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Vol. 1 · No. 6 · Wednesday, May 6, 2026

The Gainesville Ledger

Environment

Lochloosa West brush fire grows to 228 acres, prompts road closure and air quality warnings

A brush fire near Lochloosa Lake in southeast Alachua County expanded rapidly from 3 acres to 228 acres, reaching about 30% containment as crews worked through the night. The blaze forced the closure of County Road 325, though the road was later reopened Monday night, and smoke from the fire reduced visibility along U.S. 441 and I-75. No structures were reported threatened, and residents within a three-mile radius were placed on alert.

Sources: WUFT News · Mainstreet Daily News · The Independent Florida Alligator · The Gainesville Sun · WCJB TV20

Community

Hurricane Preparedness Week urges Floridians to get ready before season peaks

National Hurricane Preparedness Week, running May 3–9, is prompting emergency officials and weather agencies to remind residents that waiting until a storm approaches risks running out of supplies and missing critical planning steps. Experts caution that Florida’s safe window for evacuation and final preparations can close faster than expected, and that a storm’s dangerous effects often extend well beyond the official forecast cone. NOAA and disaster-response organizations are encouraging residents to review insurance, stock supplies, and finalize evacuation plans now, while conditions are calm.

Sources: WUFT News · WCJB TV20

State & National

Florida sued over new congressional map minutes after DeSantis signed it

Voting rights group Equal Ground Education Fund filed a lawsuit against Florida’s newly redrawn congressional map within an hour of Gov. Ron DeSantis signing it into law, arguing the districts violate the state’s Fair Districts Amendments, which prohibit drawing maps for partisan advantage. The governor’s office has maintained the map was drawn using political data rather than racial data. Headlines from the Gainesville Sun suggest the mid-decade redistricting is designed to boost Republican House seats, though analysts have raised the possibility it could backfire on the GOP.

Read both sides →

Sources: The Gainesville Sun · WCJB TV20

Education

Alachua County School Board votes 3-2 to restructure City of Alachua schools

The Alachua County School Board approved a contested grade-reconfiguration plan Tuesday night, voting 3-2 to keep Irby Elementary as a K-2 campus while moving grades 3 through 8 to Mebane Middle School. Board members Sarah Rockwell, Tina Certain, and Thomas Vu backed the plan as a compromise, while Leanetta McNealy and Janine Plavac voted against it. The vote came after roughly two hours of debate and a dispute earlier in the day over a presentation shared with teachers that some described as confusing and lacking transparency.

Read both sides →

Sources: WCJB TV20 · The Gainesville Sun

City

Education

Federal judge allows expelled UF student’s lawsuit to proceed to trial

A federal judge denied the University of Florida’s motion to dismiss a lawsuit brought by expelled student Preston Damsky, clearing the case for a jury trial set to begin May 27. Damsky was removed from the university after posting what defense attorneys describe as an antisemitic threat against Jewish students on social media. Judge Allen Winsor issued the ruling following a telephone hearing on Monday.

Read both sides →

Sources: WCJB TV20

UF researchers find bacterial blotch in button mushrooms has multiple causes

University of Florida scientists have determined that bacterial blotch, a disease that has damaged white button mushroom crops for more than a century, is caused by a combination of bacteria rather than a single pathogen as long assumed. The UF/IFAS research team used DNA analysis to reach the finding, which upends longstanding assumptions about the disease. Researchers say the discovery should lead to more accurate diagnostics and more effective treatments, with potential benefits for mushroom growers across the country.

Sources: UF News

Public Safety

Bell man sentenced to over two years in prison for threatening reporter, Muslims, politicians

Peter Ring, 31, of Bell in Gilchrist County, was sentenced to roughly 27 months in federal prison after pleading guilty to making interstate threats against a newspaper reporter, Muslim people, and political leaders. The FBI began investigating Ring last June after he threatened a reporter and promised to stop, but he resumed making threats months later, ultimately targeting at least 14 individuals. The case was prosecuted by the Northern District of Florida U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Sources: WCJB TV20 · Mainstreet Daily News

Gainesville gang member, 18, gets two years in federal prison for illegal firearm

Devon Oliver, an 18-year-old Gainesville man identified as a documented gang member, was sentenced to two years in federal prison after being found with a pistol whose serial number had been removed. Officers caught Oliver attempting to flee at a Gainesville apartment complex; the weapon was loaded with an extended magazine holding 22 rounds. Federal prosecutors linked the arrest to gang violence in the area.

Sources: Mainstreet Daily News · WCJB TV20

13-year-old dies in Bradford County camper fire near Starke

A 13-year-old boy died Tuesday morning after a fire destroyed a camper home on Southwest 84th Avenue in the Sampson City area of Bradford County. Firefighters extinguished the blaze within minutes but arrived too late to save the child, who had stayed home sick from school while his mother was working at the Alachua County Sheriff’s Office in Gainesville. The State Fire Marshal is investigating the cause of the fire.

Sources: WCJB TV20

Alachua County school zone speed cameras log 2,400+ violations in first week

Speed cameras installed at two Alachua County school zone locations recorded more than 2,400 violations during their first week of operation, the Alachua County Sheriff’s Office reported. The cameras, launched April 24 under the county’s School Zone Speed Enforcement Program, are positioned near Chiles Elementary School and along Southwest 75th Street near Wiles Elementary and Kanapaha Middle School. On the opening day alone, the four cameras collectively captured 440 violations across the two sites.

Sources: WCJB TV20

Teen arrested after firing at victims following Archer Road argument

Alachua County Sheriff’s deputies arrested a 17-year-old Saturday night after he allegedly opened fire on a group of people following a dispute that began at a gas station on Southwest Archer Road. According to deputies, the suspects followed the victims from the Chevron station into a residential area near 129th Street before the teenager discharged a weapon from a vehicle; no one was hit. The juvenile was charged with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and discharging a firearm from a vehicle within 1,000 feet of another person, and a second suspect faces pending charges.

Sources: WCJB TV20

Witness in Columbia County grandmother’s disappearance case found dead

Kaylin Madonia, 24, who had reported her grandmother Martina Lundy missing in Columbia County in 2024 and was scheduled to testify in the related murder case, was found dead over the weekend. No cause of death has been released. Aaron Hokanson, Lundy’s boyfriend at the time of her disappearance, was arrested earlier this year and indicted on a first-degree murder charge, even though Lundy’s body has not been recovered.

Sources: WCJB TV20

Business

HCA Florida Gainesville Hospital opens, first new facility in over 50 years

HCA Florida Gainesville Hospital began accepting patients Tuesday at its new 90-bed, full-service medical and surgical facility on S.W. 41st Boulevard near the Archer Road I-75 interchange. It is the first new full-service hospital to open in the Gainesville region in more than half a century. Officials say the facility is expected to generate at least 250 new jobs.

Sources: WCJB TV20

Sports

ACL tears rising among young female athletes, experts say

ACL injuries are occurring at increasing rates among young female athletes, a trend that has drawn attention in part through high-profile cases like that of Chloe Kitts. Anatomical, hormonal, and biomechanical differences are among the factors thought to make female athletes more susceptible to this type of knee injury.

Sources: The Gainesville Sun

Environment

Hurricane Melissa retired from name list after catastrophic Cat 5 season

The name Melissa has been officially removed from the Atlantic hurricane rotation following what sources describe as a catastrophic Category 5 storm with striking death and damage statistics. The name Molly will replace Melissa in the 2026 hurricane season list. Retirement of a storm name by the World Meteorological Organization typically signals that the storm caused exceptional loss of life or destruction.

Sources: The Gainesville Sun

UF research finds flood intrusions are degrading Florida’s freshwater springs

New University of Florida research shows that heavy rainfall is forcing murky river water back into Florida’s freshwater springs, reversing their natural flow and reducing water clarity. A study of 62 springs along the Suwannee and Santa Fe rivers found widespread loss of aquatic vegetation, particularly in areas repeatedly exposed to flood-driven intrusions. Researchers say these events compound existing problems such as low oxygen levels and algae blooms.

Sources: UF News

Community

Chiappini’s Gulf Station closes after 91 years as Melrose landmark

Chiappini’s Gulf Station in Melrose is shutting down this week after 91 years in business, with third-generation owners Mark and Robin Chiappini choosing retirement after more than half a century of operation. The store, open since 1935, has served the small community as a source for beer, bait, and propane, among other staples. No announcement has been made about what will take its place.

Sources: The Gainesville Sun · WCJB TV20

State & National

Man convicted of 1996 infant killing set for execution at Starke prison

Andrew Lukehart, 53, is scheduled to die by lethal injection on June 2 at Florida State Prison in Starke after the governor signed his death warrant. Lukehart was convicted of killing a 5-month-old girl in Duval County nearly three decades ago, with authorities saying he repeatedly attacked the child before disposing of her body in a pond. He would be the ninth person executed in Florida this year, according to state officials.

Sources: The Gainesville Sun · WCJB TV20

Deported Floridians face uncertain futures in their home countries

A WUFT report examines the experiences of immigrants removed from Florida under deportation enforcement, tracing what happens to them after they are returned to their countries of origin. The story explores the personal and practical challenges facing those suddenly uprooted from their lives in the state.

Sources: WUFT News

From the Magazine

SHOW PREVIEW

Pop-Punk Stacks the Bill at Signal Friday Night

Lifted Riffs, AITA, The 91’s and SWANYX at Signal. Doors 8 p.m., show 8:30, 21 and up.

By Craft Lemon

All Entertainment →

This date in Gator history

2025

Gators beat Georgia 5-2 in Super Regional Game 3 to clinch WCWS berth

On May 25, 2025, the Florida Gators softball team defeated SEC rival Georgia 5–2 in a winner-take-all Game 3 at Katie Seashole Pressly Stadium in Gainesville, clinching a spot in the 2025 Women’s College World Series. Graduate transfer Rylee Holtorf delivered a go-ahead two-run homer to seal the victory, capping a dramatic three-game series. It marked Florida’s 13th all-time WCWS appearance and their second consecutive trip to Oklahoma City.

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