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Year: 2023

Market in the eye of the beholder

To some people, our national real estate market is downright awful, but to others, it may be the best of real estate times. It’s all in the eye of the beholder.

Don’t believe everything you read and, believe me, I read it all. Yes, it’s true that buyers, especially first-time buyers, are having a terrible time finding an affordable house. Yes, indeed, sellers aren’t moving out of their 1,200-square-foot starter house because they have a 3% mortgage. But it’s also true that sellers who want to sell are in a pretty darn good financial position and they’re as happy as can be.

Home prices were declining for five consecutive months but all of that has reversed itself quicker than the housing economists expected. The surprisingly quick recovery suggests that the residential real estate downturn is turning out to be shorter than many housing economists expected. Even if the number of sales keeps going down, sale prices are unlikely to fall significantly. In popular regions, including Florida, bidding wars are breaking out again, reliving the insanity of the 2021 market.

A byproduct of higher selling prices and fewer sales is, of course, the fear of low appraisals. If the buyer is planning on obtaining a mortgage based on the contract price the lender will be looking for a satisfactory appraisal for at least the purchase price. If the appraisal comes in too low, that will affect the loan-to-value ratio and could easily sink the transaction.

Sellers in today’s competitive market may remove the appraisal contingency from the contract. This means that no matter the amount of the appraisal, the buyer is legally bound to complete the transaction and better have the additional cash available.

Facing a low appraisal in an escalating market is not uncommon and can be a shock to buyers. Again, they will need to come up with more cash to close the gap to proceed with the transaction. Parties to the transaction like the broker and/or attorney can ask for consideration on the appraisal if they determine that one or more of the comparable properties were not valid, however, getting appraisers to change appraisals is nearly impossible.

Time to look at Manatee County’s August sales as reported by the Realtor Association of Sarasota and Manatee for the month of August:

Single-family homes closed 6.9% more than last August. The median sale price was $525,000, the same as last August. The average sale price was $715,711, up 9.2% from last year. The median time to contract was 33 days, compared to 13 days last year. The month’s supply of properties was 2.8 months, compared to 2.5 last year.

Condos closed 0.8% less than last August. The median sale price was $358,990, up 1.8% from last year. The average sale price was $393,727, down 2.6% from last year. The median time to contract was 50 days, compared to 13 last year. The month’s supply of properties was 3.3 months, compared to 1.8 months.

The Realtor Association feels that our prices are steady, and Florida is enduring in its desirability among out-of-staters. The fact that new listings and pending inventory are up for both single-family and condos is encouraging. Single-family had 8.6% new listings and 8.4% pending inventory. Condos had 18% new listings and pending inventory at 16.1%.

My eye beholds further adjustments, not a downturn, and once buyers get comfortable with 7.5% interest rates, they will forget all about the 3% their friends have. This is the way the economy rolls; it can’t be timed, it can only be faced head-on.

Painted rock honors young Iowa woman

Painted rock honors young Iowa woman

ANNA MARIA – Bradenton Beach resident Rob Edwards made a heartwarming discovery while recently photographing the sunrise at the Anna Maria City Pier.

Edwards, a retired electrician from New York, often takes photographs of the Island sunrises to send to his snowbird friends up north. On Sept. 9, which also happened to be his son’s birthday, he decided to take that day’s sunrise photo at the City Pier.

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Painted rock honors young Iowa woman
Rob Edwards found the painted rock near the City Pier. – Rob Edwards | Submitted

While standing among the shoreline rocks near the foot of the pier, Edwards looked down and saw a rock with Winnie the Pooh painted on one side of it. Winnie the Pooh happens to be one of his son’s favorite characters. At first, Edwards thought he’d found a rock painted by Marilia Stumpf Clarke, an Island resident who paints messages on rocks – sometimes called “kindness rocks” or “kindness stones” – and leaves them all over the Island. But when Edwards picked up this rock and read the memorial message on the other side, he knew it was something different.

The message on the rock says, “In memory of Ava Rose Vaske, Oct. 4, 2002 – Sept. 11, 2022, West Des Moines, Iowa.”

Painted rock honors young Iowa woman
The painted rock memorializes Ava Rose Vaske. – Rob Edwards | Submitted

Not knowing what to do with his discovery, Edwards took the rock home and posted photos of it on the Anna Maria Island Life Facebook page. Someone suggested he reach out to Ava’s family. From a family member, Edwards learned Ava passed away from ovarian cancer at the age of 19. She had been planning a trip to Anna Maria Island but never made it due to her illness. According to Ava’s still-active Facebook page, she was a student at Iowa State University.

Painted rock honors young Iowa woman
Iowa resident Ava Rose Vaske passed away when she was 19. – Ava Rose Vaske/Facebook | Submitted

After Ava’s passing, her mother decided to paint rocks in her memory and have friends place them in various places so her spirit could experience those places. She painted 100 rocks, three of which featured Winnie the Pooh, a favorite of Ava’s. One of the three Pooh rocks was placed on Ava’s grave. Another was given to a young girl at the Mayo Clinic suffering from the same disease. The third Pooh rock was given to a family friend who was headed to Anna Maria Island. That friend placed Ava’s rock near the City Pier.

Painted rock honors young Iowa woman
Ava’s painted rock experienced sunrise at the Sandpiper mobile home park dock. – Rob Edwards | Submitted

The family member Edwards communicated with told him to keep the rock. Given the affinity Ava and his son shared for Winnie the Pooh, and the fact that he found the painted rock on his son’s birthday, Edwards decided to carry it with him on his Island travels and post photos of those experiences on Facebook.

Painted rock honors young Iowa woman
Ava’s painted rock visited a parrot at Sun and Surf. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Edwards has since shared photos of Ava’s rock by a parrot cage at the Sun and Surf beach shop in Holmes Beach, on the beach near the 26th Street street-end in Bradenton Beach, and at sunrise by the dock at the Sandpiper Resort mobile home park where he lives. His Facebook posts have generated more than 1,000 likes, comments and emojis from other Facebook users.

Painted rock honors young Iowa woman
Rob Edwards brought Ava’s rock to the beach near his Bradenton Beach home. – Rob Edwards | Submitted

“The family is ecstatic over the outpouring of love and compassion shown by so many total strangers,” Edwards said. “As for the Ava stone, Ava and I will continue to travel together.”

Commissioners approve funding to remove derelict boats

Commissioners approve funding to remove derelict boats

BRADENTON BEACH – City commissioners have passed a request from Bradenton Beach Police Chief John Cosby to approve funding for the removal of derelict boats at the city pier following Hurricane Idalia.

A proposed motion was read by Mayor John Chappie at the Sept. 21 commission meeting to approve an invoice from SeaTow Sarasota Inc. for $10,397 for the removal of derelict vessels using city pier funds to come from West Coast Inland Navigation District (WCIND) grant money.

The motion was made by Commissioner Jan Vosburgh and seconded by Commissioner Ralph Cole.

It was passed unanimously by Vosburgh, Cole and Chappie. Commissioners Marilyn Maro and Jake Spooner were absent with excuse from the meeting.

“I want to thank you for getting on top of this and getting those boats out of there,” Chappie said. “Thank you to our public works department for all the work they’ve done with the whole mess with the storm.”

WCIND provides financial assistance related to navigability, recreational boater access, boater safety and the marine environment. It is a multi-county special taxing body covering Manatee, Sarasota, Charlotte and Lee counties.

In other business at the meeting, City Attorney Ricinda Perry gave an update on city pier preparations for the water taxi.

“Duncan (Duncan Seawall) has been out there every day working on it… They were very close to finishing when I talked to the Duncan crew the other day,” she said. “I also got the quotes in from Duncan to do the expanded pier planking that would wrap around to the dinghy dock and put in the waiting area for the water taxi down at the cistern area.”

Perry reported that the city has obtained approval from the Southwest Florida Water Management District to remove the cistern adjacent to the city pier.

Chappie had presented a proposal at the Aug. 2 Community Redevelopment Agency (CRA) meeting to discuss having an elevated small park created at the end of the Bradenton Beach pier in the spot where the fenced, unused cistern is located.

“The cistern project area is the center point of what we’ve been doing for the last several years – this 1,800-foot-long walkway,” Chappie said in August. “We have the city pier that has been totally rebuilt with 630 linear feet, we’ve added the 36 feet of floating docks, we’ve added the finger docks which expanded our docking facilities for up to 21 boats.”

“The mayor has been working on getting that set up and taken care of, which I think is going to be happening within the next few weeks,” Perry said at the Sept. 21 meeting.

Perry said the next step is to get the project funding in place.

“This was a project that was budgeted to be funded by the CRA,” she said. “But in the hopes the TDC (Tourist Development Council) funds would be used for this particular area, I’m pleased to tell you Mayor Chappie and I have been working very diligently with the TDC for the water taxi that is coming in.”

She said the CRA approved up to $15,000 for a ramping system or connection to get into the water taxi. She said it’s still being worked on.

“We have an interim potential solution,” Perry said. “It will be in combination with using the floating dock with a leased-out handicap-accessible piece of equipment while potentially making it full-time coming off the dinghy dock… It looks like we’re going to have that particular issue resolved.”

The lease amount is $1,000 a month for the handicap lift, which will be temporary, Perry said.

Siddique, Shoemaker enter county commission race

Siddique, Shoemaker enter county commission race

MANATEE COUNTY – Democrat Diana Shoemaker and Republican Talha “Tal” Siddique both seek the District 3 Manatee County Commission seat currently held by Kevin Van Ostenbridge.

Shoemaker announced her candidacy on Sept. 22. Siddique announced his candidacy on Sept. 19.

District 3 includes all of Anna Maria Island, Cortez, Palma Sola, and a portion of west Bradenton. The county commission primary election will conclude on Aug. 20. The primary election winners will square off in the general election that concludes on Nov. 5.

Tal Siddique

Siddique earned a bachelor’s degree in organizational sciences with a minor in computer science from The George Washington University and he’s served with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs and the U.S. Air Force.

Siddique is a member of the 2023-24 class of Leadership Manatee. He’s also a member of the Bradenton Kiwanis Club, Manatee Young Professionals, Young Republicans, Lakewood Ranch Republican Club, Lakewood Ranch Young Leaders Alliance, the Elks Lodge, Manatee Tiger Bay Club, the University of South Florida Sarasota-Manatee Alumni Board and his community advocacy group, Speak Out Manatee.

“I have had a tremendous amount of encouragement from Manatee County residents, which has been humbling. Our residents are frustrated with mismanagement, and the scandalous theft of property and personal data by politicians who think this is an appropriate use of their power and our taxpayer dollars. They clearly want to see new leadership, as do I,” Siddique stated in his campaign announcement press release.

The press release notes that Siddique and his wife, Kristen Truong, are deeply rooted in the Manatee County community and devoted parishioners of Saints Peter and Paul the Apostles Catholic Church.

“Tal’s candidacy for Manatee County Commission, District 3, is founded on a genuine desire to advocate for the needs and aspirations of the community, bringing forth a fresh and inclusive perspective to enhance the lives of all residents,” his press release says.

Siddique has already been endorsed by Holmes Beach Mayor Judy Titsworth and Holmes Beach Police Chief Bill Tokajer.

Learn more at www.votetal.com.

Diana Shoemaker

Shoemaker was president and CEO of Manatee Habitat for Humanity until 2021. For 12 years, she worked to create affordable housing for Manatee County residents.

In 2021, she became executive director of the Elders Action Network, a non-profit organization that works to create greater social and environmental justice.

From 2007 to 2009, she served as director for Family Promise of Manatee County, a non-profit providing shelter and resources to homeless families. She was the chair of the Manatee County Affordable Housing Task Force in 2016 and a member of the Bradenton Housing Advisory Committee. She graduated from the Leadership Manatee program and the Lakewood Ranch Business Alliance Executive Academy.

Shoemaker grew up in Long Island, N.Y. She earned a bachelor’s degree in social work from Ohio University and a master’s degree from Columbia University in 1988. She, her husband, Mark, and their two children moved to Bradenton in 1999.

According to her campaign announcement press release, Shoemaker is running to restore the voice of District 3 voters whose concerns have been overlooked or ignored on issues such as wetlands protection or the proposed parking garage on Holmes Beach.

“It’s time that we have leadership that understands their responsibility to listen to their voices,” she said.

“What we want from those who lead our community is integrity, open dialogue and attention to critical local issues necessary for creating fair and balanced policy. In recent years, leaders have pushed through policy decisions over and sometimes in spite of clear opposition from the public they represent. The issues we’re struggling with right now are nonpartisan issues. Having clean water and solving traffic problems are nonpartisan issues,” Shoemaker said.

Learn more at www.electshoemaker.com.

Kevin Van Ostenbridge

First elected in 2020, Van Ostenbridge filed his District 3 reelection campaign paperwork on June 1 and he’s already received $170,000 in campaign donations.

In a written statement provided to The Sun, Van Ostenbridge said, “Conservatives in Manatee County know that in my first term, I have led their county commission in delivering two tax cuts, record investments in traffic-relieving infrastructure, renewed our commitment to our sheriff’s office and its deputies and kept the economic engine of our community open for business.

Siddique, Shoemaker enter county commission race
Kevin Van Ostenbridge was elected as the District 3 commissioner in 2020. – Manatee County | Submitted

“Conservatives know we’ve gone to unprecedented lengths to protect the right to life and the second amendment in Manatee County.

“Conservatives know that protecting our environment is a priority of mine including moving forward with conserving hundreds of acres of environmentally sensitive lands for future generations to enjoy. I have also played an integral role in writing the final chapter of Piney Point. The closure of phase 1 at the Piney Point site is now complete,” he said.

Turtle season slows to a crawl

Turtle season slows to a crawl

ANNA MARIA ISLAND – The 2023 turtle nesting season is coming to an early end, partly due to Hurricane Idalia.

“No changes in nest numbers,” Anna Maria Island Turtle Watch Executive Director Kristen Mazzarella said. “That’s not surprising as this is usually the hatching time of year.”

The last nest on the Gulf of Mexico side of the Island hatched on Sept. 19 and volunteers continue to check three remaining nests on the bay side.

“We are still hoping to see a hatch,” she said.

Sea turtle season officially begins on May 1 and ends on Oct. 31.

Volunteers did not conduct patrols on Aug. 30 due to Idalia, but they were out on the beach assessing the status of the nests the following day.

“We had 76 unhatched nests left on the beach when Hurricane Idalia came through. Stakes were lost from all but 12 of them,” Mazzarella said.

“It is possible that some nests may still hatch, although unmarked. Turtle season is not quite over, but we are happy with the results, having allowed nearly 23,000 hatchlings to go out to sea prior to the storm.”

One local celebrity loggerhead turtle, Suzi – named after the late Suzi Fox, longtime executive director of Turtle Watch – was released from Coquina Beach on June 27 after being fitted with a satellite monitor. She is participating in the Sea Turtle Conservancy Tour de Turtles race and is currently swimming in the Gulf of Mexico near Cancun, Mexico.

The hatchling numbers from Suzi’s nest were unavailable due to the storm.

“Unfortunately, we never saw Suzi’s nest hatch prior to the storm, so we don’t have any information on how many hatchlings the nest produced,” Mazzarella said. “It is possible it hatched on one of the rainy days prior to Hurricane Idalia. The rain sometimes makes it impossible to see the hatchling tracks and therefore document the hatch.”

As the season winds down, Turtle Watch focuses on education and outreach.

“We are looking forward to having a booth at the Anna Maria Farmer’s Market in October,” Mazzarella said. “We are still compiling our data and working on coordinating with the schools about outreach programs.”

City Pier ferry stop approved

Ferry will stop at Anna Maria

ANNA MARIA – The city commission has approved an interlocal agreement that allows Manatee County to use the City Pier as a Gulf Island Ferry stop.

The unanimous approval granted on Sept. 21 ends a lengthy negotiation process that included the mayor and city commissioners recently rejecting the county’s request to make $300,000 in modifications to the City Pier. The rejected modifications included a floating perpendicular dock and a gated, exclusive ferry landing area at the existing boat landing at the T-end of the pier.

The county previously entered into an interlocal agreement with the city of Bradenton Beach to use the Bradenton Beach Pier as a ferry stop. The county also entered into an interlocal agreement with the city of Bradenton to use the Riverwalk Day Dock as a ferry stop.

City Pier ferry stop approved
Two composite pilings will be attached to the existing City Pier boat landing. – City of Anna Maria | Submitted

On Thursday, the Anna Maria City Commission approved the county’s request to attach two composite bumper pilings to the existing boat landing. Mayor Dan Murphy said pilings will be attached to the existing landing area but will not extend downward into the state-owned submerged land below the Tampa Bay waters. Murphy noted driving pilings into the state-owned land would require approval by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

City Pier ferry stop approved
The Gulf Island Ferry boats will use the boat landing at the T-end of the pier. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Murphy said the piling installation will cost the county about $10,000. The city will pay for the ongoing maintenance of the pilings. If the city decides later to opt out of the interlocal agreement, the city must reimburse the county for the initial piling installation expenditure.

Ramps carried on the ferries will provide pier access for arriving and departing passengers. Other boats docked at the public landing area must yield to arriving ferries.

City Pier ferry stop approved
A Gulf Island Ferry visited the City Pier on Sept. 7. – Amy Stanley/Facebook | Submitted

Commissioner Charlie Salem thanked Murphy for the time and effort he put into the interlocal agreement negotiations that ultimately saved the county and its taxpayers $290,000.

Expected to begin service at some point this year, the Gulf Island Ferry service between downtown Bradenton, Anna Maria and Bradenton Beach will initially operate on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays only, from 10:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. The fare will be $8 for a one-way trip, $5 for children making a one-way trip and $6 for seniors making a one-way trip.

Commissioner Jon Crane doesn’t expect the limited ferry service to have much impact on reducing automobile traffic and congestion to and from the Island. Nor does he expect the ferry service to be heavily utilized by employees who commute to the Island for work. Crane said he hopes the city and the county have ongoing conversations about increasing and expanding the limited ferry service.

Murphy agreed and said the initial offering is at least a starting point that hopefully leads to increased service and a greater emphasis being placed on transporting Island employees.

Miles Moss: Not stopped by Guillain–Barré

Miles Moss: Not stopped by Guillain–Barré

HOLMES BEACH – To anyone seeing him on the playground at Anna Maria Elementary School or on the field at the Island’s community center, Miles Moss looks like any 8-year-old boy. Kicking the soccer ball on the field or in the gym at The Center, Miles has excelled as a young athlete.

But it has not been an easy road for Miles to reach his position as one of the top youth goalkeepers in The Center’s recreational leagues.

Over Thanksgiving break 2016, Miles’ mother, Emily, worked as the Youth Programs Director for The Center of Anna Maria Island and had a week of fun-filled activities planned for The Center’s campers, but one November morning would forever change her family’s world.

On Nov. 21, 2016, a switch seemingly went off in Miles’ body, rendering him unable to stand or gain stability. Taking time away from the business he recently started with his uncle, Miles’ dad, Ryan, immediately took his son to the doctor, who rushed them to All Children’s Hospital in St. Petersburg.

With conditions worsening, pain at the touch and loss of movement progressed. Testing and speculation began. The possible diagnoses ranged from encephalitis to spinal myelitis. Negative or inconclusive tests led to preventive treatments, with no improvement for Miles.

As testing continued, Miles slowly became paralyzed.

“He could no longer sit up, eat, drink or speak,” his mom said.

In excruciating pain, his spinal tap resulted in a Guillain–Barré Syndrome diagnosis. The head neurologist at All Children’s expressed to the Moss parents that Miles was the youngest patient he had seen with this diagnosis.

Miles Moss: Not stopped by Guillain–Barré
After a long road of recovery, the Moss family can look back at their journey with Guillain-Barré Syndrome as a distant memory. – Submitted

Guillain-Barré is a rare disorder in which the body’s immune system attacks part of the peripheral nervous system, affecting the signals to the brain, causing weakness, numbness, pain, temperature and touch sensitivities, paralysis, as well as difficulty swallowing and breathing.

The future was unknown for the entire Moss family. Because of Miles’ young age, lack of research and experience meant uncharted territory for medical professionals and everyone else involved in his recovery. The progression to recovery that typically is seen within a few weeks in most patients was not the case for Miles.

The road to recovery was up and down until Miles was well enough to start the therapy necessary to move him back to his home. During the next weeks, he started three hours of hard work a day for occupation, speech and physical therapy.

Earning the nickname “Smiles” at The School for Constructive Play, Miles brought his infectious personality with him while he worked through his daily recovery with his mom in the hospital. While Emily was with Miles, co-worker, Rainia Lardas, kept youth programs at The Center running smoothly, allowing Emily to focus on her son’s health.

Making the trip back and forth to Tampa when possible and spending weekends at the hospital, Ryan and Miles’ older brother, Mason, poured love and support into his recovery. Thanks to the Tampa Ronald McDonald House, the family had a place to escape the hospital setting for emotional and physical recovery as caregivers.

Working and growing his then-new construction company, Moss Builders, Ryan tirelessly supported Miles’ recovery.

Learning to walk again, starting with a crawl to walking with braces, Miles eventually worked up to returning to school. With sports and other daily activities, Ryan helped him regain his confidence.

According to Emily, “Ryan and Mason both helped coach and encourage him in sports and would always cheer for him along the way.

“Mason was such a trooper through it all. He never complained about the long car rides to Tampa after school, or coming for the weekends,” his mom said. According to Emily, Mason would make games out of his brother’s therapy, helping him to get through his exercises.

After more than a month at All Children’s, Miles was finally on his way home, but the road to recovery continued at Blake Hospital. The journey was not easy and it was not overnight.

Over three years later, “Miles has made a full recovery as far as we can tell,” Emily said. Completing his last therapy session in February 2020, Miles has been able to resume a full and active life.

Miles Moss: Not stopped by Guillain–Barré
Recovered from Guillain-Barré Syndrome, Miles Moss is now playing lacrosse with older brother, Mason. – Submitted

Playing sports with Mason, now 12, Miles has been dominating the soccer field both inside and outside at The Center along with his brother.

“There is always a fierce competition with his older brother, Mason, in all things,” Emily said of Miles.

In the most recent seasons, Miles has been one of the top goalies in The Center’s youth leagues and has been playing in his designated age group, as well as the older leagues.

Being an Island kid, he loves chatting it up with people fishing at the City Pier or helping the waitresses at Slim’s Place, the location of his “dream job.”

“Sometimes, when I look back at the photos, it’s hard to believe that was even my life at one point,” Emily said.

Seemingly with the hard part behind them, the Moss family is thankful that Miles thrives today. His mom’s statement of pride says it all.

“Miles is confident and loves being in the spotlight. He wants to be ‘famous’ like his dad and brother, who are often found in the sports section of the local newspaper,” she said.

The confident third grader, with the love and support of his family and the community, goes through life today like any other 8-year-old after enduring the life-altering impacts of Guillain–Barré Syndrome.

Sebring departs Anna Maria Commission

Sebring departs Anna Maria Commission

ANNA MARIA – City Commissioner Deanie Sebring has vacated her city commission seat.

Sebring participated in her final commission meeting on Sept. 21. In October, she and her husband, Tripp, are moving to France. The remaining months of Sebring’s two-year term will be filled by a commission appointment to be made in January. Her term expires in December 2024.

Thursday evening’s regular city commission meeting was preceded by a budget adoption hearing. Before the budget meeting began, Sebring shared some thoughts on her departure and her next adventure.

“I am following my intuition. I am moving to Biron, France. I looked at a map and something made me say I was moving to France, and that was it. That day, we started putting the wheels in motion,” she said.

In the small commune/domicile of Biron, Sebring will pursue artistic interests that include working with

Angélique de Labarre and creating paintings of the late American-born French entertainer Josephine Baker. She will also continue her efforts to expand universalism.

Sebring moved from Tampa to Anna Maria in 2017. In December 2020, she was appointed to fill the city commission seat vacated by Amy Tripp. Running unopposed in 2022, Sebring was elected to serve another two-year term.

When asked what she learned as a commissioner, Sebring noted a commissioner doesn’t always get what they want because commission decisions are made by consensus. Sebring was alone in her past support for the elimination of the parallel parking spaces along Pine Avenue as part of the pending Reimagining Pine Avenue safety improvement project. She believes eliminating those streetside parking spaces would make Pine Avenue safer for pedestrians.

Referring to the potential consolidation of the three Anna Maria Island cities, Sebring said, “I think more people need to put their name in the hat to become a commissioner, especially if they want Anna Maria to continue to be a city.”

Regarding the commission as a whole, Sebring said, “I love the fact that it’s people who truly care about the community. I think this commission does a wonderful job. We have people with different backgrounds and it’s nice that we all have different ideas about different things. Dan Murphy is an incredible mayor and I very much respect him.”

When the budget meeting began, Murphy presented Sebring with a plaque containing a ceremonial key to the city. He described Sebring as “a bundle of energy” who got involved with the Anna Maria Island Garden Club, the Anna Maria Island Historical Society, the city commission and the community.

Sebring departs Anna Maria Commission
Deanie Sebring received a key to the city from Mayor Dan Murphy. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

“You’ve left your imprint here in the city of Anna Maria and we are so appreciative to have had you as a citizen of our city. It’s going to be difficult to replace you and we’re going to miss you. Thank you for everything you’ve done for the city,” Murphy said.

Sebring then said, “I will definitely miss everyone here. I’ve never felt I would have so many friends and meet so many people. It’s actually been the most incredible experience of my entire life. This little town was a safe haven for me and my husband for many different reasons. Anna Maria’s probably the most spectacular city I’ve ever had the pleasure of being a part of.”

Sebring’s last action as a city commissioner was to join the rest of the commission in approving the interlocal agreement that allows the county to use the City Pier as a Gulf Island Ferry stop. She then departed the regular commission meeting still in progress to attend a previously planned social gathering.

Appointment timeline

After Sebring departed, the mayor and remaining commissioners discussed the process and timeline that would be used to appoint someone to serve the remainder of Sebring’s term. At the same time, the commission will appoint someone to fill the two-year vacancy created when Commissioner Robert Kingan’s two-year term expires in December because he decided not to seek reelection.

Sebring departs Anna Maria Commission
Commissioner Robert Kingan’s commission term expires in December. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

In November, the city clerk’s office will begin accepting applications from Anna Maria residents interested in serving on the commission. The commission appointments will be made in early January, with each sitting commissioner numerically ranking the applicants in order of their personal preference. One applicant will be selected to serve the remaining months of Sebring’s current term and one applicant will be selected to serve the two-year term as Kingan’s successor. Applicants can state their preference for a one or two-year appointment.

A week before appointments are made, the applicants will participate in a public question and answer session at city hall answering questions posed by the sitting commissioners, the public and the media.

The importance of socializing your child early

By Pam Bertrand

As the director at School For Constructive Play, my 30ish years in early childhood education have produced many parent questions.

Some questions are asked in a panic, “She touched a banana pepper during dinner and must have touched her face because it’s on fire. What do I do?!” The answer to this question is to take a deep breath, get some milk, and put it on her face. The child in this story was 100% OK; her face is as fresh as a daisy, and to repay me for my awesome advice, she eventually came to work for me. She, too, would one day pass that wisdom on to another frantic parent like her mother.

Other questions are asked in less of a panic and more in regard to the philosophy at our little Island preschool. Among the most common question is, “According to your philosophy, what are the benefits of socializing my child early?”

By socializing your child early and implementing a play-based learning strategy, you are helping them to:

  • Develop a positive self-image. This enables a child to be successful in a learning environment and provides the building blocks for personal development throughout the child’s life.
  • Learn to handle their emotions in an appropriate way. Children have strong feelings. They are often confusing and beyond their control. By socializing your child early, you are helping them learn to understand, label and express their feelings towards themselves and others in appropriate ways.
  • Develop a sense of personal responsibility. When children are given opportunities to make choices and solve problems with others, they begin to learn how the world around them operates and how they function in it. In a safe and loving environment, children begin to learn their actions have consequences not just for themselves but for others as well.
  • Learn to trust and care about those around them. Through the relationships they make by socializing with their peers and teachers, children begin to develop the ability to give and receive affection and understanding. They start to learn to trust themselves and others around them.
Bioluminescence dazzles AMI beachgoers

Bioluminescence dazzles AMI beachgoers

ANNA MARIA ISLAND – The bioluminescent glow coming off the water in recent nights may be related to the aftermath of Hurricane Idalia, according to one local expert.

“This could be related to the nutrient pulse from Idalia,” said Dr. Dave Tomasko, executive director of the Sarasota Bay Estuary Program. “The water came up and much of the grass clippings and yard debris on our landscape got dragged back out into the bay as the water receded. So our water took a little bit of a hit.”

Tomasko said there are several types of organisms that could be responsible for the glowing flashes in local waters.

“It seems most likely to be a dinoflagellate called gonyaulax,” he said. “That’s a type of single-cell organism that’s known to cause California red tide, but not here. Our red tide here is caused by a different organism.”

Another organism, noctiluka, which comes from the Latin meaning “shines by night,” could also possibly be the cause of the glow, Tomasko said.

Tomasko said the organisms are not harmful to humans.

“It’s thought that this lighting is a protection against predators,” he said.

“The neat thing about these organisms is they create light from an enzyme they have that takes chemical energy and turns it into light,” he said. “It has to be there in a high enough amount to see the glow. It’s a neat little show.”

The best time to see the phenomenon is when the sky is darkest, he said.

Tomasko said the bioluminescence has often been seen south of Coquina Beach in Longboat Pass.

“One way to stir them up is to kick at the water, or the waves from a boat will do it,” he said. “I would not advise swimming at night though.”

Idalia erodes Island beaches

Idalia erodes Island beaches

ANNA MARIA ISLAND – Hurricane Idalia’s storm surge eroded the Island’s renourished beaches, but the full extent of the damage and when it will be repaired is not yet known.

“It could be months before any decision on what efforts will be undertaken is made,” Manatee County spokesman Bill Logan said in a Sept. 8 email to The Sun.

The first step of the process – evaluation by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) – has been completed.

“Jacksonville District completed preliminary damage assessments of all federal shore protection projects Sept. 1-3,” according to David Ruderman of the USACE Jacksonville Corporate Communications Office.

“Non-federal sponsors of federally authorized and constructed coastal storm risk management projects which sustained damages resulting from Hurricane Idalia have until Oct. 1 to apply for rehabilitation assistance under Public Law 84-99,” Ruderman said in an email to The Sun.

As of Sept. 15, Ruderman said requests have been received from Manatee and Pinellas counties.

During the Aug. 29 hurricane, storm surge reached 3-4 feet in coastal areas in Manatee County.

“This is the beginning of what I am told is a long process whereby the beaches are hand-measured, staked-out and surveyed for damage estimates from the storm and what measures may be needed to renourish any impacted areas,” Logan said in the Sept. 8 email.

Sarasota Bay Estuary Program (SBEP) Director Dr. Dave Tomasko evaluated the impact from Hurricane Idalia on the SBEP website.

“With Idalia, even though it was about 100 miles offshore, we were on its strong side, and thus we got the storm surge, even though we mostly experienced just tropical storm level winds,” he wrote. “This storm surge came a few hours before the peak of the full moon high tides.”

Water levels were retreating as the tide was coming up, Tomasko wrote.

“So, the dreaded ‘high tide on top of a storm surge’ did not happen,” Tomasko wrote. “That is lucky, because that could have added another foot or two. Still, water levels were about 3’ higher than they would have been otherwise.”

The last major beach renourishment locally was the 2021 Coquina Beach Storm Damage Restoration project, which placed approximately 74,805 cubic yards of sand at Coquina Beach.

“Beach renourishment projects not only provide recreational beach width for the benefit of residents and visitors, but during storm events, the sand also provides critical protection for structures and infrastructure landward of the beach. In addition, the beach provides critical habitat and nesting areas for protected species such as sea turtles and shorebirds,” according to Manatee County’s website.

Since 1992, Manatee County has participated in eight beach nourishment projects.

Approximately 6.9 million cubic yards of sand from offshore borrow areas have been placed as a result of the county’s and USACE’s beach preservation efforts.

Investigation continues into SeaPort Manatee oil spill

Investigation continues into SeaPort Manatee oil spill

ANNA MARIA ISLAND – Hurricane Idalia’s storm surge eroded the Island’s renourished beaches, but the full extent of the damage and when it will be repaired is not yet known.

“It could be months before any decision on what efforts will be undertaken is made,” Manatee County spokesman Bill Logan said in a Sept. 8 email to The Sun.

The first step of the process – evaluation by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) – has been completed.

“Jacksonville District completed preliminary damage assessments of all federal shore protection projects Sept. 1-3,” according to David Ruderman of the USACE Jacksonville Corporate Communications Office.

“Non-federal sponsors of federally authorized and constructed coastal storm risk management projects which sustained damages resulting from Hurricane Idalia have until Oct. 1 to apply for rehabilitation assistance under Public Law 84-99,” Ruderman said in an email to The Sun.

As of Sept. 15, Ruderman said requests have been received from Manatee and Pinellas counties.

During the Aug. 29 hurricane, storm surge reached 3-4 feet in coastal areas in Manatee County.

“This is the beginning of what I am told is a long process whereby the beaches are hand-measured, staked-out and surveyed for damage estimates from the storm and what measures may be needed to renourish any impacted areas,” Logan said in the Sept. 8 email.

Sarasota Bay Estuary Program (SBEP) Director Dr. Dave Tomasko evaluated the impact from Hurricane Idalia on the SBEP website.

“With Idalia, even though it was about 100 miles offshore, we were on its strong side, and thus we got the storm surge, even though we mostly experienced just tropical storm level winds,” he wrote. “This storm surge came a few hours before the peak of the full moon high tides.”

Water levels were retreating as the tide was coming up, Tomasko wrote.

“So, the dreaded ‘high tide on top of a storm surge’ did not happen,” Tomasko wrote. “That is lucky, because that could have added another foot or two. Still, water levels were about 3’ higher than they would have been otherwise.”

The last major beach renourishment locally was the 2021 Coquina Beach Storm Damage Restoration project, which placed approximately 74,805 cubic yards of sand at Coquina Beach.

“Beach renourishment projects not only provide recreational beach width for the benefit of residents and visitors, but during storm events, the sand also provides critical protection for structures and infrastructure landward of the beach. In addition, the beach provides critical habitat and nesting areas for protected species such as sea turtles and shorebirds,” according to Manatee County’s website.

Since 1992, Manatee County has participated in eight beach nourishment projects.

Approximately 6.9 million cubic yards of sand from offshore borrow areas have been placed as a result of the county’s and USACE’s beach preservation efforts.

County changes historical property oversight

County changes historical property oversight

CORTEZ – A proposal to shift the oversight of historical properties from the Manatee County Clerk’s Office to the Sports and Leisure Division was contested by those in the historical community at a Sept. 12 Manatee County Board of Commissioners meeting. It didn’t stop a majority of commissioners from voting in favor of the change.

Properties affected by the change in management include the Florida Maritime Museum (FMM) in Cortez, Manatee Village Historical Park, Manatee County Historical Records Library, Manatee County Agricultural Museum, and Palmetto Historical Park.

“Have we had any complaints that these properties are presently not being run adequately under the clerk’s office?” Commissioner George Kruse asked. “I don’t understand why we’re doing this.”

Commissioner Amanda Ballard said she felt “we could do better.”

“It seems like it’s been rushed in here,” Kruse said. “No one can tell me why we’re doing this except the opinion that quote unquote it could be done better. Somebody has to tell me why we’re doing this today. And not being presented to us in a manner that we can actually make an intelligent vote on this?”

A motion to approve Historical Resources to be managed under Sports and Leisure Services Department was made by Commissioner Ray Turner and seconded by Commissioner Mike Rahn.

Manatee County Deputy Director Sports and Leisure Services Molly White narrated a PowerPoint presentation at the meeting.

“We feel there is an opportunity to have a more impactful reach to our residents and visitors by moving these locations under the management of sports and leisure services. This will create a streamlined marketing approach and increase in growth in programs and initiatives to better serve our residents,” she said.

More than a dozen speakers who were not in favor of the change spoke, including Cindy Rodgers and Karen Bell representing two Cortez-based non-profits dedicated to the historical preservation of the fishing village.

“The Historical Society was founded in 1984 to document the history of Cortez, educate the public on the living history of our working fishing village, and protect the important historic resources of our National Historic District. Due to the community’s historic preservation efforts, Cortez is a popular tourist destination,” Cortez Village Historical Society (CVHS) president Cindy Rodgers said. “One of the things that ties the history together for both residents and visitors is the Florida Maritime Museum at Cortez. The museum opened in 2007 and has developed into a valuable educational resource.”

CVHS has co-sponsored multiple public events with the FMM.

“We’ve observed a high level of professionalism, creativity and commitment on the part of the staff,” Rodgers said, adding that Manatee County’s historic resources are well-run.

“We are particularly appreciative of the Manatee County Historical Records Library, which has painstakingly preserved and cataloged all of the key historical resources under the county’s purview,” she said. “It makes sense that the county clerk’s office, which is responsible for maintaining most of the key public records for the county including deeds, marriage licenses and construction documents, has the expertise and experience to successfully manage our historic records and resources.”

She expressed concern about the proposal to “uproot the Historic Resources Department” and move it to the Sports and Leisure Department.

“The PowerPoint suggests that management and public use of our historic resources would improve under this sweeping change in administration,” Rodgers said. “That is an interesting perspective and one that deserves a full public airing if commissioners and others have concerns about the current situation.”

She asked for commissioners to defer action until there is a full public accounting of the costs and benefits of such a change.

Karen Bell, a board member of The Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage (FISH), also spoke in support of the FMM and recounted some of its history.

“We met with Ernie Padgett, who was the county administrator at the time, and we asked him if we could write a grant to purchase the Maritime Museum, which at the time was the 1912 schoolhouse. Bob Sailors lived there – he had died and his estate was willing to sell to us,” Bell said. “We put together a grant application in 10 days, submitted it, we were in the top 10 and we were awarded the money. So, the funds to purchase the Maritime Museum came from the state of Florida and the Florida Institute for Saltwater Heritage. We put $20,000 into the purchase.”

Bell told the commissioners the importance of sharing that story.

“That’s our museum,” she said. “That’s our history. We have our families’ artifacts in there. So, for this to be brought upon us with no notice, nobody even shared with us that this was a consideration. It’s hard for me to understand how that can be when we have a partnership with county. So please, take time before you do something drastic. It works well.”

Bell said people from around the world visit the museum and stop at AP Bell Fish House as the last stop during village walking tours.

“It’s so different from what they see in other places in Florida,” Bell said.

The motion passed by a 6-1 vote with Kruse in opposition.

Holmes Beach Commissioners approve budget first reading

HOLMES BEACH – The city’s new budget and millage rate has received unanimous support from commissioners during an initial public hearing and vote.

Despite Commissioner Terry Schaefer’s absence, city commissioners had no trouble getting the two items passed during a Sept. 16 meeting.

The proposed millage rate was dropped to 2.05 mills, a reduction from the previous year’s 2.15 millage rate but still 12.18% higher than the 1.873 mills rollback rate. The millage rate is the rate charged per $1,000 of assessed property value for city taxes. The rollback rate is the millage rate that would bring in the same amount of revenue as the previous year.

“I don’t know how you all did it,” Commissioner Carol Soustek said. “The quality of services that people expect here are high and you kind of have to keep that up. But you all have just done a phenomenal job. It got lower than I thought it would go,” she said of the millage rate.

Soustek said that she hopes property owners understand that by lowering the millage rate from the previous year, commissioners provided a tax cut even though the city’s ad valorem tax revenue actually did go up due to an increase in property values. She added that it was unfortunate that the price tag has increased for city property owners, however, she added that increases across the board in costs make it impossible for the city to use the rollback rate to bring in a lower amount of tax revenue.

Commissioner Greg Kerchner asked if language could be added to the millage rate ordinance that explains how the tax rate works, but the idea was shot down by City Attorney Erica Augello who said it would be inappropriate to add such wording to an ordinance.

The budget presented during the first budget hearing totals $25,121,957 including $10,960,076 in reserves. The city treasurer noted that with a modest increase in reserves, Holmes Beach will have 24.5% in unrestricted reserves, just under the recommended 25% in unrestricted reserves recommended for coastal cities. The unrestricted reserves are used to run the city in case of an emergency, such as a hurricane, if the tax base for Holmes Beach is decimated. The funds also can be used to help cover unexpected expenses throughout the year with commission approval.

There was no public comment offered during the meeting.

The public has one more chance to weigh in on the budget before commissioners vote on it again. A final budget public hearing and vote is scheduled on Tuesday, Sept. 26 at 5 p.m. at city hall, 5801 Marina Drive. While meetings can be viewed online, anyone who wants to speak must appear in person in commission chambers.

The 2023-24 fiscal year begins Oct. 1.