photo mosaic of Naples, Florida pier, Bayfront, Bayside, dolphin jumping, magenta orchid, water birds silhouetted against the sunset
Lee Health becoming a private nonprofit hospital.

Lee Health becoming a private nonprofit hospital.

Liz Freeman | Naples Daily News

What you need to know

Lee Health has crunched financials for staying as a public hospital or becoming a private nonprofit system and found a conversion would bring gains after an initial hit.

The publicly-elected board of the 1,865-bed system with a $3 billion operating budget was briefed Thursday on how some revenue sources as a safety net hospital would be foregone while new financial opportunities would open up.

A 10-year projection starting in 2025 shows Lee Health’s net patient revenue at $34.5 billion if it stays as a public hospital. It would jump to $35.5 billion with the conversion to a private nonprofit. That would be a gain of $1 billion over the 10-year forecast, according to projections by Ben Spence, chief financial officer.

A key short-term loss would be $60 million in supplemental payments that are currently used to support treating uninsured and underinsured patients, according to Spence.

What are the upsides? Read more on naplesnews.com

Dining, music and fun: Mercato is hot and getting hotter

Dining, music and fun: Mercato is hot and getting hotter

J. Kyle Foster | Naples Daily News

On a Saturday afternoon in January, Mercato in North Naples is busy and will get busier as the hours pass.

People come for the experience – from food and shopping to unique events and outdoor entertainment; from family fun to adult time that includes romantic dinners, cigars, drinks and dancing. The later the night, the heels get higher and the clothes get tighter.

At 4 p.m., it is 75 degrees and a group of 6- to 8-year-old girls practices cartwheels on artificial turf in the middle of the shopping center and later play hide-and-seek – all near busy restaurants, retail stores and an art show that has the street in between closed.

At 8 p.m., the green space is filled with people listening to Wendell Ray singing DNCE’s “Cake by the Ocean,” some sitting in chairs they brought with them. Others dancing. Children hop and run around. Stiletto-clad women in short skirts walk by to go to the three late-night spots – Blue Martini, Cavo and Burn.

Most of the restaurants have outdoor seating to take advantage of the Southwest Florida weather and the desire for visitors to enjoy it. Among the restaurants are The 239 Naples, Bar Tulia, The Capital Grille, The Pub, The Hampton Social, Rocco’s Tacos & Tequila Bar, Chipotle, Grace & Shelly’s Cupcakes, Kilwin’s ice cream.

Some of these also have locations eight miles south on Fifth Avenue South, also a very popular shopping and eating area in Naples.

“We share a lot of guests (with) downtown,” said Daniel McLean, general manager of Mercato’s Bar Tulia, whose first location was on Fifth. The cocktail menus at each location are created by the bartenders and are different, as are most of the menu items, he said.”It’s even more reason to go to both places” McLean said.

Shopping mall vs. downtown feel
“It’s like a walking shopping mall,” said Heidi Zizza as she was having drinks with friends at a table in the corner near the sidewalk at Blue Martini. “It’s very different from Fifth. Fifth Avenue is more of a downtown.”

Read the full article with photos onnaplesnews.com.

Find a home convenient to great restaurants and entertainment in southwest Florida. Contact David at David@DavidFlorida.com or 239-285-1086.

Hidden gems: Reader’s Digest calls this Collier beach one of the best in Florida

Hidden gems: Reader’s Digest calls this Collier beach one of the best in Florida

Kendall Little | Naples Daily News

Popular magazine Reader’s Digest highlighted several South Florida beaches in a February article titled “15 Best Beaches in Florida Locals Want to Keep Secret.”

One Collier County beach made the cut: Tigertail Beach on Marco Island.

What did Reader’s Digest say about Tigertail Beach?
Best for: Swimming and bird-watching

After you park your car and start walking toward the water ahead of you, you might ask yourself: Is this the beach? It certainly is “a beach,” but what you see from the parking lot is actually just a huge lagoon, full of birds and tidal pools. And yes, plenty of people set up camp right there! But if you walk just a few minutes past the lagoon (sometimes, depending on the tide, you’ll have to wade through), you’ll get to the real star: three miles of soft, wide sand, fiddler crabs and beautiful migratory shorebirds.

The author, Liz Zack, also recommends watching the sunset and then

grabbing a bite to eat at Sami’s, a local favorite that serves Italian dishes.

What other Southwest Florida beaches were included?

  • Bowman’s Beach, Sanibel
  • Boca Grande, Gasparilla Island
  • Turner Beach, Captiva
  • Lover’s Key State Park, near Fort Myers Beach

How Reader’s Digest chose its ‘Best Florida Beaches’

Read the full article with photos on naplesnews.com.

Contact David to find your new home in southwest Florida. at David@DavidFlorida.com or 239-285-1086.

The rich getting richer? Naples was the only Florida city to make this list about wealth

The rich getting richer? Naples was the only Florida city to make this list about wealth

Kendall Little | Naples Daily News

In some areas of the United States, the rich are just getting richer ― including here in our backyard.

Naples was the only Florida city to make personal finance site GOBankingRates’ list of places where the rich are getting richer.

Let’s take a look at the findings and the rest of the list:

Naples ranked #14 on the list
GOBankingRates found that most growing wealth is found on the West Coast, but Naples ranked No. 14 out of the 25 cities on the list.

The study found that the average 2022 household income in Naples was $277,872, which was a 27.56% increase since 2019.

Naples also had a 20.21% increase in the number of high earning households.

California cities dominated the top 10. Here’s the breakdown.

  1. Los Altos, CA
    $400,817 household income for 2022
    22% increase in household income
  2. Wellesley, MA
    $367,801 household income for 2022
    27.80% increase in household income
  3. McLean, VA
    $364,093 household income for 2022
    22.76% increase in household income

See the list and read about the methodology on naplesnews.com.

Contact David to find your luxury lifestyle in southwest Florida – Email or call David@DavidFlorida.com or 239-285-1086.

Our critic answers readers #1 question: Where do you eat?

Our critic answers readers #1 question: Where do you eat?

Her top 3 Naples restaurants

Diana Biederman | Naples Daily News

What are JLB’s top three restaurants when friends and family visit?

It took a lengthy scroll through my phone’s gallery to figure it out.

Until 2021, one top destination (according to my photos) was Siam Thai, an affordable and convenient go-to with dated décor a la Mad Men. From my vegan pal Thomas Farley, aka Mister Manners, to “Iron Chef America” judge Karine Bakhoum, whose palate was once insured for $1,000,000 by Lloyds of London, this easy downtown joint was a crowd pleaser.

Alas, Siam Thai changed hands and then closed in 2022, making it ineligible for this story inspired by USA Today’s recent listing of America’s top 100 restaurants of the year based on where my Gannett colleagues go when friends and family land in town.

…below are JLB’s three most frequent restaurant haunts from May 2015 to now.

What they have in common? Each is independently owned, decidedly fuss-free and family-friendly. They also won’t break the bank unless you go bananas ordering multiple fun cocktails because you might want to try several.

JLB’s Top 3
If there’s a downside to JLB’s job, it’s only that I don’t get to visit my favorites as often as before. But when friends and family are in town, these are my must-visits, listed in alphabetical order.

Island Gypsy
292 Capri Blvd., Naples; 239-394-1111; theislandgypsy.com

Jane’s Cafe
1209 Third St. S., Naples; 239-261-2253; janesgardencafe.com

Seventh South Craft Food + Drink
849 Seventh Ave. S., Naples; 239-231-4553; seventhsouth.com

Don’t miss JLB’s photos and descriptions on naplesnews.com.

Find a home convenient to delicious dining spots in Naples, Florida. Contact David at David@DavidFlorida.com or 239-285-1086.

Seminole Gulf Railway agrees to sell land for Bonita-Estero trail project.

Seminole Gulf Railway agrees to sell land for Bonita-Estero trail project.

J. Kyle Foster | Naples Daily News

The Bonita Estero Rail to Trail will include construction of a 12-foot-wide asphalt path for almost 15 miles, looking similar to paths in Baker Park in Naples.
After four years of negotiations, Seminole Gulf Railway has agreed to sell its 14.9-mile Bonita-Estero rail corridor for a public pedestrian and biking trail.

Lee County and its municipalities, and Collier County if it chooses, have until March 2026 to come up with the $82 million agreed upon price brokered by the Trust for Public Land, a national nonprofit that works to connect people to outdoor spaces, said Deborah Orton, president of Friends of Bonita Estero Rail to Trail.

The Bonita Estero Rail to Trail – called BERT – would run from just south of the Lee Collier County border to Alico Road through downtown Bonita Springs and Estero ending just north of San Carlos Park at Alico Road. The trail will connect to Lee County’s John Yarborough Trail to the north and the planned Paradise Coast Trail to the south in Collier County.

Seminole Gulf Railway has agreed to sell its 14.9-mile Bonita-Estero Rail Corridor for a public trail in Lee County.
“This isn’t an isolated 15-mile piece of land,” said Doug Hattaway, Southeast Region conservation director at Trust for Public Land. “It’s going to connect to a statewide trail network.”

Read the full article on naplesnews.com.

Contact David at David@DavidFlorida.com or 239-285-1086 to find your home in healthy southwest Florida.