Pinellas to honor high-achieving Hispanic students

More than 400 students from elementary, middle and high schools were honored during the Maria Edmonds Hispanic Achievement Awards ceremony April 6 at Ruth Eckerd Hall. In addition to the awards, students will have opportunities for scholarships from St. Petersburg College, the University of South Florida St. Petersburg and Pinellas Technical College.

The event will honor the legacy of Maria Nieves Edmonds, an advocate for women, children and members of the Hispanic Community. Edmonds, who passed away January 19, 2017. She was an associate provost at St. Petersburg College and served on the Juvenile Welfare Board and as chairperson for the Hispanic Leadership Council.

The event will feature student performances, a presentation by Pinellas Superintendent Michael Grego and a message by Mount Vernon Elementary School Principal Robert Ovalle. 

To view article by Tampa Bay Newspapers visit: https://www.tbnweekly.com/schools/article_ed6967f4-5a39-11e9-96a6-cf84396a4c11.html

Teen named youth of the year for Boys and Girls Clubs of the Suncoast

George Mention, a club member at the Wood Valley Boys and Girls Club, was named the 2019-20 Youth of the Year for Boys and Girls Clubs of the Suncoast. The Youth of the Year program is nationally recognized by Boys and Girls Clubs of America and sponsored by Disney and Toyota. For nearly 70 years, the Youth of the Year program has honored youth dedicated to their communities and clubs. A student at Countryside High School, Mention has been attending the Wood Valley Boys and Girls Club since 2010. He began attending regularly and started to mentor younger members. Since joining, he has become a member of the Teen Council, Chairman of the Juvenile Welfare Board Youth Council and logged close to 600 hours of community service. He is also a member of the YPD, a youth organization at his church, and is on the track team at his high school. He plans to attend the University of South Florida and major in International Business and Chinese.

To view article by Tampa Bay Times visit: https://www.tampabay.com/pinellas/hometown-pinellas-20190408/ 

Mattie Williams family center feeds Oldsmar, Safety Harbor working poor

For 17 years, Church and Community Outreach operated a food pantry out of the Mattie Williams Neighborhood Family Center in Safety Harbor, serving hungry parents and children from hundreds of households.

Then, in September 2017, as Hurricane Irma bore down on Florida’s West Coast, CCO completed the planned closure of its food bank, leaving the family center — and many families and children — without a food pantry.

“They had already moved things out, but they still had some food here,” said Janet Hooper, Mattie Williams’ executive director. “I pulled the staff together and said, ‘We can’t do this, we can’t let people not have food.’”

Though the CCO pantry had decided long before Irma to move to Clearwater, the result was the same: Some 50 families were unable to drive or otherwise reach the CCO pantry’s new location.

“There was no bus going there so there was an issue,” Hooper said.

Hooper’s staff felt launching a food pantry in two weeks was unrealistic. The freezers, shelves and other equipment the CCO food bank used were gone from a large, empty room. Finding and buying commercial refrigerators and freezers and installing shelving units was a tough proposition.

“Understand, my staff looked at me like I was nuts,” said Hooper, who smiles as she describes how everything fell together, mainly with help from local churches, nonprofits and school kids who threw in to build and open a new food pantry.

Hungry families in Safety Harbor, Oldsmar

More on that — but first, some facts from the United Way’s annual measure of the working poor, called the ALICE (Asset Limited, Income Constrained, Employed) Report:

• 41 percent of Pinellas County’s households struggle to afford basic needs, like housing, food, health care, and child care.

• A Florida individual who makes $11,770 a year or less is in poverty; a Florida family of four that brings in $24,250 or less is considered in poverty.

• At least 67 percent of all Florida jobs pay less than $20 per hour.

And this:

“If you go by the U.S. Census, we have more than 3,600 kids in our service area (Safety Harbor, Oldsmar, and ZIP codes 33759, 33761) who are below poverty level,” said Charrie Moscardini, Mattie Williams’ community development director.

“When you talk about 3,600 kids, that’s a lot of kids in a smaller area than you would expect,” Hooper agreed.

‘People were stopping in and looking for food …’

“Everybody was like, how are we going to do this?” Moscardini remembered. “People were stopping in and looking for food, and we didn’t have any.”

Because the family center has provided a community clothes closet, family support services, youth programs, career development and adult education services since 1994, its board members had connections throughout the helping community.

“Janet took the idea to the Mattie Williams Neighborhood Family Center’s board of directors,” Moscardini said.

As volunteers cleaned and painted the room that once held the food pantry, Hooper and board members put the word out for new or used commercial refrigerators and freezers and other food equipment. Two volunteers, including Moscardini, sought certification in safe food handling from Safe Staff, a professional food-training organization licensed with the state’s Department of Business and Professional Regulation.

Moscardini, a professional grant writer, also put the call out for financial donations over social media, as well as researched and applied for such grants as the Pinellas Community Foundation’s Hunger Grant.

Community puts in serious effort to open food bank

The family center also contacted the Florida Dream Center, which provides grants for feeding the hungry, and Feeding Tampa Bay, which operates a large warehouse of donated food and groceries in St. Petersburg for distribution to food pantries in the Tampa Bay area.

“Within a week, we had two certified food handlers and a promise of emergency funds from the Juvenile Welfare Board,” Moscardini said. “Within two weeks, we had been given a new commercial grade freezer and a new commercial grade refrigerator; we had sent in our application for a partnership with Feeding Tampa Bay; and we had opened our Food Pantry, serving 35 families with approximately 30 children.”

Bayside Community Church in Safety Harbor donated a new commercial freezer for the new food pantry and the city of Clearwater helped fund a new refrigerator, Hooper said.

The center gets food from other sources:

• Local mail deliverers in the National Association of Letter Carriers’ Stamp Out Hunger program;

• Safety Harbor’s Briar Creek Mobile Home Community

• Safety Harbor’s annual Gobble Wobble 5K Walk/Run Food Drive

• School food drives, and many other local efforts supply the pantry with food.

• Pinellas Community Foundation (PCF)

• Clearwater Community Block Grants

Food grants from the Pinellas County Juvenile Welfare Board, the Pinellas Community Foundation, and Finance of America Cares helps the family center stock low-fat, low-sodium, and other healthy food for people battling diabetes, high blood pressure and other medical conditions, Moscardini said.

“If you’re living on the edge, it is much cheaper to eat food that is not healthy than it is to buy healthy food,” she said. “You can get a McDonald’s meal for what fresh broccoli costs at the store.”

Now, a year and a half after Irma, the center serves 60-70 families a week and is on the way to serving 100 families every week, Hooper said. On Thursday, March 21, the pantry opened its doors for evening shoppers for the first time.

“We’re now open one weeknight so people can come by after work,” Hooper said. “We’re asking families to call in and let us know they are coming by that evening and we’ll put food aside to make sure we meet their needs.”

The family center has more than 250 families on its rolls, in addition to food, of course, the center provides clothes and other items families might need. The food pantry, however, meets immediate needs.

“We don’t give them enough to live on a whole week,” Hooper said. “In addition to vegetables, starches, fruits, bread, we can give them two or three pieces of meat, that’s it. No food bank can feed families totally. We just want to keep families together to help them survive.”

To contact the Mattie Williams Neighborhood Family Center, call 727-791-8255

To view article by Tampa Bay Newspapers visit: https://www.tbnweekly.com/clearwater_beacon/article_a7efe758-50a1-11e9-810c-771de3592075.html 

Clearwater Summer Camps registration begins March 21

It’s never too early to start thinking about what fun and safe things your kids could do during their summer break. In fact, starting Thursday, March 21, you can register your kids for Clearwater Summer Camps.

“Each week Campers will enjoy a wide variety of fun activities including; fantastic field trips, goofy games, spectacular guest speakers, creative craft projects and other awesome activities,” according to the Clearwater Parks and Recreation website.

Registration cost $90 a week if you have a recreation card and $100 without one. If your kid up qualifies for JWB sponsored camps it’ll cost $30. The registration covers the cost of field trips, supplies, a t-shirt and 50 hours of fun activities.

Camp runs from June 3 to August 9 from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Clearwater Camp locations include:

  • Countryside Recreation Center, 2640 Sabal Springs Dr.(727-669-1914) — Elementary and Middle School Camp (Children entering grades 1-8)
  • Long Center, 1501 N. Belcher Rd. (727-793-2320) — Elementary and Middle School Camp (Children entering grades 1-8)
  • Morningside Recreation Center, 2400 Harn Blvd, (727-562-4280) — Elementary and Middle School Camp (Children entering grades 1-8)
  • North Greenwood Recreation & Aquatic Complex, 900 N. MLK, Jr. Ave. (727-462-6276) — JWB Camp for children ages 11-17
  • Ross Norton Recreation & Aquatic Complex, 1426 S. MLK, Jr. Ave. (727-562-4380) — JWB Camp for Elementary children ages 5-8, and Middle School children ages 9-12.

For more information about the Clearwater Summer Camps or scholarship opportunities, click here.

To view article by ABC Action News WFTS-TV visit: https://www.abcactionnews.com/news/region-pinellas/clearwater-summer-camps-registration-begins-march-21

Black history comes alive

The Black History Month program held at the Thomas “Jet” Jackson Recreation Center Friday, Feb. 22 went off without a hitch. Parents packed in for an evening of entertainment, fine dining, and of course, a history lesson.

In its fifth year, the Black History Month program featured children stepping up to the microphone to recite short biographies or quotes by historical figures and those who are currently making history. The usual suspects made their yearly appearances such as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr, George Washington Carver and Rosa Parks, but in a refreshing turn of events, the night saw NASA astronaut Mae Jemison, almanac author, surveyor, naturalist and farmer Benjamin Banneker and legendary basketball player Bill Russell.

Recreation center Supervisor I Barbara Walton and other staff worked in concert to bring smiles to the parents’ faces. Walton said she was a withdrawn and shy child, so whenever she spots those traits in one of her charges, she works hard at bringing them out of their cocoon.

“I’m going to put them into dancing, singing, or whatever talent they have so we can get the shyness out of them.”

And although she once contemplated stopping the black history event, she could not bear to disappoint the kids or their parents.

“They get excited. That shyness and fearfulness leaves,” Walton said. “I see it brings so much joy to the children as well as the staff and myself.”

Participants in the Black History Month program attend the before and after school program at the recreation center. Children ages 5-11 are picked up from seven different schools and are transported back to the center. They participate in a number of different activities and receive help with homework.

During the school year, there can be anywhere from 50 to 60 children; however, during the summer that number swells to more than 150 youngsters. Walton said there is no capacity because, “If we get more children, we just hire more staff.”

A grant from the Juvenile Welfare Board funds the middle school program, which allows low-income families the benefit of before and aftercare with two education specialists to help with homework, participation in sports and summer camp when school is out.

Danah Watkins, teen supervisor 1, grew up in the program at the very same recreation center from play camp to teen camp and came back as a volunteer once she aged out.

“After that, I knew I wanted to be a teen supervisor. I love the teens; I love all the activities. I love planning field trips; I love participating in the field trips,” said the 24-year-old.  “I just want the kids to have that same experience I had.”

Youth Development Worker Jerald Reedy, who is over the teen program, cooked up baked, barbeque and stewed chicken, yellow rice, string beans, cornbread and dessert. Both parents and children couldn’t wait to get ahold of his mouthwatering fare.

This year, parents were treated to a demonstration by Midtown Miracles, a martial arts program with classes held at the Thomas “Jet” Jackson and Lake Vista Recreation Centers.

Grand Master Soke Bryant K. Harrell and his wife Master Sensei Leotte-Keiva Harrell head up the program started by Police Chief Anthony Holloway. Originally created for at-risk children, the chief takes drug money seized from criminals and put it toward positive things in the community.

“We have a lot of kids in foster care, abused children, a lot of kids are sent here for therapy, kids that were in gangs. A lot of behavior issues,” said Leotte-Keiva Harrell.

There are two age groups the Harrells work with: children from ages 4-15 and ages 16 to adults.

“We teach real-world technique. We teach for competition, and we teach for real life, especially the adults,” she said, adding that they run the gamut of martial arts from karate to kung fu to aikido, self-defense techniques and everything in between.

Next year’s show promises to be even more spectacular. Even though it’s a year away, mark your calendars for the last Friday in Feb. so that you won’t miss seeing history come alive through the eyes of children.

To view article by The Weekly Challenger visit: http://theweeklychallenger.com/black-history-comes-alive/

JWB CEO Dr. Marcie Biddleman announces her retirement

The Juvenile Welfare Board of Pinellas County (JWB) has launched a nationwide search for a new CEO to succeed Dr. Marcie A. Biddleman, who plans to retire in Sept. 2019 after 10 years with the organization.

Biddleman announced this to the JWB board two years ago and reaffirmed her plans during her most recent evaluation. The board has seated a CEO Search Committee, comprised of its members, charged with finding her replacement.

Established by a Special Act of the Florida Legislature in 1945 and approved overwhelmingly by Pinellas County voters in 1946, JWB is an independent special taxing district that responsibly invests property tax dollars to give children the best opportunities to lead healthy, successful, and satisfying lives.  JWB is governed by an 11-member board and nationally accredited through the Council on Accreditation.

In the 2018 fiscal year, their annual program budget of $57 million strengthened the lives of 66,000 children and families through investments in 88 programs with 49 nonprofit agencies. In addition, their collective work with Pinellas County partners addresses such complex issues as childhood hunger, grade-level reading, and preventable child deaths.

JWB’s investments and work are focused on four strategic areas: School Readiness, School Success, the Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect and Strengthening Community.

The full position description may be found at jwbpinellas.org/about/careers. Interested applicants should submit a cover letter, resume and salary range by 5 p.m. on Wednesday, March 20, 2019, electronically in a Word or PDF format to ceosearch@jwbpinellas.org.

To view article by The Weekly Challenger visit: http://theweeklychallenger.com/jwb-ceo-dr-marcie-a-biddleman-announces-her-retirement/

Need to know: Five things that happened while you pondered the definition of ‘national emergency’

  1. Positive outcome: A panel from the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida has provided $3.6 million to the Florida Bar Foundation. In the Engle tobacco litigation, the Court found that certain lawyers engaged in unethical and unprofessional conduct, leading to a sizeable sanctions award, a release said. The money will go to qualified local legal aid organizations assisting litigants in obtaining representation.
  2. CEO job opening: The Clearwater-based Juvenile Welfare Board wants a new CEO who is “strongly committed to advocating for and providing services to children and families.” Established by the Legislature in 1945, JWB is an independent special taxing district. Its annual budget is $57 million and it impacts 66,000 children and families in 88 programs with 49 nonprofit agencies. More info: http://bizj.us/1ptcls 
  3. Employers needed: Employers from the public and private sectors, health care, hospitality, manufacturing and construction interested in promoting open and future positions can meet with job seekers from the Pasco County community and PHSC students seeking employment. The third annual Metro Job Fair is scheduled from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Feb. 26 at the PHSC Porter Campus at Wiregrass Ranch. 
  4. Milestone: Tampa’s Lee Pallardy Inc. is 100 years old. The firm of nine focuses on real estate appraisal, brokerage, development and land sales. The grandfather of current Chairman Lee Pallardy III started the firm in 1919. It’s rare to find a firm with a track record of work for clients like the city and airport for 50 years, VP David Taulbee told the Tampa Bay Business Journal.
  5. Back pay: After an investigation by the U.S. Department of Labor, Palmetto-based Utopia Fresh South LLC — operating as Taylor & Fulton Packing LLC — has paid $87,920 in back wages to 109 employees for violating overtime and record keeping requirements of the Fair Labor Standards Act. The employer was ineligible for an agricultural exemption it claimed and failed to pay the overtime, the government said. 

To view article by Tampa Bay Business Journal visit: https://www.bizjournals.com/tampabay/news/2019/02/22/need-to-know-five-things-that-happened-while-you.html  

Marcie Biddleman plans to retire from Pinellas Juvenile Welfare Board

The Juvenile Welfare Board of Pinellas County has launched a nationwide search for a new CEO to succeed Marcie Biddleman, who plans to retire in September after 10 years with the organization.

Biddleman, 73, said after five years as CEO, and the previous five as chief operating officer, she is ready to move aside to welcome “new ideas and new thinking.” She said she warned her board of directors in 2017 that she planned to retire in 2019.

Funded through a special taxing district, the Juvenile Welfare Board has a budget of about $53 million that supports about 90 programs and 51 nonprofits, impacting tens of thousands of children every year. Its priorities are school readiness and success, prevention of abuse and neglect, and strengthening communities.

Biddleman said she is most proud of being able to connect providers and improve collaboration during her tenure, as well as an ongoing initiative to strengthen resources for youth mental health.

She said her replacement should be progressive and adept at showing the organization’s impact through data and facts, a growing priority for the industry. Before joining the Juvenile Welfare Board in 2009, Biddleman served 12 years with the United States Marine Corps and later worked as district administrator for the Florida Department of Children and Families, executive director of Heartland for Children, vice president of Community-Based Services for Eckerd Youth Alternatives; and executive director of the St. Petersburg Free Clinic.

“I’m certainly not going to disappear,” Biddleman said of retirement. “I want to make sure I can continue to utilize what knowledge and experience I’ve gained over these years so there will probably be a few different places I might want to help.”

To view article by Tampa Bay Times visit: https://www.tampabay.com/pinellas/marcie-biddleman-plans-to-retire-from-pinellas-juvenile-welfare-board-20190221/

2019 is Sleep Baby Safely Year in Pinellas

One healthy baby dies each month in Pinellas County due to suffocation while sleeping.

The Juvenile Welfare Board and a group of about 70 partner agencies are working together to teach people how to protect babies when they are laid down to sleep – “every night, every nap and every time.”

“Over the past 10 years, 102 babies in Pinellas County have suffocated while sleeping unsafely,” is the message on the homepage of www.sleepbabysafely.com. “That’s enough children to fill six kindergarten classrooms. While each circumstance was different, they all had one thing in common: All of these deaths were preventable.”

The Pinellas County Commission recently proclaimed 2019 as Sleep Baby Safely Year. During the Jan. 22 meeting, Commission Chair Karen Seel talked about the work JWB is doing to enhance an already established regional program called Prevent Needless Deaths.

According to the website www.preventneedlessdeaths.com, over the last five years, more than 200 young children in the Tampa Bay area have died from unsafe sleep, drowning and abusive head trauma.

The Sleep Baby Safely campaign singles out what has become the No. 1 cause of preventable death for children under age 18, Seel said.

Seel, who has a 14-month-old granddaughter, said she asked many questions when the Sleep Baby Safely campaign was presented at JWB. Seel is a JWB Board member.

“It’s amazing how research and horrible happenings, experiences or deaths have created better conditions and more knowledge for our mothers today.”

She said much has changed over the years to ensure babies sleep safe and provided a couple of examples.

“No longer do you put bumpers around the cribs because those are hazardous,” Seel said. “And now you place the baby on their back versus the stomach.”

The Sleep Baby Safely campaign is based on local data that features understandable language, undeniable facts and easy to remember tips, she said. Consistent messaging also is a factor, making sure everyone identifies the cause of death as suffocation — not sudden infant death syndrome.

Seel said it has been nearly 20 years since the District 6 Medical Examiner’s Office has determined an infant sleep-related death as SIDS.

Education is a big part of the Sleep Baby Safely campaign — making sure that everyone knows it is safest for babies to sleep on their back. They should also sleep in an empty crib, bassinet or Pack n’ Play.

All items should be removed from the crib, including blankets, pillows and stuffed animals. Mattresses should be firm and sheets should be tight fitting. Use a one-piece sleeper or sleep sack to keep babies warm.

More babies die in adult beds than any other place. Two-thirds of infant sleep-related deaths happened when parents shared a bed with their baby. Infants are 40 times more likely to die in adult bed than in their own crib. Other soft surfaces such as couches, futons, recliners and air mattresses also pose a risk of suffocation.

Mothers who bring their baby into their bed to nurse should return the child to the crib after they’re done. Set an alarm to make sure you don’t fall asleep.

Lynda Leedy, JWB’s chief administrative officer, talked about some of the ways those involved in the Sleep Baby Safely were working together to spread the message. A welcome bag was given to every single baby born in 2018. The bag includes safety literature and an onesie that says, “This side up,” on the front.

The County’s emergency medical services personnel are involved. Leedy said Sunstar paramedics, St. Petersburg Fire Rescue, Largo and Clearwater police, as well as the Sheriff’s Office had trained more than 2,500 employees, who are now able to “deliver direct on-scene safe sleep education.”

JWB and St. Petersburg Fire Rescue produced a video, featuring Recue Chief Ian Womack, who says, “I know all too well and seen way too many babies die from sleeping unsafely. And the tragic thing is — all these deaths could have been prevented.”

Healthy Start Coalition rebranded and expanded its Beds for Babies program and is providing a Pack n’ Play (bed) to every family that does not have a safe place for their baby to sleep.

“All these efforts collectively are working,” Leedy said, adding that the number of reports of infants deaths were down slightly in 2018.

“We hope to continue that trend in 2019,” she said.

To view article by Tampa Bay Newspapers visit: https://www.tbnweekly.com/pinellas_county/article_53c2cd28-2976-11e9-9280-fbc3592d4b38.html

Ultimate Medical Academy named Nonprofit of the Year

Ultimate Medical Academy was honored as the recipient of the 2019 Large Not-For-Profit Business of the Year Award last night at the Clearwater Regional Chamber of Commerce’s 97th Annual Meeting and Awards Dinner.

“For 25 years, this organization has helped equip and empower its students and today has a total alumni base of more than 45,000 students,” former Chair of the Chamber Jeanie Renfrow noted when announcing the award. “This organization has facilitated adults young and old the chance to earn a living in the healthcare industry.

Ultimate Medical Academy received the 2019 Large Not-For-Profit Business of the Year Award last night at the Clearwater Regional Chamber of Commerce’s 97th Annual Meeting and Awards Dinner. UMA leaders accepting the award include Associate Director of Continuing Medical Education and Strategic Initiatives Leia Bell, Clearwater Campus Director Dr. Rebecca Sarlo, Senior Director of Communications Martha Monfried, Manager of Student Finance Jill Sellers, and Executive Vice President Geordie Hyland.

“Not only do they educate students in a career where they can earn a living, they help individuals overcome obstacles that might stand in their way of bettering themselves,” she added. “Whether it be assisting with child care, helping with food needs, or suppling young mothers with diapers, they are there to help their students.

“Even while doing all this, they manage to participate in many nonprofit organizations in our community, including Here We Grow Foundation, the Juvenile Welfare Board, Boys and Girls Clubs, Armed Forces Family Foundation, and CASA in St. Petersburg.

“This group’s motto is ‘students are the reason for everything we do,'” Renfrow concluded. “They truly are a shining example not just for their students but for their commitment to our Clearwater community.”

UMA Clearwater Campus Director Dr. Rebecca Sarlo accepted the award, thanking her team for their work and the community for the recognition.

Since 1994, UMA’s Clearwater Campus has offered convenient daytime and evening diploma and associate degree programs, hands-on training in classrooms and labs, personalized attention, and career readiness services. Current campus programs include Dental Assistant with Expanded Functions, Medical Assistant, Nursing Assistant, Patient Care Technician, and Phlebotomy Technician, which can be completed in 8 weeks to 22 months.

The campus provides the foundation for the nonprofit accredited national school that employs more than 2,000 faculty and staff in the Tampa Bay area. Annually, UMA supports more than 150 students at Clearwater and almost 15,000 online students across the nation.

To view article in PR Newswire visit: https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/ultimate-medical-academy-named-nonprofit-of-the-year-300784481.html