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It's a warm Tuesday morning and Joe Hollis is beginning his food preparation for the week at a Shell Gas Station in Casselberry. He’s preparing all of the meat, spices and sauces for his restaurant that he operates independently.
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"I learned very quickly that there is such a spectrum of needs, and everybody is so unique, and everybody's brain works so differently. Our constant goal is to work to understand the individual and meet them at their level and then enhance and maximize their abilities."
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You may be used to seeing storm troopers hunting down Jedis and taking over planets, but there is a group of troopers in Central Florida who are only here to do one thing: bring smiles to people’s faces.
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“I don’t have kids, so it’s been as close to me as fathering children as I'm going to get so it’s been a real blessing to me,” Cavalleri says.
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“Anytime you can get on an equal playing field with someone who is sighted and stay on that equal playing field you do it, you absolutely do it and you run with it, because it doesn't happen very often, “Park says.
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Once again, in 2021 the Orlando metro area was ranked No. 1 as the most dangerous city in America for walkers by the pedestrian-safety advocacy group Smart Growth America in its annual Dangerous By Design report.
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For Kim K. Johnson, losing her job to the COVID-19 pandemic revealed her life purpose: she saw a need and founded a non-profit called "Farm to Trunk" to fulfill it.