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County defers to city on pier ferry plan

County defers to city on pier ferry plan

ANNA MARIA – Mayor Mark Short told city commissioners that Manatee County officials will respect the city’s wishes regarding the design and instal­lation of a county-funded ferry landing alongside the City Pier.

In January 2024, the 49-passenger pontoon boats currently used by the county-contracted Gulf Islands Ferry service began docking at the public boat landing at the T-end of the City Pier. In October 2024, Hurricane Milton destroyed the landing and the City Pier walkway.

With no landing area, ferry service to Anna Maria remains suspended until a new pier walkway is built and a new ferry landing is installed alongside it. Mayor Mark Short expects the new pier walkway to open in the fall of 2026 and county officials want a ferry landing operational as soon as possible after the pier reopens.

On Sept. 25, Short and the commis­sioners expressed strong opposition to the latest ferry landing concept proposed by the county. The opposition pertained primarily to the inclusion of a lengthy additional gangway that would serve as a ferry passenger waiting area. Concerns were also expressed about which side of the pier walkway the ferry landing would be installed on.

During the commission’s Oct. 9 meet­ing, Short said he spoke with a county representative earlier in the week and was told the additional gangway waiting area has been removed from the plans.

In reference to the gangway waiting area highlighted in blue on the county draw­ings, Short said, “The blue staging area is off the table. That is not going to happen.”

Short said the county has com­mitted to developing a ferry landing concept that meets the approval of the mayor and city commission and he noted that county commission ap­proval is required for a ferry landing installed alongside the city-owned pier. Short said it hasn’t been deter­mined yet if the ferry landing will be a fixed or a floating structure.

County defers to city on pier ferry plan
In this diagram, the ferry landing is located on the left side of the pier, as viewed from shore. – Manatee County | Submitted

Short said the county also committed to working with the city regarding the type of wave attenuators to be installed near the ferry landing. The county has proposed metal attenuating walls but Short said he suggested the consideration of cement wave attenuators that attract and support fish and other marine life, similar to the attenuators located near the Sunshine Skyway Bridge.

Commissioners Chris Arendt and Gary McMullen liked Short’s wave attenuator idea.

McMullen said he would oppose a floating ferry landing in part because of the past damage that’s occurred to the floating dock and fingers docks installed alongside the Bradenton Beach Pier and in part because the Tampa Bay waters near the City Pier are much rougher than the inland waters near the Bradenton Beach Pier.

“The bottom line is they want to work with us,” Short said regarding the ferry landing location, its distance from the pier walkway and the type of wave attenuators to be installed.

Commissioner Kathy Morgan-Johnson said she’s concerned about the larger, partially enclosed 90-foot, 100-passenger ferry boat that will soon join the Gulf Islands Ferry fleet resulting in many more passengers congregating on the pier walkway while waiting for a ferry.

County defers to city on pier ferry plan
The pavilion near the City Pier entrance might be used as a ferry passenger waiting area. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Short said he discussed that with the county representative and one suggestion included using the on-land pavilion area at the pier entrance as the passenger waiting area.

“That’s how Disney does it and it works very well,” General Manager Dean Jones added.

No commission decisions were made and the ferry landing discussions between the city and the county will continue.

County's pier ferry landing concept meets city resistance

County’s pier ferry landing concept meets city resistance

ANNA MARIA – The mayor and city commissioners strongly oppose Manatee County’s latest concept for the installation of a Gulf Islands Ferry landing alongside the soon-to-be-built Anna Maria City Pier walkway, but they remain hopeful that a workable solution can be found.

Not allowing the county to install as a separate project a county-funded ferry landing alongside the walkway could jeopardize the county’s anticipated $2 million contribution to the city’s $8 million pier walkway replacement project.

On Sept. 25, Anna Maria Mayor Mark Short presented city com­missioners with the latest ferry landing diagram he received from the county. The color-coded diagram proposes a ferry landing near the T-end of the pier where a new and larger 90-foot-long enclosed ferry boat would dock (highlighted in green), passenger loading and unloading areas at the bow and stern of the larger ferry (highlighted in orange), a lengthy gangway that would serve as a passenger waiting area (highlighted in blue) and a perpendicular metal wave attenua­tion wall between the docking area and the T-end pier building occupied by Mote Marine.

Short said the proposed landing structure would extend approxi­mately 350 feet along the east (right) side of the soon-to-be-built pier walkway, as viewed from shore.

Designed to accommodate the larger, enclosed ferry boat that the county hopes to put into service later this year for the Manatee River route between Anna Maria and downtown Bradenton, the new City Pier landing would replace the public boat landing previously used by the smaller pontoon ferry boats before Hurricane Milton destroyed most of the pier walkway that now awaits replacement.

Short said he and county officials are trying to finalize an interlocal agreement for the county’s tourist development tax-funded $2 million contribution to the pier walkway reconstruction project. Short said county officials are “pretty adamant” that the city-county agreement must allow the county to install a ferry landing alongside the pier at the county’s expense.

County's pier ferry landing concept meets city resistance
Earlier this year, city commissioners expressed their support for ferry landing option C. – Manatee County | Submitted

Earlier this year, city and county officials discussed several potential ferry landing options and city commissioners favored the option that proposed a much smaller ferry landing and attenuation wall being installed along the west (left) side of the pier, as viewed from shore.

“I’m not happy with this,” Short said of the new proposal. “I’ve already told the county I’m not so sure this is going to work. They’re going back to the drawing board.”

Short plans to consult with an independent industry expert to garner additional insights on a workable ferry landing solution.

Participating by phone, Commis­sioner John Lynch said the county’s latest proposal is not a viable solution because it takes away the functionality, visibility, aesthetic design and historical perspective of the City Pier.

Lynch questioned whether accommodat­ing the county’s desire to bring a larger ferry to the City Pier benefits the city and its residents.

“Do we want to have a 90-foot boat parking at our pier? I know that’s the desire of the county and the TDC (Tourist Development Council) but is that what we, the residents of Anna Maria, want?” he asked.

Regarding the potential loss of $2 million in county funds, Lynch said, “We’re being held hostage to that.”

Commissioner Gary McMullen said the latest proposal would effectively make the entire east side of the pier unavailable for fishing and other activities. McMullen opposes the additional gangway waiting area and he said the ferry landing needs to be as small as functionally possible.

County's pier ferry landing concept meets city resistance
Before the 2024 hurricanes struck, the pontoon ferry boats docked at the public boat landing near the T-end of the City Pier. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Commissioner Kathy Morgan Johnson asked what happened to the county’s previous proposal to install the ferry landing along the west side of the pier walkway. Short said installing the landing there would obstruct the view of Egmont Key, the Gulf and the sunsets.

Commissioner Chris Arendt said he’s OK with a ferry landing on the east side of the pier but he opposes the additional gangway waiting area.

Regarding the accommodation of a larger ferry boat, Arendt noted the two cur­rently utilized open-air pontoon boats are weather dependent, rarely run in inclement weather and don’t provide reliable public transportation.

“This is an all-weather ferry – enclosed, heated, cooled. It’s going to run on a timetable that would allow employees that work on the Island to use it for transporta­tion during the peak traffic season,” he said.

He said those employees could then catch a free Island trolley at the foot of the City Pier that would get them close to their workplaces elsewhere on the Island.

“I think it’s a good thing,” Arendt said.

Commissioner Charlie Salem questioned the need for such a lengthy ferry landing. He said the people designing it for the county should discuss the potential drawbacks and benefits with the mayor and commissioners. He’s also puzzled by the county’s pier replacement project funding being tied to the city’s ferry landing approval.

“It would be better for everyone if they focused on helping us rebuild the pier and using the commitment of those tourist-generated dollars for a largely tourist-visited pier, instead of having the residents of this city front the money,” Salem said of the pier replacement costs.

City, county officials discuss pier replacement, ferry landing

City, county officials discuss pier replacement, ferry landing

ANNA MARIA – City officials’ desire to rebuild the hurricane-damaged City Pier walkway and Manatee County officials’ desire to install a ferry landing at the pier are financially and philosophically intertwined.

The city needs county funds to help replace the pier walkway weakened by Hurricane Helene and mostly destroyed by Hurricane Milton. The pier wasn’t insured and the city doesn’t have enough money to self-fund the project.

The county needs the City Pier to serve as the Anna Maria stop for the larger ferry boat that will join the Gulf Islands Ferry fleet later this year. The county’s long-term goal is to use the larger ferry boat to transport passengers between the City Pier and downtown Bradenton and use the two pontoon boats as “Island hoppers’ that travel between Anna Maria, Bradenton Beach and the South Coquina boat ramp – and potentially Holmes Beach. The county also plans to include a ferry stop at the Cortez Marina in Cortez when the county-owned marina is built.

The Gulf Islands Ferry service currently runs between the Riverwalk Day Dock in downtown Bradenton and the Bradenton Beach Pier in Bradenton Beach.

City, county officials discuss pier replacement, ferry landing
Manatee County wants to install a ferry landing alongside the City Pier walkway when the missing walkway is replaced. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

On June 16, Anna Maria Mayor Mark Short appeared before the Manatee County Tourist Development Council (TDC), which recommends county commission approval for the city to use up to $2 million of tourist development tax revenues for the City Pier project.

City/county meeting

On June 18, Short, city commissioners Charlie Salem, Chris Arendt and Kathy Morgan-Johnson and City Clerk Amber LaRowe met with County Commission Chair George Kruse, County Administrator Charlie Bishop and other county staff members. County commissioners Tal Siddique and Carol Ann Felts participated by phone. The city and county officials discussed several topics but first and foremost were the related pier and ferry landing projects.

City, county officials discuss pier replacement, ferry landing
Mayor Mark Short presented the city’s pier-related funding needs to county commissioners and county staff. – Manatee County/YouTube | Submitted

For cost saving purposes, the current pier walkway that opened in 2020 was built atop hollow concrete pilings and a wooden support structure. The new pier walkway will be built atop solid concrete pilings and a concrete support structure similar to the T-end of the pier that survived the 2024 hurricanes.

Short estimates the pier walkway replacement will cost between $7 million and $9 million and hopefully be completed by October 2026. He said the city’s pier walkway replacement project and the county’s ferry landing installation must remain separate projects because the emergency permit received from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers requires the new walkway to be built in exactly the same footprint.

The city will know by July 1 whether Gov. Ron DeSantis vetoes the city’s pier-related $1.25 million state appropriation request. Those state funds would be available on Oct. 1 if not vetoed. The city anticipates receiving around $4 mil­lion in pier-related FEMA reimbursements but those federal funds aren’t guar­anteed and Short doesn’t know if or when the city will receive them.

Short said the city already spent $223,000 on the pier project. He estimates the city will spend another $1.1 million between now and September, including $239,500 for the demoli­tion of the remaining pier walkway and $800,000 to repair and remediate the T-end pier buildings that sustained flood damage but remain structurally sound. Short estimates the city will need $3.1 million in 2025 and another $4.1 million in 2026 for the pier project.

Kruse asked Short who is responsible for restoring the T-end pier buildings oc­cupied by Mote Marine and the City Pier Grill. Short said the city will repair and remediate the city-owned pier buildings and the pier tenants are responsible for replacing their damaged equipment and contents.

Kruse asked Short if he expects Mote Marine to return to the pier.

“If that goes away, it’s not the same,” Kruse said.

Short said Mote personnel recently visited the pier by boat and are assessing Mote’s future plans.

Bradenton Area Conven­tion and Visitors Bureau Executive Director Elliott Falcione said the Mote space could be used as a ferry passenger waiting area if Mote doesn’t return. Kruse said he’d like to see that space used for some­thing more than a waiting area.

Falcione said Natural Resources Director Charlie Hunsicker estimates the City Pier ferry landing will cost the county an additional $1 million to $1.5 million. Falcione also said Manatee County Area Transit (MCAT) will assume oversight of the county-contracted ferry service on Oct. 1 and the visitors bureau will continue marketing and promoting the ferry service it currently oversees.

Kruse insights

Kruse expects county commissioners to vote on the $2 million TDC recom­mendation on July 29.

He noted the $4 million in potential FEMA funds equates to about half the estimated pier replacement costs.

“It could be 18 months before you know if you’re even going to get it and another three years before you actually get it,” Kruse said of the FEMA funds.

City, county officials discuss pier replacement, ferry landing
County Commission Chair George Kruse supports using county funds to help cover the pier walkway replacement costs. – Manatee County/YouTube | Submitted

Speaking for himself, and not the county commission, Kruse said the county may need to front the city the additional money needed to complete the project, with the city later reimbursing the county using FEMA funds or other funding sources.

“This has to be rebuilt,” Kruse said. “I don’t think there’s any alternative. It’s critical to our tourism, it’s critical to our residents and we’ve got great amenities out there. We need the landing space. We want people to go to Mote. We want people to go to the grill. We want people to use that pier.”

He also mentioned the economic impact of ferry passengers visiting the restaurants and businesses within walking distance of the pier, and beyond.

City, county officials discuss pier replacement, ferry landing
Manatee County wants to install a new ferry landing alongside the Anna Maria City Pier. – Manatee County | Submitted

Kruse suggested Mote Marine and City Pier Grill representatives meet with city and county officials for an all-inclusive discus­sion. He also said city and county staff need to create a funding proposal.

Kruse mentioned the hurricane-related line of credit the county secured, the county’s reserve funds and the county’s tourist development tax revenues as potential funding sources.

“I don’t think this is a question of should we do it,” Kruse said. “I think it’s a question of where’s the money coming from in the short term and where’s the money coming from in the long term? It’s still taxpayer money.”

“We understand and we appreciate that,” Short said.

Related coverage:
Mayor seeks TDC support for pier replacement project
Manatee County, Bradenton Beach officials discuss ferry options
City Pier Grill operators hope to renegotiate lease
City commission narrows ferry landing options

Anna Maria ferry landing discussions continue

Anna Maria ferry landing discussions continue

ANNA MARIA – Manatee County and Anna Maria officials spent an hour or so discussing five potential Gulf Islands Ferry landing locations at or near the City Pier.

During the May 8 city commission meeting, the pros and cons of the proposed landing areas were discussed but no decisions were made. A county-funded ferry landing built alongside or near the City Pier requires city commission approval.

Last October, Hurricane Milton destroyed a large section of the City Pier walkway, taking with it the boat landing that had served as the Anna Maria ferry stop since January 2024. Mayor Mark Short and the city commissioners are unified in their belief that replacing the hurricane-damaged pier walkway and reopening the pier is their top priority and the ferry landing is an important but secondary concern. It was stated during a recent TDC meeting that the county-contracted Gulf Islands Ferry Service is not expected to resume in Anna Maria until August 2027.

The ferry service currently consists of two 49-passenger, open-air pontoon boats traveling on the Manatee River and the Intracoastal Waterway between downtown Bradenton and the Bradenton Beach Pier. The county expects to add a larger and heavier boat to the fleet later this summer. The new boat will seat approximately 76 passengers inside and 22 people outside and handle the Bradenton/Anna Maria river route. The two pontoon boats will serve as ‘Island hoppers’ traveling between Anna Maria, Bradenton Beach and Coquina Beach, and potentially Holmes Beach.

Holmes Beach Commissioner, ferry proponent and Tourist Development Council (TDC) member Dan Diggins attended the May 8 meeting but didn’t participate in the discussion.

The county was represented by Bradenton Area Convention and Visitors Bureau Executive Director Elliott Falcione, Natural Resources Director Charlie Hunsicker and county consultants Thomas Pierro and Morjana Signorin.

Anna Maria ferry landing discussions continue
County staff members Elliott Falcione, left, and Charlie Hunsicker addressed Anna Maria’s mayor and commissioners. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Options A, D and E propose constructing a stand-alone ferry dock near the Lake La Vista channel and jetty. Options A and D are closer to shore and would require dredging. Option E is in deeper water, almost parallel with the T-end of the pier, and would not require dredging.

Anna Maria ferry landing discussions continue
This diagram illustrates all five ferry landing scenarios. – Manatee County | Submitted

Option C proposes a ferry dock constructed along the northwest side of the pier walkway, between the shoreline and the City Pier Grill building. Option B proposes a ferry dock constructed off the far end of the pier. Options C and B wouldn’t require dredging but would require a gangway that connects the ferry dock and the pier.

All five options propose wave attenuator walls that would help offset the wind, waves, currents and other conditions that impact docking, and all five options were subjected to extensive computer modeling that predicts how each option would be impacted by those natural conditions. Additional factors to consider include water depth, seagrass and marine life habitats, dredging needs, permitting requirements and cost.

The county presentation lists option D (by the jetty) and C (alongside the pier walkway) as the top two options. Using cost figures that are now 18 months old, the county presentation lists an estimated $1.2 million price tag for option D and $600,000 for option C.

Falcione said the county seeks the city’s input on how to proceed and he personally prefers the two pier-based options.

“We’re at a fork in the road,” he said of the ongoing decision making processes.

Concerns, considerations

City officials aren’t sure the City Pier can accommodate a larger, heavier ferry. Participating by phone, Commissioner John Lynch asked how many more passengers would arrive and depart from the City Pier aboard the larger boat. The county representatives didn’t have that information but Falcione said he’d get it. Lynch also questioned how the increased passenger loads might impact the land-based infrastructure near the pier.

During public input, city resident and Planning and Zoning Board member Jeff Rodencal shared similar concerns. Regarding a pier-based ferry landing, he theorized there could be a hundred people getting off the large ferry, a hundred people waiting to board the large ferry and another 30-40 people waiting for a smaller ferry headed for another Island destination. He questioned where all those passengers would sit or stand on the pier while waiting for their boat.

“The logistics of moving people through that period and that time has to part of this project,” Rodencal said.

Anna Maria ferry landing discussions continue
City Pier tenant Brian Seymour, left, shared his thoughts on the proposed ferry landing scenarios. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Pier tenant and City Pier Grill operator Brian Seymour can’t resume his business operations until the pier reopens and he expressed his concern that ferries coming close to shore would endanger manatees, dolphins, sea turtles and other marine life. He also expressed concerns about a landing alongside the pier walkway becoming dislodged during a hurricane and damaging the pier.

“I think B gives us the best option,” he said of his preferred pier-end option.

Regarding stand-alone jetty-based options, Seymour questioned how many ferry passengers would come ashore and then walk 900 feet back out to the T-end of the pier. As a pier-based business operator, he doesn’t see a financial benefit with that scenario.

Raising another consideration, Hunsicker said the county is constantly challenged by non-boaters fishing at county boat ramps and leaving their lines in the water when boats approach. He said this could be a problem on the City Pier unless an “all lines up” policy is in place during ferry arrivals and departures.

Seymour said the L-shaped areas where the pier walkway meets the T-end are heavily fished but “No Fishing Beyond This Point” signs could be placed at the far end of the pier to accommodate the pier-end option.

The discussion ended with Commission Chair Charlie Salem thanking the county representatives for their work and their presentation.

“There’s a lot of stuff to consider here and we’re obviously anxious to get going with our rebuild, but we know this is an important part of restoring ferry service. I look forward to continuing discussion,” Salem said.

Ferry landing requires city commission approval

Ferry landing requires city commission approval

ANNA MARIA – When discussing three conceptual scenarios for a Manatee County-funded Gulf Islands Ferry stop in Anna Maria, Mayor Mark Short said city commission approval is needed for any ferry landing installed at or near the Anna Maria City Pier.

The ferry landing scenarios first discussed during the April 21 Manatee County Tourist Development Council (TDC) meeting include a standalone ferry stop located between the City Pier and the Lake La Vista jetty. This scenario also calls for the current jetty to be extended to help reduce sediment accumulation and the need for maintenance-related dredging of the channel. The conceptual scenarios also include a ferry landing installed alongside the northwest side of the City Pier walkway or a ferry landing that extends from the tip of the T-end of the pier.

Last October, Hurricane Milton destroyed most of the pier walkway, including the boat landing at the T-end of the pier that served as a Gulf Islands ferry stop since January 2024. Built on a concrete foundation, the T-end of the pier and the pier buildings sustained minimal hurricane damage.

On April 24, Short told city commissioners he contacted Bradenton Area Convention and Visitors Bureau Executive Director Elliott Falcione on April 17 regarding the ferry update included on the TDC meeting agenda.

“I reminded him that anything they want to do out here needs this commission’s approval,” Short said. “I also told him that our priority is to rebuild that pier; and it has to be built in the exact footprint it was in.”

During the TDC meeting, Falcione said the new, larger enclosed 76-passenger ferry boat, the Manatee Belle, expected to arrive in July, would weigh 30,000 pounds. He said the two 49-pas­senger, open-air pontoon boats that will remain in service weigh 1,000 pounds. Falcione later corrected himself and said the Manatee Belle will weigh 100,000 pounds and the pontoon ferry boats each weigh 33,000 pounds.

Ferry landing requires city commission approval
This diagram illustrates three potential City Pier ferry landing scenarios being explored by county officials. – Manatee County | Submitted

Short said the new pier walkway, when constructed, could accommodate the pontoon ferry boats but a pier walkway built in the exact same footprint could not accommodate the new and heavier ferry boat.

“Sooner or later, this commission is going to be asked to vote on one of the scenarios. They can’t make our reconstruction of the pier part of their add-on. They cannot bolt that on to our project. It would be a completely separate project, outside of what we’re working on with the pier rebuild,” Short said.

Commissioner Charlie Salem noted the county’s August 2027 estimate for ferry service to resume in Anna Maria would leave the city without ferry service for another two and a half years.

Falcione and Manatee County Natural Resources Director Charlie Hunsicker will present the ferry landing scenarios to the mayor and commission on Thursday, May 8 at 1 p.m.

“The city encourages the public to attend that meeting to learn more about the options the county is considering,” Short said.

The May 8 meeting can be accessed by phone and public input can be given by calling 1-929-205-6099 and entering the meeting ID: 85392000280.

Pier repair funding

Earlier this year, Short submitted a funding request to the county that listed an estimated $8 million total cost to replace the pier walkway. The city hopes to fund the pier repairs with a portion of the hurricane-related $252.7 million in Community Development Block Grant Disaster Recovery funds that the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development awarded the county.

Falcione told The Sun that he, Short and other county staff members have also engaged in preliminary discussions about possibly using county commission-controlled tourist development tax revenues to help fund the pier walkway repair project.

During the April 24 meeting, Short also addressed the pending demolition and removal of what remains of the pier walkway. He said 10 construction companies sent representatives to the mandatory pre-bid walkthrough meeting held at the pier the previous day. Bid proposals for the demolition and debris removal contract are due by May 16 and Short hopes to recommend a demolition firm for city commission consideration on May 22.

Ferry accident

Contracted by Manatee County, the Gulf Islands Ferry service is managed and operated by Trisha and Dennis Rodriguez through their Gulf Coast Water Taxi LLC. Through their Clearwater Ferry Services LLC, the couple also manages and operates the Clearwater Ferry service that was involved in a fatal boating accident in Clearwater on April 27. The accident resulted in the death of 41-year-old ferry passenger Jose Castro and 10 other passengers were injured.

The fatal accident is being investigated by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) and the U.S. Coast Guard. According to the FWC, the three-engine power boat that struck the ferry boat was driven by Jeff Knight, 62. At the time of the accident, Knight owned the Jannus Live music venue in Clearwater and several other Clearwater businesses. On April 30, Jannus Live issued a statement saying Knight is no longer affiliated with the music venue.

According to FWC Capt. Matthew Dellarosa, Knight voluntarily subjected himself to a breathalyzer test that evening and no alcohol was detected in his system. To date, no criminal charges have been filed as the investigation continues. Knight’s legal team now questions whether the ferry boat was properly lit when the accident occurred.

According to various media reports, Knight was piloting the same motorboat in 2019 when it collided with a pontoon boat, injuring three pontoon boat passengers. In 2012, he was named in a civil lawsuit after a man slipped and drowned while getting off his boat. That lawsuit was later dismissed.

County exploring Anna Maria ferry landing options

County exploring Anna Maria ferry landing options

ANNA MARIA – Manatee County officials are developing scenarios to install a permanent, county-funded landing between the Anna Maria City Pier and the Lake La Vista jetty for the Gulf Islands Ferry.

On Feb. 27, Anna Maria Mayor Mark Short informed city commissioners of the county’s efforts to develop and install a new stand-alone ferry landing to accom­modate the new, larger and partially enclosed ferry boat the county plans to put in service later this summer.

The new ferry boat will have nearly twice the capacity of the two 49-foot pontoon boats that currently operate between the Riverwalk Day Dock in downtown Bradenton and the Bradenton Beach Pier three to four days per week.

County exploring Anna Maria ferry landing options
In mid-2024, county officials released this illustration that represents what the new ferry boat will look like. – Manatee County | Submitted

Using the now-destroyed boat landing at the T-end of the City Pier, the downtown Bradenton to Anna Maria Gulf Islands Ferry service began in January 2024 and a month later was expanded to include Bradenton Beach. Anna Maria ferry service was discontinued after Hurricane Milton wiped out a 75- to 100-yard section of the City Pier walkway in early October. The City Pier remains closed for the foreseeable future and will not reopen until the missing walkway that connects to the T-end of the pier is replaced.

County exploring Anna Maria ferry landing options
Hurricane Milton destroyed a significant portion of the City Pier walkway. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

When the new boat joins the Gulf Islands Ferry fleet, it will be used to make the Manatee River run between downtown Bradenton and Anna Maria Island. The two original pontoon boats will then be used exclusively to shuttle passen­gers between the Anna Maria and Bradenton Beach ferry landings; and maybe someday to the Kingfish Boat Ramp in Holmes Beach as well.

In late October, the state provided the county with a temporary ferry landing that consisted of a spud barge and a walkway that connected to the Anna Maria shoreline, but the wind, waves, water depth and weather conditions left the ferry captains leery of using the temporary landing even after additional spud barges were installed. In January, the state demobilized the privately-owned spud barges provided as part of the state’s hurricane response.

New scenario

Due to the size of the new ferry boat, the idea of a stand-alone ferry landing in Anna Maria predates the 2024 hurricanes. During the Feb. 27 meeting, Short said when the City Pier is repaired and reopened it will not be able to accommodate the larger ferry boat.

County exploring Anna Maria ferry landing options
This diagram represents one possible scenario for a new ferry landing in Anna Maria. – Manatee County | Submitted

The agenda packet for that day’s meeting contained a single-page diagram of the ferry landing concept being developed by county officials and those assisting them.

“What you see is one sce­nario,” Short said. “They are working on other scenarios. This is not the only thing they’re looking at but this is one scenario they have actually taken to a point of putting on paper. They want to be able to land this boat near the city of Anna Maria.”

Short said the county hired a third-party firm to study the wave action, wave heights, currents and sand movement in that area. He noted the scenario presented includes extending the rock jetty further out into Tampa Bay and installing a wall-like wave attenuator that protects the landing area from the waves and currents that present navigational challenges in those waters.

County exploring Anna Maria ferry landing options
The proposed ferry landing would be located between the Lake La Vista jetty and the City Pier. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Short told county officials they must appear at a city meeting and present their proposed plans to the com­mission and the public before the commission will consider approving the county’s request to build a stand-alone ferry landing that connects to the Anna Maria shoreline.

Short said he would share additional details with the commission as they become available.

County exploring Anna Maria ferry landing options
The first Gulf Islands Ferry landing in Anna Maria was in January 2024. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Commissioner Chris Arendt asked Short if the county would assume the city’s current financial responsibil­ity to periodically dredge the channel the connects Lake La Vista and Tampa Bay. Short said the county is studying the dredging needs that might exist in that area and dredging may be needed where the ferry landing would be built.

Short also noted the city previously received a $75,000 resiliency grant and is seeking additional grant funds for a yet-to-be-initiated study that would help identify a long-term solution that eliminates the need to dredge the channel every four years or so.