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Newberry Main Street fries fish for funding

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C.M. WALKER
Local
22 March 2014
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W  - Newberry Main Street Fish FryEllen Boukari/Alachua County Today

L-R: Lowell Garret and Reuben Hamlin handled the fish frying duties for the Newberry Main Street Organization. The fish fry was a fundraiser to support the organization’s activities.

 

NEWBERRY – Hungry visitors stopped by the Newberry Municipal Building, 25440 West Newberry Road, on Saturday, March 15, to help their town economically and to also fill their stomachs with a yummy fish dinner with all the trimmings.

 

Newberry Main Street Organization, Inc. (NMSO) produced a dine-in-or-take-out dinner of mouthwatering fried fish, coleslaw, beans, hushpuppies, grits and iced tea as one of several fundraising events planned for this year.

 

To top off the tasty meal, baked goods were also available for purchase for those who had a little bit of room left for a tasty treat. The Newberry High School Baseball Booster Club sold brownies, cookies, cupcakes and more as their fundraiser in an admirable attempt to satisfy everyone's sweet tooth, while earning a little money for their club.

 

One of the highlights of the event was a drawing for a $50 gift certificate to Gander Mountain sporting goods and clothes store in Ocala. The winning ticket was purchased by Trenton resident Greg Landingham.

 

“We couldn't have done it without the help of Newberry's Backyard BBQ, Visit Gainesville and the City of Newberry,” said Barbara Hendrix, NMSO Director. “The turnout was great,” she said.

 

NMSO's Mission Statement, “Enhancing a downtown through sound economic development that promotes our future while preserving the past,” is embodied in the events and projects undertaken each year to attract visitors to historic Newberry.

 

In addition to providing visitors with a Tourism Information Center, NMSO also produces the Newberry Farmer's Market on a monthly basis throughout the growing season, the Newberry Spring Fling Festival in early April, the Fall Festival in October, the Festival of Lights in December and provides a free website for others to advertise local events. All of these projects help boost tourism, increase visitors to the downtown business community and provide a central online location for residents and visitors to discover other community events.

 

In an attempt to balance their budget this year, the city reduced their contribution to NMSO from $40,000 to $25,000 in an across-the-board budget reduction. The funding change left NMSO with a $15,000 shortfall. “While we do fundraising every year, we are beefing up our efforts this year to help make up for those lost funds,” said Hendrix. “We want to continue to bring new people into Newberry to see what a wonderful town we have and to meet our friendly residents and business people,” she said. The NMSO Board thought this type of fundraiser would serve two functions...to bring residents a great meal and also help make up for some of the funding shortfall, she said.

 

In addition to the city's funds, NMSO receives revenue through memberships, donations, festivals, sales of artwork through the Newberry Firehouse Gallery and through the Farmer's Market.

 

NMSO has also written grants which have led to funding of some events. “Every one of those grants requires us to make reports back to the funding group to prove that the money is actually bringing people into Newberry,” said Hendrix. “It takes some time to do all of that, but it's well worth it when I hear business owners say they have made enough money in one day [in tandem with one of our events] that they were able to pay their bills for the month,” she said.

 

Anyone interested in becoming a member of the organization or learning more about the events and programs sponsored by NMSO, may stop by the Newberry Fire House Gallery, 25435 W. Newberry Road, call 352-472-2112 or check them out online at NewberryMainStreet.com.

 

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Gazebo gets clean sweep

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C.M. WALKER
Local
22 March 2014
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W - Gazebo yes-S5000077Carol Walker/Alachua County Today

L-R: Gloria James, Greg Dirocco, Sandra Webb and Eyvonne Andrews volunteered their time to pitch in and help improve the gazebo, stage and surrounding area. The entire project was coordinated by the Chamber of Commerce.

 

HIGH SPRINGS – Spring cleaning came early this past weekend in High Springs. In preparation for the second anniversary celebration of the Music in the Park (MIP) Series, the High Springs Chamber of Commerce and a few High Springs residents volunteered to replace the old leaky roof over the gazebo behind City Hall on Saturday, March 15, and help clean up the area. The structure, which was built in 1983, “leaked like a sieve,” said Michael Loveday, MIP Program Organizer.

 

Mud Crutch, the Gainesville band that went to California and became Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, was the first band to play in the gazebo said Loveday as he described a small part of the historic significance of the structure. All the sweeping and cleaning yielded another bit of historic information. The concrete steps were inscribed with the year they were built – 1938.

 

“We were delighted when Jim Brown from Signature Roofing, Inc. said he would donate his time, labor and shingles to help with the project,” said Chamber President Sandra Webb. The Chamber decided to take on this project as a way to thank the City of High Springs and its residents for all they do for the Chamber. Along with a contribution from Lowe's in Alachua, the Chamber purchased $700 in wood which was needed to support the shingles.

 

Loveday was on-hand as well, filling wheelbarrows with leaves and debris and pushing them and down the steep sinkhole embankment as part of the cleanup effort. The entire gazebo floor and everything around it was covered with leaves and branches that had fallen during the last few rainstorms. Webb and Chamber board members Eyvonne Andrews and Gloria James pitched in to help clear the debris and neaten up the entire area with help from Roy Blake, an employee with the City of High Springs Public Works Department. City Manager Ed Booth oversaw the production and made sure the volunteers lacked for nothing. Lunch was provided to all the volunteers by the Chamber and the Great Outdoors Restaurant.

 

Brown and Greg Dirocco, another volunteer, worked together to install the wooden structure that supports the roof. Another High Springs resident, Steve Hart, volunteered his time to install the barrier between the wood and shingles and Brown and Morgan Dall’Aqua, a Signature Roofing employee, installed shingles until dark. With 85 percent of the shingles installed that night, the gazebo was water tight for Sunday's Music in the Park concert. Each quadrant of the structure was removed and replaced separately to ensure the supporting structures maintained their stability during construction.

 

Construction and cleanup began at 8 a.m. and continued all day, said Webb. Brown returned on Monday to complete the last part of the shingle installation. “Just like any roof we build,”said Brown, “it should last another 20 years.”

 

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Cancer-stricken boy gets motorcycle dream ride

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CARL MCKINNEY
Local
22 March 2014
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W - Motorcycle 1Marc Okes, 8, who has brain cancer, had a wish to go on a motorcycle ride. When he and his mother arrived at the Harley-Davidson shop in Gainesville, a crowd of riders ande police officers were there to take them on a motorcycle ride. Pictired are Marc and his mother as they ride through Alachua on Monday,March 10.  The local Make-A-Wish foundation helped make the dream come true for Marc as he was accompanied by over 100 riders.

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Youth learn agriculture skills and business savvy

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DANIELA PRIZONT-CADO
Local
22 March 2014
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W - GoatGAINESVILLE – The Alachua County Youth Fair and Livestock Show kicked off last Thursday and concluded on Tuesday, March 11. Featuring a wide array of activities teaching youngsters about livestock and agriculture, the event drew in huge crowds throughout its six-day run.    

Cows, pigs, goats and other animals were paraded around the auction house, waiting to be sold off.

The fair was set up for different events to be scheduled on certain days. From morning to night, exhibitions, auctions and contests took place at the Alachua County Fairgrounds.

The youngsters attending the event generally came in two camps. Those involved in the local 4-H program, and those involved with the local Future Farmers of America, or the FFA.

The 4-H program’s division included various clubs composed of volunteers of different ages, up to the age of 19. Within the 4-H program, there were four categories which the fair’s attendees were classified into, including cloverbuds, juniors, intermediates and seniors.

The FFA division was more specific in terms of its qualifications to join, since it is a middle and high school affiliated program with an age limit of 18.

Sierra Holsbeke, a 17-year-old junior at P.K. Yonge Developmental Research School, has been an exhibitor ever since one of her friends introduced her to a goat that was being exhibited three years ago.

This year, she represented her club, Micanopy Friendship, in the 4-H program.

Raising livestock animals is hard work and takes a lot of time, she said.

“It’s a long-term investment,” Holsbeke said.

Holsbeke’s project consisted of auctioning off her 81-pound goat that she had taken care of since last September. The fair’s rules and regulations dictated that she had to keep up with record-keeping in terms of the goat’s weight, making sure it didn’t exceed the 110-pound limit. She had to be mindful to check on the goat regularly and feed it twice a day, every day. The fair rules also prohibit naming the goat, in order to avoid attachment.  

“It teaches responsibility and caretaker skills,” she said.

The auction drew one of the largest crowds at the event. As people flooded the area and bid on the livestock on display, the youth got to see the end result of raising an animal.

Chenoa Dixon has been involved with the Youth Fair and Livestock Show for 12 years, having been part of the executive board for six years. She has been president for the last two years now. She had been involved with the 4-H division from age 8 to 18. Dixon became so devoted to this organization that she became a volunteer after graduating high school.

She is in charge of finding sponsors and making sure the event runs smoothly. Like Holsbeke, she agrees that the fair teaches responsibility, but it also imparts business skills. She said the main goal of the show is educational.

The process of raising an animal takes about three to six months, so the youth has to learn to be patient in order to see their efforts pay off.

“The point is to show them the start and finish of the project they’re involved in,” she said.

With agriculture playing such a large part in the county’s economy, many local families like Dixon’s have grown accustomed to making this annual event a tradition. That is why she believes that this function will never die out.

“It becomes a generational thing,” she said. “They come back.”

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Business of the springs: Impacts of eco-tourism

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BRIANA ERICKSON
Local
13 March 2014
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W - Ginnie Springs

MARK LONG/Photo special to Alachua County Today

Families gather at Ginnie Springs near High Springs for some relaxation in the water. Researchers looked at the economic impact of several public and private springs to measure how much money they bring into the area.

ALACHUA COUNTY – Every summer for seven years, she would drive her daughters from Clearwater to High Springs.

It was the 90s, and Camp Kulaqua in High Springs was a beautiful place for Barbara Ferguson and her kids to spend their summer.

She recalls that there used to be docks all the way around, rope swings, and a huge inner tube fit for two people in the spring. There was even a diving board.

“The kids used to jump off the diving board and onto the tube, catapulting the other person off the other side,” she said.

The camp was surrounded by the Hornsby Springs, one of the gorgeous local flowing springs.

“I was the parent in the springs,” she said.

In the last 10 years, Ferguson said that one day the spring just stopped flowing. Camp Kulaqua is now a camp without a spring.

“It broke my heart,” said Ferguson, who is a board member of the environmental group Save Our Suwannee.

The springs were one of the reasons Ferguson left her home in Clearwater to move to Gainesville.

“I fell in love with the springs. We would go camping. It was beautiful.”

Now, Ferguson only has one word to describe Hornsby Springs.

One word, repeated three times.

“Gone, gone, gone.”

Over the last 50 years, the increase of water permits given by legislatures to industries and farmers has resulted in the ground levels to drop at least 40 feet, which continues to reduce the flow of water into the springs, Ferguson said. We cannot continue on the course we are on, unless we don’t want to have any springs, she added.

“Subsidies need to be used more wisely, to plant the right crops in the right places,” she said.  

Ferguson said the water policy has always been in favor of developmental agriculture, which has been bad for the springs.

But, now, “it’s been bad on steroids,” she said. “The water is barely flowing, it is wimping along. There is not enough water, so there is little ground pressure underground to push through to the springs,” she said.

If the region loses its springs, the property values of homes will go down, because many people move here to be close to them

“The problem with most of our springs is over-withdrawal from the aquifers that feed them, lack of rainfall and increasing pollution from fertilizers and wastewater treatment plants,” said Annette Long, president of Save Our Suwannee.

That is why Ferguson got involved with Save Our Suwannee, a non-profit organization aiming to help raise awareness to the public and protect the water quality and quantity in the Suwannee Basin. The basin is made up of the springs that feed the Suwannee River and the Santa Fe River in North Central Florida.  Recently, the board, made up of nine members, has been in contact with two economists from the University of Florida, Allen W. Hodges and Tatiana Borisova, to create a presentation to raise awareness of the economic benefits of the springs. Because the economy has been such a pressing issue in the legislature, they want to make a presentation that will appeal to the legislators based on the economic value that the springs bring to the region.

The research that Borisova and Hodges are undertaking will not be finalized until May. This impact study will be finished in June. For now, they are going through the process to help achieve the goal of Save Our Suwannee.

“The focus of the project is to estimate the economic interest in the area,” said Borisova, an assistant professor and extension specialist specializing in water economics and policy in the Food and Resource Economics Department at the University of Florida.

She and Hodges, along with a team of researchers, are developing a presentation on the project, which focuses on the economic contribution of eight public springs as well as some private springs.

The project consists of an input and output model to help display the contribution of the springs in the region. Existing information about the visitors’ region, the new money that it is bringing into the region from the outside, the number of jobs brought into the region and the goods and products used in recreation from the springs are factors the two are analyzing, Borisova said.

“There is a concern for this treasure we have here, and for decision makers, we need to have numbers for the economy to measure the contribution of the springs to the region, and we already see that there is a connection, and the region would likely suffer without it,” Borisova said.

Borisova said that she and Hodges have interviewed businesses around the cities and the local chamber of commerce to verify their estimates. Using the data collected from that and existing studies, Borisova hopes that they will come out with a regional gross domestic product (GPD) that will help their case when presenting to legislatures.

“The regional GPD will establish a relationship to tourism and an established value from the springs recreation,” Borisova said. She hopes this will then measure the total value of the springs.

Ferguson has many memories of the springs, which she said is important for action. “You need long-term memories to have long-range visions, and the legislators have short-term visions,” she said. That is why she wants the numbers to help convince them to adjust their ways to conserve water, instead of continuing to use up all the water from the springs.

“The outside money coming in is critical to our point, because people do come from all over to see the springs,” said Annette Long, president of Save Our Suwannee.

She said the presentation created by the research from Hodges and Borisova will be presented to local officials, business leaders and the public.  

“We want to bring this info straight to them instead of them coming to us,” Long said.

Long said that the organization wants to show the legislature that, even though their goal is to create jobs and help the economy, the springs brings in money just by being there. They also flow fresh water into Cedar Key, which is essential for the oysters and the clams that are there for business.

“We are trying to make the point that the springs are essential to our way of life as well as to small businesses in the rural North Florida region,” Long said.

Save Our Suwannee is not blaming agriculture and industry, Ferguson said. She explained that the need for the springs is equally as important as the need for agriculture and industry.

“We need both,” she said. However, she said that there needs to be adjustments for a low-environmental impact in the development for the agriculture. “If my bank account is going low, I’ll turn off the cable,” Ferguson said. She wants legislatures to make adjustments so that we don’t run out of water and the springs can still flourish.

“We need to join arms and solve this together,” she said.

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