The Gabber: October 1, 2020

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ONLINE EVERY DAY THEGABBER.COM

No. 2677

October 1 - October 7, 2020

It’s Official: Gulfport is Open for Business By Laura Mulrooney

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In a ceremonious acceptance of the “new normal,” city officials, business leaders and the Gulfport’s Merchant Chamber gathered at Gulfport’s Welcome Center early Tuesday, September 29. A sizable, masked crowd gathered to celebrate the grand reopening of the City of Gulfport.

Gulfport loves their grand openings and a good party. On Tuesday, September 29 at 8:30 a.m. a sizable, masked crowd gathered to celebrate a grand opening like none other – the grand reopening of the City of Gulfport. In a ceremonious acceptance of the “new normal,” city officials, business leaders and the Gulfport Merchants Chamber gathered at Gulfport’s Welcome Center early Tuesday morning. “We’ve been waiting for six months and two weeks for this moment,” said GMC President Barbara Banno. From left Alan Feivelson and Charlie Cox, owners and operators of Frivolous Fruits, pose with their farmer Gary Parke from Parksdale Farms, just before the Gulfport Tuesday Fresh Market kickoff. “We’re very happy to be back after seven months; we’re looking forward to a successful season,” said Cox. Reopening continued on page 9

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publisher’s note We’re Changing How We Report Crime 2908-B Beach Blvd. S. Gulfport, FL 33707 727-321-6965 Publisher

Cathy Salustri Loper

Editor

Shelly Wilson

Creative Director Joey Neill

Advertising Director Chris Madalena

Reporters & Photographers Laura Mulrooney, News and Politics

Jeff Donnelly, Theater Jennifer Ring, Food and Culture Lynn Taylor, Arts June Johns, Photographer Nano Riley, Environment Jenna Rimensnyder, Events

Social Media & Operations Leah Petrakis

Serving Gulfport, South Pasadena, St. Petersburg West, Downtown St. Petersburg, Kenwood, Maximo, Tierra Verde, St. Pete Beach, PassA-Grille, Treasure Island, Pinellas Point Owners Barry Loper and Cathy Salustri Loper Deadlines Friday at 5 p.m.

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When the Gabber started running crime reports years ago, we ran an almostverbatim reprint of the police reports of crime. Over the years, we changed the format somewhat, even dropping the report completely for a while. Some readers accused us of trying to “cover up” crime. The truth is, we’ve always been looking for the best way to report on crime in our community where, most weeks, the bulk of criminal activity is shoplifting and car break-ins. Recently, we began rewriting the crime reports from the Gulfport Police Department with a bit more humor. The reports we get from the police are usually the bare minimum of detail and, without knowing the full story, these snippets offered us only meme fodder. While a handful of the stories describe criminal silliness, for the most part, we were poking at the least fortunate of us. Take, for example, the woman recently arrested for shoplifting who said it was because she was trying to save money to get her children medicine. Or the person who shoplifted dish soap. When life has brought you to that point, for whatever reason, if a newspaper makes fun of you, it’s called punching down. We did that, and I am sorry. I’ve been adamant that we don’t print the names of those accused of sex crimes in our paper – even if other outlets do – because everyone is innocent until proven guilty and a person cannot come back from that accusation. However, I wasn’t thinking as much about the harm we did to the unnamed accused and how our crime blotter could shape people’s ideas about crime in our communities. The Gabber newsroom adheres to the code of ethics agreed upon by members of and set forth by the Society of Professional Journalists, and one of the things that code dictates is that it’s our job to give voice to the voiceless. It also says we should “avoid pandering to lurid curiosity, even if others do it.” If we continue to run the crime reports with no follow up, we give no voice to anyone other than the police. I like our police, and I respect our police, but they’re human. Just like journalists, every police officer has biases. Just like good journalists, good police officers try daily to set those biases aside. Sometimes we could both do a better job. Crime reports and the way a newspaper handles them can make people feel unduly unsafe, foster racism (we remove a lot of references to color, and other potentially racist signatures), and they rarely tell the entire story. The police catch someone breaking the law, and that person has prior convictions, so they decide to arrest. OK, what were the convictions? Were they for possession of marijuana? Were they for shoplifting? Driving with a suspended license? How many crimes are born of poverty? Starting this week, the Gabber will no longer run a crime blotter. That’s not to say we won’t cover crime; it’s to say that we’ll cover it differently. If you want the crime index, we’ll have a link on our website, so you can see what crimes happen in your area – but know that index doesn’t give the full picture. We’ll still report on crime, but we’re in discussions with the police about how we can do a better job of getting more of the story to give readers a better picture. We’re also looking at work done at The Marshall Project, so named for Thurgood Marshall, a giant in the civil rights movement, for guidance. A few weeks back, I admitted that change was hard and also told you we want The Gabber to be a paper for everyone in South Pinellas. Since then, we’ve had internal discussions about how we can better serve all our communities and how to do more good than harm. This is one of those changes; our crime coverage can be better, and it will be. You can share your thoughts with me at cathy@thegabber.com. – Cathy

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020


voices Fears Grow as Florida Reopens Folks had a lot to say on Facebook this week about Florida’s Phase 3 Reopening [“Florida Dives into Phase 3 Reopening,” September 25, 2020, thegabber.com]. ”Beach Blvd was jammed last night. I had takeout pizza from Tutto Bene and could not find a parking place, like the days of no COVID. It will get worse.” – Kenneth Salak “And yet... in order to visit my mother in her room at her ALF I must get tested every two weeks and wear full PPE. And she’s been in virtual isolation herself since March, and passed 2 COVID tests. Please, dunderheads...go out and sit this close to unmasked strangers indoors for hours. I wanna see what happens to ya.” – Deborah Bidwell-Tuthill

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theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020

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news This is Your Last Chance to Register to Vote By Laura Mulrooney

Four of Gulfport’s Gecko Queens hit the streets in a golf cart parade to drum up participation for this year’s National Voter Registration Day on Tuesday, September 22. From left, Brian Liggins (2017), Jody Robinson (2019/2020), Wes Ray (2014) and Jon Ziegler (2018).

Election Day is a little more than 30 days away. From the U.S. president to local school board members, this is no small election. Each vote is vital and will impact the future of our country, and the future of Pinellas County. Monday, October 5 is the deadline to register to vote or change political party affiliation for the November 3 general election. If you’re unsure about your voter registration status, you can check it at dos.myflorida.com/elections.

Locally, voter turnout is a hot topic. Grassroots organizations like Gulfport Votes 100%, League of Women Voters of the St. Petersburg Area, and Women Talk Black are renewing efforts to get voters registered, informed and out to the polls. As of Friday, September 25, Pinellas County broke the 700,000 mark for registered voters. “Metrics doesn’t sound very interesting,” says GV100 founder Ingrid Bredenberg, “but Gulfport likes a party.”

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On Tuesday, September 22, from 4 to 7 p.m. the LGBTQ Resource Center at the Gulfport Public Library and GV100 threw a party in honor of National Voter Registration Day in the library garden. National Voter Registration Day is a nonpartisan civic holiday that celebrates the right to vote, with the intent to make voting registration easily accessible. The LGBTQ Resource Center and GV100’s registration party did not disappoint. Four Gulfport queens, three community leaders and a slew of community influencers gathered under the shade of the library garden, danced to live music, issued library cards and registered voters. “It is inexcusable that people have sat on the sidelines in the past. Now, more than ever, is the time to get out and vote,” said District 69 State Representative Jennifer Webb. “We have our COVID response on the line, we have our Supreme Court justice nominees on the line – we have how we’re going to pull ourselves out of this economic crisis.” Alright, so perhaps you’re registered to vote, but standing in line in a pandemic isn’t an ideal situation. We get it, and so does the Supervisor of Elections and the United States Postal Service. In the time of COVID-19, there has been a greater emphasis on mailin ballots over in-person voting and a debate on the validity of the absentee ballot process. In case you’re wondering, “absentee ballots” and “mail ballots” are the same thing. You don’t need a reason to vote by mail. According to the Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections, “Any registered voter may request a mail ballot.” If you’re mailing your ballot, there are steps you can take to help make your sure vote arrives in time to be counted. Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections Julie Marcus has urged residents to request their mail-in ballots as soon as possible, and to send them in quickly. “Ballots are collected as they arrive at the three elections offices in person or by mail. Florida statutes allow mail ballots to be opened and processed beginning 22 days before the election,” according to the Supervisor of Elections office. “The first results released on election day are partial

VOTER REGISTRATION DEADLINE: October 5, 2020 DEADLINE TO REQUEST A MAIL-IN BALLOT: October 24, 5 p.m. EARLY VOTING AND BALLOT DROP-OFF LOCATIONS OPEN: October 19 to November 1, 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. Register to vote, request a ballot, find a drop-off location, polling location, early voting locations and more at votepinellas.com. Read the Gabber’s ongoing coverage of the upcoming election at thegabber.com/ vote.

mail ballot results. The remainder of the mail ballots are processed during election night.” Still, accurate counts of mail-in ballots take time. “Postal delivery service has changed,” says the Supervisor of Elections office. “Voters are advised

to allow at least one week for their ballot to be returned by mail to the Supervisor of Elections office.” If you have concerns about the USPS’s ability to deliver your mailin ballot on time, you can also drop off your ballot at an election office, polling location or ballot drop box, and skip the mailing process entirely. “It’s easy to feel, in the pandemic, helpless. This is something that we can offer people to do, to feel like their voice matters,” says the Gulfport LGBTQ Resource Center’s Susan Gore. Voter registration applications are available at any Supervisor of Elections Office or online at VotePinellas.com. Make address changes online at VotePinellas.com, by calling 727464-VOTE (8683) or by emailing Election@VotePinellas.com. You can also request a mail-in ballot for family members. Interested in becoming a poll worker? They can help you with that, too. If you’re not online, you can complete all updates, including signature, name, address and political party affiliation, by completing a voter registration application and returning it to the Supervisor of Elections Office at 13001 Starkey Rd., Largo. Other offices are at 501 1st Ave. N., St. Petersburg and at the Pinellas County Courthouse, 315 Court Street, Room 117, Clearwater. All three offices will be open Saturday, October 3, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., and will be open until 6 p.m. on Monday, October 5.

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theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020

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A Grave Situation: Part Three

Exhuming the Past of Lincoln and Forgotten Cemeteries in Pinellas. An eight-part series special to the Gabber. By James A. Schnur

HERITAGE VILLAGE ARCHIVES AND LIBRARY

A Disturbing Pattern The practice of disturbing individual gravesites is nothing new. Neither is the wanton neglect of burial grounds. Questions about the stewardship and conditions at historically Black cemeteries have attracted renewed interest on both sides of Tampa Bay. The recent discoveries of forgotten graves at the Robles Park Village and King High School sites in Tampa, along with two locations in Clearwater, have left many wondering how such neglect could happen at those former solemn grounds. Surveys for possible unmarked graves at another historically Black burial ground in Tampa, Memorial Park Cemetery, have also started. Forgotten graves revealed by ground-penetrating radar have shocked many. Similar reactions occurred a few years ago, after investigations found unexpected bodies at the former Dozier School for Boys in Florida’s Panhandle. Early Patterns Of Disrespect While GPR surveys at former burial sites in Tampa and Clearwater focus on historically Black cemeteries, Pinellas County’s history shows a larger pattern of disrespecting burial sites. This shameful legacy began long before Lincoln

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Cemetery was established in 1926, long before Pinellas separated from Hillsborough County in 1912, even long before any African Americans lived in lower Pinellas. By most accounts, the earliest recorded burial in presentday Pinellas County took place in 1853 on grounds that later became the Sylvan Abbey Cemetery along Sunset Point Road in eastern Clearwater. This does not mean, however, that the first person ever to perish in Pinellas did so in 1853. Potter’s fields, often known as paupers’ graves, certainly existed. These unmarked sites offered a place where people buried their dead without any permanent marker. Any simple wooden posts or crosses that may have existed deteriorated over time. Beyond these forgotten pioneer burial plots, other bodies were placed in the highly saline soils of Pinellas long before the first Europeans arrived in the New World. People have lived and died here for thousands of years. Archaeologists and historians investigating the First Floridians have few archives to examine. These Indian cultures left no written records. When they interacted with Spanish conquistadors and pirates in the 1500s, their populations quickly declined. Expeditions led by Pánfilo de Narváez in 1528 and Hernando de Soto in 1539 skirted along and probably passed through the Pinellas peninsula as these Spaniards

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020


sought gold and wealth. They left behind smallpox and other illnesses that wiped out the original Indian populations in Southern Pinellas County by the 1700s. Early white pioneers began to settle in Pinellas in the 1830s. The first documented permanent settler, Odet Philippe, took up residence in the shadow of the large Indian mound near Safety Harbor. Philippe and other settlers searched and sometimes scavenged mounds and smaller middens left by the Tocobaga and other Indian cultures. They looked for treasures and sometimes desecrated skeletons. Not all mounds have burials; most do not. But successive waves of settlers and residents picked through every mound they could find from the large one at Safety Harbor to smaller ones at Maximo Moorings, and everything in between. Some may even remember when the St. Petersburg medical complex, now known as Bayfront Health, was called Mound Park Hospital to honor a large Indian mound nearby. The mound disappeared in the 1950s. The hospital changed its name about a decade later. A Nightmare Way To Sell The ‘Florida Dream’ Eugene M. Elliot was an entrepreneur who helped George S. Gandy finance the construction of the first bridge to connect Tampa and Pinellas County. The original Gandy Bridge opened in November 1924 as a private toll road. Aware of the potential traffic on this bridge, Elliot bought much of Weedon Island in 1923 and planned to develop luxurious homesites. Knowing Weedon’s history as a place with middens and earlier Indian settlement, Elliot schemed of a way to increase his investment’s value. Elliot placed some bones, trinkets, and pottery pieces on his property near St. Petersburg’s future gateway with Tampa. He then contacted the Smithsonian Institution, expecting that the “discovery” of these fake relics by scientific authorities would encourage newcomers who wanted to buy land and build homes alongside the small mounds. A team of archaeologists led by Jesse Walter Fewkes came from the Smithsonian. They began to conduct excavations at Weedon Island in November 1923. They bypassed the items Elliot had planted, digging deeper to find a burial mound and other significant items. Elliot ran full-page advertisements in local newspapers encouraging people to watch the Smithsonian excavations and consider purchasing land from him. At one point, he even offered to give visitors pottery fragments as a gift. The land boom’s decline and Fewkes’s findings killed Elliot’s plans in the mid-1920s. Years later, he looked back with a sense of regret – not because of the damage he did to actual Indian sites, but for the financial losses to promote a failed development. He allegedly told a friend, “To think I spent all that money to plant those phony bones!” An Old Story Writ New Long after Elliot’s failed plans came to an end, others continued to search for Indian bones. Areas of the Bayshore Homes site near Abercrombie Park and the mouth of Long Bayou in western St. Petersburg have yielded skeletons of early Floridians. Homes and businesses in the area where Tyrone Boulevard crosses Park Street occupy some of these sites.

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020

Archaeologists also found remains around Joe’s Creek in western Lealman. After professional surveyors left, amateurs scoured the area. A librarian received a telephone call nearly 10 years ago from a woman living in Oregon with an important reference question. Her father had passed away after the family had moved from St. Petersburg to the Pacific Northwest. While going through her father’s belongings, she found a human skull in a box with a note that he had retrieved it from Joe’s Creek in the early 1950s. The librarian directed her to the proper authorities so it could be handled in accordance with the law. The practices of disturbing, collecting and sometimes displaying Indian remains have obviously angered members of the Indian community. Indeed, when evidence of a largely undisturbed Tocobaga site near St. PetersburgClearwater International Airport became known about 30 years ago, members of the American Indian Movement guarded this sacred space while professional surveys took place. They were there to protect the location from thrillseekers and collectors. Fieldwork at this site, now called “Yat Kitischee,” was done respectfully. Legislation has helped. The federal government enacted the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act in November 1990. This act applies to cultural items, human remains and sacred objects found on federal lands or within institutions that receive federal funding. [Editor’s note: After almost a decade of unsuccessfully attempting to get roughly 1,500 ancestral remains (and tens of thousands of Tribal artifacts) returned to them, the Seminole Tribe of Florida withdrew from its Smithsonian Institution Affiliation in January 2020. To learn more, please visit seminoletribune.org and ahtahthiki.wordpress. org and search for “No More Stolen Ancestors.”] Although NAGPRA does not generally apply to privately owned or state lands, other statutory provisions now discourage or prohibit the violation of aboriginal sites at these places as well. Some regulations include legal consequences. Similar to the desecration of Indian sites in Pinellas, the historic problems at Lincoln Cemetery have roots in a system that has treated some people as inferior because of their racial ancestry. Lincoln became a second-chance burial site for people who were considered second-class citizens during the years of mandatory racial segregation. In our next installment of “A Grave Situation,” we visit the Tropicana Field site when parts of it were a potter’s field, rather than a “Field of Dreams.” A graduate of Boca Ciega High School, James A. Schnur previously served as president of the Pinellas County Historical Society and as a member of the Pinellas County Historical Commission. He has authored four photographic history books on the cities of Largo, Madeira Beach, St. Petersburg, and Seminole, as well as a history of Pinellas County that celebrated its centennial of independence in 2012. He taught Florida and U.S. history classes at Eckerd College for nearly 20 years. His research on historically Black cemeteries in Pinellas County was included in a successful application that allowed Rose Hill Cemetery in Tarpon Springs to gain admission to the National Register of Historic Places in 2017.

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Local Band Student Benefits from Downsizing By Laura Mulrooney

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“I am so glad, young lady, that you’re going to get to enjoy this,” said Donald Hensley as he handed the drum sticks over to 17-year-old Boca Ciega High School band student Arlene Assllani. Hensley and his wife Brenda recently made the decision that it was time to get the heck out of dodge and away from the Florida heat. The Hensley’s have a home in Tennessee they’re ready to move back to, but that comes with one hitch – they have to downsize. That decision made Assllani the lucky recipient of her very own drum set. Assllani, who comes from a musical family, has been involved in music since she was 5 years old. Assllani first learned the piano, the viola, then percussion, eventually finding her passion in the drums. When Hensley decided it was time to find a new home for his drum set, he reached out to long-time friend, BCHS math teacher and Gulfport Councilmember Christine Brown. “I wanted to find a student who had a need and a passion for drumming,” said Hensley. “Christine was the first person I thought could help me.” Brown contacted BCHS music teacher Joe Spiriora, who knew just the person. “Owning your own instrument allows you to do more than what you would do in the band room at school,” said Assllani. “It strengthens your art; I’m extremely grateful.” Cringing at the thought of having a novice drum player in your house? Don’t fret for the Assllani family. Arlene’s father Kenny was all about it – you could say it was music to his ears. “In my country, [Albania], rock and roll was illegal,” said Kenny. “When I was younger, I made my own drum set out of cardboard and other pieces and if I was caught playing them, I just said I was ‘exercising.’” When Arlene told her father about getting a drum set, he encouraged her from the get go. “I tell her: ‘I’ll teach you what I know and you’ll teach me what you know,’” Kenny said.

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020


“Nothing makes me more proud and excited to be standing here today, to represent the Gulfport Merchants Chamber and the reopening and the relaunching of the Tuesday Morning Market,” said Banno. “It’s such a staple in the city, and it’s really something that unifies this city, all of our businesses and brings us together as a community.” “It’s about time. I’m happy to see this all happening again,” said Gini Fagan, owner and operator of Beach Bazaar. “This city is too small to not have any events going on.” “I want to take the opportunity to thank the business community that spearheaded the opportunity to reopen Gulfport,” said City Manager Jim O’Reilly. “It’s been a long time since St. Patrick’s Day, when a lot of these things started. So, here we are and I hope everyone practices social distancing.”

LAURA MULROONEY

Reopening continued from cover

Three-year fresh market veteran, arborist Chuck Pool, owner and operator of Pool’s Nursery and Landscaping, is happy to have his spot back in front of Pia’s Trattoria. Pool came back with a full supply of plants, herbs and trees, ready for the planting.

But is it safe? COVID-19 cases are on the rise in the U.S. We are still very much in a pandemic. Gulfport officials and business leaders say they’re making safety the highest priority in reopening. In conjunction with the reopening, the city collaborated with the GMC and Carroway + Rose to develop a campaign called “GulfportSTRONG.” (STRONG is an acronym for Social distance; Take the test; Routinely wash your hands; Only go out if you feel well; Notify your doctor if you feel sick; Go out wearing a mask.) “The GulfportSTRONG campaign focuses on the safety and responsibility of visitors while encouraging residents and visitors to be respectful to each other in following health and safety guidance during this COVID-19 pandemic,” said Mayor Sam Henderson. The first event to return under the GulfportSTRONG campaign is the Gulfport Tuesday Fresh Market. Soon to follow are the First Friday Art Walk on October 2, followed by the Third Saturday IndieFaire Market. “We’re working with a less-thanideal situation, but we’re rolling with the punches and operating within our new reality,” said Banno. “We don’t want to put anyone in danger, but realistically, we knew we had to find

LAURA MULROONEY

Say Hello to GulfportSTRONG

Gulfport resident Billie Glimpse wears her new t-shirt supporting GulfportSTRONG, an initiative developed in the aftermath of COVID to keep visitors, residents and businesses safe.

a way to give our community a sense of normalcy and our businesses a chance to welcome visitors safely back through their doors. That’s how we came up with the idea: GulfportSTRONG, and since so many of our events take place outside, we realized that by working with the city, we could reinvent the events and strengthen our community.” “We all are working together to bring visitors and patrons back to the City of Gulfport in a safe and responsible manner,” said Henderson. “Gulfport is doing it right,” said District 69 State Representative Jennifer Webb. “When we look for leadership during

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020

these times, our cities, like Gulfport, are the leaders that we need.” Webb expressed confidence in the way Gulfport is handling the reopening. “We’re masking up, we’re keeping our distance. We’re protecting our vendors and our business owners, customers and community,” said Webb. Despite Florida’s Phase 3 reopening announcement on September 25, Pinellas County’s COVID-19 restrictions remain in effect, requiring masks in most indoor spaces, as well as limiting bars and restaurants to 50% capacity. Learn more at covid19. pinellascounty.org.

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There’s a Pocket Prairie Coming to Town By Laura Mulrooney

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AMAZONITE is a stone of HARMONY both within ourselves and between people. It awakens COMPASSION through stimulation of the Heart Chakra. A stone of TRUTH and PEACE, you can trust the visions, dreams, and intuition that surface while meditating with it.

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City of Gulfport Horticulturist Toffer Ross and Gulfport Public Library Youth Services Librarian Cailey Klasson work on the library’s new pocket prairie.

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Pocket Prairies – small urban gardens featuring native plants – are gaining popularity and Gulfport is taking part. City of Gulfport Horticulturist Toffer Ross and Gulfport Public Library Youth Services Librarian Cailey Klasson are working on a special project to replace high-maintenance grass behind the library with a native foliage collaboration. “The main goal of our ‘pocket prairie’ is for it to be used as a teaching garden to children and adults once we can start in-person programming back up,” said Klasson. “I’d like to use the space during our K-5th grade science club once that can continue and also start an informal monthly gardening meetup.” The Gulfport Library Pocket Prairie will have four spaces featuring plant life from Florida meadows, wetlands, pinelands and coastal dune environments. The plan is for each quadrant to be separated by 100% recycled borders; treated shells will pave the designated walkway. It may not look like much now, but Ross and Klasson have spent quite a few late-summer afternoons creating

Gulfport’s newest interactive outdoor classroom. “In addition to adding a little natural beauty to the property, we want to teach the importance of planting Florida natives and specifically natives that will grow in this zone in Florida – since, as we know, Florida has a broad climate range,” said Klasson. “Our hope is that by getting people interested in planting native species they will also become interested in how this helps improve the ecosystem.” Klasson plans to teach outdoor curriculum on topics like the importance of planting natives to benefit pollinators (butterflies, bees and birds), and how to create a landscape that doesn’t rely on fertilizers. Registration isn’t necessary. Toffer and Klasson encourage all who wander to stop by and enjoy the space, especially when it’s a little more established. To Florida native plant purists, Ross says “there may be some species planted that are arguably not native, per se, but they’re not invasive. They’re ornamental and complimentary.”

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020


CITY OF ST. PETE BEACH, FLORIDA NOTICE OF GENERAL ELECTION AND QUALIFICATION PERIOD

CIUDAD DE ST. PETE BEACH, FLORIDA AVISO DE ELECCIÓN GENERAL Y PERIODO DE CALIFICACIÓN

The City of St. Pete Beach, Florida will hold a municipal election Tuesday, March 9, 2021, for the election of a Commissioner in District 2 and a Commissioner in District 4. The Qualification Period begins at 12:00 p.m. on November 2, 2020 and ends at 12:00 p.m. on November 13, 2020.

La Ciudad de St. Pete Beach, Florida celebrará elecciones municipales el Martes 9 de Marzo de 2021 para elegir a un comisionado en el Distrito 2 y un comisionado en el Distrito 4. El periodo de Calificación iniciará a las 12:00 p. m. del 2 de Noviembre de 2020 y finalizará a las 12:00 p. m. del 13 de Noviembre de 2020.

A candidate for Commissioner shall be a full-time resident of the City, and of the district which s/he seeks to represent, for at least twelve (12) months prior to the last day of the Qualification Period.

El candidato para comisionado debe ser un residente a tiempo completo de la Ciudad, y del distrito al que busca representar, por lo menos doce (12) meses antes al último día del periodo de calificación.

Candidate Guidebooks will be available October 28, 2020, in the Office of the City Clerk, St. Pete Beach City Hall, 155 Corey Avenue, St. Pete Beach, Florida 33706.

Las guías para los candidatos estarán disponibles a partir de el 28 de Octubre de 2020, en la Oficina de la Secretaria de la Ciudad, ubicada en St. Pete Beach City Hall, 155 Corey Avenue, St. Pete Beach, Florida 33706.

Please call the Office of the City Clerk at (727) 3639220 for further qualifying information or to schedule an appointment to pick up a Candidate Guidebook.

Por favor llame a la Oficina de la Secretaria de la Ciudad al (727) 363-9220 para recibir más información sobre la calificación o para programar una cita para recoger una guía para los candidatos.

Amber M. LaRowe, CMC City Clerk

Amber M. LaRowe, CMC Secretaria de la Ciudad

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Renaissance Dad: Parenting in the French Style By Jon Kile

JON KILE

The minute I suggested the name of this ongoing column, I regretted it. “Renaissance Dad.” It was merely a play on “Renaissance Man,” and nothing more. But it also sounds a little arrogant and implies that I parent in some advanced way with better outcomes. None of that is true. I’m a regular dad who was dealt a circumstance that put me in a position to have the kind of time many mothers have to spend with their kids. I’m reminded of an article that I read a while back that had a title that something along the lines of, “I decided to parent like a French dad and you’ll never believe what happened.” Click bait. Of course I clicked. The algorithm knows me. I assumed that the French method involved giving your kids wine and cigarettes. In reality it had more to do with not making the children the center of attention and not talking to them like babies. Turns out, my wife and I were accidentally doing this (sans wine and cigs). And is just me, or doesn’t all French sound like baby talk? About the same time our son started forming words (I believe he was three weeks old) the baby talk from us stopped. For me, it wasn’t out of some evolved notion that I should treat my kid like an intelligent being as much as the difficulty I have mustering false enthusiasm. Yes, we goo-goo-gah-gah’ed at both of our kids, but when speaking to them, we didn’t sound like Betty Boop. Now that they’re older, approximately 50% of the things our kids say to us begin with, “Dad, Mom, watch this.” This is followed by a mundane action, which they are extremely proud of, or didn’t quite go as planned. As much as I’d love to encourage them, I can’t feign being impressed by the 100th way they attempted to blow a bubble with their gum. In response, we’ve typically responded to these feats with sarcastic approval: “Amaaaazing.” Being exposed to sarcasm from the age of two, they learned to dish it back: “Look kids, horses!” “Amaaazing, Dad.” It’s always fun to hear my own voice coming out of a scale model of myself. In terms of not making them the center of attention, this isn’t some sort of high-level twist on parenting. Who are we fooling? Kids are the center of attention, but I like to think we draw the line. We’ll sign them up for different activities and sports like you’re supposed to, but we’re not going to build

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our lifestyle around the possibility that they’ll win an Olympic medal in fencing. As much as we’d like to accommodate all possible interests, their activities have to be able to fit into the family dynamic. I think this attitude stems from when I was a kid and my dad, faced with driving me to daily baseball practices, dusted off a yellow 10-speed rusting in our garage. I rode what my teammates dubbed “The Brady Bunch Bike” through Southern California traffic and my baseball career peaked at age 13. Maybe my dad read a French parenting book. I’m not criticizing parents who do invest heavily into helping their child excel at something – because I think many of them take great joy in doing that – but I took no joy sitting in a folding chair during karate class. When the pandemic hit, parents were presented with a new set of challenges. Parents had to make sure their kids were continuing to learn while also keeping them entertained without places to go. For the first month, even the beaches were closed. It was at this time that we allowed our son to get Fortnite. I’ll be the first to admit that by most metrics, our kids spend too much time on their devices. I’m giving them a Pandemic Pass. Rather than set time limits on their electronics, we’ve focused on measuring their time off their screen. The benefit of this is that when they’re asked to put the iPad down, they do it, because they know they’ll have time on it later. After all, what is “time” in a pandemic? All this is to say that I’m just a normal dad, most of the time. Once in a while, I actually am a genius – most recently when I picked up a classy $125 WalMart above-ground pool with filter just as the pandemic started. Soon there was a shortage and friends looking for the same pool found it selling on Ebay for $800. OK, I didn’t pick up Bitcoin on the ground floor, but our kids swim in it daily and my wife offers me frequent praise. Win-win. What is a parent to take from all of this? Relax! The damage we do to our children happens slowly over time. When I was a kid I’d spend hours throwing a baseball, but when forced to practice piano everyday for 30 minutes, I never practiced for 31 minutes. Embrace the things they enjoy and help them develop healthy patterns. Give them some power to choose their pastimes. The added benefit of this laissez faire approach is that when you let them be their own people, they’ll have less to blame you for later. It’s this je ne sais quoi that makes the difference. What’s so French about that? Jon Kile is a stay-at-home dad, writer and amateur homeschool teacher in St. Petersburg. He and his wife Monica, a nonprofit consultant and marathoner, have a habit of loading their two kids into their RV and disappearing down the backroads of America. After a series of major medical emergencies in 2016, he was diagnosed with a rare condition called Vascular Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, in which his fragile arteries are prone to spontaneous rupture. Jon has adjusted his lifestyle while finding inner peace and humor against the backdrop of raising two feral children. Together, they’ve determined to “live in the moment.” Reach him at jkilewrites@gmail.com or visit dontmakemeturnthisvanaround.com.

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020


Back to the Original Plan: Census Ends October 31 By Laura Mulrooney

CENSUS.GOV

A U.S. Census worker canvassing in 2020.

Residents now have an additional month to be counted in the 2020 census. U.S. District Judge Lucy Koh approved a court order Thursday, September 24 extending the deadline to October 31 for census submission, along with a later deadline for data review by U.S. Census Bureau statisticians. Koh said the shortened schedule ordered by President Donald Trump’s administration this past July would likely produce inaccurate results that would last a decade. In August, a group of civil rights organizations and local governments sued the U.S. Census Bureau and the Trump administration to block the government from ending the count in September, arguing that the shortened schedule would result in undercounting minority groups. Deadline extensions allow harder-to-reach communities a fair chance to be counted and be accurately represented. The census is used to determine how $1.5 trillion in federal

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020

spending is distributed each year for local communities, schools, roads and other public services – and the number of representatives each state has in Congress. Florida is currently ranked 33rd of the total 52 states and territories, with a self-response rate of 63%. U.S. Census Bureau statisticians will start tallying the final data on November 1 and will have until April 2021 to review their findings, determine funding distribution and the number of state representatives. “Much of the federal funding that goes to local governments is based on population and population data comes directly from the Census,” says Gulfport Mayor Sam Henderson. “If people fail to be counted, Gulfport’s slice of the pie gets smaller and the benefits per capita are less than they should be. Be counted so we can make it count for all of us.” If you have questions concerning the U.S. Census, or are ready to fill out your form, visit 2020census.gov.

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business Beaches, Rumors and Rum

The Stinger Bar and Pepperz, across 49th Street South, are the only two Gulfport bars outside of the downtown area. On Monday, September 14 bars were able to open up at half capacity. “We’re open and the owner has no plans to close the doors again,” said Stinger’s bartender Verena Alvarado. Hats off to the little bar for making it through a time of uncertainty. LAURA MULROONEY

If this sounds familiar, that’s because it is. Buy Beaches First is not a new program. Tampa Bay Beaches Chamber of Commerce has relaunched Buy Beaches First, a shop local movement, to bring shoppers back to smaller beach businesses after the pandemic. Buy Beaches First began in 2015 as a social media contest to show local businesses how much an online presence would help their companies. Whenever shoppers visited local beach business, they would snap photos and check in with the hashtag #BuyBeachesFirst. In turn, each week the TBBCoC randomly selected one lucky shopper to receive a prize donated by one of the chamber members. The prize isn’t still valid but the campaign is still active. “The response we got in 2015 was incredible, to say the least,” said TBBCoC Marketing and Member Support Jessica Morrow. “Locals and visitors from all over were using the hashtag and were proud to mark themselves as a beach community supporter. What started as a short, holidayseason campaign turned into a movement.” Organizers ask that folks help bring business back to the community by shopping local and using #BuyBeachesFirst on Facebook and Instagram, and tag @buybeachesfirst. Squashing Rumors

STINGER BAR

The Stinger Bar isn’t going anywhere, Gulfport. It’s small but mighty. The little bar off of Gulfport Boulevard and 49th Street South was forced to close – as were all bars in the state – after COVID-19 cases skyrocketed in June.

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Rumbles Bakery Pop-Up

RENATA AUGAITIS

Buy Beaches First

Looking for a late-night treat? Perhaps you’d like a dessert infused with valerian root, said to help with anxiety, restlessness and insomnia; or a date-night sweet infused with blue lotus, thought to be a calming aphrodisiac that illuminates social skills.

RENATA AUGAITIS

By Laura Mulrooney

If those sound enchanting, visit pastry chef Renata Augaitis of Rumbles Bakery. She’s got a pop-up shop every Tuesday morning in the Art Village Courtyard, 2902 Beach Blvd. S. Augaitis studied Culinary Arts and Baking & Pastry Arts in Lake Tahoe, CA. She went on to be the head chef for an awardwinning vegan and gluten-free restaurant in her hometown of Chicago. Two years ago, Augaitis found her way to Gulfport and opened Rumbles Bakery, a unique wholesale bakery with custom infusions of CBD and a variety of healthy mix-ins and herbs. Augaitis plans to eventually open a brick and mortar establishment in the city. Along with her herb-infused delicacies, Augaitis is known for her specialty rum balls. All of her items can be made with or without any of the infusions she offers on her website, rumblesbakery.com. Try desserts by Augaitis prior to her pop-up debut at SumitrA Espresso Lounge, 2838 Beach Blvd. S.

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020


things to do Beach Bites, Outdoor Entertainment and Football The weather is changing and Florida’s version of fall is upon us. Enjoy it with live music, and explore the food scene while you get your trivia fix. Make sure to bring your mask, keep your space and, when you can, make a reservation to keep your outing as smooth and safe as possible. FRIDAYS: The City of St. Pete Beach Parks & Recreation Department is bringing back the popular October Concert Series. Every Friday, locals can gather to enjoy live music and entertainment. Due to social distancing, space is limited so be sure to purchase tickets in advance. The series kicks off with Titans of Rock with tributes to Bon Jovi and Journey, followed by Big Brother Band (10/9), 2 Dog night (10/16), Horny Toads (10/23), and finishing with Stormbringer (10/30). Bring your own food as there are no vendors. $5 for a 10x10 lawn square, $10 for picnic table seating. Every Friday through October. 7-9 p.m. Horan Park, 7701 Boca Ciega Dr., St. Pete Beach. spbrec.com

THUNDERBIRD HOTEL

By Jenna Rimensnyder

p.m. Thunderbird Ikki Woo Woo’s Tiki Hut, 10700 Gulf Blvd., Treasure Island. thunderbirdflorida.com

Burgers & Tap House, 5905 Gulf Blvd., St. Pete Beach. blvdburgers. com

TUESDAYS: Know a bunch of useless facts and want to be rewarded with free beer and gift cards? Head to Boulevard Burgers any Tuesday to get your game on. They’re super dog-friendly, offering covered outdoor seating as well as indoor dining to escape the heat (or rain). Every Tuesday. 7-9 p.m. Boulevard

WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY: Get over the mid-week hump at Billy’s Stone Crab with a cold one and live music by local talent. They also have a $9.99 fish and shrimp fry special on Mondays, and a Taco Tuesday deal for $4.99. Every Wednesday and Thursday. Billy’s Stone Crab, 1 Collany Rd., Tierra Verde. billystonecrab.com

FRIDAY-SUNDAY: The Taste of the Beaches event returns – with some 2020 twists. You can get your tickets and dine at the nearly 30 participating restaurants from shore to shore. Take your time – you might even find your new neighborhood hangout or date-night destination. $10 for three tastes. October 2-4. Locations vary. tampabaybeaches.com/taste SUNDAYS: Need a little escape to get your football fix? After all, it’s a celebration in itself for sports to be back. Swing by Caddy’s to cheer your team and grab some drinks by the water. There’s also daily live music and free beach amenities. Every Sunday through January 31. 1-11:30 p.m. Caddy’s on the Beach, 9000 W. Gulf Blvd., Treasure Island. caddys.com MONDAY: Local singer-songwriter Fiona Frensche is providing the entertainment with live music to start your week. Indulge in some tropical drinks before taking a walk in the sand on Treasure Island at the Thunderbird Beach Resort. October 5. 3:30-7:30

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020

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things to do: gulfport TUESDAYS: Support small local businesses by browsing vendors with an eclectic selection of wares, while getting some fresh air. From produce to artisan goods, you can find anything you need, and some things you want and don’t need at all. Free; new social distancing rules in place. Every Tuesday. 9 a.m.-2 p.m. Downtown Gulfport. visitgulfportflorida.com WEDNESDAY: On the first Wednesday of every month, Batman Media hosts Mixtape Bingo at Caddy’s in Gulfport. Come for the tunes, videos and free bingo, stay for the brews and chicken wings. It’s time to relearn how to communicate in-person again. Free to play. October 7. 7-9 p.m. Caddy’s Gulfport, 3128 Beach Blvd S, Gulfport. Caddys.com WEDNESDAYS: Get crafty at the Ceramic Tile Carving workshop at Brenda Mcmahon Gallery. The Gallery hosts A Taste of Art events where attendees enjoy gourmet bites and wine while creating carved tile. Social distancing regulations are in place, masks are required. $125 per person, four people maximum. October 7. 5-8 p.m. 2901 Beach Blvd. S., #104 Gulfport. brendamcmahon.com FRIDAY: Gulfport’s Art Walk returns with “Metamorphosis: Art for Hope and Healing” theme. If you haven’t left your cave in a while, allow local artists to wow you and offer up some therapeutic views. Around since 1993, the Art Walk is now a curated space for creatives to showcase original pieces. This is a family friendly event, so bring the entire gang. Make sure everyone is sporting a mask. October 2. 5-8 p.m. Gulfport Merchants Chamber, downtown Gulfport. visitgulfportflorida.com THURSDAYS: Essential oil classes return to the Gulfport Recreation Center once a month from local Master Herbalist & Certified Aromatherapist Jennifer Gilman. Learn about a specific topics and then make a DIY item using the essential oils to take home. Masks are required. Thursdays, from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.; $10 per class. Gulfport Recreation Center, 5730 Shore Blvd. S. Call Jennifer at 813-263-3919 or email Jennifer@TheHerbalCabinet.com.

SATURDAY: The Gulfport Sustainability Committee and Most Holy Name of Jesus Catholic Church present “West Side Story” in the church parking lot. Get there early to get a good parking space or lawn/beach chair space. They’ll have movie treats for sale, but feel free to bring your own. Suggested donation of $20 per vehicle or $5 per person. Dress like a character in the movie and maybe win a prize. The Sustainability Committee will use proceeds for more garbage cans in Gulfport; the Church will use their proceeds for youth group activities. Saturday, October 3 at 7 p.m. Most Holy Name of Jesus Catholic Church, 5800 15th Ave. S. Contact April Thanos, 206-501-7836. THURSDAYS: Zumba with Magda blends upbeat Latin rhythms with easy-to-follow choreography for a total body workout. All levels welcome. Wear comfortable clothes and bring water. Masks required to enter and on breaks. Thursdays from 6 to 7 p.m. at the Gulfport Recreation Center, 5730 Shore Blvd. S. Contact Magda, 727-214-7868. THURSDAYS: The Gulfport Recreation Center has open basketball for adults 18 and over. Bring a water bottle, your basketball shoes and your court skills to have fun and meet new friends. Annual registration is $3 for Gulfport residents and $25 for non-residents. Proof of Gulfport residency required. Masks required to enter and on breaks. Thursdays from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Gulfport Recreation Center, 5730 Shore Blvd. S. 727-893-1068. TUESDAYS & THURSDAYS: Adults 18 and over are welcome to play table tennis at the Gulfport Recreation Center on Tuesday and Thursday mornings from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Bring your paddle and your skills. Annual registration is $3 for Gulfport residents and $25 for non-residents. Proof of Gulfport residency required. Masks required to enter and on breaks. Gulfport Recreation Center, 5730 Shore Blvd. 727-893-1068.

SATURDAY: If your taste in music runs to classic rock, then you should head to O’Maddy’s to catch local band The Conspiracy. The brews are cold, the music is good, and you can even save your sink from dishes by sticking around for dinner. October 3. 5-9 p.m. O’Maddy’s Bar & Grille, 5405 Shore Blvd. S., Gulfport. Omaddys.com

WEEKLY: Ballet and Tap Dance classes return to the Gulfport Recreation Center. Classes are Wednesday evenings: ages 3 to 6 from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m.; ages 9 to 16 from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. Hip Hop Dance classes are on Friday evenings from 6:30 to 7:30 p.m. for ages 6 to 8; 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. for ages 9 to 16 . All classes limited to 10 students and require masks. All instructors are Level 2 background screened. Masks required to enter and on breaks. Gulfport Recreation Center, 5730 Shore Blvd. S. Contact Lisa Walker, 727-742-2594.

SATURDAY: Gulfport Lions will serve their first pancake breakfast since the pandemic began. Following all CDC guidelines, Lions’ members and volunteers will serve allyou-can-eat pancakes, scrambled eggs, sausage, coffee, tea and orange juice for $8. Kids under 12 eat for half price. The Lions will limit seating to 50% capacity, and will also have outdoor seating and to-go meals. Saturday, October 3, 8 to 11 a.m. Lions Club of Gulfport, 4630 Tifton Dr. S. (behind the Gulfport Marina). Find the Gulfport Lions Club on Facebook or call 727-366-6341.

WEEKLY: Get into the latest sports trend: Pickleball. Adults 18 and over play at the Gulfport Recreation Center Monday mornings from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. for intermediate/ advanced players; Tuesday mornings, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. for beginners; all levels play Tuesday evenings from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. and Thursday mornings from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Annual registration is $3 for Gulfport residents and $25 for non-residents. Proof of Gulfport residency required. Masks required to enter and on breaks. Gulfport Recreation Center, 5730 Shore Blvd. 727-893-1068.

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theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020


arts Metamorphosis: The Journey to Freedom for Carina Krehl By Lynn Taylor

CARINA KREHL

G. Woodson African American Museum in St. Petersburg. Social issues are an area of interest for Krehl, who is also involved in the Roll to the Polls initiative’s weekly events leading up to the November 3 election. A documentary is also in the works. “The documentary will encompass the mural, voting and spotlight different events and the people who are typically overlooked who have been so involved in these projects,” she says. Krehl says she’s excited about participating in the return of Gulfport’s Art Walk and about how its theme, “Metamorphosis: Art For Hope and Healing,” fits so much of her work. “This year of awareness led to true metamorphosis for me as an individual,” says Krehl. “Consciousness holds more power than the subconscious mind. Metamorphosis is the journey to freedom.” For more information about Carina Krehl’s work go to carinakrehl.com.

Artist Carina Krehl’s motto is “It’s a Renaissance Woman kind of thing,” and after talking with her and discussing her work, it becomes obvious that the catchphrase is a perfect fit. A recent University of Florida visual arts graduate who recently moved to St. Petersburg, the neo-surrealist artist will be a featured artist at Gulfport’s First Friday Art Walk on October 2. “My work subsumes mediums spanning across illustrative book writing, traditional painting and drawing, ceramics, virtual reality art, digital and logo design as well as performance,” says Krehl. Her work draws on what she calls the core values of radical gratitude, attitude, loyalty and process. Her latest series of oil paintings and poems is titled “Lies We Tell Ourselves: Finding Truth Beyond Insecurity.” She’s finished four paintings – with titles such as “Archetypal Figure,” “Charmeleona” and “Not Good Enough” – with two more planned to complete the series. Each painting is a self-portrait that documents her conscious awakening, which she says began in 2019, and explores what she calls “happiness blockers, subconscious falsehoods that hold no bearing.” “This series is very much a self-examination and questions how we lie to ourselves,” she says. Krehl has more projects in the works, including a book and a video music album. She recently contributed background work to the Black Lives Matter mural in front of the Dr. Carter

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020

CARINA KREHL

“Smoke Fear Away”

“Charmeleona”

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What We’re Reading By Lynn Taylor

“What We’re Reading” is about readers in the community and the books they love, in their own words.

Acapulco and one woman’s need to flee to the U.S. with her young son to avoid the same death as her family, which was massacred because of her journalist husband’s reporting. Closeup views of migrant life make this work of fiction very real. It grabbed me on page one and it’s hard to put down.

Margie Davis Book: “American Dirt” by Jeanine Cummins.

Nanette Davis Book: “RedHead by the Side of the Road” by Anne Tyler

My Zoom book club chose “American Dirt.” It starts with the narco war in

The main character, Micah Mortimer, has a somewhat OCD personality

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Michael Taylor Book: “Next To Last Stand” by Craig Johnson Walt Longmire, the Absaroka County Sheriff, gets entangled in a search for “Custer’s Last Fight,” a long-lost painting by Cassilly Adams that was printed as a poster and distributed by Anheuser-Busch. This is the 21st book featuring Longmire, on which the former A&E TV series “Longmire” (now on Netflix) was based. Adventure, humor and the modern old west. What’s not to like?

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theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020


Artist at Work By Lynn Taylor

LYNN TAYLOR

Anna Ayres was hard at work last week on her nature-based column murals outside Brenda McMahon Gallery in Gulfport. The mural’s theme is nature and how it inspires art. Anna’s paintings of the natural world are also on display inside the gallery. “The mural represents what inspires the artist,” says Ayres. “The figure represents the artist as focal point.” Gulfport muralists have been hard at work lately. In the Village Courtyard, artist Kiersty Long is also finishing a tribute to the legendary John Prine, who died earlier this year from COVID-19 complications. The Gabber will have more on her tribute in the weeks to come.

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theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020

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announcements Drop Your Ballot at St. Pete Beach Library The St. Pete Beach Public Library will be a ballot drop-off location for the November general election. Poll workers from the Pinellas County Supervisor of Elections will be on site from October 19 to November 2, Monday to Friday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. If you are voting by mail, you can bring your completed ballot to the library instead of mailing it. Visit votepinellas. com for more.

City of St. Petersburg Ready to Restart The City of St. Petersburg announced on Tuesday, September 29 that events will resume and public facilities – libraries, recreation centers and others – will reopen Monday, October 5. The Restart St. Pete initiative means third-party, co-sponsored and private events can resume, but must comply

with guidelines from the CDC and local health authorities. Recreation center rooms will be available to rent, and gymnasiums and fitness centers can resume operations. Each center will have their own opening plan and COVID-19 procedures. Call your local center for more. St. Petersburg Public Libraries will reopen with limited hours and curb-side pickup. Visit splibraries.org for details. Find updates, resources and more at restartstpete.com.

Beta Sigma Phi Meets Again Gamma Omega Master Executive Board will meet on Monday, October 7 at 7 pm. at the home of Val Rankin. Beta Sigma Phi is a social and cultural women’s organization and our council has eight chapters of various degrees with members of all ages. Many chapters have adjusted meeting times and locations to practice social distancing. For more, call First Vice President Joyce Powell at 727-641-1245.

A Little Help from Santa It’s not yet Halloween, but it’s never too early to think about Santa. Gulfport’s “Operation Santa” is ready to make lists and check them twice. Gulfport residents who could use a little help with Christmas gifts for their children are encouraged to contact the Gulfport Police Department, 2401 53rd St. S., for Christmas assistance through December 18, Monday through Friday. Each family’s head of household must bring photo identification, proof of Gulfport residence, as well as the name(s) and age(s) of child(ren) living in the home. Folks must pick up gifts at the police department December 20 and 21, by appointment only. Operation Santa is also looking for donations! Any help is appreciated, and they’re looking for donations of money, new unwrapped toys or gift cards. Call 727-893-1097 to learn more.

Make Pinellas Count America gets one chance each decade to count its entire population and the 2020 Census is your chance to make sure Pinellas gets its fair share. The census determines the size of political representation and how billions of dollars are spent on federal and local programs. Public transit, affordable housing, school lunches, Medicaid and SNAP are just a few programs that rely on census data. Your response is secure, confidential and protected by law. The short survey is a civic duty laid out in the Constitution – and vitally important to your community’s future. Take the census by mail, phone or online. Visit pinellascounty. org/census2020 for more.

Need a Mask? The City of Gulfport hands out free masks to all who need them at two locations: the Gulfport Casino Ballroom, 5500 Shore Blvd. S., weekdays from 1 to 8 p.m.; and the 49th Street Neighborhood Center, 1617 49th St. S., weekdays, 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Find other local mask distribution sites at covid19. pinellascounty.org.

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theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020


WE’RE HERE FOR YOU We’re thinking of you and your loved ones as we navigate these unpredictable times together. Rest assured, our commitment to helping you thrive remains unwavering, and no question is too big or too small. You can always reach us, and we look forward to providing guidance and support via phone, text, email, and virtual chats – whatever platform works best for you. We’re here to help, ready and equipped with a list of several additional resources for seniors. Whether you or a family member are in urgent need or just need to talk, we’re here for you. If it matters to you – it matters to us. We’re a people company, and YOU are our people. Please do not hesitate to reach out anytime. Call 727-381-5411 today.

1255 Pasadena Avenue South • St. Petersburg, FL 33707 727-381-5411 • watermarkcommunities.com A WATERMARK RETIREMENT COMMUNITY

INDEPENDENT LIVING • ASSISTED LIVING • MEMORY CARE SKILLED NURSING AT THE SPRINGS, OPERATED BY SUMMIT CARE INC.

FLORIDA ASSISTED LIVING LICENSE #0083

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020

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PLAN TO BE HEALTHY AND SAVE*

Contact lens Specialist • Children & Adult Vision Care • Quality Fashion Eyewear • Treatment of Eye Disease • Emergency Care & Lasik Consultation • Glaucoma & Cataract Testing Most Insurance Plans Accepted, Including Eyemed, Medicaid, Medicare, United Health Care, Advantica, Humana, Avmed, VSP, Cigna, Comp Benefits, BCBS

OPEN EVENINGS & SATURDAYS BY APPOINTMENT

Dr. Stuart Pollack GULFPORT CHIROPRACTIC 5301 Gulfport Blvd. S., Gulfport

(727) 321-9520 *Wellness Plan $150 Annual Fee • Evaluation Exam $30 Visits (as often as you like)

Wellness • Auto Accident • Chronic Pain

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theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020


Have a Blast at Gulfport’s Teen Night Register now for Gulfport’s Teen Night Program for teens and middle school kids to age 17. Teens enjoy recreational and social activities, as well as monthly field trips, cooking projects, service projects and overnight lock-ins. The teens get to use the Gulfport Recreation Center’s gymnasium, gameroom and outdoor area. Hours are Monday, Wednesday and Friday evenings from 6 to 9 p.m. Annual registration fee is $3 for residents/$25 non-residents. For more, call John at 727-893-1079.

Curbside Reading at the Library Don’t feel safe going back into public places? The Gulfport Public Library has you covered at the curb! You can pick up requested materials — books, reemployment forms, tax forms, your copy of the Gabber, what have you — at the curb. You can either reserve books online, via email, or by calling the library, Pick up materials Monday through Friday 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. and Saturday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Get more details at mygulfport.us/gpl.

at Gulfport Recreation Center, 5730 Shore Blvd. S. The program provides bus transportation from Pasadena Fundamental, Bear Creek, Gulfport and Douglas Jamerson Elementary. Hours are until 5:30 p.m., with extended hours available until 6 p.m. for an extra fee. The Recreation Center participates in the Afterschool Nutrition Program, a part of the Child Care Food Program, to provide nutritious snacks to children in after-school programs at no extra charge. Register Monday to Friday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Call 727-893-1068 for fees.

Virtual Learning on the Beach St. Pete Beach Parks and Recreation offers a Virtual Learning Assistance Program at the St. Pete Beach Community Center. The program allows for smaller groups of kids, with a dedicated staff member monitoring their engagement with the PCS online curriculum. This is not a tutoring program, but oversight for

children working with MyPCS online curriculum. Looking for more fun for the kids? St. Pete Beach’s licensed after school program has games, sports, homework time, swimming and more. Transportation provided from Azalea Elementary and Gulf Beaches Elementary. Go to spbrec. com or call 727-363-9245.

Get Gulfport on the Go Check out the newest way to connect in Gulfport: an app for iOS and Android. The official City of Gulfport app gives residents a simple way to ask questions or report potholes, signs, trash or debris, code violations and more. Users can submit GPS data and photos, keep track of requests and find direct links to utility bill payment, the city calendar, frequently asked questions, the city employee directory, sanitation department, newsletter signup and more. Email info@mygulfport.us, call 727-893-1118 or visit mygulfport.us/ cityapp.

Check Out Child Care Kids in kindergarten through age 14 can now register for the 20202021 School Year Child Care Program

WALK-INS WELCOME What is it Nun on the Run?

• Seasonally-inspired, chef-created dinners that are fast, affordable and the gourmet takeout experience. • No prep, no cleanup, just reheat and eat!

How does it work?

• Menu rotates weekly - posted on Stella’s Facebook/Instagram and in newsletter

How to order?

• Call Stella’s during business hours (7am-2pm) to speak with staff • Place orders over phone - pay via phone/at time of pickup

Dr. Roxene Riles PhD, APRN 3955 58 St. N. 727-347-2557

Personal Dietary Restrictions?

• Vegetarian/Vegan and gluten-free options available. For specific issue or allergy, contact Chef Morgan at stellasdeli@gmail.com

2908-A BEACH BLVD S • 727-303-0976 • STELLASINGULFPORT.COM

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020

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TRAVEL IS FUN TOURS

Licensed FL Seller of Travel #ST12255

727-347-1600 1600

• • • •

Tours Designed with you in mind! Full Brochures available on all trips! Over 38 years in business Expert Drivers, Luxury Coaches!

www.tiftours.com

919 Tyrone Blvd, St. Pete, FL 33710

SEMINOLE CASINO IMMOKALEE NOV 16-17, 2020—2 DAY

2 Casino Visits, 1 Night at Drury Inn Ft Myer’s—2 Meals included!!

COST: $175* per person double or $219 single

ST. AUGUSTINE CHRISTMAS PARADE DEC 3-5, 2020—3 DAY

Includes 2 Nights in beautiful St. Augustine, 3 meals, Full Day Trolley Pass, Familiarization trolley tour, Night of Lights, Annual Christmas Parade & so much more! Loads of Attractions! Enjoy America’s First City at the most wonderful time of the Year!

COST: $379* per person double or $479 single

GRAND OLE OPRY & CALLAWAY XMAS DEC 13-18, 2020—6 DAY

10 Meals (5B, 1L, 4D) Two Nights at Spectacular Gaylord Opryland Resort with Oak Ridge Boys Christmas Dinner Show, Gen’l Jackson Showboat & Callaway Gardens with Fantasy in Lights tour!

COST: $1149* per person double or $1519 single

TROPICAL CHRISTMAS DEC 25-27, 2020—3 DAY

6 Meals incl, 2 Nights at the Ft. Myers Drury Inn, with nightly 5:30 Kickback with Food, Drinks & Full Hot Breakfast Daily, Performance of the Irving Berlin Classic—”Holiday Inn” at the Broadway Palm Dinner Theater, 10,000 Islands Everglades scenic boat tour & more!

COST: $469* per person double or $555 single More Great 2020 Multi-Day Tours

• • • •

OCT 12, 7 DAY—AMISHLANDS OF PENNSYLVANIA…$929*/$1185 DEC 31, 3 DAY—NEW YEARS EVE CRUISE on the Caloosahatchee!... $TBD JAN 10, 4 DAY—BILOXI GETAWAY at the BEAU RIVAGE!...$339*/$469 MAY 12, 16 DAY—BEST OF THE WEST—GRAND CANYON!..$2369*/$3079

Plus Dozens of Great Day Trips! Here are just a few!

• • • •

• • •

OCT 3, SAT—KENNEDY SPACE CTR Shuttle Atlantis, IMAX Movies!...$119 OCT 21, WED—”MAMMA MIA” at Broadway Palm Dinner Theater, w/ lunch…$99 OCT 23, FRI—RED BARN FLEA MARKET over—600 Booths & Shops!...$35 OCT 24, SAT—FISHERMAN’s VILLAGE—in Punta Gorda—Lunch on your own— ”Throwback to the 50’s” celebration with music & Antique Cars!...$45 OCT 25, SUN—Mount Dora! Day for shopping & lunch in quaint old Florida town, optional trip to Renninger’s Antiques offered as well…$49 OCT 28, WED—VICTORY CASINO CRUISE, Free Play & lunch included!...$79 NOV 4, WED—FLORIDA AIRBOAT RIDE on the Withlacoochee River…$69 NOV 7, SAT—Tampa YACHT STARSHIP BRUNCH! - $5 unlimited mimosa’s..$89

FREE TRAVEL CLUB MEETINGS! - Prizes & Excitement!!! WEDNESDAY OCT 14th, 1:30PM at Big Apple Buf fet in Tyrone Gardens or on Facebook live!! 24

Need Help with Rent or Utilities? You can now apply for help with overdue rent, mortgage or utilities through Pinellas CARES by texting COVIDCARES to 898211. Pinellas residents need a signed form attesting job or income loss from COVID-19 and $10K or less in the bank. You can get up to $5K per household, including new bills, even if you previously received help. Learn more at cares. pinellas.gov.

St. Pete Beach Public Library The Little Free Pantry located just outside the St. Pete Beach Library, 7470 Gulf Blvd., has been more popular than anticipated and they would appreciate any donations. Also for the kids: Try their new Take & Make Kits on the themes of art, engineering, coding or upcycling. Activities are geared toward grades 3 to 5 and offer a fun, hands-on way to learn at home. Visit spblibrary. com for more, or to browse the catalog.

Gulfport Utility Customer Service Open Gulfport City Hall is now open for utility customers for walk-up in-person services. Folks will have to wear masks, use sanitizer and stay physically distant. Customers can make credit card payments online at municipalonlinepayments.com/ gulfportfl. For billing questions, call 727-893-1016 or email utilitiesinfo@ mygulfport.us. If you have a water emergency after hours, call the nonemergency police number at 727-5826177.

Tot-Time and VPK is Ready for Kids Registration continues for the 20202021 Tot Time and VPK Programs in Gulfport. The Tot Time Program is a pre-school, hands-on program for kids ages 3 to 5 with multi-day options. Program hours are from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Both programs aim to make learning fun for children and help prepare them for kindergarten. Limited spots available. Register from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. Call 727-893-1068 for more.

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020


Chair-ity Benefit Postponed – Again By Lynn Taylor

WOLFGANG DEININGER

Event coordinator Karen Love, left, discusses chair storage specifics with Lions members John McEwan and Ron Coyne.

When this year’s Best Seat in the House: A Chair-ity Auction With a View was postponed in March due to COVID-19, the plan was to hold the event in October. However, due to ongoing COVID

concerns, organizers decided to wait until March of next year, says event coordinator Karen Love. Since the March cancellation, the 10 wooden Adirondack chairs, each creatively painted by a different

Gulfport artist, have been stored in different locations around Gulfport and moved numerous times by a small but dedicated group of volunteers. When that was no longer feasible, Love reached out to the Gulfport Lions Club, and they agreed to store the chairs until the event that benefits the Gulfport Senior Center Foundation is held in 2021. In addition to the Adirondack chairs, art-embellished vintage windows created by six different artists, will also be auctioned off at the benefit by auctioneer Philip Bailey. The windows are currently on display at the Gulfport Public Library. According to Love, last year’s inaugural benefit auction, held in the Art Village Courtyard, raised $7,000 for the Gulfport Multipurpose Senior Center Foundation. She hopes the next one will exceed $10,000 with 100 percent of the proceeds going to the foundation. The exact date and location haven’t been finalized. For updates and more photos of the chairs, find the Best Seat in the House on Facebook.

Robert J. Myers, Esq. Akerson Law Offices

347-5131

Complimentary Estate Plan Review

535 49th Street North St. Petersburg FL 33710

C ity O f G ulfpOr t M eetinGs City Clerk’s Office • October 2020

Wills/Trusts

October 6, 2020

Council Meeting - 6:00 pm Virtual Zoom Meeting

Probate Trust Administration

October 7, 2020

Planning/Zoning Board - No Meeting

Real Estate Sales/Closings

October 9, 2020

Senior Citizens Advisor y Committee - No Meeting

Estate Planning

Business Law Elder Law Disputes Personal Injury * The hiring of an attorney is an important decision that should not be based solely upon advertising. Before you decide, ask us to send you free written information about our qualifications and experience.

October 14, 2020

Board of Adjustment - No Meeting

October 20, 2020

Council Meeting - 6:00 pm Catherine A Hickman Theater

All meetings are open to the public and are held in the City Hall, City Council Chambers, 2401 53rd Street South, unless otherwise noted. Meetings may occasionally be added, cancelled or rescheduled after this list is published; please check the city’s website mygulfport.us for updated information and login information for the City Council Virtual Meetings.

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020

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gulfport mayor’s corner Gulfport, we are in the midst of a crucial time in terms of our civic duty. The election approaches, the Census is wrapping up and COVID-19 is still posing a threat to our health and economy. So my message to you is this: Play your part in all of these important tasks. It matters. Election Day is Tuesday, November 3, but there are multiple opportunities to vote before then. Early voting runs from October 19 to November 1, 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily. The closest location to Gulfport is the SPC Allstate Center, 3200 34th St. S. Make sure you have valid photo ID with your signature. Also, if you are a mail-in voter but have qualms about the process, there are multiple remote ballot drop off locations. The one in Gulfport is at the 49th Street Neighborhood Center, 1617 49th St. S., which accepts absentee ballots from October 19 to November 2, 8 a.m. until 3 p.m. You cannot drop these off on Election Day. If you are voting in person, go to your usual polling place. These will be posted on the city website at mygulfport.us as soon as we receive final word from the Supervisor of Elections. For more information, contact the Supervisor of Elections at 727-464-VOTE or votepinellas.com. Many thanks to our local voter advocacy group, Gulfport Votes 100%. The U.S. Census happens every 10 years, and time is running out on this round. It is easy to do, and there are no strings attached. Funding for your county and city relies on this data for the next 10 years. Help make sure that your community isn’t short-changed. If you haven’t already participated in the census, please visit 2020census.gov or call 844-330-2020 to make sure you get counted. And finally, I know we are all sick of the sickness, but please continue to take precautions for your health and the health of others. Policy changes do not kill viruses. During the ongoing reopening of life as we knew it, please don’t forget that we still have a personal responsibility

SAM HENDERSON

Be Counted, Be Heard and Be Smart

to mitigate the spread of this disease. Mask up, wash up and spread out. Thank you to the Gabber for this opportunity to reach you all. Stay strong, stay smart and stay safe. Sam Henderson Mayor, City of Gulfport 727-744-6186

Gentle, Friendly, and Personalized Care Modern, State-of-the-Art Facility General Dentistry Working with Latest Technologies

727-954-4431

StPeteModernDentistry.com

5500 1st Ave N St. Petersburg

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theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020


the gabs Should the next Supreme Court justice be appointed immediately or after January’s presidential inauguration?

Sunya, St. Petersburg: “I believe this decision about the Supreme Court justice should be made after the election, just because there are so many moving parts happening right now and a potential transition. I feel like it just makes the most sense to hold off until that time.”

Teresa Bridges, Gulfport: “I think we need to wait to appoint the new Supreme Court justice after the election, because that is the mandate of the people.”

6.00 Watch Batteries $

+ Tax, with Gabber coupon, no other discounts apply

Jim Mahfet, St. Petersburg: “Yes, we definitely should wait. I think it should reflect the opinion of the current president at that time, to reflect the will of the people that voted him in as president.”

• Quality Onsite Jewelry Repair • New & Vintage Jewelry • Custom Designed Jewelry • Top dollar paid for your unwanted jewelry • Family Owned & Operated in South Pasadena for over 30 Years

727-344-2524

6801 Gulfport Blvd #12 • South Pasadena • Located across the street from Pasadena Shopping Center, next to Winn Dixie

Leonard Insurance Agency LeonardFamily Family Insurance Agency Home • Condo • Auto • Flood • Commercial

Home • Condo • Auto • Flood • Commercial

We shop many companies to We shop many companies to guarantee guarantee you the best price. you the best price. Call Kathy Leonard today!

Lynn Carr, Gulfport: “I think we should absolutely wait until the new president, whoever he is, is elected. The precedent was set in 2016 and it should be followed. Fair is fair.”

Kathy Leonard today! We’re here Call to make sure you’re protected.

Kathy@leonardfamilyinsurance.com Kathy@leonardfamilyinsurance.com 6160 Central Ave,101 Suite • St. Pete, 33707 6160 Central Ave, Suite • St.101 Pete, 33707

727-329-8995•• FAX FAX727-498-8602 727-498-8602 727-329-8995

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020

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worship Sunday Sermon Drive-In Paradise Lutheran Church on Treasure Island invites you to join us 9:30am every Sunday at our Drive-In services. Sunday's services will include music and communion while you join us from the safety of your car.

Paradise Lutheran Church on Treasure Island 10255 Paradise Blvd, Treasure Island

17th St. & 29th Ave N St. Petersburg 345-7777 Friday 7PM

Beth-El Shalom Messianic Congregation

ShalomAdventure.com JewishHeritage.net Rabbi@JewishHeritage.net

Unitarian Universalist United Fellowship

During the pandemic join us Sundays on Zoom.

Discussion -10:30 Program - 11:00 For Zoom directions email us at uuunited@earthlink.net “You need not think alike to love alike.” - Francis David, 1534

uuunited.org

‘Upscale Resale’

316 Corey Ave. St. Pete Beach 727-360-5647 Open five days a week: 10am-2pm Mon. Wed. Thurs. Fri. Sat.

Clothes–Collectibles–Gifts Household Goods A Ministry of St. Alban’s Episcopal Church Proceeds go back into the community.

obituaries

DAWN SCOTT

Buxton, Sharon Pauline, 67, from Gulfport, passed away Tuesday, August 25, 2020 at Morton Plant Hospital. She was born August 10, 1953 to Charles and Pauline Buxton. She was raised in Gulfport and was a graduate of Boca Ciega High School and went on to become a Licensed Practical Nurse. She had three children: Patricia Buxton-Wood, Dawn Scott and Samuel (Matthew) Proffer. She lived in Gulfport with her

28

longtime companion Will Haynes. She enjoyed reading, gardening and loved spending time with her grandchildren and great grandchildren. Sharon is survived by her longtime companion Will; her three children, Patricia, Dawn and Matt; seven grandchildren, Leanne, Jessica, Michael, Dylan, Chandler, Preston and Gavin; and two great granddaughters, Ellie and Violet. Sharon is preceded in death by her father, Charles Buxton, her mother Pauline Buxton and her brother Charles (Buckwheat) Buxton. Family, Friends and others whose lives Sharon touched are invited to celebrate her life with her children and family at 1 p.m. on October 3 at 1149 8th Ave. N.E., Largo, FL 33770, to reminisce, grieve, support each other and of course chat. She will surely be missed by many.

EXPERIENCE COUNTS – AND SAVINGS ADD UP Find out about the Competitive Rates and Special Benefits available through our agency for all your insurance needs! Ready to learn more? Contact our agency now! Call today for your FREE, no obligation quote. HOME • FLOOD AUTO • BUSINESS COMMERCIAL

727-344-4500 6524 1st Ave. N., St. Petersburg, FL 33710

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020


THE CITY OF GULFPORT – PUBLIC WORKS DEPARTMENT

Public Announcement Please be advised, Effective October 1, 2020, the following changes in fees for special trash pick-ups will take place: Special Pick-Up Fees

Description

Single Item

(Mattress, piece of furniture, other like items)

New Fees Effective Oct. 1, 2020

$24.00 each

Appliances

$48.00 each

Vehicle Tires

$24.00 each

Car Battery

$12.50 each

Propane Tank (20lbs or less & EMPTY) TV’s/ Computer Components

$24.00

Excessive Amounts of Trash & Debris, and/ or Brush

$24.00 and up

$35.00 (based on size, amount and type of equipment used to remove debris)

Excessive accumulation of trash, debris, and/or brush will be picked up by the city, with or without notification by the owner or resident. An additional fee shall be charged according to the type of item, or size of the load, which shall be billed as an additional charge on the utility bill. No trash shall be allowed to accumulate for a period of longer than 72 hours.

Call the Public Works Department at 727-893-1089 for more information, or to schedule a special pick-up.

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020

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crossword

Solution on page 35

Dual Occupations

GABBER ON vaCATION

MIKE FLOOD

Mike Flood took the Gabber under the 1000 Islands Bridge in Northern New York looking north toward Canada in August of 2020. “The border is closed,” said Flood, “but we are allowed to travel in Canadian waters if it’s the ONLY way to get where we are going. There was virtually no auto traffic across the border. It has been a strange summer in this border town, to say the least.” Have you taken the Gabber somewhere? Or maybe stayed at home? We want to see your pictures! Please send a highresolution photo and a brief description to news@thegabber.com.

EQUALITY FOR ALL

MONDAY PASTA!

& EXPANDED MENU

30

ALL THE PASTA REFILLS YOU CAN EAT!

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020


adopt a pet

sudoku

Solution on page 35

Friends of Strays Some dogs were just born with the magic of Disney in their veins and Minnie is no different. She is fun, exciting, sweet,and would love to love you. Though a senior, she is not ready to slow down yet. Who would like to adventure with her through her golden years? Minnie is spayed, vaccinated and microchipped. Online applications at friendsofstrays. org/adopt. Friends of Strays is located at 2911 47th Ave. N. Email info@friendsofstrays. org or call 727-522-6566.

Pet Pal Animal Shelter

Sweet Luke is finally ready to go home to his new family. He had several issues, including a congenital deformity that required amputation. After months of care and love, he is healthy and ready for adoption. He has an outgoing personality and will be an amazing companion for someone. Could that be you?

Luke and Lena are at Pet Pal Animal Shelter, 405 22nd St. S. Call 727-3287738 or visit petpalanimalshelter.com.

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020

49th St S

8th Ave S

50th St S

Lena, aka Princess Lena, is ready to rule in her new realm. Lena is a super snuggler who would like to be the diva of your heart.

4921 9th Ave S • Gulfport (only 1/2 block off 49th Street, on 9th Ave S)

9th Ave S

727-321-1068 • GulfCoastSeafoodFL.com Mon-Fri 9-5pm / Sat 9-4pm / Closed Sunday

Gulf Coast Seafood is OPEN! Come in and see our DAILY SPECIALS! American Red Snapper Filet $19.99/lb (Wild) Domestic Jumbo Shrimp 16/20ct $13.99/lb Florida Key Lime Fish Fry Buy 1 Get 1 $3.99 (while supplies last)

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The Storage House 727-327-9598 • TheStorageHouse.com 1219 49th Street South • Gulfport Office Hours: Mon - Fri 8-5 / Sat 8-2

Still with the best deal in Gulfport

$49.99 MOVES YOU IN ANY SIZE UNIT FOR YOUR 1ST MONTH ON 2+ MONTH RENTALS. NEW CUSTOMERS ONLY LIMITED TIME ONLY! FAMILY OWNED AND OPERATED BUSINESS

SPECIAL DISCOUNTS FOR MILITARY, SENIORS & STUDENTS

NEED MORE SPACE?

We’re The Moving Place! 24-Hour Access First-Floor Convenience Climate Controlled WE SELL BOXES, LOCKS, AND MOVING SUPPLIES. 32

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020


CLASSIFIEDS

If you have questions about advertising, please email us at advertising@thegabber.com or call 727-321-6965! Deadline: Friday 5 p.m.

Accounting

CLEAR NUMBERS BOOKKEEPING Virtual bookkeeping for small businesses and nonprofits. Monthly packages customized to your needs or one time cleanups. Payroll available. QuickBooks Online Certified ProAdvisor. 10+ years experience. Call/text to 727-248-0714 or email to nspence@clearnumbers.biz

references and your phone number to gauribux@yahoo.com. Rate negotiable.

Electrical

AC ELECTRIC 727-345-3108

Over 30 years experience. Residential & commercial. New or remodel work, service upgrades, lightning arrestors. Fans and lighting installed. State License #ER0007653

MAYNARD ELECTRIC • Room Additions • Lightning Protection • Fuses to Breakers • Mobile Homes • Circuits Added • Phone Wiring • Ceiling Fans • Security Lighting & More 24 Hour Service

FREE ESTIMATES

525-0677

Licensed Bonded Insured St. Lic. #EC0002881

LOCAL TAX EXPERT Certified Acceptance Agent. Anastasiya Dycus, EA, CAA. Tax Debt Help & Back Resolution. Individual and Business Tax Preparation. 1135 Pasadena Ave S, Office 105. South Pasadena, FL 33707 727-793-5419. Admin@taxhelp123. com. Open 9-5 and by appointment.

SERVICE WHEN YOU NEED IT!

Antiques

Furnished Rentals

1920 ROLLTOP DESK

WATERFRONT LARGE 1BD 1BATH furnished Hampton condo Fully furnished condo in 55+ community in a no pet waterfront building in Town Shores of Gulfport. Queen bed in bedroom, daybed with trundle (two twin beds) in the Sun Room for occasional guests. Six month minimum. Gulfportcasamarina@gmail.com

Solid Oak, Doweled. Will Deliver! Text bids to 727-326-8216 Automotive 2000 MERCURY COUGAR 6 cyl. Cold Air. 62,000 original miles. Second owner. Florida car. $2800 obo. Call 727-748-9117. Caregiver

General GULFPORT LIONS CLUB Available for parties, weddings, meetings. Great waterfront location with full facilities. Call Jean for info and dates. 727-366-6341. Handy Person

Non-Medical Home Care • Private Duty Personal Care • Companionship Homemaker Services • No Contracts No Minimum Hour Requirement Licensed, Bonded, Insured Nurse Owned & Operated Free In-Home Consultation / RN Assessment

HANDYMAN SEMI-RETIRED All types of repairs • small jobs welcome • Quality work at reasonable prices • Honest • Reliable • Free estimates • John, 727-410-2201 CARPENTER DEPENDABLE! Have Tools Will Travel Trustworthy. Doors, Decks/ Eaves/Rotted Wood, Etc. 30 Year Gabber Advertiser. Free Estimates, Lic. C-5754. 727-821-9973.

CALL TODAY 727-381-7498 www.omnipresentcaregivers.com Care@OmniPresentCaregivers.com Cleaning Services I MEAN PRISTINE CLEAN! Spring cleaning! Residential • Commercial. Move ins or move outs. We leave it spotless! Call Pamela at 727-417-6038.

PINELLAS CUSTOM CLEANING

$10 OFF FIRST 3 CLEANS FOR REOCCURRING SERVICES. Weekly, Bi-Weekly & Monthly , Reliable & Pet Friendly. With Over 20Yrs Exp . Call Now To Book Appt. Rebecca : 727-320-7997

Help Wanted LOOKING FOR A PART TIME CLEANER Perfect for a semi-retired, physically active person. Some heavy lifting will be required. It is outside work but not in direct sunlight. 5 Days a week/weekends, couple hours a day. If interested, please call/text Angela 727-656-2907. A Cleaning Services. EXPERIENCED CARPENTER WANTED With own transportation, preferably truck or van. 727-644-6194 CLEANER AND PACKER WANTED! I need someone to help me pack items for a move and do some light cleaning in my small Largo home. Please send three

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020

AHERN’S AUTO REPAIR SHOP Has immediate opening for experienced lube/ tire technician. Must be able to lift 40 lbs or more. Valid driver’s license. Own tools. Stop by 6763 Gulfport Blvd S, St Petersburg, 33707 on M-F 10-3, or call 727-3846807 FULL TIME YEAR-ROUND steady work with established lawn care and tree trimming business. Great Pay. DL required. James Fox Tree Service (727) 322-1849

Computer Services

COMPUTER SERVICES 727-343-2838

In-home services: Internet security, training, virus & spyware removal, maintenance & repair, data recovery. PC & Mac.

Computer Problems? No Problem! In-Home Service FREE Phone Consultation Virus/Malware Removal Setup • Repair • Tutoring Courteous, Competent, Reliable Service

perfectworldllc.com JS COMPUTER REPAIR Mobile computer repair. 40.00 per visit. www.jmswebser vices.com 727-643-0697

Gulfport Computer Repair Fast Friendly Service

727-388-3493 2321 49th St S

Mon-Thu 10am-5pm

15 Years in Gulfport 45 Years Experience

Computer Sales

Fax, Copy, Print

Home & Condo Maintenance

D.C. STRONG

Home & condo maintenance • Interior & Exterior • Experienced in all work, A-Z • Call Dennis Strong 727-301-4530 • Licensed & Insured

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Home Improvement

Painting

ROOFING LEAK SPECIALIST Bryan “The Roof Whisperer”. 727-277-9502. Residential/Commercial, Repairs/Reroof. Shingles, Tile, Flat. Quick Response. Quality Work at Reasonable Rates. References. Insured/Licensed. #CCC1330056.

EXTERIOR PAINTING BY MASTERGUARD PAINTING

Heating & Air Conditioning

“Same rates seven days a week”

NO SERVICE CHARGE EVER! CAC1815513

727

709-7979 www.AirPhillips.com

QUALITY AT WORK

Luke Phillips

3914 6th St S St. Petersburg

30 Years Painting in Pinellas County. Sherwin Williams Products used with a lifetime guarantee. Licensed and insured. Discounts for Seniors, Veterans and First Responders. MASTERGUARD PAINTING LLC. Call Steve at 727-424-4303

WHEN QUALITY COUNTS Trust Masters Painting. Making Happy Customers for 37yrs. Pressure Cleaning, Waterproofing, Honest, Reliable. 727-344-1674. References, Guaranteed. Lic.#C4749.

SMALL JOB PLUMBING

ProFlo Plumbing 727-902-7077

Real Estate for Rent SEASONAL HOUSE FOR RENT Attention snowbirds! 3 BD home, totally renovated. All utilities and cable included. Oct-May. 1600/mo. Call 727-907-317-5778. Real Estate for Sale

AFFORDABLE GULFPORT Beachway Park Mobile Homes

Over 55 / No Pets / Co-op Share Included Low Maintenance, $200 Mo.

2 BD / 1 Ba, Carport, Screened Porch, Washer & Dryer: $55,000

CHARLES JUNK HAULING & DEMOLITION Junk & Trash Removal. Low, Low Prices Guaranteed, Daily Specials. Kitchen, Bath, Shed, Fencing, etc. Demolition. 727831-0507.

2 BD / 1.5 Ba, Beautifully Remodeled, Furnished, No Back Neighbor: $85,000

DUMPSTER DROP 10 yard trailer for up to 2 tons of waste. 3 day drop $200. Removal available (price based on job).727433-2167

2 BD / 1.5 Ba, Totally Updated, Split Bedrooms, Corner Lot, Huge 20’ Bonus Room: $95,000

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BREATHTAKING WATERFRONT TOWN SHORES CONDO This corner unit condo has 2 bedrooms, 2.5 baths and a split floor plan that offers lots of space with over 2200 square feet. Completely updated with newer windows, newer flooring and so much more. Call for details 727-565-6787 DIPLOMAT TOWNSHORES Largest 2200 sq ft, 2 BD/2.5 BA, corner unit overlooking Boca Ciega Bay. Swimming pool/clubhouse. Rent $1800 Buy $399,000 Call 727-867-7022 OPEN HOUSE Sat 10-2 Sun 10-3. 2BD/ 2BA. 1404 Cordova Grn, Seminole, FL. 164,500. Call Leona, FLB Team 727-4210599 DOUBLE WIDE MOBILE HOME Causeway Village. Extensively remodeled. Fenced in yard, tropical landscaping. Looks out over Boca Ciega Bay. Passed four point inspection. Appraised at $82,500, asking $79,500. Call Brenda or Frank for showing. 727-281-5538 or 727-221-4486 PELICAN BAY CONDO (PASADENA YACHT & COUNTRY CLUB Elegant 2/2 first floor. 1,476 sq ft living area plus large balcony. Overlooks tropical pond. Reserved garage parking. Interior laundry. 3 electric hurricane shutters. Pool/spa. Photos on zillow.com at 5950 Pelican Bay Plaza S, Apt 103, Gulfport. $316,900. Owner/broker. 727-347-6000

PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE ADS ONLINE AT

THEGABBER.COM Lawn / Landscape

EXPERT SPRINKLER REPAIR

Opinions TRUTH AND TRANSPARENCY Dear Mayor Henderson, Vice Mayor Fridovich, Council members Thanos, Brown and Ray: Why do you insist on putting false information into Gulfport’s legislative history and refuse to correct the minutes of 10/1/2019. The truth matters.

Dina Gamma, Realtor®

Thinking of Selling? Call me!

Sewer-drain cleaning. CFC1427888. Low rates. 727-522-2508. MasterCard/Visa.

TEE&DEE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT (Specializing in Tree Service) Family owned and operated. No job too small. or large .Fairest quotes money can buy! TnDtreeservice@ yahoo.com

Moving / Hauling

5410 11th Ave South PRICE REDUCED: $259,500

gammadina10@gmail.com

Professional Services

THE TRASH QUEEN Clean up/clean out, big or small messes, inside and out, organic or otherwise. Free estimate/consultation from Kathy, licensed and insured Trashologist. Call or text, 845 866-3867. Responsible, reliable, reasonable, and ready.

Muchkinland!

Fixer upper in South Pasadena unincorp Pinellas County only $134,900. Call for Details on this estate sale today!

727-410-5035

Plumbing

#CFC1430429 State certified, residential/ commercial service. Senior and military discount. $25 off service with ad. Locally owned and operated.

Miscellaneous Services

New Listing in

Bill & DeAnn Meredith

727-224-5126 727-224-5129

Rich Moseley, Irrigation Contractor. 25 Years Experience. Reasonable Rates. Well & Pumps. 727-439-0792. Lic.#C8312. BBB Accredited. TREE PRUNING & DEBRIS CLEANUP Serving South St. Petersburg • Free Estimates • 727-308-8650

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020


AFFORDABLE PROMPT • RELIABLE Licensed & Insured

solutions

Lee Claxton, I.S.A. Certified Arborist

Planting • Trimming Tree & Stump Removal Cabling/Bracing • Pruning/Shaping

727-220-0226 AnAffordableArborist@gmail.com

• PAY LESS TO SELL YOUR HOME! • Save Thousands in Fees with Me • You Pay Only 3-4% Commission! • Full Service Real Estate For Less

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Anything These Local Experts Touch...

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Jodi Jenco

Chris Brady

Lisa Bambase

Daniela Nankova

Margo Spoerl

Steve Michalski

Chip Hall

Sellers!! Put a LOCAL EXPERT on your side!! CALL US TODAY!!!

727-440 -1000

7316 Central Ave • St. Petersburg theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020

35


Now accepting Humana, Freedom, Optimum, United, Wellmed, Medicare, and most commercial insurance.

All Florida Family Care, Inc. S. Tirupathi M.D. Primary Care Physician

3301 66th St N, Ste-A, St. Petersburg

727-344-6200

Hours of Operation Monday - Friday 9-5pm

We are always there for YOU! 24 Hour Answering Service with doctor on call 24 hours a day. We offer same day appointments for all our patients!

Complimentary BEMER/PEMF Treatment, Meditation Room, & Massage Chair Physician Supervised Weight Loss Program 2001 Board CertiďŹ ed in Internal Medicine at Michigan State University. Practicing as an Internist in the area since 2003. Recipient of the 2009 and 2010 People Choice Award for Favorite Physician. A Primecare, LLC afďŹ liated Physician. 36

theGabber.com | October 1 - October 7, 2020


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Adopt A Pet

1min
page 31

Obituaries

1min
page 28

Should the next Supreme Court justice be appointed immediately or aft er January’s presidential inauguration?

1min
page 27

Be Counted, Be Heard and Be Smart

2min
page 26

Chair-ity Benefit Postponed-Again.

1min
page 25

Announcements

1min
page 24

Announcements

2min
page 23

Announcements

2min
page 20

Artist at Work

1min
page 19

What We're Reading

1min
page 18

Metamorphosis: The Journey to Freedom for Carina Krehl

1min
page 17

Things To Do: Gulfport

4min
page 16

Beach Bites, Outdoor Entertainment and Football

2min
page 15

Beaches, Rumors and Rum

2min
page 14

Back to the Original Plan: Census Ends October 31.

1min
page 13

Renaissance Dad: Parenting in the French Style

5min
page 12

There's a Pocket Prarie Coming to Town

1min
page 10

Local Band Student Benefits From Downsizing

1min
page 8

A Grave Situation: Part Three. Exhuming the Past of Lincoln and Forgotten Cemeteries in Pinellas.

6min
pages 6-7

This is Your Last Chance to Register to Vote

4min
pages 4-5

Fears Grow as Florida Reopens

1min
page 3

Publisher's Note

3min
page 2

It's Official: Gulfport is Open for Business

3min
pages 1, 8-9
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