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9021261258?profile=RESIZE_710xAttending the premiere of I Will Soar at iPic were (l-r) sponsors Joe White and Lee Cohen, Atlantic head coach Jamael Stewart, former head coach T. J. Jackson, team doctor and sponsor Dr. Michael Grasso and coach William Hendrix. Photos provided by Epiphany Photography

 

By Brian Biggane

Many students who attend Atlantic High School in Delray Beach arrive with the proverbial two strikes against them.

Eighty percent of the student population lives at or below the poverty line. Ninety percent of the football players live in one-parent households — and in many cases that parent is actually a grandparent. Drug traffic and crime are accepted as routine in many of the players’ neighborhoods. Teen pregnancy is not uncommon.

Into this environment in 2013 stepped T.J. Jackson as Atlantic head football coach. The remarkable transformation the school — and particularly his team — has made since is the subject of the documentary I Will Soar, which premiered at Delray’s iPic Theater on May 4 and is set for inclusion in a number of international film festivals.

By enlisting city and community leaders and installing a set of rules that demand commitment from his players, Jackson has produced some very different numbers: 90% of his seniors are scheduled to attend college, including a record 14 on football scholarships. Several more will attend on academic scholarships, after meeting his demand of achieving at least a 3.0 average (out of 4.0). The graduation rate was 100%.

“I don’t feel like there’s another coach like Coach T.J.,” said former student Henry Bryant, a heavily recruited defensive tackle who just finished his first semester at Louisville. “He’s such a leader, and has such a big impact on people. Just to be around him, it gives you good energy.”

Jackson was 68-23 during his tenure as head coach before leaving for a college job earlier this year. In the 2019 season spotlighted in the movie, Atlantic reached the state quarterfinals before losing to Fort Lauderdale St. Thomas Aquinas, which in recent years has had the most alumni on NFL rosters of any high school in the country.

Among the community leaders Jackson recruited is Janie Swanko of Gulf Stream, a motivational speaker whose frequent trips to the school prompted her and cinematographer John Sturdy to put together the film after getting the OK from Principal Tara Ocampo. It documents how Jackson transformed the team into a family.

“There’s utter respect among each other, and if they ever let loose, T.J. would never let them on the team,” said Swanko, whose duties have included giving seminars on etiquette and media preparation. “It’s about respect, it’s about discipline, it’s about watching out for your brother.”

Former state Rep. Al Jacquet, who attended Atlantic and participated in both football and wrestling there, becomes emotional during the film when asked about the struggles of inner-city Delray Beach students and about Jackson and Swanko, who help light a better path.

“This is why I even had a political career,” he said. “If it wasn’t for people like that, I wouldn’t have even graduated. I would have been one of those statistics.”

Jackson has since accepted an offer to become an assistant coach at Charleston Southern. Former assistant coach Jamael Stewart will replace him, and there are few doubts the standards will remain high.

 

9021262887?profile=RESIZE_710xJohn Sturdy and Janie Swanko

 

“The principal is still there, the staff is still there,” Swanko said. “We are a well-oiled machine here.”

Ocampo echoed that sentiment, noting that Stewart worked alongside Jackson throughout his tenure.

“My goal in life is don’t fix what’s not broke, and probably the best decision I’ve made for this program is with all my coaching staff,” she said. “Jamael was side-by-side with T.J., making sure this program is as successful as it is. So bringing Jamael in doesn’t mean we’re skipping a beat. Nothing’s changing, and all those core values are still in place and will continue to be in place.”

Swanko said she hoped the movie could serve as a template for how to go about transforming a program with so many challenges into a success, and she has begun getting feedback from other schools and organizations.

Meanwhile, defensive line coach Daniel Studdard, who coached at the college level for 30 years before joining Jackson four years ago, said he understands how outsiders would be skeptical of all Atlantic has accomplished.

“But now that I’m here and see all the hard work, everybody as a whole, including our great principal, it’s wonderful. That’s why we call it a family, because what we do as a whole is special. A lot of kids don’t have this opportunity. So it’s a great thing.”

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On the Water: AAH, SUMMERTIME

9021255891?profile=RESIZE_710xMike Champlin and Ryan Golubovic with a small wahoo Champlin caught off Mar-a-Lago. The wahoo hit a bonito belly strip trolled below the surface behind a planer. Photos by Willie Howard / The Coastal Star

 

Ocean fishing heats up with tournaments, family outings

By Willie Howard

Many South Florida anglers look forward to the warm days of summer — a time to enjoy fishing the ocean with friends and family for catch such as mahi mahi, kingfish, mutton snapper, blackfin tuna and wahoo.

With the onset of long days, hot weather and relatively calm seas come a host of fishing tournaments (see list below), most of them targeting kingfish, dolphin and wahoo.

A few tips to consider when fishing the ocean during the summer:

• Get out early and finish early. Avoid the worst of the heat and the afternoon storms. Wear long sleeves, hats, sunscreen and sunglasses for sun protection. Drink plenty of water.
• Use live bait when possible. Catch it yourself with a cast net, small jig or sabiki rig (depending on the type of bait), or buy it from one of the boats that sell live bait, such as the Dynamite Live Bait boat often found just inside Boynton Inlet.
• If you hook a nice fish, tighten down the drag and move the boat toward the fish to bring it in before the sharks find it. Sharks’ eating hooked fish has become a year-round challenge for anglers fishing the waters off Palm Beach County.
• Fish deeper after the sun warms the water. Use weight, trolling planers or downriggers to get your bait below the surface. Try attaching a 2- or 3-ounce bank sinker to the line about 20 feet up from the bait by looping a No. 16 rubber band over the line and through the bank sinker. When the sinker comes up on the line during the fight, break the rubber band, then continue the fight.
• Look out for other boats. Don’t intrude on another boat’s fishing spot, but if several boats are lined up along the coast a few miles off the beach, chances are they’re drifting or trolling around weed mats for mahi mahi. You should be able to fish the same general area without invading the space of anglers on another boat.

There’s no need to own a boat to fish the ocean.

Try fishing on one of the inexpensive local “drift boats” such as the Lady K based in Lantana, the Living on Island Time in Hypoluxo or the Sea Mist III in Boynton Beach — or find a private charter at marinas such as Boynton Harbor Marina in Boynton Beach, Sportsman’s Park in Lantana or Palm Beach Yacht Center in Hypoluxo.

 

 

Sport lobster season in late July

Florida’s two-day sport lobster season is set for July 28-29.

The daily bag limit is 12 spiny lobster per diver, except in Biscayne National Park and Monroe County (Florida Keys), where the daily limit is six.

Night diving is prohibited in Monroe County during the two-day sport season.

Divers must each have a valid Florida saltwater fishing license and lobster permit, unless exempt.

Lobsters must be measured underwater and landed in whole condition. The lobster’s carapace, or head section, must exceed 3 inches.

No egg-bearing lobster may be harvested. (Look for the orange, spongy mass under the lobster.)

Divers must display diver-down flags from boats and in the water and stay close to their flags.

The regular lobster season opens Aug. 6 and continues through March 31.

For details, go to www.myfwc.com and search for “spiny lobster.”

 

9021259060?profile=RESIZE_710xJorge Nunez holds the 51-inch kingfish he caught in April using a live goggle-eye in 100 feet of water off The Breakers hotel. Fishing action for kingfish, dolphin and wahoo tends to heat up with the water temperatures during June and July.

 

Youth fishing skills program

The West Palm Beach Fishing Club is offering a fishing skills program for youths ages 12-15 who are accompanied by a parent or adult chaperone.

This summer’s SALTY program will be held June 18-19.

To request an application, call the fishing club at 561-832-6780.

 

 

Fishing tournaments

June 5: The West Palm Beach Fishing Club’s KDW Classic, based at Riviera Beach Municipal Marina. Captains meeting and late registration begins at 6 p.m. June 4 at Riviera Beach Municipal Marina. Entry fee $300 per boat. Call 561-832-6780 or visit www.kdwclassic.com.

June 5: Ladies Fish-Off, Alsdorf Park, Pompano Beach. Register at www.ladiesfishoff.com. Awards brunch June 6. Instagram updates at LadiesFishOff.

June 12: Lantana Fishing Derby with weigh-in at the Old Key Lime House restaurant. Captains party set for 6-9 p.m. June 10 at the Lantana Recreation Center. The awards barbecue is 11:30 a.m. June 13 at Lantana Recreation Center. Eligible fish: kingfish, dolphin and wahoo. Entry fee $250 for up to four anglers. Enter at www.LantanaFishingDerby.com.

June 12: Hospice KDW Shootout Charity Fishing Tournament. Captains meeting 5-7:30 p.m. June 10 at Hurricane Bar & Lounge, 640 E. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach. Weigh-in at Palm Beach Yacht Center in Hypoluxo. Entry fee $300 per boat. Call Mike Goodridge at 561-703-1907.

June 12: Saltwater Slam for kingfish, dolphin, wahoo, tuna and cobia. Captains meeting 6 p.m. June 10 at Pompano Beach Civic Center. Weigh-in 4-8 p.m. at Sullivan Park, Deerfield Beach. Awards June 13. Entry fee $475 per boat. 954-725-4010 or www.saltwaterslam.com.

June 19: Lake Worth Fishing Tournament for kingfish, dolphin, wahoo and snapper. Captains meeting 6 p.m. June 17 at Tuppen’s Marine & Tackle in Lake Worth Beach. Weigh-in at Palm Beach Yacht Center in Hypoluxo. Entry fee $175 per boat by June 13 or $250 thereafter. Details and entry form at www.Lakeworthfishingtournament.com.

July 10: Big Dog, Fat Cat KDW Shootout based at Sailfish Marina in Palm Beach Shores. A kickoff party is set for 7 p.m. June 23 at Sailfish Marina. The captains meeting and silent auction begin at 5:30 p.m. July 9. Fishing will be from 6:30 a.m. until 3:30 p.m. July 10. Eligible fish: kingfish, dolphin and wahoo. Enter at www.bigdogfatcat.org.

Aug. 14: Mark Gerretson Memorial Fishing Tournament for kingfish, dolphin, wahoo and a mystery fish. Captains meeting is at 6 p.m. Aug. 12 at Delray Beach Elks Lodge, 265 NE Fourth Ave., Delray Beach.Weigh-in is at Palm Beach Yacht Center in Hypoluxo. Details at www.mgmft.net.

Through Sept. 6: CCA/Florida’s STAR tournament. Prizes include college scholarships for youths and $10,000 for the registered angler who catches the first tagged dolphinfish (mahi mahi).

Prizes awarded for submitting photos of trash collected from the water. Young anglers can get community service hours for removing trash from the water and documenting their work by submitting a photo taken with the STAR measuring device.

Official 2021 STAR measuring devices are available at marine stores such as West Marine in Delray Beach or Tuppen’s Marine & Tackle in Lake Worth Beach.
Entry fee $40 for CCA members or $75 for non-members, including a one-year CCA membership. Register at https://ccaflstar.com or call 844-387-7827.

 

9021259269?profile=RESIZE_710xScott Hart with a mahi mahi (dolphinfish) caught around mats of floating sargassum on a calm summer day. Calm summer seas give anglers the opportunity to run well offshore to search for weed mats and mahi mahi.

 

Tip of the month

With more divers taking to the water during the summer and the two-day sport lobster season set for late July, boaters should be especially careful to watch for red-and-white dive flags displayed on boats and on floats pulled by divers in the water. Boat operators should stay at least 300 feet away from dive flags in open water and at least 100 feet away in inlets, rivers and channels.

 

Willie Howard is a freelance writer and licensed boat captain. Email tiowillie@bellsouth.net.

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9021245254?profile=RESIZE_710xMonsignor Thomas J. Skindeleski marked the 50th anniversary of his ordination to the priesthood in May. He plans to retire as a pastor effective Aug. 31. ABOVE: Skindeleski, 75, leads the blessing of a new addition to St. Vincent Ferrer Catholic School in January. Tim Stepien / The Coastal Star

By Janis Fontaine

On a sunny weekend in May, the Very Rev. Canon Thomas J. Skindeleski of St. Vincent Ferrer Catholic Church in Delray Beach marked the golden anniversary of his ordination as a priest with two celebrations with family and friends from all over the country.

Although he’s been a priest for 50 years, Monsignor Tom, as he’s known among his parishioners, started practicing for the priesthood around age 10 — using Necco wafers candy and tepid tea to give communion to his younger siblings.

“God was speaking to me already,” he said. “I was already in love with the Lord by then.”

When other kids went to lunch, Skindeleski often went to pray. When it came time to make plans for the college, he faced a crossroads. He had a deep passion for architecture, but he said God told him, “There will be time for that. I want you to be a priest.”

It was a choice his parents embraced. His father had considered entering the priesthood as well and liked to joke, “It’s better to raise a priest than be a priest.”

In 1971, at the age of 25, Thomas Skindeleski was ordained at the Cathedral Basilica of Saints Peter and Paul in Philadelphia, by Cardinal John Krol, who died in 1996.

Skindeleski made other sacrifices besides forgoing a life in architecture. A pretty girl he dated got a “Dear Jane, I’m entering the priesthood” letter that Skindeleski still remembers writing. “She wrote me a couple times after, but I never responded. I said goodbye to an old way of living, and my focus was turned to God.”

The many joys in his life have mitigated any sacrifices, Skindeleski says.

“I’ve traveled and seen so much. The great cathedrals in France. I’ve been to Rome dozens of times,” he says.

He treasures his annual spiritual retreat, a week with Trappist monks in the mountains of Massachusetts, where unnecessary talk is discouraged and quiet communion with nature rejuvenates his spirit for another year.

Skindeleski says in his own discouragement, he has found ways to help others face theirs. He tells them that at those times he hears God’s voice saying, “I still love you.” God will always love you, but that doesn’t give you license to live your life without restraint.

“There’s nothing wrong with wealth or power,” he says. “It’s how you use whatever you have that matters. My goal in life has never been wealth or power. It’s been to get to heaven. People today focus on themselves. They say, ‘It’s all about me.’ I say, ‘Say no to me and yes to God.’ Live your lives in readiness to meet God.”

And he can say that to people in six languages (plus English and Latin), having been inspired by his friend and mentor Pope John Paul II. “It enables me to reach out to people in their own language. That’s so important.”

Skindeleski came to St. Vincent Ferrer in 2005 during an embezzlement scandal that shook parishioners’ faith and prompted many to leave the church. St. Vincent has flourished under his kind heart and steady hand.

At the same time, God fulfilled his promise to Skindeleski about his architectural dreams.

Before he came to St. Vincent, Skindeleski served as pastor at Our Lady Queen of the Apostles in Royal Palm Beach, where he oversaw the building of a rectory, parish administration building and a meeting facility. During his tenure at St. Vincent, the school has doubled in size and become a technological powerhouse, among his other achievements.

Skindeleski attributes his success at renewing the parish’s faith and rebuilding the church, literally and figuratively, to his lifelong devotion to prayer.

“All during the day, be prayerful,” he says.

Whether he’s walking, driving, or brushing his teeth, Monsignor Tom is praying. His motto is “ora et labora” — pray and work.

Skindeleski will retire as a pastor on Aug. 31, but “I’ll be very active in different ways,” he says.

In his pastoral message on May 16, Skindeleski wrote: “My true ambition is to be a saint — not necessarily an officially canonized one as those three that I met were — but simply a saint in the sense of spending eternal life with Our Lord in heaven. That has been my real goal in life.”

Of his time at St. Vincent, he says, “There’s never been a dull moment. I’ve never once been bored.”

 

Boca temple increasing focus on mental health

In Boca Raton, B’nai Torah Congregation is putting more focus on mental health support. One facet of the coronavirus with which clergy members are concerned is that people who lost someone were never able to properly grieve the loss. David Steinhart, senior rabbi of B’nai Torah Congregation, is making mental health a priority for his congregation, encouraging people to start and participate in support groups.

Steinhart says not only is it OK to ask for help, it’s OK to look for help beyond spiritual counsel. Churches and synagogues are turning to professionals for extra help, hiring social workers and other mental health practitioners to expand their arsenals.

But the first step is to ask for help. And the best place to start is your place of worship.

 

Janis Fontaine writes about people of faith, their congregations, causes and community events. Contact her at janisfontaine@outlook.com.

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9021184481?profile=RESIZE_710xCameron Price, Arturo Palermo and Siena DeRosa, preschool students at St. Vincent Ferrer Catholic School in Delray Beach, take part in art activities. Photo provided

 

By Janis Fontaine

When their older brothers and sisters return to classes at St. Vincent Ferrer School in Delray Beach, the youngest students will have a place to learn and play, too.

St. Vincent is nearly tripling the size of its preschool programs, adding a full-day program for 3-year-olds to its 4-year-old class, and adding a half-day program for 3- and 4-year-olds who don’t want to commit to a full day of school.

When they’re not playing in their bright, new classrooms, they may be outside on their new playground.

St. Vincent has been investing in children’s education for 65 years. The school recently finished a $6.5 million renovation to accommodate the 360 students attending kindergarten through eighth grade. Now preschoolers are getting the attention and improvements.

Julie O’Brien is the director of early learning for the preschool program but she’s been teaching at the school for 12 years. She said that since Monsignor Thomas Skindeleski arrived in 2005, the school has increased enrollment in the primary school from fewer than 150. And it built a whole new wing of classrooms.

She said Skindeleski also brought in the voluntary pre-K voucher program, and “we are now up to date with technology everywhere.”

At the same time church leaders upgraded the school, “we definitely saw there was a need for more programs for the younger kids,” O’Brien said.

Parents like the convenience of one drop-off place, and those who hope to enroll their children in kindergarten at the school see the pre-K classrooms as a bonus.

And parents who may be paying for day care anyway are getting more academics at St. Vincent and religious education, of course.

“The Catholic faith is at the top of what we do,” O’Brien says. “We use songs, stories and crafts to teach young kids about God.”

Second is children’s social and emotional health, and the school teaches a program called “conscious discipline.” O’Brien says it’s about teachers creating a school family where kids feel safe, loved and cared for, and where they can learn to safely express and handle their emotions. “We do a lot of breathing,” she says, laughing.

The academic instruction comes via a curriculum from Frog Street. “We are a school, not a day care,” O’Brien says.

Much of it is about establishing routines, helping kids adjust to social situations and learn to listen to directions.

And “I love you” rituals are short interactions with the youngest kids to let them know someone is listening to what’s important to them.

The entire school reopened on-campus learning last August, several months into the coronavirus pandemic, after spending about $125,000 on upgrades for personal protection equipment, an air purification system and live-stream tech improvements.

The school follows the guidelines established by the Catholic Diocese and the superintendent of schools.

Parents and students have been very cooperative, making the precautions easier to handle, O’Brien said. Masks will likely still be worn by at least some students and staff when school resumes in the fall, although the leaders don’t expect the coronavirus to affect the new school year as it did the last.

Still, teachers and staff are cautious about declaring victory over the pandemic. Some kids might still be afraid or unsure about safety issues.

“These kids have been victims of trauma,” O’Brien said. “We have to be aware of that.”

 

If you’re interested in finding out more about St. Vincent Ferrer School’s pre-K programs, call Stephanie Lang at 561-278-3868. The school is at 810 George Bush Blvd., in Delray Beach.

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9021181496?profile=RESIZE_710xGabriella (center) with Upbin (left) and NSAL member Marcie Gorman. Photo provided

The National Society of Arts and Letters’ Florida East Coast Chapter showcased the talents of an array of young dancers from South Florida. Judges included Clarence Brooks, Shimon Ito and Colleen Smith. First prize was awarded to Gabriella Garbarini, a 17-year-old student at the Dreyfoos School of the Arts, who will advance to the national competition and vie for a $12,000 prize. ‘This is a very challenging competition, judged on three elements including classwork, classical dance and contemporary dance,’ event Co-Chairwoman Shari Upbin said. ‘Gabriella truly excelled in all categories.’

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By Charles Elmore

Debates about how to grapple with COVID-19’s receding but not extinguished risks are hardly producing lockstep policies among Palm Beach County’s southern coastal communities as they sort through a dizzying flurry of federal, state and local attempts to shape the rules.


But thanks to a rising tide of vaccinations along the coast, a lot of things in June will look closer to normal than they have since the worst pandemic in a century hit with full force more than a year ago.


In June, Boca Raton’s City Council plans to return to meeting in person, though in the larger 6500 Municipal Building on Congress Avenue rather than City Hall. Council member Yvette Drucker, for one, won’t miss the “audio issues” and other glitches common to virtual gatherings.


“I am ready to go back,” Drucker said.


Mask mandates are being peeled away for people who have been vaccinated, in many public spaces and some but not all businesses — even if in practice that often means taking people at their word. Driving much of the change in the past five weeks, and not always without controversy, have been U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidance and Gov. Ron DeSantis’ executive actions that sought to eliminate or restrict what safety rules local governments can impose.


Health officials cheered falling infection rates but warned the threat has not entirely vanished just because a lot of folks are ready to move on.


Less than half of Palm Beach County’s 1.5 million residents had received full or partial COVID-19 vaccinations by May 24, according to the state’s Department of Health.


County health director Alina Alonso noted county vaccination rates fell short of “herd immunity” — typically meaning at least 70% to 80% — and that children under 12, for example, have not generally had access to vaccines. She urged people to wear masks even after vaccination. Direct hospitalization and death are not the only COVID-19 threats for some age groups, with the long-term effects of the virus still under study, she said.


“We still have to be careful,” Alonso said. “We don’t want to slip and go backwards.”

 

High vaccine rates on coast

Still, many communities along the county’s southeast coast have been getting shots at a rate above the county average, with ZIP codes in the region often achieving 55% to 85% vaccination rates by the end of April, government records showed. With May results expected to drive rates higher, some local officials saw encouragement to take action.


As of June 1, Delray Beach said it would return to in-person City Commission and board meetings without temperature checks for the public. Anyone entering a municipal facility will be asked to wear a mask if he or she has not been fully vaccinated, city policy says.


“Public meetings are a vital part of our representative government,” Mayor Shelly Petrolia said. “In-person meetings allow for a human connection and clarity of communication with those we represent.”


Meetings still are streamed live online, but the city’s pre-recorded public comment line will no longer be used. People who want to comment must do so in person.


Boca Raton was ready to ditch virtual meetings May 10, though officials put off enactment until June to allow more time for affected staff members to make sure they got second COVID shots.


Manalapan was one of the first coastal communities to go exclusively to Zoom meetings after the pandemic started, and it was one of the first to quit Zooming and resume in-person meetings late last year. During a Town Commission meeting on May 25, it was one of the first to relax mask and distancing restrictions.


 “If you’re fully vaccinated, you don’t need to wear a mask,” Town Manager Linda Stumpf said. “We’re following county health department and CDC requirements.”


 Public access for commission meetings increased from six open seats to 15. But Stumpf said Town Hall will continue to be closed for other business until October, with contractors and vendors entering by appointment only.


 “When the season starts and people start coming back, we’ll open it up,” she said.

 

Businesses ease protocols

Towns and cities are not the only ones making changes.


Publix, Walmart, Costco, Starbucks and Trader Joe’s joined the list of retailers that removed mask mandates for customers who have been vaccinated. 


Publix “will no longer require fully vaccinated associates or customers to wear face coverings, unless required by a state or local order or ordinance,” a company statement said May 14. “In accordance with CDC guidelines, individuals who are not fully vaccinated are required to use face coverings over their noses and mouths while inside any Publix store.”


Fully vaccinated, according to the CDC, means two weeks after a one-shot vaccine or the second jab of a two-shot vaccine. 


Early in May, DeSantis made permanent a ban on vaccine “passports,” meaning businesses cannot require proof of vaccination from customers, though they can continue to require masks and distancing if they choose. 


Not all movie theaters survived the pandemic, and those that did have reopened under varying schedules and precautions designed to reassure customers. As of late May, Cinemark Palace 20 and XD in Boca Raton, for example, continued to require people to wear masks except when eating or drinking inside the auditorium, according to its website. Reduced theater capacities and staggered show times were still in effect.


DeSantis also signed an executive order suspending COVID-19 restrictions imposed by city and county governments, which Miami Beach Mayor Dan Gelber likened to “spiking the ball on the 10-yard line.”

 

Municipalities use caution

Despite the unease, mask mandates have ended in many local government settings.


By May 18, masks were no longer required in county government buildings for people who have received shots.


Ocean Ridge still requires people to wear face coverings in Town Hall, unless they are seated and properly distanced from others, Town Manager Tracey Stevens said. 


“As you know, we have a very limited staff and still need to take precautions for those employees that are not vaccinated,” Stevens said. “It would be devastating to our operations if several employees became sick at once.”


Lantana officials said they were following the governor’s orders and CDC guidelines. 


Most people who attended the May 24 Town Council meeting did not wear masks, although town staff did. Chairs were still set 6 feet apart in the council chambers.


The town’s Centennial Celebration at Bicentennial Park is on track for July 4 and social distancing will be adhered to for children’s games. All activities will be outside and masks will not be required.


Highland Beach has been holding commission meetings in person for several months but limiting public attendance while Town Hall was otherwise closed to the public.


Starting June 1, Town Hall was open again during regular business hours, with masks “strongly encouraged.”  Zoom participation will continue for public meetings. The town post office and library are open again with regular hours but with restrictions on the number of people allowed inside at any given time, with masks encouraged.


Boynton Beach began holding commission meetings in its chambers in January. The chairs in the chambers are set up for social distancing, but face masks and temperature checks are not required.

 

Signs vaccines are working

More than 585,000 of Palm Beach County’s residents had received a full vaccination by May 24, with another 140,000 getting at least a first shot, state records showed. 


While that represented only about half of the county’s total residents, the highest proportion of shots has been going to the most vulnerable age group, people 65 and over.


Coronavirus infections and hospitalizations have been falling, while positive results for people getting tested for COVID-19 were dipping below 6% by the middle of May. That was down from nearly 30% in the most virulent phases of the pandemic in 2020.


Vaccinations are clearly having an impact on infection rates, Alonso said, but that does not mean all risks have disappeared. On May 24, more than 2,400 Floridians were still hospitalized with the virus and 53 new cases and eight deaths were reported in the county.


“If you’re not vaccinated, masks are still recommended,” Alonso said. With family members she cares about vulnerable to infection, she said even after vaccination she plans to wear her mask for some time to come.

 

Mary Hladky, Dan Moffett, Jane Smith and Mary Thurwachter contributed to this story.

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9021174870?profile=RESIZE_710xManhar Dhanak, Ph.D., stands with a device that helps test the effectiveness of types of personal protection measures against airborne viral transmission. Photo provided

 

By Christine Davis

Researchers from Florida Atlantic University’s College of Engineering and Computer Science received a two-year $698,801 grant from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to test the effectiveness of types of personal protection measures against airborne viral transmission.

Building on their prior research, the project will result in strategies for mitigating airborne transmission of aerosolized droplets for a safe workplace environment.

“Employers are considering various protective measures in the workplace such as face masks, placing safety barriers in offices and at workstations, reviewing ventilation/air conditioning systems in buildings, redesigning interior spaces as well as arranging safe queuing procedures at checkouts and other high-density environments,” said Manhar Dhanak, Ph.D., the principal investigator. He is chair of FAU’s Department of Ocean and Mechanical Engineering, and professor and director of SeaTech.

“With this CDC grant, we will conduct experimental simulation studies that will result in observations and analyses in support of social distancing and other preventative measures for mitigating airborne transmission of viral infections, which will be of particular interest to businesses, schools and the general public.”

The Palm Beach County Medical Society Services honored recipients of its 18th annual Heroes in Medicine awards at a virtual event in May.

Ankush Bansal, MD, Cleveland Clinic Martin Health, received the Physician Hero award. Alicia Rootes, interim director for diversity and inclusion, FAU Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine, received the Bruce Rendina Professional Hero award. Rootes manages the university’s health care careers outreach program, which provides middle and high school students from diverse backgrounds the opportunity to enter health care fields.

During National Hospital and Health Care Week, May 9-15, Tenet Palm Beach Health Network hospitals showed appreciation to people who work in hospitals. 

This year’s theme, “Inspiring Hope through Healing,” recognized the hope that health care workers provide despite the pandemic and acknowledged their efforts. 
For National Nurses Week, May 6-12, Tenet recognized the critical role nurses perform in its hospitals. Tenet also celebrated National Emergency Medical Services Week, May 16-22. This year’s theme was “This is EMS Caring for our Communities.”
Delray Medical Center is one of Tenet’s hospitals.

In honor of National Nurses Week, Palm Health Foundation and the Community Foundation for Palm Beach and Martin Counties launched a “Thank Our Healers” program, offering complimentary admission to Palm Beach County nurses and their guests at John D. MacArthur Beach State Park, the South Florida Science Center and Aquarium, and the Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens.

In April, Marcus Neuroscience Institute at Boca Raton Regional Hospital earned the Gold Seal of Approval for Spinal Surgery Certification from the Joint Commission, a national independent accreditation organization.

Physicians at the institute’s Phillip & Peggy DeZwirek Center for Spinal Disorders & Back Pain perform more than 1,500 procedures annually. The center’s approach includes pain management, neuro and ortho-spine surgery, and physical therapy.

In May, Delray Medical Center achieved a Healthgrades Patient Safety Excellence Award for the fourth year in a row. This distinction places Delray Medical Center among the top 5% of short-term acute care hospitals reporting patient safety data as evaluated by Healthgrades.

 

Send health news to Christine Davis at cdavis9797@gmail.com.

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9021169664?profile=RESIZE_710xResidents of the Carlisle Palm Beach and other car enthusiasts look at vehicles brought to the inaugural Carlisle Classic Auto Show. Proceeds will go toward the Alzheimer’s Association’s ‘Longest Day’ fundraiser on June 21. Photos by Tim Stepien/The Coastal Star

 

By Rich Pollack

It’s not every day that you discover a 1936 Auburn Boattail Speedster parked in front of a South Florida senior living community.

On May 15, however, there one sat — a rare collector’s dream car on display at the Carlisle Palm Beach in Lantana. It was part of a fundraiser to support the Alzheimer’s Association’s “Longest Day” event.

Owned by Hypoluxo Island’s Joshua Kobrin and his father, David, the Auburn Speedster — sometimes referred to by onlookers as the “Cruella de Vil car” — was one of the stars of the Carlisle Classic Auto Show.

Not far away sat a 1965 Rolls Royce Silver Cloud III that owner Mel Kantor of Boynton Beach says draws a lot of attention when he takes it for a spin on weekends. “It’s a real head turner,” he said.

What makes the car special?

“It’s the end of an era,” Kantor said, explaining that after 11 years the Silver Cloud was replaced by the Silver Shadow. “I love the styling.”

Also nearby was a 1957 Ford Thunderbird — one of the first generation of T-Birds — owned and displayed by Kobrin’s father.

“My dad always had a classic car in the garage and I guess I followed in his footsteps — or his gas pedal foot,” Joshua Kobrin said.

In all, about 40 classic cars were on display in the Carlisle’s front parking lot during the fundraiser, ranging from a Model A Ford and 1955 MG to a 1963 Buick Riviera and even a new Tesla.

 

9021172268?profile=RESIZE_710xCars at the show included a 1936 Auburn Boattail Speedster owned by Joshua Kobrin and his father, David.

 

Adding to the special atmosphere — attended by many of the Carlisle’s 240 residents — was entertainment provided by an Elvis impersonator. Also available were food, vendors providing health services, and even ice cream from an old-style Good Humor Ice Cream truck.

Organized by Steve Saffer of Cruise Boca, the show drew a group of classic car owners who not only enjoy getting together to display their classics but are happy to be part of an event that benefits a charity.

“It’s a win-win,” Saffer said.

Money raised from the event will be donated to the Alzheimer’s Association “Longest Day” event. The fundraiser is held every June 21 with participants from across the world holding events and activities that raise awareness and support the fight against Alzheimer’s.

The car show was a first for the Carlisle, according to Executive Director Richard Tournesy, who said past fundraisers for Alzheimer’s included an art auction and raffles with residents.

Supporting the fight against Alzheimer’s, Tournesy said, is a good match for the Carlisle, which has a 67-bed memory care unit.

“We know what families go through,” he said. “We see it every day and we want to make sure we contribute.”

The show turned out to be an ideal way to do just that, with residents and family members taking part and members of the Carlisle staff going to work to help stage the event.

Tournesy said he is looking forward to hosting a car show again next year.

“It is well supported by our community,” he said.

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So long, Hand’s

9021146695?profile=RESIZE_710xDavid Cook, owner of Hand’s in downtown Delray Beach, plans to close the store and retire in June. Cook, 58, sold the property after his family had owned the business since 1964. It first opened in 1934 as a bookstore. Tim Stepien/The Coastal Star

 

Owner recalls how business changed with times and became a landmark

 

By Mary Thurwachter

 The colorful plastic hand-shaped chairs no longer grace the sidewalk in front of the Delray Beach office supply shop known as Hand’s. Owner David Cook took the last one home several weeks ago, a memento of a business that has called 325 E. Atlantic Ave. its home for 87 years and has been under his family’s reign since 1964.

By Father’s Day, Hand’s, one of downtown Delray’s oldest businesses, will close. The only remaining business on the avenue older than Hand’s is the Colony Hotel, which dates back to 1926.

Cook sold hundreds of those kitschy plastic hand chairs over the years until UPS stopped shipping them.

“They used to be delivered with a label on the finger, often on the second finger,” Cook said with a laugh. “Kids loved them. There were more pictures taken in those chairs than you can imagine. Not everybody put together that Hand’s was the name of the store.”

The amiable retailer, whose father, Lonnie Cook Jr., ran the business before him, admits revenues dipped about 30% during 2020, but he isn’t calling the store closing a coronavirus casualty.

“It’s more just the right time in everybody’s life that’s involved,” said Cook, 58. His wife, Renee, has been working in the store’s accounting department for the past 10 years and his two grown daughters already have good jobs they enjoy, he said.

 

9021153883?profile=RESIZE_710xLonnie Cook Jr., David’s father, added the Spanish-style front in 1974. Photo provided by Delray Beach Historical Society

 

How it all began

The store’s history begins with Lauren Hand, editor of the now defunct Delray Beach News. He founded the Delray Book Shop in 1934. Locals called it Hand’s, and since the name stuck, the shop officially changed its name to Hand’s Office Supply.

Hand saw a need for a local office supply store, since he previously had to travel to West Palm Beach to buy his supplies for the newspaper.

In 1964, Hand sold the business to Lonnie Cook Jr., whose father was a longtime friend and Delray Beach’s first paid fire chief.

Lonnie Jr. died in 2012 and his son, David, then assumed ownership, although he had been assisting his dad in managing the store for several years before. David and his sister, Connie, were regulars at Hand’s even as children.

“I remember coming in the store with my dad when I was about 4,” Cook said. “We were always dragged along.

“We’d play in the store and build little forts out of boxes. We’d just be hanging around doing our thing, pretending we were helping, but obviously we weren’t.”

David became a full-time employee at Hand’s when he was 26 and distinguished himself as a savvy businessman.

But it wasn’t easy.

 

9021161676?profile=RESIZE_710xA 1970s view of Atlantic Avenue looking east in downtown Delray Beach, with Hand’s and its orange sign at center left. Photos provided by Delray Beach Historical Society

 

Rise of big box stores

In the early years of the Cook family’s ownership, Hand’s was the place to go for office supplies.

Bill Bathurst, a former city commissioner who worked at Hand’s during high school and junior college, said, “Hand’s was Office Depot before there was an Office Depot.”

Bathurst and other employees drove vans that had 6-foot pencils on top. “We’d deliver everything from a pad of paper to a 900-pound fireproof safe,” Bathurst recalled. “The cool part of the job for me was I knew the back door to every office from Boynton to Boca. You just knew everybody and everybody knew you. You’d pop in and pop out. It was almost like a pizza delivery guy. We’d make 30-40 deliveries a day. That’s the way everybody got their office supplies.”

 

9021164477?profile=RESIZE_710xHand’s vans with the pencils on top were ubiquitous.

 

By the late 1980s, the real Office Depot came to Delray and had its headquarters in Boca Raton.

“We lost about half of our customers,” Cook said. “Of course, their stuff was cheap. That was a game changer. That’s when we diversified way more into gifts.”

It wasn’t just office supply stores. Chain bookstores including Books-a-Million and Barnes & Noble moved into the community in the 1990s. That hurt Hand’s business, as well.
Hand’s always sold books, but fewer of them after that. Customers could always find specialty books in the store as well as books by local authors like artist Winston Aarons.
Aarons’ novel Jasmine — about love, sex, obsession and perfume — found a prominent place on the bookshelves at Hand’s, for which the artist and author remains grateful.

Aarons has been buying art supplies at Hand’s for decades and is sad to see it go.

“I’m going to miss that place,” he said. “It was the last vestige of a real hometown. It was just great because I live close by and could get there in a quick drive and parking was easy in the back of the store.

“And the owner, David, what a lovely man! I’m going to miss him and all of them and the place. I’ll have to go all the way to Deerfield to get my paint supplies now — or Amazon.”

Bathurst said the real memories for him were working with the people. “It was the office supply store of the time but it was more like a homey drugstore. Nobody would go through Delray without taking a walk through Hand’s. You’d always see somebody you knew. It was not exactly Cheers bar, but had that kind of feel.”

 

Other notable times

When the city tackled what it called “the Renaissance of Delray” in the 1990s during “the Decade of Excellence,” Atlantic Avenue was torn up in the process, Cook said.

“They redid all the sewer and parking lots and added fresh landscaping. They redid all the piping and drainage. We weren’t shut down; you just couldn’t get here for six months.

“But that’s really when Delray kind of turned around. That’s when the restaurants started putting seating outside and bands performed on the corner and we’d close the street and have our entertainment at night and everybody would come back downtown.”

What Cook objected to — and fought against for a decade — was the addition of parking meters in 2017.

“We had experts come in from all around the country,” Cook said. “The city followed absolutely zero of all the experts’ advice.”

Shoppers didn’t like the meters.

“It alienated the locals,” said Cook, who was on the city board for the parking master plan. “I just never saw some people again. If they came in, they were mad. They’d complain. It absolutely hurt me. I would say it took 25% off my business.”

On a brighter note, Cook says he will never forget the Beanie Baby boom of the 1990s.

“People were in line wrapped around the building waiting to buy them,” Cook said. “We already had an account with Ty, so when they got hot, we were ready to go.”
In a single day, Hand’s once sold $60,000 worth of the stuffed toys.

“I’ve never seen anything sell like a Beanie Baby,” Cook said.

 

9021165681?profile=RESIZE_710xHand’s owner David Cook with his dad, Lonnie Cook Jr., who bought the store in 1964. Lonnie died in 2012.

 

Navigating a pandemic

In March 2020, when nonessential businesses were closed in an effort to stop the spread of the coronavirus, Hand’s found ways to stay in business, selling office supplies and janitorial products.

“It was a different kind of market,” Cook said. “I had paper towels, gloves, soaps and hand sanitizer and I sold a lot of toilet paper. The masks weren’t the thing at first, but we had them when they were.”

It was a good year for board games and jigsaw puzzles.

“We would put every puzzle we had in the window with a number and a sign out there to call, email or something and tell us what puzzle you wanted,” Cook said.

“We weren’t letting people in. We’d get their credit card through a little door, ring them up and give them their product. Same with art supplies. You would just email a list and we would prepare the order and they would drive up and honk and we would bring it out to their car.”

 

Pivot master

No matter what obstacle came his way, Cook found a way forward.

“To run a business for that long and have it be successful, is not easy,” Bathurst said of his friend and former employer. “So many places go out of business. And to pivot and pivot and pivot into things that would be sellable but keeping the core heart of the store alive, is something.”

The inventory grew over the years to be more than books and office and art supplies. It included a Hallmark store, casino-caliber playing cards for the serious bridge players, toys, board games, souvenirs and collectibles like Blackwing pencils.

The new property owner, developer Steve Cohen, paid $11.5 million for the 11,382-square-foot building, according to court records.

He plans to give the structure a complete remodel with new plumbing, wiring and roof. Cohen plans to divide the building — including space formerly home to Vince Canning Shoes, which shuttered last summer after 68 years — into five retail spaces.

As for David Cook, he promises not to be a stranger.

“I’m not buying a boat and sailing away,” he said. “I’ll be around.”

His souvenir hand-shaped chair is blue, but Cook isn’t. A self-described people person, he says he will miss the interaction with customers and staff, but said it is the right time to close this chapter of his life.

“We always had our niche. We survived a lot and really the reason we’re selling is, it’s time to retire. … And Delray’s still very popular.”

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By Amy Woods

The overwhelming need for food as a result of the pandemic and its economic toll has prompted Boca Helping Hands to expand its presence in Boynton Beach.

The organization that has served Boca Raton’s neediest residents for decades now will offer Boynton Beach residents emergency financial assistance to help pay for rent, utilities and child care through the Boca Helping Hands Resource Center, previously limited to Boca residents.

Boca Helping Hands also has expanded food distribution in Boynton Beach to five days a week, up from four. The additional drive-thru distribution takes place from 1 to 2:30 p.m. Wednesdays at St. John Missionary Baptist Church.

Boca Helping Hands already distributes 1,500 pantry bags of food each month at First Baptist Church of Boynton Beach, where hours are 10 a.m. to noon the other four weekdays.

For more information, call 561-417-0913 or visit www.bocahelpinghands.org.

 

Grants aid Palm Beach County children in need

Local children’s charities received $280,000 in grants from the Children’s Foundation of Palm Beach County through its “Partnership” initiative.

Specifically, five charities received $50,000 grants, and an additional six charities received grants of $5,000.

“The program will provide thousands of children and families with meals, therapy, computers, school supplies, education and a bed on which to sleep,” said Pamela Weinroth, the foundation’s executive director.

The “Partnership” initiative is an annual program that invites philanthropists and organizations to purchase “shares” for $500. Each share represents one vote. Established earlier this year, the foundation is an affiliate of Boca West Children’s Foundation, which has granted more than $11.5 million to nonprofits in its 11-year history.

For more information, call 561-488-6980 or visit https://childrensfoundationpbc.org.

 

Y receives funding for swimming lessons

The USA Swimming Foundation selected the YMCA of South Palm Beach County as a grant recipient this year.

Funding will go toward the Y’s Drowning Prevention Program, with its mission to provide free or reduced-cost swimming lessons to youths.

“While we cannot change our environment, we can remove its biggest threat,” said Libby Moon, the Drowning Prevention Program coordinator, noting that drowning is the No. 1 cause of death for children ages 5 and younger countywide. “We are so happy to have been given the opportunity to teach more children about water safety as well as their families how to be safe around water.”

For more information, call 561-237-0950 or visit www.ymcaspbc.org.

 

Food Bank fills two key leadership positions

Jamie Kendall is the new CEO at the Palm Beach County Food Bank, and Ellen Vaughan is the new director of development and philanthropy.

The two assume their roles at a time of exciting activity — the organization’s recent move to a warehouse and distribution facility in Lake Worth.

“Thanks to experienced and committed interim leadership, the Palm Beach County Food Bank is well-poised to continue to meet the unprecedented food-insecurity needs that COVID-19 has created in our community,” board Chairwoman Marti LaTour said. “With the addition of Jamie and Ellen, we add great depth of knowledge to our leadership team.”

For more information, call 561-670-2518 or visit www.pbcfoodbank.org.

 

FoundCare’s board welcomes 3 new trustees

FoundCare, a local nonprofit federally qualified health center, has added three members to its board of trustees.

Stephanie Carden, Miron Ebanks and Marcia Howard have varied backgrounds that bring new talents to their roles.

“My favorite part of my job was representing and advocating for individuals with HIV/AIDS, so FoundCare was a natural fit for me as they pioneered HIV/AIDS services with the Comprehensive AIDS Program,” said Carden, who previously worked as a staff attorney at the Legal Aid Society of Palm Beach County.

“No one should feel that they cannot afford to go to the doctor or get medical treatment, and I do not think there should be barriers to health care.”

Added Ebanks, CEO of Merricare Community Integrated Services, “I am passionate about providing services to underserved communities that are impacted by mental health crises, substance abuse and developmental disabilities.

“I am excited about serving on FoundCare’s board to make a difference in the lives of the most vulnerable in our community and bring leadership through compassion and care.”
Howard is assistant controller at Palm Beach Atlantic University and was FoundCare’s chief financial officer from 2006 to 2014.

“The organization delivers services with care and compassion, and that aligns with my values,” she said.

FoundCare is based in Palm Springs but has facilities throughout the county.

For more information, call 561-432-5849 or visit www.foundcare.org.

 

Housing advocate named to Adopt-A-Family board

The supervising attorney for the Legal Aid Society of Palm Beach County’s Fair Housing Project recently joined the Adopt-A-Family of the Palm Beaches board.

Tequisha Myles, who served on the board from 2006 to 2013 as secretary, vice president and president, brings a knowledge of and commitment to equitable access for affordable housing.

“Tequisha’s role with Legal Aid is one that fits seamlessly with the work we do at Adopt-A-Family,” CEO Matthew Constantine said. “She understands that stable housing is a fundamental and basic need. We are excited to welcome her back to our team, standing up for those in our community who need us most.”

For more information, call 561-253-1361 or visit www.adoptafamilypbc.org.

 

New head selected for Habitat for Humanity

Habitat for Humanity of South Palm Beach County has hired 20-year nonprofit professional Jennifer Thomason as the branch’s new president and CEO.

Thomason will replace Randy Nobles, who is retiring this summer.

“We are confident that her leadership will take our affiliate to new levels and springboard off what has been successfully built under Randy Nobles’ tenure,” board Chairwoman Brittney Kocaj said.

More than 50 applicants were in the running for the job.

For more information, call 561-819-6070 or visit www.habitatsouthpalmbeach.org.

 

Janis Fontaine contributed to this column.

Send news and notes to Amy Woods at flamywoods@bellsouth.net.

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9021133053?profile=RESIZE_710xKathy Adkins, president of Impact 100 Palm Beach County, and Holly Schuttler, president-elect. Photo provided by Warner-Prokos Photography

For the first time in Impact 100 Palm Beach County's history, the organization awarded six $100,000 grants and four $13,000 grants to South County nonprofits. The $100,000 grants went to Boys & Girls Clubs of Palm Beach County, Coastal Conservation Association Florida, Help Our Wounded Foundation, Milagro Center, Tri-County Animal Rescue, and Schoolhouse Children’s Museum & Learning Center. The $13,000 grants went to Florence Fuller Child Development Centers, Pathways to Prosperity, PROPEL (People Reaching Out to Provide Education & Leadership), and Spady Cultural Heritage Museum.

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9021124463?profile=RESIZE_710xPlayers who plan to take part in Literacy Links include (l-r) Amy Brewer, Leanne Adair, Brenda Medore and Ginny Barbary. Photo provided

 

By Amy Woods

The CEO of the Literacy Coalition of Palm Beach County is hopeful that, following a challenging year of postponed and canceled events, its annual golf tournament will be a success.

Literacy Links is scheduled for June 11 at Palm Beach Par 3 Golf Course. It usually takes place in April.

“We’re going to miss a few people, but we’re still going to have it,” Kristin Calder said. “We have a good response so far.”

The tournament drew 50 players last year and raised $35,000. It was moved to November because of the pandemic.

“The important part of all this is adaptation,” Calder said. “People love this event, so we wanted to have it.”

Proceeds will provide adults and children in need with links to literacy programs that will help them succeed in school and life.

One of those programs is Building Better Readers, targeting third-grade students who read below their level. Hundreds of volunteers are recruited and trained to be reading tutors and then dispatched to homes and schools.

Another program is Literacy AmeriCorps, through which college graduates serve as reading tutors for adult learners and at-risk youths.

Another beneficiary will be the Glades Family Education program, which serves the Belle Glade, Pahokee and South Bay area. It offers adult literacy, children’s literacy, monthly parenting-skills workshops and weekly Parent and Child Together activities.

“It really serves that community well in terms of tutoring and reading,” tournament Chairwoman Nancy Vera said. “I firmly believe it needs to start at a young age — the love of books. I know that was one of my favorite times with my kids, that hour or two before bed reading.

“Reading is dear to my heart, so it’s something that’s important to me,” Vera said. “I feel what we do as an organization is important for our community.”

 

If You Go
What: Literacy Links golf tournament
Time: Registration 7:30 a.m., shotgun start 8:30 a.m.
Date: June 11
Where: Palm Beach Par 3 Golf Course
Cost: $200 per person, $700 per foursome
Information: 561-279-9103 or www.literacypbc.org

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9021122069?profile=RESIZE_710x(l-r) Polly Joa, Susan Lissner Weege, Sallie Howell, Carol Coleman, Cody, Mickey Austin Farley and Zoanne Hennigan. Photo provided


The Ocean Ridge Garden Club’s season wrapped up with the installation of 2021-22 officers and recognition of those who made the best out of a challenging year. Officers were sworn in by the Florida Federation of Garden Clubs district director and given musical-themed miniatures. The luncheon at last enabled members to see each other face-to-face and was organized by club President Mary Ann Cody.

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9021119464?profile=RESIZE_710x(l-r) Florida State Attorney Dave Aronberg, U.S. Rep Brian Mast (R-Fla.), U.S. Rep Lois Frankel (D-Fla.), Tri-County Animal Rescue President Suzi Goldsmith, Pope, former Congresswoman Donna Shalala, American Humane CEO Robin Ganzert, Weishel and Palm Beach County Commissioner Robert Weinroth.
Photo provided by Capehart

There are an estimated 2,700 dogs actively serving in the U.S. military and another 700 deployed overseas. But for the most part, the courageous canines have not been given credit for their heroic acts on and off the battlefield. So philanthropist Lois Pope, in partnership with American Humane, dedicated the American Military Hero Dog Monument. The monument was designed by sculptor Austin Weishel, who said it honors ‘the everlasting and unbreakable bond between canines and the valiant warriors of our armed forces.’

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9021115499?profile=RESIZE_710xEric Viner and Niki Knopf with event sponsors Eda and Cliff Viner. Photo provided

Men who make outstanding impacts on the community through their philanthropic efforts were honored at Florence Fuller Child Development Centers’ 19th annual event. This year, a total of 20 male volunteers enjoyed an outdoor movie-style festivity with music and food trucks. ‘After the challenging year we’ve all had, the work of volunteers was more important than ever,’ said Ellyn Okrent, Fuller’s CEO. ‘It was a great pleasure to recognize the outstanding honorees and nominees.’

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9021109483?profile=RESIZE_710xSuzanne Klein, Beau and Edna Meyer-Nelson.

9021110290?profile=RESIZE_710xMercedes Casanova Mottek, Scott and Batmasian. Photos provided

More than 125 pooch-loving advocates filled the outdoor courtyard for an inaugural event that raised money for Tri-County Animal Rescue, specifically for subsidizing veterinary care, surgeries, X-rays, dental procedures and other medical needs. Honorees included Marta Batmasian, Andrea Kline and Constance Scott. ‘TCAR believes that all pets should remain healthy in their homes, not forced to neglect treatable medical and dental issues that can escalate out of control, causing unnecessary pain and loss or even surrendered to shelters due to lack of funds,’ board Chairwoman Sharon DiPietro said.

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9021106082?profile=RESIZE_710xPatricia Ramudo and Andrea Virgin get ready to install drywall. Photo provided

Habitat for Humanity South Palm Beach County’s female-centric fundraiser brought in more than $225,000 thanks to 150-plus volunteers who wielded hammers and other tools to put roofs over the heads of people in need. ‘It is so gratifying and inspiring each year to witness the power of mission-driven women, stepping out of their comfort zones and rolling up their sleeves to make a profound, indelible impact on one family for generations to come,’ said sponsor Tom Moraca, of Moraca Builders.

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9021102878?profile=RESIZE_400xLt. Austin J. Haynie, Navy pilot, has returned from a seven-month deployment on the USS Theodore Roosevelt, aircraft carrier 71. Austin joins his grandfather Neil Haynie, trading in his military F18 Super Hornet to fly grandpa’s Piper to Fort Myers. Twenty-five years ago he rode in the baggage compartment. Austin, 28, is a fourth-generation pilot, and Neil credits Austin’s ability to his superior training. Photo provided

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By Jane Smith

Delray Beach will immediately notify affected customers of any reclaimed water issues following a critical review from the county Office of Inspector General.
Also as a result of the report, released May 6, the city will educate customers about what reclaimed water is and its allowed use being only for lawn irrigation.
In addition, the Utilities Department started documenting all customer complaints or inquiries and tracking them in the city’s computerized maintenance management system. Utilities staff will be trained in the proper documentation and inspection reports required by the regulating agencies over reclaimed water.
Interim City Manager Jennifer Alvarez defended the city from the inspector general's broad criticism of upper management and elected officials knowing about illnesses stemming from reclaimed water on the barrier island in December 2018.
While a since-retired water and sewer manager might have known about the illnesses, there is no evidence that he told the utilities director, Alvarez wrote in a response included in the OIG report.
The Office of Inspector General became involved last August at the request of the Palm Beach County office of the Florida Department of Health. Health officials were "concerned that city staff and/or elected officials concealed and/or misrepresented their knowledge," according to the OIG report.
The Health Department began investigating the Delray Beach reclaimed water system in January 2020 but could only issue civil fines. The OIG can forward its results to the State Attorney’s Office for criminal prosecution.
The OIG investigated what the city staff knew about the illnesses and whether they were reported to the department as required. "During our investigation, (the OIG) was unable to determine whether the reported illness was actually caused by the citys drinking water," according to the report.
But an unnamed city staffer identified in the report as a whistleblower submitted a lengthy rebuttal to the OIG findings.
The staffer talks about a March 2019 meeting convened to discuss illnesses from the crossed connection found in December 2018. A crossed connection occurs when reclaimed water pipes are mistakenly connected to ones for drinking water. Reclaimed water is highly treated wastewater suitable only for lawn irrigation.
At the meeting various department heads, a former assistant city manager and the project consultants representative determined no more action was needed without medical or hospital records connecting the illnesses to the reclaimed water, according to Public Utility Management Services Inc., a firm the city hired in 2020 to independently review the system.
However, the whistleblower's rebuttal said, "It was not the city's job to determine this but to report it (to the Health Department)."
The whistleblower also alleges the city destroyed paper call logbooks from late 2018. A barrier island resident called to say his family became ill and he thought it was from drinking tap water. The operator on duty notified the then-water and sewer manager who said he would handle it, according to the whistleblower.
When The Coastal Star made a records request for the logs, Utilities Department leaders asked the whistleblower for a copy of them on Nov. 26 because "the documents were thrown out-- this was openly discussed," the rebuttal said. The city staffer told them they were required to report the lost records and later turned over a copy on Nov. 30.

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Even the most visionary and creative individuals build on what came before. They construct new ideas from their surroundings, often using knowledge gained from their own experiences.
The most brilliant minds plotting out the future of the world understand that lurking around the edges of any “big idea” is the framework of history.
That is why The Coastal Star plans to use the coming months to tell the tales of times and places gone by in our community. It’s always been part of our mission as a newspaper to share stories of our past to help guide our future.
As our elected officials spend the summer months budgeting for the challenges that come with aging infrastructure and rising seas, it seems like a good time to remember what came before.
History is a relative term in South Florida — Ocean Ridge and Manalapan are turning 90, Lantana will hit 100 come July. Mere infants compared to Boston or London or Paris.
Still, middle age presents its challenges with leaky pipes and cracked foundations.
It’s a good life along the coast, but it can be a hard one. Not all of our history is pleasant to recall.
So as our cities and towns budget for improvements that will carry us all forward for the years ahead, this newspaper hopes to spend the summer bringing our readers remembrances of our past.
We hope you’ll like reading these stories as much as we enjoy talking with historians and archivists and all the people who still remember the days gone by. And we hope learning about our past will give us all a foundation on which to build a framework for the enduring future of our community.
If you are heading north for the summer, you can stay informed by mailing in a $25 check and the subscription form found on page 23 in the Around Town section of this paper. You can also read each edition online at www.thecoastalstar.com. Membership is free.
— Mary Kate Leming, Editor

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