Anna Maria Island Sun June 1, 2022

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- Named Best Florida Newspaper In Its Class -

VOL 22 No. 34

June 1, 2022

The Memorial Day event featured a performance by the Anna Maria Island Concert Orchestra. BY JOE HENDRICKS SUN CORRESPONDENT | jhendricks@amisun.com

ANNA MARIA – The city’s 7th Annual Memorial Day Patriotic Symphony Salute honored those who gave their lives in service to their country. Monday morning’s ceremony at City Pier Park also honored the living military veterans in attendance. The ceremony began with an invocation from Bishop Michael Garrison, followed by the presentation of colors by a Marine Corps color guard, a memorial wreath placement by Marine Corps veteran Dave “Watchdog” Miner, the performance of “Taps” by trumpeter Tim Eaton and drummer Chuck Parr and the performance of “Amazing Grace” by bagpiper and Manatee County Sheriff’s Office Det. Nate Boggs. Mayor Dan Murphy welcomed the elected officials in attendance, including all five members of the Anna Maria City Commission and County Commissioner Carol Whitmore. The mayor recognized and thanked the city staff members for all the work they put into organizing and preparing for the day’s event, and for working on a holiday.

Anna Maria memorializes those who served, sacrificed JOE HENDRICKS | SUN

Hundreds honored the military under the shade sails at City Pier Park during Monday’s Memorial Day event.

Anna Maria taking vacation rental owners to court The lawsuit will seek a one-year suspension of the property owners’ city-issued vacation rental license. BY JOE HENDRICKS SUN CORRESPONDENT | jhendricks@amisun.com

ANNA MARIA – The city plans to file a lawsuit against the owners of a vacation rental home cited for five noise ordinance violations within a nine-month period. Located at 313 Magnolia Ave., the rental is managed by Vacasa and owned by the Orlando-based Mangoes on Magnolia LLC registered to brothers Mukesh and Raju Patel. During the May 18 code enforcement hearing at city hall, Special Magistrate Jerry Buhr declared the rental to be a public nuisance. Buhr’s declaration will be the basis of the lawsuit that City Attorney Becky Vose

INSIDE NEWS EDITORIAL CARTOON OUTDOORS REAL ESTATE SPORTS CROSSWORD CLASSIFIEDS

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will soon file with the 12th Judicial Circuit Court in Manatee County. Vose plans to file the suit after the city receives the court reporter’s verbatim transcript of the special magistrate hearing at which Code Enforcement Manager Sandy Olson presented the city’s case. Olson’s May 18 presentation included testimony from two Manatee County Sheriff’s Office deputies, the deputies’ body camera footage and testimony from two neighboring property owners. According to Olson, noise violation citations carrying $35 fines were issued to five different rental guests between June 5, 2021 and March 16 of this year. The special magistrate hearing and the pending lawsuit were discussed at the May 26 city commission meeting, with the commission voting 4-0 in favor of filing the lawsuit. SEE RENTALS, PAGE 27

Bird nest discovered in trees slated for woodchipper With an active bird nest at stake, locals are hoping that state officials will step in to save the trees at Kingfish Boat Ramp. BY KRISTIN SWAIN SUN STAFF WRITER | kswain@amisun.com

HOLMES BEACH – Some Manatee County commissioners may have given up on the fight to save more than 80 trees planned for destruction at Kingfish Boat Ramp, but many constituents hope the discovery of an active great blue heron nest in one of the trees will change minds. County Commissioner Carol Whitmore led the fight to save trees slated for destruction or relocation at Kingfish, including at the shady picnic area, as part of planned renovations at the popular park

during a recent meeting. However, Commission Chair Kevin Van Ostenbridge said that he didn’t think saving the trees is a fight that commissioners can win with the renovation plans already at 100% completion and a fall 2023 deadline for finishing the project looming. Of the 120-140 trees in the park, more than 80 are planned to be removed or relocated to make way for more parking. All of the Australian pine trees, which provide shade along the shoreline and a place for birds to nest, are slated for destruction. As of May 28, dozens of trees at the boat ramp had been marked with caution tape, indicating they are to be removed, though no timeline for the removal was available as of press time for The Sun. Some are hoping that the discovery of SEE BIRD, PAGE 27

HUNTERS POINT, Cortez

HATS OFF TO GRADS at AME,

School for Constructive Play. 4

Anna Maria Island, Florida

SEE MEMORIAL DAY, PAGE 25

Village Marina battle over canal. 11 ALGAE VACUUM considered by Holmes Beach officials. 5

The Island’s award-winning weekly newspaper www.amisun.com


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