Summer Book Bus Delivers Thousands of Free Books across Pinellas County

The Summer Book Bus is on the road in Pinellas County, working to combat learning loss through free books.

The bus makes an average of 70 stops across the county every summer and gives away nearly 10,000 free books in underserved neighborhoods.

The stops include libraries, communication recreation centers, family centers, childcare centers, schools and more.

Kids are invited onto the bus to pick two books to take home.

The bus is sponsored by the Juvenile Welfare Board in partnership with the school district. It’s part of JWB’s Early Readers, Future Leaders Grade-Level Reading Campaign.

See the remaining stops at https://www.jwbpinellas.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/2023-JWB-Summer-Book-Bus-Schedule.pdf

Read the article as originally published at https://www.abcactionnews.com/news/region-pinellas/summer-book-bus-delivers-thousands-of-free-books-across-pinellas-county

Most Families Now Pay More for Child Care than Housing

Some Tampa Bay parents are struggling to not only find child care but also afford the cost as it outpaces the price of housing for some families, according to a report by Child Care Aware of America.

We got kicked off the waitlist for three different home daycares before Ellowynne was even born, so yes, very stressful part of my unplanned pregnancy,” said Pinellas County mother Morgan Nelson. I was on six different waiting lists of the only six places I could find that would take zero to one (year old.) I had no idea how I was going to go back to work at all.”

Nelson said she kept calling the learning center next to her work in Clearwater that had a capped closed waitlist of 45 families. She eventually got in.

“I am beyond thankful every day that I dropped my daughter off there because it is just literally the only solution,” she exclaimed. But that solution is still $385 a week.

According to Child Care Aware of America (CCAoA), the cost of child care in the U.S. averaged about $11,000 a year in 2022. That’s 10% of a married couple’s salary and 33% of a single parent’s salary for one child.

Nelson’s yearly bill is closer to $20,000.

CCAoA also found the price of care for two children exceeded average housing costs in the Midwest, the Northeast and the South. It also exceeds annual in-state tuition across the country.

With people moving to Tampa Bay at record rates, the rise in the cost of child care is a reflection of demand and inflation. The Early Learning Center of Pinellas County adds that many centers are also short-staffed and have to leave children on the waitlist.

The childcare crisis is why it’s a day of celebration in St. Petersburg at the grand opening of the newly renovated Happy Workers R’club Early Learning Academy, now big enough for nearly 150 children with eligibility for scholarships.

We received $350,000 from the legislature. We have received donations from private funders, and we have received Juvenile Welfare Board funding as well,” said Debra Ballinger, Executive Director R’Club Child Care.

The early education center’s focus is on ages zero to five, with emphasis on two months to three years old.

One of the greatest needs is for the Zero to Three population,” Ballinger explained. “We find that families are desperately seeking quality education for their younger children and the costs that’s involved with zero to three with the lower ratios and all of the mandates sometimes is very prohibiting for certain families.”

St Petersburg mother Brittany Dillard has three children enrolled at the Happy Day R’Club center.

“Having childcare… is honestly on the same level as having a mortgage,” she exclaimed. “Having your children in school and especially in a place like happy workers where they can receive a quality education, you know that they’re being educated for the amount that you’re paying is definitely a really big deal.”

“Eighty percent of the brain is developed in the first three years and yet there are not enough high-quality early learning institutions in places in Pinellas County or elsewhere,” said Beth Houghton, CEO/Juvenile Welfare Board of Pinellas County. “So our funding is about a million dollars towards this project on an annual basis not just to assure that it is here and it provides the care that you would find in other places, but that it is a higher level of care.”

The Florida legislature recently approved an additional million dollars into the state’s school readiness program to help parents afford child care, but most working families don’t qualify.

The Early Learning Center of Pinellas County has partnered with the Juvenile Welfare Board to create an additional expanded scholarship program to help some of those families to start meeting those needs and reach, but there’s more that needs to be done,” said Lindsay Carson, with the Early Learning Coalition of Pinellas County.

The Economic Policy Institute recommends state childcare reform that caps families’ childcare expenses at 7% of their income.

They said this would, in turn, allow more than 75,000 parents to enter the labor force and generate $7.6 billion for the economy.

“The Child Care and Development Block Grant Act (CCDBG) is a law that authorizes the Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) program. CCDF is administered by states, territories and tribes and outlines how federal funds will be used to provide financial assistance to low-income families to access child care. This hub page provides information on CCDBG and the CCDF state plans, which states are currently in the process of developing for years 2022-2024.”

Read more about the block grant plan here.

View the article, with video interviews–including JWB CEO Beth A. Houghton–as originally published at https://www.abcactionnews.com/news/in-depth/most-families-now-pay-more-for-child-care-than-housing

JWB Director Cited for Community Spirit

April Putzulu, director of strategic communications at the Juvenile Welfare Board, has been honored with the “Spirit of Community” award by the Florida Commission on the Status of Women.

Putzulu is the only Tampa Bay honoree of 11 women across the state who were recognized by the commission during a June 28 ceremony in Orlando.

The Commission’s award spotlights Putzulu’s 36 years of service to Florida’s children and families and her passion for developing creative prevention programs and campaigns—many of which remain in existence today, according to a press release.

Putzulu’s career has centered on children and youth; first as a probation officer with the Department of Juvenile Justice and later with Operation PAR leading substance prevention programs, which resulted in two National Safe & Drug Free Schools designations. She led efforts to create the Heart Gallery of Pinellas and Pasco, and partnered with the media on feature stories, including the viral piece by Tampa Bay Times’ Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Lane DeGregory about 16-year-old Davion who wanted “someone, anyone” to adopt him.

Putzulu is currently leading a new birth-to-three campaign, Turbo Babies, fueled by JWB, to support parents and caregivers as their child’s first and best teachers. Turbo Babies represents the rapid pace at which children birth to three develop and grow and shares everyday activities caregivers can use to encourage early connections and nurture a baby’s drive to learn.

View the article as originally published at https://www.tbnweekly.com/pinellas_county/article_8d36dbca-2017-11ee-8402-1b9bd5e2c8c3.html

Embracing a New Identity, Lealman Holds First-Ever July 4th Celebration

They were fireworks with a purpose.

Tuesday evening, on a warm but clear evening, the fireworks that illuminated the sky over Raymond H. Neri Community Park marked the first community Fourth of July celebration ever hosted in Lealman, a community of roughly 30,000 residents just north of St. Petersburg.

“I think this is great for the community,” said Raelynn Tamura, who took in the fireworks with her family.

And the festival wasn’t just about fireworks. There were games, food trucks, and free hot dogs.

To Nicole Bartlett — who watched the fireworks alongside Tamura — the event represented a special moment in Lealman’s history.

“Everybody seems to be coming together,” she said.

As Jim Millican can attest, that wasn’t always the case.

“When you drove through here many years ago, it was very run down, very poor looking, things weren’t taken care of,” said Millican, the Division Chief of Lealman Fire District, who’s lived in Lealman since 1988. “We had a lot of problem areas where we had a lot of drugs going on, a lot of drug overdoses, a lot of spouse abuse.”

In 2016, Pinellas County commissioners adopted a plan — with nine main objectives — to redevelop Lealman through both public and private investment. Lealman was designated a Community Redevelopment Area (CRA).

“Guided by the community and supported by data and analysis, the plan will lay the foundation for the county, property owners, and developers setting forth specific expectations, roles, relationships, and participation (guidelines, standards, roles) by the public and private sector to ensure the successful redevelopment of the Lealman CRA,” the plan explained.

Just a few years later, Millican has noticed results.

“The revitalization has changed the look of Lealman,” he said. “Revitalizing and rebuilding homes, putting in new homes, new housing, new apartment complexes — really a much nicer community.”

The work, however, isn’t done. The county wants to lure more economic development and affordable housing to Lealman. According to Tom Almonte, the Assistant County Administrator for Pinellas County, several affordable housing developments are in the works.

“You’re going to see at least between 150 and 200 new homes that are going to be available to the community, and that’s significant,” he said.

The redevelopment plan for Lealman also calls for more “community pride” and identity, and that’s the reason behind this first-ever Fourth of July festival.

More events will likely follow as Lealman continues to transform.

“I look forward to seeing what the next five years brings,” said Bartlett.

View the video and read the article as originally published at https://www.abcactionnews.com/news/region-pinellas/embracing-a-new-identity-lealman-holds-first-ever-july-4th-celebration

JWB CFO Laura Krueger Brock Named Tampa Bay Business Journal CFO of the Year Honoree

Twenty financial executives from businesses across the Tampa Bay area have been named honorees for the 2023 CFO of the Year awards.

CFO of the Year awards recognize the top financial executives who help grow their companies and are active in the Tampa Bay economy.

This year’s honorees are presented in alphabetical order in the attached gallery. They represent a range of industries, from sports and nonprofits to transit and higher education.

Nominations began late last year and ended on March 17. Over 100 nominations were received this year. Nominees submitted detailed materials and recommendation letters, and an internal judging team led by the Tampa Bay Business Journal newsroom and publisher evaluated the submissions.

Among the criteria, nominees were asked to describe how their contributions led to continued success for their companies in the past year, with a focus on leadership ability, the impact of their ideas, and initiatives. 

The judging panel asked nominees to provide details on how their efforts strengthened their company’s strategic market position and how they demonstrated excellence and accountability. The judges also explored nominees’ contributions to the community and their volunteer work.

An event will be held on May 31 at 11:30 a.m. at the Hilton Downtown Tampa.

Read the article as originally published at https://www.bizjournals.com/tampabay/news/2023/04/12/revealed-2023-cfo-of-the-year-honorees.html

TBBJ CFO of the Year logo

Florida Campaign Seeks to Reduce Accidental Infant Deaths

Accidental suffocation is the leading cause of death for children under one year of age according to the Florida Department of Health. In 2018, the Juvenile Welfare Board of Pinellas County, Florida, utilizing data from the medical examiner’s office, found that over one hundred infants had died due to sleep-related suffocation during a period of ten years. The infants were otherwise healthy at the time of death, which led the Juvenile Welfare Board to conclude that these deaths were preventable.

Their realization led to the formation of the “Sleep Baby Safely” campaign, which seeks to educate parents, caregivers, and other citizens about how to prevent accidental infant deaths due to suffocation. According to April Putzulu, a senior Board manager, infant deaths have reduced by half in Pinellas County since the launch of the campaign.

Florida is now expanding the campaign to include eight more Florida counties, including Miami-Dade, with funds being allocated from the Florida Department of Health’s budget to prevent death in children.


How To Keep Infants Safe While Sleeping

The Sleep Baby Safely campaign recommends caregivers follow the “Safe Sleep ABCs”. The acronym helps caregivers to remember the following words: Alone, Back, and Crib.

– Alone: infants should sleep alone.

– Back: infants should always be laid down on their backs with their heads and bellies facing up.

– Crib: infants should sleep in an empty crib, bassinet, or Pack n’ Play

The campaign also recommends adults share a room with a small child, but not a bed. Additionally, an infant’s mattress should be firm to further prevent suffocation. Often adult beds, air mattresses, and sofas are too soft and increase the risk of child suffocation. A caregiver should also set alarms during feeding time to ensure they do not fall asleep with an infant in a chair, sofa, or other location. An infant should always be returned to their crib or bassinet.

Read the article as originally published at https://www.islandernews.com/news/florida/florida-campaign-seeks-to-reduce-accidental-infant-deaths/article_d5ee2a1a-c272-11ed-b643-cbb8146d1482.html

Juvenile Welfare Board Receives Top Award for Excellence in Financial Reporting

Juvenile Welfare Board Board chair and staff posing with GFOA's top award for Excellence in Financial Reporting: (l to r) Senior Accountant Richard Godfrey, Senior Manager of Accounting Lynn De la Torre, JWB Board Chair Mike Mikurak, and Fiscal Specialist Lilia Pletnev.
Juvenile Welfare Board Receives Top Award for Excellence in Financial Reporting: (l to r) Senior Accountant Richard Godfrey, Senior Manager of Accounting Lynn De la Torre, JWB Board Chair Mike Mikurak, and Fiscal Specialist Lilia Pletnev.

The Government Finance Officers Association (GFOA) recently awarded the Juvenile Welfare Board of Pinellas County (JWB) with the Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting Award for the 2021 Annual Comprehensive Financial Report.

This is the third year in a row JWB has received the highest form of recognition in governmental accounting and financial reporting.

GFOA established the Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting Program (COA) in 1945 to “…encourage and assist state and local governments to go beyond the minimum requirements of generally accepted accounting principles to prepare annual comprehensive financial reports that evidence the spirit of transparency and full disclosure and then to recognize individual governments that succeed in achieving that goal.”

Submission requirements are very detailed—the first award, given in 2021 after nearly nine months of review of the 2019 financial report, required the compilation of 10 years of statistical data. JWB accounting staff poured tremendous effort into this endeavor while completing the day-to-day duties associated with the organization’s annual impact budget of $87.3 million, which strengthened the lives of nearly 60,000 children and families.

“The GFOA award is a testament to the JWB Accounting team’s dedication to organizational transparency and accountability,” said JWB Board Chair Michael Mikurak, while presenting the newest award to staff at the March 9th Board meeting. “Accounting Manager Lynn De la Torre and her accounting team deserve our congratulations for this recognition of their hard work and dedication to excellence!”

Learn more about how JWB has been putting Pinellas County children first for more than 75 years at https://www.jwbpinellas.org/about/

JWB Board Chair Mike Mikurak (left) and JWB Accounting Manager Lynn De la Torre (right) at the March 9, 2023, Board meeting, where it was announced JWB has received the highest form of recognition in governmental accounting and financial reporting, the Government Finance Officers Association’s Certificate of Achievement for Excellence in Financial Reporting Award, for the third year in a row.

DeSantis Announces State Board Members Overseeing District for Walt Disney World

Gov. Ron DeSantis announced appointments to a new state board overseeing the district encompassing Walt Disney World on Monday.

The board includes Martin Garcia, Bridget Ziegler, Brian Aungst, Jr., Mike Sasso and Ron Peri.

“The state of Florida is the new sheriff in town,” DeSantis said. “We’ve created a state control board that is going to be responsible for this area.”

DeSantis signed legislation to remake Disney’s Reedy Creek board in an effort to ensure that the company’s debts are not passed down to local taxpayers. 

The district will now be named the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District.

The changes strip Disney of its control over the district, ultimately doing away with many of the company’s self-governing powers.

Rep. Fred Hawkins, R-St. Cloud, sponsored the legislation.

The legislation allowed DeSantis to appoint members, who are confirmed by the Senate, to the district’s board.

“These are folks who have a variety of experience that I think all are pertinent,” said DeSantis.

Martin Garcia will serve as chair of the board. Garcia practiced law from 1981 through 1995 and was a partner in two premier law firms. From 1992 through 1998, he owned and operated a successful private equity investment firm. Since then, he has served as chairman of his own family office and chairman of his family charitable foundation that he founded.

Bridget Ziegler is a mother of three and a member of the Sarasota County School Board. She assumed office in 2014 and was subsequently reelected in 2018 and 2022. She is the director of School Board Programs at the Leadership Institute. Prior to joining Leadership Institute, she worked in the risk and insurance industry for 15 years as a Corporate Risk Consultant with two of the largest global risk and insurance brokerage firms.

Brian Aungst, Jr. is an attorney and shareholder at the law firm of Macfarlane Ferguson & McMullen, P.A. in Clearwater. He recently served as the Chairman of the Pinellas County Commission Redistricting
Committee. He is a gubernatorial appointee and past chairman of the Juvenile Welfare Board of
Pinellas County, and a gubernatorial appointee and Past Chairman of the Sixth Judicial Circuit Judicial Nominating Commission.

Mike Sasso is a lawyer and partner at Sasso & Sasso. He has served as the president of the Seminole County Bar Association, president of the Seminole County Legal Aid Society, president of the Seminole County Inns of Court, and as an elected governor for three terms on the Florida Bar Board of Governors, Young Lawyers Division.

Ron Peri is chairman and CEO of The Gathering USA, a ministry that focuses on areas where faith and culture intersect. He has founded, successfully managed, and grown three companies, while also functioning as a consultant to many international and Fortune 500 companies as well as multiple government agencies.

DeSantis said the board will meet in the coming weeks. He asked the board to look at the compensation for the first responders and give them more compensation for doing a good job.

“There’s a board meeting scheduled a week from Wednesday and so they will be in charge during that board meeting. So buckle up, there’s a lot to get done,” said DeSantis.

Read the article as originally published at https://flvoicenews.com/desantis-announces-state-board-members-overseeing-district-for-walt-disney-world/

BREAKING: DeSantis Reveals New Board Members as Disney Loses Control of Reedy Creek District

Today, Governor Ron DeSantis announced new board members who will immediately take control of the 40-square mile Reedy Creek Improvement District – now functioning under a new name, the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District.

The move comes as DeSantis signs legislation passed in a recent special session that removes the Disney-selected board and imposes a state-controlled, term-limited board appointed by the governor.

MEET THE NEW BOARD

Bridget Ziegler, Board Member, Central Florida Tourism Oversight District

Bridget Ziegler, a mother of three, is a member of the Sarasota County School Board. Ziegler was appointed to the school board in 2014 by Governor Rick Scott to fill a vacancy and was subsequently reelected in 2018 and 2022. Ziegler is a strong conservative who believes in limited government, parental rights, transparency, and fiscal responsibility.

In 2015, Ziegler co-founded the Florida Coalition of School Board members which served as a rival to the Florida School Board Association. The board was instrumental in passing numerous pieces of legislation focused on school choice, parental empowerment, and curriculum transparency.

Ziegler helped draft the Parents Bill of Rights with Florida State Representative Erin Grall. The legislation played an instrumental role in Governor DeSantis’ Executive Order prohibiting school districts from imposing mask mandates. Ziegler, who worked closely with Moms For Liberty in its early stages of development says it’s critical that “the proper role of education is restored to protect our children and the future of our country.”

Brian Aungst, Jr., Board Member, Central Florida Tourism Oversight District

Brian Aungst, Jr., is an attorney and shareholder at the law firm of Macfarlane Ferguson & McMullen, P.A. in Clearwater. Aungst recently served as the chairman of the Pinellas County Commission Redistricting Committee and is a gubernatorial appointee and past chairman of the Juvenile Welfare Board of Pinellas County. Aungst currently serves on multiple boards, including Ruth Eckerd Hall, one of the largest performing arts centers in the Tampa Bay region, the YMCA of the Suncoast, and the St. Petersburg College Public Policy Advisory Committee.

Mike Sasso, Board Member, Central Florida Tourism Oversight District

Michael A. Sasso serves as a partner in his law firm and focuses his practice on high-stakes litigation in Florida’s state and federal courts. He has served as the president of the Seminole County Bar Association, president of the Seminole County Legal Aid Society, president of the Seminole County Inns of Court, and as an elected governor for three terms on The Florida Bar Board of Governors, Young Lawyers Division. Michael has also been appointed by the president of The Florida Bar to the Florida Bar Civil Rules Committee. Governor Ron DeSantis appointed Michael to the Judicial Nominating Commission for Florida’s Ninth Judicial Circuit and to Florida’s Public Employee Relations Commission. In 2021 Sasso was elected as chair of the commission.

Martin Garcia, Board Member, Central Florida Tourism Oversight District

Martin Garcia is an attorney and former partner of two law firms. He has owned and operated a private equity firm and served as chairman of his family’s charitable foundation. Garcia previously served as chairman of the Investment Advisory Council for the Florida Pension Fund System, chairman of the Trial Lawyer Section of the Florida Bar, chairman of the Florida Supreme Court Judicial Nomination Commission and on the Florida Judicial Qualifications Commission, Board of Governors of the Florida Bar Association and Board of Trustees of Wake Forest University.

Ron Peri, Board Member, Central Florida Tourism Oversight District

Ron Peri is chairman and CEO of The Gathering USA, a ministry that focuses on areas where faith and culture intersect. Peri was founder, chairman, and CEO of Orlando-based airline software company Radixx International from 1993 to 2017. He has founded and managed three companies while also working as a consultant to international corporations and government agencies.

Read the article as originally published at https://www.theflstandard.com/breaking-desantis-reveals-new-board-members-as-disney-loses-control-of-reedy-creek-district-2/