The Islander Newspaper E-Edition Wednesday, April 14, 2021

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VOLUME

Stay Safe

NO. 25

APRIL 14, 2021 Free

The Best News on Anna Maria island Since 1992

astheworldterns. 6 dredge company errs again. 3

Q&A 041421

3

Meetings. 4 CoVid long-hauler speaks about battle. 5 County vaccine registry closes. 5

Opinions. 6 10-20 YEARS AGO

looking back. 7

Anna Maria tackles new ordinances. 8

RoadWatch. 9 Save a date. 10

Happenings Activities. 10-11 Center cooking up fun. 12 AMe-pTo election. 13

Gathering. 14

Obituaries. 14 Navigating AMI. 22

Cops&Courts 18-19 residents sound off on Cortez bridge plans. 20 Tram service picks up speed. 21 Turtle watch monitors piney point crisis. 22

islander.org

Questions persist in Piney Point catastrophe By lisa Neff islander editor

Multiple warning signals went out before the crisis at a retired phosphate plant resulted in the flow of polluted water into Tampa Bay. HRK Holdings LLC, which manages the Piney Point site, had cited “significant deterioration” of the upper portion of the liner system holding millions of gallons of wastewater in July 2020. An engineer then advised the company to look for alternatives due to the poor condition of the plastic liner. Environmentalists had been raising similar concerns about the site for decades. But an alternative didn’t come soon enough. After identifying leaks at Piney Point March 25, HRK received permission from the Florida Department of Environmental Protection to allow the release of polluted wastewater into to Tampa Bay. The controlled discharges began March 30 and continued until April 9. Uncontrolled releases of wastewater also took place as states of emergencies were

university of South florida College of Marine Science researchers April 7 conduct testing aboard the Weatherbird ii. They were monitoring for environmental impacts as polluted wastewater flowed from the retired piney point phosphate plant. islander photo: Courtesy uSf

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Anna Maria declares emergency, heads off Tampa Bay crisis By Amy V.T. Moriarty islander reporter

Anna Maria city commissioners unanimously approved an emergency ordinance April 8 in response to wastewater leaks flowing into Tampa Bay from a defunct phosphate plant. The ordinance authorizes “emergency management procedures to protect the health, safety and welfare of the citizens of Anna Maria and members of the general public;” and the adoption of resolutions to deal with

an imminent environmental emergency. “If we get a fish kill” in Tampa Bay, Mayor Dan Murphy said it will be easier to get financial and other assistance under an emergency order. Commissioner Mark Short motioned to approve the ordinance and it was immediately enacted. The flow of contaminated wastewater at the Piney Point plant was alerted March 25 by on-site management staff for HRK Holdings LLC, which is responsible for

Motorist strikes, injures biker in HB crosswalk

emergency responders tend April 8 to cyclist Keeping watch over the robert Koehnke after bay. 23 elizabeth Bisaga, the driver Tournament season at of the SuV, collided with KrC. 24 the biker in the crosswalk at remarkable experiences gulf drive and Holmes Boulevard in Holmes Beach. on the water. 25 paramedics transported pandemic relief netted in Koehnke, who suffered Cortez. 26 non-incapacitating injuries, to Blake Medical Center in ISL BIZ: 27, 30 Bradenton for treatment. Holmes Beach police offiCLASSIFIEDS. 28 cers issued Bisaga a citaPropertyWatch. 30 tion for reckless driving. for more, see page 9. islander puzzle. photo: Mike deal

NYT

maintaining the phosphogypsum stacks at the Eastport Terminal facility. By March 30, the leak intensified to a point that Florida Department of Environmental Protection authorized a controlled release of wastewater into Tampa Bay. The controlled release and other undetermined amounts of wastewater flowed from the site to a creek that feeds into Tampa Bay, which borders the north end of the city where it merges with Anna Maria Sound and the Gulf of Mexico.

1st look at storm season forecast By lisa Neff islander editor

An early forecast calls for an “above normal” Atlantic hurricane season. The prediction is from Colorado State University’s department of atmospheric science and is based in part on average sea surface temperatures across the tropical Atlantic and warmer than normal temperatures in the subtropical Atlantic. The researchers said it seems unlikely that El Niño conditions will occur this season. Typically, El Niño reduces hurricane activity in the Atlantic region. The forecast, released April 8, calls for: • 17 named storms, the average is 12.1; TurN To storm, pAge 4

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HB’s adopt-a-spot program loses 4 sponsors By ryan paice islander reporter

Legalities are scaring some sponsors away from the Holmes Beach Parks and Beautification Committee’s Adopt-a-Spot program. Board member Susan Anderson, who heads the program, said April 8 that four sponsors declined to renew their applications for a spot due to concerns with the form. The adopt-a-spot program allows residents, organizations and businesses to enhance public rights of way and open spaces with landscaping or other improvements, including ongoing maintenance. There were 16 spots listed in the program and “several” needed adoption as of April 8, according to city clerk Stacey Johnston. According to the application, adopt-a-spot sponsors must: • Conduct a minimum of four maintenance and cleanup sessions annually; • Provide the city with a list of volunteers who will work at any adopt-a-spot site before work can begin; • Agree to “hold the city of Holmes Beach harmless from any claim for injuries or damages that may arise out of the applicant’s participation in the adopta-spot program.” Committee chair Mary Lange said the board reviewed the application a year ago. “We went through a whole effort last year of taking a look at the application, deciding it wasn’t user-friendly and creating a more user-friendly version,” Lange said. “But, at the end of the day, a lot of legal language had to be added back in and that scared some people.” Board member Alec Graham said there was too much pushback over the form to ignore the issue. “I read it and I’m not sure I’d sign it,” Graham said. He suggested sending the application to city attorney Patricia Petruff to see if she could soften the language.

“I guess we should alert her to the problem and see if she can be a little more flexible,” Lange said. City Commissioner Carol Soustek, who serves as the commission’s liaison for the parks and beautification committee, told board members Petruff’s goal is to protect the city. She suggested board members try to communicate with the concerned sponsors. “Legal language can just come across as harsh,” Soustek said. “Maybe we can speak with some of the

dropped sponsors and explain why that wording is in there. It’s not to intimidate them. It’s just necessary coverage.” People interested in adopting a spot can pick up an application at city hall, 5801 Marina Drive, or find it online at www.holmesbeachfl.org. The next parks and beautification meeting will be at 10 a.m. Wednesday, May 5, at city hall, 5801 Marina Drive, or by teleconference, with instructions on the meeting agenda posted to the city website.

Holmes Beach preparing poll on community garden

A heart-shaped flower bed is included in one of 16 adopt-a-spot projects created to beautify Holmes Beach by the parks and beautification committee’s. islander photo: ryan paice

Holmes Beach public works administrator Matt McDonough told parks and beautification committee members April 7 the committee’s proposed survey to gauge interest in a community garden would be published online by the week beginning April 12. The proposed garden would be set in a city-owned empty lot abutting Grassy Point Preserve, a designated nature preserve at the north end of Avenue C near 30th Street. Mayor Judy Titsworth suggested the committee should create a communitywide survey to show interest in the garden to city commissioners, who will have the final say on the property’s use. The committee met in March to hammer out questions for the survey, which recently passed staff review, according to McDonough. McDonough said a link to the survey would be provided on the city’s website, www.holmesbeachfl. org, after it was published. Committee chair Mary Lange said she hoped the city could “get the garden going” by October or November. “It’s a great site,” Lange said. “It just needs a little work.”

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April 14, 2021 THE ISLANDER | islander.org Page 3 ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

A dredge with lights blazing and engines humming remained anchored April 11 about 600 feet from the Tampa Bay shoreline at Bayfront Park, 315 N. Bay Blvd., Anna Maria,. Islander Photo: Courtesy Anna Maria

Dredge company errs again, causing disruption By Amy V.T. Moriarty Islander Reporter

“X” did not mark the spot for Weeks Marine, which April 1 incorrectly set up shop in Tampa Bay off the north end of Anna Maria Island. The Louisiana-based company was contracted to dredge sand for beach renourishment on Longboat Key and began to set up in the wrong location. Just when it appeared the bungled operation was no more than an eyesore on the horizon, with promises April 5 from Longboat Key officials to Anna Maria Mayor Dan Murphy the operation would be relocated by April 8, the crew began running its engines around the clock and lights on deck overnight. The mayor received complaints April 6 from residents and vacation rental occupants that they had to hang blankets over their windows because of the

brightness of the lights. Murphy worked with Longboat Key town manager Tom Harmer to solicit a promise the dredge crew would reduce lighting to what was necessary for safety and limit the noise. And on April 11, the equipment remained anchored at the same location. “This whole thing was not done very well. It was just bungled from the beginning,” Murphy said. When the dredge was first spotted in the bay, a crew member told a sheriff’s deputy they were there to move sand from Bean Point south toward the Sandbar Restaurant, 100 Spring Ave., Anna Maria. But they were not contracted to dredge there or to pump sand on Anna Maria’s beaches. And what Murphy called a fiasco from the beginning worsened as overnight winds April 1 dislodged

Q&A 041421

The Islander poll

Last week’s question National Library Week took place in April. How do you most make use of your local library? 54%, Check out books. 25%, Not a patron. 13, Download materials. 4%, Attend programs. 4%, Meet with friends. This week’s question Earth Day will be celebrated April 22. How will you mark the day? A. Plant a tree. B. Post on social media. C. Commit to do more for the environment. D. Donate to a cause. E. It’s just another day. To take the poll, go online to islander.org. three 100-foot pipes from the dredge and choppy waters carried them to within 10 feet of the beach at Bayfront Park on North Bay Boulevard. According to Manatee County Sheriff’s Office dispatch logs, deputies received numerous calls early April 2 about loud banging noises. When the sun rose, deputies found the pipes clanging against one another just off the beach. Because the pipes posed a public safety risk, Murphy had deputies close off the beach portion of the park until the pipes could be moved. It took two tugboats and a barge two attempts to retrieve and secure the pipes to the dredge, as within hours of the first effort, the pipes had again loosened from the dredge and floated back up to the beach. “Complete incompetence on the part of Weeks,” Murphy said April 8 at a city commission meeting. “I’ll tell you, if we ever decide to dredge, we’ll call Weeks last.”


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catastrophe continued from page 1

enacted, residents evacuated and roadways closed due to concerns of a collapse of the massive system built to contain the waste — nutrient-rich water and radioactive gypsum rock – at Piney Point. Addressing the immediate crisis involved county, state and federal emergency management agencies, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and Coast Guard, federal and state environmental protection staff, federal and state fish and wildlife services and many nonprofits and educational institutions. Personnel, pipes and pumps were deployed to syphon water from the Piney Point reservoir while pilots directed drones for an aerial view and dive teams investigated underwater conditions. By April 8, emergency officials indicated the likelihood of a large-scale breach or collapse of the phosphogypsum stack at Piney Point had diminished. And by April 9, the DEP reported that all discharges of “untreated water” had ceased to try technologies to reduce the nutrients and removal with other treatments before discharging more wastewater. By then, about 215 million gallons of polluted water had been discharged to the bay and the DEP was sampling water from about 25 locations, including northeast of Anna Maria Island, for salinity, dissolved oxygen, clarity, nutrient levels, turbidity, radionuclides and more. The DEP was reporting water quality met standards but the area nearest the discharge point at Port Manatee showed elevated levels of phosphorous. Aboard the research vessel Weatherbird II April 7, a team from the University of South Florida College of Marine Science also collected water samples, surface sediments and fish from Tampa Bay to analyze for salinity, bacteria, nutrients, trace metals, oxygen and pH, or acidity. “Rapid deployments … provide us with an unprecedented opportunity to get out there and provide science necessary to inform an effective response, as well as any necessary mitigation efforts, so that we can safeguard our vulnerable coastal resources,” said USF’s Tom Frazer. Now, there are many questions for government Storm continued from page 1

• 80 storm days, the average is 59.4; • Eight hurricanes, the average is 6.4; • Four major hurricanes, the average is 2.7. The probability of a major hurricane making landfall on the U.S. coastline is 69%. The probability of a major hurricane making landfall on the U.S. East Coast, including the Florida peninsula, is 45%. The CSU forecast is among the earliest outlooks. In late May, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration will release its seasonal outlook. NOAA announced April 9 its adjusting how it defines an “average” season, based on 1991-2020 storm records. Such adjustments occur about every decade. Now, an “average” season will include 14 named storms, seven hurricanes and three major hurricanes. Previously, the “average” was 12 named storms, six hurricanes and three major hurricanes. The Atlantic hurricane season official begins June 1 and continues through Nov. 30.

Meetings

Anna Maria City April 22, 6 p.m., city commission. Anna Maria City Hall, 10005 Gulf Drive, 941708-6130, cityofannamaria.com. Bradenton Beach April 15, noon, city commission. CANCELED Bradenton Beach City Hall, 107 Gulf Drive N., 941-778-1005, cityofbradentonbeach.com. Holmes Beach April 21, 10 a.m., code compliance. Holmes Beach City Hall, 5801 Marina Drive, 941-708-5800, holmesbeachfl.org. Manatee County April 15, 1:30 p.m., county commission (land

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis assesses the situation at Piney Point and Tampa Bay April 4 from a helicopter. Islander Courtesy Photo

officials, politicians, plant management, environmentalists and scientists to answer about the environmental impact and how to eliminate the threat of Piney Point and other phosphate plants. The boards of two prominent environmental groups met April 5 and issued a joint statement, calling for action on “phosphogypsum stacks endangering the coastal habitats in Florida.” The statement from Suncoast Waterkeeper and Tampa Bay Waterkeeper said the failures at Piney Point were preventable. They said the discharge of wastewater allowed has delivered excess nitrogen and phosphorous, nutrients known to fuel harmful algal blooms. Meanwhile, the wastewater in the phosphogypsum stack contains about 10 times the amount of nitrogen in raw sewage. “Our community and environmental organizations need assurances by the state of Florida, our governor and the secretary of the environmental protection agency, the Senate and the House that this failure will be handled promptly with utmost caution and assurances that future failures will be averted by enlightened leadership,” the statement read. The boards demanded a state commission for phosphogypsum stack operations and closures, statefunded closure of the Piney Point stacks and the removal of water, enhanced water monitoring for five

years, testing of fish in the Tampa and Sarasota bay estuaries for two years, a moratorium on processing phosphate for six months and an accounting for the parties responsible. DEP Secretary Noah Valenstein, visiting the site April 3, said the state priorities were to stop the discharges as soon as possible and then focus on regulatory review and enforcement. But cleanup at Piney Point might be governmentfunded and controversial. State Sen. Jim Boyd, R-Bradenton, in Senate Bill 2500, cosponsored a budget amendment to fund the cleanup and closure of the stacks at Piney Point. The money — estimated at more than $200 million — could come from the Biden administration’s American Rescue Plan, which is intended to provide relief from the coronavirus pandemic. The cleanup, as proposed, would involve constructing a deep-injection well to handle the waste. “There are many problems associated with deep well injection,” said the ManaSota-88 environmental group in an April 5 statement. “All wells are subject to failure and there are too many unknowns to safely inject treated or partially treated effluent. The operation of deep well relies very heavily on predictions and good faith.” And good faith, environmentalist say, is not in good supply at Piney Point.

About Piney Point: Then and now THE PLANT: Borden Chemical opened the plant in 1966 to mine and process phosphate, used in fertilizer. Ownership transferred to Amax Phosphate in 1980, FCS Energy in 1986, Royster Phosphates in 1988 and Mulberry Corp. in 1993. Mulberry ceased operations in 1999 and abandoned the property in 2001. THE OVERSIGHT: The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency assumed oversight, followed by the Florida Department of Environmental Protection and then HRK Holdings LLC, which purchased the site in 2006, agreeing to maintain and monitor the phosphogypsum stacks and wastewater system. PAST TROUBLES: 1970 — Waste dumped into Bishop Harbor kills fish. 1989 — A storage tank leak released 23,000 gallons of sulfate, prompting an evacuation. 1991 — Two incidents resulted in the release of sulfur dioxide and sulfur trioxide into the air, killing

use). April 20, 9 a.m., county commission. County administration building,1112 Manatee Ave. W., Bradenton, 941-748-4501, mymanatee. org. Also of interest April 14, 4 p.m., Palma Sola Scenic Highway group, Bradenton public works, 1411 Ninth St. W., Bradenton. April 19, 9 a.m., Manatee County Tourist Development Council, Bradenton Area Convention Center, 1 Haben Blvd., Palmetto. — Lisa Neff

Editor’s note: Some meetings may be conducted virtually and some in-person and virtual.

three workers at the site and creating an acid cloud that sickened 30 people. 2004 — A storm ruptured a dike, releasing 70 million gallons of polluted water. 2011 — A spill dumped 170 million gallons of polluted water into Bishop Harbor and Tampa Bay. TODAY’s TROUBLES: October 2020 — The ManaSota-88 environmental group warned of the “risks of catastrophic failure” of the stack system and called for an EPA investigation. February 2021 — A coalition of environmental groups urged the EPA to address Piney Point and other stacks. March 25, 2021 — A leak was found in the wall of a pond containing about 400 million gallons of wastewater and seawater. March 30, 2021 — The controlled release of polluted water was authorized by the DEP in an effort to protect the stack system. April 1, 2021 — Manatee County declared a local of state of emergency with concern for a largescale breach of the containment system. Evacuations and road closures followed. April 3, 2021 — Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency for Manatee, Hillsborough and Pinellas counties as polluted water was pumped, flowing into Tampa Bay. April 4, 2021 — The response team grew to include the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Florida Department of Emergency Management, Federal Emergency Management Agency. April 6, 2021 — The evacuation orders were lifted and roads reopened. Manatee County authorized the use of a deep-injection well for the transfer of polluted water. April 7, 2021 — Discharges of water continued. Sampling showed water-quality standards maintained in Tampa Bay but areas surrounding the discharge point showed elevated levels of phosphorus. — Lisa Neff


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COVID long-hauler speaks about battle, lingering impact By ryan paice islander reporter

People everywhere may continue to feel the impact of the novel coronavirus pandemic for years to come. But for some who’ve endured COVID-19 — those called “long-haulers” — the effects still linger. Anna Maria resident Annrene Rowe, 68, told The Islander in an April 8 interview that as a “long-hauler,” her experience with the illness continues to impact her more than a year after she was hospitalized in April 2020 for treatment. “People need to know about this,” Rowe said. “I’d rather have the flu 10 months in a row than live through this because you don’t know how or if it’s going to affect you.” “I don’t want anybody to have to go through this,” she added. Acute COVID-19 symptoms usually last up to three weeks after its onset, but around 10% of patients — long-haulers — experience post-acute symptoms, or “Long COVID,” according to an August 2020 study from the British Medical Journal. Rowe said the first symptom she experienced when

County closes vaccine registry

The vaccine rollout effort is about to change. Manatee County was set to close registration for its COVID-19 vaccination standby pool April 12, according to an April 7 news release. “Manatee County is closing vaccine registration because the vaccine is so easily accessible through pharmacies, state vaccine sites and federal vaccine sites,” county strategic affairs manager Chloe Conboy wrote in an April 9 email to The Islander. About 140,000 county residents ages 18 and over had received at least a first dose as of April 9, according to the Florida Department of Health. Manatee’s health department had distributed 76,346 of those first doses, according to Conboy. In a final push, county staff were contacting remaining registrants the week beginning April 5 to schedule vaccination appointments at Tom Bennett Park and the Public Safety Center for April 13-15. The following week, the county will hold a firstcome, first-served vaccine distribution event 8 a.m.noon Wednesday, April 21, at Tom Bennett Park. Patients receiving their first doses at the event will receive their second doses Wednesday, May 19. The county’s public safety center vaccine site will continue to administer second doses until it closes Friday, April 30, which will leave Tom Bennett Park as the only public vaccination site. “After the event on April 21, we will reassess to see how much longer we need to keep the Tom Bennett Park vaccine site open,” Conboy wrote. “Manatee County’s Public Safety Department is also looking to ramp down vaccine sites to start preparing for hurricane season.” — ryan paice

#AMItogether #AMItogether #AMItogether #AMItogether #AMItogether #AMItogether #AMItogether #AMItogether

Annrene rowe in July 2020, before she began experiencing hair loss due to CoVid-19. islander Courtesy photos

Annrene rowe shows a bald spot emerging on her scalp in August 2020, during her long battle with CoVid-19.

she came down with COVID-19 in March 2020 was swelling in her throat. “I woke up one morning and couldn’t swallow. …I felt like I’d swallowed a whole live swarm of buzzing bees,” Rowe said. “It was pretty bad.” Over the course of a month, Rowe developed a high fever and lost 22 pounds before being hospitalized with severe pneumonia in April 2020. She spent three days on oxygen in an intensive care unit and another nine days in supervised care before going home. By June 2020, Rowe was still struggled with severe shortness of breath, lethargy, shaking, body

pain, as well as rarer symptoms like heart palpitations and temporary paralysis. She said she continued to deal with many of the same symptoms as of April 8. “It seemed like everyday I woke up there was a new symptom,” Rowe said. “Every day there’s something different.” Rowe added that she lost 75% of her hair due to the illness and had to adjust to wearing wigs. She said she’d spoken with other former COVID-19 patients who’d also dealt with significant hair loss. Another lingering symptom is “brain fog,” which Rowe described as a cognitive fuzziness that often leaves her disoriented and confused. “Something that would maybe take me five minutes can take me about an hour,” Rowe said, taking a second to catch her breath mid-sentence. Rowe said that in the most dangerous instance, she forgot a pot of water on the stove she left to boil and nearly started a fire. “I could have burnt my kitchen down,” she said. “And I can’t even remember why I put the water on.” While some of the illness’ impact is there to stay, such as scarred lung tissue from her pneumonia, Rowe said some symptoms have improved since she received the vaccine earlier this year. “They’ve improved a little bit over time,” Rowe said. “I’m getting a little bit more energy. …I was a skeptic. I’ve never even had a flu shot, but I started hearing stories that long-haulers were seeing improvements because of the vaccine. …So, I got mine.” “I’ve had it. I don’t want it again,” she added.

AM receives mixed reaction to Mote-pier project By Amy V.T. Moriarty islander reporter

An April 7 meeting regarding a proposed Mote Marine Laboratory outreach center at the Anna Maria City Pier yielded mixed reactions from county officials. In attendance were Anna Maria Mayor Dan Murphy, Manatee County Commissioner Kevin Van Ostenbridge, Bradenton Area Convention and Visitors Bureau executive director Elliott Falcione, Manatee County Van ostendeputy administrator and economic bridge development official Karen Stewart and Manatee County School Superintendent Cynthia Saunders. Murphy reported to city commissioners April 8 that Van Ostenbridge was supportive, adding, “in this project we have a good friend in Kevin Van Ostenbridge.” Falcione and Stewart also were supportive, Murphy said, but Saunders “didn’t sound as excited as I hoped she’d be.” In preparation for a Manatee County Tourist Development Council meeting set for 9 a.m. Monday, April

19, Murphy said he is tweaking his presentation, but believes there is strong support on the recommending body. A memorandum of understanding between the city and Mote stipulates the city would be responsible for securing funding for the $500,000 build-out of an 1,800-square-foot space at the T-end of the pier, 100 S. Bay Blvd. And Murphy is looking for money from the tourist development tax or a funding source other than property tax dollars. The tourist development funds come from the 5% tax on accommodations of six months or less. As city commissioners in February weighed uses for the vacant building on the pier, the Mote project emerged as a favorite of six options. After Hurricane Irma in 2017 decimated the historic pier, TDC funds helped to build a new pier. Mote also has received funding from the TDC. Sourcing funds for the build-out is the city’s only responsibility for the marine center as the estimated $400,000 annual costs would be funded by Mote. The April meeting of the TDC will be at the Bradenton Area Convention and Visitors Center, 1 Haben Blvd., Palmetto.


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Opinion

Our

No end in sight

Florida is among the states experiencing a rise in coronavirus cases, including the more intense, more contagious variants from the UK, Brazil and South Africa. And yet, as many of us tend to let our collective foot off the pedal, there are far too many at-risk people in the teen-under 60s who are ignoring the CDC guidelines — putting others at risk. We need to be vigilant to break out of the tunnel — to be free of the pandemic, quarantine, fear, threats and severe illness. Keep the goal in mind: Wear the mask and social distance when you’re not among vaccinated family and a close circle of friends. Don’t just be safe, stay safe. And what a relief the vaccine can be. I’m looking forward to relaxing with close friends, coworkers and my family — like old times. While keeping my guard up, I see others bent on ignoring safety, as all three island cities are seeing increases of COVID-19 cases. The county saw more than 860 new cases in a week, 18 hospitalizations and two deaths. And one more case is one too many. So why are restaurants, shops and boutiques allowing customers without masks? Maybe because the governor set the bar too low. He has prevented local governments from enforcing their own rules by voiding fines and other enforcement tools. The only recourse for cities with mask mandates, like Anna Maria and Holmes Beach, is for the store owners to require masks, refuse service and call in law enforcement to trespass violators. It seems there are reluctant, stubborn or greedy business owners who won’t turn customers away. But you can make a difference. Remember, you don’t have to eat, shop, patronize businesses or go where you don’t feel safe. Meanwhile, you can help your neighbors. You can pitch in to save the environment from the waste pouring into Tampa Bay by joining like minds online who are looking for answers for the future. And you can help fight construction of a 65-foottall megabridge from Bradenton Beach to Cortez, and add your comments on the Longboat Pass Bridge to the Florida Department of Transportation website. A megabridge here can overwhelm our small communities and our old-Florida ambiance by devastating historic sites and diminishing the size and beauty of the largest public beach in Manatee County. Please, don’t let it happen on our watch. — Bonner Joy, news@islander.org.

APRIL 14, 2021 • Vol. 29, No. 25 Publisher, Co-editor Bonner Joy, news@islander.org ▼ Editorial editor lisa Neff, lisa@islander.org Joe Bird, editorial cartoonist Kevin Cassidy, kevin@islander.org Jack elka, jack@jackelka.com Kane Kaiman, kane@islander.org Kelsey Mako, kelsey@islander.org Amy V.T. Moriarty, amym@islander.org ryan paice, ryan@islander.org ▼ Contributors Johann Bertram Karen riley-love Capt. danny Stasny, fish@islander.org ▼ Advertising Director Toni lyon, toni@islander.org ▼ Webmaster Wayne Ansell ▼ Office Manager, lisa Williams info@, accounting@, classifieds@, subscriptions@islander.org ▼ Distribution urbane Bouchet ross roberts Judy loden Wasco (All others: news@islander.org) ▼

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Your

Opinion

HB’s stand against bullies

Being residents of Holmes Beach for the past 15 years, we would like to thank Mayor Judy Titsworth, Police Chief William Tokajer and the Holmes Beach Commission for standing firm on the parking rights of the residents in Holmes Beach. We feel we have been “bullied” by the Manatee County commissioners for some time and they look at Anna Maria Island only as a “big cash cow.” Tourists and off-islanders are more than welcome when they respect residents, property and local laws. We are appalled to think that Manatee County Commissioner Kevin Van Ostenbridge feels he is representing the residents of Holmes Beach when he shows such disrespect to our local elected officials. May we suggest the county open up more parking spots by removing their equipment and huge dumpsters from the Manatee Public Beach? Kudos and support to our Holmes Beach officials and may they continue to represent our residents. Pam and Major Leckie, Holmes Beach

Rules of the road?

My neighbor recently got a ticket for running a stop sign in Anna Maria. He was fined $160 and, in order to avoid points on his license, has to go to classes and take a test. Since he was on his bike, don’t you think a warning could have been given? I understand bicyclists should stop but he was waved through by a motorist. A little excessive to say the least. Hollis Stacy, Anna Maria

Skimming online …

Web (register for free news alerts) islander.org Facebook @islandernewspaper Twitter @ami_islander Instagram @theislanderami Pinterest @islandernewspaper E-edition For $36 a year or $99 for a lifetime, e-edition subscribers have access to the weekly e-edition, with page-by-page views of all the news, photos, columns, community announcements and advertisements. To subscribe, visit islander.org.

Please, do not …

Please, do not walk on the dunes as they are protected. Please, do not pull or walk on the sea oats as it is against the law. Please, take your empty cups and papers home to deposit in the trash. Please, do not dig holes and leave them open when you leave the beach because people walking can trip and injure themselves. Please, do not feed the birds because they might attack you. Please, enjoy your vacation. Yusha Ouelette, Bradenton Beach Editor’s note: Please, do no feed the birds or other wildlife — it can result in their harm or death.

Have your say in The Islander The Islander accepts original letters of up to 250 words and reserves the right to edit for grammar and length. Letters must include name, address and a contact phone number (for verification). Anonymous letters will not be printed. Please, email news@ islander.org.


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On the menu A postcard features the offerings at an old Anchor inn in Bradenton Beach. The boast on the card’s back reads, “All you can eat. fried shrimp. Chicken. fish fillet. Ham steak.” The cost? $4.25 for adults, $2.25 for kids. The postcard, donated by the Bishop Museum of Science and Nature, was not dated. The Anchor inn was a small chain, with cocktail lounges in detroit and riverview, Michigan, and the one in Bradenton Beach at 200 gulf drive N. The site currently houses The Beach House.

Barefoot in BB A postcard by e.C. Kropp Co. dated 1940-50 depicts “The Barefoot Boy at Bradenton Beach.” The card’s back states, “fancy fishing tackle is nonessential here, merely a know-how with ordinary equipment as demonstrated by this native lad. Big ones are caught too and to land them is an exceptional thrill.” islander images: Courtesy Manatee County public library System

Share from your archives

Got old photographs, postcards or newsclippings of Anna Maria Island in your memory boxes or photo albums? Make a photo or scan, write a recollection and share one with The Islander. We welcome submissions at news@islander. org and calendar@islander.org. Please, include a name and phone number for questions and credit.

From the archives

10&20 years ago

In the April 11, 2001, issue

• Members of the Anna Maria Administrative Procedures Committee met privately in pairs — in violation of Florida’s Sunshine Law, which prohibits two or more government board members from meeting behind closed doors. • Holmes Beach’s Dr. Stephen Pelham was named “Doctor of the Year” at Blake Medical Center in Bradenton. Pelham said it was a “nice pat on the back.” • A firefighter with the West Manatee Fire Rescue District died after falling from a ladder at the Cortez Road station in Bradenton.

In the April 13, 2011, issue

• The Anna Maria Island Community Center — now the Center of Anna Maria Island — was considering putting up a cell tower to generate $72,000 in annual revenue. • Bradenton Beach began work on a new walkover for the dunes at the west end of Bridge Street. Work was to be completed before May 1, the official start of turtle nesting season. • Bradenton Beach officials were asking Manatee County to help raise concerns about navigational channels in Sarasota Bay from First Street South to Longboat Pass. — lisa Neff

find The islander dating to November 1992 online at ufdc.ufl. edu.

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page 8 THE ISLANDER | islander.org April 14, 2021 ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

Anna Maria tackles 2 new ordinances, approves purchases By Amy V.T. Moriarty islander reporter

Anna Maria city commissioners April 8 approved nearly $90,000 in spending and considered two proposed ordinances. Commissioners unanimously approved a motion from Commissioner Mark Short, seconded by Commissioner Deanie Sebring, authorizing Mayor Dan Murphy to spend $44,505 to engage Raftelis to perform a stormwater tax study. The project outlined by Tony Hairston of the North Carolina-based utility and public sector consulting firm would include: • Improve drainage maintenance efforts; • Capital projects; • Increase debt capacity to complete improvements more quickly; • Improve fee equity. Under the existing stormwater drainage plan, the city supplements construction using ad valorem tax dollars, whereas a proposed stormwater assessment would more equitably spread the cost among properties, Hairston said. The study work would begin in May and end in December. With a motion from Commissioner Jonathan Crane, seconded by Sebring, the commission also unanimously approved $42,500 to purchase a generator for city hall. Public works director Dean Jones laid out options for commissioners, noting that a replacement generator is the more costly option, but also offered the most security. The new propane-powered generator will be installed by June 15 and a 1,000-gallon propane tank will be buried under the horseshoe pits about 15 feet away, Jones said, noting disruption to the horseshoe pits would be limited and temporary. The generator will allow for 14 days of continuous operation.

Place portrait photo here

“As the mayor’s taught me, people want nor• Murphy updated commissioners on plans to remalcy,” Jones said. imagine Pine Avenue. He said the project includes four elements: Traffic flow; parking configuration; storm Ordinances drainage; and grants to fund the project. A revised parking ordinance is set to be drafted • The mayor walked back a statement he made and available for a public hearing and first reading at in March about former city mayors not having done the city’s 6 p.m. Thursday, April 22, meeting. enough to prepare for future density increases. Commissioners heard reports from Jones and code Murphy said he realizes mayors don’t make decienforcement officer Debbie Haynes regarding parking sions, the commission does and no one entity is to studies conducted in response to complaints and sug- blame for problems that stem from a combination of gestions from residents. issues that arose over the years. Included among the proposed parking changes: • Commissioners approved two beach weddings in • Installing “No parking” signs for a length of May, contingent on the organizers providing evidence 40 feet on Jacaranda Road, from its intersection with of insurance and a plan for guest parking. Gladiolus Street. • Installing a “No parking here to corner” sign on Alamanda Road at North Bay Boulevard. Hurry up and wait. • Installing a “No parking here to corner” sign on Holmes Beach restaurant Eat Here was set to Poinsettia Road at North Bay Boulevard; reopen April 14 after a forced 50-plus-day closure • Installing “Compact vehicle only” signs on both due to unpermitted renovations in the plaza where it sides of the driveway entrance/exit at the Roser Guild operates. Thrift Shop, 511 Pine Ave. Southern Cross Contracting president Steve John• Installing a “Compact vehicle only” sign to the son wrote in an April 8 email to Sean Murphy, owner left of the Pine Avenue entrance to the post office, 101 of Eat Here, 5315 Gulf Drive, that the restaurant was S. Bay Blvd. set to reopen April 10 pending a fire alarm acceptance Commissioners also heard a first reading by Vose test — however, the reopening was pushed again to of a draft ordinance regarding alternative methods of April 14, after The Islander went to press. stormwater design. The closure, which Murphy had called “devasThe amended ordinance would include a section tating,” began Feb. 24, when city building inspectors that allows developers to install a standard infiltra- observed the contractor completing unpermitted renotion trench for development of accessories, — pools, vations in another unit of the building on behalf of garages, sheds or the like — at existing residential William Keel — owner of the plaza. units. City staff and the West Manatee Fire Rescue A public hearing and final reading is set for the District disconnected gas to the property and issued April 22 meeting. “cease-and-desist” orders, which impacted Eat Here. City staff previously told The Islander the conOther matters tractor’s renovations impacted the plaza’s utility lines, • Commissioners commended city employee Nick which needed repair and inspection, and Eat Here Poulin for his efforts to update the city’s home rule needed a new site plan to reopen. website. — ryan paice

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SUV driver strikes biker, cited in Holmes Beach Holmes Beach police cited Holmes Beach resident Elizabeth Bisaga the afternoon of April 8 for failing to yield the right of way to a pedestrian at a crosswalk after colliding with Cortez resident Robert Koehnke, who was struck while attempting to cross Gulf Drive on his bicycle. Bisaga was driving southbound on Holmes Boulevard and turned left onto Gulf Drive when she struck Koehnke, who had the right of way. “(Bisaga) continued to travel over the top of

(Koehnke) and his bicycle. (Bisaga) came to final “I’m pretty banged up, with lots of broken ribs rest in the marked crosswalk, in the east bound lane and everything,” Koehnke said. “And I can’t see out of Gulf Drive. (Koehnke) came to final rest in the of my right eye, so it’s pretty bad.” — ryan paice crosswalk, half way underneath (Bisaga),” according to a Holmes Beach Police Department report. Paramedics transported Koehnke to Blake Medical Center in Bradenton for treatment for non-incapacitating injuries, according to HBPD Chief Bill Tokajer. Koehnke told The Islander April 12 that the incident resulted in several injuries.

Law enforcement cracking down on bicycle scofflaws By Amy V.T. Moriarty islander reporter

Manatee County Sheriff’s Office deputies assigned to the Anna Maria substation have been cracking down to enforce bicycle safety laws. The Islander received an April 3 email from a reader who thought a $166 fine issued to a bicyclist for running a stop sign was excessive. But bicyclists are subject to the same traffic laws as motorists and face the same penalties for failing to stop, according to the MCSO. Anna Maria city commissioners have received a number of complaints from residents in the past few months about a seeming disregard by bicyclists and pedestrians of the rules of the road. One of the ways deputies have tried to address concerns is by cracking down on bicyclist and pedestrian violations. In Bradenton Beach, police are monitoring the bicycle situation, Detective Sgt. Lenard Diaz said April 8. When a bicyclist has to ride in the road, whatever the reason, “they’ve got to abide the law as a bicyclist just like a driver,” Diaz said. Holmes Beach responded April 8 to a bicyclist struck and trapped under an SUV in the crosswalk on Gulf Drive at Holmes Boulevard. The driver was cited and the cyclist suffered some injury, but was treated

and released the same day. Holmes Beach Police Chief Bill Tokajer said in an April 11 call to The Islander, “We need to do more with businesses that cater to vacationers with rentals to educate riders and remind all bike riders that a bicycle is a vehicle, bike riders must stop at stop signs and walk their bicycle across the crosswalk, and follow all the rules of the road.” HBPD sees a “vacation mentality” here, but the laws still must be enforced, he added.

An April 8 SuV vs. biker crash in Holmes Beach left the bicyclist seriously injured. islander photo: Jay Shore

RoadWatch Eyes on the road

Bicyclists ride two abreast in Anna Maria in late March. Anna Maria’s deputies are cracking down to enforce safety laws — including the proper use of bikes. islander photo: Courtesy Melissa Anderson

The Florida Department of Transportation posted no notices for the week. For the latest road watch information, go online to swflroads.com or dial 511. And, a reminder, a fare-free trolley operates daily on Anna Maria Island. — lisa Neff

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page 10 THE ISLANDER | islander.org April 14, 2021 ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

The Islander Calendar

Compiled by lisa Neff email calendar@islander.org.

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT ONGOING ON AMI

Throughout April, “Line<Color<Form,” three-dimensional works by Susan Maas, Island Gallery West, 5368 Gulf Drive, Holmes Beach. Information: 941-778-6648. Throughout April, Jodi Tshida and Dee Pastorius, featured artists, Artists’ Guild Gallery, 5414 Marina Drive, Holmes Beach. Information: 941-778-6694. AHEAD ON AMI May 1, Anna Maria Island Chamber of Commerce Beach’n Food Truck Festival, Holmes Beach. May 13, Center of Anna Maria Island’s Marshall Tucker Band outdoor concert, Anna Maria. June 4, Center of Anna Maria Island’s Journey outdoor concert, Anna Maria. July 24, Anna Maria Island Privateers Christmas in July party, Bradenton Beach. OFF AMI Saturday, April 17 1-3 p.m. — World Circus Day celebration at the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, 5401 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota. Fee applies. 941-359-5700. ONGOING OFF AMI Through May 16, “Frans Hals: Detecting a Decade,” John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, 5401 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota. Fee applies. Information: 941-359-5700. Through May 16, “Larry Rivers: Boston Massacre from the Ringling collection,” John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, 5401 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota. Fee applies. Information: 941-3595700. Through June 27, “Kabuki Modern,” John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, 5401 Bay Shore Road, Sarasota. Fee applies. Information: 941-359-5700. Through June 27, “Roy Lichtenstein: Monet’s Garden Goes Pop!” Mary Selby Botanical Gardens, 1534 Mound St., Sarasota. Fee applies. Information: 941-366-5731.

Circus spectacular A performer with Circus Arts Conservatory/Sailor Circus, which will participate in World Circus day celebrations 1-3 p.m. Saturday, April 17, at the John and Mable ringling Museum of Art, 5401 Bay Shore road, Sarasota. for more information, call the museum at 941-359-5700. islander photo: Circus Arts Conservatory/Sailor Circus

ing, in-person at Bridge Street Bistro, 111 Gulf Drive S., Bradenton shell Shore Walk, Coquina Beach south jetty, Bradenton Beach. Beach, and via Zoom. Information: 941-920-2505. Information: 941-742-5923. Tuesdays into May, Anna Maria Farmers Market, City Pier Park, AHEAD ON AMI 103 N. Bay Blvd., Anna Maria. Information: 941-708-6130. April 22, Manatee County Audubon outing at Leffis Key, BraOFF AMI denton Beach. Saturday, April 17 OFF AMI 8 a.m.-3 p.m. — Anna Maria Island Privateers’ Thieves Market, G.T. Bray Park, 5502 33rd Ave. Drive W., Bradenton. Information: Thursday, April 15 5 p.m. — Manatee County Parks and Natural Resources 931-639-0986. Coastal Cleanup, Neal Preserve, 12301 Manatee Ave. W., Perico AHEAD OFF AMI Island. Information: 941-742-5923. KIDS & FAMILY April 29-May 3, Sarasota-Manatee Originals Forks and Corks AHEAD OFF AMI Food and Wine Festival, various locations. AHEAD ON AMI May 14, Anna Maria Island Chamber of Commerce Golf TourOUTDOORS & July 4, Anna Maria Island Privateers July 4 Parade, islandwide. nament, Bradenton. TENTATIVE SPORTS

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Thursday, April 15 6:30 p.m. — Manatee County Parks and Natural Resources ONGOING ON AMI Wildlife Spotlight on Shorebirds, Coquina Beach Cafe, Bradenton Saturdays, 8:30 a.m., Kiwanis Club of Anna Maria Island breakBeach. Information: 941-742-5923. fast and meeting, Gulf Drive Cafe, 900 Gulf Drive N., Bradenton Friday, April 16 Beach. Information: 941-778-1383. 9 a.m. — Manatee County Parks and Natural Resources SeaTuesdays, noon, Rotary Club of Anna Maria Island lunch meet-

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Compiled by lisa Neff email calendar@islander.org.

Yo ho ho! 50 Years!

Season’s final market ahead

The Anna Maria Island Privateers will hold its final Thieves Markets of the season Saturday, April 17, at G.T. Bray Park. The market will be 8 a.m.-3 p.m. at the park, 5502 33rd Ave. Drive W., Bradenton. The event raises money for the Privateers’ “kids and community” mission as the nonprofit marks its 50th anniversary. Vendors typically sell treasures and junk, including household goods, art, sports equipment and more, as well as produce and other food items. Also, the Privateers usually sell barbecue, hot dogs and corn on the cob — “a buck an ear.” For more information, contact Kim “Syren” Boyd at 931-639-0986 or go online to amiprivateers.memberlodge.org.

Kiwanis to meet

On the concert circuit Save the date: The Marshall Tucker Band is set to perform outdoors 5-9 p.m. Thursday, May 13, at the Center of Anna Maria island, 407 Magnolia Ave., Anna Maria. The concert is sponsored by the Bradenton Area Convention and Visitors Bureau. for more information, including ticketing details, call the center at 941-778-1908. islander Courtesy photo

Artists’ Guild Gallery closing for renovations

The Artists’ Guild of Anna Maria Island is planning much more than a spring cleaning. AGAMI will close its gallery, 5414 Marina Drive, Holmes Beach, for renovations, with work set to begin May 1. Plans include lighting updates, fresh paint and work on the ceiling and floors. “When we reopen, our gallery will be bright and open with a wonderful showcase for the works of our talented local artists,” read an April 6 message from AGAMI president Sharon Tarras. Artists will remove their works April 25-30 ahead of the renovations. AGAMI plans to complete the work by May 24 and open for business June 1. For more information about the gallery work or AGAMI membership, call the gallery at 941778-6694.

Library resumes regular hours

Stay longer. Check out later. The Manatee County Public Library System returned to regular business hours more than a year after adjusting schedules and procedures due to the coronavirus pandemic. The system also extended the time limits for patrons to visit. The libraries had been closing an hour early for cleaning and sanitizing but were to return to regular hours April 12, as The Islander went to press. Also, the 30-minute time limit for visits was to be extended to 60 minutes. Social distancing guidelines remain in effect and library patrons must wear face coverings over the nose and mouth to enter. The Island Library is at 5701 Marina Drive, Holmes Beach. Hours are 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday-Saturday and noon-8 p.m. Wednesday. For more information, call the Island Library at 941-778-6341.

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The Kiwanis Club of Anna Maria Island will gather Saturday, April 17. The meeting will be at 8:30 a.m. at the Gulf Drive Cafe, 900 Gulf Drive N., Bradenton Beach. The club will hear from Kathleen Kramer of Turning Points, a local organization that provides free services designed to assist individuals and families on their path to financial stability and independence. Due to the pandemic, face masks are required when attendees are not eating or drinking during the club’s meeting. For more information, call Sandy Haas-Martens at 941-778-1383.

Visit www.islander.org for the best news on AMI.

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page 12 THE ISLANDER | islander.org April 14, 2021 ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

FISH board holds catch-up meeting, annual gathering planned By Kane Kaiman islander reporter

Make room on your plate for an extra helping of FISH this month. The Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage, a nonprofit dedicated to maintaining the commercial fishing legacy of Cortez, held its monthly board meeting April 5 in advance of an April 19 annual meeting. The annual gathering will be at 7 p.m. at Fishermen’s Hall, 4515 124th St. W., Cortez. At the April 5 meeting, topics included: • Organization financials; • Board member Kaye Bell’s resignation as president of the Cortez Village Historical Society; • The implications of the Piney Point wastewater leaks for the Cortez fishing industry. Board member Jane von Hahmann, who assumed the role of treasurer March 8, reported she had updated FISH’s financial records through March. Von Hahmann, a former county commissioner, succeeded Michael Northfield, who died in September 2020. Bell announced her resignation as president of the Cortez Village Historical Society, an organization that “focuses on preserving ‘old Florida’ history and stories of founding families in Cortez.” The organization maintains the Cortez Cultural Center at 11655 Cortez Road W., Cortez, and helped get the fishing village located south of Cortez Road designated a U.S. historic district in 1995. Bell took over as president in 2013 after the death of her husband, Sam, who had served as CVHS president since 2004. She will continue to serve on the CVHS board but said she did not know who would lead the organization. During the commercial fishing report segment of the meeting, board member Karen Bell — owner of A.P. Bell Fish Co., Star Fish Co., and a share of Tide Tables restaurant — said the Houston, New York and Atlanta markets had been buying Cortez seafood. She also said the baitfish season got off to a good start, but fishers were concerned about the potential impact of the Piney Point leaks on the harvest. The Florida Department of Environmental Protection March 30 began authorizing the release of wastewater from leaking storage ponds at the defunct Piney Point phosphate plant into Tampa Bay. According to Manatee County environmental division manager Rob Brown, the nutrient-rich water could contribute to algal blooms that can cause fish kills. For more on FISH, call 941-794-0043 or email jvonhahm@verizon.net.

fiSH board treasurer Jane von Hahmann and board member Herman Kruegle chat April 6 following the meeting at fishermen’s Hall in Cortez. islander photo: Kane Kaiman

Stage set for annual meeting At annual meetings, usually held in late March or April, FISH members observe year-in-review presentations and elect board members. Last year’s meeting did not take place due to COVID-19, and, according to von Hahmann, the organization has struggled to find new volunteers since the pandemic began. Since Northfield’s death, three board members have resigned. With 11 active participants on a 15-member board, FISH has had trouble making quorum requirements. The board held an emergency meeting March 8 where a motion was made to amend the FISH by-laws to reduce the board to 11 members. Though the membership will have to approve the changes at the annual meeting, von Hahmann said she has received nothing but affirmative votes by mail to this point. Four board members will be up for reelection at the annual meeting: FISH president Kim McVey, Kaye Bell, Herman Kruegle and von Hahmann. If the board reduction is approved, they could face challenges from write-in candidates at the meeting, though von Hahmann said the scenario is unlikely.

Center cooking up fun day, fundraising Pass the ketchup, please. The Center of Anna Maria Island will be serving hot dogs and hamburgers Saturday, April 24, during a cookout and fun day to raise money. The event will be outdoors at the center, 407 Magnolia Ave., Anna Maria, and feature rock climbing and other adventure activities, a musical performance by Trevor Bystrom, lunch items — hot dogs and burgers — from Duffy’s Tavern and Anna Maria Oyster Bar and ice cream from Small Town Creamery. Additionally, the center will conduct a 50/50 drawing, recognize longtime supporters and fun day-enthusiasts Chuck and Joey Lester and host Eckerd College and Mote Marine Laboratory at informational tables. The representatives will be available to talk about the center’s green initiatives, including the newly founded Blue Waters Coalition, a project that includes a water-quality “lab” at the center. “We have neighbors, mini-reef owners, volunteers, businesses and members of the center all pitching in to keep our students from Eckerd on the water each weekend to gather baseline water-quality readings that have been informed by training and scientific process of Mote Marine,” said center director of development

Jim McDaniel. The fun day agenda also includes remarks by McDaniel and center executive director Chris Culhane and a performance by children in the Beyond the Classroom program. Hours are 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Admission will be donation-based, as the fun day kicks off a fundraising campaign to raise $100,000 through May 31. “Our most recent financials show us to be almost exactly $100,000 behind due to COVID-related revenue losses, including from reduced foot traffic through the center and the cancelation of events over the past year,” read an April 8 news release. The center will conduct temperature checks at entrances and offer face masks to those who need them. For more information, call the center at 941-7781908.

Click! The Islander welcomes news of the milestones in readers’ lives. Send notices to news@islander.org.

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The Islander has moved! The “best news on AMI” has purchased and relocated to a condo officeat 315 58th St., Holmes Beach. We’re now across from HB City Hall and behind the Ugly Grouper. Same owner, staff, phone, email. New digs. The island’s best news for 29 years! 941.778.7978 news@islander.org


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PTO board nominations announced Nominations for the 2021-22 Anna Maria Elementary School Parent-Teacher Organization board were submitted April 5. Most 2020-21 officers are seeking reelection. Nominees include: • Nicole Plummer for president; • Alana Fleisher for vice president; • Brook Morrison for co-treasurer; • Jen Serra for co-treasurer; • Kari Kennedy for secretary. If the nominees are elected, Jen Serra would take the place of Lauren Palmer as co-treasurer. Plummer said she is excited to be nominated for a second year as president. It would be her third year on the board. “I look forward to welcoming old and new families to Anna Maria Elementary School, whether next year be virtually or in person,” she wrote in an April 6 email to The Islander. “The PTO has a great responsibility of assisting teachers and staff, as well as provide learning

By Kelsey Mako

experiences for our students that are as unique as our school.” PTO members nominated the board by email during a weeklong call for nominations. During the remainder of the school year, PTO members will focus on organizing an appreciation event for teachers and staff, as well as finding sponsors for AME Field Day. Other events, like the Spring Fling, were discontinued during the pandemic. Officer elections will be virtual, April 26-30. Officers will be sworn in at a PTO board meeting May 5. For more information about the group, go to their website at www.amepto.org or their Facebook page at @amepto.

AME Calendar • Monday, April 19, 3:45 p.m., school advisory committee meeting, via Microsoft Teams online platform. • May 4-5, English/language arts state test, fourth- and fifth-grades. • May 11-12, science state test, fifth-grade. • May 19-20, FSA math, third-, fourth- and fifth-grades. • Monday, May 24, AME field day. • Thursday, May 27, last day of school. Anna Maria Elementary is at 4700 Gulf Drive, Holmes Beach. For more information, call the school at 941-708-5525.

AME parents collaborate for state testing Anna Maria Elementary calls on parents to help students be successful on Florida State Assessments. Parents of third-graders sent supportive letters to the school before testing earlier this month, encouraging their child to try their best on tests, principal Jackie Featherston told The Islander April 6. Third-grade students opened the letters before taking state tests April 7. “I think if a child has encouraging words that are very specific about a certain task that they’re doing, they’re far more likely to attend to that task than if that doesn’t happen,” Featherston said. Third-graders took the English/language arts FSA test, which tests reading proficiency and determines if students are ready to be promoted to the next grade. Third-grade is the first year students are required

to take state tests. Third-grade teachers have been asking parents to Third-grader Amelia Thiessen uses craft supplies send letters to students before testing for years. Additionally, before testing season begins, AME March 25 to build cars for an energy experiment. sends out a letter to let parents know when their child islander Courtesy photo will be testing. — Kelsey Mako

Academic achievements

The Islander welcomes announcements of scholastic achievements. Share honors, stories and photographs by emailing news@islander.org.

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Gathering

Gloria Dei collecting food

Gloria Dei Lutheran Church will conduct a spring food drive 10 a.m.-noon Saturday, April 17. Supporters are asked to donate nonperishable food and cash to support the Roser Food Pantry and Loaves and Fishes. The church is at 6608 Marina Drive, Holmes Beach. For more information, call the church at 941-7781813.

Chapel plans for Earth Day

The Longboat Island Chapel will host nature talks and walks for Earth Day, which is Thursday, April 22. The church, 6200 Gulf of Mexico Drive, Longboat Key, plans: • Self-walks through the friendship garden, where the Manatee River Garden Club has placed plant markers; • Guided bay walks, with a representative from Sarasota-based Mote Marine Laboratory; • Keynote speakers at the chapel, including a representative from the Mary Selby Botanical Garden and another from the Conservation Foundation of the Gulf Coast; • Talks at the garden gazebo; • Exhibitors in the garden. Hours will be 11 a.m.-4 p.m. on the chapel grounds, which boasts 5.5 acres of landscaping along Sarasota Bay. For more information, call the chapel at 941-3836491.

Tidings

REGULAR WORSHIP

Donate at Roser The oneBlood bus will roll into Anna Maria Sunday morning, April 18, and park outside roser Memorial Community Church, 512 pine Ave., Anna Maria. Blood donors wearing masks are welcome 8:30 a.m.-1 p.m. They’ll receive a wellness checkup that includes screening for CoVid-19 antibodies, blood pressure, iron count and cholesterol. To register, go online to oneblooddonor.org and use the code #37502.

Gathering Gathering is the religion page for The Islander. We welcome news from local places of worship, as well as their photographs and calendar listings. Please, email your news to calendar@ islander.org and news@islander.org.

Obituaries Gary E. Trudelle

Essential Truths WHY THE BIBLE?

Monday-Friday 8:30 a.m. — St. Bernard Catholic Church, 248 S. Harbor Drive, Holmes Beach. Information: 941-778-4769. Thursdays 9:30 a.m. — Episcopal Church of the Annunciation, 4408 Gulf Drive, Holmes Beach. Information: 941-778-1638. Saturdays 4 p.m. — St. Bernard Catholic Church. Sundays 8 a.m. — Episcopal Church of the Annunciation. 8:30 a.m. — St. Bernard Catholic Church. 8:30 a.m. — Roser Memorial Community Church, 512 Pine Ave., Anna Maria. Information: 941-778-0414. 9 a.m. — CrossPointe Fellowship, 8605 Gulf Drive, Holmes Beach. Information: 941-778-0719. 9:30 a.m. — Episcopal Church of the Annunciation. 10 a.m. — Roser Church. 10 a.m. — Christ Church of Longboat Key Presbyterian USA, 6400 Gulf of Mexico Drive, Longboat Key. Information: 941-9004903. 9 a.m. — Longboat Island Chapel, 6200 Gulf of Mexico Drive, Longboat Key. Information: 941-383-6491. 10:30 a.m. — St. Bernard. 10:45 a.m. — Episcopal Church of the Annunciation. 11 a.m. — Longboat Island Chapel. ONLINE WORSHIP OFFERED

Gary E. Trudelle, 79, of Parrish and formerly of Anna Maria, died April 2. He was a loving husband, father, grandfather and great-grandfather. He was born in Keene, New Hampshire, in 1941 to Wilfred and Lena (Nadeau). He was raised in Lowell, Massachusetts, and worked and managed multiple area grocery stores. Trudelle He met the love of his life, Ellen DeRoche, and they married in 1971. In 1975, they purchased and operated the North Billerica Market in North Billerica, Massachusetts. The convenience store/deli served sub sandwiches — meatball being the most popular. They sold their house and business in 1984 and moved to Anna Maria Island. He bartended and managed local restaurants. He brought smiles and laughs to his patrons from all over the world. His quick wit, humorous jokes and charming personality ensured a good time was had by all. He was an avid hunter, fishermen and golfer who took great pleasure being the captain of his boat. He enjoyed the opportunity to take others fishing and to enjoy sunsets on the waters around the island. He always cherished sunset dinners on the beach with family members and friends. A celebration of life will be held in Massachusetts. Memorial donations may be made to the American Heart Association at www2.heart.org. He will be deeply missed and is survived by his beloved wife, Ellen; sister Pamela of Massachusetts; daughters Joanne of New Hampshire and Belinda

COMMUNITY CHURCH

Worship and events calendar

Wilson of Colorado; stepson Kenneth DeRoche of Massachusetts; grandchildren Sherilyn, Madison Wilson, Colton Wilson, Krystle, Gary Jr., Jason, Dawson DeRoche and Dalton DeRoche; great-grandkids Kyra and Cody McIntire; and many nieces and nephews.

Christ Church of Longboat Key, christchurchlbk.org. CrossPointe Fellowship, crosspointefellowship.church. Episcopal Church of the Annunciation, amiannunciation.org. Gloria Dei Lutheran Church, gloriadeilutheran.com. Harvey Memorial Community Church, Facebook. Longboat Island Chapel, longboatislandchapel.org. Roser Church, roserchurch.com.

Lisa I. Van Zandt

Lisa I. Van Zandt, 64, of Clayton, New York, and longtime resident of Florida, including Holmes Beach, died Feb. 22. She was born in Detroit Aug. 16, 1956, to William E. and Kathleen B. Heron Schumacher. She was a 1974 graduate of Seaholm High School in Birmingham, Michigan, and then achieved a cosmetology license. She worked as a beautician and Van Zandt waitress throughout her life. Anyone who had the pleasure of being served by her came away with a great memory and maybe a new joke or two. She moved from Anna Maria Island to Clayton in August to be closer to family and worked at the River Rat Cheese Store. She enjoyed music, hearing and telling a good pun and her greatest enjoyment was spending time with her family and friends. She always would leave people with these words: “Shine on.” She married Thomas G. VanZandt Jr. Oct. 26, 1985. She is survived by brothers Mark W. Schumacher and wife Melanie of St. Petersburg and Kurt R. Schu-

SUNDAY WORSHIP 8:30 AM or 10:00 AM

ONGOING EVENTS Wednesdays 10 a.m. — Women’s Bible study, Christ Church. 6:15 p.m. — Wednesday supper, CrossPointe. 6:45 p.m. — Wednesday Night Blast, CrossPointe. Thursdays 9:30 a.m. — RoserRobics fitness, Roser Church. Mondays 9 a.m. — Men’s Bible study, Christ Church, via Zoom. Tuesdays 9:30 a.m. — RoserRobics fitness, Roser Church. Please, send notices to calendar@islander.org.

macher and wife Lena of Punta Gorda, sisters Karen E. Gullo and Wendy L. Siever of Clayton; and several nieces and nephews.

Joan Spencer Eagles Webb

Joan Spencer Eagles Webb lived a full life and died April 2 at the age of 100. She was born in Dobbs Ferry, New York, Nov. 4, 1920, to Edna Dilworth Spencer and Reginald Harrison Eagles and was a longtime resident of Hastings-on-Hudson, New York. She attended the Hudson River Day Webb

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Sunny skies brighten Friends book sale

people browse the selection of books for sale in the parking lot outside the island library, 5701 Marina drive, Holmes Beach. The friends of the island library hosted the April 10 sale. Traditionally, the support group holds an indoor sale in the winter, but the event did not take place due to the coronavirus pandemic. islander photos: lisa Neff

friends of the island library president Julie perry staffs a table, selling tote bags and memberships in the support group April 10, during a parking lot book sale and fundraiser.

oBItUarIes CoNTiNued froM pAge 14

School, Scarborough Day School in Briarcliff Manor, Centenary College in Hackettstown, New Jersey, and the Art Students League in New York City. She was married 60 years to P. Norman Webb. In her early years, she was an accomplished equestrian, synchronized swimmer, artist and musician. In her adult years, after moving to Bradenton in the 1980s, she was “admiral” of her SV Minerva, spending many weeks at sea, exploring the coast of Florida. She loved taking her children and grandchildren around the world exposing them to other cultures and was also an avid cruiser on ships, circling the globe. She taught art at the nonprofit Graham School for children in Hastings-on-Hudson. This was the first private orphanage in United States, started by Alexander Hamilton’s wife, Eliza. She was the treasurer for the DAR in Westchester, New York. In Hastings, she was a Cub Scout leader, a longstanding member of Grace Episcopal Church and part of the Riverview Manor Fire House “Gang.” She spoke a number of languages, including Russian, which she learned to protect her children from the Russians during the Cold War. She was a progressive woman ahead of her time who understood people, lived her faith, was cultured,

kind and accepting of people for who they were. She had a well lived life and was a blessing to all who had the good fortune to know her. Memorial donations may be made to the Episcopal Church of the Annunciation, 4408 Gulf Drive, Holmes Beach, FL 34217. She is survived by her children, R. Lane Pettibone and wife Judy, Bruce S. Pettibone and wife Linda of Ponte Vedra Beach, Philip N. Jr. and wife Frances of Tallahassee and Wende H. of Bradenton; six grandchildren and 10 great-grandchildren.

PLEASE, TAKE NOTE! lois Mcgann, 44-year resident of Holmes Beach and an avid reader, leaves the friends book sale April 10 with a load of new reading material. islander photo: Courtesy Jeanne payne

About obituaries

Obituaries are offered as a community service to residents and families of residents, both past and present, as well as to those people with ties to the island. You may submit a standard obituary and photo to news@islander.org. Obituaries are free.

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The “best news on AMI” has purchased and relocated to a condo officeat 315 58th St., Holmes Beach. We’re now across from HB City Hall and behind the Ugly Grouper. Same owner, staff, phone, email. New digs. The island’s best news for 29 years! 941.778.7978 news@islander.org

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Cops & Courts

Staff reports

Teens arrested in Bradenton Beach home invasion By Amy V.T. Moriarty islander reporter

Pinwheels placed for awareness Holmes Beach police Chief Bill Tokajer holds one of the blue pinwheels April 2 that were placed on the lawn at city hall, 5801 Marina drive, as part of the nationwide pinwheels for prevention campaign to promote healthy child development and raise awareness of neglect and abuse during April, Child Abuse Awareness Month. islander photo: ryan paice

Streetlife

Staff reports

Island police reports

Anna Maria April 1, 12100 block of Gulf Drive, larceny. The Manatee County Sheriff’s Office received a complaint about a missing recycling bin. Deputies issued a case number. April 1, 200 block of Oak Avenue, noise. The MCSO received a complaint of a loud party. The deputy found people playing games outside and issued

Three teens were arrested April 6 on charges stemming from an armed home invasion. Bradenton Beach police allege the trio of 16-yearolds — two from Bradenton and one from Palmetto — allegedly broke into a home on 12th Street South. One pointed a gun at a 14-year-old occupant and threatened to shoot her if she alerted anyone in the home. The occupant, visiting with family from Michigan, was not injured. She told police she woke and went downstairs to the kitchen for a glass of water and saw someone standing in the room. The person pointed a gun at her, threatened to kill her if she said anything and motioned two other people to run, according to a police report. At the time of the invasion, police were in the area, searching for the occupants of a vehicle found parked nearby. When a 911 call reporting the home invasion came in, BBPD police called for a K-9 unit from Sarasota County Sheriff’s Office and a helicopter unit from Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office to join a search. Officers and deputies from the Holmes Beach Police Department and the Manatee County Sheriff’s Office were already in the area, assisting with the search for the vehicle occupants. a code violation citation for excessive noise. April 2, 100 block of Hammock Road, noise. The MCSO dispatched a deputy regarding a complaint of loud banging. The deputy found no violation. April 3, 300 block of Magnolia Avenue, vandalism. The MCSO dispatched a deputy on a complaint of a rock thrown through the window of a residence. The deputy was unable to locate a suspect. April 3, 100 block of Cedar Avenue, noise. The MCSO dispatched a deputy regarding a report of a loud party. The deputy found no violation. April 3, 700 block of Fern Street, noise. The MCSO received a complaint of a loud party. The deputy found no violation.

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April 5, 300 block of Magnolia Avenue, larceny. The MCSO dispatched a deputy regarding a complaint of a missing rental bicycle. The deputy filed a report. April 5, 400 block of Pine Avenue, noise. The MCSO received a complaint of a loud party. The deputy spoke with someone at the property who went inside to get a resident but then no one returned despite the deputy’s repeated attempts to reestablish contact. Additional information was not available. The Manatee County Sheriff’s Office polices Anna Maria. Bradenton Beach April 4, Bridge Tender Inn, 135 Bridge St., larceny. The Bradenton Beach police dispatched an officer regarding a theft from a tip jar. The complainant pleASe, See streetLIFe, NeXT pAge

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Meanwhile, an MCSO violent crimes task force investigating a burglary in Bradenton notified investigators the suspects might be connected to their case, as the suspicious vehicle was connected to the earlier crime, Bradenton Beach Detective Sgt. Lenard Diaz said April 8. While the various law enforcement units attempted to track the home invasion suspects, one unit observed three males running across the Cortez Bridge toward Cortez. At the same time, the task force pinged a cellphone of one suspect, identified by tracing the vehicle used in the earlier burglary to its owners — the suspect’s parents, Diaz said. The three suspects were arrested as they attempted to get into a ride-share vehicle. The victim was accompanied by her father to a location where she identified the suspect who pointed a gun and threatened her. Throughout the ordeal, the victim impressed officers as she remained calm and collected, Diaz said. After Bradenton Beach police arrested the three teens, they were turned over to MCSO to face charges for the earlier burglary. Because the three people arrested are teenagers, their names are being withheld. In Florida, juveniles charged with a felony, as the teens are, could be tried as adults.

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Cops & Courts

Staff reports

Woman charged with DUI-2nd-degree misdemeanor By ryan paice islander reporter

Official charges have been filed against a Bradenton resident arrested for driving under the influence of alcohol. An April 6 arraignment for Jessica Christie, 34, was continued after the defendant failed to appear for the hearing, and assistant state attorney Marissa Price, the prosecutor, filed a second-degree misdemeanor charge the next day. Holmes Beach police officers arrested Christie March 3 after she made an illegal turn and failed field sobriety tests during a traffic stop. Christie registered 0.18 and 0.177 in two blood/ alcohol level tests. The legal blood/alcohol content limit for driving

under the influence is 0.08 in Florida. The officer later transported Christie to the Manatee County jail, where she was released March 3 after posting a $120 bail bond. Police charged Christie with a second-degree misdemeanor for the incident, but the State Attorney’s Office for the 12th Judicial Circuit didn’t file official charges with the court until April 7. Christie already filed a “not guilty” plea March 23. The charge carries varying punishments, including fines and up to nine months in prison for a first conviction. A pretrial conference will be at 1:25 p.m. Tuesday, June 15, at the Manatee County Judicial Center, 1051 Manatee Ave. W., Bradenton.

Milwaukee man arrested for DUI in Holmes Beach

Largo man charged with 3rd-degree felony The state attorney’s office’s is moving forward against a Largo resident arrested in Holmes Beach for possessing methamphetamine. Judge Frederick Mercurio of the 12th Judicial Circuit informed Largo resident Steven Neidl, 25, at an April 9 arraignment that the SAO filed charges, including a third-degree felony for drug possession and a first-degree misdemeanor for possession of drug paraphernalia. A conviction for a third-degree felony charge can carry up to a five-year prison term and a $5,000 fine. A Holmes Beach police officer stopped Neidl March 8 after he was found biking at night without lights. The officer ran Neidl’s name through law enforcement databases and found an out-of-county warrant out for his arrest. He then searched Neidl and found a substance that tested positive for meth during a field test. The officer arrested Neidl and transported him to the Manatee County jail, where he remained in custody under a $2,000 bond as of April 9. The SAO didn’t file charges with the court until March 18, while Neidl pleaded not guilty March 10. The next hearing had yet to be scheduled as of April 9, according to the Manatee County Clerk of Court.

field sobriety tests, which HBPD said he failed. The officers arrested Peck and transported him to Holmes Beach police officers arrested Douglas the HBPD, where he registered results of 0.287 and Peck, 51, of Milwaukee, March 31 on a second-degree 0.271 grams of alcohol in two blood/alcohol tests. misdemeanor charge for driving under the influence of The legal blood/alcohol content limit for driving alcohol. under the influence is 0.08 in Florida. The case began when an officer responded to An officer transported Peck to the Manatee County reports of a possibly intoxicated person driving a jail April 1. white minivan in the Time Saver Liquor Store’s parkPeck was released April 1 after posting $120 — ryan paice ing lot. bond. The officer found the motorist swerving off the An arraignment will be at 8:25 a.m. Tuesday, May road while heading north on Gulf Drive. He conducted 4, at the Manatee County Judicial Center, 1051 Manaa traffic stop and requested backup to begin a DUI tee Ave. W., Bradenton. investigation, according to a Holmes Beach Police The state’s case against a Bradenton resident The second-degree misdemeanor charge carries Department arrest report. varying punishments, including fines and up to nine arrested in Holmes Beach for driving under the influAnother officer arrived and had Peck complete months in prison for a first conviction. ence of alcohol hasn’t moved forward after a month. An April 8 arraignment for Jordan Thurman, 22, Lakeland woman arrested for drug possession, battery was continued since the state attorney’s office had By ryan paice The officers found Swanchara at Skinny’s Place, yet to file official charges and the defendant failed to islander reporter 3901 Gulf Drive, where they arrested her for domestic appear for the hearing. Holmes Beach police officers arrested Lakeland res- battery. Holmes Beach police arrested Thurman March 6 ident Tamara Swanchara, 23, April 3 on a third-degree They also allegedly found in her purse a Xanax after she was caught speeding and failed field sobriety felony charge for possession of a controlled substance pill for which she did not have a prescription. tests during a traffic stop, according to a Holmes Beach and a first-degree misdemeanor for domestic battery. An officer transported Swanchara to the HBPD for Police Department arrest report. An officer responded to reports of a domestic dis- processing, then, April 4, to the Manatee County jail. Thurman refused to provide breath samples for turbance in the parking lot at Manatee Public Beach, Swanchara was released April 4 after posting blood/alcohol tests when asked at the HBPD. 4000 Gulf Drive, and found the victim and a group of $3,000 bond. She was transported to the Manatee County jail, people who said they witnessed the incident. An arraignment is noticed for 9 a.m. Friday, April where she was released March 6 after posting a $120 The male victim told the officer that Swanchara 30, at the Manatee County Judicial Center, 1051 Mana- bail bond. was intoxicated and attacked him before running away, tee Ave. W., Bradenton. Police charged Thurman with a second-degree according to an arrest report from the Holmes Beach The third-degree felony charge for drug posses- misdemeanor for the incident, but the SAO had not Police Department. sion can carry up to 5-year prison and/or probation filed charges against her as of April 9. Others at the scene corroborated the victim’s story sentences, as well as a $5,000 fine. Thurman pleaded “not guilty” April 7. and filled out sworn affidavits, police said. The first-degree misdemeanor charge carries up to A pretrial conference will be at 1:25 p.m. Tuesday, a year-long prison sentence and a $1,000 fine. June 29, at the Manatee County Judicial Center, 1051 streetLIFe CoNTiNued froM pAge 18 Manatee Ave. W., Bradenton. reported someone took $150-$200. The officer filed a tion. An officer from the Holmes Beach Police DepartThe second-degree misdemeanor charge carries report for investigation. ment stopped a motorist driving without a seat belt. varying punishments, including fines and up to nine April 6, 100 block of Seventh Street South, noise. The owner did not have registration for the vehicle. months in prison for a first conviction. Police responded to a report of loud music. The officer The officer issued a court summons. — ryan paice found people around a pool who had just turned off March 31, 4300 block of Gulf Drive, suspended their music. The officer issued a verbal warning about license. An officer stopped a motorist who made an the city noise ordinance. illegal turn. The driver’s license was suspended and April 6, 2000 block of Gulf Drive South, domes- there was no proof of insurance. The officer issued a Island watch tic disturbance. Police received calls from motorists court summons and a citation. reporting a physical altercation in a vehicle traveling April 1, 3700 block of Gulf Drive, alcohol. Three In an emergency, in stop-and-go traffic on Gulf Drive South. Among officers responded to reports of a large group of juvecall 911. To report the witnesses who called was an off-duty Hillsbor- niles drinking alcohol on the beach. The officers information, call the ough County sheriff’s deputy. When police stopped detained 13 juveniles, issued citations and called parMCSO Anna Maria the vehicle’s occupants, the driver made threats against ents to pick up their kids. substation, 941-708-8899; Bradenton Beach the witnesses. The driver was arrested for battery. April 2, 5800 block of Holmes Boulevard, fraud. A police, 941-778-6311; or Holmes Beach police, April 6, 1100 block of Gulf Drive South, burglary. resident called the HBPD to report fraudulent charges 941-708-5804. Police responded to a theft of money and items from to her credit card. The person provided information responded to reports of a loud tenants at a vacation an unlocked vehicle. Police found some items in the regarding the purchases for a case file. area. The incident is under investigation. April 3, 4700 block of Gulf Drive, suspended rental. He arrived and obtained a decibel meter readThe Bradenton Beach Police Department polices license. An officer received a notification from the ing with the noise level in violation of city code. The Bradenton Beach. license plate recognition system and stopped a motor- officer issued the tenant a citation and provided an Cortez ist. The motorist’s driver’s license was suspended so informative pamphlet. April 6, 5900 block of Marina Drive, recovered April 6, 12500 block of Cortez Road West, theft. the officer issued court summons. The Manatee County Sheriff’s Office received a comApril 3, 5200 block of Marina Drive, reckless property. A Holmes Beach public works employee told plaint of a theft. The deputy filed a report. driving. An officer saw a speeding motorist run a stop an officer they recovered two bicycles left in city parks The Manatee County Sheriff ’s Office polices sign and swerve around other vehicles. He stopped over the past month that nobody claimed. The officer Cortez. the motorist and issued the driver citations and a court checked databases for the owners but failed to find them. The bikes were placed in storage. Holmes Beach summons. HBPD polices Holmes Beach. March 31, 4300 block of Gulf Drive, no registraApril 5, 200 block of 64th Street, noise. An officer By ryan paice islander reporter

Arraignment delayed for woman arrested for DUI


Page 20 THE ISLANDER | islander.org April 14, 2021 ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

Mobile home residents sound off on Cortez megabridge plans By Kane Kaiman Islander Reporter

The Not-So-Great Wall of Cortez? The Federal Department of Transportation has programmed 2026-27 construction of a 65-foot-clearance fixed-span bridge to replace the current 17-footclearance Cortez drawbridge. For some Cortez Mobile Home Park residents, that will mean an approximately 20-foot-tall wall staring back at them through their front windows. The park is on the west side of the Cortez fishing village, designated a U.S. historic district in 1995. It rests at the eastern terminus of the Cortez Bridge and borders the Intracoastal Waterway to the west and Cortez Road to the north. Michael Holbrook, a Cortez Park resident whose family has owned property in the park for 30 years, owns a home with a front porch view of Cortez Road. If megabridge construction goes forward as planned, his property will face the highest point of the ramp that carries traffic to and from the bridge. “I’d hate to walk out and look up and see nothing but concrete for 20 or 30 feet,” Holbrook said April 1. “It sucks rocks, man.” “I love the village, I love being here and I agree with everyone else about how much this is going to change the atmosphere of the village,” he added. Holbrook said he also was concerned about trash and debris that might come off the megabridge and accumulate at the base of the bridge. The only benefit of the big bridge, he said, is that

A view of Cortez Road April 1 from Michael Holbrook’s porch in the Cortez Mobile Home Park approximates the DOT illustration of the bridge ramp (pictured below.) Islander Photo: Kane Kaiman

it would cut down on the number of cars that access Tide Tables restaurant through the park. With megabridge construction, traffic access to Tide Tables would be restricted to a new road that stems from the north side of Cortez Road and loops beneath the bridge. But restricted access might hurt restaurant sales, which would negatively impact the property values of park residents, Holbrook said. Holbrook’s neighbor to the west, Carol Ritter, is more equivocal about the megabridge. She said that while a high wall is questionable, she could go either way, since her view is usually dominated by parked recreational vehicles. “I don’t know if it’s good or bad,” she said. “I

A mock-up presented to the Cortez megabridge design committee April 1 of the approximately 20-foot-tall wall that the DOT has slated for construction in front of the Cortez Mobile Home Park in 2026-27. Islander Screenshot

won’t know until I see the thing.” Ritter’s neighbor to the west is Bob Flesch, who purchased his property in 1995. Flesch said that although his view will not change dramatically, since he’ll be looking under the bridge at the access road, he is opposed to the megabridge. “It would be ridiculous for us to have that wall up here,” he said. “Originally, most of the people in town thought that we were going to just repair this bridge, but, of course, the state won’t accept that.” “The consensus now is that a 35-foot bridge would be very sufficient,” Flesch added. “And it probably wouldn’t disrupt the community like this 65-foot monstrosity.” Flesch’s sentiments are shared by a coalition challenging the high bridge’s construction in federal court. The group includes Bradenton Beach, former Manatee Commissioners Joe McClash and Jane von Hahmann, and Cortez residents Linda Molto and Joe Kane. In addition to obstructed views and debris, McClash said April 8 that park residents could expect: • Increased light pollution; • Greater difficulty accessing the bridge on foot; • Increased storm surge and wave action due to wind deflected by the high walls. Wall problems aside, park residents also will have to deal with megabridge construction headaches and increased noise from traffic after the high bridge is completed, McClash said.

Bradenton Beach dodges litigation cost of Cortez Bridge battle By Kelsey Mako Islander Reporter

Bradenton Beach commissioners voted 4-1 to reduce city money going to litigation over a new Cortez Bridge from $15,000 to $5,000. City Commissioner Jan Vosburgh voted against lowering the amount. “I don’t see how you could lower it,” Vosburgh said April 8. But Commissioner Ralph Cole said it would be more appropriate for individuals opposed to the bridge to contribute private money. A federal court challenge is underway to halt construction of a high, fixed-span bridge to replace the drawbridge on Cortez Road. Earlier this spring, Bradenton Beach commissioners voted to support litigation brought by two former county commissioners, one a Cortez resident, and two other longtime Cortez residents and against the Florida Department of Transportation. The plaintiffs seek a compromise — a midsize drawbridge instead of the planned high, fixed-span

Eagle at work, at rest A bald eagle April 6 carries a twig and perches in a tree in Holmes Beach, near its fishing spot in Watson’s Bayou. The eagle was removed from the federal endangered species list in 2007 and the state imperiled species list in 2008. Florida has one of the densest concentrations of nesting bald eagles in the states. Islander Photos: Bruce McFadden

bridge. The city has not officially joined the litigation, as more information and clarification was sought. City attorney Ricinda Perry said involvement could cost up to six-figures in legal fees. She also said the goal is to try and resolve this issue outside a courtroom. The Florida Department of Transportation’s chief council for District 1, attorney Angela Tucker, contacted Perry to arrange a conference call. Tucker said the DOT would allow Bradenton Beach officials to express concerns in the call regarding the megabridge plan. “I don’t know that I’ll ever be able to placate the concerns that are out there or resolve all the hurt and angst that especially the Cortez fishing village has with this bridge that’s coming, but I want to at least put a foot forward and see where we can go with this and have a good conversation,” Perry said. “This is our best chance to try to resolve this amicably,” she added.

The conference call was set for April 16. Commissioners determined that no decision on joining the anti-megabridge litigation will be made until after the call. For the record: In earlier votes… Bradenton Beach city commissioners voted unanimously March 18 to join Joe McClash et al in the legal action against FDOT to oppose the 65-foot-clearance Cortez Bridge. In that vote, the city agreed to become the fifth plaintiff in an effort to achieve a compromise on a new bridge — a 35-foot-clearance bridge. At the March 18 meeting, city attorney Ricinda Perry recommended the commission also approve a motion to direct her to coordinate with outside council to represent the city’s interest in the suit. Commissioner Jan Vosburgh made that motion and Commissiojner Marilyn Maro seconded it. Maro said at the March meting that she did not want to see “our last original fishing village in the United States” become destroyed.


April 14, 2021 THE ISLANDER | islander.org page 21 ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

Longboat Pass Bridge PD&E comment period comes to close By Kane Kaiman islander reporter

Did you miss it? The hybrid kickoff meeting — online and in-person — hosted by the Florida Department of Transportation as part of the Longboat Pass Bridge project development and environment study ended April 2. The official comment period for the meeting began March 16 on the project website, www.swflroads.com/ sr789/longboatkey, and included an in-person meeting March 23 at the Harbourside Ballroom on Longboat Key. At the in-person meeting for the public, three comment forms and four questionnaires were submitted. As of April 9, the DOT had received 30 electronic comments and 102 questionnaires, according to DOT communications specialist Brian Rick. Though the official comment period is closed, comments and questions can be submitted on the website throughout the project’s lifespan. All comments and questions sent to the DOT during the study will be included in the final comments and coordination report, which will be public record, Rick said in an April 9 email to The Islander. Prior to the kickoff meeting, the DOT mailed 1,668 newsletters and questionnaires to the addresses that corresponded to residences and businesses in the vicin-

looking north over the 17-foot-clearance longboat pass drawbridge in March. The bridge carries traffic over the pass between longboat Key and Bradenton Beach. it is the subject of a florida department of Transportation study that will result in a recommended alternative to the approximately 64-year-old structure. islander photo: Jack elka

ity of the project’s boundaries. Out-of-state seasonal residents that listed physical addresses that differed from mailing addresses were included, Rick said. The PD&E study, which is tentatively scheduled for completion in October 2023, will result in a recommended alternative to the approximately 17-footclearance drawbridge that spans Longboat Pass and connects Bradenton Beach on Anna Maria Island to

Longboat Key. The study will evaluate the social, natural, cultural and physical impacts of three alternatives: • Maintaining the existing bridge, built in 1957, for the foreseeable future; • Replacing the drawbridge with a high, fixed-span bridge; • Replacing the bridge with another drawbridge.

BB’s ‘Old Town Tram’ ride service picks up speed By Kelsey Mako islander reporter

All aboard the “Old Town Tram.” Ridership and advertising on the tram have increased, following concerns addressed earlier this year by the Bradenton Beach Community Redevelopment Agency. The no-fare service was contracted by the CRA to address the lack of parking in the commercial district. Two trams pass through the Bridge Street district every 10-15 minutes. About 4,500-4,600 riders used the tram last month, said tram-operator Easy Parking Group owner Joshua LaRose. Ridership increased 400-500 more people from the previous month. “It’s been busy the past seven to eight weeks,” said Old Town Tram driver Andy Walker. Additionally, the tram increased beach service at Coquina Beach by providing more than 300 more rides from the area. “That was something the council wanted us to concentrate on, so we made sure to target it a bit more,” said LaRose. The tram typically does not travel to Coquina Beach because of the volume of traffic on Gulf Drive but people can call to request a ride from the beach. LaRose said visitors enjoy the service and locals are becoming aware of the opportunity to ride. Also, employees on Bridge Street are using the tram, which helps free up parking spaces in the district. Advertising space on the tram was estimated at about three-fourths sold, according to LaRose, who April 1 was awaiting some numbers. In addition to ads on the trams, there are plans to

richard lusk, old Town Tram driver, secures passenger richard lavanture’s wheelchair April 2 in the tram. lavanture, from indiana, was vacationing on Anna Maria island with his father, also richard, and brother Anderson. The three were heading to meet other family members for lunch on Bridge Street. islander photos: Kelsey Mako

vide transportation to a small area. “It’s faster, more convenient and more available,” LaRose said. Easy Parking Group has similar parking services in Venice and on Siesta Key. The Old Town Tram is a pilot program. If successful, Easy Parking will have a three-year contract with the CRA. The Old Town Tram operates 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Sunday-Thursday and 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Friday-Saturday. For a ride, call 941-404-6240.

add signage at the routine stops to make people more aware of the service. The signage will be funded by the CRA and tram advertisements. The CRA promotes restoration, growth and tourism for the district — bordered by Cortez Road, Sarasota Bay, Fifth Street South and the Gulf of Mexico — with incremental tax revenue funding from Manatee County after the area was declared blighted in 1992. The old Town Tram arrives April 2 to the Historic LaRose said he thinks his service stands out from Bridge Street pier, 200 Bridge St., Bradenton similar services on the island because the trams pro- Beach.

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page 22 THE ISLANDER | islander.org April 14, 2021 ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

Nesting notes By Kelsey Mako

AMITW nesting preparations gear up for May 1

Their deadline is on the horizon. Anna Maria Island Turtle Watch and Shorebird Monitoring continues to prepare for the May start of nesting season, expecting evidence of sea turtles and shorebirds in the next weeks. AMITW is a nonprofit with a mission to conserve and collect data on sea turtles and shorebirds. AMITW volunteers form two groups within the organization. Turtle watch volunteers work under Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission permits and shorebird volunteers do not. Turtle watch volunteers are placing bins containing their tools for work under lifeguard stands on the beaches, AMITW executive director Suzi Fox said April 6 by phone. Tools include stakes and ribbons to

AMiTW invites people to learn more about sea turtles on its website at turtlewatch.com.

Nest stakes are ready to deliver to storage bins under lifeguard stands on island beaches in preparation for sea turtle nesting season. islander photos: Courtesy Suzi fox

mark turtle nests. The volunteers are monitoring the beach for sea turtle and shorebird activity, as turtle nesting season approaches, with shorebirds not far behind. When female sea turtles come ashore to dig their nest and deposit their eggs, they leave crawl marks — visible imprints in the sand that can look like tractor treads on their path to and from the nest. Indications of the beginning of shorebird nesting season include sightings of snowy plovers, black skimmers and least terns, as the birds look to mate. AMITW began preparations for nesting season April 1 and, by April 15, volunteers will be making regular runs on the beach. “We start on a specific date, and it’s very early, but occasionally we get something. So we have to be aware of it. We have to watch for it,” Fox said. Under AMITW’s contract with Manatee County, the organization monitors for turtle activity daily and

shorebird activity every two weeks. Turtle watch volunteers travel the beach via ATVs to look for signs of nesting activities while shorebird monitors use binoculars on walks on the beach. The loggerhead, the most common type of sea turtle nesting on Anna Maria Island, is a threatened species in Florida. The shorebirds AMITW monitors also are threatened. Fox said there has not been any evidence of turtle crawls or sightings of nesting shorebirds on AMI. She said this is likely because the weather is still too cold for nesting. Ideal water temperatures for sea turtle nesting are between 70 and 80 degrees. When turtles come on shore, the sand temperature needs to be warm as well because the eggs need to incubate. A reason for no shorebird sightings could be a lack of these nesters on the island. Last year, shorebird volunteers did not see any of the birds they watch for. The FWC is coming to Anna Maria Island later this summer to investigate the lack of snowy plovers, black skimmers and least terns. Fox, a marine conservation permit holder, is in daily contact with other permit holders on the Gulf coast. As soon as one permit holder sees evidence of turtles nesting on the beach, they notify others. For more information, contact AMITW by email at info@turtlewatch.com or by phone at 941-778-5638.

AMITW monitors Piney Point crisis for impact on turtles Anna Maria Island Turtle Watch and Shorebird Monitoring is monitoring the Piney Point environmental crisis. AMITW is watching for how polluted, nutrientrich water from a reservoir at the defunct Piney Point plant site is moving through Tampa Bay, said executive director Suzi Fox. AMITW is a nonprofit focused on collecting data on sea turtles, listed as threatened and endangered in Florida, depending on the species. The nonprofit also is keeping in contact with Manatee County and state officials, including at the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. “The FWC is working closely with our partners regarding the Piney Point discharge response in Manatee County. The FDEP is the lead agency in response to this issue,” Amanda Nalley of the FWC’s Marine Fisheries Management division wrote April 7 in an email. “FWC officers are patrolling Port Manatee and

monitoring for any effects from the discharge. FWC biologists are also monitoring the area,” Nalley added. “There are a lot of issues here we have to watch and I think the county is in tune with this at this moment,” Fox told The Islander April 6 by phone. “If anything starts to flow south here, we need to know about it,” she added. The controlled release of contaminated water from the Piney Point site began March 30 after a leak was discovered days earlier. On April 2, one of the reservoir containment walls began to collapse, creating the potential for a wall of water to flow out. The following day Gov. Ron DeSantis declared a state of emergency and, to prevent a large-scale breach, more contaminated water was released into Tampa Bay. AMITW now will look for sick, injured or dead sea turtles on shore or near shore lacking obvious signs of trauma. In such cases, AMITW would call the state for necropsies. “Collecting the data from any turtle that looks ill

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AMiTW executive director Suzi fox carries a rescued green sea turtle in a cooler among a crowd of onlookers in 2018 for release at Coquina Beach in Bradenton Beach. islander file photo

in any way is going to be the best thing we can do,” Fox said. Scientists from the FWC and its Florida Marine Research Institute would examine any dead turtles. “If there is any way to help them, (the turtles) they will come up with it,” said Fox. “We still need some more water quality data to figure out what we’re actually looking at and we’re still gathering that information,” FWC media contact Kelly Richmond said by phone. “I can tell you that the pH is low, which is generally a positive thing,” Richmond said. This is not the first time Piney Point has posed an environmental threat. But, Fox said, “I didn’t think we’d get here.”

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By Lisa Neff

Keeping watch over the bay

“Life’s a beach” is one motto on Anna Maria Island. So is “get ’er done,” a saying I’d not heard until I went to work for The Islander about 15 years ago. A lot of folks I know are more in the “get ’er done” mindset these days. They’re righting a struggling business or organization more than a year into the coronavirus pandemic. They’re lining up for their vacNeff cines or arranging for friends and family to get a shot. They’re balancing, juggling, striving. And, looking out for the best interests of Anna Maria Island and the surrounding waters, they’re rallying to act in response to an environmental crisis at Piney Point. Piney Point in northeast Manatee County is the site of a defunct phosphate mining operation. The plant ceased operations in 1999 and has since been managed to maintain and monitor the pollution left behind — a radioactive phosphogypsum stack and wastewater containment system. In late March, the site management found a leak in the containment system and, seeking to avoid a catastrophic collapse of the system, asked the state to authorize the release of polluted water — a mix of seawater, rainwater and wastewater that contains phosphorous, nitrogen and other materials. You’ll hear and read references to this water being “nutrient-rich” but pollution isn’t like fresh produce and nutrient-rich is no bonus. So island officials are on watch and ready. Anna Maria commissioners voted April 8 to declare a local state of emergency while Holmes Beach officials had already set out to create a water quality committee. The Anna Maria Island Chamber of Commerce is sending out updates regarding Piney Point just as it stepped up to disseminate information last spring when the pandemic hit. Island businesses are providing an assist, lobbying,

researchers with the university of South florida College of Marine Science head into Tampa Bay April 7 aboard the first research cruise dedicated to studying the environmental impacts of the breach at a retired fertilizer processing plant at piney point. islander photo: Courtesy uSf

educating. How many of us watched via Twitter as Chuck Wolfe, CEO of the Ed Chiles trio of restaurants on Anna Maria Island and Longboat Key and a Parrish farm, guided Florida Agriculture Nikki Fried on Piney Point and the importance of water quality to “Fresh from Florida” businesses. “We’re watching the water rise. We’re watching the quality change,” Wolfe said. “We’re doing our part. …The involvement of business, the involvement of the government, the involvement in making sure that

A map shows sampling sites for monitoring water quality following the discharge of polluted water from the piney point phosphate plant. islander photo: Courtesy fdep

Get updates

For updates on the Piney Point crisis, follow @FLDEPNews on Twitter. Also, go online to protectingfloridatogether.gov/pineypointupdate and www.mymanatee.org. To see water sampling data, go online to floridadep.gov.

Piney Point petition in circulation Sierra Club wants you to lend your voice. The Florida chapter is circulating a petition asking the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to do more to address the threat of phosphate mining and the waste that’s produced. The chapter launched the petition drive as polluted wastewater from the defunct Piney Point phosphate site was being discharged into Tampa Bay to avoid a

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citizens know the for the entire state that this is important.” Local charter captains and conservationists are on the water, guiding clients to great catches but also keeping watch. Anna Maria Island Turtle Watch and Shorebird Monitoring is stepping up — as always. The nonprofit monitors for nesting activity — sea turtles and shorebirds – on the island May 1-Oct. 31, but volunteers are watching our beaches now for signs of sick or dead animals. The Center of Anna Maria Island — known for its sports leagues, fitness classes, children’s camps and fun days — also runs a green initiative. The center recently formed the Blue Waters Coalition and invites people to help “defend our waters” by installing mini-reefs at their docks or volunteering to collect and analyze water samples or submit observations on beach conditions. Most recently, in response to the Piney Point crisis, the center offered to help monitor water quality around the island in cooperation with a student-driven research program at Eckerd College. “We stand ready,” center director of development Jim McDaniel said April 8 in an email to The Islander. We stand ready. All this movement is taking place so perhaps someday we can get back to more of our claim that “life’s a beach” — and “it’s 5 o’clock somewhere,” too.

large-scale breach and collapse of the phosphogypsum stack system. The EPA and the Florida Department of Environmental Protection maintain the wastewater meets water quality standards and is not radioactive. However, phosphogypsum is radioactive and the stack system remains a threat. The petition is online at sierraclub.org.

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It’s tournament season at KRC, horseshoes play on in AM

watched as Farrington and Bobeldyk cruised to a 22-12 victory over Lee and Shank. The finals saw Doyle and Brown turn the tables on Farrington and Bobeldyk, earning a 21-12 victory and bragging rights. Play gets underway at 9 a.m. Wednesdays and Saturdays at the Anna Maria pits. Warmups begin at 8:45 a.m., followed by random team selection. There is no charge to play and everyone is welcome.

By Kevin p. Cassidy islander reporter

The Key Royale Club hosted a new golf championship April 2, with plans to make it an annual event. The Men’s Member-Member tournament saw 24 two-man teams, split into three divisions by handicaps. After 18 holes of golf, the winners and ties from each division competed in a three-hole playoff to determine the champion. Five teams battled it out over the three-hole, sudden-death playoff. Cassidy Turns out, all three holes were needed for Dave Richardson and Gary Risner to cinch the championship on the last hole. Second place went to the team of Jon Holcomb and Ron Vandeman, while Bill Ford and Jim Livanos came in third. In regular golf action, the men played a nine-hole modified-Stableford system match April 5 that saw Ron Buck take individual honors with a plus-5, one point ahead of second-place finisher Jon Holcomb. The team of Don Grau, Dale Hudson, Jeff Jump and John Soler won the team competition with a combined score of plus-5. The women played a Friend’s Day Scramble April 7 using an Ambrose handicap scoring system — averaging team handicaps. The team of Marylou Dreier, Judy Todd, Jana Samuels and Betsy Myers took first place with a handicapped score of 16. Sue Wheeler, Fran Barford, Jenny Huibers and Jackie Gorski matched the handicap score of 20.5 carded by Peggy Clauhs, Ellen Boin, Debbie DuVernay and Ann Klein to finish in a tie for second place. The men were back on the course April 8 for their weekly nine-hole scramble. The team of Eric Lawson, John Cassese, Ron Vandeman and Quentin Talbrert combined on a 6-under-par 26 to earn clubhouse bragging rights for the day. The team of Terry Tarras, Larry Brattain, Leigh Brattain and Debbie Richardson matched the 4-underpar 28 carded by Brian Comer, Joe Tynan, Marty Hicks

Adult soccer signup underway The deadline to register for the adult coed soccer league at the Center of Anna Maria Island was April 8. Games will be played Thursday nights, with an occasional Wednesday night match possible. For more information, contact Connor Haughey at connor@centerami.org or 941-778-1908, ext. 217. gary risner and dave richardson pose after winning the Men’s Member-Member tournament April 2 at the Key royale Club. islander photo: Courtesy Tom Nelson/KrC

and Win Bishop to finish in a tie for second place. Horseshoe news Two teams emerged from pool play with 3-0 records April 7 to battle for the day’s horseshoe championship at the Anna Maria City Hall pits. Bob Lee and Tom Farrington held on for a 23-15 victory over Adin Shank and Neil Hennessey to earn a trip to the winner’s circle. Five teams fashioned 3-0 records in pool play April 10 and settled things in a playoff. Farrington and Gene Bobeldyk drew the bye into the semifinals and watched as Lee and Shank slip by Jerry Disbrow and Bob Rowley 22-19. The other quarterfinal match was just as close, as Steve Doyle and Bob Brown eliminated Billy Silver 21-19. Doyle and Brown drew the bye into the finals and

Joe, left, and Monica Hale, visiting the gulf Coast from ohio, Jesse delamotte from idaho, young eli Carmean from ohio and Aspen Bias from utah fished inshore waters April 5. using shiners as bait and guided by Capt. Warren girle, the friends were rewarded with a bounty of flounder.

TideWatch

Red tide bloom in SW Florida

The red tide organism, Karenia brevis, persists in Southwest Florida. Over the past week, K. brevis was detected in 45 samples. K. brevis was observed at background to low concentrations in Sarasota County, background to high concentrations in Charlotte County, background to low concentrations in or offshore of Lee County and in Collier County and low concentrations offshore of Monroe County. K. brevis was not observed in Manatee County. For more information, go online to myfwc.com/ research/redtide.

Free fishing lessons offered

The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission offers free saltwater fishing clinics for beginning anglers. “You’ll be taught basic fishing skills and knowledge that can be used, shared and built upon for a lifetime of catching Florida memories with those you love,” reads a news release from the FWC. Session topics include conservation, rods and reels, tackle, baits, rigs, knot tying, habitats, fish handling, best practices and additional resources. Seven-session classes will begin Tuesday, April 27, with one-hour sessions at 6:30 p.m. Tuesdays, with signup limited to 50 anglers per clinic. Registration is being conducted online. For more, go to myfwc.com/fishing/saltwater/ or call 850-488-4676.

Fishing tip! If you hook a bird: Reel, remove and release!

Anna Maria Island Tides

WE LIKE LIKES

Date

AM

HIGH

PM

HIGH

April 14 April 15 April 16 April 17 April 18 April 19 April 20 April 21

2:29a 3:15a 4:13a 2:39p 3:22p 4:18p 5:41p 10:39a

1.5 1.4 1.3 2.4 2.3 2.2 2.0 1.6

1:09p 1:34p 2:04p — — — — 7:27p

2.3 2.4 2.4 — — — — 2.0

AM

6:58a 7:12a 7:21a 11:02p — 12:11a 1:20a 2:23a

LOW

PM

LOW

Moon

0.9 8:29p -0.2 1.0 9:13p -0.2 1.1 10:03p -0.2 -0.2 — — — — — -0.1 — — -0.1 — — -0.1 1:48p 1.4

1st

AM City Pier tides; Cortez high tides 7 minutes later — lows 1:06 later

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April 14, 2021 THE ISLANDER | islander.org Page 25 ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

Local waters spawn fishing variety, remarkable experiences By Capt. Danny Stasny Islander Reporter

Springtime fishing is in full swing on Anna Maria Island and its surrounding waters, where working nearshore ledges and hard bottom requires strong arms and stamina to bring in the migratory fish foraging on the run of bait. Large schools of threadfin herring are present within a few miles of shore, attracting many predators. Kingfish are the most evident, boasting a mouthful of razor-sharp Stasny teeth, a smooth torpedo-shaped body, finished with a large tail to propel them at speeds of up to 45 mph. On medium-heavy spinning gear, these fish are a force to be reckoned with — burning out the drag as they react to the hook. With all of this activity, you can bet sharks are on alert. Blacktip, spinner and hammerhead sharks often are found slashing through bait schools, showing dorsal and tail fins as they break the surface of the clear Gulf waters. Moving offshore to depths of 60-100 feet, reports of amberjack, blackfin tuna and cobia are at the top of the list, plus a few hookups with sailfish are occurring. Don’t rule out bottom fishing, as red grouper are lurking in areas with a Swiss cheese bottom and mangrove and yellowtail snapper are coming to the party. Moving inshore, the waters south of the Sunshine Skyway Bridge in Tampa Bay are producing some of the best backcountry action our area has to offer. On a recent charter, I had just finished boating about 20 trout — at least half of which were 20 inches or bigger — before we rallied on more than a dozen snook in the mangroves. As we moved on, slowly idling over the lush green waves of turtle grass bending with the tide, we spotted a 6-foot hammerhead shark meandering across a flat. It looked graceful but it sensed the boat and turned and swam off as we headed toward deeper water. About 100 yards down the flat, we saw a pod of manatees. In Tampa Bay, the gentle giants float along the edge of the grass flat, grazing innocently on the abundance of seagrasses growing in our waters. From up in the tower, I saw them from a good distance. So I killed the engine and let the boat coast a little closer. Wouldn’t you know it? The manatees crossed ahead of us — three cows and a calf. My clients were in awe as they pulled out their phones for pics and video. They commented on how lucky I am to live here. “What a great office,” they chuckled. It was satisfying to share the morning on the water with these folks. I see manatees all the time, but when you’re with a group who has never seen them, you’re reminded of Mother Nature’s beauty. I try to remind myself not to take my life’s work for granted. And now, with an environmental crisis taking place at Piney Point, I feel that I may have. I guess you just don’t realize what you have until it’s threatened. I spend a couple hundred days on the water every year and now I’m wishing I spent more. The potential for a large red tide bloom or development of green algae is a real possibility — a strong dose of it, too. The eastern shoreline of Tampa Bay — as we know it — could rapidly change for the worse and all the work we’ve done as stewards of our environment could be reversed with this incident. Bear in mind, I’m just a local fishing guide and I don’t claim to be a scientist, chemist or a marine biologist.

Nate Coleman of Bradenton shows off a blackfin tuna that ate a live sardine on his first cast while fishing April 9 in 140 feet of water in the Gulf of Mexico on a guided trip with Capt. David White of Anna Maria Charters.

Here’s what I learned: The Piney Point fertilizer plant filed bankruptcy and shut down in 2001. The site stores amounts of phosphogypsum in stacks. Phosphogypsum is a calcium sulfate hydrate that forms as a byproduct in the mining and production of fertilizer. The large rocks are stacked in excess of 50 feet high for great lengths. Phosphogypsum can be radioactive due to the presence of uranium and thorium, as well as radium, radon and polonium. None of us want this stuff stored anywhere near our delicate coastline. As these stacks are placed, walls are formed that can enclose more than 100 acres of land. To protect the phosphogypsum, a liner is inserted in the pit and eventually rainfall fills the stack walls, forming a lake. Water levels are then maintained to prevent overflow. The phosphogypsum stack in question has a perforation in the liner, in turn causing a breach where the wastewater was leaking. To avoid a greater disaster, including a collapse, the stack needed to be drained. The wastewater is being released and pumped into Tampa Bay. The discharge potentially contains 10 times the amount of nitrogen that would be present in raw sewage. The nitrogen-rich water typically leads to enhancing the toxicity of harmful algal blooms. The situation raises a serious, if not critical concern, for our local waters. A red tide of this magnitude would devastate the marine life we hold so dear. If you’d like to learn more on the issue or feel as if you want to help, I suggest visiting www.suncoastwaterkeeper.org. These folks are stepping up to defend our waters. They are putting pressure on regulators, legislators and other lawmakers to ensure the quality of our local waters is maintained. I’m a proud member. On a final note, remember this isn’t just affecting the locals. All who love Anna Maria Island need to be educated on the subject, as it directly affects our marine habitat. If you want to enjoy paradise and protect it, get involved. Your opinion matters, too. Capt. Warren Girle is working Sarasota Bay, which

is yielding a variety of species. Fishing around residential docks is producing action on catch-and-release redfish. Casting live shiners or shrimp around these docks is resulting in numerous hookups of reds measuring 18-24 inches. Girle is working deep grass flats for catch-andrelease spotted seatrout, measuring anywhere from 15-22 inches. Mixed in with the trout bite are bluefish, Spanish mackerel and jack crevalle, adding variety to the bite. Lastly, fishing shallow water toward the mangrove shorelines is producing action on catch-and-release snook. Jim Malfese at the Rod & Reel Pier says the sheepshead bite is hanging on, although most catches are barely making the minimum size limit of 12 inches. Using live shrimp to target the sheepies works best, plus the shrimp are attracting other species — black drum and catch-and-release redfish. In fact, some catch-and-release snook are taking the shrimp. Pier fishers casting artificials — jigs or silver spoons — are hooking up with some Spanish mackerel and ladyfish. Tipping jigs with fresh-cut shrimp pieces is a good idea, especially for anglers looking to hook up with a pompano. Capt. David White says the bite for kingfish and Spanish mackerel is about as good as it gets. Freelining live shiners over wrecks, reefs and hard bottom is resulting in many hookups. For the macks, some fluorocarbon leader and a long shank hook works great. For the kings, adding a 6-inch wire to the rig will ensure these fish stay on the line. Moving offshore, red grouper and yellowtail snapper are being caught over hard bottom. Live and frozen baits are working on this bite. Lastly, White says blackfin tuna are being caught around offshore wrecks. Capt. Jason Stocks says spring break fishing is producing a mixed bag up offshore species. Migratory species — kingfish, blackfin tuna and amberjack — are being caught regularly, as well as some cobia. Freelining live shiners is working well for these species. For a thrill, Stock is letting his clients pull on some goliath grouper while wreck fishing in the Gulf. The highlights of spring break include putting some African pompano in the cooler, as well as a couple of sailfish hookups. Capt. Aaron Lowman is working nearshore structure in the Gulf of Mexico inside 9 miles, where kingfish, bonito and sharks are getting the adrenaline pumping for his anglers. Fee-lined shiners are quickly being eaten by these voracious predators. Moving inshore, Lowman is enjoying good action on the catch-and-release trio — snook, redfish and trout. All three are responding to live shiners as bait. Lastly, Lowman is fishing the remainder of the sheepshead bite for anglers who like to put dinner in the cooler. Live shrimp is the bait of choice here. Send high-resolution photos and fishing reports to fish@islander.org.

Send your fishing, sports, event news and photos to news@islander.org.

Share the fun.

Southernaire Fishing Charters

Licensed


page 26 THE ISLANDER | islander.org April 14, 2021 ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

Cortez crabber nets coronavirus pandemic relief By Kane Kaiman islander reporter

It’s about staying afloat. Pandemic relief checks for Florida’s fishing industry professionals were mailed March 18. Of the 113 Manatee County applications the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission received, 23 came from Cortez, one of the state’s last commercial fishing villages. Eight Cortez-based applications were approved for payment. Among the applicants was Mark Ibasfalean, who splits time between commercial fishing and maintenance work at The Seafood Shack restaurant and marina in Cortez. Ibasfalean, who at one time owned a 4,000-trap operation, has been stone crabbing in the Gulf for more than 40 years. He has downsized to about 200 traps and is eyeing retirement. “It’s a young man’s operation,” he said. “I’m my worst enemy right now — I’m a ‘part-timer.’ That was the worst thing back in the 1980s, to call someone a part-timer. Well, that’s what I became.” Though the shutdowns that began in March 2020 hurt his pocketbook, Ibasfalean said he wasn’t impacted as much as the area’s large-scale crabbers and fish houses. “They had a pretty good crab year last year, except COVID stopped the sales of crabs. The fish houses took a beating right off the get-go, because your local fresh market is where these stone crabs are sold, and nobody was buying,” Ibasfalean said. “People wouldn’t even go into the retail markets they were so scared. So, even though you had crabs, you didn’t have an outlet to sell.” Ibasfalean usually sells his catch to A.P. Bell Fish Co., one of the largest seafood dealers in Cortez. A.P. Bell shut down more than once during the pandemic but warned crabbers in advance each time.

Mark ibasfalean talks about pandemic relief on his boat in Cortez April 6, while hauling in a crab trap with a winch. islander photo: Kane Kaiman

Loan forgiveness was another way the Cortez fish houses looked after their suppliers, Ibasfalean said. “I’m a cheap guy now, but some of these crabbers will push 30 grand before they even start crabbing, and the fish houses help pay for it,” he said. “So, they had about a month or two of crabbing under their belt, and then all of a sudden this thing started coming apart. But the fish houses just cut everybody slack and let them slide.” Ibasfalean said he didn’t see panic in the Cortez community during the shutdown period.

Stone crab traps are stored landside March 31 between the A.p. Bell fish Co. docks and Star fish Co. restaurant in Cortez. in early- to mid-2020, crabbers and fish houses were hit hard by CoVid-19 shutdowns. islander photo: Kane Kaiman

“They didn’t show it. They were freaked out like everybody else, but everybody was surviving somehow,” he said. Relief funding came from the $2.2 trillion Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act signed into law March 27, 2020. Florida received $23.4 million of the $300 million of CARES Act funding Congress allocated to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to distribute to states whose marine fisheries had been impacted by the pandemic. Eligible applicants included licensed commercial saltwater fishers, saltwater wholesale dealers, charter fishing businesses and aquaculture outfits. Successful applicants received 22% of the net loss they reported from January-May 2020, based on a five-year average of their net revenue from the same period. For a revenue loss of $20,000, that amounts to $4,400 of relief. Ibasfalean received about $1,400 from the FWC shortly after March 18. “It was fine for me, because I have a job,” he said. “But, for the full-time crabbers, they’d like to see more.” In December 2020, Congress passed the $2.3 trillion Consolidated Appropriations Act, which included an additional $255 million of funding for fisheries impacted between August and Dec. 31, 2020. NOAA has allocated $19.9 million of that total to the state of Florida. The FWC is currently awaiting further direction from NOAA regarding the distribution of the funds, FWC public information specialist Amanda Nalley said in a March 28 email to The Islander. The $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan Act, the latest pandemic relief spending bill, was signed into law March 11. It does not specifically mention relief for fisheries. However, the legislation includes $4 billion of stimulus for the food supply chain, which will cover government purchases of food, including seafood, for needy individuals, as well as grants and loans for small and midsized seafood processing facilities and vessels. FWC pandemic-related relief projects can be reviewed at myfwc.com/conservation/special-initiatives/caresact/.

BizCal

COMPILED BY AMY V.T. MORIARTY

AMI Chamber THIS WEEK

Thursday, April 15 5 p.m. — Ribbon cutting, Locals Realty, 9801 Gulf Drive, Anna Maria. Save the dates April 22, Business card exchange, Anna Maria. May 1, Beach ’n Food Truck Festival, Holmes Beach. May 14, golf tournament, Bradenton. Fees may apply for events. For more information, contact the chamber at 941-778-1541.

Christine Kourik

Realtor® I LIVE, WORK & SELL THE ISLAND! 941.538.7414 home@christysproperties.com AnnaMariaPropertySearch.com

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April 14, 2021 THE ISLANDER | islander.org page 27 ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

isl

“pizza dan” Whitley, left, receives an engraved watch April 8 from domino’s franchise owner erin Mullins, right, in appreciation for 30 years of service at the Holmes Beach store. Also attending are Brett fortenberry, left, and former franchise owners Mary and John rachide. Not pictured: islander staff members Toni lyon, lisa Williams and Amy Moriarity. islander photo: Bonner Joy

biz

Amy V.T. Moriarty

Island businesses come, go

Back in business The musical chairs game has ended for an island deli in search of a location. After a June 2019 move to a shared location with Island Coffee Haus, and the November-December 2020 closure and bankruptcy of the coffee shop, Scott’s Deli lost a bid to keep the lease at the storefront in S&S Plaza in Holmes Beach. But Scott and Jamie Mason persevered. The deli has made its return April 6 to the commercial building at 6000 Marina Drive, Holmes Beach. The digs aren’t all that’s new. You might soon notice the “& Jamie’s Tacos” tag added to the store name. Street tacos are new to the menu, including braised beef and avocado and a banh mi option.

Pizza man honored for 30 years of primo service

Employers typically gift longtime employees with hot pizza from a shop with several inches of water gushing through the doors. And some people might retire by the time they’ve Franchise owner Erin Mullins bought the island clocked 30 years on the job. store in 2013 from John Rachide. But while island Domino’s employee Dan WhitShe said April 8 that inheriting a staff with someley got the watch April 8, he’s not planning his retire- one like Whitley was great. ment. And having a longtime local like Whitley deliverHe did retirement more than 30 years ago when ing pizzas is even better — he knows all the shortcuts he signed off duty for the last time, ending a 21-year around AMI. career as a New York City police officer. Thanks to delivery on game days to the Center Whitley said he and his wife fell in love with the of Anna Maria Island, Whitley quickly earned favor island while vacationing here shortly after he retired among young and old customers. from the NYPD, but after a year of puttering, enjoying His big smile and friendly service were winners. the island lifestyle, he needed something to do. To honor Whitley’s longevity with the company, Coincidentally, while “puttering,” Whitley learned Mullins and Rachide bought a commemorative watch, the Domino’s Pizza franchise in Holmes Beach was which they presented to him April 8. The presentation hiring a part-time employee and he applied. was pushed back a few months because the pandemic He got the job, beginning the dandy legend of delayed shipping on the timepiece. “Pizza Dan,” as many know him and his vanity auto The watch was not the only gift to Whitley. In tag proclaims. January, Domino’s switched employee uniforms, but In the years since he signed on, Whitley went from Mullins withheld the hats and shirts so that Whitley part-time employee to often working 60- to 70-hour could be her first island employee to don the new weeks and has covered all the positions in the shop — threads. front to back. And, while Whitley isn’t the only longtime island Whitley said he’s loved his time with Domino’s Domino’s employee, Mullins said she was lucky to — from delivering pizzas to a frequent customer on buy a location with several great employees, which North Bay Boulevard who answers the door in the is just one of the things that makes the island’s shop buff to working through hurricane threats to deliver special.

pleASe, See IsL BIZ, pAge 30 a watch at retirement.

Scott Mason looks out from the counter April 7 at the new Scott’s deli, 6000 Marina drive, Holmes Beach. islander photo: Amy V.T. Moriarty

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page 28 THE ISLANDER | islander.org April 14, 2021 ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

I S L A N D E R C L A S S I F I E D S ITEMS FOR SALE

ITEMS FOR SALE Continued

HELP WANTED Continued

oNe-of-A kind dining set. oval shape, expandable, four chairs. $250. like-new royal carpet cleaner, $50. 941-778-3926.

ANTiQue pArTNer deSK: All wood, reduced to $5000. Contact The islander office, 315 58th St. Suite J, Holmes Beach. 941-778-7978.

reporTer WANTed: full- to part-time. print media, newspaper experience required. Apply via email with letter of interest to news@islander.org.

ANTiQue offiCe chairs: perfect for eclectic dining set. Circa 1950 from Anna Maria City Hall. The islander newspaper, 315 58th St. Suite J, Holmes Beach. 941-778-7978.

KIDS FOR HIRE

free eNTerTAiNMeNT CeNTer: Thomasville, three-pieces. Walnut. Can easily be a bar too! 813-391-5187. edgerS: CoNCreTe, like new, 50 cents, car roof rack, black, easy install, $50, chandelier, brown metal, hardware included, $79. 941-920-2494.

FREEBIE ITEMS FOR SALE individuals may place one free ad with up to three items, each priced $100 or less, 15 words or less. free, one week, must be submitted online. email classifieds@islander. org, fax toll-free 1-866-362-9821. (limited time offer)

KeYBoArdS, $10, MouSe $5. Non-stick green pans, 8-10-12-inch, $25. 941-9202494. SHip’S WHeel TABle: Capt. J. lindroth original masterpiece of inlaid wood and brass. 19-inches tall, 45-inch diameter. $1,500. Also, related pieces. marinateal@ gmail.com.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Sandy’s Lawn Service Inc. ESTABLISHED IN 1983

Residential & Commercial Full-service lawn maintenance. Landscaping ~ Cleanups Hauling ~ Tree Trimming. LICENSED & INSURED

Paradise Improvements

941.792.5600

Andrew Chennault

FULLY LICENSED AND INSURED Island References Lic#CBC056755 CBC 1253471

RDI CONSTRUCTION INC. Residential & Condo Renovations Kitchens • Bath • Design Service Carpentry • Flooring • Painting Commercial & Residential

References available • 941-720-7519

Help reSCued peTS! Volunteer, foster, computer help needed! Moonracer Animal rescue. email: moonraceranimalrescue@ gmail.com. THe iSlANder offerS the best results for your classified advertising dollar. We really work for you! Submit your ad no later than noon Monday on the website, www.islander. org. for Monday holidays, the deadline is friday.

Honey is 5 years old. She is up to date with vaccinations, spayed and looking for a loving family. To meet this sweetie, call Lisa Williams at 941-345-2441 or visit The Islander office in Holmes Beach. For more about pet adoption or to adopt Honey, visit moonraceranimalrescue.com.

HELP WANTED HiriNg! Tour BoAT Captain. oupV 6 pack or greater. pay plus great tips! 941822-3351.

ANSWERS TO APRIL 14 PUZZLE J A I L A U G H T S

S T R A I N

K E E P T O

P A P A W

C H E E D E I M C Y N I T S T A T L O V E R O A D

I D I D A N Y R A N L C I T E R S B L I S G A N Y Y E L S E Y D A Y N M O J O S P O O H R Y D I O S C C H E A R E E L A W D O N E S T E R

D E C A L

T A H O E

A G L E E R

S T S F U M E D L S T A S A R U L I E S T S P O H E M E W B D M E N A O R

G R O T U C O P O N L I G E U W I M A L E H E N T A M O N E S I T A T R I A

C A R A T

C L Y D E

R O U G E

A L T S

D E C O D G E N O R F O S L D E T R E A R O P A A G E I O N N O A L A G O R H E M A

I P A N E M A

SERVICES Need A ride to airports? Tampa $65, St. pete, $55, Sarasota, $30. gary, 863-4095875. gvoness80@gmail.com. i doN’T CuT corners, i clean corners. professional, friendly cleaning service since 1999. 941-779-6638. leave message. BuSiNeSS-To-BuSiNeSS Jd’s Window Cleaning looking for storefront jobs in Holmes Beach. i make dirty windows sparkling clean. 941-920-3840. BeACH SerViCe air conditioning, heat, refrigeration. Commercial and residential service, repair and/or replacement. Serving Manatee County and the island since 1987. for dependable, honest and personalized service, call Bill eller, 941-795-7411. CAC184228. reSideNTiAl-BuSiNeSS CleANiNg by Jessie. 10-plus years’ experience. Topbrand cleaning products. Honest, mature, trustworthy. references from long-term clients. i work alone so no crew in your home. i have bimonthly openings. Text or leave a message at 941-526-9900. LAWN & GARDEN CoNNie’S lANdSCApiNg iNC. residential and commercial. full-service lawn maintenance, landscaping, cleanups, hauling and more! insured. 941-778-5294. BArNeS lAWN ANd landscape llC. design and installation, lawn and landscape services, tree trimming, mulch, rock and shell. 941-705-1444. Jr98@barneslawnandlandscape.com.

PLEASE, TAKE NOTE!

priVATe CleANer: We need support and looking for 1-2 people for vacation rental cleaning on Saturdays on Holmes Beach. please, call 941-243-3097.

SpoNSored BY

A L L E G E

free guN loCK courtesy of project Childsafe, florida fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission and Holmes Beach police department. pick up at The islander office, 315 58th St. Suite J, Holmes Beach. don’t be sorry, be safe. PETS

AdoptA-Pet

R E L I E S

WANTed: WorKouT dVds and retired but working XBox, Wii units with games for Ministry of presence for kids and teens in Haiti. deliver to The islander, 315 58th St. Suite J, Holmes Beach. WANTed: Your old cellphone for recycling. deliver to The islander, 315 58th St. Suite J, Holmes Beach.

Kitchen and Bath Remodeling Specialist Replacement Doors and Windows

Z O R B A

Will purCHASe Your old Anna Maria island property plat book (abstract of title). Text images to 813-205-6500.

KidS for Hire ads are free for up to three weeks for island youths under 16 looking for work. Ads must be placed in person at The islander office, 315 58th St. Suite J, Holmes Beach.

E N T L A Y S T S

V I L I N I N C E

B E G I N

I T A L I A

F R I E N D

F A N D O M

S A R O N G

I M S U R E

E B O N Y

R I N D

HouSeKeeper: pArT-TiMe at Haley’s Motel. Must have own transportation and speak english. prior experience required. Haley’s is a non-smoking property. 941-7785405. looKiNg for A safe driver to provide scheduled rides for kids of a Holmes Beach family to/from the island to off-island events (school, sports, etc.). please contact: annamariarick@gmail.com.

PLACE CLASSIFIED ADS ONLINE AT WWW.ISLANDER.ORG

The Islander has moved! The “best news on AMI” has purchased and relocated to a condo office. We’re now across from HB City Hall and behind the Ugly Grouper. You’ll find us at 315 58th St., Holmes Beach. So stop by and check out our new, groovy digs. We’re ready to serve you! Same phone and email. The island’s best news for 29 years! 941.778.7978 news@islander.org


April 14, 2021 THE ISLANDER | islander.org Page 29 ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

I S L A N D E R C L A S S I F I E D S HOME IMPROVEMENT

RENTALS Continued

EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY

VAN-GO PAINTING residential/commercial, interior/exterior, pressure cleaning, wallpaper. Island references. Bill, 941-795-5100. www.vangopainting.net.

HOLMES BEACH ANNUAL 2BR/2BA elevated duplex. Nice, quiet area. References required. $1,800/month. 970-331-1041.

All real estate advertising herein is subject to the Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination Familial status includes children under age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of discrimination, call HUD toll-free at 1-800-669-9777 or for the hearing impaired, call 0-800-543-8294.

GRIFFIN’S HOME IMPROVEMENTS Inc. Handyman, fine woodwork, countertops, cabinets and wood flooring. Insured and licensed. 941-722-8792. BLINDS, SHUTTERS, SHADES: Motorization. 30 years on AMI. Call Keith Barnett, Barnett Blinds, 941-730-0516. ISLAND HANDYMAN: I live here, work here, value your referral. Refinish, paint. Just ask. JayPros. Licensed/insured. References. Call Jay, 941-962-2874. PRESTIGE SERVICES OF Sarasota: Custom interior and exterior painting, polyaspartic epoxy floor applications for garage, pool and more. Polished and decorative concrete, paver sealing and IPE hardwood refinishing. Reliable, quality work, reasonable prices. ‘A’ rating on Angie’s List. Call Jeff, 941-3560444. HANDYMAN AND PAINTING. No job too small. Most jobs just right. Call Richard Kloss. 941-204-1162. SOUTHWEST HOME IMPROVEMENT: Michigan builder, quality work guaranteed. Affordable, timely, within budget. Call Mike, cell, 1-616-204-8822, home, 941-896-5770. RENTALS COZY COTTAGE: SANDPIPER Resort. 55-plus. 1.5-minute walk to beach or bay, near pool. 1BR/1BA, washer/dryer. For sale or rent. Call 941-251-4767, leave message. ANNA MARIA GULF beachfront vacation rentals. One- two- and three-bedroom units, all beachfront. www.amiparadise.com. 941778-3143. More ads = more readers in The Islander.

WANTED ANNUAL RENTAL on Anna Maria island for August/September. 2BR/2BA or larger. Pet friendly, two large dogs. Prefer home. 214-854-6496. WANTED: CONDO RENTAL. January to March 2022, by retired nurse (non-smoking, no pets). No rental companies. 401-6802855. HOLMES BEACH: 2BR/2BA furnished duplex with garage, $1,750/month plus utilities. Available May 1 for six months. 941778-2824. JOB RELOCATION, EARLY May, need housing soon. Married couple with spayed, declawed, female cat. 785-341-9662. VACATION RENTALS: TOWNHOUSE, 2BR/2.5BA, pool and boat slip, $800/week. Beach condo, 2BR/1BA, $1,800/month. 90-day minimum. Call Real Estate Mart, 941-356-1456. REAL ESTATE WINNIE MCHALE, REALTOR, 941-5046146. Rosebay International Realty Inc. Selling island homes, Sarasota and Bradenton. Multi-million-dollar producer. Luxury estates, waterfront/boating communities. Villas, townhomes, condos. Experience, integrity, professional A+ results, since 1999. “Selling Homes - Making Dreams Come True.”

PLEASE, TAKE NOTE! LOOKING FOR AN EARLY BIRD? You can read Wednesday’s classifieds on Tuesday at www.islander.org. And it’s FREE!

The Islander has moved!

The island’s best news for 29 years! 941.778.7978 news@islander.org

____________ ___________ ___________ ___________ ___________ ___________ ___________ CLASSIFIED RATES: Minimum $12 for up to 15 WORDS. 16-30 words: $20. 31-45 words: $40. BOX ad: additional $4. (Phone number is a "word.")

The deadline is NOON Monday every week for Wednesday’s paper. _________

_________

HURRICANE

Windows & Doors 941-730-5045 WEATHERSIDE LLC

Bed: A bargain!

King, Queen, Full & Twin, pre-owned from $30 new/used. 941-922-5271 www.sleepking.net

AMI TAXI

professional, metered, on-call, gps, cards accepted www.amitaxi.com • amitaxi4u@gmail.com holmes beach, bradenton beach, anna maria

941-447-8372 airports • shops • dining

Gone All Summer? Home Unoccupied? Many Bad Things Can Happen

“Your Eyes Here – While You’re Away” Keeping Homes Safe For 29+ Years!

Protection Property Watch.com Call Jon Kent 941-920-0832

The “best news on AMI” has purchased and relocated to a condo officeat 315 58th St., Holmes Beach. We’re now across from HB City Hall and behind the Ugly Grouper. Same owner, staff, phone, email. New digs.

rg CLASSIFIED AD ORDER o . r e d n la .is___________ w ____________ ___________ ___________ ___________ ___________ ___________ w w t a e n i onl ____________ ___________ ___________ ___________ ___________ ___________ s___________ d a d e fi i ____________ ___________ lass ___________ ___________ ___________ ___________ ___________ c e c a l P

Run issue date(s) _________

Place classified ads online at www.islander.org. LIC#CBC1253145

TILE -TILE -TILE. All variations of ceramic tile supplied and installed. Quality workmanship, prompt, reliable, many Island references. Call Neil, 941-726-3077.

SEASONAL RENTAL: 2BR/2.5BA, washer, dryer, beach access. Two pools, ground floor, cozy. 5400 Gulf Drive, Holmes Beach. 847-769-9080.

Avoid the airport chaos and ship your souvenirs, purchases & luggage home! 3230 J_ c_ T;`/_(f D>@/U_ / )9_&!c_ >6T//AU' P: 941-778-1911 • aaaJ;U> A-@ ;> A-FT;AZJ)D@

IMPROVE YOUR CURB APPEAL! Horticultural Design Services | Landscape Construction Landscape Maintenance | Irrigation Installation & Repair Brick & Stone Pavers | Walls, Gates, Fences | Tree Trimming Low Volt Outdoor Lighting Repair & Installation

_________ or TFN start date: ______________

Amt. pd _________________ Date _____________ Ck. No.� _________ Cash � _______ By _________

d � u No.

_____________________________________________________

Name shown on card: ____________________________________________card exp. date ______ / ______ House no. or P.O. box no. on cc bill ________________________Billing address zip code ________________ Your e-mail for renewal reminder: ____________________________________________________________

Web site: www.islander.org 315 58th St., Suite J Holmes Beach FL 34217

E-mail: classifieds@islander.org Fax toll free: 1-866-362-9821 Phone: 941-778-7978

FOR MORE INFO 941.704.9025 ShadyLadyFL.com OUR BEST PRACTICES PROMISE IS APPLIED TO RESIDENTIAL OR COMMERCIAL CONSTRUCTION & MAINTENANCE.

317924

Credit card payment: �


page 30 THE ISLANDER | islander.org April 14, 2021 ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

PropertyWatch By Johann Bertram

IsL BIZ CoNTiNued froM pAge 27

They’ve also added flavored lemonades — freshly squeezed, thank you — iced teas and smoothies. And Scott Mason told us April 7 that he and his new landlord are working on plans to a convenient new entry for the deli this summer. Better still, he told us, the creation of a new entrance would also allow for a patio with seating. Welcome back, Scott, Jamie and crew. We hope you enjoy the new digs. Scott’s Deli has new hours, 9 a.m.-6 p.m. For more information and a menu, go online to www.scottsdeliannamaria.com or call 941-778-3000. Cut the ribbon The Anna Maria Island Chamber of Commerce will host a ribbon cutting 5-7 p.m. Thursday, April 15, at AMI Locals Luxury Vacation Rental Properties, 9801 Gulf Drive, Anna Maria. Bringing a concierge service to the vacation rental industry, the company is staffed by locals focused on tailoring guest experiences by using their knowledge of the area. For more information, go online to www.amilocals.com or call 941-757-8226. For more information about the ribbon-cutting, go online to www.annamariaislandchamber.org or call the office at 941-778-1541. Not so smooth If you tried last week to slake your thirst or boost your energy with an ice-cold smoothie from Smoothie King in the Anna Maria Island Centre shopping plaza, 3248 E. Bay Drive, Holmes Beach, you probably found yourself wanting. We were surprised April 6 to find the door to the island’s location locked, although an employee was behind the counter. A hand-written sign said the store is permanently closed and a second sign apologized for any inconvenience. A call to the shop that afternoon for information was not returned. Nor was an April 7 email to the corporate office. So we can’t tell you why they’re closed,

Real estate transactions

1603 Gulf Drive N., unit 30, Bradenton Beach, Tradewinds Condos, a 380 sfla / 380 sfur, 1bed/1bath condo built in 1971 sold 03/18/21 by Wirkus to Robinson for $226,000; list $214,900. 3801 Fourth Ave., unit 77, Holmes Beach, La Playita, a 1,197 sfla, 2bed/2bath condo built in 1981 sold 03/19/21 by Coffta to Seifferly for $465,000; list $449,000. 1453 Gulf Drive N., Bradenton Beach, Bermuda Bay Club, a 1,524 sfla, 3bed /2.5bath / 2-car townhouse built in 2000 sold 03/15/21 by Metcab Properties LLC to Brady for $750,000; list $775,000. 7000 Gulf Drive, unit 101, Holmes Beach, Tiffany Place, a 1,212 sfla, 2bed/ 2bath condo built in 1980 sold 03/17/21 by Clinton to Glenn A Hoskins PSC for $981,000; list $981,000. 515 Spring Ave., Anna Maria, a 2,000 sfla, 3bed/3bath /1-car pool home built in 1981 on a 7,540 sqft lot sold 03/17/21 by Aaron to Turney for $1,125,000; list $1,195,000. 4114 Fifth Ave., unit A, Holmes Beach, a 2,842 sfla / 4,466 sfur, 5bed/3.5bath / 2-car pool home built in 2010 on a 10,008 sqft lot sold 03/12/21 by Wilson to Beach To Bay Investments INC for $1,215,000; list $1,225,000. A sign appeared April 7 taped to the door of the 303 Church Ave., Bradenton Beach, a 2,263 sfla, island’s Smoothie King location announcing its clo- 6bed/4.5bath/2-car pool home built in 2014 on a 5,101 sure. islander photo: Amy V.T. Moriarty sqft lot sold 03/11/21 by Triton Bend II LLC to Roaring Fork Enterprises LLC for $1,475,000; list $1,525,000. Johann Bertram, sales agent at Michael Saunders just that they are. Good thing it wasn’t the only smoothie place on & Co., AMI office, can be reached at 941-779-3856. the island. Until next week, friends, stay frosty. And as always … The “best news on AMI” has purchased and relocated to … Got business news? Contact Amy Moriarty at a condo officeat 315 58th St., Holmes Beach. We’re now amym@islander.org or call 941-778-7978.

PLEASE, TAKE NOTE!

The Islander has moved! across from HB City Hall and behind the Ugly Grouper. Same owner, staff, phone, email. New digs.

You can read it all online at islander.org

The island’s best news for 29 years! 941.778.7978 news@islander.org

LOCALLY KNOWN� GLOBALLY CONNECTED� SINCE �����

BAY ISLES ��� Harbor Cay Drive Maureen Horn ������������ A������� ����������

ANNA MARIA ISLAND ��� Palm Avenue Hannah Hillyard ������������ A������� ����������

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ISLANDER CLUB OF LONGBOAT ���� Gulf Of Mexico Drive ��N Ian Addy� PA & E� Gail Wittig ������������ A������� ��������

LONG BEACH ��� Fox Street Cindy Fischer ������������ A������� ��������

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INN ON THE BEACH ��� Sands Point Road ���� The Walter Group ������������ A������� ��������

TIDY ISLAND �� Tidy Island Boulevard Kathy Marshall ������������ A������� ��������

CAPE TOWN VILLAGE ���� ��rd Street W Maria Christenson & Karla Davidson ������������ A������� ��������

BAY BEACH ���� ���st Street W Debbie Vogler ������������ A������� ��������

PALMA SOLA BAY CLUB ���� ��th Street Circle W ��� Pamela Miller ������������ A������� ��������

NEW CONSTRUCTION

MSC MORTGAGE | MSC TITLE | MS&C COMMERCIAL NEW HOMES & CONDOMINIUMS

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RELEASE DATE: 4/11/2021

New York Times Sunday Magazine Crossword

April 14, 2021 THE ISLANDER | islander.org Page 31 No. 0404 ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................

OVER THE MOON

1

BY OLIVIA MITRA FRAMKE / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ

60 Hit movie released as ‘‘Vaselina’’ in Mexico 1 Pest-control product 62 Husk-wrapped dish 5 Luggage label 10 Color effect in graphic 65 Colorful tropical fish design 66 Song standard on ‘‘Barbra Streisand’s 18 Video-game princess Greatest Hits’’ of the Kingdom of Hyrule 71 Saturn 19 Writer Zora ____ 72 With 11-Down, hit Hurston 2001 film with an ‘‘!’’ 20 Take part in a D.&D. in its title campaign, e.g. 73 Stirred up 21 Brand of fruity hard 74 Cold shower? candy 75 Muralist ____ 23 Personae non gratae Clemente Orozco 24 Uranus 76 2021 Super Bowl 25 ‘‘Arrivederci!’’ champs 26 Jerks 80 Boy, in Barcelona 27 ‘‘____ to differ!’’ 81 Animated character who wears a red 28 One taking the long shirt and no pants view? 31 Tarot-deck character 82 Time before computers, 35 Some surgical tools facetiously 38 ‘‘Unit’’ of fun 85 Fleet runner: Abbr. 39 All-star duo? 86 One feature of a 40 Comfort in not perfect nanny, in knowing, say a ‘‘Mary Poppins’’ 47 Request song 50 Jupiter 91 Mars 51 Ships passing in the 92 Hesitate in speaking night? 93 More inquisitive 52 Sch. on the Rio 98 Jaded sort Grande 99 Solo flier? 54 Hollers 55 Like some parties and 105 Prefix meaning ‘‘both’’ flowers 56 ‘‘Back to the Future’’ 106 Welled (up) antagonist 108 Like people who are much looked up to Online subscriptions: Today’s 109 Insurance-fraud ploy puzzle and more 110 Determiner of Answers: than 4,000 past puzzles, cannabis legality, nytimes.com/crosswords page 28 ($39.95 a year). e.g.

3

4

5

18

Olivia Mitra Framke, of Jersey City, N.J., is an academic adviser at the New School’s College of Performing Arts in Manhattan. She started solving crosswords during college — but not at college. Her dad would hoard New York Times Magazines, and the two of them would solve together when she returned home. This is Olivia’s ninth crossword for The Times, and her fourth Sunday. — W.S.

AC RO SS

2

113 Classic carnival ride 116 Cherished family member 117 Neptune 118 Golding of ‘‘Crazy Rich Asians’’ 119 Sporty car 120 Deliver a speech 121 World of Warcraft spellcaster

29 Poker variety 30 ‘‘This Will Be’’ singer Natalie 32 Sommelier’s métier 33 ‘‘Monsters, ____’’ 34 Be on the level? 36 ‘‘Notorious’’ Supreme Court initials 37 Knocked ’em dead 39 Not spoiled 41 Suffix with serpent DOWN 42 One of five in 1 Leans (on) ‘‘pronunciation’’: Abbr. 2 Claim 43 Choice of sizes, briefly 3 Pastoral poem 44 Celebratory, quaintly 4 ____ es Salaam 45 Deception 5 Navel type 6 Sticker on the back of a 46 Cowboy or Patriot, for short laptop, say 47 Zeros 7 Home to the Sugar Bowl and Heavenly 48 Distinct melodic ski resorts segment 8 Draft pick? 49 Not waver from 9 Neighbor of Belg. 53 Fruit also called a custard apple or 10 Word after focus or prairie banana Facebook 55 Baby’s cry 11 See 72-Across 56 Cue at an audition 12 Mountain map figs. 57 Land jutting into il 13 Ones getting the Mediterraneo message 58 Quaker 14 Rio beach of song 59 Community of 15 Hollow center? followers 16 Turner who led an 1831 slave rebellion 61 Thesaurus listing: Abbr. 17 Grateful sentiments, in online shorthand 63 Melber of MSNBC 64 Candy featured 18 ‘‘The Greek’’ of film in a classic 21 Corner space in ‘‘MythBusters’’ Monopoly episode 22 Juggling or magic, in 65 Confucian’s spiritual a talent show path 26 Nobel laureate 67 In ____ (peeved) Morrison

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49

9

10

53

60

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45

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81 Money earned from an event, say 82 Gush 83 Archaeologist’s find 84 Brian once of glam rock 86 U.S. health org. 87 ‘‘Hands off, that’s mine!’’ 88 Austrian article 89 Sent off 90 Lose a layer 94 Bit of luau wear

95

105

108

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68 Nintendo dinosaur who eats fruit and throws eggs 69 Bring to court 70 2003 best seller whose title is one letter different from a fantasy creature 75 Pleasures 77 Grammy winner DiFranco 78 Rendezvoused 79 ____ gow (Chinese domino game)

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95 ‘‘No question!’’ 96 Magazine whose 60th anniversary issue had the cover line ‘‘Denzel, Halle & Jamie’’ 97 What’s hard about a melon? 99 Origami shape called ‘‘orizuru’’ 100 Tree surgeon, at times 101 Interior chambers 102 Gem weight

103 Bonnie’s partner in crime 104 Quadratic formula subj. 107 Oodles 109 Measurement in plane geometry 110 Camera type, briefly 111 As well 112 DuVernay who directed ‘‘Selma’’ 113 Queue before P 114 Canal locale 115 Piece de resistance?

Visit WWW.ISLANDER.ORG for the best news on Anna Maria Island. the Team Duncan Difference! Local-Area Expertise Outstanding Customer Service Experienced Professionals Proven Performance

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Condo with views of Skyway Bridge! Welcome to your little slice of paradise at the entry of this second-floor condo, offering sweeping ICW views that pull you right in. $429,000

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Custom-built home on the water! Stunning 4BD/3.5BA custom built home with meticulous detail everywhere you look! Situated on the Intracoastal. $2,895,000

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Subdivision of Laguna Maria! Zoned for weekly rentals. Your island oasis has a fresh new look. 3BD/3BA home with oversized carport and plenty of parking for friends and family. $1,415,000

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Nautilus of Holmes Beach! Look no further than this gulf side, ground floor condo at the Nautilus. It’s the perfect spot for your island getaway. $465,000

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Sunbow Bay Condo This condo is a 2BD/2BA furnished home. The complex offers tennis, 2 swimming pools and pickleball courts! $419,000

Our Sand Castle by the Sea. 2BD/2BA home with inground pool. This home is zoned for weekly rentals!Don’t let this perfect little slice of island life slip away! $975,000

Great location in Holmes Beach! Centrally located in Holmes Beach this 5BD/3.5BA Mediterranean style home. Centrally located and weekly rentals allowed. $1,215,000

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Custom Home on Palma Sola Bay Remarkable custom built 3BD/3BA home on Palma Sola Bay! Take in the natural beauty from over 300 feet of open waterfront. $3,995,000

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Page 32 THE ISLANDER | islander.org April 14, 2021 ...............................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................................


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