Skip to main content

Year: 2024

Manatee County evacuation information

MANATEE COUNTY – The 2024 Atlantic hurricane season is underway. Two of the scariest issues when a storm heads toward Anna Maria Island are if an evacuation will be issued and where you and your family will go when you have to leave your home.

Manatee County addresses are assigned an evacuation zone based on proximity to the water and the elevation of the property. All of Anna Maria Island, Perico Island and Cortez are located in the Level A evacuation zone, the first zone that will be called in the event of a storm. All coastal areas of the county are included in this zone along with all mobile home communities.

From Anna Maria Island, the evacuation routes are east along Manatee Avenue and Cortez Road. When an evacuation is called, first responders advise making preparations and leaving as quickly as possible. Rather than attempting to catch a flight or drive to another state, residents are asked to evacuate 10s of miles, not 100s of miles. Once the storm passes, it might be difficult to get back due to heavy traffic and lack of supplies, such as gas, along the way.

Holmes Beach Police Chief Bill Tokajer said while first responders cannot force a property owner to evacuate, all vacationers are required to leave in the event an evacuation is called for the area. And if a property owner chooses not to evacuate, he said they should remember that first responders cannot respond to an emergency once winds reach a certain speed. These first responders include fire, EMS and law enforcement. Once winds reach a sustained 45 miles per hour, the fire department’s staff is required to evacuate the Island. Once winds hit a sustained 55 mph, EMS and law enforcement are required to evacuate. When these agencies leave the Island, they are not allowed to respond to any emergency calls until after the storm passes. Anyone who calls 911 to report an emergency during this time will be placed on a list to be checked on once the storm passes, Tokajer said.

Learn your evacuation zone at https://www.mymanatee.org/departments/public_safety/emergency_management/evacuation_levels

Stock your hurricane kits

MANATEE COUNTY – With the start of hurricane season on June 1, Manatee County reminds residents to stock disaster supply kits.

Recommended items are:

  • First aid kit with bandages, antiseptic, tape, compresses, aspirin and aspirin-free pain relievers, antacid and important phone numbers;
  • Flashlights and batteries for each family member;
  • Portable radio and batteries;
  • Mosquito repellent;
  • Whistle and distress flag;
  • Emergency charger for cell phones and other devices;
  • Cash as ATMs may not be operating;
  • Charcoal, matches and grill (for outdoor use);
  • Generator and fuel;
  • Ice chest/cooler and ice;
  • Plastic tarp, window screening, tools and nails;
  • Non-electric can opener;
  • Instant tire sealant;
  • Fire extinguisher;
  • Water purification kit;
  • Clean-up supplies;
  • Garbage can or bucket with tight-fitting lid and cat litter;
  • Toilet paper, paper towels and pre-moistened towelettes or baby wipes;
  • Up-to-date list of family medicines and dosages, along with a two-week supply of prescription medicines;
  • Enough non-perishable food to feed your family and pets for at least 7 days, including special dietary foods or baby food and formula;
  • One gallon of drinking water per person, per day, plus water for cooking and washing for 7 days;
  • Extra batteries.
Holmes Beach prepares residents for hurricane season

Holmes Beach prepares residents for hurricane season

HOLMES BEACH – City leaders did not hold back in this year’s hurricane preparedness town hall meeting. In addition to offering resources to prepare for the best possible outcome, Police Chief Bill Tokajer also showed a mock video of the worst, Tampa Bay taking a direct hit from a Category 5 storm.

Over a dozen people plus city staff members and elected officials came out to the May 22 presentation hosted by the Holmes Beach police, code compliance and public works departments. The goal of the annual workshop is to help get property owners ready to face the rigors of hurricane season, which runs from June 1 through Nov. 30.

This year’s season is predicted to be more active than average with 23 named storms and 11 hurricanes, 5 of which are predicted to be major hurricanes – a Category 3 storm or higher. Tokajer presented the forecast from Colorado State to the group, noting that it only takes one storm to turn our way and wash over the barrier islands.

Holmes Beach prepares residents for hurricane season
Director of Public Works Sage Kamiya explains to the crowd at city hall how meteorologists describe storm surge and how it translates to where they live and own property. – Kristin Swain | Sun

On the Saffir-Simpson Scale, a Category 1 storm has sustained wind speeds of 74-95 mph, a Category 2 storm has sustained wind speeds of 96-110 mph, a Category 3 storm has sustained wind speeds of 111-129 mph, a Category 4 storm has sustained wind speeds of 130-156 mph and a Category 5 storm has sustained wind speeds of 157 mph or more.

During his presentation, Tokajer primarily spoke on safety before, during and after a hurricane.

He noted that first responders are required to leave the Island once sustained wind speeds hit a certain level. The fire department must leave once sustained winds hit 45 mph to safely navigate their equipment over the bridge. EMS and the police leave once sustained wind speeds hit 55 mph.

Once an evacuation has been called and the storm approaches with enough force to send first responders to the mainland, Tokajer said that calling 911 will only put you on a list to be checked on after the storm safely passes. First responders will not be able to come out and provide assistance during the storm.

Once the storm passes, Tokajer said the city has its own “first in” team to check for structural damage, clear roads and look for downed power lines so the city’s residents and property owners don’t have to wait for Manatee County teams to make it to the Island.

Holmes Beach prepares residents for hurricane season
A light pole at the skate park in the City Field complex, 5901 Marina Drive, is painted to show what storm surge at levels up to 9 feet would realistically look like at that location in Holmes Beach. – Kristin Swain | Sun

Re-entry tags are available at the police station for city residents and are valid for five years.

He encouraged everyone to have a plan in case of evacuation and to go tens of miles away, not hundreds of miles. He also reminded people that while shelters are available in Manatee County they should be used as a refuge of last resort. And while the county does offer a medical needs shelter and transportation to the shelter for those who cannot drive on their own, those services are limited and anyone who thinks they may need the services should visit www.mymanatee.org/needs or call 311 for information.

Tokajer also reminded everyone to digitize records, prepare their homes for the storm including removing any outdoor furniture or tying it down, pack a hurricane kit with food and water for each member of your family and each pet for seven days, a first aid kit, blankets and other bedding if you need to go to a shelter, toys or games for children, comfort items including bedding and potty pads or other necessities for your pets and all of your medication. He also stressed adding cash to your hurricane kit, noting that if electricity isn’t working, debit and credit cards won’t work either.

Director of Public Works Sage Kamiya discussed what the age of their property means for property owners. He said that while a newer structure may be able to withstand higher wind speeds, an older one built to different building codes may have a lower maximum wind speed designation. He encouraged everyone to know the age of their home and to prepare it accordingly using hurricane shutters, sandbags and roof tie downs and other items to prevent damage from winds and flooding. He noted that sandbags, a maximum of 10 per property, are currently available by the pickleball courts at City Field and encouraged people to get them early, before a storm hits to avoid the rush or potentially not being able to get them at all. In the event of massive storm surge, he said that no sandbag will help keep water out of the house.

Holmes Beach prepares residents for hurricane season
Mayor Judy Titsworth does a happy dance at the idea of Anna Maria Island successfully surviving another hurricane season. – Kristin Swain | Sun

Mayor Judy Titsworth encouraged property owners to lift all appliances on the ground floor up by two feet to prevent damage from flooding. Kamiya also noted that all appliances should be unplugged before water begins to enter a structure.

A light pole at the skate park at City Field has recently received a new paint job. Kamiya said that the purpose of the paint is to show realistically what storm surge flooding looks like up to 9 feet or more in Holmes Beach. He said he hopes the pole will help people prepare accordingly for a storm and to reduce confusion from meteorologist predictions.

Multiple agencies predict above-average 2024 hurricane season

ANNA MARIA ISLAND – The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has released its 2024 Atlantic hurricane season forecast, and although Anna Maria Island dodged direct hits from two major hurricanes in 2022 (Ian) and 2023 (Idalia), forecasters warn that 2024 could be a bigger problem.

The season began on June 1, and NOAA’s forecast for this season predicts an 85% chance of an above-normal season, 10% chance of near-normal and 5% chance of below normal.

NOAA is forecasting a range of 17 to 25 total named storms (winds of 39 mph or higher). Of those, 8 to 13 are forecast to become hurricanes (winds of 74 mph or higher), including 4 to 7 major hurricanes (category 3, 4 or 5 with winds of 111 mph or higher). Forecasters have 70% confidence in these ranges.

NOAA’s forecast is very similar to AccuWeather’s recent forecast. AccuWeather’s team of expert meteorologists is warning people and businesses to start preparing for a frenzy of tropical activity that could have major impacts on the United States this hurricane season.

“The 2024 Atlantic hurricane season is forecast to feature well above the historical average number of tropical storms, hurricanes, major hurricanes and direct U.S. impacts,” AccuWeather Lead Hurricane Forecaster Alex DaSilva said. “All indications are pointing toward a very active and potentially explosive Atlantic hurricane season in 2024.”

DaSilva says there are four factors that indicate that this year will possibly be recordbreaking. The first problem is that ocean temperatures are very warm, and that’s basically food for hurricanes.

“Sea-surface temperatures are well above historical average across much of the Atlantic basin, especially across the Gulf of Mexico, Caribbean, and the Main Development Region,” DaSilva explained.

AccuWeather Chief Meteorologist Jon Porter said there is high confidence that that sea-surface temperatures across the Atlantic basin will remain well above the historical average throughout the 2024 hurricane season.

“When you look back at historical sea surface temperature in the Atlantic’s Main Development Region, recent average water temperatures jump off the chart. They are the highest observed this early in the season in the available records,” Porter said. “This is a very concerning development considering this part of the Atlantic Ocean is where more than 80% of the storms form which go on to become tropical storms or hurricanes.”

 

AccuWeather also blames the flipping from El Nino to La Nina weather systems for the forecast. Even though the Pacific Ocean is thousands of miles away from the Atlantic, what happens there has major impacts on severe weather in Florida; especially hurricanes.

 

During an El Niño pattern, waters in the eastern Pacific are warmer than the historical average. In La Niña, sea-surface temperatures in the eastern Pacific are cooler than the historical average. In short, this leads to less wind shear over most of the Atlantic basin, which, when mixed with the warmer water, makes for perfect conditions for tropical development.

 

Other factors include weather patterns in Africa. A stronger African jet stream could jump-start the development of storms long before they make it here to the states. The strength, orientation and position of a feature known as the Bermuda-Azores high pressure area can have a major influence on the formation of tropical storms and hurricanes.

 

“Severe weather and emergencies can happen at any moment, which is why individuals and communities need to be prepared today,” FEMA Deputy Administrator Erik A. Hooks said. “Already, we are seeing storms move across the country that can bring additional hazards like tornadoes, flooding and hail. Taking a proactive approach to our increasingly challenging climate landscape today can make a difference in how people can recover tomorrow.”

The Sun recently spoke to longtime Bradenton Beach resident Dave Redeker to get a resident perspective on how he prepares for hurricane season, and how concerned he is in general regarding the potentially turbulent time of year.

Sun: Do you evacuate when told to?

Redeker: I evacuate for storms Cat. 3 and up. I think anything less than that is for the tourists.

Sun: When you do evacuate, how you decide what to take and what to leave?

Redeker: Records, guns and anything laying around that’s valuable. By records, I mean insurance papers, deeds and any important papers that can’t be replaced. I grab some clothes, a little bit of food and this-and-that. Usually, you’re going somewhere where there’s going to be food, so that’s not as important.

Sun: Do you take pictures of the house and other properties before you go?

Redeker: No, I know I’m going to get screwed by the insurance company, so why bother. The wind insurers are going to say it’s flood damage and the flood insurers are going to say it’s wind damage. They’ll begrudgingly pay you a fraction of what they should.

Sun: What do you say to people who ask how you can live in a potential path of destruction, and is it worth it?

Redeker: I say that we get at least three days’ notice when a big hurricane is coming. Somebody in the Midwest only gets three minutes notice a massive tornado is about to destroy everything they own. I don’t know where you live that you don’t have something. Mudslides, wildfires and earthquakes out west, or flash floods in the mountains, nowhere is very safe, but I really like it here.

Sun: Is hurricane season being potentially worse this year a concern to you?

Redeker: Every year is going to be the worst year; we’ve been hearing it forever. All I know is that hurricanes one or two or three weeks after Labor Day are the ones you’ve got to watch. If something bad’s coming, that’s when it’s going to show up. If you’ve got to be gone because you have a hurricane phobia, be gone in August and September.

Whether or not this will be a bad hurricane season remains to be seen, but every government agency and local municipality agrees being prepared for the worst will result in the best outcome.

Hurricane names 2024

Hurricane names 2024

The World Meteorological Organization released the names for the 2024 Atlantic hurricane season. These names will be used in alphabetical order to identify hurricanes, tropical storms and other meteorological systems of significance in the Atlantic basin. Developing cyclones are given a name when they become a tropical storm, reaching sustained winds of 39 miles per hour or higher.

This year’s names are:

 

  • Alberto
  • Beryl
  • Chris
  • Debby
  • Ernesto
  • Francine
  • Gordon
  • Helene
  • Isaac
  • Joyce
  • Kirk
  • Leslie
  • Milton
  • Nadine
  • Oscar
  • Patty
  • Rafael
  • Sara
  • Tara
  • Valerie
  • William

 

This year’s list of storm names was last used in 2018. If the number of named storms exceeds the list, additional storms will be named using a supplemental list of names. This rarity has only happened twice in the past 15 years.

Island youth soccer playoffs underway

Island youth soccer playoffs underway

ANNA MARIA – The final days of school added to the excitement of the first two rounds of youth soccer playoffs played last week at The Center of Anna Maria Island. On Monday night, four games were played and the teams advancing to round two were determined.

In an exciting finale, team AMI Coconuts beat out the Emily Moss Design squad in post-regulation play penalty kicks. Emily Moss Design’s goalkeeper Miles Moss earned top honors in this demanding position with the Outstanding Goalie award.

Isola Bella Italian Eatery won out over team Shady Lady Horticultural Services by one goal, advancing along with the team in pink to Tuesday’s round two play of matches for the 8- to-10-year-old league. Winning Most Improved Player accolades for the season, Shady Lady’s Leo Tyler played hard all season, honing his skills each game.

The older kids played last Monday night with Moss Builders sitting out as the first-place finishers at the end of the regular season. Westfall’s Lawn Care & Pest Control and HSH Design came out on top over Solid Rock Construction and The Gitt Team, respectively.

The Gitt Team roster nearly swept the 11- to-14-year-old league awards this season. Teammates Jasmine Sparks, Gunnar Maize and Charlee Maize won the league’s Defensive MVP, Most Improved Player and Sportsmanship awards, respectively.

Co-league MVPs Brittany Robertson and Mason Moss played with dedication for team HSH and Moss Builders, respectively, during the season to earn their awards. Both teams moved past round one of the playoffs.

Wednesday night’s soccer play solidified this week’s two championship game opponents. With their wins, The Intuitive Foundation and Solid Rock Construction earned their places in the final game of the season for the elementary school age co-ed soccer league.

The three goals scored by The Intuitive Foundation squad were off the feet of Gunnar Maize and Parker Svoboda, league co-MVP, alongside Solid Rock’s Everly Chaplinsky. Maize’s two goals against team AMI Coconuts solidly put his team in the championship game against Solid Rock Construction.

Despite winning Defensive MVP honors for the season, Aiden Guess scored the only goal in Solid Rock’s game against the Isola Bella Italian Eatery team. Isola’s Carson Long was honored with the Sportsmanship Award this season for his age group.

Night two for the tweens and teens last week only had one match-up with Westfall’s Lawn Care & Pest Control getting a big win against team Moss Builders. The Westfall win put them in the final game of the spring youth soccer season this week against HSH.

Adult players completed the regular season battles on the pitch this past Thursday night with Pool America finishing at the top of the standings. The big kids will finish spring sports at the Island community center in June.

 

SUN SCOREBOARD

 

MAY 21

YOUTH SOCCER – ROUND ONE PLAYOFFS

8- TO 10-YEAR-OLD LEAGUE

 

AMI Coconuts 1

Winner in a postgame shootout

Emily Moss Design 1

 

 

Isola Bella Italian Eatery 1

Shady Lady Horticultural Services 0

 

 

11- TO 14-YEAR-OLD LEAGUE

 

Westfall’s Lawn Care & Pest Control 4

Solid Rock Construction 0

 

 

HSH Design 3

The Gitt Team – KW on the Water 2

 

MAY 22

YOUTH SOCCER – ROUND TWO PLAYOFFS

8- TO 10-YEAR-OLD LEAGUE

 

The Intuitive Foundation 3

AMI Coconuts 0

 

 

Solid Rock Construction 1

Isola Bella Italian Eatery 0

 

 

11- TO 14-YEAR-OLD LEAGUE

Westfall’s Lawn Care & Pest Control 2

Moss Builders 1

 

 

MAY 23

ADULT CO-ED SOCCER – WEEK 9

 

Salty Printing (6-3-0) 3

Diamond Turf (2-6-1) 2

 

 

Ross Built Custom Homes (5-2-2) 4

Language Services Association (2-4-3) 1

 

 

Progressive Cabinetry (6-2-1) 5

Sato Real Estate (4-5-0) 4

 

 

Beach House Waterfront Restaurant (2-6-1) 2

Solid Rock Construction (1-4-4) 2

 

 

Pool America (6-1-2) 6

Moss Builders (3-4-2) 1

Everyone’s talking about home prices

I challenge you to enter a room with at least four adult homeowners and not hear the conversation eventually gravitating to the price of homes.

Some of the conversation centers on fear that what their home is worth is just a moment in time and will completely disappear, others think they caused the high value of their home because they’re so smart and others probably think who cares, I’ll worry about it when it’s time to sell. Wherever you are in this conversation, the effect of home prices will have a major influence on your future.

According to a recent analysis by ResiClub of the Case-Shiller National Home Price Index, home prices have surged 47.1% since the start of 2020, easily outstripping the gains seen in recent decades. By comparison, home prices in the 1990s and 2010s grew a respective 30.1% and 44.7%.

In addition, home price growth so far this decade is on the verge of surpassing all the growth seen in the 2000s. During that period, housing prices skyrocketed 47.3%, including an 80% spike before the 2007 housing market crash.

There are several driving forces behind the spike in prices. Some of the reasons are underbuilding because of a rapid rise in mortgage rates and expensive construction materials. Available home supply remains down 34.3% from the typical amount before the COVID-19 pandemic in early 2020. Remember these are national profiles; what happens locally and especially in Florida does not always follow the national trend.

All of this is complicated by sellers who are locked into record-low mortgage rates and are reluctant to sell, further limiting the available supply of properties. Currently, about 80% of mortgage holders have a rate below 5%. That’s a lot of people who don’t want to move.

Nevertheless, prices continue to increase and, per the National Association of Realtors, the median single-family home price grew 5% from a year ago. This increase was confirmed in 93% of the metro areas in the country during the first quarter.

Two of the fastest-growing markets in the country, Texas and Florida, may be starting to see a softening of prices. Again, all real estate is local, so let’s see what the April sales statistics for Manatee County reported by the Realtor Association of Sarasota and Manatee look like.

Single-family homes closed 3.5% more properties compared to last year and condos closed 7.8% more properties compared to last year. Keep in mind these are lagging numbers for contracts probably written a couple of months before.

The median sale price for single-family homes was $530,000, down 7.0%, and the median sale price for condos was $352,420, down 7.5%. The average sale price for single-family homes was $718,603, down 2.3%, and the average sale price for condos was $435,292, down 3.7%.

The median time to contract for single-family homes was 44 days compared to 28 days last year, and for condos, it was almost the same at 44 days this year compared to 27 last year. New listings are up for both single-family at 17.1% and condos at 24.2%. Finally, the months’ supply of available properties is up to 3.9 months for single-family and 6.3 months for condos.

You don’t have to be a mathematician to see that inventory has surged, resulting in a more competitive market and longer selling periods. Selling prices are already down and could be further impacted because of the additional competition.

The best way to discuss what your homes are worth among friends is probably not to. No one gets the credit for it and no one will get the blame if prices start to level off. I’m with the guy who says, “I’ll worry about it when it’s time to sell.”

FWC announces 2024 Lionfish Challenge

If you’re a diver, you’ve seen first-hand how lionfish invade the reefs and threaten the balance that sustains many offshore species. You’ve probably also heard of the Lionfish Challenge, an opportunity to help reduce the population of this invasive species.

Here’s a chance for divers and anglers, both commercial and recreational, to make a difference while enjoying Florida’s reefs and wrecks.

The Lionfish Challenge, from May 24 – Sept. 2, is sponsored by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC).

FWC announces 2024 Lionfish Challenge
The beautiful but venomous lionfish threatens Florida’s reefs. – Submitted

The challenge is a free summer-long lionfish tournament open to recreational and commercial competitors of all ages in Florida. More than 195,000 lionfish have been removed as a part of this challenge since it began in 2016. In its ninth year, the Lionfish Challenge goal remains the same – remove as many lionfish as possible in just three months.

Participants will compete in either the commercial or the recreational division, with grand prizes to the top competitors in each division.

Prizes will be awarded in tiers as follows:

• Tier 1 – Harvest 25 lionfish (recreational) or 50 pounds of lionfish (commercial);

• Tier 2 – Harvest 75 lionfish (recreational) or 100 pounds of lionfish (commercial);

• Tier 3 – Harvest 150 lionfish (recreational) or 200 pounds of lionfish (commercial);

• Tier 4 – Harvest 300 lionfish (recreational) or 400 pounds of lionfish (commercial);

• Tier 5 – Harvest 600 lionfish (recreational) or 800 pounds of lionfish (commercial).

To read the full tournament rules and register, visit FWCreefrangers.com/lionfish-challenge.

Keep up with the challenge on Facebook.com/fwcreefrangers.

AME welcomes new principal

AME welcomes new principal

HOLMES BEACH – Anna Maria Elementary School (AME) Principal Mike Masiello announced his retirement earlier this month, and Willis Elementary School Assistant Principal Katie Fradley has accepted the job.

The Sun recently spoke to her regarding her new position.

“My career spans 34 years. Thirty of those years were spent right here in Manatee County and four of them in Hawaii,” she said. “I hold a bachelor’s degree in elementary education from FSU, a master’s degree in reading from USF and a Ph.D. in curriculum and instruction from USF. I’m a teacher at heart and was a teacher for 21 years at Braden River, Sea Breeze and Rowlett. When I left the classroom, I served as a reading coach at Moody Elementary, a literary coach at a private school in Hawaii, and an instructional specialist with the school district. I then moved into administration in 2020 when Mr. Masiello hired me as assistant principal at Ballard Elementary School. After working at Ballard for two years, I moved to Willis Elementary School, a large school in Lakewood Ranch with tremendous family involvement, as assistant principal.

“I look forward to bringing my own passion and excitement for teaching and learning to AME, as well as carrying on the traditions that have been established throughout the years,” Fradley said. “As I settle into the role, I look forward to seeing how I can maintain the unique historical qualities of the AME experience while ensuring that the students are also provided with opportunities for growth and success.

“AME is magical!” she said. “I love its charm, starting with its traditions, small student body, family-like atmosphere and community involvement. The partnership with the Guy Harvey Foundation has so much potential to have a major impact on our community, and I look forward to being very involved. I am so excited to get to know each of the families and to support and nurture every child as they move through the AME experience.”

Principal Masiello, who has been at AME since 2020, said he was retiring to spend more time with his family, and requires surgery in the coming months with a lengthy recovery time and felt it was the right time to step down.

“I love AME and it’s been an amazing time here at this special school,” Masiello said, adding that he believes the school is in very good hands.

“Getting to be involved in the Guy Harvey Academy has been a highlight of my time here, and I know the school will continue to grow and provide a learning experience like no other. I wish the new principal the best,” said Masiello, whose retirement wraps up an almost 30-year career in the Manatee County School system.

Local restaurant to close its doors

Local restaurant to close its doors

HOLMES BEACH – A local favorite for more than two decades, Peach’s Restaurant in the Anna Maria Island Shopping Center will close its doors for good on Sunday, June 16.

The Father’s Day closure was announced on social media on May 22 along with the news that a second Peach’s location in Ellenton would also be closing its doors on the same day. The shopping plazas where both restaurants are located are owned by Benderson Development.

Management for the local restaurant chain said that the decision to shutter both locations was made by Benderson, which refused to renew leases for the two locations, citing their plans to move in a different direction with both plazas. Representatives for Peach’s said that the leases both expire on June 30. They added that the closure of both locations affects approximately 40 employees who will be relocated to one of the chain’s six other area restaurants, if possible.

The Holmes Beach Peach’s has been open since 2001 with the Ellenton location opening in 2002.

While the restaurant’s management said they’re actively looking for new locations, nothing has been decided yet.

Representatives for Benderson did not return calls for comment by press time.

Fans of the Holmes Beach restaurant took to social media to express their dismay at the unexpected closure.

“Oh, we are heartbroken to hear this news,” Angie Blunt said, adding that Peach’s is her family’s favorite restaurant on Anna Maria Island and that the staff is like an extended family.

Resident and local activist Laurel Nevans offered to get signatures for a petition or help arrange a protest if the restaurant’s management thought it would help them hold on to the Holmes Beach space. The restaurant’s management replied that while they appreciated the help, they were told a new lease had already been signed for the space by an undisclosed tenant.

“We never imagined it wouldn’t be renewed,” they said of the lease with Benderson.

“This is so sad,” Island visitor Lisa Roberts said. “Visiting Peach’s for breakfast on the first and last morning of our holiday has been a family tradition every time we have visited Anna Maria Island/Holmes Beach from the U.K. over the last 20 years. We would also treat ourselves to lunch at Peach’s Ellenton on our shopping trip. So sad for you all. I do hope you find new locations. We return in April and hope to see you.”

“Have been visiting the Island for over 30 years and Peach’s is always a ‘must do’ on our list,” Debby Reed Howard said. “So very sorry to lose this landmark on AMI.”

“We are sad that we have to close, and we will miss making memories with everyone,” the restaurant’s management said. “AMI is a very special and unique Island, and we are so grateful to have been a part of it!”

The remaining Peach’s locations are at 3201 Manatee Ave. W. in Bradenton, 7315 52nd Place E. in Bradenton, 4292 Bee Ridge Road in Sarasota, 5240 State Road 64 in Bradenton, 6386 N. Lockwood Ridge Road in Sarasota and 1230 Jacaranda Blvd. in Venice.

Least tern colony thriving on beach

Least tern colony thriving on beach

BRADENTON BEACH – Anna Maria Island Turtle Watch and Shorebird Monitoring reports that a colony of least terns on the beach is thriving.

As of May 24, there are 15 birds on nests and 29 individuals inside the fenced-off area. One nest has been lost to an unknown cause, according to a release from Turtle Watch Executive Director Kristen Mazzarella.

“There are still some individuals courting and making scrapes (nests) so it’s possible there may be more nests in the coming days,” Mazzarella wrote. “As of yet, we have no chicks, but the first few nests should be due very soon.”

In an effort to keep new chicks from traveling out of the posted area towards the busy 27th Street beach access, Turtle Watch volunteers have installed “chick fencing,” as chicks are mobile soon after they hatch and are likely to leave the posted area.

“We ask folks to keep their distance from this posted colony as the birds are very susceptible to disturbance and we want them to stay on their nests to protect the eggs from heat and predators,” Mazzarella wrote.

Longboat Key considers joint regulation of mangroves with AMI cities

LONGBOAT KEY – With an eye toward teaming up with the three Anna Maria Island cities to obtain Florida Department of Environmental Protection (FDEP) authorization to regulate mangroves, the Longboat Key Town Council invited FDEP Environmental Manager Hannah Westervelt to speak at its May 20 meeting.

“We’ve been discussing with the communities in Anna Maria Island possibly working to put together a joint program to preserve the mangroves on our two islands,” Longboat Key Town Manager Howard Tipton said.

Westervelt provided a slide presentation beginning with an overview of the Mangrove Trimming and Preservation Act (MTPA) of 1996.

“The legislative intent of the Mangrove Trimming and Preservation Act is to protect mangroves,” Westervelt said.

She noted that the MTPA protects both living and dead mangroves and does distinguish between the two, however, dead mangroves provide structure and habitat.

“Something to think about,” she said. “Don’t remove mangroves because they’re dead. Contact me first, please.”

Westervelt discussed the process for local governments to obtain FDEP delegation authority over mangroves.

“I know that’s been a topic of discussion here so I wanted to talk about that,” she said. “Local agencies are able to adopt delegation. Something that is important to note is that they’re not allowed to limit the exemptions if they do get that authority.”

Westervelt said it’s up to local government to apply for that authority and FDEP will assist in the process.

“We have pre-meetings before that application is submitted so we can assist wherever needed,” she said. “But essentially it is up to that local agency to determine if they have the needed number of resources and the budget available for this project.”

Anna Maria City Commission Chair Mark Short, commissioners Gary McMullen and Charlie Salem and Building Department General Manager Dean Jones attended the May 20 Longboat Key Town Council meeting.

During the May 23 Anna Maria City Commission meeting, Short said he reached out to Westervelt and asked if it’s possible for FDEP to notify the city before any FDEP-approved mangrove removals take place in Anna Maria.

“If a property owner wants to alter their mangrove – alter basically means to do anything other than trim – they have to go to DEP to get the permit. DEP has no requirement to inform the city that a property owner has made this request,” Short said.

“I asked her if the city of Anna Maria formally requested DEP to inform us if any such permit requests are made for a property in Anna Maria, they would inform us. She did not see any reason why they could not honor that but that would require approval at a level higher than she is. So, I have asked the mayor to work with the city attorney to draft such a request to send to FDEP,” he said.

“If it can be approved, then going forward we can have this ability when a property owner does request to alter the mangroves on their property,” Short said. “I’m not saying it’s going to make everything right, but it sure seems to make sense to me that we at least know what’s going on.”

– Sun Correspondent Joe Hendricks contributed to this story

CBD resolution finalized

CBD resolution finalized

ANNA MARIA – The city commission has adopted a resolution providing the sales and registration requirements allowing existing CBD and hemp sellers to continue those sales by acquiring city-approved grandfathering status.

City Attorney Becky Vose presented Resolution 24-796 to the city commission on May 23 and the commission unanimously adopted the resolution on first and final reading. Vose plans to present the accompanying grandfathering registration form on June 13.

The adopted resolution and the still-pending registration form will work in unison with a recently amended city ordinance prohibiting the sale, processing or manufacturing of any product derived from cannabis (marijuana) plants – including medicinal marijuana, CBD and hemp products – while creating grandfathering exceptions for businesses that already sold limited amounts of CBD and/or hemp products as of April 1.

There are currently no full-blown CBD stores in Anna Maria and the commission’s goal is to prevent that from happening. The grandfathering provision cannot be obtained by an existing business or a new business after July 1.

The recently-adopted grandfathering provision, the newly-adopted city resolution and the soon-to-be-approved registration form satisfy the mayor and commission’s regulatory concerns while still allowing those few existing businesses to continue selling the CBD and hemp products that few realized were illegal in Anna Maria until earlier this year.

CBD and hemp products are legal statewide but Anna Maria is an exception to that rule, similar to a dry city or county that doesn’t allow alcohol sales. State-compliant CBD sales are allowed in the neighboring city of Holmes Beach, throughout Bradenton and in unincorporated Manatee County.

RESOLUTION PRESENTED

When presenting the resolution to the city commission on May 23, Vose said, “As you recall, we did change our marijuana ordinance having to do with businesses that have a fixed physical location, not to include mobile sales, in the city of Anna Maria and sell products that would otherwise be prohibited in the ordinance. This would allow them to continue.”

The resolution states all grandfa­thering applications must be submit­ted to the city by July 1 on forms to be provided by the city.

“In addition to information about the grandfather applicant and location, the grandfather applications must include a listing of relevant products sold by the business and the quantity of such products that were purchased/sold from March 1-31 and photographs of then-current supplies of relevant products,” the resolution states.

The resolution also states, “Grandfather applications must be submitted under oath and notarized.”

Vose noted the resolution gives the mayor the authority to oversee and tweak the registration and enforcement processes as needed.

COMMISSION INSIGHTS

Commissioner Gary McMullen questioned the need for the grandfathered businesses to list and photograph their CBD and/or hemp product inventory and whether that might be burdensome for the business owners.

“It’s in the very recent past and they should be able to give us that information,” Vose responded. “Then they’d give us photographs of then-current supplies of the product so we have some kind of feel for the product they have.”

Vose said there’s a finite number of hemp and CBD products already being offered for sale in Anna Maria and those business owners already have a pretty good idea of what they have and how much they’re selling.

“I don’t think this will be terribly burdensome, but if it ends up being terribly burdensome, there is the authority for the mayor to tweak this,” Vose said. “We don’t want a gift shop that happens to sell some CBD products to all of the sudden turn into a head shop where 95% of what they sell are these products.”

CBD resolution finalized
Cool Beans AMI sells a limited amount of CBD products. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Commissioner Charlie Salem said, “I think the intent is to make sure we’re not going beyond the grandfathering. Let’s let them continue what they’ve been doing but you don’t want them to be exclusive dealers of a much broader set of these products. I think this is a way to make sure there’s something on record so we all can rest easy that they’re going to comply with what they get through the grandfathering.”

“This resolution effectively is putting a stake in the ground,” Commissioner Mark Short said, noting the resolution states that grandfathered businesses can’t increase their CBD or hemp product offerings. “It’s limiting them to where they were at as of April 1st.”

Short noted the city is aware of three Anna Maria businesses currently selling CBD or hemp products, but there might be more.

The North Shore Café offers food and drink items made with hemp powder that contains trace amounts of THC. The Cool Beans AMI coffee shop sells CBD items in addition to its coffee, food, beverage and other offerings. AMI Beach & Dog Supply sells canine-grade CBD products among its many other offerings.

Mayor Dan Murphy said the plan is to contact every business that operates in Anna Maria and ask them if they’re carrying any CBD or hemp products. If so, they have until July 1 to register for the grandfathering provision. Murphy said the business owners will be given a copy of the resolution so they know what’s expected of them.

“I’m not going to make it burdensome,” Murphy pledged.

The city’s efforts to regulate CBD sales come at a time when additional CBD restrictions proposed by the Florida Legislature are still awaiting a final decision by Gov. Ron DeSantis. If the state decreases the allowed potency and THC content of CBD products, Anna Maria’s CBD grandfathered sellers must comply with the new state law.

Editorial: Palm trees and other shady endeavors

Someone once posed the question: “If a tree falls in a forest and no one hears it, does it make a sound?”

The Sun poses a similar question: If the city attorney says there’s a signed agreement for the ill-fated Bridge Street palm tree planting project but nobody has seen it, does the agreement really exist?

In early April, the Bradenton Beach Community Redevelopment Agency (CRA) that includes the mayor and city commissioners approved planting 80 coconut palm trees along Bridge Street. According to City Attorney Ricinda Perry, the CRA was to contribute $40,000 toward the project and developer Shawn Kaleta and/or one of his LLCs would kick in another $10,000.

Perry told the CRA members there would be a signed maintenance, indemnification and hold harmless agreement in place before the trees were planted. The trees were planted in late April with no signed agreement in place.

A couple of weeks ago, one of the new palms toppled onto a Bridge Street sidewalk and had to be replanted.

Last week, FDOT told the city to remove the new palms planted in the Gulf Drive-Bridge Street roundabout.

Gulf Drive is a state road and FDOT doesn’t allow coconut palms to be planted along state-owned roads because they limit visibility and contain large falling objects like coconuts and palm fronds.

You’d think someone with the city or the city’s often-contracted landscaper would have known about this pesky little state rule – or at least checked to see if there was such a pesky little state rule. But that kind of foresight doesn’t mesh with the city’s “You can do it right when you do it over” approach to project management.

So now we know that coconut palms aren’t cool along a state road but they’re still OK standing alongside the highly-traveled, highly-populated city-owned Bridge Street.

To date, Perry and the city have not provided The Sun with a copy of the signed agreement, despite the multiple public records requests made during a two-week period. Perry told us we had to wait until the city clerk returns from her vacation on May 28 before we can see the elusive signed document.

The Florida Public Records Act says the city has to promptly acknowledge public records requests, respond in good faith and make “reasonable efforts” to figure out who has the requested document and where it’s stashed. City officials who break the state law can be fined $500 or removed from office if they try really hard to hide or withhold the requested document.

Perry and Mayor John Chappie were copied on our multiple and still ongoing requests for a signed agreement. Perry gave us an incomplete and unsigned draft version of the agreement that didn’t mention the project partner’s name. She also sent us some emails that showed us how hard she tried to collaborate with Team Kaleta’s lawyers to make this deal happen.

According to the unsigned version of the agreement, Team Kaleta is supposed to maintain the palm trees at their expense for the next 30 years. The unsigned agreement doesn’t specifically mention coconuts or palm fronds and it doesn’t specifically require Team Kaleta to pluck those pesky buggers from the trees before they drop on some unlucky person’s head, child or 1962 Corvette.

The unsigned agreement does however require Team Kaleta to comply with reference Exhibit A – a blank space that calls for a yet-to-be-seen site plan that shows specifically where each new tree was planted – and Exhibit B: “Guidelines for the Management of Coconut Palms.”

The “Guidelines” inform us that coconut palms can grow to be over 100 feet tall, may live 100 years and “regularly shed coconuts and large fronds, which may expose people and property to injury and damage.”

The all-knowing ‘Guidelines” also say, “To minimize this risk, coconuts and fronds must be regularly removed prior to their fall. In certain instances, coconut palms may possess structural defects that increase the risk of failure of a portion or all of the palm.”

Thank you, wise city leaders. What could go wrong?

The “Guidelines” say any coconut palms that show serious defects, conditions or weather damage must be removed (by Team Kaleta) within 14 days of being told to do so. Given that one tree already toppled onto a Bridge Street sidewalk on a sunny day, what’s the over/under on how many palms are going down during our upcoming “more active than usual” hurricane season?

In the absence of the signed agreement, it appears the first tree likely fell before the agreement was signed and dated by Chappie and Team Kaleta. If that first falling tree injured a person, place or thing with no signed agreement yet in place, who would have been liable – the city, Kaleta or both?

The unsigned agreement is also supposed to indemnify (lawyer-speak for “protect”) the city and the CRA against any future liabilities and lawsuits associated with the troublesome palm trees. If someone or something gets clocked by a falling tree, frond or coconut, that unfortunate soul gets to do battle with Team Kaleta’s army of lawyers, while the city sits on the sideline screaming, “Leave us alone, we’re indemnified!”

Mayor Chappie frequently laments the negative impacts that super-sized short-term vacation rental homes, aka “party houses,” have on Bradenton Beach’s residential neighborhoods, but he’s OK taking project money from the Island’s biggest developer of “party houses.”

Instead of sharpening their pencils and wisely managing CRA and city funds for future projects, the mayor and city commissioners are taking the lazy and easy way out by enabling Perry to pursue funding partnerships with Team Kaleta.

In the past year or so, Perry proposed the CRA or city partner with Team Kaleta to improve the city-owned parking lot near the Team Kaleta-owned marina. She also suggested the city partner with Team Kaleta for a Team Kaleta-controlled mooring field near the pier.

In early April – the same day she proposed the ill-advised, poorly-executed palm tree project – Perry proposed the CRA partner with Team Kaleta to install a waterfront pedestrian path that runs from Team Kaleta’s marina, past Team Kaleta’s mobile home park and ends at the city-owned pier.

Who is Perry working for? The city or Team Kaleta? When proposing these public-private partnerships, she sings the praises of a developer good-hearted enough to help fund CRA and city projects, but what she, the mayor and the city commission are really doing is selling the city down the Intracoastal Waterway.

Somehow, the sister cities of Anna Maria and Holmes Beach manage to fund their capital projects without financial aid from Team Kaleta. And in both those cities, the city attorneys focus on the basics – providing legal advice and legal services to their respective city leaders and city staff.

In most cities, a city attorney’s sole job is to dispense legal knowledge. City attorneys don’t usually serve as de facto city managers, project managers and project initiators. But in Perry’s defense, she’s just filling the leadership void created by Bradenton Beach’s weak mayor form of city government, and the weak mayor and weak commission gladly let her do it.

With the threat of state-imposed consolidation looming over the three AMI cities, there’s chatter in local political circles that Chappie wants to serve as the Island-wide mayor if that happens. That leadership scenario might scare some folks, but Island Mayor Chappie and Island Attorney Perry could then partner with Team Kaleta to plant coconut palms and other seeds of dissent throughout the rest of the consolidation fiefdom.