Category: COMMUNITY

  • Shame encourages hunger

    BY LAURA MULROONEY
    NNB Reporter
    [Edited By Ivelliam Ceballo]

    Twenty-five percent of Pinellas County’s underage population has no idea where their next meal will come from, the definition of chronic hunger.

    Approximately 86 percent of people in this country take for granted food choices available to them, according to the United States Department of Agriculture.

    While food is freely distributed throughout the city at numerous food banks and outreach programs, what prevents residents from being food and nutrition secure?

    Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) is a federal nutrition assistance program, not a cash assistance program. Similarly, Women, Infants and Children (WIC) offers food for low-income women who are pregnant or have children under the age of 5.

    SNAP and WIC nutrition programs are used interchangeably with the word welfare, which causes confusion and misunderstanding for those who might qualify for the programs but never apply because of a perceived stigma.

    Participation in the SNAP program has dropped by more than a million people since October 2014. October 2015 marked the fifth straight monthly decline. Even as more people are applying for benefits, about 20 percent of eligible applicants will not receive them, according to the Food Research and Action Center.

    Why the decline?

    Beth Houghton, the executive director of St. Petersburg Free Clinic, believes awareness is the biggest problem.

    “Many families don’t know they qualify for food assistance like SNAP, commonly referred to as food stamps,” said Houghton. “Many families are unaware of the qualifications they need to benefit from this federal program. Education about available programs and resources is key.”

    Some groups are working to raise awareness.

    The St. Petersburg Free Clinic Food Bank started advertising with other area food banks to share food resource information using social media.

    Did you know 1 in 4 children in Pinellas County are chronically hungry? Posted by St. Petersburg Free Clinic on Tuesday, August 25, 2015
    Tampa Bay Network to End Hunger provides education initiatives and resources through the University of Florida Extension program which includes help with finances, nutrition and home gardening. The Food Research and Action Center provides dedicated web space for research including resources on nutrition and healthy living. Short pre-screenings to determine eligibility can be done online for SNAP and WIC. Still, the suffering from chronic hunger persists and it’s not always visually apparent. There is a fear of being stereotyped, the stigma behind being a welfare recipient is harsh in a world where the rich are idolized and the poor are ignored.[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][vc_column width="1/3"][vc_column_text] 27% of people in Midtown are at or below poverty level, which is much higher than the state’s average of 17%.  city-data.com [/vc_column_text][vc_separator color="grey" align="align_center" style="" border_width="" el_width=""][vc_column_text]Links to Program Prescreening Supplemental Nutrition Assitance Program (SNAP) Women, Infants and Children (WIC) [/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row] NNB reporters Esteban Rodriguez and Marla Korenich contributed to this report.

  • Flag raised over City Hall commemorates 40 years of Black History Month

    BY LAURA MULROONEY
    NNB Reporter

    ST. PETERSBURG – History was made February 1 at City Hall.

    Amid applause, whoops and laughter, Mayor Rick Kriseman raised a flag over City Hall commemorating 40 years of Black History Month.

    The flag featured the likeness of Dr. Carter G. Woodson, an educator, author and historian who is known as the father of Black History Month.

    After the flag was raised, Terri Lipsey Scott, chair of the Dr. Carter G. Woodson African American Museum in St. Petersburg, praised Kriseman for the important gesture.

    She commended him on doing what no other St. Petersburg mayor has ever done, “which was to acknowledge and commemorate the contributions that African Americans have made to this nation by flying, over a government institution, a flag in honor of not only Dr. Carter G. Woodson but African American history,” said Scott.

    In response, Kriseman said that “one of the many things that makes our community so special is our black history and the countless contributions that black individuals and families have made, and continue to make.”

    Last March, Kriseman also won plaudits when he announced that the city will try to purchase and preserve the Woodson museum, a long-simmering point of controversy between the museum board and the museum’s landlord, the St. Petersburg Housing Authority.

    Two months earlier, the Housing Authority board had voted 4-3 to sell the small community museum at 2240 9th Ave. S.

    Since then the city has announced a plan to purchase the building with the intent to keep it as a cultural landmark, museum, and now city building.

    In praising Kriseman’s recognition of the city’s diversity and the importance of keeping its history alive, Scott quoted Woodson: “If a race has no history, if it has no worthwhile tradition, it becomes a negligible factor in the thought of the world, and it stands in danger of being exterminated.”

    Woodson announced the celebration of “Negro History Week” in 1926, in effort to preserve African American history, which had been routinely overlooked in history books.

    In 1976 “Negro History Week” was extended to encompass the entire month of February. Some say that the establishment of Black History Month is counterproductive to Woodson’s initial intent.

    Relegating black history to one month excuses the full integration of black history into mainstream education.

    This is not the first time Kriseman has made steps to unify the community and demonstrate St. Petersburg’s inclusiveness.

    During Pride Week in 2015, Kriseman flew the LGBT Pride Flag over City Hall and returned as the parade’s honorary grand marshal along with former St. Petersburg Assistant Police Chief Melanie Brevan.

    Laura Mulrooney is a reporter in the Neighborhood News Bureau at the University of South Florida St. Petersburg.

  • County launches new program for struggling schools

    BY ANNA STEBBINS, IVY CEBALLO, DAVID STONER, JADE ISAACS AND KATIE CALLIHAN
    NNB Reporters

    MIDTOWN- Midtown schools are still undergoing the process of bringing in money for teacher training, in hopes for a better classroom atmosphere, but could the most important part be the passion of the teachers?

    After being deemed “Failure Factories” in 2015, Midtown schools continue to attempt to increase classroom success and teacher longevity, but the cure to the academic disease might lie in the educator’s passion to teach.

    In January of last year, Pinellas County school officials pledged to spend $1 million and partner with the New Teacher Project, based out of Brooklyn, New York.  The program, Scale Up for Success, could live up to its name for Pinellas County schools by offering teacher training, teacher’s assistance and mental health experts on hand.

    The program includes five St. Petersburg schools: Campbell Park Elementary, Melrose Elementary, Fairmount Park, Lakewood and Maximo.

    The partnership has had its start at Campbell Park Elementary, where turnaround efforts are a focus.

    Third-year principal at Campbell Park, Robert Ovalle, says that he is dedicated to the concentration of teacher training and support from all faculty and staff.

    “Our ultimate goal is to support classroom teachers. They are the teachers working hard on the front line,” said Ovalle.

    Ovalle is dedicated to use this ongoing opportunity of additional funding to not only train his teachers, but also give him the reinforcement to add further support as an entire school unit.

    “There are certain obstacles here that come up but that’s what my job is, to prepare teachers to have those skill sets,” said Ovalle.

    As for the Scale Up For Success program, which is expected to provide more advantages and will continue to provide stability in the classroom environment, according to Ovalle, it will only be successful if teachers are passionate about what they do.

    “Teachers stay at schools like this because they have that deep passion to give kids a quality education,” said Ovalle.

    Campbell Park Elementary third-grade teacher, Jordan Blakeney, conducts daily morale and welfare checks with her students on her classroom floor.

    “Some say, I haven’t had breakfast, I’m checking in,” said Blakeney, “If I have anything that I can give them, I will.”

    She uses this exercise to assess how to help her students’ performance throughout the day.

    “Whatever they feel like they need to express, they can say, and if they don’t want to say anything, I still require them to say I have nothing to say, but I’m checking in,” she said.

    For the school year of 2007, Campbell Park Elementary received a letter “B” grade performance at a 70 percent student minority rate. In consecutive years, the grade dropped from “B” to “C” to “D” and, finally, to “F”, according to the Florida Department of Education’s accountability report.

    The latest “F” grade is from the 2013 school year, at an 88 percent student minority rate.

    “Just because we’re an F doesn’t mean that we’re not teaching, we’re not working,” said Blakeney, “It’s the exact opposite actually.”

    Blakeney said that Scale Up For Success has helped her reflect on her teaching skills and find ways to challenge herself and her students. The program has provided her and other participating teachers with a math coach, a reading coach and a behavior coach to offer them individual feedback.

    “We neglect a lot of our own lives to support the school and our families. I know of co-workers who stay extra to help kids. Their kids at home aren’t seeing them,” said Blakeney.

    The same outlook about teaching is expressed by Connie Fowler, a Pinellas County teacher of 28 years.

    “The money doesn’t matter; teachers teach to teach. They love kids.  I didn’t come to this school to get a bonus or paid for the extra half an hour.  I’m just drawn to working with minority students who live in poverty,” said Fowler, who taught at Lakewood Elementary for 17 years.

    Over the past 80 years, Midtown’s educational foundation has been set, dissembled, and reassembled in a way where the pieces do not fit back together. Some pieces are broken and some pieces are missing.

    It was not until 1971 when the School Board voted to desegregate the schools across Pinellas County.

    Rules used to be active in making sure that schools were not more than 30 percent black. This caused students to be bused away from their neighborhood schools and instead receive their education in a mixed and fair learning environment.

    Complaints about the inconveniences and costs of busing these students away from their neighborhood schools caused a reverse in the zoning system in 2007.

    In December of that year, the School Board decided on a plan that stopped the integration and rezoned students to their neighborhood schools.

    This, in return, caused schools to lose their mixed social and economic learning environment. In time, classrooms turned into mostly all white and all black classrooms. This action resulted in a staggering drop in academics across the board, especially in Midtown.

    Students started failing at rates that teachers couldn’t keep up with. This created a cycle of discouraged and stressed out teachers who could not handle the mess.

    “I watched over 50 percent of a very dedicated staff walk out the door. I passed but lost most of my friends to the cut and then were fully a neighborhood school,” said Fowler.

    Today, the education of Midtown has been an experiment of trial and error.

    Leaving Lakewood Elementary in 2015, Fowler has seen the evolution of the school system after the re-segregation and zoning changes.

    The Scale Up for Success Program combined with the reinforced passion of teachers might finally be the answer that Midtown schools are looking for.

    “Teachers work harder than ever before and are so stressed. Money doesn’t even come into play, they do it because it’s who they are,” said Fowler.

     

  • Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day of Service Project: ‘King’s Dream Unite’

    BY LAURA MULROONEY
    NNB Reporter

    ST. PETERSBURG — As part of the nationwide Martin Luther King, Jr. Day of Service, a substantial crowd gathered as a mural by local artist Ya La’ford was unveiled on the north side of the historic Manhattan Casino in Midtown Monday.

    bluebird ya la ford unveiling Steinocher mycro school mural 2 mural 1 mt zion i have a dream hubbard darden rice deputy mayor dance

    Titled “King’s Dream Unite,” La’ford and 25 students from MYcroSchool Pinellas, a tuition-free, dropout recovery, public charter high school, painted the expansive 30’x30’ mural in one week with what was described as a “tremendous amount of paint.”

    “King’s Dream Unite” is a community mural where La’ford admits the community helped her realize Martin Luther King Jr.’s dream.

    “The mural is about unity, this is about how we’re connected, this is about how we can pull and collaborate the community together where I am not only exposing you to the visual but also to the dance and to the music, I am kind of forging these forces together to have something so impactful to the community,” she said.

    The event Monday began with the roar of the Mt. Zion Progressive Community Marching Band. The 13-percussion piece ensemble’s force and presence brought the crowd alive with the beat of their drums and crash of their cymbals.

    “The pounding of the drums represents our heartbeats coming together,” said La’ford at the end of the event.

    Jacqueline Williams Hubbard, Esq./Pres., St. Pete Chapter, The Association for the Study of African American Life and History spoke of the importance of the mural’s location on the side of the historic Manhattan Casino. For 40 years the Manhattan Casino played an instrumental role in south St. Petersburg arts, entertainment, and cultural development in the 1920s when Jim Crow segregation laws were still prevalent.

    The Moving Mural, a collaborative dance and song presentation performed by dancer and rehearsal director Helen Hansen French, singer Becca McCoy, MYcroSchool students and Mt. Zion Impact Dance Ministry confirmed that arts and entertainment still thrive in Midtown.

    La’ford along with Deputy Mayor Dr. Kanika Tomalin, Councilwomen Lisa Wheeler-Brown and Darden Rice and Chris Steinocher, president and CEO St. Petersburg Area Chamber of Commerce cut the ribbon as the tarp simultaneously raised, revealing the unified efforts of a diverse community.

    The mural consists of a black background with silver intersecting geometrical lines starting from the base of the building like tree roots that grow upwards to form the trunk and then a circular crown. The crown embraces two illuminated circles, one inside the other. A description by La’ford is essential to understand the magnitude of the piece.

    “Black represents the color of our people, the lines forge together in silver, silver being one of the oldest and most precious metals, as precious as our people. The three circles represent all of us rotating around each other for infinity. The geometric patterns represent how all of our lives intersect, everyone’s life journey may have traversed to the left or to the right but they will all intersect at some point. The center two circles are illuminated to acknowledge the presence of a higher being connecting us all together.”

    La’ford consistently involves children in her art to show that art is in everything that they do and see. This project provided MYcroSchool Pinellas students with the opportunity to participate in something they would not have normally done.

    The mural unveiling also included a free book giveaway for students and children courtesy of Keep St. Pete Lit and Bluebird Books. Students received bookmarks where they could write their response finishing MLK Jr.’s famous sentence “I have a dream.”

    Laura Mulrooney is a reporter in the Neighborhood News Bureau at the University of South Florida St. Petersburg.

  • Kriseman addresses gun violence, Midtown neighborhood problems in ‘State of City’ speech

    BY SAMANTHA PUTTERMAN FOR THE CROW’S NEST:

    Mayor Rick Kriseman addressed issues of gun violence that claimed the lives of seven people and Midtown problems including the education gap and high unemployment during his annual State of the City speech Saturday, Jan. 23.

    “We are addressing the risk factors that affect our children and young adults,” Kriseman told The Crow’s Nest. “We are determined to do what we can to end gun violence and, most importantly, the underlying choices that lead to violence.”

    Kriseman also said more action and solutions are needed to help struggling schools, labeled “Failure Factories” in a series of stories by The Tampa Bay Times. He also noted the need for increasing job recruitment, entrepreneurship and business retention in Midtown.

    READ THE FULL STORY ON THE CROW’S NEST.

  • A History in Photographs: Jordan Park

    It’s 1939. You and your entire family lives in what is essentially a shack with three other families. The roof leaks. There’s cracks in the walls, loose floorboards. You have to walk out the front door and around the back to use the toilet. There’s no electricity. There’s no running water. There’s nowhere else to go.

    The public housing subdivision called Jordan Park, located in Midtown St. Petersburg, has a rich history of highs and lows. It was originally developed as an African American community during segregation. Although nowadays it’s considered quite a low-key, peaceful place, Jordan Park residents throughout time have gone from the poorest living conditions to living in state-of-the-art homes to then living in an area filled with drugs and crime. Despite everything, a strong sense of community in Jordan Park has always prevailed.

     

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TAj-oS4Ys0A

     

    Records show that African Americans have always lived in the south side of St. Petersburg, ever since groups first came to the area in the late 19th century during the Florida land boom. However as time went on, African Americans were pushed more and more south of Central Ave. They lived in the areas of St. Petersburg known as the Gas Plant District, Methodist Town and Pepper Town. Today, this is essentially where the interstate and Tropicana Field are located.

    Even when Jordan Park was built, people still resided in the old communities of the Gas Plant District, Methodist Town and Pepper Town up until the interstate and the Trop were built over them.

    According to James Schnur, head of Special Collections and University Archives at USF St. Petersburg, living conditions in these communities were “almost intolerable by the 1930s.”

    Pictures from a scrapbook constructed in the 30s, now belonging to the USFSP Special Collections, show old, dingy wooden houses with broken balconies, no indoor plumbing, no ventilation, leaky roofs, cracks in the walls, no electricity and broken floorboards.

    Oftentimes there would even be multiple families living in the same home.

    Segregation was very strong in St. Petersburg during this time period. Whites tended to ignore black communities for the most part and were not allowed in many areas of St. Pete, including Downtown, with the exception of working.

    When the issue of housing for African Americans was brought for debate, a number of white folks sided for the city to provide better housing, according to Schnur. Many African Americans during this time worked in service jobs and were hired by these white folks. White people were concerned about possible illnesses that could potentially be caused by such poor living conditions. They didn’t want themselves to get sick or contaminated as a result.

    The project was soon given the green light. In the summer of 1939, construction began. Money for the project was given by the city of St. Petersburg and the federal government from President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal Plan during the Great Depression.

    Land farther south was donated by a man named Elder Jordan, a successful business man and who owned a large amount of real-estate in Pinellas County and advocate for equality for African Americans. The stretch of land reaches from 9th Ave S down to 13th Ave S and 26th St S to 22nd St S.

    A majority of the construction was completed by the summer of 1940. Over the next year, more houses were added.

    The houses in the older African American communities were primarily made of wood. Schnur notes that this was not rare, even in the late 1930s, but it also wasn’t the most innovative tool. The houses in Jordan Park were made from concrete blocks.

    Upon the completion of construction, newspaper articles reported as many as almost 2,000 residents lived in the subdivision at one point. There was even a waitlist to get in. The houses did their job of providing a safe, sanitary place for people to live. All was well.

    As the years went on, public housing began to earn a bad stigma. Crime and drugs started to appear on headlines in connection with Jordan Park. Shootings became frequent. Children witnessed drug deals. The city hired extra police officers to canvas the area at night because it was so bad, according to the Times. However, the extra police officers in the neighborhood ended up having a positive effect and decreasing crime rates during this time by more than 80%.

    Eventually time and use began to wear the houses of Jordan Park away. In the late 90s, the St. Petersburg Times, now Tampa Bay Times reported complaints of broken streetlights and the old military-style buildings looking ragged.

    There was a lot of controversy about demolishing Jordan Park and replacing it with new houses. Many residents argued in newspaper interviews that it would be taking away from its legacy. At this point it was the oldest public housing project in St. Petersburg.

    Demolition began in late 1999. It was once again funded by the city and the federal government, this time with help from Hope VI. The St. Petersburg Times reported $27 million was put into the project. The project was completed in 2001.

    Many residents who lived in Jordan Park during that time moved elsewhere. The residents who moved out were given an allowance to move elsewhere if they chose to do so. About 50 families opted to stay and lived in the subdivision while construction went on.

    The subdivision went from hosting 446 homes to 236 houses, apartments, duplexes and triplexes. Hundreds of people once again put their names on the list to live in the vibrant-colored houses of Jordan Park.

    Jordan Park went through a number of ups and downs throughout the years. It stood its ground throughout the times of the thriving deuces to the political riots of Midtown. Nevertheless, a strong sense of community has always survived through its residents.  Even though it had to be knocked down and rebuild, its legacy still stands. The community still stands.

  • It’s not a class. It is a newsroom.

    It’s not a class. It is a newsroom.

    BY ZENENA MOGUEL
    NNB REPORTER

    Photo courtesy of nnbnews.com
    Sign of Neighborhood News Bureau located in Midtown. Photo courtesy of nnbnews.com.

    ST. PETERSBURG – At University of South Florida St. Petersburg’s (USFSP) Department of Journalism & Media Studies exists a class that prepares students for the path of professional journalism. Unless you’re a part of this department, you probably have not heard of Neighborhood News Bureau (NNB). To many it’s just another required course, but it carries a different meaning to those who have taken it. To those ‘it is a newsroom.’

    “Neighborhood News Bureau is a mix. It’s not just a class,” said Dr. Bernardo Motta. “They actually work like they were working in a newsroom. They do their assignments just like they would do in a newsroom for publication.”

    Founded by George Killenberg and late Robert Dardenne, NNB originated in 2001, but officially opened its offices in March 2006 in the community it continues to serve – Midtown, St. Petersburg. Just south of Downtown St. Petersburg, Midtown was once the heart of the black community. Though trying to get revitalized, the media as well as the government have always overlooked the community. NNB strives to serve this community and uncover the stories that still need to be discovered.

    “Midtown is everything for NNB. Without Midtown, we don’t have NNB,” said Motta. “The stories we tell are stories that aren’t usually told in mainstream media. There’re so many stories that are missing and nobody is telling those stories. That’s what NNB does,” Motta continued. “We’re basically filling that gap.”

    Indhira Acosta Suero, NNB reporter. Click on the picture to read her story[sg_popup id=”2″]20151013_123839[/sg_popup]

     

    Lorien Mattiacci, NNB reporter. Click on the picture to read her story.

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    Eric Vaughan, NNB reporter. Click on the picture to read his story.

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    Danielle Von Dreele, NNB reporter. Click on the picture to read her story

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    Undergraduate student Danielle Von Dreele and graduate students Indhira Suero Acosta, Eric Vaughan, and Lorien Mattiacci shared their experiences in NNB and believes NNB has prepared them for their future in journalism.

    NNB is completely staffed by both undergraduate and graduate students and the faculty of the department. The newsroom aims to provide real-life experiences to young journalists and reporters while challenging the students to step out of their comfort zones.

    “They have to pitch their stories. They have to come up with their own ideas and produce the stories for different types of media,” said Motta. “Jared [NNB’s Graduate Assistant] and I basically work more as the editors.”

    Apart from getting out into the real world, these students get to hear from media professionals in the field. A number of award-winning media professionals shared experiences and knowledge with NNB students during the semester. The list includes Lara Cerri (photojournalist at the Tampa Bay Times), Michael LaForgia (investigative journalist at the Tampa Bay Times), Adam Playford (director of data and enterprise at the Tampa Bay Times), Mary Shedden (news director at WUSF), Craig Pittman (environmental journalist at the Tampa Bay Times) and Cynthia Barnett (environmental journalist and book author), and Kate Bradshaw (news and politics editor at the Creative Loafing Tampa).

    After all, NNB is also building relationships with the mainstream publications like Creative Loafing and The Weekly Challenger. Multiple students have been published this semester, and for some it was their very first published work.

    “I was so excited,” said graduate student, Lorien Mattiacci. “This was my first non-academic publication.”

    From education, arts, events, and even the city council election of St. Petersburg, the impact NNB is having on the community is significant in building relationships with entrepreneurs, teachers, politicians, and members of the community.

    Elihu Brayboy, entrepreneur and business owner, remembers the time he got involved with an article about the history of the Mercy Hospital in Midtown by a NNB student.

    “The great thing that happen from it (article) was I got a phone call from a Dr. Crist, who happens to be Governor Charlie Crist father, who said he spent time at the Mercy Hospital as an intern when he first got out of med school,” said Brayboy. “He knew my mother and the doctor that was in the story and he knew a lot of other things. As a result, he was willing to meet with the student to talk more about the history of the Mercy Hospital from his perspective,” Brayboy continued. “So that is a phenomenal thing that would never have happened without the student assignment you guys are doing about the community.”

    NNB students are working with many others like Brayboy who are being impacted by the stories these students are telling.

    “It is very important for them (NNB students) to keep digging stories out which may seem to be redundant, but it’s not redundant, ” said Brayboy.

    While NNB students are working on covering the Midtown community, the Midtown community, in turn, is having an impact in these students’ lives. Listen to NNB student, Clarence Ford, as he shared his story on how NNB has made him become a more active member of the Midtown community. Ford is also planning on joining the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP).

     

    One would think this is an actual newsroom, and in reality it is. Each student selects a beat of his or her own interest preparing them for their future in journalism.

     

  • Celebration and remembrance at St. Petersburg’s MLK Parade

    Celebration and remembrance at St. Petersburg’s MLK Parade

    BY MIRANDA BORCHARDT
    NNB Reporter

    DOWNTOWN — An estimated crowd of 3,000 people filled the streets of downtown St. Petersburg to take in the 31st annual Drum Major for Justice National Parade celebrating the life of Martin Luther King Jr. Monday, Jan. 18.

    This St. Petersburg tradition is the nation’s longest running Martin Luther King Jr. Day parade with the inaugural event being held on Jan. 20, 1986.

    Student Matthew Vorra, 15, and friends spent their school day off traveling from Seffner to experience the event but mostly to celebrate, remember and honor the legacy of the civil rights leader.

    King was “a man who fought for what he believed in,” said Vorra.

    The parade showcased local school marching bands, dance troupes and floats featuring community groups and local businesses who embraced the spectators with smiles, waves and by throwing beads to the crowd. There were even a few local celebrities who joined the two mile route from Tropicana field down to Vinoy Park including Mayor Rick Kriseman and former Florida Gov. Charlie Crist.

    Yolanda Fernandez, St. Petersburg police spokeswoman, said attendance was average. Some attendees may have been deterred by the lower than normal temperatures for the day.

    While the crowd was all smiles some were pensive remembering the times of struggle while embracing their freedoms of today. Charles Payne, 80, of St. Petersburg, has attended for about 20 years.

    “Martin Luther King (Jr.) stood for nonviolence,” he said. “It is good to see so many people recognize (that).”