com.

    One of the biggest attractions at Monster Jam is a new dinosaur-themed truck called ThunderROARus. Driver by Tony Ochs said kids and adults have been clamoring for a dino-themed vehicle.

    “What kid does not love dinosaurs?” Ochs said, adding that fans often tell him the truck has become their favorite. “They say ‘You know, Grave Digger used to be my favorite Monster Jam truck, but now it’s ThunderROARus.’”

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    Jeff Butera

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  • Family of injured Citrus County deputy worries about future, rift with sheriff

    Family of injured Citrus County deputy worries about future, rift with sheriff

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    TAMPA, Fla. — Initially, Michelle Lahera felt the support.

    One year ago, her husband, Citrus County Deputy Andy Lahera, suffered a traumatic brain injury. The school resource officer was directing traffic outside the Lecanto High School graduation when he got hit by a car.


    What You Need To Know

    • Citrus County Deputy Andy Lahera suffered a traumatic brain injury in 2023, directing traffic at a high school graduation  
    • He remains in a medical facility, needing constant care on a slow path to recovery 
    • His wife says the sheriff plans to end Andy’s employment with the sheriff’s office in August
    • She’s worried that will leave the family short of the benefits they need 

    Deputy Lahera’s injuries were so severe, he still requires constant care at a Florida medical facility. Though he has improved recently – regaining some movement in portions of his body – recovery has been slow.

    “It’s something I never thought I would ever have to endure,” said Michelle. “Every day, I’m reminded of what happened that night.”

    In the weeks after the accident, Michelle said her family felt bathed in support from the Citrus County Sheriff’s Office and the community.

    Then she believes something changed. A rift formed between Michelle and Citrus County Sheriff Mike Prendergast. The Lahera family believes the sheriff has abandoned them. 

    “I don’t know (what went wrong). I wish I knew,” Michelle said. “I wish I could go back and we could figure it out.”

    Prendergast contends the fracturing of the relationship is a misunderstanding of intent.

    “We have shown vast amounts of compassion, concern and care for not only Deputy Lahera – our beloved colleague – but for Mrs. Lahera and family,” Sheriff Prendergast said.

    Lahera is currently being paid two-thirds of his salary through a workers’ compensation claim. The Florida Sheriff’s Risk Management Fund is paying that money. Lahera is using accrued vacation and sick leave to supplement that pay. All of his medical bills related to the accident are covered as well.

    However, the sheriff sent Michelle a letter, dated August 14, 2023, saying they would re-evaluate Andy’s employment on August 14, 2024.

    If the sheriff ends Andy’s employment on that date, Michelle worries his full health insurance policy and life insurance policy would end. Though his medical bills from the accident would be paid, she fears any other unrelated medical issues would not be covered.

    “How do I figure this out so my husband has the best care moving forward? That’s all I care about. I don’t care about anything else,” Michelle said.

    She says those fears have gone unaddressed, however, because she has not spoken to the sheriff in months. After trading voicemails in the early part of this year, communication has broken down.

    “I don’t know how we got here,” Michelle said.

    Prendergast has a different view of the situation. He points to the same letter Michelle received in August, 2023. It states that the Sheriff was extending Andy’s employment longer than the policy dictated for employees on workers’ compensation leave.

    He argues he gave Michelle a full year to consider the best options and make the decisions about Andy’s care, including Florida Retirement System Disability or Social Security Disability.

    “A year later, we still have nothing one way or the other about the choices she wants to take,” the sheriff said, adding that he wants to help Andy and continues to do so, but needs Michelle to make decisions about the future.

    As for the communication breakdown, he says he’s willing to meet with Michelle to try to find a constructive solution moving forward. She is willing to do it too, as long as there is a third-party present. But it appears both want the other to pick up the phone and arrange it.

    The Sheriff ended a phone interview with Spectrum Bay News 9 by quoting the Warrior Ethos, a subset of the Soldier’s Creed in the U.S. Army.

    “I will never leave a fallen comrade,” the sheriff said. “And that was my pledge to Andy at his bedside on multiple occasions when he was hovering near death in a trauma center in the Tampa Bay area.”

    When Spectrum Bay News 9 told the sheriff that some people, including Andy’s family, believe he had abandoned Andy, he responded, “They don’t understand it because they’re not cognizant of what the true facts are.”

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    Jeff Butera

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  • The Tampa Bay flight that changed history

    The Tampa Bay flight that changed history

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    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Historian Rui Farias calls it “gigantic.” 

    Chris Minner, an executive vice president at Tampa International Airport, thinks it was “revolutionary.”

    And leaders in St. Petersburg think so highly of it, there are not one but two memorials marking the event in the span of just a couple hundred feet.


    What You Need To Know

    •  The first commercial flight in history happened in 1914
    •  Pilot Tony Jannus flew from St. Petersburg to Tampa
    •  The seaplane’s flight took 23 minutes and landed on the Hillsborough River
    • A former mayor paid $400 to be the first passenger

    The event happened in 1914, 110 years ago. It involved a 24-mile, 23-minute flight carrying two people in one plane.

    It lifted off from St. Petersburg, right near where Albert Whitted Airport currently stands. The seaplane touched down on the Hillsborough River in Tampa less than half an hour later.

    It was the first scheduled commercial flight in history.

    A man named Percival Elliott Fansler had come up with the idea of the St. Petersburg-Tampa Airboat Line. At the time, it took more than six hours to travel between the two cities either by boat or train.

    “It was a day’s journey just to get between the two cities,” Farias, the executive director at the St. Petersburg Museum of History, said.

    Fansler partnered with Thomas Benoist, an aviation entrepreneur to design the plane. The duo then enlisted Tony Jannus, a famous daredevil-playboy pilot, to fly the plane. A.C. Phiel, a former mayor of St. Petersburg, paid $400 to be the first passenger.

    “Huge chunk of change, more than $8,000 today, for a one-way ticket from St. Pete to Tampa,” Farias said.

    A crowd of people watched the seaplane take off. Another crowd came to see it land on the other side of the Bay. When it was over, the simple flight had made aviation history.

    “The reality is without that first flight here in Tampa Bay, the industry today could not look the way that it does,” said Minner, an executive vice president at Tampa International Airport.

    Minner noted that before that St. Pete-to-Tampa flight, there were zero passengers flying. Now, Minner said the industry is expecting 1 billion passengers worldwide this year alone.

    The St. Petersburg-Tampa Airboat Line was short-lived. It only lasted a few months, offering two flights a day, six weeks a day for $5 per person. Passenger interest waned, though, and the flight stopped due to financial concerns.

    Yet the flight’s legacy and what it sparked lived on.

    “The short flight from St. Petersburg to Tampa ignited an industry that changed the way we travel,” then-President Barack Obama said on the flight’s 100th anniversary in 2014.

    In 1964, the Tampa and St. Petersburg Chambers of Commerce established the Tony Jannus Distinguished Aviation Society. It recognizes people who contribute to the scheduled aviation industry.

    There is now an exhibit telling the story of the flight at the St. Petersburg Museum of History, as well as a memorial at the nearby St. Pete Pier area.

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    Jeff Butera

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  • Tampa native performs in ‘Stranger Sings!’ musical at Straz Center

    Tampa native performs in ‘Stranger Sings!’ musical at Straz Center

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    TAMPA, Fla. — A musical that’s playing right now in Tampa is a spin-off from one of the most binge-worthy shows of the last decade, and it features a Bay area girl with some powerful chords.


    What You Need To Know

    •  Caroline Huerta, born and raised in Tampa, is performing in the musical, “Stranger Sings!” at the Straz Center
    •  The musical is a parody of the Netflix show, “Stranger Things,” a spooky thriller set in the 80s
    • “Stranger Sings!” plays at the Straz Center through April 21 

    “I love Tampa,” said Caroline Huerta. “Tampa is amazing. I was born and raised off Westshore, went to school at Berkeley Prep. I’m a lifer.” 

    Huerta spent much of her youth in Tampa going to see shows on the stage of the Straz Center. And now in her adult life, she’s performing on that very same stage. 

    You can hear her voice in “Stranger Sings!” — a musical playing at the Straz with its roots on Netflix.

    It’s the musical parody of the Netflix show, “Stranger Things,” a spooky thriller set in the 80s where a group of kids battle villains from the eerie “Upside Down.”

    “It’s a lot of fun, a spooky comedy,” Huerta said. “It’s not so much scary as it is in the Netflix series, so we turn it on its head and make it a lot of fun.”

    And can you imagine how much fun Huerta is having living out her performer dreams in the city that raised her?

    “Ever since I was little, I think it was something I always wanted to do in my heart,” she said.

    “Stranger Sings!” plays at the Straz Center through April 21. Tickets start at $37. And Huerta said one piece of feedback they’ve been getting: you don’t have to be a fan of the Netflix show to enjoy the musical. 

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    Jeff Butera

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  • Tarpon Springs showcases popular oil painter’s work for February

    Tarpon Springs showcases popular oil painter’s work for February

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    TARPON SPRINGS, Fla. — Tarpon Springs is featuring the work of a well-known oil painter. 

    Fran Failla grew up in Brooklyn. She went to an illustrious art school in Manhattan.

    But a few years ago, she decided to make a change.


    What You Need To Know

    • Oil painter Fran Failla will be having her art showcased for the month of February at the Tarpon Art Guild
    • Failla spent a portion of her life in New York before relocating to Tampa Bay
    • Failla specializes in still life and is known for her colors
    • Tarpon Art Guild is open 11 a.m. – 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, 12 p.m. – 6 p.m. on Saturday, and 12 p.m. – 5 p.m. on Sunday

    “On Christmas Day, I found myself on Clearwater Beach in about 75 degree weather, and I said, ‘You know, I’m here,’” Failla said.

    Failla now lives here in Tampa Bay.

    The Tarpon Art Guild is displaying dozens of her paintings for the month of February. She’s enjoying the spotlight. While walking through the gallery of her artwork, Failla was honest.

    “When you have this many pieces, it’s like, ‘Wow, this impresses me too,’” she said.

    She’s impressed others as well with what she can do with a paintbrush.

    Failla specializes in still life and is known for her colors.

    “I love bright saturated warms and cool colors,” she said. “I love painting old things, like ceramics and tea cups and metals.” 

    One of her paintings featured in the art exhibit, called “Quiet Solitude,” was painted in two hours.

    “This was a very simple still life I decided to do because I had gotten this teapot from an antique shop, and I loved it,” Failla said. “I paint very fast, by the way.”

    That’s fast, but not as fast as her answer of ‘yes’ when the art guild asked if she wanted to show off her work.

    “I got a phone call, asking if I wanted the space for a month, and I was like, ‘Yeah!’” Failla said.

    Guests can see Failla’s work at the Tarpon Art Guild on Tarpon Avenue. No tickets are required to see the exhibit. The venue is open 11 a.m. – 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, 12 p.m. – 6 p.m. on Saturday, and 12 p.m. – 5 p.m. on Sunday.

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    Jeff Butera

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  • Tampa woman plans mobile classroom on bus

    Tampa woman plans mobile classroom on bus

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    TAMPA, Fla. — Brenda Allen says for two weeks straight, she kept waking up at 2 a.m. 


    What You Need To Know

    • Brenda Allen is creating a mobile classroom from a former school bus 
    • She wants the bus to be the forum to teach Black history 
    • Allen is retrofitting the bus to create an interactive learning environment
    • She plans to drive the bus to different venues in Tampa, where she’ll deliver the lessosn

    Finally, she says it became clear what the problem gnawing at her was that was leading to her sleepless nights.

    “Our people are starving and dying from a lack of knowledge,” Allen said. “I must feed the people, feed the people that are starving.”

    Allen, who moved to Tampa a few years ago from Los Angeles, said she talked to so many people who said they were not learning about Black history in school.

    “They’re not getting the information,” Allen said. “On our Black history, African American history and our ancient history.”

    Allen decided to do something about it: She bought a bus.

    (Photo courtesy: Brenda Allen)

    The yellow bus she found had been used to transport kids to school in Clermont, Fla. But Allen had a different idea: she was going to turn the bus into a mobile classroom.

    “It’ll be so amazing. When it travels the street, people will wonder ‘What is that? What’s going on with that vehicle?’” Allen said.

    She calls it the Ma’at Sankofa African Learning Temple. ‘Ma’at’ stands for ‘truth; ’ ‘Sankofa’ means ‘go back and get it.’

    Her idea of retrieving Black history involves wrapping the outside of the bus in a façade of Queen Hatshepsut, a pharaoh from Ancient Egypt. Inside, she’s envisioning a museum of pyramids and hieroglyphics on the walls of the bus. Children can learn on laptops aboard the bus or check out a library in the back.

    She’s currently raising enough money to begin retrofitting the bus. That will involve taking the seats out of the bus, then creating the mobile classroom on-board.

    Eventually, she hopes to take the bus around Tampa Bay teaching lessons to kids about Black history.

    “Bringing our history, our knowledge, our culture, our heritage around the world,” Allen said. “That is the long-term view for Ma’at Sankofa African Learning Temple.”

    (Photo courtesy: Brenda Allen)

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    Jeff Butera

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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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