St. Petersburg will receive $400,000 annually and can redevelop part of the Tropicana Field site under a new licensing agreement with the Tampa Bay Rays.
City council members also unanimously approved allocating an additional $5.26 million to repair the storm-damaged stadium Thursday. The estimated $55 million project is on pace to conclude in April 2026, before the start of a new Major League Baseball season.
School funding freeze explained, discussed in forum
Places This Week: Clearwater’s Big Storm Brewing for sale
Mayor: St. Pete could purchase embattled Job Corps site
Wrestling and political worlds react to Hulk Hogan’s death
It turns out that St. Petersburg’s job loss data was not half as bad as the numbers presented during the city’s State of the Economy address in May.
Councilmember Gina Driscoll subsequently requested an administrative analysis on the declining job growth in June. “I absolutely do not want us to become a bedroom community for Tampa and other cities that are creating jobs,” she said.
For this edition of Arts Alive!, we forgo the fun and frivolity of our regular podcast programming to focus on a weekend event that’s enlightening, not entertaining: St. Petersburg Museum of History director Rui Farias’ trolley tour of significant places from the civil rights movement in St. Petersburg.
St. Pete storm permit waiver ends soon
St. Pete ranks among ‘best cities for first-time homebuyers’
St. Pete emergency room receives prestigious award
Raising Canes announces opening date in St. Pete
Jul 26 @ 01:00 PM
Self- Defense / Abduction Prevention
Jul 26 @ 02:00 PM
FREE Child Custody & Co-Parenting Workshop
Jul 26 @ 03:00 PM
Kids’ Writing Workshop – Cristin Bishara
Create
Will Tubman statue be St. Pete’s next public art purchase?
New Company
Juvenile Welfare Board of Pinellas County
New Position
Program Evaluator
The SparkPlug
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