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Year: 2020

Manatee County curfew lifted

Manatee County curfew lifted today

MANATEE COUNTY – This morning, Manatee County Commissioners voted 4-3 to lift the county curfew enacted on April 3 and extended on April 10 and April 17.

The curfew has been in effect from 11 p.m. to 5 a.m. daily. Travel during that overnight timeframe was supposed to be restricted to the essential businesses, services or activities set forth in Gov. Ron DeSantis’ Executive Order 20-91, which some public officials refer to as a “stay-at-home” order. That order is currently scheduled to expire on Thursday, April 30 unless it is lifted early or extended.

During today’s meeting, Commissioner Priscilla Trace made the motion to lift the controversial and much-debated curfew. Commissioners Vanessa Baugh and Steve Jonsson supported Trace’s motion to end the curfew. Commissioners Reggie Bellamy, Misty Servia and Carol Whitmore opposed the motion. Voting last, Commission Chair Betsy Benac cast the deciding vote to lift the curfew.

In doing so, it was noted that Manatee County is among the highest in Florida in terms of COVID-19 cases and the county has not yet hit its anticipated peak, which is now expected during the week of May 3.

“We’re removing the curfew, but I would like to focus on the sense of responsibility individually in making sure that you’re protecting yourself, making sure you’re protecting your loved ones and be mindful of social distancing,” Bellamy said.

He then said lifting the curfew does not mean it’s “time to party” or time to start engaging in late-night activities.

“COVID-19 is out in front of us. We have a lot of unanswered questions and the best that you can do is mask up and emphasize social distancing,” Bellamy said.

“I agree 100%,” Benac said. “This was not a message to anyone to let up on the gas, to let down your guard. The fact of the matter is we haven’t hit our peak. We need to continue to try to slow the spread so we don’t have a long plateau because that would be very bad for our community.”

It was noted that Gov. Ron DeSantis’ essential services (“stay-at-home”) order remains in effect until Thursday, April 30 unless he lifts it or extends it.

The countywide state of local emergency remains in effect. So does the countywide burn ban, which allows residents to have fires in their home fire pits.

Test kits expected today

During today’s meeting, the commission authorized County Administrator Cheri Coryea to spend up to $100,000 to purchase COVID-19 test kits and the Personal Protective Equipment needed to administer the testing. The money will come from the county’s $6.5 million emergency disaster fund.

Trace noted each test kit currently costs $61 per test to purchase and she anticipates that cost to continue increasing.

The county requested 300 tests from the state and during the meeting Public Safety Director Jake Saur was informed that the Manatee County Health Department would be receiving those 300 tests later today.

Saur said those tests would likely be used for a second round of drive-thru testing at the Bradenton Area Convention Center in Palmetto.

Commissioner Vanessa Baugh asked about the cost to get tested.

Saur said any tests conducted with test kits received from the state must be done at no cost to the person being tested.

Coryea said it costs $107 to get tested at a local MCR Health facility. She said there is a co-pay for those with health insurance and a sliding cost scale for those without insurance.

The commission will meet again at 2 p.m. on Tuesday, April 28 to discuss any new developments or actions required as the county response to the pandemic continues.

Manatee County COVID-19 cases

According to the Florida Department of Health’s COVID-19 Data and Surveillance Dashboard, Manatee County has thus far had a total of 435 reported COVID-19 cases, 84 hospitalizations and 34 reported COVID-19-related deaths as of early this afternoon.

As of this afternoon, Manatee County has the 10th-highest number of reported cases in Florida, and 318 of those COVID-19 cases are in Bradenton.

Also as of this afternoon, there are 128 reported COVID-19 cases and 14 deaths among residents or staff members at long-term care facilities in Manatee County, which is the fourth-highest in Florida in those two categories.

Florida has 27,495 reported positive cases and 839 reported COVID-19 deaths.

Anna Maria Island cases

As of today, there were no reported COVID-19 cases in the city of Anna Maria.

According to FDOH’s afternoon daily data report, there are still only two reported cases of on Anna Maria Island – one past case in Bradenton Beach and one past case in Holmes Beach.

The Holmes Beach positive case was reported by the Florida Department of Health on April 2. FDOH reports do not include the names of those who test positive or negative for COVID-19.

According to an April 2 story in the Grand Haven (Michigan) Tribune, Megan Sheehan told the publication that her 68-year-old father, Bradenton Beach resident Tom Sheehan, died on March 29 while being treated for COVID-19.

The Grand Haven Tribune story notes Sheehan suffered from asthma, COPD and diabetes and went on a cruise even though family members warned him not to because of the unfolding coronavirus crisis.

Zip code hot zone

On Friday, Manatee County Public Safety Director Jake Saur said the 34208 zip code in Manatee County had the highest number of reported cases per zip code in the Tampa Bay region.

As of Tuesday afternoon, the 34208 zip code had 140 reported COVID-19 cases. That zip code encompasses portions of Bradenton, Ellenton, Samoset, south Bradenton and west Samoset.

Complete and regularly updated county-by-county and zip code specific COVID-19 data can be found at the FDOH COVID-19 Dashboard.

Commission to consider ending building moratorium

ANNA MARIA – Mayor Dan Murphy and the Anna Maria City Commission will discuss the possibility of ending the emergency building moratorium on Thursday, April 23.

According to the meeting agenda, the commission is also scheduled to discuss the pier restaurant lease proposals recently received from the Ugly Grouper ownership group and restaurateur Sean Murphy.

The commission will also discuss a funding request from the Center of Anna Maria and Murphy will provide the commission with a coronavirus update.

City Hall remains closed to the public and the media. Thursday’s telephonic meeting will begin at 6 p.m. To attend by phone, call 1-646-749-3112 and when prompted enter the access code: 564682437.

Moratorium discussion

The commission could also enact another short-term emergency building moratorium that would extend the existing moratorium, enacted on March 4, for an additional 60 days – an action that could be taken as an alternative to pursuing a previously-discussed six-month moratorium that could replace the current moratorium.

The emergency building moratorium was enacted before the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic became a major concern and the commission’s decision was unrelated to the pandemic at the time.

During the commission’s April 9 meeting, Murphy said the emergency building moratorium and the subsequent six-month building moratorium may no longer be needed. He attributed this in part to the pandemic giving the building department time to begin its thorough review of the city’s building codes in anticipation of amending and updating those codes in the coming months.

Murphy also said the emergency and six-month moratoriums may not be needed if the economic impacts of the coronavirus pandemic result in fewer investors looking to purchase vacation rental homes.

The emergency moratorium was enacted in part to temporarily halt the construction of new single-family homes while the mayor and commission research the potential implementation of an impact fee program. If implemented, the impact fee program would result in builders paying impact fees upon the completion of their single-family residential construction projects.

The impact fees would be used to help pay for street and road projects, drainage and stormwater projects, recreational elements and sea-level rise projects necessitated in part by the increased number of large vacation rental homes that now populate the city.

During Thursday’s meeting, the mayor and commission will also discuss hardship appeals for builders and property owners if the building moratorium is continued. And Murphy will provide an update on the pursuit of an impact fees program.

Coleman concerned about Island’s unemployed workforce

Coleman concerned about Island’s unemployed workforce

ANNA MARIA – Like many members of Anna Maria Island’s business community, Mike Coleman is concerned about the impact the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic is having on the diverse group of Island employees who depend on its tourism-based economy.

In the mid- to late-2000s, Coleman and fellow resident and businessman Ed Chiles joined forces to develop the Pine Avenue Restoration (PAR) mixed-use project that features residential units above commercial units along Pine Avenue. The Coleman family is also involved in the Poppo’s Taqueria group of restaurants that began with the Anna Maria location on Pine Avenue.

“First, I want to say I believe the local officials have done everything that can to be done to comply with the state orders and protect the freedoms of those who live here. I have nothing but respect for what they’ve done,” Coleman said, while chatting on the Poppo’s porch last week.

“At the same time, I think we need to give some thought to all the people that have been put out of work suddenly and without recourse in the last few weeks. We’re talking hundreds, if not thousands, of jobs. These are people that are dependent on their incomes day to day, week to week and hand to mouth. And now they have no income, and many have no access to unemployment insurance,” Coleman said.

“I’m hoping everyone will join together to get us through this as quickly as possible so those people can get back to work, which is what they want to do. They work in restaurants, they clean houses, they clean vacation rentals and they own small businesses here. I’m concerned that some of the small businesses here are going to close and never reopen. Other businesses here have managed to pivot, and some of them are staying open just to pay their employees while the business loses money. The impact is hardest at the bottom of the income scale,” Coleman said.

“At Poppo’s, we’re doing everything we can to maintain employment at all our stores. We have nine stores. We go from St. Pete to south Sarasota, including our location on Manatee Avenue in Bradenton, and they’re all still open,” Coleman said.

On March 20, Gov. Ron DeSantis issued Executive Order EO 20-7, an order that limits all Florida restaurants that remain open to takeout and delivery service until that order expires on April 30, if it is not extended.

“We were in a position to pivot and I’m grateful for that. Our people have been working for about a year on software that allows for takeout orders, curbside pickup and online ordering. That put us in a position to survive – not in all of our stores, some of our stores should actually be closed, but we’re keeping them open because the people that work there need the money and need their jobs,” Coleman said.

Coleman was asked how the pandemic and the ensuing recovery period might alter the restaurant and business landscapes.

“I don’t think anybody can see the end of this or how it’s going to take shape. I think it’s important to be able to pivot and respond as things occur and hope for the best,” Coleman said.

Employee’s perspective

Allie Sykeny is the general manager of the Poppo’s restaurant in Anna Maria.

“I’m very happy to be working. I have no problem working through all of this. We’re staying safe and restaurants are actually cleaner in general. We practice sanitation without a pandemic. We had an inspection back in November and we got a 100%. And now we’ve stepped it up a little more. I couldn’t be more grateful to be working,” Sykeny said.

She and her staff wear masks while working and a plexiglass shield has been installed in front of the computer screen used to take orders and process payments.

Sykeny was asked what she envisions for restaurants when they reopen for in-house dining.

“I see 50% of the people that are ready to get back out there and continue normal life and I see the other 50% that are going to be a little more apprehensive about being in public,” she said.

Sykeny was asked what she’s hearing from some of her friends in the hospitality industry who are not working.

Pulling no punches, she said, “They’re suicidal. It’s very sad. It sucks.”

Boaters outnumber beachgoers in Holmes Beach

Boaters outnumber beachgoers in Holmes Beach

HOLMES BEACH – While Police Chief Bill Tokajer says the beaches were sparsely attended over the April 17-19 weekend, the boat ramps were packed with vehicles.

After a rainy Saturday, Tokajer said he counted 144 vehicles, not including trailers, parked in and around Kingfish boat ramp at about 11 a.m. on Sunday, April 19. The boat ramp has 57 parking spaces. At the 63rd Street boat ramp, parking spaces also were filled early in the day with some vehicles in the overflow parking area near the city’s dog park.

Despite the large number of boaters, Tokajer said that his officers had no problem enforcing the city’s rules barring parking at beach accesses, in the right of way and along city streets through April 30. Over the second weekend that the new parking regulations have been in effect, he said his officers wrote 37 tickets and didn’t tow any vehicles.

“Pay attention to the signs, people,” he said, referring to the banners placed throughout the city advising drivers that their vehicles will be towed if illegally parked. “Your car can be towed. Do not think that you can get away with a $50 ticket.”

Over the previous weekend, April 10-12, police officers wrote 69 tickets and towed seven vehicles.

“People are starting to pay a little bit more attention than they were and that’s our goal, to get compliance,” Tokajer said.

The city’s new parking regulations remain in effect through April 30 or until the executive directive is rescinded by Mayor Judy Titsworth.

County curfew extended until Tuesday

MANATEE COUNTY – The Manatee County Commission voted 4-3 on Friday, April 17 to extend the county’s curfew until Tuesday, April 21, when it was set to be discussed again at the regular Tuesday commission meeting.

The vote was in response to Public Safety Director Jake Saur’s request to extend the curfew for seven more days.

“Manatee County has not yet achieved a flatting of the curve. Our response to COVID-19 is going to continue for some time. Therefore, sustained efforts to promote social distancing that slow the spread or flatten the curve remain more crucial than ever. Over the next few weeks, while our health and medical community remain on the front lines and under a great deal of stress, we need to be doing all that we can to build and maintain resiliency in ourselves and in our community,” Saur said when seeking the curfew extension.

Saur said COVID-19 cases in Manatee County are now predicted to peak during the week of May 3 instead of on or around April 21 as previously predicted.

When enacted by a 5-2 vote on April 3, the curfew took effect from 11 p.m. to 5 a.m. daily. Travel during that overnight timeframe was supposed to be restricted to the essential businesses, services or activities set forth in Gov. Ron DeSantis’ Executive Order 20-91, which some public officials refer to as a “stay-at-home” order. That order is currently scheduled to expire on Thursday, April 30, unless DeSantis extends it.

During Friday’s meeting, six county residents spoke in opposition to the curfew. They questioned the need for a curfew and said it violated their civil and constitutional rights.

The five doctors who spoke in favor of extending the curfew stressed the need to continue the efforts to “flatten the curve” and “slow the spread” to help prevent a surge of COVID-19 patients from potentially overwhelming the three hospitals in Manatee County.

As he did the week before, Sheriff Rick Wells requested the curfew be extended in part to lessen his deputies’ exposure to those carrying the coronavirus. Wells said more county residents are aware of the county curfew than they are of the governor’s executive order. He also said his deputies would continue enforcing and educating the public about the governor’s order with or without a county curfew.

Saur said more than 50 Emergency Medical Service responders have been exposed to the virus since the pandemic began and eight were currently being withheld from active duty.

When he and Wells first requested the curfew on April 3, Saur said EMS was responding to an average of 100 COVID-19 calls per day. Saur said each call takes an average of two hours, including the time EMTs spend putting on and taking off their personal protective equipment and sterilizing their ambulances and equipment.

Commissioner Priscilla Trace was one of five commissioners to support the curfew on April 3. On April 10, she supported a seven-day extension of a modified curfew. During Friday’s meeting, she made the motion to extend the curfew until Tuesday only.

“I think that the curfew’s run its course, but I’d like to wait until Tuesday to decide. We should hear from the governor and the president by then. Keep the curfew going until Tuesday and then make the decision on Tuesday,” Trace said.

Commission Chair Betsy Benac supported the curfew during the two previous votes. On Friday, she joined Commissioners Vanessa Baugh and Steve Jonsson in opposing the extension. Benac said she did not support extending the curfew until Tuesday. She supported extending it for seven more days or letting it expire.

Eight long-term care facilities in Manatee County report COVID-19 cases

Eight long-term care facilities in Manatee County report COVID-19 cases

UPDATED April 20, 2020 – MANATEE COUNTY – Manatee County officials are concerned about the spread of the coronavirus (COVID-19) among residents and staff members at long-term care facilities, including nursing homes, rehabilitation centers and assisted living facilities.

Manatee County Public Safety Director Jake Saur addressed these concerns during Friday’s emergency county commission meeting.

“Our number one testing concern right now is with our nursing homes. The state has brought in incident management teams to our nursing homes and they’ve started a very big push to get all of those patients and workers tested,” he said.

“As of this week, our health department has started issuing involuntary quarantines to some of those nursing home workers because we know they’re spreading COVID-19. The state is reserving those tests for the nursing homes. We have to get into those nursing homes to make sure they’re following all the proper procedures and that they’re also being tested,” Saur said.

“Our nursing homes and so forth are taking a hit right now. I’m curious why we’re just hearing this today and why we weren’t on this sooner,” Commissioner Vanessa Baugh said.

“These folks are not going out. It’s coming in from the community. We have people that are dying in nursing homes. We’ve got to get a handle on this,” Commission Chair Betsy Benac said.

“There’s three or four assisted living facilities that we have as hot spots right now,” Commissioner Carol Whitmore added.

FDOH data reports

On Tuesday, April 7, the twice-daily Florida Department of Health (FDOH) Joint Information Center Data Reports included for the first time a list of counties reporting COVID-19 cases involving long-term care facility residents and/or staff members.

The April 7 FDOH/Joint Information Center morning data report listed 23 long-term care facility COVID-19 cases in Manatee County. Those reports did not yet include long-term care facility deaths.

The April 15 evening FDOH data report was the first to also include long-term care facility resident and staff member deaths, and that report cited 45 positive cases and eight deaths associated with long-term care facilities in Manatee County.

Governor orders facilities named

Gov. Ron DeSantis addressed nursing home concerns at his Saturday press conference.

DeSantis said members of the Florida National Guard are now going into nursing homes and doing spot testing to try to identify asymptomatic staff members who may be infected with COVID-19.

“We are telling the Guard to expand the strike teams into the assisted living facilities,” DeSantis said.

Eight long-term care facilities in Manatee County report COVID-19 cases
Gov. Ron DeSantis discussed nursing homes and other long-term care facilities during his Saturday afternoon press conference. – Florida Channel | Submitted

“Since the beginning of this crisis, probably our number one point of emphasis has been on long-term care and nursing home facilities. Very early on we put strong guidance and regulations in place so that staff members – anyone who entered a facility – had to be screened for coronavirus symptoms. We also prohibited outside visitors,” DeSantis said.

“What we found is you may have everyone doing everything right in one of these facilities, but you could have a staff member who’s not symptomatic and it can spread throughout the staff and spread to the residents very quickly,” DeSantis said.

“I told the Surgeon General from the beginning that we want to put as much information out as you can. I don’t think you should be identifying individual patients by name. I have now directed him that it is necessary to release the names of the facilities where a resident or staff member has tested positive for COVID-19,” DeSantis said.

Local facilities identified

Saturday evening’s FDOH data report email included for the first time a link to an untitled four-page report that listed county-by-county every long-term care facility in Florida that reported positive COVID-19 cases or deaths. That list only includes the names of the facilities and the counties they are located in. It does not provide the number of cases or deaths at a specific facility.

The following Manatee County facilities were included in Saturday’s list:

  • Braden River Rehabilitation Center, 2010 Manatee Ave. E. in Bradenton;
  • Bradenton Health Care, 6305 Cortez Road W. in Bradenton;
  • Brookdale Bradenton Gardens, 5612 26th St. W. in Bradenton;
  • Casa Mora Rehabilitation and Extended Care, 1902 59th W. in Bradenton;
  • Manatee Springs Rehabilitation and Nursing Center, 5627 Ninth St. E. in Bradenton;
  • Residence at Bay Vue, 105 15th St. E. in Bradenton;
  • Riviera Palms Rehabilitation Center, 926 Haben Blvd. in Palmetto;
  • Westminster Point Pleasant, 1700 Third Ave. W. in Bradenton.
Eight long-term care facilities in Manatee County report COVID-19 cases
Bradenton Health Care on Cortez Road is one of eight long-term care facilities in Manatee County that has reported COVID-19 cases or deaths connected to facility residents or staff members. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Saturday evening’s FDOH data report listed 68 positive long-term care facility resident or staff COVID-19 cases and 13 deaths in Manatee County. Sunday evening’s FDOH data report listed 120 long-term care facility cases and the same 13 deaths.

Sun Facebook fan Brenda Smonskey saw the list on The Sun’s website and discovered that her employer, Beneva Lakes Healthcare and Rehabilitation Center in Sarasota, is on the list of long-term care facilities reporting COVID-19 cases.

“Thank you,” she posted on The Sun’s Facebook page. “I work prn at Beneva Lakes and was not informed.”

According to the list, long-term care facilities accounted for nearly 29% of the county’s 415 reported COVID-19 cases and nearly 42% of the county’s 31 reported COVID-19 deaths.

As of Sunday evening, Manatee County had the fourth-highest number of long-term care facility cases and deaths in Florida, trailing only Miami-Dade County, Broward County and Palm Beach County.

Sunday evening’s data report email referenced the statewide numbers and said, “There are currently 307 long-term care facilities with positive cases of COVID-19. Of the 1,825 cases of residents or staff in long-term care facilities, 179 have died.” 

No additional facilities in Manatee County were named in Sunday evening’s facilities’ list.

Braden River

On April 17, the Lakeland-based newspaper The Ledger reported it obtained a document from the Florida Medical Examiners Commission that contained information on 59 confirmed COVID-19 deaths at nursing homes, rehabilitation centers and assisted living facilities in Florida.

According to The Ledger and its reference to the April 14 Florida Medical Examiners Commission report, four of the seven long-term care facility deaths in Manatee County reported at that time were connected to the Braden River Rehabilitation Center.

The Braden River Rehabilitation Center in Bradenton is among those in Manatee County that has reported COVID-19 cases or deaths with residents or staff members. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

On Saturday, The Sun requested from the Florida Medical Examiners Commission the document referenced by The Ledger.

The Sun received the following response from spokesperson Gretl Plessinger: “We haven’t released information from the Medical Examiners Commission on COVID-19. We are compiling the information received by the commission.”

Plessinger said she would provide that information when it becomes available.

Coast Lines: Happy Earth Day from Anna Maria Island

Coast Lines: Happy Earth Day from Anna Maria Island

As the COVID-19 pandemic progresses, the Florida Department of Health is no longer monitoring water quality at local beaches because they are closed. Likewise, the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission is reducing its water testing for red tide.Coast Lines logo

But local waters have been unusually clear this month, a great reason to get outside and celebrate the 50th anniversary of Earth Day on Wednesday, April 22.

One Florida event is #GetTrashed, a challenge to take a walk outside with gloves and a plastic bag and pick up enough trash to fill a bag. But wear your mask and stay at least 6 feet from anyone else. Check out more events here.

Arbor Day is also still being celebrated on Friday, April 24. Organizers suggest virtual celebrations, like live-streaming a reading of the poem, “Trees,” by Joyce Kilmer on your Facebook page. Check out more virtual celebration suggestions.

And if you do nothing else environmental this week, resolve to learn enough about federal oil spill policy to help you decide whom to vote for in the next presidential election, in honor of the 11 people killed in the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, which happened 10 years ago April 20.

The spill poisoned the Gulf of Mexico and its marine life with 200 million gallons of oil for nearly three months, some washing up on beaches from Texas to Florida.

The Washington, D.C.-based environmental group Oceana says that the federal government’s proposal to expand offshore drilling to nearly all U.S. waters will result in more spills.

“Offshore drilling is still as dirty and dangerous as it was 10 years ago,” said Diane Hoskins, Oceana campaign director. “If anything, another disaster is more likely today as the oil industry drills deeper and farther offshore… When they drill, they spill. The BP disaster devastated the Gulf, and we cannot afford to repeat it. Protecting our environment has never been more important than it is today. President Trump’s plan is still a preventable disaster if we stand together to protect our coasts.”

In a recent report, Oceana found the Gulf coast suffered significant economic losses following the Deepwater Horizon disaster:

  • The recreation industry lost more than $500 million, and more than 10 million user-days of beach, fishing and boating activity.
  • Fisheries closed and demand for Gulf seafood plummeted, costing the seafood industry nearly $1 billion.
  • Housing markets across the region experienced a decline in prices between 4% and 8% that lasted for at least five years.

Oceana also found the environmental impact of the Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf was unprecedented:

  • For five years, more than 75% of all dolphin pregnancies failed in the oiled area.
  • Bryde’s whales, one of the most endangered whales in the world, decreased by about 22%.
  • As many as 800,000 birds died, including up to 32% of laughing gulls and 12% of brown pelicans.
  • Up to 170,000 sea turtles were killed by the spill.
  • About 8.3 million oysters were killed, and certain populations of fish, shrimp and squid decreased by as much as 85%.

See Oceana’s full report here.

Then turn off your computer, go outside and celebrate the Earth.

Letter to the Editor

The proverbial saying, “Every cloud has a silver lining,” is used to convey the notion that, no matter how bad a situation might seem, there is always some good aspect to it. Is there a “silver lining” in this pandemic we’re experiencing? Well, that would be a real stretch. But I’ll try.

Five weeks ago, my primary source of food supply for the Roser Food Pantry (Publix) inadvertently cut me off. Not the store’s fault. That was at the time that bathroom tissue couldn’t be found and all other staples were flying off the shelves due to the pandemic fears. And that was the situation in any store, everywhere. Masks, rubber gloves, TP, disinfectant, cleaning supplies… you remember.

Four weeks ago, when my first bulk order was denied, I began searching for alternative sources to buy food supplies. No need to worry. I had a relatively full pantry and a healthy bank account. That was until my third weekly bulk order was also denied. Publix corporate was making the decisions on what each store got to restock their shelves. Of course, my food needs were not on their trucks. Because of the business closings on the island, we had just opened our doors to island workers displaced by this pandemic, much the same as we did in the 2017 red tide emergency. New applications for pantry benefits were coming in weekly. All Island Denominations Board, the Island Chamber of Commerce and Anna Maria Commission Chair Carol Carter, a friend, learned of the pantry’s situation and sent memos out to their extensive list of friends, people and organizations. They cautioned that this was not a financial need, rather a supply need. A bag of groceries or two is what was needed. They all included a list of supplies desired and locations where donations were being accepted.

Two weeks ago it started; the potential “silver lining” in all of this worldly pandemic anxiety. During Food Pantry hours, cars began to pull in and leave bags and bags of needed food items. One island lady called from Costco and asked, “What do you need? I’m in a buying mood.” Within an hour she dropped off nearly $500 in needed groceries. Publix donated two bundles (800 count) of paper bags. People were dropping off grocery bags and cash/checks one after the other. One island resident joined with a convenience store owner and conceived of a means to have $6,000 of nonperishable food delivered just last Thursday. Even a manager (island resident) at FELD Entertainment heard of our need and donated two very large cases of cotton candy. What a treat for the children we serve!

Thank you one and all. You know who you are.

Does a “deep sense of community” for all involved in fulfilling our short-term need count as a “silver lining?” You bet it does.

Jack Brennan
Proud Island resident; Chair of the Roser Food Pantry
Anna Maria, FL 34216

Boaters return to reopened boat ramps

Boaters return to reopened boat ramps

MANATEE COUNTY – Local boaters took to the water over the weekend after Manatee County’s public boat ramps reopened on Monday, April 13.

The public boat ramps were closed on March 26 by Manatee County Public Safety Director Jake Saur, but the Coquina South boat ramp in Bradenton Beach and the Riverside boat ramp in Palmetto remained opened to commercial fishermen. The ramp closures were part of the county’s response to the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.

On Friday, April 10, Manatee County commissioners voted 4-3 to reopen the boat ramps the following Monday. Commissioners Vanessa Baugh, Reggie Bellamy, Misty Servia and Priscilla Trace supported reopening the boat ramps. Commissioners Betsy Benac, Steve Jonsson and Carol Whitmore opposed it.

On Sunday, several boaters gathered offshore of Jewfish Key. With a few exceptions, most of the boaters anchored there adhered to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) COVID-19 social distancing guidelines. The FWC guidelines call for no more than 10 people per vessel and that vessels maintain a 50-foot distance from other vessels.

Boat traffic in and around Longboat Pass was also moderately heavy and the Manatee County Sheriff’s Office Marine Unit was on scene patrolling those waters.

A visit to Anna Maria Island’s boat ramps Sunday afternoon revealed full parking lots, robust activity and no noticeable social distancing concerns.

Members of the Manatee County Beach Patrol monitored the Coquina North and Coquina South boat ramp parking lots in Bradenton Beach and parking was limited to boat ramp users only.

Fred Garvin and his friend, Jesse, were among those who put in at the Coquina South boat ramp on Sunday.

“I think it’s a good sign of things getting back to normal, but I think it’s important not to go too quick with it. Go a little bit at a time,” Garvin said regarding the gradual loosening of COVID-19 restrictions.

Bradenton Beach Police Officer Devon Straight patrolled the boat ramp parking lots and the adjacent Gulf Drive rights of way where public parking is not allowed.

“Since they’ve reopened the boat ramps, it’s almost like a normal Sunday out here. Both boat ramps have been overflowing and we’re getting calls about parking complaints,” Straight said Sunday afternoon.

“Our biggest concern is at the base of the Longboat Pass Bridge. That is a state right of way and parking there is reserved for the bridgetender only. A lot of people think that since they can’t park at Coquina Beach, or park at the boat ramps to go to the beach, they’re parking on the right of ways. We are citing them $50 parking tickets if we catch them doing that. We try to give a warning first, but if we can’t find you, you’re going to get a ticket,” Straight said.

“As it has always been, as long as you can find legal public parking you can access the beaches,” Straight added.

The Kingfish boat ramp in Holmes Beach was also busy on Sunday. By late afternoon, there were still several vehicles and boat trailers parked along the Manatee Avenue right of way across the street. Boat ramp users included boaters, personal watercraft owners and some kayakers who put in along the shoreline west of the ramps.

Castles in the Sand

Changes in the pandemic age

If the pandemic taught us anything, it’s how quickly everything can change, and the real estate market is no exception. We went from a blow-out real estate market, overflowing restaurants, planning high school and college graduations to hoarding toilet paper, wearing face masks and checking daily infection counts in less than a month.

What’s ahead for the real estate market, both local and national, is anyone’s guess; unfortunately, there are likely dark clouds on the horizon. With businesses closed, employees laid off and people unable to move around the country, buyers and sellers may have to take a pause. Even with continuing historically low mortgage interest rates, if a buyer can’t qualify because of job loss, it will take a toll on the health of the markets. In addition, available inventory may eventually be impacted because homeowners don’t want strangers coming into their homes and will opt not to list properties for who knows how long.

Meanwhile, homeowners who have lost jobs are struggling with impending mortgage payments, flooding their mortgage companies with requests for help. In addition, they’re having trouble getting through waiting on the phone for hours to reach a real person who may be working from home and having their own personal and technical difficulties.

The stimulus legislation says homeowners hurt by the coronavirus or its fallout can ask their mortgage servicer for a so-called forbearance. This means their monthly payments are interrupted for up to six months and an additional six months can be requested after that. They don’t have to prove they have been hurt by the coronavirus since, if the loan is backed by the government, the mortgage servicer is generally expected to grant the request. Since about 70% of U.S. mortgages are backed or insured by a federal agency like Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac or FHA, this will be a non-issue for most borrowers.

What is not specified in the law is when borrowers have to make up the missed payments. Some homeowners are assuming that they don’t have to make up the payments ever, certainly incorrect. But even when they understand this, there’s still confusion as to how the funds will be made up. The Department of Housing and Urban Development told servicers that holders of FHA mortgages can compile the missed payments into a second, interest-free home loan for borrowers to pay off after the original mortgage.

However, for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac loans, which represent about half of the country’s mortgage market, that offer was not made. Instead, federal regulators have instructed servicers to work with borrowers and to consider letting them tack their missed payments on to the end of their loan, but are not mandating it.

Lenders, like everyone else, are operating in the dark with no way of predicting the scope or duration of the pandemic and shutdown. Economist Mark Zandi with Moody’s says as many as 30% of Americans with home loans, about 15 million households, could stop paying their loans if the economy remains closed through the summer or beyond.

Are we in for a big wave of foreclosures similar to the housing bubble bursting in 2008? Let’s hope not, but since our real estate market was so strong and so much in demand, it’s not a bad calculation to assume it will be one of the first to come back even in a big downturn. Chin up and stay safe.

Reel Time: Tarpon time is coming

Reel Time: Tarpon time is coming

The weather hasn’t cooperated in a long time but as soon as it does, I’ll be out hunting tarpon. It’s a little early for the migration but while I’m waiting for the weather to change, I’ll be planning for the season. The boat is getting cleaned up, I just got the trolling motor tuned up and the outboard serviced. I’m rerigging my spin and fly tackle and tying flies in anticipation of one of my favorite times of the year. Tarpon are one of the premier gamefish that swim local waters and a noble adversary on any tackle. The migration gets into full swing during the month of May and generally runs into August and September for die-hard anglers. These fish are a test of any angler and tackle, running to over 200 pounds. The average runs an astounding 80 to 100 pounds.

We are blessed with some of the best tarpon fishing in the world and the local bars and inshore waters host some of the finest fly and spin fishing to be found anywhere. This isn’t a game of numbers and to the anglers who pursue tarpon it’s the hunt and the action that keep them on the bow for six to eight hours in the hot summer sun.

Tackle should match the size of the quarry and most anglers opt for a 20- to 30-pound spin outfit and 11 to 12 weight fly rod, line and reel. A heavy bite tippet is required because of the size of tarpon and their rasp-like mouth. Fly anglers generally use a 60- to 80-pound tippet while spin anglers choose 80- to 100-pound test. While it might seem like a difficult task to land a tarpon on the fly, or any tackle for that matter, anglers who knows the limits of their tackle can actually land a tarpon in a surprisingly short time. The key is to apply maximum pressure from the hookup never letting up. Neophyte anglers have a tendency to “baby” their tarpon in a misguided attempt to land them. The truth is that the longer you fight a tarpon the better chance you have of losing it.

A properly (IGFA approved) tied tarpon leader used by fly fishers usually runs between 10 and 12 feet and is tapered to properly deliver the fly. The leader includes a class tippet (weakest link) from 16 to 20 pounds that is doubled at both ends to soften the (shock) impact to the class tippet and bite tippet. Key to the whole equation is to have a very sharp hook as tarpon have extremely tough mouths.  Conventional leaders vary from angler to angler, but a doubled standing line tied to a leader and then to the bite tippet with a blood knot or Albright Special is recommended.

Flies vary from the classic splayed feather “Keys” style to more complex designs like the “Toad,” and various baitfish imitations. Some fly anglers are not concerned with actually landing a tarpon, preferring to just enjoy the hunt, the hook up and the jumps that usually follow the hook set. They use light bite tippets which allow the tarpon to work through the leader with their abrasive mouths. The key to landing tarpon on the fly is accuracy. The fly must be placed perfectly, move in a precise direction relative to the fish and be at the proper (fishes’) depth. Even when all of these factors come together, there’s still about a 50% chance that the tarpon will reject the fly.

The go-to bait for spin anglers is a live crab. Small blue crabs can be purchased from bait shops and pass crabs can be dipped from the local passes on a falling tide. Other effective baits include pinfish, threadfin herring and pilchards. Artificial lures like the DOA Bait Buster and the 4- and 6-inch shrimp, jigs and even top water plugs can be effective. Patience is a critical factor when fishing for tarpon, especially when fly fishing. The most successful anglers find the edge of a sand bar or other underwater feature that tarpon track, anchor in casting range and wait. Sometimes tarpon come at a steady rate but just as often there are long periods of time when the only thing to look at is the water. This really separates the good anglers from the great anglers. There are times when you need to move but knowing when and where is a skill that is developed and never mastered.

Once set up, the angler must be able to make a 40- to 50-foot cast to a location the size of a dinner plate. Placement of the fly cannot be overemphasized, because tarpon will seldom vary a foot or two from their path to eat a fly. Although there is always the rare exception, a fly must never travel in a path towards the intended target. A tarpon’s prey species wouldn’t survive long if it moved towards its aggressor, and tarpon know it. Besides moving away from the fish, the fly must move at the proper pace, be at the proper depth and never slow down when a tarpon is tracking it. Conversely you can’t move the fly too fast, taking it out of a tarpon’s range. If all this wasn’t demanding enough, once a tarpon decides to eat the fly an angler’s mettle is really tested.

Conventional anglers usually look for rolling fish in the near-shore Gulf and motor well ahead of them to intercept their path. Trolling motors can be effective for following a school in deep water but will spook them in the shallows. One thing that all tarpon anglers should practice is courtesy. Often a boat has been working long and hard to get properly set up for a shot and a boat running up on the fish will spoil the day for everyone. Tarpon are not trout and attempting to raise the rod to set the hook is a cardinal mistake. Fortunately, once a tarpon decides to eat there’s no need to make a lightning-fast hook set. When fly fishing, the right set is called a “strip strike,” which involves letting the line come tight and immediately setting the hook with a combination of the line hand and the rod. Conventional anglers should also have the patience to let the line come tight before attempting to hook the fish. Then the angler must at once work to set the hook in the cement-like jaw while being ready for the fish to bolt away from the boat.

After a fly angler’s initial hook set, attention must go immediately to clearing (getting the loose line off the deck) the line. In most cases the angler has been stripping in line when the fish bites and the hook is set. That line can easily foul on the angler, the rod or the reel. The protocol is to take your attention from the fish to the line at your feet. Hold the rod away from your body and let the excess line pass through your stripping hand in a circle made with the thumb and the forefinger. Once the line is “on the reel” set the hook with several more strip strikes, using the rod. Conventional anglers often use circle hooks which don’t require a hook set. They just need to let the line come tight and enjoy the action. In any case, a tarpon cannot be aware of the angler on the other end until the hook set.
While it’s important to exert maximum pressure on the tarpon during the fight, anglers must yield on jumps. On the jump the standard maneuver is to thrust the rod forward to relieve pressure on the line. This prevents the tarpon from breaking off if it lands on a taught line. This maneuver is known as “bowing to the king.”

It’s customary to start the engine and get as close to the tarpon as possible after the initial and subsequent long runs. This allows the angler to apply maximum pressure. If a tarpon is a hundred yards from the boat, the stretch of the line makes it impossible to apply any real pressure.

If you’re looking for a good jump shot here’s a great tip. When a tarpon makes any long run, motor close to it, applying only enough pressure to make sure the hook doesn’t dislodge. As soon as you are in place, frame the shot you want and then have the angler apply maximum pressure. Most times the tarpon will make a jump that’s close enough to the boat to get the angler and the fish in the shot. It’s not a sure thing, but when it works it can present an awesome photographic opportunity. Finally, don’t try and rush the tarpon when it gets near the end of the fight. Keep the pressure on but don’t clamp down and try to force the fish to the boat. In the end it’s a game of odds. Every time I think I’ve discerned a pattern, the tarpon teach me a new lesson! Good action can be found right through July and beyond for fly anglers while the best month for conventional anglers is generally June. Tarpon fishing is a challenging endeavor, but it’s well worth the effort when you finally get that first scale-rattling jump.

Now repeat after me, “I’ll remember all this, learn it and reread so I don’t make any mistakes.” Good luck with that, but I guarantee you those are some of the most exciting mistakes you’ll ever make.

County curfew extended, concerns raised about testing and nursing homes

BRADENTON – Manatee County Commissioners have extended the countywide curfew until Tuesday, but they have even larger concerns about the lack of coronavirus (COVID-19) testing kits and the high number of nursing home residents and employees who’ve already tested positive.

And according to Commissioner Carol Whitmore, former commissioner Gwendolyn Brown has died as a result of contracting COVID-19. Brown was Manatee County’s first African-American county commissioner and the county’s first African-American commission chairperson.

Curfew extended

During Friday afternoon’s emergency county commission meeting, Manatee County Public Safety Director Jake Saur presented his request to extend the curfew for another seven days.

“Manatee County has not yet achieved a flatting of the curve. Our response to COVID-19 is going to continue for some time. Therefore, sustained efforts to promote social distancing that slow the spread or flatten the curve remain more crucial than ever. Over the next few weeks, while our health and medical community remain on the front lines and under a great deal of stress, we need to be doing all that we can to build and maintain resiliency in ourselves and in our community,” Saur told the commission.

Saur said COVID-19 cases in Manatee County are now predicted to peak during the week of May 3. The previous anticipated peak was on or around April 21.

The commission voted 4-3 to extend the curfew until Tuesday, April 21, when it will be discussed again during the regular county commission meeting which starts at 9 a.m.

When making her motion to extend the curfew until Tuesday April 21, Commissioner Priscilla Trace said it was possible that Gov. Ron DeSantis might make an announcement on Monday that impacts the county curfew.

For now, the countywide curfew remains in effect from 11 p.m. to 5 a.m. daily. Travel during that overnight timeframe is restricted to those engaged in essential businesses, services or activities set forth in Gov. Ron DeSantis’ Executive Order 20-91, which some refer to as a ‘stay-at-home’ order.

Testing concerns

Commissioner Misty Servia asked Saur why Manatee County has had so many fewer tests than Sarasota County.

According to Saur, the Manatee County Health Department has run out of specimen collection kits and is waiting for more.

“We know the state of Florida has run out of tests. Since we last saw our 200 tests we used for our drive-through (testing) the State of Florida has sent us more tests. However, we were told we could not use them and all of the information on all those tests were in Chinese,” Saur said.

The tests marked with Chinese language are not FDA approved.

“As of today, they’re going to start replacing those with valid FDA-approved tests. When those come in, we will definitely start using those to start testing the public,” Saur said.

County curfew extended, concerns raised about testing and nursing homes
Manatee County commissioners are dealing with numerous coronavirus-related concerns. – Manatee County Submitted

Saur said MCR Health in Manatee County has purchased its own tests and is providing COVID-19 testing for those who meet the testing and symptomatic criteria. Saur said those with a prescription from their personal health care provider can be tested at a MCR Health facility. He also said those without a prescription can be tested at a MCR Health facility if they meet the testing criteria.

“MCR has plenty of tests,” Saur said.

Saur said Manatee Memorial Hospital has purchased tests and he thinks Blake Medical Center has too.

Commissioner Vanessa Baugh asked Baugh if COVID-19 testing was free nationwide. Saur said he’s aware of medical facilities in Manatee County charging for coronavirus tests.

Dr. Jennifer McCullen is an obstetrician in Lakewood Ranch. She is also the president-elect of the Manatee County Medical Society. During public comment, she expressed support for extending the curfew. She also addressed the cost of purchasing COVID-19 tests.

“They are $60 per test and you’re not getting them for free,” McCullen said.

County Administrator Cheri Coryea said there would be a meeting on Monday at which she, Saur, local health care professionals and Manatee County Health Department officials would discuss purchasing test kits directly, without going through the state.

Coryea said she has asked the discussion group to provide a number as to how many tests are needed and how many tests can be appropriately administered in Manatee County.

Commissioner Reggie Bellamy asked about the county’s available financial resources.

“It is a funding issue from the standpoint of the costs of tests, but it’s also an access issue of finding tests that are the appropriate tests. At this point we’re not as concerned about the financial implications,” Coryea said.

Coryea said said she’s spoken to other organizations and individuals in the community who’ve offered to assist in the efforts to purchase tests directly.

“I don’t feel it’s a funding issue, it’s getting the right information so the right tests are here and carried out properly,” Coryea said.

Coryea said she would provide the commissioners with more details on Tuesday.

Nursing home concerns

Saur addressed the need to test nursing home residents and employees.

“Our number one testing concern right now is with our nursing homes. The state has brought in incident management teams to our nursing homes and they’ve started a very big push to get all of those patients and workers tested,” he said.

“As of this week, our health department has started issuing involuntary quarantines to some of those nursing home workers because we know they’re spreading COVID-19. The state is reserving those tests for the nursing homes. We have to get into those nursing homes to make sure they’re following all the proper procedures and that they’re also being tested,” Saur said.

“We have two long-term care facilities that have tested employees and residents. And of those two sites, we’ve had over 100 positives in those two long-term care facilities,” Saur said.

COVID-19 claims former commissioner

During Friday’s meeting, Whitmore announced Brown’s passing.

“I have some very bad news. Commissioner Gwen Brown died at 2:49 from this terrible disease. She was at home. She wasn’t in a nursing home. She wasn’t able to drive, so somebody brought it (the virus) to her. Her family asked me to publicly announce this and to please pray for her. So, for those of you who say you don’t know anybody and can’t put a name to this, Commissioner Gwen Brown rest in peace,” Whitmore said.

County curfew extended, concerns raised about testing and nursing homes
Former County Commissioner Gwendolyn Brown has passed away. – Manatee County | Submitted

Beaches still ‘closed’

During public comment, Bradenton resident Michelle Pinel addressed the beach closures on Anna Maria Island. She questioned the fairness of Island residents and vacation rentals guests being allowed to access the Island beach areas that remain difficult for other county residents to utilize due to the temporary elimination of public parking spaces.

County curfew extended, concerns raised about testing and nursing homes
Bradenton resident Michelle Pinel wants the county beaches reopened. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

“The beach is closed down, but it is only closed down to the average Manatee County citizen. There are people illegally checking into vacation rentals and the citizens (of the Island) are allowed to use the beach, but we are not. I think that is unfair,” Pinel said.

Peace out

“Pass on peace, not COVID-19” is the inspirational message written in the sands of Anna Maria Island by local artist Jim Shipley, and people all over the world have seen it, thanks to Patricia Filomeno, owner of Ink Graphics Media and Florida Furniture Rental.

On Saturday, March 28, Filomeno and her husband, Rainer Scheer, went for a walk on Anna Maria Island and spotted the artist working on a sand installation with the mission to share peace and love in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic.

“We decided to bring our drone and film it,” she said. “We have over 82,000 views already. I am so proud that our video served as inspiration for thousands of people.”

“This is totally awesome!” Shipley said. “Doing just what I wanted to do, the message is getting out there. It’s all about peace. Thanks for passing it on, that’s what it’s all about.”

Patricia Filomena with Jim Shipley’s sand sculpture. - Patricia Filomena | Submitted

Patricia Filomena with Jim Shipley’s sand sculpture. - Patricia Filomena | Submitted

Artist Jim Shipley made these sand sculptures in Holmes Beach last week. - Mark Taylor | Submitted

Artist Jim Shipley made these sand sculptures in Holmes Beach last week. - Mark Taylor | Submitted

Artist Jim Shipley made these sand sculptures in Holmes Beach last week. - Mark Taylor | Submitted

Artist Jim Shipley made these sand sculptures in Holmes Beach last week. - Mark Taylor | Submitted

Artist Jim Shipley made these sand sculptures in Holmes Beach last week. - Mark Taylor | Submitted

Artist Jim Shipley made these sand sculptures in Holmes Beach last week. - Mark Taylor | Submitted

Artist Jim Shipley made these sand sculptures in Holmes Beach last week. - Mark Taylor | Submitted

Artist Jim Shipley made these sand sculptures in Holmes Beach last week. - Mark Taylor | Submitted

Officers enforce new parking measures

Officers enforce new parking measures

HOLMES BEACH – The Easter weekend was a busy one for Holmes Beach police officers as they worked to enforce the city’s new no parking mandates.

Beginning April 10, no parking orders went into effect in the city, blocking parking at all beach accesses, along city streets and in the right of way. Banners were placed throughout the city warning drivers that violators would be towed and beach accesses were blocked by police barricades. Some private parking areas where businesses were closed also were blocked off to prevent illegal parking on April 12.

Also on Sunday, officers and tow truck drivers created a staging area at the then-closed Kingfish Boat Ramp where 7 vehicles were towed on Sunday. In a conversation with The Sun on April 13, Holmes Beach Police Chief Bill Tokajer said that he had nine officers out on April 12 to help educate drivers. He said that his officers warned drivers as they parked that if they left the vehicle it would be towed at their expense. Without that, he said that the number of cars towed would have been much higher, around 40-50. For the drivers whose vehicles were towed, Tokajer said the vehicles were towed to the boat ramp instead of in town and officers gave the drivers a ride to Kingfish to pay to retrieve their vehicles while pointing out all of the banners and signs the drivers had passed warning of the city’s new parking policies.

Tokajer said that officers gave drivers 69 parking tickets over the weekend to help educate them that the new parking regulations would be enforced. He added that he had five tow trucks from different companies on Sunday to tow illegally parked vehicles. With Kingfish reopening on April 13, he said that if needed, officers may set up a towing staging area across the street instead of using the area for overflow boat trailer parking.

Both Tokajer and Titsworth said the new parking regulations are designed to help discourage people from coming to the beach and encourage them to abide by Gov. Ron DeSantis’ stay at home order, which is set to expire at midnight on April 30. Tokajer said he felt the new parking regulations helped with social distancing and keeping large groups from gathering.

The new parking regulations remain in force until at least April 30 or when Mayor Judy Titsworth rescinds her executive directive.

In Bradenton Beach, Lt. John Cosby said that there were no issues with illegally parked vehicles over the weekend. While the city remains under a state of emergency, drivers are advised to not park in the First Street North municipal parking lot, at the Coquina and Cortez county beach parking lots or in barricaded areas. Bradenton Beach police officers are strictly enforcing the new rules and violators may be ticketed or have their vehicles towed at their own expense.

– Sun reporter Joe Hendricks contributed to this story.

Related coverage

Bradenton Beach issues parking enforcement announcement

Holmes Beach parking closed for beachgoers

Coquina Beach south parking lot closing Monday

Local entrepreneurs give to save animals

Local entrepreneurs give to save animals

ANNA MARIA – Mark and Christine McConnell are not your average business owners. The two created a line of t-shirts, hats and other items sold at the Pineapple Marketplace but most, if not all, of their profits go to help local animal rescue nonprofits in the area.

The foray into retail is a new venture for both of them, Mark said in a conversation with The Sun. The couple has two lines of shirts called AMI Guy and AMI Gal and featuring a distinctive turtle logo. The shirts are all long-sleeved and provide 98% protection from the sun.

“It’s just a really good product,” Mark said of the shirts.

When he came up with the idea, Mark said he taught himself how to use Photoshop and Illustrator to design and digitize the drawings for the lines’ surfboard and turtle designs. With some help from other local business owners, including friends at HowLuckyAMI and the Pineapple Marketplace, Mark said AMI Gal is now out-selling AMI Guy, the original line, and they’re looking to add new designs in the future.

The turtle logo is a best seller for the AMI Guy and AMI Gal lines. – Submitted | Mark McConnell

One thing you’ll notice upon seeing the couple’s booth at the front of the Pineapple Marketplace, a Pine Avenue store featuring 30 vendors selling everything from crafts to clothing and jewelry, is the signs on top of the clothing racks advertising that purchases help fund local animal rescues.

Mark said that he’s been donating to local rescue organizations since his arrival in Anna Maria Island seven years ago. After being joined by Christine, the idea to give as much as they could to the animal rescues evolved into the business they now run using local printers and suppliers to create their products. In the past three months, he said they’ve been able to donate $3,000 to local rescues. Some of the rescues they’ve helped include Anna Maria Island Turtle Watch and Shorebird Monitoring, UnderDog Rescue of Florida and Forget-Me-Not, a large dog/pitbull rescue in Bradenton.

“We’re trying to just keep getting as much money as we can to rescues,” Mark said.

Christine said that the rescues they’ve donated to so far are ones that they’ve had experience with. The couple adopted one of their puppies from UnderDog and Christine volunteers with Forget-Me-Not. As for AMITW, Mark said he has a lot of respect for the work the organization does and that “it’s a great cause.”

The couple said they’re open to helping additional organizations in the future.

In the future for their clothing line, Mark is working on websites for the AMI Guy and AMI Gal shirts as well as new designs. The physical retail space is planned to remain at the Pineapple Marketplace where the couple also volunteers.