Category Archives: Education

Fla. lawmakers set to override Gov. Crist’s vetoes

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) – Florida lawmakers are poised to do something they haven’t done in 12 years and that they’ve accomplished only twice in the last 24 – override a governor’s veto.

The Republican-controlled Legislature’s agenda for a planned one-day special session Tuesday includes override votes on up to seven bills and one budget item. All were vetoed earlier this year by Gov. Charlie Crist, who quit the GOP to run unsuccessfully for the U.S. Senate as an independent.

None, though, will be as contentious as an abortion bill that was one of two vetoed measures the Legislature last overrode on March 11, 1998.?The Legislature says it will not?consider hot-button?vetoes on teacher merit pay and retention, elections and abortion during the one-day session.

“My personal inclination would be not to try and take up anything in special session that was a big, more regular session-type issue such as health care or education,” incoming House Speaker Dean Cannon said.

Instead, Cannon and Senate President Mike Haridopolos said they picked legislation that passed by wide margins and with bipartisan support. The override candidates include a $9.7 million appropriation for the University of Florida’s Shands Teaching Hospital and a bill that would dilute the powers of the governor and other executive branch officials by requiring legislative approval of administrative rules with an economic effect.

Another bill?would let local governments put yard trash in garbage dumps so they no longer will have to make separate pickups for each type of refuse.

The two leaders Monday dropped two of the 10 override attempts they’d originally proposed, including one at the request of Governor-elect Rick Scott, a fellow Republican. That bill?would have stripped the governor of sole authority over the Department of Management Services and required him to share it with the three Cabinet members.

Scott “thinks he has the right skill set to turn around this area, and it needs a lot of turn around,” Haridopolos said.? The agency has drawn criticism from lawmakers over its building construction, maintenance and leasing functions.

The other bill contained provisions designed to control the state’s costs for risk management and workers compensation, including a cap on how much doctors can get reimbursed for drugs they dispense to injured workers. Crist’s veto was supported by doctors who donated heavily to Republicans, including political committees formed by Haridopolos and Cannon.

Besides the overrides, votes also are planned on appropriating $31 million in federal stimulus money for consumer rebates on purchases of solar energy and high-efficiency heating and air conditioning systems and delaying a new septic tank inspection requirement for six months until next July 1.

The last time the Legislature, also with Republican majorities in both chambers, overrode vetoes was when Democrat Lawton Chiles was governor

Republicans also voiced opposition to higher taxes, yet one vetoed bill set for possible override would triple the tax on citrus to 3 cents a box. The increase is expected to raise $3.5 million a year for research on such things as greening, a citrus disease.

Haridopolos said he supports the increase because growers approved it in a referendum.
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Fla. lawmakers set to override Gov. Crist’s vetoes

Local education leaders discuss longer school years, other topics at FGCU forum

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Local education leaders discuss longer school years, other topics at FGCU forum

FGCU’s Bower School of Music opens with halls engineered to enhance and contain sound

Construction workers rush to complete the recital hall in the new music building for the Bower School of Music at Florida Gulf Coast University on Tuesday, Aug. 10, 2010, in South Fort Myers.   David Albers/Staff

Photo by DAVID ALBERS // Buy this photo

Construction workers rush to complete the recital hall in the new music building for the Bower School of Music at Florida Gulf Coast University on Tuesday, Aug. 10, 2010, in South Fort Myers. David Albers/Staff

23,000 square-foot facility opens to students this Aug. 23

$11.6 million spent on construction

$1 million, more than actually, spent on new instruments, including $637,000 on pianos

196-seat recital hall

120 music majors are enrolled this fall

25 new Steinway pianos were delivered to the school last week

3 phases represent the build-out plan for the Bower School — this building represents phase one

To learn more

To learn more about the Bower School of Music, including named and contribution opportunities, call the school at (239) 590-7851 www.fgcu.edu/cas/bsm/

Home of the cymbals and saxophones, the piccolos and pianos, it may still be the quietest building on campus.

That’s because

Florida Gulf Coast University’s new Bower School of Music was designed, and is expected, to be “acoustically perfect.”

Rehearsal rooms are built on floating floors to prevent sound vibrations from travelling, and the doors of the recital hall have been manufactured specially to prevent any noise from leaking in. So when students start streaming back onto campus at

Florida Gulf Coast University Aug. 23, they will fill the rooms at Bower with music, not the hallways.

The spacious new, 23,000-square-foot building is physically a stone’s throw from the series of modular trailers that previously housed the music department, but it is a world away by every other measurement.

“This has been the missing link,” said Michael Baron, FGCU’s head of piano studies. “The great building, the great instruments will truly help us compete on a national scale.”

“The building we’re in right now is only supposed to be for 50 students, and we’re going to be up to 120 majors this fall,” said Rod Chesnutt, head of instrumental studies at the school.

Chesnutt, like many of the upper-echelon faculty and administrators at the school, has been there since the beginning, four years ago, when the music department did not even have a trailer to call home. Faculty members recall offices that were little more than closets, and rehearsal rooms that were nothing but ordinary classrooms.

The old modular building, while more spacious, offered no acoustics. In the old environs, sound bleeds through walls, and a piano practice becomes an inextricable part of a trumpet lesson.

The move into a new building, described on all sides as state-of-the art, is also described as a timely progression.

In May, the school’s first students will graduate as music majors.

“When you come here to start a program, it’s sort of what your goals are,” said Chesnutt. “It’s why you start a program like this. It’s creating an identity — because the building is part of the identity now.”

Acoustical attention

The 196-seat recital hall boasts a soaring ceiling, buffeted by honey-stained, wood-paneled walls that have been angled to create peaks and valleys. They resemble giant pieces of origami, with the angles designed cradle sound and gently reverberate it back to the audience.

The building was practically constructed with nary a right angle; every ceiling is sloped, and every wall set obliquely. Parallel surfaces bounce sound back and forth; its irregular angles let the sound slip along the seams of walls and back down to the listener.

“I have been in 30 music schools across the country, and this is by far the best music school I have ever been in,” said Greg Billings, owner of the Steinway Piano Gallery in Bonita Springs.

Last week, Billings helped deliver 25 pianos to the new building, including two 9-foot concert grand pianos and five Steinway Model B grand pianos, the instrument on which George Gershwin composed “Rhapsody in Blue” and Irving Berlin wrote “White Christmas.” The new pianos cost the school $637,000.

Steinway is the exclusive piano supplier at FGCU, making it the 111th school to hold that distinction. It joins Yale University’s School of Music, the Juilliard School and Oberlin College’s Conservatory of Music.

The 25 new pianos, as well as a wealth of other new instruments, were included as part of the $11.6 million total building cost. The total cost was covered by a state allocation, and while some work is ongoing, the project is expected to come in under budget.

The school has also received substantial donor support from community members. The FGCU Foundation has undertaken a separate campaign asking donors to make donations in exchange for naming opportunities in the new building. For example, a $100,000 gift puts a donor’s name on a concert grand piano; $25,000 names the music laboratory or a conference room; $1,000 gets a donor’s name on a single seat in the recital hall.

All gifts will, in turn, be placed in the performing arts endowment, which supports arts programs and students at the school. University spokesman Ken Schexnayder said the university is still receiving donations, and is not prepared to release a donor fund raising total.

Robert Thayer, interim director of the Bower School of Music, said the school’s relationship in the community is a symbiotic one.

“I think the growth of the program in the very short time it’s existed is remarkable,” he said. “It helps us realize we have an important position in the community. … I don’t know that this kind of explosion could have happened in many other places. Support from individuals has exceeded anyone’s hopes.”

Details count

The features at the new building are many, and are getting both faculty and students excited.

For Douglas McDonald, a music major from Fort Lauderdale, it is the attention to detail, especially in the building’s rehearsal hall.

The large room boasts two small observation decks, and gives students a bird’s eye view of techniques and conducting. The rehearsal area is also equipped for recording, as is the recital hall.

“I was pretty amazed — blown away by the quality of work that’s been put into it,” said McDonald, 19, after getting something of a sneak peek of the building.

He and a handful of other students helped move instruments into the building last week. McDonald, who plays alto saxophone and wants to teach music, looked at the move-in as less of a chore than an opportunity.

“I actually got the chance, while we were unpacking some of the percussion instruments, to hear how they sound in the space,” he said. “For me, personally, it’s an opportunity to use state-of-the art equipment and technology to put on a world-class performance.”

But perhaps the biggest boon for students, faculty and visiting community members, is the recital hall. Music recitals, a vital component of music majors’ education, have previously taken place in the school’s student ballroom.

“I’ve done an awful lot of concerts there, but I can’t be very enthusiastic about it,” said Baron, who regularly performs concerts around the world. “You practice and you practice, and you get the sounds just right, and then you go to a place where the sound is so dead — it’s kind of depressing.”

The first recital planned in the new recital hall is a faculty quintet performance scheduled for

7:30 p.m. Sept. 16. The free recital will feature Baron on the piano, Kirsten Bendixen-Mahoney on horn, Judy Christy on oboe, Kristen Sonneborn on bassoon and Paul Votapek on clarinet.

This week, the recital hall was the only portion of the building that had not been officially handed off to FGCU from the construction company, Owen-Ames-Kimball.

Officials at the school broke ground for the new building in September, and expected to move in sometime in December, in time for the start of the spring semester.

When construction started running ahead of schedule, the move-in date was moved up to October, then to August.

That’s not to say corners have been cut, Thayer cautions: “We think it’s been done with great care and loving tenderness.”

The long move

Even with all of this new space, the university plans to continue using the modular trailers as rehearsal space.

“Frankly, as we’re moving into this building, we’ll be at capacity the first day,” Baron said.

Fortunately, the new building is just the beginning. It represents phase one of a three-phase plan for the Bower School of Music. Land adjacent to the new building is being set aside to accommodate phases two and three.

But faculty members are not getting ahead of themselves. For the last four years they have looked toward the future, when the Bower School would have a permanent home. With that day finally here, they are determined to live in the moment.

“Musicians deal with sound,” said Baron. “Sound is everything to us, so to have something that is ideal allows us to produce our craft so much better than before.”

A formal open house for the new Bower School of Music is planned for January.

Connect with education reporter Leslie Williams Hale at naplesnews.com/staff/leslie_hale

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

FGCU’s Bower School of Music opens with halls engineered to enhance and contain sound

Dangerous intersections: U.S. 41 is accident central throughout south Lee

Scenes at the intersection of Sanibel Boulevard and U.S. 41, one of the most dangerous intersections in Lee County. Greg Kahn/Staff

Photo by GREG KAHN // Buy this photo

Scenes at the intersection of Sanibel Boulevard and U.S. 41, one of the most dangerous intersections in Lee County. Greg Kahn/Staff

The Daily News reviewed crash reports from 2006 through 2008 for 22 intersections south of Daniels Parkway, determining which had the most accidents and the highest crash rates compared with traffic volume.

Of about 1,400 crashes in the three-year period of the Daily News analysis, about half were rear-end collisions. Another 450 weren’t classified. Fewer than 300 were either side-swipes or angled collisions and 33 were head-on crashes.


Vivian Jones waved her hands back and forth, criss-crossing over her head, swooping down into a loud clap.

That was her impersonation of traffic at one of the most crash-prone intersections in south Lee County.

Jones lives, works, shops and takes her child to day care near the crossroads of Sanibel Boulevard and U.S. 41 in San Carlos Park.

She drives cautiously and remains alert on the streets she calls stressful.

“When you’re driving,” Jones said, “you can’t just drive for you. You have to drive for everyone else because everyone else is bang, bang, bang.”

Nearly 47,000 cars pass through this spot every day. With more than one crash every two weeks, these cross streets ranked fourth-highest in an analysis of south Lee County’s most dangerous intersections.

The Daily News reviewed crash reports from 2006 through 2008 for 22 intersections south of Daniels Parkway, determining which had the most accidents and the highest crash rates compared with traffic volume.

Traffic engineers and law enforcement officers use statistics such as these to highlight roadways in need of safety improvements or extra enforcement.

Officials interviewed for this story felt that the intersections in south Lee County were, overall, in pretty good shape.

“There’s no intersection on U.S. 41 that’s been raised to the (DOT) for issues of safety,” Florida Department of Transportation spokeswoman Debbie Tower said. “We see crashes at signalized intersections. That’s unfortunately not atypical. And we do see a lot of rear-end crashes. … We’re just not seeing anything out of the ordinary.”

Of about 1,400 crashes in the three-year period of the Daily News analysis, about half were rear-end collisions. Another 450 weren’t classified. Fewer than 300 were either side-swipes or angled collisions and 33 were head-on crashes.

“There’s no intersection on U.S. 41 that’s been raised to the (DOT) for issues of safety,” Florida Department of Transportation spokeswoman Debbie Tower said. “We see crashes at signalized intersections. That’s unfortunately not atypical. And we do see a lot of rear-end crashes. … We’re just not seeing anything out of the ordinary.”

A number of factors play into the safety equation: design flaws, congestion, traffic signals that allow for dangerous movements and distractions, such as driveways into businesses.

By far, the No. 1 cause of crashes is driver error, officials said.

Engineers attributed 90 percent of collisions to distractions such as following too closely or turning attention to text messages or kids in the back seat.

“You’re going to have crashes because we’re humans and humans make mistakes,” said Stephen Jansen, Lee County’s senior traffic engineer.

When those mistakes happen at an increasing rate, Jansen takes note to see if anything can be done to reduce drivers’ risks.

One such analysis took place a few years ago at the Sanibel and U.S. 41 intersection near where Jones works at Taco Viva.

The county traffic division noticed there had been 84 crashes in 2004 and 2005, 21 of which resulted in injuries.

“Turning off of (U.S.) 41 in each direction was a problem,” Jansen said.

Seventeen crashes happened when cars tried to turn left from U.S. 41 and collided with traffic moving straight through the intersection.

In 2006, that signal was changed to limit left turns to green arrows only. In the years that followed, left-turn injury crashes became practically nonexistent. From 2007 through 2009 there were 63 crashes, nearly half the annual rate from earlier years. Nine crashes in the three-year span resulted in injuries, two of which were left-turning vehicles colliding with through traffic.

(Monday, it will be your chance at naplesnews.com to Sound Off about traffic. Return to our website on Monday and take several polls about traffic in our area.)

Thursday: Collier’s most dangerous intersections

Today: South Lee’s most dangerous intersections

Weekend: Dangerous intersections, by community

Monday: Readers’ choices and several polls for you to Sound Off about Southwest Florida traffic

(Pick up copies of the Daily News this Sunday and Monday for newspaper versions of this series and a full-page map showing the most dangerous intersections)

The intersection still ranks high for crashes, however those typically don’t involve injuries. Most often, there are rear-end collisions that typify driver error.

“It doesn’t matter what you do to the road if the driver’s not paying attention,” Jansen said.

When Jansen’s crash-rate analysis shows less than one crash for every million vehicles, he considers it to be in good shape. Between one and two crashes per million are basically safe, but could possibly trigger a review. Anything more than two crashes per million vehicles is a red flag.

In the Daily News analysis, just two south Lee County intersections along U.S. 41 surpassed Jansen’s threshold: Old 41 Road had 2.15 crashes per million and Corkscrew Road saw 2.08 crashes per million vehicles.

Old 41 Road is a city of Bonita Springs road, but Daryl Walk, the city’s public works manager, said the city doesn’t have the engineering staff to analyze crash statistics. Crashes along there trended down, with 61 reported in 2006, 39 in 2007 and 25 in 2008.

Tower said she couldn’t be sure what the numbers were illustrating. In 2006, U.S. 41 was under construction from Old 41 Road south, but she declined to say whether that was a factor.

“I just can’t draw that conclusion,” she said.

However, Jansen said where there is construction there are distracted drivers. They turn their attention to construction work or become confused by barricades.

Rodgers Wilkinson, 56, manager of the Circle K on U.S. 41 near Old 41 Road, said traffic usually moves along at a good pace with few accidents.

“You do start to see (traffic) back up here,” Wilkinson said. “Usually it flows pretty good.”

Corkscrew Road at U.S. 41 carried the second-highest crash rate in the Daily News analysis and saw about 127 crashes in three years. Most of those were rear-end and side-swipes.

Jansen said those types of accidents were congestion-related. A fix for that is coming by early next year. The state plans to six-lane U.S. 41 from Corkscrew north to Hickory Drive.

Most top spots for crashes occur at higher-volume roads.

Six Mile Cypress Parkway at U.S. 41 carried about 88,000 vehicles each day.

Between one and two crashes per million are basically safe, but could possibly trigger a review. Anything more than two crashes per million vehicles is a red flag. In the Daily News analysis, just two south Lee County intersections along U.S. 41 surpassed the threshold: Old 41 Road had 2.15 crashes per million and Corkscrew Road saw 2.08 crashes per million vehicles.

Though its crash rate didn’t make the top five, that intersection saw 116 crashes from 2006-08, ranking fourth in total collisions.

Drivers can expect some relief there as well. A state project will double the capacity of the left-turn lanes in both directions on U.S. 41.

That’s where Brooke Wallis, 52, manager of the DQ Grill & Chill near the intersection, calls traffic “crazy.”

“This light backs up a lot and people are trying to squeeze into the turn lane for the beach,” Wallis said.

The two turn lanes already operating in both directions aren’t enough to keep cars from overflowing into lanes where traffic is continuing through the intersection.

“If you’re not prepared for it,” Wallis said, “you can bump into someone else.”

Once all of U.S. 41 is six lanes, it will likely not get wider, Tower said, so new north-south corridors become key to managing growth.

That’s why Metro Parkway will be extended to U.S. 41 in 2012.

Still, some see enforcement as the crux to safe streets.

“They can do anything to the roads, but the only thing that will change drivers is seeing more police on the roads,” said Marilyn Kidder, 61, a saleswoman for Carl’s Patio at the Alico Road and U.S. 41 intersection.

Lt. Jim Drzymala, traffic commander of the Lee County Sheriff’s Office, agreed.

“Once we determine the education and engineering won’t work, we’ll go out and focus some enforcement on (a section of road),” he said.

County engineering, enforcement and education officials meet monthly to discuss streets in need of attention.

“We don’t have any bad intersections,” Drzymala said. “We have high-volume intersections, but that’s just part of growing pains in Southwest Florida.”

While some growing pains can be alleviated by widening streets, some streets have had all of the fixing they will likely get.

?Dangerous intersections: Where you’re most likely to crash in Collier County

Bonita Beach Road carries an average of 67,000 cars each day and saw 139 crashes, or 1.9 crashes per million vehicles. But plans to widen it west of U.S. 41 are stalled with a lack of money, Jansen said.

“There’s never going to be enough money for all the needs,” added Harry Campbell, Lee’s traffic director. The intersection maintenance budget has been cut from about $1 million to $750,000.

To the extent possible, traffic signals can promote efficiency and safety.

Yellow lights can be lengthened to give drivers more time to pass through the intersection, as can the full cycle from green to red to handle peak-season or peak-hour volumes.

Law enforcement officers can be tipped off to red-light runners by special lights on signals that illuminate when a car has run a red light.

?Dangerous intersections: How we did our analysis in Collier, south Lee

?Dangerous intersections: Lee data

Sometimes those lights aren’t perfect, though, and the county can fix glitches when notified by the public.

Michael Condello, 31, of Naples who works at the Subway at the intersection of Corkscrew Road and U.S. 41, said his biggest traffic concern is sensors.

Sensors detect when a car is waiting for a green arrow. But that can be problematic for people riding motorcycles, which sometimes may not be detected by sensors.

“I have to wait for a car to come behind me for the light to turn,” Condello said. “Sometimes I just have to blow through it.”

Tower was adamant, however, that drivers shouldn’t consider traffic signals as tools for safe streets.

“Traffic signals are not safety devices,” she said. “They assign right of way.”

Sometimes if a driver is killed, family will ask for a traffic light at the crash location. But lights installed arbitrarily may cause more problems, Tower said.

“Safety is in the hands of drivers,” she said.

Sometimes residents see a problem where traffic officials don’t.

Several drivers interviewed for this story said turning at the Bonita Beach Road and Arroyal roads intersection is the most dangerous in south Lee County.

Athena Andrus, 25, who works at CVS near the U.S. 41 and Bonita Beach Road intersection, said the problem is turning left.

“When there are other cars in the turn lane (across from you) you can’t see oncoming traffic,” Andrus said. “People behind honk at you, but you can’t see and you can’t take that risk.”

Tami Gruver, 39, of Bonita Springs, was in an accident there.

“It totaled my car and I had neck injuries,” she said. “I get nervous going through there.”

The intersection allows cars to turn left on the green arrow and green ball.

With about 15 accidents a year and more than 30,000 cars traveling through the intersection each day, the Arroyal-Bonita Beach Road intersection sees about one crash per million drivers.

“In the grand scheme of things it’s not that bad,” Jansen said.

Maintaining traffic flow and safety is a balancing act.

“I can make these roads so safe nobody would die,” Jansen said. “But nobody wants to go 15 miles per hour.”

__ Connect with Tara E. McLaughlin at www.naplesnews.com/staff/tara-mclaughlin/

DANGEROUS INTERSECTIONS: The series so far

?Dangerous intersections:The series

?Dangerous intersections: A map of crash rates

?Dangerous intersections: A map of crash totals

?Dangerous intersections: Where you’re most likely to crash in Collier County

?Dangerous intersections: A closer look at five of Collier County’s worst

?Dangerous intersections: Collier data

?Dangerous intersections: U.S. 41 is accident central throughout south Lee

?Dangerous intersections: Lee data

?Dangerous intersections: How we did our analysis in Collier, south Lee

This series was reported by Ryan Mills, Tara McLaughlin and Tracy Miguel. Video by Carrie Wise. Database by Joseph Prehoda.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Dangerous intersections: U.S. 41 is accident central throughout south Lee

Lee man alleges voodoo, fights to get motel back from Santeria spiritual adviser

In October 2007, Enzo Vincenzi, 43, now of Estero, paid Miriam Pacheco $50 and the “Santeria Africana” spiritual adviser and healer warned he was in grave danger. Pacheco, who calls herself Madrina Miriam (godmother Miriam), warned only she could help. In the end, Pacheco took Vincenzi to a Fort Myers lawyer, and Vincenzi signed documents that Pacheco prepared, signing away his motel.

“During the course of the ceremony, Pacheco killed a bird and passed it over Vincenzi’s stomach while praying and chanting, which she claimed would heal his stomach ailments,” the lawsuit says. “Pacheco also covered Vincenzi’s eyes, made him drink an unidentified liquid and laid her hands on him — all of which she claimed would help heal him.”

Attorney Joseph Hoffman, who represented Pacheco, just considers it a case involving a language barrier: Vincenzi speaks English, while Pacheco only speaks Spanish. “I’ve had weirder cases,” Hoffman said. “I’m not saying this was plain vanilla. But it’s a property dispute. That’s all it was.”


It sounds like a bad TV movie.

A sick Lee County hotelier worried about his finances and stomach problems looked in the Yellow Pages under herbs, found the Botanica 7 Potensias Africanas shop in Fort Myers, then sought treatment and help.

On that day in October 2007, Enzo Vincenzi, 43, now of Estero, paid the owner, Miriam Pacheco, $50 and the “Santeria Africana” spiritual adviser and healer warned he was in grave danger. Pacheco, who calls herself Madrina Miriam (godmother Miriam), warned only she could help.

Over weeks and months, there were ritualistic ceremonies involving a dead bird, a sacrificed rooster, liquid potions, prayers and chants by Pacheco, her Santerian “god-daughter,” Maria Teresa Torres, and another god-daughter.

In the end, Pacheco took Vincenzi to a Fort Myers lawyer, and Vincenzi signed documents that Pacheco prepared, signing away his motel.

Those are the allegations in a lawsuit Vincenzi and Sabal Oasis Inn filed in Lee Circuit Court against Pacheco, 57, and Torres, 43.

“It was a very bizarre case,” Naples attorney Michael D. Randolph, who filed a related lawsuit against Pacheco and Torres, said of Vincenzi’s allegations.

But attorney Joseph Hoffman, who represented Pacheco and Torres, just considers it a case involving a language barrier: Vincenzi speaks English, while Pacheco and Torres only speak Spanish.

“I’ve had weirder cases,” Hoffman said. “I’m not saying this was plain vanilla. But it’s a property dispute. That’s all it was.”

His clients have denied allegations of ritualistic ceremonies, fraud or coercing Vincenzi into turning over his motel.

On Thursday, Lee Circuit Judge Sherra Winesett signed an order for partial summary judgment, for $37,000 that a Lee circuit jury awarded Vincenzi in April for intentional infliction of emotional stress.

Vincenzi, who ended up marrying Torres’ daughter, was involuntarily committed to a psychiatric hospital under the state’s Baker Act months after the rituals, due to the loss of his motel and fears that Pacheco’s predictions of doom, his poisoning and death would come true.

His wife, Cynthia, testified against her mother and Pacheco, as did others who said Pacheco scammed them.

The jury also awarded Vincenzi $99,500 for the loss of his 13-room motel and attached home, finding fraudulent misrepresentation by Pacheco and Torres.

But Pacheco doesn’t have $99,000 and Vincenzi’s attorney, Bradley Lang of Naples, is working on a rescission of deed so Vincenzi can get his motel back.

“Returning the motel is ‘equitable relief’ and only the judge can do that,” Lang said after the brief hearing. “The jury can only award monetary damages.”

A rescission of deed is designed to make everyone involved whole, a domino effect that returns all parties back to the way each started.

In the other case, attorney Randolph has $250,000 that Pacheco obtained through a loan to pay his client, Leone Mason Contracting Inc., which is owned by Vincenzi’s father. He’d had the motel’s original mortgage, sued Pacheco and Torres for payment after the transfer, and they defaulted.

“If you have a car that you bought, you give it back to the dealer and the dealer gives it back to the manufacturer and the manufacturer gives it back to the smelter,” Randolph said, explaining a rescission. “You either choose damages or you choose rescission.”

Randolph would return the $250,000 to Pacheco, who would give it to her lender. Pacheco and Torres and their families would vacate the motel, then Vincenzi would get it back.

A hearing on the deed rescission hasn’t yet been scheduled.

“We’re waiting to see if my client can come up with the money,” Hoffman said. “Money is tight now.”

Vincenzi is hopeful.

“They made me homeless,” Vincenzi said after the hearing, adding that he’s unemployed and faces nearly $20,000 in medical bills. “They traumatized me, I ended up in the hospital, I’m drowning in debt — and they’re still in my house.”

Depositions show Pacheco, of Cuba, and Torres, who is from Honduras, have elementary school educations. They work at the motel and Pacheco’s store, which sells saint statues, candles, herbs for spiritual baths, and other items for spiritual ceremonies, voodoo and Palo, an Afro-Cuban religion also known as Reglas de Congo.

Pacheco denied doing voodoo or Palo, saying her son wrote that when he set up her website: http://botanica7potencias.com/

After the lawsuits were filed, there were allegations back and forth and restraining orders.

“They made up an incident report and three weeks later, when I was in court, they have me arrested and claim I assaulted them,” Vincenzi said. “The day we were supposed to go to trial on this, they dropped it. The judge warned them. He saw right through the whole thing.”

Torres, however, was convicted of battery on Vincenzi and resisting arrest after a Lee County deputy saw Torres hit Vincenzi.

Vincenzi also filed complaints to alert state and federal agencies about the real estate fraud. He’s reported the Fort Myers attorney who handled the deed transfer to The Florida Bar, two real estate brokers and an accountant to the Division of Business and Professional Regulation, and mailed letters to the state Attorney General, the U.S. Attorney, the FBI and others.

The original lawsuit filed by Vincenzi’s prior attorney, Andrew Epstein of Fort Myers, details the unusual case:

Pacheco cautioned Vincenzi he was in danger of demonic spirits, the devil, and said the hotel’s prior owners had buried the devil. He was in grave danger, faced IRS problems and she claimed prostitutes worked at his motel.

She said she could help by becoming his Santeria Africana godmother. At a card reading and St. Lazarus ritualistic ceremony, she warned he was a “walking dead man” and his housekeeper was poisoning his food.

“During the course of the ceremony, Pacheco killed a bird and passed it over Vincenzi’s stomach while praying and chanting, which she claimed would heal his stomach ailments,” the lawsuit says. “Pacheco also covered Vincenzi’s eyes, made him drink an unidentified liquid and laid her hands on him — all of which she claimed would help heal him.”

A week later, she sacrificed a rooster, saying it would protect him from the motel’s former owners, who were trying to kill him. She told him to pay her $500 so he could move into the home she shared with Torres. He remained there, confined to a bed, for about two months as she and Torres served as spiritual advisers.

She took him to a beach and performed a “Queen of the Seas” ceremony, chanting and praying over him as he lay in the sand. She urged him to see her attorney, who could help with legal problems she predicted.

She coerced him into transferring the property, promising to save him from demonic spirits and attempts on his life.

She took him to her attorney and Vincenzi signed deeds Pacheco prepared, transferring the motel to her and Torres without cost. He lost his Jaguar, pickup truck, motorboat and possessions after she evicted him; they deny taking his vehicles.

A former client used to picket Pacheco’s store, claiming she was defrauded, and evidence Lang obtained shows this wasn’t the only time Pacheco was accused of fraud.

An attorney for Devoe Pontiac in Bonita Springs successfully fought a worker’s compensation claim she’d filed under her married name, Miriam Engstrom. An insurance database turned up many fraudulent slip and falls, injuries, a stroke and accidents she’d filed claims for against four employers from 2001 to April 2003; insurers denied them.

Documents show she settled a slip-and-fall hernia case against Walmart for about $56,000 and got $8,000 for a 2001 motor vehicle claim. That insurer later found she’d had two other auto claims in 1998 and 1999, and had sought benefits for an alleged 1995 industrial accident — although she claimed to have only worked as a housekeeper and had no prior auto claims.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Lee man alleges voodoo, fights to get motel back from Santeria spiritual adviser

PHOTOS: Estero firefighters ablaze with goodwill as they preview new calendar

Estero Fire Rescue firefighters Eliel Blanco and Fred Gonzalez. Firefighters from Estero Fire Rescue took the stage Saturday at a charity calendar party at the Hyatt Coconut Point. The calendar preview party is part of a series of upcoming fundraisers to benefit Partners in Breast Cancer and the Estero Safety Fund. Kevin Merritt / Special to the Daily News

Estero Fire Rescue firefighters Eliel Blanco and Fred Gonzalez. Firefighters from Estero Fire Rescue took the stage Saturday at a charity calendar party at the Hyatt Coconut Point. The calendar preview party is part of a series of upcoming fundraisers to benefit Partners in Breast Cancer and the Estero Safety Fund. Kevin Merritt / Special to the Daily News

Firefighters from Estero Fire Rescue took the stage Saturday at a charity calendar party at the Hyatt Coconut Point. The calendar preview party is part of a series of upcoming fundraisers to benefit Partners in Breast Cancer and the Estero Safety Fund. Kevin Merritt / Special to the Daily News

Firefighters from Estero Fire Rescue took the stage Saturday at a charity calendar party at the Hyatt Coconut Point. The calendar preview party is part of a series of upcoming fundraisers to benefit Partners in Breast Cancer and the Estero Safety Fund. Kevin Merritt / Special to the Daily News

For more information on the Estero Firefighters 2011 calendar or to make a donation, call (239) 390-8000, or e-mail Fred Gonzalez at Gonzalez@EsteroFire.org or Eliel Blanco at Blanco@EsteroFire.org.

Estero was a few degrees hotter than the rest of Southwest Florida on Saturday.

The Estero Fire and Rescue firefighter charity calendar party served as a preview of the calendar that will debut in the fall.

Several firefighters took the stage to promote the department’s first calendar. Some went shirtless, wearing nothing but suspenders and pants.

The event began at 11 a.m. and continued until 4 p.m., featuring music, barbecue and a fashion show. Attendees participated in a silent auction and raffles throughout the day. All the action happened poolside at the Hyatt Place Coconut Point as attendees mingled with several members of Estero Fire and Rescue.

“The calendar is for a good cause, and we wanted to provide something fun for the public,” said Eliel Blanco, a firefighter and EMT for Estero Fire Rescue. “We’re glad the community will be able to see us both as firefighters and as the average people we are. We’ve never done a calendar before so we’re very excited to see the outcome and the reaction of the public who have supported us tremendously. ”

The calendar preview party is part of a series of upcoming fundraisers to benefit Partners in Breast Cancer and the Estero Safety Fund. Partners in Breast Cancer provides education and support for people with breast cancer while the safety fund is a charity that provides community fire and safety education.

To date, Partners in Breast Cancer has assisted more than 7,000 women and men who qualified for the program. Some of the services include mammograms, biopsies, ultrasounds and mastectomy surgical consults among others.

“We chose Partners in Breast Cancer as one of our beneficiaries because we knew these funds would stay in the community,” said Fred Gonzalez, a firefighter and paramedic for Estero Fire Rescue.

“The issue of breast cancer affects so many people these days, and we wanted to focus on trying to provide some type of contribution to the largest group of people in Southwest Florida.”

Firefighters say they’re looking forward to other events. They hope to have the calendar available for sale by Black Friday, the day after Thanksgiving, and hope to debut the calendar at Coconut Point when shoppers will be in a buying frenzy.

However, that will all depend on funding. The success of the calendar project and the amount of money they’ll be able to give to the Estero Safety Fund and Partners in Breast Cancer will hinge solely on the financial support the department receives from donations.

For more information on the Estero Firefighters 2011 calendar or to make a donation, call (239) 390-8000, or e-mail Fred Gonzalez at Gonzalez@EsteroFire.org or Eliel Blanco at Blanco@EsteroFire.org.

E-mail Kelly Merritt at kelly@kelly-merritt.com.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

PHOTOS: Estero firefighters ablaze with goodwill as they preview new calendar

Summer reading keeps students from falling behind in school, experts say

Research shows that children who don’t continue reading through the summer can lose a month or more of progress made during the school year.

The following are books recommended for the summer of 2010 by Just Read, Florida! _ an initiative adopted by then-Gov. Jeb Bush in 2001 that aims to help every student become a successful, independent reader:

—Kindergarten through third grade—:

• “Why Mosquitoes Buzz in People’s Ears: A West African Tale” by Verna Aardema

• “Pancakes for Breakfast” by Tommie DePaila

• “Charlotte’s Web” by E.B. White

• “Miss Nelson is Missing” by Harry Allard

—Grades four and five—:

• “Princess Academy” by Sharon Hale

• “Island of the Blue Dolphins” by Scott O’Dell

• “Sarah, Plain and Tall” by Patricia MacLachlan

• “Discovering Mars” by Melvin Berger

—Grades six through eight—:

• “Wangari’s Tree of Peace” by Jeanette Winter

• “Hoot” by Carl Hiaasen

• “Bridge to Terabithia” by Katherine Paterson

• “The Lightning Thief” by Rick Riordan

—Grades nine through 12—:

• “The Book Thief” by Markus Zusak

• “The Old Man and the Sea” by Ernest Hemingway

• “A Separate Peace” by John Knowles

• “In the Time of Butterflies” by Julia Alvarez


Lisa Wendel walked out of the headquarters branch of the Collier County Public Library ready for summer.

In her arms were a stack of books, mysteries and romances, waiting for their pages to be opened.

“I just do it for fun,” Lisa, 14, said of reading. “Not too many of my friends do it, but I read a lot because it lets me find more things to build (my knowledge) on.”

Whatever she is reading, Lisa is cracking a book this summer and that’s something educators and researchers believe is necessary to help her when she soon starts her freshman year at Gulf Coast High School.

And it is not just true for high school students.

Kaitlin Yonge, 10, a fifth-grader at Pelican Marsh Elementary School, said she has enjoyed reading The Beacon Street Girls, a series of books written by Annie Bryant.

“They’re about a group of girls who go through problems and solve them,” she said.

Kaitlin also had a copy of Judy Blume’s “Fudge-a-Mania” in her hands. Blume is an author familiar to her mother, Stephanie Yonge, who read Blume’s books when she was younger.

“I think she likes to get lost in the stories. She likes being taken away to another place,” Yonge said.

Yonge said she tries to encourage both Kaitlyn and younger sister, Megan, to be good readers.

“It is important to read. You learn how to learn,” she said. “And I think it helps with boredom. It breaks up the summer. They also need to be in the practice of reading. You don’t want them to be out of school for two months and not pick up a single book.”

Research backs up Yonge’s assertion that children need to read over their summer vacation and shows that children who don’t continue reading through the summer can lose a month or more of progress made during the school year. Of greater concern, according to the International Reading Association, is that the losses are cumulative, creating a wider gap each year between more-proficient and less-proficient students.

Current research points out that more summer reading reduces the amount of summer learning loss.

“A key step toward stopping the summer slide is the development and launch of high-quality programs that take advantage of time outside the school day and year to help children learn, grow and develop,” Education Secretary Arne Duncan has said.

A study by Scholastic Inc. revealed that the No. 1 complaint from children regarding reading is that they don’t read more because they cannot find books they enjoy.

Lisa said she would recommend that students like herself read books by Nicholas Sparks.

“They’re all kind of the same, but I like sad books,” she said. “They’re just really good books.”

Parents are a top source of book suggestions for kids who read most, according to Scholastic’s Kids and Family Reading Report.

But for parents who don’t have book suggestions for their children, there is help.

The Collier County School District publishes reading lists for students in kindergarten through fifth grade. The lists are available on the district’s Web site, www.collier.k12.fl.us/parents/summerreading.asp.

Just Read, Florida! _ the reading initiative signed by then-Gov. Jeb Bush in 2001 _ also has developed a recommended reading list for students in kindergarten through 12th grade. It is available at www.justreadfamilies.org/SummerReadingList.pdf.

The Collier County Public Library also offers a free summer reading program that gives students incentives to read. For the younger students, the library allows students to get a pocket prize each time the students report they have read a book over the summer.

In addition, the library will enroll students who read between five and 15 books, depending on the child’s age and reading ability, into a drawing for a pass to the Sun-N-Fun Lagoon in North Naples. Gold medal winners, those students who have gone above the initial Sun-N-Fun drawing, will be entered into a drawing for a one-year family membership to the Naples Zoo.

For students age 11 to 17, the library will give a $5 gift card from Amazon.com for every 1,000 pages read.

Both contests run through July 26.

“It’s a good incentive,” said Yonge, who signed both of her daughters up for the program. “We participate every year.”

In a 2003 study, University of Florida education professors Anne McGill-Franzen and Richard Allington found that a summer setback is a bigger problem for children from low-income families. One of the reasons, the two say, is that economically disadvantaged children don’t have their own bedroom libraries.

Barnes and Noble Booksellers is looking to remedy that. The book retailer, which is located at the Waterside Shops, is offering students in grades one through six the opportunity to receive a free book through its “Passport to Summer Reading with The 39 Clues” program.

Children have to read any eight books by Sept. 7, 2010, and record them in a passport, which is available at the store. Once the student has recorded the books, and where those books took place, he or she will be allowed to pick from a list of free books to add the book to his or her library.

Before school was out for the year, Sea Gate Elementary teacher Maria Cabrera spoke with all of the parents of her students, giving them information about the Barnes and Noble program _ the store is virtually across the street from the school _ and the public libraries.

“It’s my job to help them find the resources they need to help their children,” said Cabrera, who teaches English Language Learners. “We try to tell them what books are appropriate or what titles their students might like. If they don’t read, they will learn what they lose over the summer.”

A complete list of recommended books is available at www.justreadfamilies.org/SummerReadingList.pdf

Click here for the list

_ Connect with reporter Katherine Albers at www.naplesnews.com/staff/katherine-albers/.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Summer reading keeps students from falling behind in school, experts say

FCAT results to be released on Tuesday

TALLAHASSEE – Florida’s Commissioner of Education, Dr. Eric J. Smith announced the launch of a new Department of Education website relating to the delays currently being experienced in the reporting of this year’s Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test (FCAT) results. The website hosts a variety of informational resources on the issue including:

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  • Descriptions of the FCAT scoring and validation processes;
  • Frequently Asked Questions about the delays and other related topics; and
  • Links to contractual and procurement documents detailing the selection of the state’s testing contractor, NCS Pearson (Pearson).

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“It is vital that parents, educators and school districts across the state have trust in the accuracy and validity of their students’ FCAT scores,” said Commissioner Smith.? “This new online resource will help maximize transparency surrounding the issue of FCAT delays and scoring, and ensure the public has a resource to stay informed as we work to get the remaining results out as quickly as possible.”?

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FCAT results for reading, mathematics, writing and science are typically reported between mid-April and mid-June. Due to technical issues with Pearson’s database technology, extra time was needed this year to ensure each individual student’s results match up perfectly with their demographic information. These technology issues are completely separate from the scoring process, and detailed analyses by the Department, Pearson, and a third party testing expert, The Buros Institute, all confirm this year’s results are both accurate and reliable.

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Currently, only results for third grade students and students who were retaking the 10th grade exam for graduation purposes have been released. The Department expects to release the remaining results to school districts the evening of Monday, June 28.? This release will include reading and mathematics results for grades 4-10, writing results for grades 4, 8 and 10 and science results for grades 5, 8, and 11.?

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The FCAT is administered, scored and reported through a partnership between the Florida Department of Education and a private testing contractor hired through state procurement processes. The state’s current contractor, Pearson, was awarded the contract in 2008 after submitting a bid that received a higher technical score and had a lower cost than the other qualified vendor.

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To access the website and learn more about the FCAT, visit www.fldoe.org/fcat.asp.

FCAT results to be released on Tuesday

PC ProSchool

more info

Just before I overlook this with all that is proceeding on, I came across a new resource in town when I had been talking my certification check last week (or was it the week prior to?).  I was looking on the net for a location to consider my test when the “PC ProSchools” link came up as being a possible analyze web site.  It turns out it really is truly close to me (I-96 and East Beltline) and is pretty new (as well new for Google Maps – about a 365 days aged).

I believed I knew of the majority of the Microsoft coaching facilities in town and had in no way over heard of them.  I received to my analyze about 15 minutes early and they have been entirely booked so I started off asking about their applications and examining a few of their substance.  I ended up receiving a tour of the amenities and packages by a guy named Richard Fera (who was actually useful).

They had a terrific exercising lab (place for 50 at brand-new machines, dual projectors, dual stations inside the again with the room for far more trainers (3 trainers obtainable at a total class)).  They had an open lab and what looked like a server area / wiring closet (which turned out to be an “advanced lab” area).  Their focus is about the infrastructure side (i.e. the MCSE route) on having the servers up and operating and all varieties of troubleshooting.  They will not offer you applications for computer software progress (i.e. the MCPD route).  So they had certainly not noticed on the test I used to be having nevertheless it was very obvious that their testing lab got pretty a tad of use.

They may be a Microsoft Platinum Partner provider for exercising (which says considerably about volume, graduation fee, certification price, and placement charge (>70%)).  It truly is an fascinating style simply because they run it model of like anything in between a technical trainer (i.e. delivering a person class at a time) including a institution (full-blown multi-year system).  They provide you with an intense one-year software and that is open to any high-school graduate who meets some basic requirements.  The classes are either M/W or T/Th (which has a number of Fridays thrown in for test-prep and labs) from 5:30-10:30, and that is very somewhat of function.  But inside end make sure you have your MCSE.

Add to this that they also do placement and have tasks shopping for men and women – positioned 48 in the lass school of 50.

Examining this post it seems type of like an advertisement, however it definitely isn't.  I'd create about any new source class, school, book, etc. that may just be helpful to folks carrying out what I do (or supported the servers I should work on) and do that rather generally.  If I knew somebody who was enthusiastic about servers and hardware, and searching for just a task without having committing 2-4 a long time to school, this would seem like the kind of factor you'd require to help keep you on observe and get it carried out speedily.  It is an alternative well worth examining out at smallest.

Have you been among countless numbers who sense as if they’re stuck in a dead conclusion career? Possibly you invest numerous hours everyday wondering how you can escape and move on to anything greater. If not only a productive occupation, at least anything a smaller amount stressful and far a lot more worthwhile. You’ve seen the commercials about the many opportunities in IT, but is it for you? Can you actually succeed in such a field?

The response is often a resounding yes. It really is presently considered one of the fastest growing fields for the employment industry. Appropriate now stands out as the great time to leap in and grow to be an IT expert.  Laptop or computer Proschools can guide you get there.

Professionals predict that nearly half from the workforce inside United States will be employed in industries where by IT services are abundant. This is undoubtedly evident as much companies right now rely on know-how to functionality much more efficiently and hold up using the fierce competitors. The IT market can provide you with the power to acquire employment where by you're financially rewarded and respected for your abilities, something we all want and deserve.

Below we now have listed some truth in regards to the IT industry for the evaluate. This info must provide you with an concept on the way to locate that successful profession you’ve been looking for.

Careers in IT are predicted to boost at a rate of 36% over the up coming ten many years

The IT subject accounts for an estimated 25% in the projects developed from 2002 towards present day

Computer-related work are among the top 20 quickest growing professions in the United States. This range is envisioned to enhance much more than twice as quick as other occupations

It is been reported that IT jobs present the highest earnings of the many 20 most effective expanding professions.

It really is certainly one of the fasted increasing locations of employment within the land. This domain continues to provide possibilities to hundreds as many with the work produced for IT go unfilled as a consequence of the lack of qualified candidates.

The opportunities in Facts Technology are endless as this discipline can only strengthen. Just take a look at what we’ve undoubtedly witnessed so far. In a very quick sum of time, it may very well be you reaping the positive aspects of this booming sector. With numerous nearby institutions and on the net courses like Computer Pro Colleges, receiving commenced has by no means been a lot easier.

Purely hop around the net, confer having a handful of specialists and carry the first phase in the direction of establishing your new vocation.

What's Help Desk?

A Support Cubical career supplies the foundation to explore other satisfying careers in pcs. You never need earlier computer system experience to begin your schooling and in just ten short weeks you can be starting your new job! If you would like a fast solution…get trained…and get working!

Help Cubical is a important department at every single firm that utilizes computer systems. Nowadays that is basically each and every organization, making Guide Desk a recession proof job! Support Receptionist counter technicians respond to telephone calls and e-mail messages from clients seeking for help with computer difficulties. Let’s say an accountant suddenly can not access payroll info that's stored on a pc process. This accountant would speak to you and it could be your responsibility to troubleshoot and repair this difficulty. In responding to these inquiries, help-desk technicians have to listen meticulously towards the purchaser, ask questions to diagnose the character on the dilemma, and then patiently stroll the buyer through the problem-solving measures.
Have the appropriate instruction speedily in order to commence producing the suitable income faster.

Our Computer system Guide Cubical software can take your function practical knowledge together with your current talents, and mix it with an education focused on one of the most effective growing occupations inside the U.S. in just ten weeks. For a Microsoft IT Academy with a verified and comprehensive routine we can transform you into a very sought following Support Receptionist counter Professional with market common certifications. This program is 100% on the internet to help you to continue to work whilst in institution. And our benefits speak for themselves.

The U.S. Dept of Instruction National Center for Schooling Statistics tells us that a 4 yr university record now takes 6 several years with a 57% graduation charge including a a couple of year community college/tech school now usually takes three years with an alarming 23% graduation amount. Sad to say, the majority of us really do not have that type of time to start out making the funds we have to survive. And who would like to danger those odds of finishing the program? Our graduation prices are in excess of 80%.
Acquire the initial move toward getting back again on track.

Unemployment prices are hitting record excessive amounts and our nation is struggling out of an financial recession; you cannot afford to wait any longer. No matter whether you could have already been laid off, dread the reduction of one's task or just want in making a adjust, a whole new vocation could be yours! You can be in your solution to the career that provides the salary and protection you'll need.

See for yourself by registering for an informational seminar complete with routine and tuition facts. Easily click around the “Attend Career Revival” button and you will be on your way!

Personal computer ProSchools Graduation Achievement
Personal computer ProSchools, a Microsoft Academy, is proud to announce its very first graduating school of 2008. In 2007 around 300 IT Experts graduated from Personal computer ProSchools' Aid Desk/MCSA system.

FOR Fast Launch
PR Log (Press Launch) – Apr 18, 2008 – In excess of 150 graduates and their guests filed in to the Country Inn & Suites in Brookfield, WI over a cool spring evening to celebrate a six month journey to becoming an IT pro.

Last August, students in track 183 began their journey at the Brookfield Campus of Pc ProSchools, a Microsoft IT Academy licensed by the Wisconsin Educational Approval Board and accredited by ACCET.   Observe 183 contained manufacturers, construction workers, secretaries, retail representatives and office workers. All committed to changing their lives and becoming  Assist Receptionist counter Analysts, Network Administrators or Computer Technicians to name just a number of and on March 20, 2008 they were one particular stage closer.

The Commencement ceremony began having a Welcoming Address from Campus Director Laura Polancich. Polancich, whose primary responsibility at Desktop Pro Schools is to provide job placement providers was proud to congratulate the a lot more than 50 percent from the graduating category that had undoubtedly secured a work in the substantial paying IT industry and made a commitment to keep on assisting people still searching. Up coming Vice President of Educational Companies, Kate Pelchat, presented an Executive Address and congratulated the course for their hard do the job and dedication. Pelchat compared the graduates’ journey at Personal computer Pro Schools on the CAT5 cable they had been given at their initial orientation highlighting the ups and downs and even the knots at times and shared a quote from Ernest Hemmingway that “It is good to have an end to journey in the direction of nevertheless it is the journey itself that matters inside the end.”

Lead Instructor Mick Brentar stood ahead of the type for his final lecture, so to speak. He challenged them to carry on learning always and explained how proud he is to now call them colleagues in the IT Market.
The Keynote Address was delivered by Ricardo Monteen, a Aid Table Manager at Manpower Corporation along with a former graduate of Computer ProSchools from 1 yr ago. He chronicled his journey, sharing how different his life is now. It was a complete circle moment for everyone as Monteen explained how he had just hired four Computer Pro Educational institutions graduates for his Help Workplace team.

The mood was substantial as the evening concluded having a punch and cake reception in which families, graduates and faculty shared memories; all knowing that the sum of a journey is a fresh perspective of home and for all that perspective is quite different 6 months later.
Graduate Wendy Tokarz shared “Being able to graduate with my course and conquer such a challenging goal feels great. My family and friends are so proud of me. It’s just great!”

At the time of this publication, less than a single month later, above 75% of these graduates, including Tokarz have been offered IT positions and also have begun enjoying the positive aspects of their new careers.

Personal computer Pro Educational facilities an ally in improving pc access among individuals with disabilities

Last Spring, New Horizons Un-Limited (NHU) had the good fortune of meeting Laura, the Campus Director of Laptop or computer Pro Schools’ Brookfield campus, at a Brew City HDI chapter meeting. At the meeting, NHU expressed a require for volunteer technicians to assist with their personal computer refurbishing and support desk activities. Seeing this opportunity as a solution to give again, though also supporting the profession goals of her students, Laura rapidly recruited students to guide NHU.

Around this past year, NHU has welcomed nearly a dozen Pc Pro Colleges students as volunteers. While all with the student volunteers have had a solid technical foundation, a lot of of them were lacking that all important expert knowledge to aid them win their dream career.

What NHU provides in encounter for the students is exceeded by what they, as volunteers, have contributed to NHU's routine. They have expertly refurbished dozens of computers, which, in turn, have been donated to dozens of individuals with disabilities that would not have otherwise been able to afford a home laptop or computer.

Just like NHU's student volunteers, the individuals that receive the refurbished personal computers are trying to increase their lives as a result of technologies. A laptop or computer means more to them than most of us could ever imagine.

To a lot of of NHU's recipients, a laptop or computer stands out as the tool they need to pursue their dream job and ultimately their own financial freedom.

NHU's refurbishing program is operate entirely by volunteer technicians. It merely would not be possible with out the expertise and dedication of their volunteers.

NHU's most recent group of volunteers will probably be graduating from Computer Pro Universities in just weeks. It can be NHU's hope that the practical knowledge the students have received will aid the students reach their occupation goals.

NHU would like to extend a special thank you to Craig, Dan, Fred, Jim and Jonathan for their dedication to seeing that all people, no matter their income, may have access to a home laptop or computer.

Personal computer ProSchools Unveils New Website
Cutting edge technology illustrates a obvious picture of this state-of-art Microsoft IT Academy. Computer ProSchools, Inc. is excited to announce its new website located at www.pcproschools.edu.

FOR Immediate Discharge
PR Log (Press Launch) – Apr 23, 2008 – Since 1994 Desktop ProSchools has been providing IT training within the Milwaukee area. Over the many years, Laptop or computer ProSchools expanded operations opening campuses in Green Bay, WI and Madison, WI. In 2006 and 2007 the campuses in Grand Rapids, MI and Indianapolis, IN respectively opened. “As we grow we would like to present a consistent brand image,” explains CEO James Brent. “When you enter a Starbucks, you immediately know exactly where you happen to be due to the colors and décor and their promotional items and website carry this same experience and image.” 

Earlier this 365 days Laptop or computer ProSchools hired InovaOne, a full-service strategic consulting business specializing in creative design and production, media delivery and detailed outsourcing services located in Roswell, GA, to create a different branding concept. In addition for the website, InovaOne designed a whole new logo, school colors and promotional materials to present a consistent image at the five Desktop ProSchools’ campuses located throughout the Mid-West.

“The objective of our new website is to provide prospective students using the initial facts so these are excited to take on the up coming stage and routine a campus visit” shares Vice President of Marketing and Admission, Wendy Mirenda.  “When we first started off speaking to InovaOne I had been impressed with how they used high-tech avenues to present their messages. Like a state-of-the art Microsoft IT Academy, I thought we must be doing that.”  And the new website does just that! www.pcproschools.edu offers interactive videos to highlight all that Personal computer ProSchools has to provide. In addition, a prospective student can experiment their own IT knowledge through the Pc Knowledge Assessment or sign up to visit a campus correct by means of the website.

Overall, the new website offers general information about Pc ProSchools, a series of student success stories shared directly from the students themselves inside a video testimonial format, Occupation Companies and IT Market Facts tabs providing insight into how Laptop or computer ProSchools gives students that winning advantage inside the speediest increasing market inside US. Another added benefit is the new Employers page where by IT managers and employers can come across out a lot more and speak to us directly to hire among our graduates.

Pc ProSchools also switched to the .edu website address from the past .com address. This address is exclusive to educational institutions, requiring evidence of your respective accredited status just before even securing the complete address. After achieving accreditation with ACCET last 365 days Pc ProSchools skilled for this educational based address line. “We’re an accredited college,” explains VP of Education and learning, Kate Pelchat, “we should be letting the general public know that by means of the use with the .edu address.” Visitors familiar with using the original website will now purely be redirected automatically for the www.pcproschools.edu website.
For a lot more facts on Laptop or computer ProSchools visit www.pcproschools.edu. For additional facts about InovaOne visit www.inovaone.com.