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AMI remembers Dale Woodland

AMI remembers Dale Woodland

ANNA MARIA – Former city commissioner and longtime Anna Maria resident Dale Woodland passed away on June 28 at the age of 76 due to complications caused by dementia.

The family plans to host a memorial service in October but those details are still being worked out.

Dale served eight consecutive two-year terms as an Anna Maria commissioner before leaving office in late 2019. He’s survived by his son, Jason Woodland; daughter-in-law, Meghan Woodland; seven grandchildren; younger sister, Melanie; and former wife, Gayle. Dale and Gayle’s son, Scott, passed away in 2020.

After relocating from Canada at a young age, Dale grew up on Mangrove Avenue in Anna Maria with his parents Maxwell and Marguerite Woodland, sister, Melanie and older brother, Christopher.

Maxwell Woodland served as Anna Maria mayor from 1959-62. According to family members, he suddenly disappeared after completing his tenure as mayor and the family never heard from him again. Dale was about 14 at the time and many years later it was learned that Maxwell died in his home country of Australia in 1963. Christoper Woodland was a U.S. Air Force pilot and died in a plane crash in the 1970s.

After starting their family in east Manatee County, Dale and Gayle bought the property at 134 Hammock Road in Anna Maria in 1986, when Jason and Scott were teenagers, and there they built the house Dale would call home most of the rest of his life.

From 1995 to 2020, Dale and Scott owned and operated Woodland Quality Pool Care.

In his later years, Dale dated Anna Maria resident Jayne Slade-Dashiell for six and a half years.

Jayne, a nurse, first noticed signs of Dale’s dementia in March 2022 immediately after Dale had open heart surgery.

“He never really recovered from that,” she said of the memory issues that gradually worsened. While living in her own home, Jayne cared for Dale as long as she could.

In mid-2024, Dale’s grandson, Michael Stull, moved into Dale’s home and began providing live-in care, assisted by Michael’s girlfriend. They rode out Hurricane Helene at Dale’s home but before Hurricane Milton arrived, the family decided to move Dale to Jason and Meghan’s home in Live Oak.

Dale passed away at The Canopy at Harper Lake assisted living and memory care facility in Lake City.

Commissioner Woodland

Dale’s beloved dog, Lucy, accompanied him to the city commission meetings and often wandered around the commission chambers during meetings.

After Hurricane Irma damaged the City Pier in 2017, Woodland was the only commissioner in support of building a new pier atop the existing wooden pilings, or atop new wooden pilings. Mayor Dan Murphy and the other commissioners opted for a new pier built atop concrete pilings instead. Due to damage caused by Hurricane Milton, another pier replacement project is currently in its early stages.

AMI Remembers Dale Woodland
Commissioner Dale Woodland and Mayor Dan Murphy examined the hurricane-damaged City Pier decking after Hurricane Irma in 2017. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

In 2019, Dale filed his qualifying paperwork with the Manatee County Supervisor of Elections Office seeking a ninth term, but he was disqualified because he paid his $48 qualifying fee with a personal check instead of a check drawn on a designated campaign account. He then sought commission appointment to his vacated seat but the commissioners appointed Joe Muscatello instead.

Dale never sought office again, but when addressing the commission that day he said his path to public service began when he came to a city meeting to complain to the commission and Mayor Ray Simches about Lake La Vista being so shallow and the need to dredge the channel that connects with Tampa Bay.

“That’s how I got involved in the city. Later, Ray asked me if I’d be on the code enforcement board,” Dale told the commission.

Meghan believes Dale’s memory loss contributed to the qualifying fee error.

Family

Meghan shared with The Sun a soliloquy Jason wrote about his father’s passing: “What makes a life? Is it the one with the most toys wins? Maybe it is riches and a luxurious lifestyle. Or could it be Love; giving, receiving and sharing love? For my dad, toys were never his priority. I never heard him want for anything. He had what he wanted and ignored the rest,” Jason wrote.

“Dale took advantage of opportunities that enriched his life. He built a home in paradise and made a dream life he would never leave. If experiences in life, living exactly where and how you want to live count, then my dad was a very rich man.

AMI Remembers Dale Woodland
Dale got some help on the campaign trail from his grandchildren Jordan, Michael, Savannah, Shyanne and his daughter-in-law, Meghan Woodland. – Meghan Woodland | Submitted

“Dale loved people and people loved my dad. He once told me that my mother (Gayle) was the greatest woman he ever knew. His grandchildren were the apple of his eye. He opened and shared his home with family, friends and people he knew. My dad never missed an opportunity to make a person happy with a ‘Dale Burger.’

AMI Remembers Dale Woodland
Scott Roscoe, Scott Woodland and one of Dale’s friends waiting for ‘Dale Burgers’ during a Daytona 500 party. – Meghan Woodland | Submitted

“Dale was born in Canada and became an American citizen. He loved America and the Constitution. And oh, how he loved Anna Maria. So much so that he became your city commissioner so he could be of service.

“And last, but first, my dad loved God. His favorite part of the Bible was the Beatitudes, Matthew 5. These verses were always in his mind on how to be a better person,” Jason wrote.

AMI Remembers Dale Woodland
Dale Woodland and his youngest granddaughter, Montana Woodland. – Meghan Woodland | Submitted

“I saw his heart break when he lost his dog (Lucy). I saw him support his sons in their endeavors. But what made his life, to me, and what will stay with me, are the stories. My dad was a genius storyteller – and these are real stories, not fables. He had a gift of humbling himself and sharing these stories that would jerk a tear from your eye or have you crying from laughter. He loved it because it made the listener happy. Dale had a fulfilled life and it showed in his stories,” Jason wrote.

“Now my dad is with Our Father, finally satisfied in the Beatitudes and experiencing more love than humanly possible. Dad, I love you and I will see you again one day and I can’t wait to hear the stories you will have to tell,” Jason wrote.

AMI Remembers Dale Woodland
Meghan Woodland and her beloved father-in-law, Dale Woodland. – Meghan Woodland | Submitted

Speaking by phone, Meghan said, “Dale was amazing. He knew so many people and he had so many stories to tell about his life and his parents’ life. Dale was the kind of guy where if you walked by you would be friends. It didn’t matter if he knew you his whole life or he just met you five minutes ago. His house was open for anyone to come visit at any given time. He’d tell people he just met walking down the road to come use his kayaks. He was generous and open.

“He was born in Canada and when he was a young child they moved here. He told me he remembered the day he became a U.S. citizen and it was the greatest day of his life. He was such a patriot. He loved this country and he loved Anna Maria,” Meghan said.

AMI remembers Dale Woodland
Anna Maria Mayor Max Woodland was featured on the cover of the Key Look-out newspaper in 1959. – Meghan Woodland | Submitted

She shared a copy of a three-page feature story that ran in the “Key Look-out” newspaper in August 1959. The newspaper’s coverage area included Longboat Key, Sarasota and Anna Maria Island and their story touted Maxwell Woodland as a “Man of the Keys.” The story recapped Maxwell’s service as a bomber pilot in the Royal Australian Air Force, his career path as an engineer, comptroller and certified public accountant, the life journeys that brought him and his family to Anna Maria and his current status as the Anna Maria mayor.

“He disappeared later and was never heard from,” Meghan said of Maxwell’s mysterious disappearance.

Meghan first noticed signs of Dale’s dementia around the time he started dating Jayne, and as his memory loss progressed he relied more heavily on her.

“He really turned to Jayne for everything. She would answer questions, speak for him and she was like a safety net for him. When Lucy passed away, it was traumatic. He was grieving and he couldn’t be at his house without his dog,” Meghan said.

When Michael took over Dale’s care, the family hoped to keep him at home as long as possible.

“We wanted him to stay in his house until the very last day of his life. That’s where he wanted to be and we didn’t want to take him from the Island. But I found out just how bad Dale was and my son (Michael) said he couldn’t do it anymore,” Meghan said of the decision to bring Dale to Live Oak where she could help care for him.

“He didn’t know where he was. He kept thinking he could walk up the street but he was out in the middle of nowhere,” she said of his time there.

Eventually, the family concluded it was time to place Dale in a memory care facility for his own safety and that’s where he would later pass away.

When sharing the news of this grandfather’s passing on Facebook, Michael wrote: “Some of you may have known my grandpa, Dale Woodland. He was commissioner on the Island for many years and his dad, Maxwell, was mayor many, many years ago.

“It’s come time where my grandpa has gone to be with our Father. He was loved by many people on Anna Maria, and he loved you all and the Island. He was a family man and a man for America. He preached common sense and lived by it too. He spent more time at the Rod & Reel (Pier) than anyone else; and more importantly, knew how to handle a couple too many beers. I’ll forever cherish the times that I spent with my grandpa and I hope that those of you that did spend time with him will cherish them too. Rest in Paradise Grandpa Dale,” Michael wrote.

Friends

Jayne said she and her late husband, Vic, met Dale many years ago when he was campaigning for a city commission seat, and as time passed, they got to know him better.

“My husband passed away eight years ago. I was walking my dog six months later and Dale was cleaning a pool. I asked him about windows, because I was going to get new windows for my house; and he asked me out for a date. He asked me to go to the Island Players with him because he had season tickets. He always bought two season tickets and asked different people to go,” Jayne said.

AMI Remembers Dale Woodland
Jayne Slade-Dashiell and Dale Woodland dated for more than six years. – Jayne Slade-Dashiell | Submitted

When asked what she misses most about Dale, she said, “Going on our long walks, whether it be on the beach, down the piers or walking over to Ginny’s and Jane E’s in the morning to see the locals. We also liked to go on long bike rides around the Island, knowing that if we got tired, or the weather got bad, we could get on the trolley. I am an outdoor person and so was he. He loved the mountains in North Carolina and we enjoyed going there to go hiking and see the leaves change. I just loved that he such was an outgoing, friendly person.”

While growing up on Mangrove Avenue, Dale became close friends with fellow Mangrove Avenue resident Bruce Dickins.

Currently a Tampa resident, and soon moving to the greater Sarasota area, Dickins said, “Dale lived down on Mangrove with his parents, on the beach side. I was up the street at a little house called ‘The Mayflower’ and we became good friends. His father was the mayor of Anna Maria and he was very strict. One day, I asked if I could go down there and watch color TV for the first time and I watched my first cartoons in color. Dale was the kind of guy people gravitated too. Nobody disliked him.”

Regarding Dale’s dad, Bruce said, “I don’t know why he left. After being the mayor, one day he was gone. Apparently, he died in Australia.”

Dickins also suffered a childhood tragedy: “My mom died when I was 12, so we moved to Connecticut, but we kept in contact. When I moved to Daytona, I used to go over to Anna Maria to visit. Dale was a great guy and he never forgot me,” Bruce said, noting that he continued to visit Dale and Anna Maria through the years.

From talking to Jayne, Bruce knew Dale’s dementia was getting worse.

“The last time I saw him was last year on the Rod & Reel Pier before the hurricanes blew it out. My wife and I were walking up the pier and we were about 100 feet from Dale and he looked up and said, ‘holy crap.’ We talked for an hour or two. He knew the dementia was setting in and I’d ask him questions and he didn’t know the answers,” Bruce said.

“After we talked, I got a couple pictures of us and told him I was going to leave. We were walking off the pier and Dale followed us and walked with us to the car. I didn’t think that would be the last time I saw him, but I think he knew it would be the last time. He was my oldest friend and I was his oldest friend, I loved him and he loved me back. He was a great guy. I’ll miss him so much,” Bruce said.

AMI Remembers Dale Woodland
Dale Woodland saw his lifelong friend, Bruce Dickins, for the last time last year on the Rod & Reel Pier. – Bruce Dickins | Submitted

Holmes Beach resident and charter captain Scott Moore said, “I’ve known Dale all my life. He was a true islander. He loved to scuba dive. He used to dive underneath the piers to see how many fish were there. Him and Andy Torgeson used to dive a lot together. He was always interested in protecting the environment, the fisheries and the animals here on the Island.

“Dale was a very good commissioner. You could talk to him and he was very sensible, and a gentleman. His favorite spot was the Rod & Reel Pier. He would ride his bike up there almost every day and have a couple beers. He loved that place. We lost the Rod & Reel last year and now we lost Dale. He was a really good man,” Moore said.

Reading aloud some thoughts he wrote down, former Rod & Reel Pier General Manager Dave Cochran said, “Dale was a very unique individual and an interesting person. He loved going to the Rod & Reel Pier and talking to everyone about Anna Maria and its charm. Dale was especially enthusiastic with visitors and children about the local history and activities.

Dale dedicated himself for the betterment of Anna Maria and its people. He always promoted the beauty and flavor of the Island. Having a conversation with Dale was always interesting and enjoyable. Dale was a real character at promoting good feelings and happiness around him. He will be missed and remembered by all.” Cochran said.

Public officials

The Anna Maria City Hall flag was flown at half-staff in Dale’s honor.

“I briefly served with Dale on the commission,” Anna Maria Mayor Mark Short said. “Dale was a well-known figure here in the city and gave years of service to the city as a commissioner and as an involved citizen. On behalf of the city, we were sorry to hear about Dale’s passing and our condolences go out to his family.”

AMI Remembers Dale Woodland
Dale Woodland was a voice of the people during his long tenure as a city commissioner. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Former Anna Maria Commissioner Doug Copeland said, “Dale loved Anna Maria and spent a good portion of his life trying to make it a better place to live.”

Former Anna Maria Commissioner Brian Seymour said, “Dale was one of the first locals I met when I moved here 16 years ago. I also had the privilege of serving on the city commission with him for three years. There was nothing more important to Dale than his family, his dog and serving this community. I will miss running into him at city events and around the ‘north end’ when we would catch up on how each other was doing. Another true islander lost too soon.”

Holmes Beach Commissioner Carol Whitmore said, “I have known Dale since the 1970s. He was a true islander and a free spirit. He was always smiling and he always had a story to tell. He will be missed.”

Anna Maria voters decide fates of three charter amendments

Anna Maria voters decide fates of three charter amendments

ANNA MARIA – In the city elections that concluded Tuesday, Nov. 5, Anna Maria voters adopted three charter amendments proposed by the Charter Review Commission.

Running with no opposition, incumbent Anna Maria Commissioner Carol Carter and former Planning and Zoning Board Chairman Jonathan Crane won city commission seats. A third commission seat will be filled by commission appointment in January.

Anna Maria voters decide fates of three charter amendments
Former Planning and Zoning Board Chairman Jonathan Crane will soon be sworn in as a city commissioner. – Jonathan Crane | Submitted

Charter amendments

According to the unofficial results posted at the Manatee County Supervisor of Elections website, 242 Anna Maria voters (91.32 percent) supported Anna Maria Amendment 1 and 23 voters (8.68 percent) opposed it. Anna Maria Amendment 1 said: “Shall the Anna Maria city charter be amended to provide that any city commission member or the mayor shall forfeit such office if he or she is found by the Florida Commission on Ethics to have violated any portion of the Code of Ethics for public officials and employees found in Chapter 112, Florida Statutes?”

A total of 228 voters (86.36 percent) supported Anna Maria Amendment 2 and 36 voters (13.64 percent) opposed it. Anna Maria Amendment 2 said: “Shall the Anna Maria city charter be amended to provide that the mayor’s appointment of a city treasurer shall be subject to the approval of the city commission?”

A total of 235 voters (89.02 percent) supported Anna Maria Amendment 3 and 29 voters 10.98 percent) opposed it. Anna Maria Amendment 3 said: “Shall the Anna Maria city charter be amended to make technical, corrective and conforming changes to the charter to correct scrivener’s and grammatical errors, conform city investment activity, the enactment of emergency ordinances, and certain referendum requirements to current state law, and add clarifications to make the charter easier to read and understand?”

As of August, the city of Anna Maria had 1,076 registered voters.

These are the unofficial results for the charter amendment question votes. – Manatee County Supervisor of Elections | Submitted

Commission seats

Carter will serve a fourth consecutive term and Crane will join a commission that also includes Commissioners Amy Tripp and Mark Short.

City Clerk LeAnne Addy said Carter and Crane will be sworn in at the city commission’s Dec. 5 organizational meeting. At that time, the newly-reconfigured commission will select a chair and a vice-chair. As vice-chair, Carter became the commission chair after Commissioner Brian Seymour resigned in August.

Looking ahead to her next term, Carter said, “I’m honored to serve the residents of Anna Maria for the fourth time. There’s much I want to do to help my neighbors:

  • Present sea-level rise town hall meeting with John Englander on Dec 10;
  • Continued lobbying for home rule with Florida legislators;
  • Complete flash drive video for state legislators to illustrate the progress in Anna Maria and Holmes Beach on how well local home rule is working by inspecting and certifying vacation rentals for the health and safety of both visitors and residents;
  • Present Love Anna Maria Island community programs starting with our Thanks-Living community dinner on Nov. 27;
  • Continue representing Anna Maria with the Manasota League of Cities;
  • and continue to support Mayor Dan Murphy’s efforts to get the new City Pier open and operating,” Carter said.

Crane recently resigned from his position as the Planning and Zoning Board chair in order to transition into his new role as a city commissioner.

“I’m very happy to be able to serve the people of Anna Maria in this new way,” Crane said.

Vacant seat

The soon-to-be-vacated commission seat that was not filled during this election cycle is currently held by multi-term Commissioner Dale Woodland. Woodland will vacate that seat in early December because he failed to qualify for the 2019 city elections.

Anna Maria voters decide fates of three charter amendments
Long-time Commissioner Dale Woodland hopes to get appointed to another term in office. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

The Manatee County Supervisor of Elections Office disqualified Woodland after the qualifying period close because he paid his qualifying fee with a personal check instead of using a check drawn from a campaign account.

Woodland and Commissioner Doug Copeland will remain on the commission until the organizational meeting takes place on Dec. 5, and they will still participate in the Thursday, Nov. 14 commission meeting as voting members.

Anna Maria voters decide fates of three charter amendments
Commissioner Doug Copeland’s time in office will end in December. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Addy said the seat being vacated by Woodland would be filled by commission appointment in early January. Woodland already said he will apply for the seat in hopes of getting appointed to the commission seat he’s been elected to several times in the past.

Short joins Anna Maria City Commission

Short joins Anna Maria City Commission

ANNA MARIA – Mark Short has been appointed to fill the Anna Maria City Commission seat formerly held by Brian Seymour, who resigned in August.

Short will serve the remainder of the two-year commission term that expires in November 2020.

On Thursday, Sept. 26, Commissioners Carol Carter, Doug Copeland, Amy Tripp and Dale Woodland unanimously selected Short over fellow candidate Jack Bergbom.

The appointment process began with a request for public comment, but there was none. Mayor Dan Murphy introduced the two candidates who applied to fill the vacant commission seat, noting that Bergbom was not present, although the clerk’s office had notified him of the meeting.

Turning to Short, Murphy said Short was currently a member of the city’s Planning and Zoning Board and has lived in Anna Maria long enough to have “sand in his shoes.” Short also served on the city’s Charter Review Commission earlier this year.

Short addressed the commission before the selection process took place. He said he and his wife, Pat, have owned their Anna Maria home since 2012. Two years ago, he retired after a 38-year career in the field of mergers and acquisitions and also as a Certified Public Accountant.

“I’ve always been one to get involved wherever we’ve been,” Short said, noting that he also became a member of The Center’s financial committee in 2018.

In addition to his financial background, Short said he thought being a newer resident of the city would bring a new perspective to the commission.

City Clerk LeAnne Addy then provided the four commissioners with a ballot form on which they were asked to individually rank the two candidates in terms of their first and second choices. The ballot also contained a “none of the above” option.

All four commissioners ranked Short as their first choice and Bergbom as their second choice.

“Congratulations Mr. Short,” Murphy said after Addy tallied the results.

Before being sworn in, Short tendered his written resignation from the Planning and Zoning Board. Addy then administered the oath of office and Short took his seat on the dais to participate in the rest of the meeting.

Short joins Anna Maria City Commission
Mark Short takes the oath of office administered by City Clerk LeAnne Addy. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

During the commissioners’ reports toward the end of his first meeting, Short said, “I’m looking forward to being on the commission and working with all of you.”

“Thank you for stepping up,” Murphy said.

“Yes, absolutely. Thank you,” Carter added.

Another appointment pending

After the city elections conclude in November, Short, Tripp, commissioner-elect Carter and commissioner-elect Jon Crane will appoint someone to fill the seat to be vacated by Woodland.

Carter and former Planning and Zoning Board Chair Crane are running unopposed in the 2019 city elections. Woodland sought re-election but failed to qualify when he paid his qualifying fee with a personal check instead of with a check issued from a registered campaign account.

After the two-week qualifying period closed, Manatee County Supervisor of Elections Mike Bennett told Woodland he’d been withdrawn from the race for the city’s three available commission seats.

Woodland said he hopes to be reappointed to serve another term. After the November elections, Woodland’s newly-vacated seat will be filled using the same application and appointment process used to fill Seymour’s vacant seat.

Anna Maria Commission will need to fill two seats

Anna Maria Commission will need to fill two seats

ANNA MARIA – The city of Anna Maria must fill two city commission seats by appointment – one this month and one in November.

On Thursday, Sept. 26, the commission hopes to appoint someone to serve the remainder of former commission Chair Brian Seymour’s two-year term that expires in November 2020. Seymour resigned from the commission last month. The deadline to submit an application to fill his seat is 4 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 24.

In November, the commission will need to appoint someone to fill the commission seat currently held by unopposed Commissioner Dale Woodland.

On Wednesday, Sept. 4, Supervisor of Elections Mike Bennett called Woodland and told him he was disqualified from the 2019 city elections because he paid his $48 qualifying fee with a personal check instead of with a check drawn from a designated campaign account.

This means Woodland is not eligible for re-election in the upcoming city elections that will conclude on Tuesday, Nov. 5. When contacted that afternoon, Woodland said he wants to serve another term in office and he hopes he’ll be reappointed in November.

Woodland said Bennett was very polite when delivering the news Wednesday morning.

“The law’s the law,” Woodland said.

Anna Maria Commission will need to fill two seats
Longtime Commissioner Dale Woodland will seek reappointment in November after failing to qualify for the upcoming city elections. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Woodland said he paid his qualifying fee on the first day of the two-week qualifying period and assumed the elections office would contact him if there were any problems with his qualifying papers or fee payment.

Woodland’s disqualification leaves incumbent Commissioner Carol Carter and Planning and Zoning Board Chairman Jon Crane as the only two candidates running unopposed for the three commission three seats open to election this fall.

Carter now serves as the commission chair in the wake of Seymour’s resignation on Friday, Aug. 30.

Commissioners receive an annual salary of $4,800 and are subject to the Florida Sunshine Law during their time in office.

Appointment process

Application forms for those seeking Seymour’s vacated seat can be downloaded at the city website, obtained by email or mail from the city clerk’s office or picked up in person at city hall. To contact the clerk’s office, email amclerk@cityofannamaria.com or call 941-708-6130.

Applicants must be city residents who have lived in Anna Maria for at least two years. They must also be registered city voters, legal residents of Manatee County and on their applications, list three reasons why they wish to be considered for a commission seat.

On Wednesday, Sept. 4, the Anna Maria Commission held a special meeting to discuss the process for appointing Seymour’s replacement. Woodland’s disqualification was not discussed.

At the suggestion of Mayor Dan Murphy and City Attorney Becky Vose, the commission agreed to utilize the same appointment process utilized when Commissioner Nancy Yetter resigned in early 2018.

During that process, the commissioners ranked the three candidates in order of their personal preference. The applicant receiving the lowest total score – Amy Tripp – earned the appointment.

The application forms received from those seeking Seymour’s vacated seat will be provided to the four sitting commissioners in advance. During the Thursday, Sept. 26 commission meeting, the commissioners will then fill out a form in which they rank the applicants as their first, second and additional choices, depending on the number of applications received.

A commissioner’s top choice receives one point, a commissioner’s second choice receives two points and so forth. Each commissioner’s rankings will be revealed during the appointment process.

If the first set of rankings produces a tie, the commissioners will rank the candidates again. If the second round also produces a tie, the winner will be determined by cutting cards, drawing straws, throwing dice or some similar game of chance.

A similar appointment process will then take place in mid-November to fill the seat vacated by Woodland after the city elections conclude.

Potential implications

During last week’s meeting, Carter asked what happens if a replacement for Seymour is not found. Murphy said the city could put out another call for candidates and could operate as a four-member commission until a fifth member is appointed.

Anna Maria Commission will need to fill two seats
Commissioner Carol Carter now chairs the Anna Maria City Commission. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Murphy said he would prefer not to have a four-person commission because that creates the potential for 2-2 tied votes at a time when the city budget must be adopted and decisions about the new City Pier must be made.

Related coverage

Seymour resigns from city commission

 

Carter, Crane and Woodland running unopposed

Updated Sept. 6, 2019 | ANNA MARIA – Running unopposed in the 2019 city election, incumbent Anna Maria Commissioner Carol Carter will serve an additional two-year term in office.

Incumbent Commissioner Dale Woodland, also unopposed, was disqualified on Sept. 4 because he paid his qualifying fee with a personal check instead of a check issued from a campaign account. He will now seek reappointment by the city commission that will determine who fills that seat for the next two years. Other candidates also will be able to apply for consideration.

In November, commission newcomer and current Planning and Zoning Board Chairman Jonathan Crane will join the board.

Carter, Crane and Woodland were the only three candidates to qualify in the city’s two-week qualifying period that ended Friday afternoon.

The current commission must soon appoint someone to serve the remaining year-plus of Brian Seymour’s two-year term as a result of Seymour’s surprise resignation last week.

Commissioner Amy Tripp is in the first year of her two-year term in office. Longtime Commissioner Doug Copeland did not seek re-election, and his time in office will come to an end after the November elections.

Carol Carter

Carol Carter

Jonathan Crane

Jonathan Crane

Dale Woodland

Dale Woodland

 

Crane, Woodland file preliminary campaign paperwork

ANNA MARIA – The city’s two-week election qualifying period opened Monday and closes at noon on Friday, Aug. 30.

Incumbent Commissioner Dale Woodland and Planning and Zoning Board Chairman Jon Crane have already filed their preliminary paperwork with the Manatee County Supervisor of Elections Office.

Crane, Woodland file preliminary campaign paperwork
Longtime Commissioner Dale Woodland is seeking another term in office. – Submitted
Crane, Woodland file preliminary campaign paperwork
Planning and Zoning Board Chairman Jon Crane will seek a City Commission seat. – Submitted

Incumbent Commissioner Carol Carter recently indicated she will seek re-election, and longtime commissioner Doug Copeland recently announced he will not seek another term in office. Commissioners Amy Tripp and Brian Seymour are serving the first year of their two-year terms.

 

Carter, Crane, Woodland and any other candidates who qualify will compete for the three commission seats to be decided by Anna Maria’s registered voters in the city elections that conclude Tuesday, Nov. 5.

When asked why he’s running for a commission seat, Crane deferred to the written candidate’s statement he posted at the elections office website. In his statement, Crane noted his first priority is to represent the residents of Anna Maria. His statement also mentions preserving the city’s delicate ecosystem, allowing the city’s business community to thrive and maintaining “controlled, common sense growth” that respects residents’ rights to the quiet enjoyment of their property.

For more information on qualifying, visit the elections office or call the city clerk’s office at 941-708-6130.

Anna Maria’s street-side parking switches sides

Anna Maria’s street-side parking switches sides

ANNA MARIA – Make sure you park on the proper side of the street in the city limits of Anna Maria, at the north end of Anna Maria Island – the city annually switches which side of the street can be parked on.

There are 14 streets in Anna Maria subject to this annual switch and the parking signs along those streets have now been moved to the proper side for 2019. This means you’ll be issued a $35 citation if a member of the city’s Parking Enforcement Department sees you’ve parked on the wrong side of the street. The parking fine increases to $50 if not paid within seven days.

The impacted streets are Gladiolus Street, Fern Street, Newtown Lane, Fir Avenue, Coconut Avenue, Sycamore Avenue, Elm Avenue, Magnolia Avenue, Palm Avenue, Palmetto Avenue, Jacaranda Road, Maple Avenue, Beach Avenue and Peppertree Lane.

Anna Maria’s street-side parking switches sides
Parking is not allowed on the south side of Palm Avenue in 2019. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

The alternating street-side parking took effect on Dec. 1, 2005. Current City Commissioner Dale Woodland was a member of the commission that adopted those parking provisions. Earlier this week, he shared his thoughts on that decision-making process.

Woodland said the intent was to provide at least some relief, on an annual basis, for the property owners who live along those streets that are heavily used by beachgoers and other visitors.

“The council was pretty much divided. We had one group of people that didn’t want anybody parking on their street and we had another group of people that thought they ought to be able to park on both sides. We compromised to where you can park on one side one year and the other side the other year. It took a lot of debate and it wasn’t a quick fix,” Woodland said, noting that he doesn’t hear much debate about it anymore.

“They’re pretty much used to it. I’ve had a couple of complaints over the years when they get switched and somebody forgets and gets a ticket,” Woodland said.

Sgt. Mike Jones, of the Manatee County Sheriff’s Office, reminds drivers that when parking in the city of Anna Maria, all four tires must be off the pavement and you must park in the proper direction of the flow of traffic.

Anna Maria’s street-side parking switches sides
This truck was ticketed in Anna Maria Wednesday morning for having two tires parked on Palm Avenue. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Holmes Beach and Bradenton Beach

Street-side parking regulations vary from city to city on Anna Maria Island.

Holmes Beach Police Chief Bill Tokajer cautions drivers not to park in front of a sign that says “No Parking,” not to park in front of a fire hydrant and to be courteous and not park in front of someone’s mailbox.

“You have to have to park with the flow of traffic and facing the proper direction. If you’ve parked on a road, make sure you’ve left room for other vehicles to drive around you – including ambulances, fire trucks and trash trucks. Nothing in our rules say you have to have all your wheels off the road,” Tokajer said.

But when parking street-side in Bradenton Beach, Police Chief Sam Speciale cautions drivers that all four tires must be off the pavement, like Anna Maria. Vehicles also must be parked in the direction of the flow of traffic.