Posted: 4:00 AM

  • By: Heather Gordon

Hillsborough County officials will hold a meeting Tuesday to discuss the upcoming closure of the Platt Street Bridge in downtown Tampa.

District 1 County Commissioner Sandra L. Murman and other city and county staff will be leading the Community Information Open House Meeting beginning at 6 p.m. The meeting will be held at the Freedman Tennis Court Center at 59 Columbia Drive, Davis Islands.

At the Open House, citizens will be able to hear a briefing and visit information stations to find alternate commuting options and to provide comment.

The Platt Street Bridge will be closed beginning Monday, October 3, and is scheduled to remain closed for 105 days. Officials say the closure is necessary as part of the required rehabilitation of the bridge to allow the contractor to open the drawbridge and perform replacement work on its components. The full project is expected to be completed in the spring of 2012.

For more information on Alternate Routes, call the City of Tampa at (813) 274-8333.

For more information on the Platt St. Bridge Project, call Hillsborough County at (813) 635-5400.

Detailed information can be found on online at www.hillsboroughcounty.org/publicworks/traffic/platt.

Read more: http://www.abcactionnews.com/dpp/news/region_tampa/platt-street-bridge-to-close-for-105-days#ixzz1Z9m2yFcE

Hillsborough County News

August 1, 2011

Contact: Commissioner Sandra L. Murman’s office, (813) 272-5470


Hillsborough Commissioner Sandra Murman Hosts Community Office Hours On August 5

 

Hillsborough County Commissioner Sandra L. Murman, District 1, is hosting office hours in the community to hear from residents without them having to travel to County Center in downtown Tampa.

 

Commissioner Murman and her staff welcome this opportunity to meet residents and to discuss their thoughts and concerns on various projects and community issues taking place in Hillsborough County.

 

No appointment is necessary to meet with Commissioner Sandra Murman and her staff. Residents are seen on a first-come, first-served basis.

 

The community office hours are:

 

Friday, August 5

11 a.m. – 1 p.m.

Jan K. Platt Library

3910 S. Manhattan Ave. in Tampa

Witt Community Room

Ruskin Cultural Center Update

Commissioner Murman mentioned in this Observer article on Ruskin cultural center plans:

Planned cultural center may get boost of county money

20/07/2011

Melody Jameson Photo Local visions of a community cultural center here solidified further this week with the possibility of $100,000 on the horizon.

By MELODY JAMESON

http://www.observernews.net/thisweek/front_page/3630-Planned_cultural_center_may_get_boost_of_county_money.html

RUSKIN – Local visions of a community cultural center here solidified further this week with the possibility of $100,000 on the horizon.

The potential funds in Hillsborough County’s 2012 fiscal year budget to help initiate such a center in the community’s recently-vacated county fire station were flagged by Commissioner Sandy Murman during a board meeting last week. Ruskin is at the southern end of Murman’s long, narrow Commission District I that borders Tampa Bay.

 

The funding was erroneously reported elsewhere as tagged for Ruskin’s long-closed and badly-deteriorated theater building in the center of the downtown business district which is privately owned and which is on a lot inadequate for public vehicle parking.

Commissioners, under fire from citizens over quiet multi-million dollar contribution to construction of The Regent, a grand but not very publicly useful edifice in the Brandon area, earmarked $2 million for renovations of historic buildings in Ybor City during related discussions.

At the same time, the board instructed staff to outline a countywide program funded initially with $500,000 for which organizations could apply to renovate other historic sites in the county. Criteria related to applications for the monies are expected for board consideration late in September.

The firehouse cultural center money, however, is not part of the $2.5 million in renovation funding, Tom Fesler, interim county budget director, emphasized this week.

Rather, he added, the funds are a not-yet-approved item sponsored by Murman which will be subjected to an up or down vote during the commissioners budget meeting Wednesday, July 27, along with all such recommendations made by each of the seven commissioners. That session is scheduled for 9 AM in County Center.

Those commissioner suggestions that are approved and added to the 2012 budget now taking shape also will be subject to public acceptance during the final budget public hearing on September 22, Fesler noted.

Meanwhile, the local group which has been engaged for months in hashing out plans for converting the former fire station at First Avenue and First Street to a cultural activities headquarters, provided a business plan draft to Murman this week, according to Bruce Marsh. Marsh, an artist, former professor on the University of South Florida faculty, strong proponent of Ruskin’s annual Big Draw events and member of the center planning group, described the business design for the cultural center as “a work in progress.”

A $60,000 grant for the center has been pledged by the Community Foundation of Sun City Center and if the $100,000 requested by Murman is included in the next county budget, Marsh said he anticipated the funds would be used first for the substantial interior re-design necessary for functional conversion of the former fire station.

Fesler said that if the cultural center funding is included in the next budget, it probably would be dispersed based on provisions in the final accepted business plan.

The fire station building was vacated several weeks ago when county fire fighters and emergency response personnel moved into the new, larger and more serviceable Station 17 on West College Avenue at 4th Street..

Implementation of plans for use of the old station as a community cultural center would involve turning over control, management and maintenance of the county-owned old fire house property to a community-based entity such as the Ruskin Community Development Foundation. A similar arrangement already exists locally. The foundation currently operates the Camp Bayou outdoor learning center under a recently-renewed, five-year lease agreement with Hillsborough County.

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