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Palm Coast Observer 10-30-25

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PALM COAST

MATANZAS TAKES CONTROL PAGE 8B

Observer YOU. YOUR NEIGHBORS. YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD.

VOLUME 16, NO. 40

FREE ON NEWSSTANDS | THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2025

More food truck freedom? First run at new food truck ordinance in Palm Coast ‘misses the mark,’ Vice Mayor Theresa Pontieri says PAGE 3A

Where to trunk or treat?

A NEW HOPE FOR MAKE-A-WISH

Boo-ling for Wishes raises $30,000 PAGE 1B

Calendar of local events PAGE 2B PCFD’s 24th Hall of Terror PAGE 3B INSIDE FUNERAL OPTIONS

Nina Guiglotto’s new business opens: Lotus Funeral Services PAGE 7B

50 YEARS

Garden Club at Palm Coast celebrates 50th anniversary PAGE 12A

TOP SCHOLARS

Matanzas High School recognizes AICE Diploma recipients with presentation ceremony PAGE 4A

Event raises $10K for Sea Turtle Hospital In just over three hours, $10,000 was raised for the Sea Turtle Hospital at University of Florida Whitney Lab, in Marineland, thanks to Flagler Radio’s eighth-annual Taste of the Fun Coast event on Oct. 28, in The Hammock.

Bruce Vinnick (left), broker/owner of Realty Executives Oceanside, with Jennifer McGee, of McGee Law, and family. Photo by Brent Woronoff

Flagler wants to keep school times Later start times for middle, high schools would have major financial consequences, district official say. BRENT WORONOFF ASSOCIATE EDITOR

Kat Eastman, Sea Turtle program manager, says to be on the lookout for “washbacks,” young sea turtles that are washed back on shore. If you see them, you can keep them dry and deliver them to the Sea Turtle Hospital, in Marineland. Call 904-461-4000. Photo by Brian McMillan

INDEX

Business..................... PAGE 4B Calendar..................... PAGE 2B Cops Corner................PAGE 2A Crossword...................PAGE 7B Letters.......................PAGE 13A Public Notices............ PAGE 5C Sports......................... PAGE 8B Tributes ...................... PAGE 2C Real Estate................. PAGE 5B

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Flagler Schools has been planning for two years on how to comply with a 2023 Florida statute that would mandate later start times for middle schools and high schools. Now, with the passage of Senate Bill 296 this year, the school district has another option. It can file a report by June 1, 2026, detailing its current start times, the strategies it considered to implement the later times and a description of impacts, including financial, and unintended consequences that a change would have. Citing health, safety and academic impacts of sleep deprivation on teenagers, the 2023 law required middle schools to start no earlier than 8 a.m. and high schools to start no earlier than 8:30 a.m., beginning with the 2026-2027 school year. Flagler Schools starts times are currently 7:30 a.m. for middle schools, 8:10 a.m. for high schools and 9:10 a.m. for elementary schools. While the new law effectively repeals the 2023 statute, districts are required to file the

report which also must include the number of board meetings, public hearings and opportunities stakeholders have had to discuss the impacts the later start times would have. Once the report is submitted, the district is considered in compliance with the 2023 law. The later start times would have major financial impacts on the district, Superintendent LaShakia Moore told the School Board at its Oct. 28 workshop. A ss i s ta n t S u p e r i n te n dent Angela O’Brien told the Observer that a 2023 district analysis found that about seven additional bus routes would be needed to push up the start times, costing about $80,000 per route for maintenance, fuel and additional drivers. Now, it would probably be closer to $100,000 per route, she said. The district could minimize the financial impact by changing from a tier level in transportation to combining older and younger school levels on buses. But parents typically don’t want that, O’Brien said. “It would be very difficult to not put multiple grade bands on a bus (to comply with the later start times), because transportation needs an hour between routes for drop offs,” she said. Other impacts would include extended day schedules, athletic schedules, child care and student jobs now that high school students would be getting out of school later. It would lengthen the middle school day

SCHOOL HOURS FLAGLER SCHOOLS, 2025-26 Middle schools: 7:30 a.m.-1:40 p.m. High schools: 8:10 a.m.-2:50 p.m. Elementary schools: 9:10 a.m.-3:40 p.m.

to accommodate bus tiers and move teacher planning periods from after school to during the school day, which would be an added expense. School employees’ schedules would be affected. “Some employees choose to work at specific grade levels based on their schedule,” O’Brien said. O’Brien and Louise Bossardet, the district’s director of information systems, told the board that stakeholder feedback will be collected through a survey that will be on the district’s website beginning in mid-November, public comment at board meetings and direct feedback to board members and administrators. The survey has specific questions for district employees, parents, students and community members and business operators. The intention of the latest legislation is for each district to have a conversation, Moore said. “We’re hoping families and the community will provide input,” she said. Email brent@observerlocal news.com.

Sale not fin-al

Dolphin expert in underdog bid on Marineland Dolphin Adventure wants to use attraction for animalassisted therapy

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Superior bands Superior quality: Local Flagler, Volusia high school bands receive top scores at marching assessment

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