Tag Archives: business

Hotels reporting thousands of dollars in losses due to gas outage

LEE COUNTY, Fla.- Gas is still cut off to hundreds of businesses in Lee and Collier County. Many restaurants and hotels are weathering thousands of dollars worth of lost revenue in the aftermath of the gas explosion.

“Basically, we’re at a standstill,” Hampton Inn General Manager Jeff Webb said.

Business is not as usual at the Hampton Inn on Colonial. They’re without gas, and have been for two days. It’s costing the hotel close to $9,000 in cancellations.

“You can’t replace that. Hotel business is probably one of the most perishable industries in the world because you can never sell that room again,” Webb said Saturday.

A hot shower at the Hampton Inn hasn’t been an option ever since the gas was shut off. They’re now slashing weekend rates up to 50%, and doing anything to keep guests from walking out the door.

“Free movies, free pay-per-view movies, all the bottled water they need, free baked cookies around the clock,” Webb said.

Gas-powered laundry service is causing another headache. The hotel is using an unexpected source- the competition- to keep linens clean. The Holiday Inn Express at The Forum is all-electric, and unaffected by the gas outage.

“I want every guest that comes into the area, whether they stay with my hotel or another hotel to have a great experience. Unfortunately, this incident has hurt some of our economy right now, so whatever I can do to help the competition will help me,” Holiday Inn Express General Manager Sean Archer said Saturday.

While over 200 TECO workers try to restore service to businesses, folks over at the Hampton Inn are managing to take it all in stride.

“I’ve been in the business 24 years. I’ve been through Hurricane Andrew, all the way up. So I guess it’s just another feather in my cap,” Webb said.

Gas is now back on at some businesses in Lee and Collier counties, but there is no definite timeline for when all service will be restored.

Hotels reporting thousands of dollars in losses due to gas outage

Bonita Springs movie theater in trouble?

BONITA SPRINGS, Fla.- Walk up to the Cinema Cafe in Bonita Springs and you’ll see signs telling customers it’s closed for equipment maintenance. It says it will open back up Wednesday. But manager Joe Lopez isn’t so sure.

“We’ve heard the place is going out of business and plans to file bankruptcy,”said Lopez.

Lopez says the trouble started nearly a month ago when employees told him their checks bounced. He says every pay period since then has been late, and now he wonders if he’ll ever see another.

He asked his bosses what gives, but says he keeps getting the runaround. He can’t pay his bills.

“It’s frustrating in this economy knowing there aren’t a lot of jobs in the area. Not only are we not getting paid, we have to search for new jobs,” said Lopez.

WINK got in contact with the district manager of the movie theatre company and he would not answer our questions.

Bonita Springs movie theater in trouble?

Fire damages Port Charlotte business

PORT CHARLOTTE, Fla. – Two firefighters were briefly hospitalized after a fire damaged a Port Charlotte business on Sunday morning.

Charlotte County Fire & EMS responded to the Patio Factory Store on US 41 at 8:15 Sunday morning.? The single-story metal building was fully involved with fire when crews arrived.? Firefighters had the fire under control by 10am with mutual aid assistance from four other agencies.

The State Fire Marshal is investigating the cause of the fire.

Fire damages Port Charlotte business

Editorial: Recommendations for Lee Memorial Board non-partisan races

Half of the seats on the 10-member Lee Memorial Health System board of directors are up for voter review.

There are plenty of qualified candidates who have offered to serve.

Congratulations to all of them.

Yet, choices have to be made.

Here are our recommendations in these non-partisan races:

District 2 (Vote for two)

Richard Akin and Nancy McGovern.

These two incumbents are outstanding — informed and dedicated.

They stand out even more because the two other announced candidates in this district, Aaron Babb and Liston Bochette, decline to be interviewed on how they would help set policy for this vital enterprise.

Akin is a pillar in the public health community as president and CEO of Collier Health Services.

He is not resting on his laurels. He has plans for safer hospital environments for patients and better health care for the region’s children.

McGovern is a registered nurse outside Lee Memorial. She aims to help the organization work through health care reforms and maintain her special ambassador status to the nursing staff.

Serious and dedicated sum up her offer to serve.

District 4 (Vote for two)

Dr. John Lawlor and Chris Hansen.

Lawlor is a podiatrist with an ambitious agenda to improve community health care via Lee Memorial.

He envisions: clinics, with doctors volunteering, to reach people who need care before they get sicker and cost even more to treat; and special, focused outreach programs for diabetics and dementia patients.

His energy and insights give him the potential of being a leader of the future.

Hansen is a former parademic and Lee County public safety administrator.

With that background, and with his current public relations business, he is uniquely qualified to set policy and represent Lee Memorial back to the community.

n Also in race: Diane Champion, Gary Eidson, Frank La Rosa, Dawson McDaniel.

District 5 (Vote for one)

Bill Silverman.

A career pediatrician, Dr. Silverman brings more than 40 years’ experience treating young patients and working with their families and health maintenance organizations.

He also is an outsider to the local medical community. He would come in with no preconceived notions or loyalties beyond patients and quality care. Dr. Silverman’s specialty is timely, given the changing demographic of our area and plans by Lee Memorial to expand its Children’s Hospital.

The other candidates in this race also shine. Each of them, especially Don Brown and Tyler Dupuy — a student at Florida Gulf Coast University — would bring something special to the board.

But cannot match the resume’ of Dr. Silverman.

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

Editorial: Recommendations for Lee Memorial Board non-partisan races

5pm Project Management

Languages Supported:

5pm’s whole theme is centered around getting more things done – by 5pm (hence the name). Clever, and their website’s marketing nicely continues this theme. It’s one of the more polished sites of a project management software company out there.

According to the 5PM Website:

5pm can be your central location for project and task management, team collaboration, time tracking, reporting and more…

Features:

There are a TON of features in 5pm, and as such it really gives other Online Project Management Software a run for their money (see Basecamp). Here’s a short list of what I found to be the BEST features (some aren’t available on many other project mangement applications):

  • Complete 2-Way Email Integration – Send/Receive messages, via email, that are logged to the system. Although many other systems do this, I like that they allow task/to-do creation through emails as well!
  • Timeline - 5pm offers a very sweet, intuitive, Timeline. This is something that MANY project management systems are lacking, this is very helpful for tracking the progress of multiple to-dos and tasks across the entire lifetime of a project.

Check out the complete list of all project management & collaboration features of 5pm.

Interface:

I wish to evaluate this on two levels, 1st the web page, then the application. The internet site: the 5pm web page is really a bit cluttered, though it does match the look and feel with the program, and connotes a sense of playfulness, as does their copy as well as the rest with the branding (THEY EVEN Provide A FREE GAME TO KILL TIME!). Nonetheless clever, in my individual opinion the internet site is TOO unprofessional, while well carried out, and really cluttered making it challenging at greatest, and confusing at worst, to evaluate the application.

The application continues the theme in the web page, with bright colors, beveled edges, and intense graphics. Once more, production value is high, but in my private opinion it misses the mark. An unconventional side-tab menu at the left hand aspect helps you navigate by way of the main sections.

Languages Supported:

  • English (default)
  • Swedish
  • French
  • Russian
  • Spanish
  • Portuguese
  • German
  • Polish
  • Italian
  • Croatian
  • Dutch
  • Finnish
  • Danish
  • Serbian
  • Hungarian
  • new! Slovak

Pricing:

Pricing for 5pm is somewhat inline with other online package and SAAS project management software, however, at the high end of the packages the pricing seems to get skewed somewhat.

Pricing starts at: $18 for 5 users, 10 project, and 1 GB of Storage

Pizza shop owner apologizes to teen over arrest

LEE COUNTY, Fla – The owner of a Fort Myers pizza shop has apologized to a teen for deciding to press charges after he cut loose a blimp outside his business.

18 year old Jonathan Fischer says the owner of a Little Caesars off U.S 41 in San Carlos Park will now left him pay for the helium filled balloon. The teen was booked on criminal charges after he got upset with workers at the pizza shop and decided to cut the blimp that was tied to a fire hydrant.

Fischer said he was willing to pay for it in exchange for not being arrested, but the manager refused.

Viewers called and wrote e-mails to WINK News expressing outrage the teen was not cut a break and allowed to pay to have it replaced.

Fischer says he will meet the pizza owner on Friday and will pay for the blimp.

In exchange he added, the manager will drop the charges against him.

Pizza shop owner apologizes to teen over arrest

Controversial Colonial flyover project discussed

FORT MYERS, Fla.-A controversial flyover project is up for discussion again. Lee County leaders met Friday morning with concerned citizens about the future of Colonial Boulevard.

Work on the Colonial Blvd. project has been put on hold by the Lee County commissioners pending more study. This project would add a series of flyovers on Colonial Boulevard between Fowler Street and the Forum, East of Interstate 75.

The 400 million dollar project has been on hold since June.

The county has already spent nearly 4 million dollars studying the Colonial flyover concept. The Metropolitan Planning Organization has to come up with a long range transportation plan by the end of this year.

The MPO will be holding a public hearing today and many of the business owners around here are concerned about what it will do to their business.

“Here at the restaurant we think its going to hurt our sales,” said Jerry Johnson, Alli-gators bar and grill.

The public hearing today will be at the Southwest Florida Regional Planning Council office on Victoria Avenue in Fort Myers.

It will follow the MPO board meeting which starts at 9.

Controversial Colonial flyover project discussed

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

Government Worker Pay Cuts Could Hurt Downtown Ft. Myers Businesses

Businesses in downtown Fort Myers, already struggling to survive in many cases, are bracing for another hit:??? pay cuts and furloughs for government workers who patronize the businesses on lunch hours and after work.

“When the news came out Monday evening about the pay cuts and so forth, our business on Tuesday was just dead, horrible. ?? Shockingly slow,” said Bonnie Grunberg, co-owner of the Oasis Restaurant, long a favorite for city and county workers.??? “We had 4 or 5 tables for lunch at the height on Tuesday.? That is slow, even for slow times.?? It scares me to death,” she told WINK.

Lee County announced Monday that 2000 workers probably will be put on 10-days of un-paid furlough for the coming budget year.??? Fort Myers city leaders announced Monday evening,? ?they may have to impose a 10-percent pay cut on employees, to help balance the budget.???? The dual bits of bad news, combined to crush business, and that may continue for awhile.

“I think it’s going to hurt, but that is why we are running a hot dog cart,” said Ron Kopko, of the Bar Association restaurant.?? “We have 2 dogs, chips and a drink for 3-dollars, 50-cents.?? They can afford that,” Kopko said.??? “I am willing to do what I can to survive.? We just have to hold on,” said Kopko.

There aren’t many retail shops downtown, and the owner of one, says he hopes that eclectic products will still draw government workers.? “We have a lot of speciality items, so I believe they will come in.?? These are things you can’t find other places, so hopefully we will be okay,” said Raimond Aulen, owner of? Main St. antiques and other businesses in the downtown area.

Local governments will not make final decisions on budgets for awhile, but already, the ripple effects are spreading.

Government Worker Pay Cuts Could Hurt Downtown Ft. Myers Businesses

Lee School Board looks to substitutes to fill teaching gaps made by class size amendment


Schools are used to relying on substitute teachers when regular faculty members fall sick.

But, faced with an ailing budget due in part to requirements of the state class size amendment, Lee County School Board members are now contemplating using those same substitutes to provide the extra hands needed in classrooms this fall.

The state class size reduction amendment calls for every classroom in Lee County and beyond to conform to strict limits on class size this fall, after a phased-in implementation since 2002.

However, the state has not adequately provided funding for the extra teachers needed, and a ballot challenge to the amendment before voters this November could throw the whole thing on its head. That’s why the Lee County School Board is looking for short-term solutions, which it discussed at Tuesday night’s meeting.

“There are instances where you have a classroom that may be in compliance one day and the next day they get a few more kids, and they are out of compliance,” said Lee Schools Budget Director Ami Desamours. “We may want to consider putting a long-term sub in that classroom as a co-teacher.”

Long-term substitute teachers, those placed in a class for one month or more, receive higher pay than short-term subs. However, the district does not have to pay benefits to those teachers.

Those teachers could stay on as long as needed — until a student moves out of the class, or until voters have their say on whether to reverse the class size amendment. However, that latter point is a big “if” and the district is hedging its bets.

While the short-term hiring of additional substitute teachers and the allocation of extra class space is expected to cost the district about $5 million in the fall, the district has also allocated $5 million in the 2010-11 budget to cover the hiring of permanent teachers, in the event that voters uphold the class size amendment. A supermajority — 60 percent plus one vote — is needed to reverse the amendment.

Board Member

Jeanne Dozier asked Superintendent

James Browder to clarify the issue, stating that parents might get concerned if they believe their child will be split off from his or her class mid-semester to get instruction from a substitute teacher.

However, Browder said that might actually happen depending on the number of students added to a class and the material being taught.

Additionally, the board discussed asking teachers at middle and high schools to give up their mid-day planning period to teach an additional class. They would receive extra pay in order to complete lesson planning after the end of the school day.

Teacher’s union President Mark Castellano said teacher contracts already outline the terms for a teacher to do that — voluntarily.

“What I don’t want to see, and what I’m especially concerned about is annual contract teachers being told, ‘You need to do this if you want to be renewed, if you want to be there after this year,’” Castellano said. “And if I hear about that happening, then we’re going to raise holy heck about that because it is not acceptable.”

The total budget proposed for the Lee County School District in fiscal 2010-11 is $1.4 billion, about $20 million less than the current year’s budget. Also in that budget, the district is vowing not to lay off employees or raise lunch prices next year.

In other business Tuesday night, the board formally approved a program to start in the fall that would offer breakfast for any student who wants it. The law requires school districts to provide free breakfast for all children who attend a school where 80 percent or more of the school population qualifies for free and reduced lunch but Tuesday’s approval allows the district to expand it to all students, at no additional net cost.

Also, the board heard an update on the outside audit of its transportation system. Missouri-based firm TransPar anticipates the audit report to be ready in August or September, not April as originally anticipated.

Two candidates vying for school board seats this fall have alleged wrongdoing, saying the district is stalling on the release of the audit report. Both the district and TransPar have said the audit simply required more time because of its complexity.

Browder shared a preliminary report with the board. Among the findings:

n Route design guidelines are inadequate to ensure that student ride times are kept to a minimum

n School bell times facilitate long bus rides, though changing them to be more cost-efficient would not necessarily reduce ride times

n The system has too many buses in service

n Transportation costs have been declining since 2007-08

n The transportation system cost is 3 percent higher than the Florida average, and its cost per student is comparable to other districts with a school choice model

Connect with 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.

Lee School Board looks to substitutes to fill teaching gaps made by class size amendment