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Monday, March 28, 2016

US Crystal Lagoon Pasco County

crystal-lagoon-pasco-324
Pasco County is on track to be first in the United States to be home to a Crystal Lagoon community.

The lagoons are basically gigantic swimming pools, surrounded by sandy beaches and, in the case of Pasco County, homes.

Metro Development Group partnered with Crystal Lagoons for the project, announced in late 2014.

The development group says the project has had a slower start because of the details regarding the lagoon and getting an Army Corps of Engineers permit.

Work began about six months ago, with clearing land and building a road on the old Epperson Ranch property. Within the next 30 days, crews will begin digging the Crystal Lagoon itself.

The gigantic pool will be up to nine feet at its deepest point, more than seven football fields in size, and will have a ultrasonic filtration system.

“It's water you can actually drink," said Metro Development Group president Greg Singleton. "It doesn't have a salty taste to it, it doesn't have a chlorinated taste to it, it doesn't burn your eyes, it's like swimming in bottled water."  
Clarke Hobby, attorney for Standard Pacific, said the company is planning to offer homes at a higher price point, similar to the style of homes available now in Estancia at Wiregrass Ranch, where home prices top out in the $800,000 range.

The pool will be surrounded by beaches and a community of about 2,000 single family homes.

It will also be a gated community, and the lagoon will be an amenity just for residents and their guests.

The first model homes are expected to be built by the end of summer, with the lagoon coming next year.

The total project will cost over $100 million.

The development group plans to build two more "Crystal Lagoons" communities in the Tampa Bay Area -- another in Pasco and one in Hillsborough -- as well as one in Fort Myers, Florida.

Pasco County, FL - Official Website - Epperson Ranch


 Crystal Lagoon Pasco County

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Tuesday, March 22, 2016

The Truth about Hot Dogs, Yuk.....

Image result for how hotdogs are made
Hot dogs can be such a pleasant thing to eat at a baseball game or at a party.
However, do you know how sausages are made? Once you know, you will never want to touch another hot dog in your life!
This video shows the grim reality of how hot dogs are made and it is not a pretty sight...
The process is simply. First, there are three animals that are typically ground up in the sausage: pigs, chickens and cows. The “bad” parts of the meat are all thrown into a grinder to ensure that everything is crushed to perfection.
In summary, what you find in your hot dogs are the leftover meat from the animals. It’s a long ways away from a big juicy steak!
The sad part in all this is how everything is processed. Employees don’t seem to care much as they know everything will be ground up as if it were garbage…
Anyways, here’s the video that will show you how hot dogs are made!

Monday, March 14, 2016

A Cannabis Gold Rush is coming to Florida

A Cannabis Gold Rush is coming to Florida
A Cannabis Gold Rush is coming to Florida
According to the Small Business Association (SBA) small business recently created 2 million jobs. It was not large corporations driving this train. Small business created nearly 2 million of the roughly 3 million private sector jobs generated in 2014. More than 7 million of the 11 million jobs created during our recovery have been generated by startups and small enterprise. “U.S. Small Business Administration studies show small firms employ just over half of the private-sector workforce, and created nearly two-thirds of the nation’s net new jobs over the past decade and a half.” Small business should be promoted in Florida, but instead it is suppressed within the medical marijuana business. Representative Matt Gaetz and Senator Rob Bradley continue to pick the winners and the losers in this nascent market. Is this democracy or small business at work?
If job creation is the goal in Florida shouldn’t Florida House and Senate members be promoting small business in Florida? Governor Scott’s goal is to create 1 million jobs in Florida, and put out in a December 18, 2015 press release “Thanks to our focus on cutting taxes and making it easier for job creators to succeed, our businesses are creating jobs faster than we expected.” Is that correct? In Broward and Miami-Dade counties, where Scott inked deals to create 5,456 jobs in exchange for $25.2 million in tax incentives and breaks only 61 jobs have been created. Medical marijuana in Florida would create over 50,000 jobs within a free market.
If Representative Gaetz and Senator Bradley were not tag teaming to keep Florida’s medical marijuana market limited to just five growers, and imposing patient caps before allowing other growers, we could create 50,000 jobs post a successful Amendment Two ballot vote in November. Florida’s Financial Impact Estimating Conference, put together by economists, and presented to the Governor, proclaims the following estimates.
The estimates were based upon 440,552 patients, 130,844 caregivers, and 1,993 registered treatment centers. Based upon these projections and a reasonable application fee of $15,000 for treatment centers, $100 for registered caregivers, and a biannual fee of $2,500 the Department of Health could take in the following.

• $29,895,000 application fee for treatment centers
• $13,084,400 caregiver registration fees
• $4,982,500 in treatment center renewal fees

The Economic Impact projection was the Department of Health – Office of Compassionate Use would require $2.9 million in 2017 and $2.7 million in 2018. With an expanded market they would have an overage of $40,079,400 dollars.
To date the Office of Compassionate Use has taken in $1,820,000 when 28 nurseries submitted $65,000 each on a non-refundable license application. With an expanded program, recommended application fees, the Office of compassionate Use could instead take in $42,979,400 in the first year. In essence the DOH’s Office of Compassionate Use would be more than self-funded.
Passage of Amendment Two, and allowing a free market, would generate thousands of jobs to include edible creator, concentrates processor, courier and delivery, security, reviewers, trimmers, administration, regulations and inspectors, web and software, dispensary owner, cultivation, seed harvester and sales, consulting, and training. Ancillary jobs such as air conditioning repairman, horticulture supplies, plumbers, solar panel sales, logistics, greenhouse sales, and real estate sales would all prosper. A sales tax projection of between $11.8 million to a maximum of $356.8 million has been forecasted. According to SimpleHired, a web based hiring group, the average salary in the cannabis field is $47,000 dollars.
Allowing a medical marijuana free market in Florida is exactly what Governor Scott has called for…jobs. You have to wonder why Representative Gaetz and Senator Bradley are blocking jobs in Florida by refusing to hear amendments to bills like those put forth by Senator Clemens and others.
Requirements for $65,000 application fees, 400,000 plant counts, $5 million performance bond, 250,000 patient caps before allowing only three more growers, coupling all business under these growers, and limiting the number to five growers does not promote small business, the biggest creator of jobs in this nation.
Oprah Winfrey stated it best when she said “Every time you state what you want or believe, you’re the first to hear it. It’s a message to both you and others about what you think is possible. Don’t put a ceiling on yourself.”
Vote Yes on Amendment 2 in November, and demand Representative Gaetz and SenatorBradley  to allow for an open market in Florida where jobs are created and small business thrives.