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Tag: Anna Maria Island

Letter to the Editor: Preserve our neighborhoods

We inadvertently became involved with city issues a decade ago. We attended almost every Holmes Beach Commission meeting and work session for several years. We have attended some Anna Maria, Manatee County and WMFD meetings as well and continue to stay educated. With this ever-evolving landscape of quality of island life, our mantra has evolved into “Preservation of Neighborhoods.”

We recently Googled Holmes Beach zoning and discovered a highly prioritized real estate website. A section specifically referencing HB R-2 to R-4 zones perked our interest: “The typical buyer for these zones is someone who would like to rent the property weekly for most of the time. Warning! If you plan on living in the property or visiting for multiple months be aware that it can be noisy.”

Until recently our immediate block in an R-2 zone consisted of 100% permanent residents; even with new construction, we remain predominantly permanent, full-time residents with a strong neighborhood watch. This may be a rarity, however, we had never seen documented numbers for the percentage of residences versus TPLEs (commercial rentals) per zone. (Transient Public Lodging Establishments are clearly defined in state statute.) We proceeded with public records requests from the county appraiser, city, and WMFD. Curiously, none has a count of the number of TPLEs per zone.

After re-reading our entire Comprehensive Plan and Municode Zoning sections multiple times, we know without reservation that the intent is for preservation of residential character. It is not mentioned just casually; it is staunchly entrenched repeatedly.

Many people locally and statewide have worked diligently towards preservation of residential character. Home Rule initiatives, neighborhood initiatives, and initiatives with city, county and state governments have sought to protect our neighborhoods.

We are not naive. We have followed numbers and trends as well as the imminent prospects of consolidation or dissolution of the island cities. However, there are coastal cities which have successfully preserved their character. These cities properly reference their residential zones, respect their guiding documents, enforce prescribed ordinances and encourage resident input.

We encourage upholding guiding documents in efforts to preserve intended residential character and hope that others respect that initiative by encouraging permanent residents as well. Our communities, our beloved AME, our churches, our quality of life, and even retention of our island cities depend on it.

 

Dick and Margie Motzer

Holmes Beach

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Restoration efforts go big

Restoration efforts go big

On July 14, I had the pleasure of working with Damon Moore from Oyster River Ecology (ORE) and a film crew from the Ringling College digital filmmaking program to document and install 1,050 vertical oyster garden anchors (VOGAs) on ORE’s restoration aquaculture lease site known as the Eileen Reef in the upper Manatee River. This 10-acre site is the beginning of an effort to bring bivalve restoration to a scale that can noticeably clean local waters. The following is the schedule that Moore set up for the day’s effort.

• 7 a.m. – ORE boat only; tow VOGAs on work floats over to Eileen Reef from Colony Cove staging area (staged the day before).

• 8:30 a.m. – Make final go or no go call on the weather. (The weather was perfect!)

• 9:30 a.m. – Everyone:

– Arrive at Fort Hamer Boat Ramp;

– Confirm participants have signed waivers;

– Safety meeting/questions/etc.

• 10 a.m. – All boats depart Fort Hamer Boat Ramp for Eileen Reef

• 10:30 a.m.

– Arrive at Eileen Reef and anchor boats at the staked-out area.

– Provide task instructions

• 11 a.m. – Work as a team to install 1,050 VOGAs within the marked area.

• 12:30 p.m. – Complete installation and enjoy snacks/drinks/lunch. Please bring your own.

• 1 p.m. – Depart Eileen Reef for Fort Hamer Boat Ramp. ORE boat to return work floats and empty bins to Colony Cove staging area then return to Fort Hamer Boat Ramp.

• 1:30 p.m. – Arrive at Fort Hamer Boat Ramp and group dismiss.

• 3-4 p.m. – Damon to retrieve the cargo trailer and floats from the Colony Cove staging area.

Vessels used in the project included ORE’s 18.4 coastal skiff, which was used to tow the work floats with VOGAs to the site, the Suncoast Waterkeeper (SCWK) patrol boat with board members Rob Brown and Orion Morton, which carried the camera crew, their equipment and several volunteers, and Mike Elswick, who brought a boat with SCUBAnauts volunteers.

The planting was a huge success, and everyone was impressed with the speed with which volunteers worked.

Cleanup in aisle 3

To err is human, the old axiom goes, and we Republicans proved ourselves all too human in 2020 when we put Kevin Van Ostenbridge (KVO) on the Manatee County Board of Commissioners (commission). Now, in 2024, we have the opportunity to prove ourselves insane, as well, by doing it all over again.

Van Ostenbridge currently holds the commission’s District 3 (Dist-3) seat, meaning it was Dist-3 residents, me included, who voted him onto the commission in 2020. Dist-3 covers Cortez, the three Anna Maria Island cities, the Palma Sola area, and the northwest part of Bradenton.

When Van Ostenbridge filed his election papers early this year, they were for his Dist-3 seat.

Then, in late May, KVO announced he had terminated his Dist-3 campaign and was now running for the commission District 7 (Dist-7) seat. Dist-7 covers all of Manatee County. What happened was, KVO and April Culbreath, a friend and ally of his, had swapped election campaigns. So he is the Dist-7 candidate now, and she is running for his Dist-3 seat. Culbreath, you may have read, carries some interesting baggage herself.

The reason for the KVO-Culbreath switcheroo is Van Ostenbridge knows his chances of rewinning the Dist-3 seat are nil. He misrepresented himself to Dist-3 voters in 2020, and his conduct these past four years has so angered Dist-3 communities and residents that most Dist-3 voters – people of all political stripes – can hardly wait to throw the bum out.

Because commission Dist-7 has approximately five times more residents than Dist-3, Van Ostenbridge figures its commission seat is one he can win. The disdain he has earned for his Dist-3 blunders and plunders will be diluted considerably in Dist-7’s much larger voter base. Also, KVO will have the financial and other support of his posse (those he controls) and those who control him. Money is no object for many of them, and money yields votes (and, as we painfully know, pays for scurrilous campaign ads).

Van Ostenbridge also figures that, should he win the Aug. 20 commission Dist-7 Republican primary election, the November general election is his to lose. Unfortunately, I have to agree with him on this, and many others do as well.

In fact, I am hearing that a sizable number of you Democrats and No Party Affiliations have changed your voter registrations to Republican so you, too, can vote on Aug. 20 to end KVO’s reign.

Hopefully, more of you will do the same – enough more to ensure George Kruse, KVO’s Republican opponent and the current Dist-7 seat holder, wins the Dist-7 Republican primary election.

If you too wish to vote in the Aug. 20 Republican Dist-7 primary, the deadline for changing voter registrations to Republican is this July 22. You can change yours easily online, and then back again after Aug. 20 (as you know, in the November general election you can vote for any candidate on the general election ballot you like, regardless of your and his or her party affiliation).The Election Office web address is: https://www.votemanatee.com/. Its helpline number is: 941-741-3823.

Also, if you wish to vote by mail in the Aug. 20 Republican primary, the deadline for enrolling in the Election Office’s VBM directory is Aug. 8. This can be done online or by telephone (to remain active in the VBM directory, you must reenroll every two years).

Back in 2020, when Van Ostenbridge was running for his commission Dist-3 seat, his campaign rhetoric was similar to what it is now. In short, KVO said he was a principled, free-market conservative, detests government waste, wants Manatee County to run more businesslike, and will work with fellow commissioners to find common-sense solutions to residents’ problems. This sounded good, but what a crock of brown gumbo algae it turned out to be!

Upon joining the commission, Van Ostenbridge essentially declared himself the new sheriff in town and bullied his way into the powerful chairman position. Then, poof, Campaign KVO, the would-be principled conservative, became Commission Chair KVO, an unabashed, spend-happy, crony-capitalist. And the constituents whose problems he said he would work to solve? Well, they obviously are not us ordinary and regular tax-paying residents.

Thus, it comes as no surprise Van Ostenbridge’s developer/builder cronies and other real estate-industry benefactors have amassed for him a huge 2024 campaign fund. Per June 25 Election Office records, it is $234,300 so far, a staggering sum for county-level elections. It is four times more than what the other two Dist-7 candidates have received, combined.

Ergo, one cannot help wondering if some of Van Ostenbridge’s various misfeasances and malfeasances can be explained by the generosity of his big-money campaign benefactors.

Especially things KVO has done or promoted that otherwise make no sense at all, such as the notorious Manatee Beach parking garage.

The garage is the $40-$45-million, multi-level, pay-to-park parking garage that Van Ostenbridge is clamoring to erect on the sands of beautiful Manatee Beach in the island City of Holmes Beach on Anna Maria Island. KVO justifies this parking garage on the unsupported notion that this beach is underused due to a shortage of convenient, publicly-available parking spaces that prevents off-island County residents and visitors from using and enjoying the beach on weekend and other high-use beach days.

Van Ostenbridge knows this unsupported notion is false. Knowledgeable officials and KVO’s own eyes tell him the predominant impediment to off-islanders using Manatee Beach on high-use beach days is the terrible, bumper-to-bumper, snail-pace-or-worse traffic they face just getting over to Anna Maria Island. Moreover, this geographically small neighborhood beach is not underused. On high-use beach days, with “just” the 425 onsite parking spaces it currently has, the beach typically is packed shoulder-to-shoulder and umbrella-to-umbrella with beachgoers.

It is no wonder commission Dist-3 residents and others are so angry about the garage.

It will make a terrible traffic situation substantially worse, congestion-wise and public-safety-wise; it will sully the natural pristine beauty of this Gulf Coast beach; it will put the beach’s iconic, uberpopular beachfront establishments out of business; it will eliminate all 425 existing fee-free onsite parking spaces; and, during its projected two-year-plus construction phase, there will be no onsite parking opportunities at all.

Although the animosity created by the garage is reason enough for Van Ostenbridge to cancel his Dist-3 campaign and pursue George Kruse’s Dist-7 seat, KVO is also vindictive. Kruse has angered KVO by raising important questions that beg for answers before the county proceeds any further with the garage. Shame on Kruse to want the county to run itself businesslike.

In closing, I will leave you with another old axiom: Every vote counts. And in an election as close as the Aug. 20 commission Dist-7 Republican primary threatens to be, every vote is important. Van Ostenbridge has had his way with our county long enough, so let us work together to stop the hurt now.

And let us commission Dist-3 residents combine forces to see that Van Ostenbridge’s ally and proxy, April Culbreath, loses her Aug. 20 commission Dist-3 Republican primary election to her opponent, Tal Siddique.

 

 

Jerry Newbrough

Holmes Beach

Anna Maria Island Privateers July Fourth Parade 2024

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AMI prepares for another crowded, extended holiday

AMI prepares for another crowded, extended holiday

ANNA MARIA ISLAND – As Americans wish the United States a happy 248th birthday, many people will choose to celebrate on the Island, hitting the beaches, shops, restaurants and bars with enthusiastic patriotism.

On Thursday, July 4, be prepared for festivities that will last four days or more, as many will arrive as early as they are able, taking the celebration through the weekend. Last year, many Island officials believed it was one of the busiest holidays the Island has ever seen, and this year, due to the four-day weekend, they say it could be just as busy or more so.

Tourism officials note a slight leveling off of tourism after the boom that occurred after the COVID-19 pandemic, when Florida became one of the few states that opened for business quickly after the COVID lockdown, but recent holiday weekends have been the exception.

“It’s going to be busy, but planning and patience will make it enjoyable for everyone,” Holmes Beach Police Chief Bill Tokajer said. “We issued more than 100 parking-related tickets last year, but I drove around our city’s public parking spots and there was never a time there weren’t spots open, people just need to keep a lookout for them.”

Tokajer said the City of Holmes Beach’s website has an extremely useful page that uses Google Earth to show where every legal parking space in the city is located. All a user has to do is go to www.holmesbeachfl.org and click on the “I want to” tab, then select “Find parking.” Tokajer says this is a great way to find the public parking spaces many don’t bother to seek out. Using this resource can help visitors get to the beach faster, and maximize their time on the beach rather than sit in traffic at the Manatee Beach parking lot that is usually full by 10 a.m. during busy holiday peak times.

The parking situation is amplified in the City of Bradenton Beach, where despite more than 50 no-parking signs being erected along Gulf Drive South, people simply don’t seem to care.

“Over Memorial Day weekend, our officers wrote more than 400 tickets for illegal parking at Coquina Beach and Cortez Beach, and there were still plenty that probably got away with it,” Bradenton Beach Police Lt. Lenard Diaz said.

Both Tokajer and Diaz believe that some people feel it’s worth the price of a ticket to park illegally and get on with their beach day, a sentiment echoed by many people The Sun has spoken to regarding parking.

“We were told the price of a parking ticket at Coquina Beach was $75, but these paid parking lots that have recently popped up are $20 an hour,” Joanne Stover, of West Virginia, said. “It’s a heck of a lot cheaper to pay a ticket than pay that for the day, if my math is right.”

Restaurant wait times over the weekend are expected to be excessive, and travel to and from the Island will be slow-going, but there will still be plenty of sand, sea and sun to make the Island a great place to wish America a happy birthday.

A few things to keep in mind so that everyone will have a safe and enjoyable July Fourth include knowing what is not permitted on any Island beach:

• Motor vehicles;

• Fires;

• Grills (except where public grills are provided);

• Pets;

• Alcohol;

• Harassment of wildlife (shorebirds and sea turtles are nesting, admire from a distance);

• Fireworks.

“I have three important reminders for the upcoming July Fourth holiday weekend,” Tokajer said. “First, you are vacationing in a residential area, so please keep noise to a minimum. Second, be respectful of your surroundings and leave it cleaner than you found it. Third, always park with all tires off the road. Parallel parking is parking with the flow of traffic. Saying you didn’t see the sign or were not aware will not get a ticket voided. Also, fireworks are not permitted on the beach and our department will be out strictly enforcing this.”

Holmes Beach police, along with Bradenton Beach and the Manatee County Sheriff’s Office, which patrols the City of Anna Maria, all remind the public that the laws prohibiting fires, grills, alcohol and pets are strictly enforced.

All three departments plan to increase the number of officers on patrol for the busy holiday weekend.

“Remember to not put yourself in a position to be a victim of a crime of opportunity,” Diaz said. “Lock your car and don’t leave valuables in plain sight on car seats or places that entice criminals. Also, don’t bring valuables to the beach. Just bring what you need so you can relax and enjoy yourself.”

While violent crime is uncommon on AMI, a heavy influx of tourists will naturally bring out a few people with bad intentions. Simply taking common sense precautions can help assure a fun and safe day at the beach.

Hot Dog Guy coming to Jewfish Key sandbar

Hot Dog Guy coming to Jewfish Key sandbar

JEWFISH KEY – The sandbar off Jewfish Key, a popular spot for weekend boaters to drop anchor, now has a floating food service option in the form of Capt. Marc Bouclier’s The Hot Dog Guy boat.

Bouclier bought the 21-foot Carolina skiff last year to support Crysten’s AMI, his family’s Holmes Beach-based boat tour and rental business, but after speaking to a retired relative who had opened a hot dog business in Arizona, the idea was born.

“I thought it was a great idea to be able bring food and drinks to people when they’re out on their boats and in the sun all day,” Bouclier said.

He had the former fishing charter bait boat customized to create the hot dog boat and recently received approvals from the U.S. Coast Guard and the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation.

He plans to have the boat at the sandbar between 1-4 p.m. on Saturdays and Sundays, along with some Fridays, weather permitting.

“We’ll be able to anchor the boat and have people walk from all over the sandbar to us,” he said. “The boat is easy to maneuver around in shallow water, people can come right up to the side of the boat.”

A strong advocate for supporting independent local businesses, he has multiple logos on his boat representing Island businesses.

“Everybody that’s involved in this boat was a handshake of ‘Let’s have some fun and let’s keep it island,’ ” Bouclier said. “There’s a couple of companies on here that have something to do with either the building of the boat or the marketing of the boat.”

Logos on the hot dog boat include Crysten’s AMI boat tours, Drift-In AMI, Anchor Stow, Anchor Down Real Estate & Rentals, Snook Haven, Kick Azz Fishing Charters, JMF Boatworks, Crabby Joe’s, 941 Marine Electronics, Mulligan’s Bar & Grill, Auto Trim, A.M.I. Boatworks, Custom Marine Fab and Speed King Signs.

Bouclier said people from those businesses will have an opportunity to go out on the boat with him on the weekends.

“All of our products are going to be bought from locals,” he said. “We’re keeping it simple, it’s strictly hot dogs, water and sodas.”

In keeping with his mission to support small business, Bouclier recently started a new Facebook page: Anna Maria Island FUN.

“This page is open to anybody and everybody to promote their business,” he said.

Eyes on seagrass

Eyes on seagrass

Readers of this column know the importance of seagrass to the health of the region’s bays, estuaries, fisheries, fauna and economy. These critical meadows are under threat from overdevelopment, stormwater run-off, sewage releases, motor prop scarring and what I often refer to as death by a thousand cuts. This July, citizens and visitors alike can learn about, see firsthand and help scientists quantify this critical resource during the Sarasota Bay Estuary’s Eyes on Seagrass program.

The Eyes on Seagrass program is a bi-annual citizen science event held in partnership with Florida Sea Grant, Mote Marine Laboratory and Sarasota and Manatee counties to measure macroalgae and seagrass coverage. The program was expanded from Charlotte Harbor to cover Sarasota Bay in 2021 in response to a data gap in macroalgae monitoring. During this sampling window in April and July, participants explore various locations throughout Sarasota Bay to collect information on macroalgae and seagrass coverage. Results are then integrated into the Sarasota Bay Ecosystem Health Report Card.

Want to participate? Organize a team with a boat and register your team at https://sarasotabay.org/eos/. You can pick your site preference and in-person training date (for new volunteers) during registration. Organizers will then email you which site(s) you have.

Participants can pick up their sampling gear starting Monday, July 1 at the Sarasota Bay Estuary Program’s office in Sarasota at 111 S. Orange Ave. Suite 200 W.

You can then attend an in-person training (for new volunteers), and/or read the sampling instructions and watch a video to learn how to sample and record your data. Training sessions will be held at the following locations and times, on Tuesday, June 25 at 9 a.m. at Bayfront Park in downtown Sarasota (5 Bayfront Drive) and on Wednesday, June 26 at 9 a.m. at Bayshore Gardens Park and Recreational District (6919 26th St. W., Bradenton). If you are unable to attend a scheduled training, please email christine@sarasotabay.org to coordinate an additional training session. Site sampling takes place from July 6-21.

This is an excellent opportunity to get in the water and see the amazingly rich ecosystem that lies just under the water’s surface. You’ll come away with a new appreciation of the beauty and complexity of our marine world, meet like-minded citizen scientists and make a difference. See you there.

Volunteers clean up Bowlees Creek

Volunteers clean up Bowlees Creek

This past Saturday, I attended Suncoast Aqua Venture’s large-scale cleanup of Bowlees Creek, a 4.8-mile stream in Manatee County just north of the Sarasota-Bradenton International Airport.

This body of water is located within the Sarasota Bay watershed and drains a large area of Sarasota and Manatee counties.

The event, in partnership with Keep Manatee Beautiful and the Sarasota Bay Estuary Program, was headquartered at the Bahia Mar West Marina and hosted by owners Willy and Aubry Petrat. Other partners included Suncoast Waterkeeper, Sarasota Bay Watch and Oyster River Ecology.

The marina is a unique location on Sarasota Bay that has private and public slips (first come, first served), a large tiki hut and many other amenities. The area of the cleanup included upstream within U.S. Highway 301 and State Road 70 boundaries, and downstream to the mouth of Sarasota Bay, including Bowlees Island.

Cheryl Huntsinger, vice president of Suncoast Aqua Ventures, said, “A major goal of today’s event was to get trash from upstream areas before it made it to the creek flowing downstream into Sarasota Bay.”

During the event, over 70 volunteers used pontoon boats, kayaks, paddleboards and small jon boats and collected over 1,600 pounds of debris The event was well-timed after recent rains. Following the cleanup, Suncoast Aqua Ventures and Bahia Mar West Marina held a cookout at the marina’s tiki hut.

Suncoast Aqua Ventures was created by a handful of friends in 2016 who were concerned about trash and debris in our waterways. They created a one-of-a-kind competitive event called The Reef & Beach Cleanup and gave cash and prizes in numerous categories to teams who competed. They structure all activities to be fun, family-friendly events. To date, their events have collected over 100,000 pounds of marine debris from our waterways. Their volunteers come from all ages and all walks of life and include water enthusiasts, kayakers, fishermen, scuba divers and anyone who has a passion for our beautiful aquatic ecosystem.

Their next event will be a cleanup of Perico Bayou and northern Palma Sola Bay, one of my favorite locations and close to Anna Maria Island. I encourage readers to sign up and participate in one of these events. You’ll make new friends, be surrounded by like-minded volunteers and go away knowing you left our local waters better than you found them.

For information on the upcoming Perico Bayou cleanup, visit the Suncoast Aqua Ventures website. Watch the video here.

Least tern numbers increasing

Least tern numbers increasing

BRADENTON BEACH – A colony of least terns is continuing to grow and now has 36 birds with 20 of those sitting on eggs in the sand.

Anna Maria Island Turtle Watch and Shorebird Monitoring has been watching the nesting birds at an undisclosed location that has been roped off since nesting began the week of May 6.

As the eggs begin to hatch, beachgoers are cautioned to watch for chicks crossing beach access points. Turtle Watch volunteers have placed “chick fencing” near the beach access along with “chick huts” within the enclosure to shade the chicks and protect them from predators.

Least terns are listed as a threatened species in Florida. The population has declined in the last 10 years and estimates suggest the species is vulnerable to extinction if their current threats are not addressed, according to a press release from Turtle Watch.

Least terns become agitated by disturbances by people as well as avian predators. Birds may fly away from their nests, leaving eggs and chicks vulnerable.

“Avian predators such as fish crows and laughing gulls harass nesting birds and have been documented to eat unattended eggs and newborn chicks,” according to Turtle Watch Shorebird Coordinator Kathy Doddridge.

One way to manage the threat of fish crows is by using crow effigies – a likeness made from plastic and feathers to mimic dead crows.

The placement of effigies near nesting colonies is a management tool used to scare crows away and reduce the number of crows in a specific area. Turtle Watch volunteers have placed two effigies in the area of the least tern colony.

Turtle Watch offers the following reminders to beachgoers:

• Keep your distance. If birds become agitated or leave their nests you are too close. A general rule is to stay at least 300 feet away from a nest;

• Respect posted areas. Avoid posted nesting and resting areas and use designated walkways;

• Never intentionally force any birds to fly. When birds are chased or disturbed, they use the energy they need to reserve for nesting and migration;

• Pets are not allowed on Anna Maria Island beaches. Keep cats indoors;

• Keep the beach clean and do not feed wildlife. Food scraps attract predators such as raccoons and crows to the beaches. Litter on beaches can entangle birds;

• Spread the word. If you see people disturbing nesting birds, gently remind them how their actions may hurt birds’ survival. If they continue to disturb nesting birds, report their activities to FWC’s Wildlife Alert hotline at 888-404-FWCC (3922).

Jewfish Key withdraws application to be removed from LBK

LONGBOAT KEY – The Jewfish Key Preservation Association has withdrawn its application to be removed from the jurisdiction of the Town of Longboat Key.

Attorney Aaron Thomas of the Najmy Thompson law firm represents the association. On May 31, he sent an email to Longboat Key Town Attorney Maggie Mooney formally withdrawing the “voluntary contraction” petition submitted on Jan. 16.

“Please be informed that the association, along with the property owners of Jewfish Key, has decided to formally withdraw and revoke the Voluntary Contraction Petition,” Thomas wrote. “This decision comes as we are currently in the process of reassessing the Voluntary Contraction Petition in light of the findings and recommendations contained within the Requested Contraction of Jewfish Key Feasibility Study conducted by the Town of Longboat Key.”

No specific reason was given.

The 139-page study prepared by the town includes a summary of the petition and a brief history of the contraction area, the town’s departmental and consultant analyses prepared by department heads from finance, planning, zoning, building, public works, police and fire departments and a market/economic analysis by consultant Willdan Financial of the contraction area relating to the statutory feasibility study criteria provided for in Florida Statutes Chapter 171. Also included are relevant maps, a staff analysis of Florida Statutes, historical documents and town department head credentials and biographies.

The study was prepared to fulfill statutory requirements and was intended to be used by the town commission to evaluate the feasibility of the requested contraction and decide whether to initiate contraction proceedings or to reject the petition, according to the study introduction.

Thomas wrote that since there was no longer a petition or proposal for commissioners to consider at the June 3 commission meeting, the item should be removed from the meeting agenda.

If the contraction had been pursued and was successful, Jewfish Key would have become part of unincorporated Manatee County.

Mooney notified Mayor Ken Schneier and town commissioners of the withdrawal by email: “The purpose of this email is to share with the Town Commission an email transmitted this morning from the attorney for the Jewfish Key Preservation Association withdrawing and revoking the Contraction Petition submitted on Jan. 16, 2024.”

Despite the withdrawal, Mooney wrote that the commission should still plan on convening to open the public meeting since the session was noticed to the public.

“Given the withdrawal, there will not be a presentation from town staff on the Jewfish Key contraction request as previously identified in the meeting agenda and no further town commission action or discussion on the matter is required,” she wrote.

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.

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