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Sun Persons of the Year

Sun Persons of the Year: The entire Anna Maria Island community

ANNA MARIA ISLAND – An often-cited proverb says, “It takes a village to raise a child.”

In that same spirit, The Sun says, “It takes an entire Island to recover from back-to-back hurricanes.”

For that reason, The Sun names the entire extended Anna Maria Island community as its Persons of the Year for 2025. For an Island community that experienced such widespread damage and devastation, it would be impossible and unjust to honor a single individual or organization when so many did so much in 2025.

For many on the Island, much of the year was spent on the continued recovery from Hurricanes Helene and Milton in 2024.

The wide-ranging recovery, restoration and rebuilding efforts included city leaders, city staff members, hurricane-impacted residents, local builders, contractors, subcontractors and skilled trade workers, business and restaurant owners and employees, com­munity event organizers, non-profit organiza­tions, Realtors, real estate agents and their support staffs and the vacation rental owners, managers and support staff that helped accommodate the returning tourists and visitors that supported the Island’s hurricane-impacted, tourism-based economy.

Three cities, one Island

Anna Maria Mayor Mark Short, Bradenton Beach Mayor John Chappie and Holmes Beach Mayor Judy Titsworth helped lead the recovery and restoration efforts taking place in their cities.

The mayors were assisted by the city commissions and commissioners that govern the cities; and the mayors and com­missioners were assisted by the volunteer committee members and advisory board members who provided their valuable insights and assistance.

Anna Maria General Manager Dean Jones, Bradenton Beach Public Works Director (and police chief) John Cosby and now-departed Holmes Beach Public Works Director Sage Kamiya played critical roles in guiding their departments through the recovery efforts.

The hurricanes also reminded us of the important work done by the Island’s building and planning departments, and the impacts their work has on the construc­tion community and the Island’s residents, property owners and business owners.

Anna Maria City Planner Ashley Austin, Bradenton Beach Building Official Bill Palmer, Holmes Beach Development Services Director Chad Minor, Holmes Beach Building Official Neal Schwartz and Holmes Beach Development Services Coordinator Kim Charron were among those who played important roles in the recovery efforts.

The three building departments were greatly assisted by the code enforcement/code compliance departments led by Dave DeZutter in Anna Maria, Evan Harbus in Bradenton Beach and James “JT” Thomas in Holmes Beach.

City clerks Amber LaRowe (Anna Maria), Terri Sanclemente (Bradenton Beach) and Stacey Johnston (Holmes Beach) and their staffs assisted the mayors, commissioners and fellow staff members with the recovery efforts and the daily operations of their cities.

City treasurers LeAnne Addy (Anna Maria), Shayne Thompson (Bradenton Beach) and Julie Marcotte (Holmes Beach) played important roles in the reporting, tracking and accounting associated with the hurricane damage reimbursement process while also performing their regular financial duties.

In terms of hurricane-related public safety, the worst had passed by the time the calendar flipped to 2025, but throughout the year Sgt. Brett Getman (Anna Maria), Police Chief Bill Tokajer (Holmes Beach) and Chief Cosby (Bradenton Beach) led the law enforcement agencies that helped provide us all with a safe place to live, work, play and visit.

The Sun also recognizes the many other unnamed city staff members who helped their cities and citizens recover.

Return, restore, rebuild, recover

The Island’s return to relative normalcy couldn’t have happened without the determination, resiliency and emo­tional fortitude of the Island’s permanent residents and the financial sacrifices they made to reoccupy their beloved Island homes.

Some longtime residents made the difficult decision to move off the Island, but a large percentage of the Island’s already shrinking residential population returned when their homes were habitable again; and that’s a testament to their love for the Island.

Sun Persons of the Year
Bayfest and other public events helped restore Anna Maria Island’s sense of community. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

The numerous community events held in 2025 helped foster and rejuvenate the Island’s strong sense of residential community. Signature events included Bayfest, Lester Family Fun Day, the “Old Soldiers & Sailors” Veterans Day parade, Anna Maria’s symphonic Memorial Day salute, the city block parties at City Pier Park, the weekly farmers market, Holmes Beach’s 75th Anniversary celebration and a multitude of festive Christmas and holiday events held Island-wide.

The Island’s recovery would have been impossible without the construction firms, contractors, subcontractors, skilled trade workers, technicians, landscapers and service providers that repaired, restored and rebuilt the Island – a task that contin­ues into 2026.

The Island’s return to normalcy would not have happened without the deter­mined business owners who overcame significant financial losses and hardships to reopen their restaurants, bars, retail and rental operations and other businesses that faithfully serve the Island’s residents and visitors. And the business owners could not have done it without their faithful and determined employees.

And while recovering themselves, the Anna Maria Island Chamber of Commerce assisted the Island’s business community in its return to normalcy.

Faced with hurricane-damaged struc­tures and uncertain markets, the Island’s Realtors, real estate agents, vacation rental owners, vacation rental managers and their support staffs helped bring new residents to the Island and bring back the much-needed vacationers and visitors that support the Island’s tourism-based economy.

The Sun also recognizes all the Island residents, locals, day-trippers and other mainland visitors whose expenditures helped the Island’s businesses and estab­lishments recover from the hurricanes.

As an Island business ourselves, The Sun express our utmost appreciation and sincere gratitude to every single business that advertised with us this year. Your support helped us weather the storms.

The Island churches welcomed their congregations back to worship, regroup and reconnect and the Roser Food Pantry provided food to those who needed it.

The Center of Anna Maria Island provided a place to exercise, compete, learn and gather with the community.

Wildlife Inc., Anna Maria Island Turtle Watch & Shorebird Monitoring and others helped care for and protect the Island’s animal kingdom and marine environ­ments.

And for anyone not already recognized in this story, if you had anything to do with the Island and its recovery in 2025, thank you for anything and everything you did.

Island Players celebrate ‘A Doublewide, Texas Christmas’

Island Players celebrate ‘A Doublewide, Texas Christmas’

ANNA MARIA – The Island Players’ hurricane-delayed production of “A Doublewide, Texas Christmas” opened on Nov. 13, and it was worth the wait.

The performances will continue through Sunday, Nov. 23.

Written by Jessie Jones, Nicholas Hope and Jamie Wooten and premiered in Texas in 2017, the Island Players production is co-produced by the Off Stage Ladies of The Island Players and directed by Kelly Wynn Woodland.

The southern-fried comedy tells the laugh-out-loud tale of a 10-resident mobile home community that seeks county com­mission approval to be officially incorporated as the independent town of Doublewide, Texas. And as Christmas approaches, they’re running out of time to meet the county’s make-or-break, year-end deadline to complete the ever-shifting incorporation process.

In a funny and entertaining manner, “A Doublewide, Texas Christmas” explores small town economics and politics, the fight for home rule rights and the threat of consolidation – issues that hit close to home on Anna Maria Island due to the real-life challenges the three Island cities have faced from state legislators and county commissioners in recent years.

Like the fictional inhabit­ants of Doublewide, the Island Players production of “A Doublewide, Texas Christmas” is an exhibition of persistence and resil­ience. The play was first cast in September 2024 but production shut down after two rehearsals due to the damage Hurricanes Helene and Milton inflicted on the Island – while sparing the city-owned performing arts theater of any major damage.

Last month, the entire cast resumed the long-de­layed rehearsals that led to their triumphant opening night performance.

“The cast is fantastic,” Woodland said when discussing the play. “This is the same cast from a year ago.

They stayed in touch with each other and built those relationships that come across on the stage. It’s a play about relationships and people taking up for each other and building a community; and they have done that.

“It’s a very funny play and it’s funny because the characters are funny people with large personalities. The costumes are a hoot. There’s over 100 costume pieces and there’s some specialty costumes and specialty props that are fun and funny,” she said.

Island Players celebrate ‘A Doublewide, Texas Christmas’
Kelly Wynn Woodland directed “A Doublewide, Texas Christmas.” – Joe Hendricks | Sun

“There’s a lot of unique and interesting set pieces too,” Woodland said of the primary setting in the mayor’s doublewide trailer home that’s also Doublewide’s town hall.

The mobile home/town hall interior includes a Christmas wreath made from a real Model-T tire, a mosaic painting of Elvis and a portrait of beloved Texan and presidential first lady, “Lady Bird” Johnson.

Island Players celebrate ‘A Doublewide, Texas Christmas’
“A Doublewide, Texas Christmas” is a fast-moving play. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

“I think the audiences are really going to like the play. It’s pretty wild and it moves pretty fast. It’s fun and heartwarming. I hope they feel the love and camaraderie between the characters and how people with extremely different personalities can come together to achieve a goal that benefits all of them,” Woodland said.

THE PLAYERS

The story begins with Big Ethel Satter­white (played by Laura Morales) entering from the side of the stage and standing in front of the yet-to-be-opened curtain while addressing the audience that finds itself playing the role of the residents of the Stairway to Heaven retirement village where Big Ethel works. Ethel informs the retirement home residents of the potential gastrological, family and romantic perils the approaching holidays may bring.

Throughout the performance, the come­dic action extends beyond the confines of the stage and out into the theater itself.

Sue Belvo plays Georgia Dean Rudd, a middle-aged woman who’s worked at Bronco Betty’s Buffeteria restaurant since she was 16. She hopes to one day own the local eatery and she still pines over Nash Sloggett, her “one that got away.”

Sadie Palmer plays Lark Barken, a recently widowed young woman who’s now raising her infant daughter, Arden Rose, alone. Lark also longs for Nash, who happens to be her long-lost father she’s never met.

Rick Kopp plays Haywood Sloggett, a widower who got a second chance in Doublewide despite his past undesirable behavior that included breaking up his son Nash’s blossoming romance with young Georgia Dean. Haywood hopes to bring Nash home for Christmas to help make things right.

Morgan Powis plays Joveeta Crumpler, the determined mayor of Doublewide, who’s doing everything in her power to overcome the county commission’s ever-changing, self-serving efforts to avoid incorporating the town.

Island Players celebrate ‘A Doublewide, Texas Christmas’
Morgan Powis plays Joveeta Crumpler, the determined Doublewide mayor, and Catherine Penta plays her attention-seeking mother, Caprice. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Catherine Penta plays Caprice Crumpler, Joveeta’s drink-sneaking, attention-seeking mother who still clings to the sliver of glory she found as a small town, cable TV commercial actress.

Francesca Mendolia plays Patsy Price, Haywood’s bitter and downtrodden sister who arrives in Doublewide after being hoodwinked out of her money and shamed by her own behavior in Tugaloo – the neighboring town that hopes to annex Doublewide into its municipal tax base.

Mike Lusk plays Norwayne “Baby” Crumpler – Joveeta’s enthusiastic, energetic and dimwitted brother who serves as Doublewide’s police chief, fire chief and cleaner of septic tanks.

Mark Woodland plays the elusive Nash Sloggett, whose uncertain return to Doublewide is desired by many.

Island Players celebrate ‘A Doublewide, Texas Christmas’
The residents of Doublewide are determined to incorporate their hometown. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

In their collective efforts to incorporate their town, the Doublewide inhabitants embark on a series of escapades as they try to increase the town’s revenues and raise the town’s profile as a tourist destination by developing a Texas-inspired, vegetable-based roadside attraction. At the last minute, an elusive, double-crossing county commissioner informs the residents that they must double Doublewide’s population as yet another stipulation of incorporation.

Island Players celebrate ‘A Doublewide, Texas Christmas’
Big Ethel returns from The Alamo nativity scene. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

The desperate residents enter the town in a countywide, Texas-themed nativity scene contest that takes a disastrous turn that further impedes the path to incorporation. But despite the never-ending challenges and self-inflicted mishaps, the Doublewide residents never lose sight of their shared goal to make their hometown a bonafide Texas town.

TICKET SALES

Tickets for “A Doublewide, Texas Christmas” are $20-$30 dollars and can be purchased online at www.theislandplayers.org. After receiving your digital tickets by email, you can use your phone to display them when entering the theater. Digital tickets can also be printed at home in advance. Those who prefer traditional pre-printed tickets can purchase them at the box office beginning an hour before showtime or during normal box office hours, Monday through Saturday, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

Bridge Tender Inn hosts Halloween party

Bridge Tender Inn hosts Halloween party

BRADENTON BEACH – The 2024 hurricanes may have taken the animatronic figures, the bubble machine and the hearse that the Bridge Tender Inn was known for at Halloween, but the party will still go on this year.

“The animatronics were destroyed in the storms, and we haven’t had the funds or time to replace them. The priority was fixing the building,” said manager Sue Shinka, adding, “It took us 15 years to get all the animatronics.”

Bridge Tender Inn hosts Halloween party
This giant skeleton greets those who enter the haunted alleyway. – Leslie Lake | Sun

The Bridge Street alley on the west side of the Bridge Tender is decorated with skeletons, and, as in years past, there will be a kids’ costume contest, a dog costume contest and an adult costume contest, all with cash prizes.

Bridge Tender Inn hosts Halloween party
The costume contest for dogs starts at 5:30 p.m. – Leslie Lake | Sun

“We’re still doing Halloween, but it’s going to be a little more low-key,” Shinka said.

The Bridge Tender Inn party on Friday, Oct. 31 at 135 Bridge St. features Brigid’s Cross playing music at 2 p.m., a kids’ costume contest at 5 p.m., a dog costume contest at 5:30 p.m., Justin Rector playing music at 6 p.m. and an adult costume contest at 10 p.m.

City facing financial repercussions from hurricanes

City facing financial repercussions from hurricanes

BRADENTON BEACH – Police Chief and Public Works Director John Cosby warned commissioners of continuing financial implications for the city from the 2024 hurricanes at the Oct. 23 city commission meeting.

“Via Roma, Tradewinds, Runaway Bay and Tropic Isles are not open at this time, and are not occupied. They are still going through the process,” Cosby said. “The reason I’m telling you this, and the concern is, none of these properties are going to be up by the end of the year. So, we’re still going to have a tax issue next year and evaluations end this year. When we get our numbers in June, it’s going to be greatly affected by this.”

According to the Manatee County Property Appraiser’s Office, “A homeowner may be eligible for a refund of a portion of property taxes paid for the year in which the catastrophic event occurred if the property was uninhabit­able for at least 30 days due to a catastrophic event.”

Cosby said there are 11 empty lots at commercial businesses that aren’t cur­rently operating, 12 unoc­cupied properties where all the necessary improvements haven’t been completed and 31 properties where the build­ing was either torn down or destroyed by the hurricanes.

“There are quite a few permits that are out, and quite a few more coming to get permits, so it’s going to be another year before we see some relief,” he said. “We’ll see what happens as we move forward.”

Cosby also alluded to issues with FEMA (Federal Emer­gency Management Agency) reimbursements to the city for hurricane-related expenses.

“We are having some pain with FEMA, I don’t know where it’s going and I don’t want to hit the panic button, but we are definitely having some issues with them, to the point where I had to ask the state to step in and help,” Cosby said. “We could have some financial issue with what FEMA’s willing to pay for. When I hear, I’ll let you know.”

Code Enforcement Officer Evan Harbus then spoke about city properties that are scheduled for demolition.

“The house at 1202 Gulf Drive S., tomorrow morning there will be a demolition crew and they will demolish the concrete area,” Harbus said. “The home will be removed in the next week and a half.”

Harbus said Queens Gate Resort at 1101 Gulf Drive N. will also be completely taken down.

“Those are the two big ones,” he said.

Duncan Real Estate celebrates return to Pine Avenue

Duncan Real Estate celebrates return to Pine Avenue

ANNA MARIA – Duncan Real Estate celebrated the recent reopening of its hurricane-damaged Anna Maria office with a ribbon-cutting ceremony, a champagne toast, Chick-fil-A appetizers and the 7 Better Days hat bar.

The Duncan Real Estate sales and rental operations resumed at 310 Pine Ave. in late July after the business operations were displaced by the damage caused by Hurricane Helene in September 2024.

The Oct. 17 grand reopening celebra­tion began with some group photos taken of Duncan Real Estate owner Darcie Duncan, her 28 employees and some invited guests, followed by a ribbon-cutting ceremony conducted by representatives of the Manatee County Chamber of Commerce.

Duncan Real Estate celebrates return to Pine Avenue
A champagne toast celebrated the recent reopening of the Pine Avenue office. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

After the ribbon cutting, a champagne toast was made inside the repaired, renovated and expanded office space. Appetizers were enjoyed and many attendees stepped outside to design their own hats at the mobile 7 Better Days hat bar owned and operated by sisters Taylor and Kilee Fehd. Duncan employees and invited guests selected a baseball cap-style hat of their choosing and the various patches and other accessories to be pressed onto their customized hats.

Duncan Real Estate celebrates return to Pine Avenue
Employees and guests designed and customized their hats at the 7 Better Days hat bar. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

The following day, Duncan Real Estate’s Pine Avenue office was open dur­ing the Anna Maria Island Chamber of Commerce’s Bayfest street party celebra­tion – an annual event that was canceled last year because of the hurricanes.

Looking back, looking ahead

“I could not be more excited to be back on Pine Avenue. It’s been my company’s home for 25 years and there is nowhere else we would rather be,” Duncan said. “Pine Avenue is more than just a street; it’s our little family too and we love seeing everyone again.”

Regarding the hurricane damage, she said, “With Helene, we had 37 inches of water throughout the office and we lost everything we had not removed with our normal storm preparations. So, we had to gut the inside down to the studs. We just had some little bumps and bruises from Hurricane Milton.”

Duncan Real Estate celebrates return to Pine Avenue
Duncan Real Estate’s maintenance office is located at 5916 Marina Drive in Holmes Beach. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

During the post-hurricane recovery process, Duncan Real Estate operated in the former Barnes Walker Title Inc. office at 5916 Marina Drive in Holmes Beach in a space Duncan Real Estate began using as a maintenance facility in August 2024, the month before the first of the back-to-back hurricanes struck the Island.

The maintenance facility remains at the Holmes Beach location and the additional office space there is now leased to someone else.

“We have a new, expanded office space on Pine Avenue and a great maintenance office in Holmes Beach,” Duncan said.

Duncan Real Estate celebrates return to Pine Avenue
The Duncan Real Estate sales and rental office is located at 310 Pine Ave. in Anna Maria. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

When asked about the post-hurricane real estate and vacation rental markets one year later, she said, “The sales market has held up relatively well, all things considered. It’s been a bumpy road but I see good momentum as of late. I think one of the driving factors that created the sluggish market is that people just needed to get a storm season behind them to feel comfortable before jumping back in the market.”

Duncan Real Estate celebrates return to Pine Avenue
Duncan Real Estate owner Darcie Duncan is happy to be back on Pine Avenue. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

“The vacation rental market has also held up well, considering that many of the ground-level rentals just came back online in mid-spring and into the summer. Some guests chose to just wait and come back next year, as they wanted the Island to be more put back together. We have a resilient community and that proves what a great place this is to vacation and invest. I feel very optimistic that we will see continued improvement in 2026,” Duncan said.

Belle Haven cottage celebrates grand reopening

Belle Haven cottage celebrates grand reopening

ANNA MARIA – The Anna Maria Island Historical Society celebrated the grand reopening of the historic Belle Haven cottage on Oct. 1 with a ribbon-cutting ceremony conducted by the Anna Maria Island Chamber of Commerce.

Dozens of people attended the Wednesday evening ceremony that included free beverages and appetizers and marked the final chapter in the Anna Maria Island Historical Museum’s recovery from Hurricanes Helene and Milton.

Before the ceremony, Holmes Beach resident, Historical Society member and museum docent Carolyn Orshak stood outside the cottage and said, “We are celebrating our last hurdle in the museum being back to normal. It’s a celebration of resiliency. We’ve had the museum open since the middle of March. This 100-plus-year-old building withstood the flood waters, but an inch and a half to 2 inches of floodwater seeped in, so the floors had to be done. They look fabulous.”

Belle Haven cottage celebrates grand reopening
Docent Carolyn Orshak talks about the 1930s-era table setting. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

During Hurricane Milton, the cottage lost a screen door, which was the only additional damage.

The elevated wooden cottage sits higher off the ground than the neighboring ground-level museum building made of concrete block and originally built as an icehouse. The museum structure withstood the hurricanes but the museum interior and some of the historical artifacts sustained significant flood damage during Hurricane Helene.

Belle Haven cottage celebrates grand reopening
This 1926 postcard shows Belle Haven cottage in the foreground and the Lotus Cottage right behind it. – AMIHS | Submitted

According to an informational sign near the cottage entrance, Belle Haven was built above the water and alongside the City Pier in the 1920s. After a large storm washed it into Tampa Bay, Island resident Lyman Christy bought the displaced cottage and hired a salvage crew that used a barge to recover it and transport it to his property on Palmetto Avenue.

Over time, a sleeping porch, kitchen, bathroom and plumbing were added to the cottage that served as the Christy family home for more than 50 years and as a rental cottage for another 25 years. When the cottage was slated for demolition in 2000, the Historical Society led the efforts to relocate the cottage in 2001 to its current location on the museum property at 402 Pine Ave.

Belle Haven cottage celebrates grand reopening
Belle Haven cottage was moved to the museum property on Nov. 27, 2001. – AMIHS | Submitted

The artifacts inside the cottage include the wood burning stove that the Island Players theater group borrowed for their recent production of “Janus,” and a 1930s-era table setting that includes hand-painted Chinese dishware.

The artifacts inside the single bedroom include a wedding dress that’s been worn by four generations of brides from the same family and Lyman Christy’s travel trunk that’s been with the cottage for 75-plus years.

“Thank you to every person who put their blood, sweat and tears into renewing this cottage and this museum. They are so much a part of our Island’s story,” Orshak said. “This ends a year of intense emotion, finding friendships where we never knew they existed and our community coming together.”

Belle Haven cottage celebrates grand reopening
The museum is located at 402 Pine Ave. in Anna Maria. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Offering free admission and still operating on its annual off-season schedule for the rest of 2025, the museum and cottage are open Tuesday-Saturday from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Museum volunteers and docents are needed and those interested can sign up at the museum during regular hours. For more information, call 941-778-0492 or visit the Historic Society website.

Belle Haven cottage can be visited during regular museum hours. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

Belle Haven cottage can be visited during regular museum hours. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

The Island Players recently borrowed the cottage’s wood-burning stove. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

The Island Players recently borrowed the cottage’s wood-burning stove. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

This wedding dress displayed in the cottage bedroom has been worn by four generations of brides. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

This wedding dress displayed in the cottage bedroom has been worn by four generations of brides. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

Lyman Christy’s trunk remains in the cottage he lived in. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

Lyman Christy’s trunk remains in the cottage he lived in. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

The Historical Museum features artifacts from the Island's past. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

The Historical Museum features artifacts from the Island's past. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

The museum provides a glimpse of Anna Maria's early years. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

The museum provides a glimpse of Anna Maria's early years. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

This museum exhibit references the Island's local newspapers. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

This museum exhibit references the Island's local newspapers. - Joe Hendricks | Sun

Beachfront property now vacant due to hurricane

Beachfront property now vacant due to hurricane

BRADENTON BEACH – Hurricane Helene’s storm surge left behind several condemned homes and structures that were damaged beyond repair and were later demolished or still await demolition.

Some of the hurricane-related demolitions resulted in now-vacant beachfront properties becoming newly available on the real estate market. One of those demolished homes was the historic beachfront 3 Pines Cottage that stood at 2214 Gulf Drive N. The cottage was named for the three pine trees that still stand on the property.

Beachfront property now vacant due to hurricane
The 3 Pines Cottage was used as a family vacation home and as a vacation rental. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

On Sept. 26, Hurricane Helene’s storm surge ripped through the cottage’s Gulf-front windows and out the landward side of the cottage, taking much of the wall, and a slice of Island history, with it. The now-vacant lot is currently on the market with a $2.55 million asking price.

Beachfront property now vacant due to hurricane
Hurricane Helene’s storm surge destroyed the 3 Pines Cottage. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

The vacant lot is currently owned by Dick Kuhlman, an Ohio native who was staying in the cottage with a friend when Hurricane Helene’s storm surge crashed through the Gulf-side windows and burst through the exterior wall along the landward side of the cottage. After escaping through the hole in the wall created by the storm surge, Dick and his friend rode out the rest of the storm inside his nearby van.

Dick and his late wife, Judy, purchased the cottage from Judy’s grandmother in 1983 and they visited often until Judy’s passing in 2023. In the late 1940s, Judy’s grandparents, Floyd and Florence Myers, towed their 29-foot Airstream trailer to Bradenton Beach, parked it on a vacant beachfront lot and over the years built the 3 Pines Cottage around the travel trailer that became part of the cottage.

Beachfront property now vacant due to hurricane
3 Pines Cottage was a built around an Airstream trailer brought to the property in the 1940s. – Submitted
Beachfront property now vacant due to hurricane
The former Wagner Realty building is hurricane-damaged and unoccupied. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

All that’s left now are memories, a vacant beachfront lot and a “For Sale” erected by Wagner Realty, the real estate company that previously managed the 3 Pines Cottage vacation rentals. The Wagner Realty office directly across the street was also badly damaged during Hurricane Helene. The hurricane-damaged building was later sold and remains unoccupied.

Holmes Beach commissioner reflects on hurricane damage, recovery

Holmes Beach commissioner reflects on hurricane damage, recovery

One year after Hurricane Helene struck Anna Maria Island, longtime Holmes Beach resident and City Commissioner Carol Soustek shares her thoughts on the damage and displacement that she, her home, her neighbors and her city sustained, and the ongoing recovery process.

By Carol Soustek
Guest columnist

I left the Island with two days of clothes, personal items and important papers. As in the past, I expected to be home within 48 hours.

When the hotel had no room for me, I transferred to another hotel for a week. When I was allowed back on the Island, I could not comprehend in my mind the dam­age I was seeing. It was horrible. The roads, homes, trees, buildings and everything else were beat up and looking so bad. My home was filled with slimy wet residue that smelled bad. The refrigerator had tipped over, the furniture had moved every which way, the mattresses were sopping wet and clothes had fallen onto the floors.

I could not handle it and I went into a “fog” state of mind. I functioned, but with no plans, no emotion. After everything was thrown out into my yard and my home was gutted, I just stopped thinking. I was numb. Then, my neighbors and my family came to my aid, helping wherever they could.

We started laughing over silly stories about habits we had that now do not work with no power, no water or no walls. We were all trying to move forward but there is no book telling you what to do next. You learn as you go. I was out of my home for nine months, living in an RV, hotels and staying with family.

I made mistakes with the repair work at first, but the city’s building department set me on a good path and I made progress. I used all the insurance money and two of my retirement accounts to pay for it all. I was determined that this storm was not going to make me leave my Island.

I am back in my home and still working on fixing the outside of the building and yard. It felt strange at first being back because everything is new, not old and comfort­able – like I was still in a hotel room. My neighbors are now back in their homes and still working on various projects. Some neighbors have not started the rebuild.

Things will not be the same as before. We were knocked off our feet and we need time to regain our confidence and feelings of safety. Every day I feel better inside. I am where I want to be. My community will rebuild because Islanders are crazy, but so strong in their desire to live here.

2024 hurricanes revisited; two piers remain closed

2024 hurricanes revisited; two piers remain closed

ANNA MARIA – One year ago, Hurricanes Helene and Milton inundated Anna Maria Island, destroying two iconic piers, leaving only the Bradenton Beach pier standing.

On Sept. 26, Helene inflicted significant damage on the privately-owned, wooden Rod & Reel Pier and the two-story restaurant and bar building at the end of the pier. Helene stripped the pier of its wooden planks and wreaked havoc on utility lines that ran from the shoreline to the pier building, also damaged in the storm. The old wooden pier was badly damaged but remained standing.

2024 hurricanes revisited; two piers remain closed
Damage inflicted by Hurricane Helene forced the closure of the Rod & Reel Pier. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Built atop hollow, spun concrete pilings, the city-owned Anna Maria City Pier fared much better during Hurricane Helene and appeared to have sustained minimal damage. But inspectors later determined the City Pier’s structural support system was weakened by Hurricane Helene.

2024 hurricanes revisited; two piers remain closed
This was all that remained of the Rod & Reel Pier after Hurricane Milton struck. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

During the evening hours of Oct. 9, 2024 and the early morning hours of Oct. 10, Hurricane Milton destroyed most of what remained of the Rod & Reel Pier and restaurant building, leaving behind some pilings and some support beams that now serve as seabird perches. Much of the Rod & Reel debris washed ashore at nearby waterfront homes.

2024 hurricanes revisited; two piers remain closed
The hurricane-damaged City Pier on Oct. 10, 2024, after Hurricane Milton struck . – Joe Hendricks | Sun
2024 hurricanes revisited; two piers remain closed
City Pier Grill tenant Brian Seymour visited the City Pier on Oct. 12, 2024. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Hurricane Milton obliterated most of the City Pier walkway and left stranded the still standing T-end buildings occupied by the City Pier Grill and the Mote Marine Science, Education and Outreach Center that remain closed with no pedestrian access until a new pier walkway is built. The destruction of the City Pier also left Anna Maria without a Gulf Islands Ferry stop.

Plans to rebuild

In late March, Rod & Reel Pier owner Oliver Lemke announced his plans to open a landbound version of the Rod & Reel Pier restaurant in the former Old Hamburg Schnitzel Haus space in the Anna Maria Island Centre in Holmes Beach. On Sept. 12, video was posted at the Rod & Reel Pier Facebook page showing the kitchen equipment being delivered. When contacted, Lemke said he expects to open the new Rod & Reel Pier restaurant in Holmes Beach in October.

2024 hurricanes revisited; two piers remain closed
Owner Oliver Lemke plans to open a landbound version of the Rod & Reel Pier restaurant soon in Holmes Beach. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

With many financial and permit­ting hurdles to clear, Lemke hopes to one day rebuild the original Rod & Reel Pier in Anna Maria. To date, the “Help Us Rebuild Rod and Reel Pier” GoFundMe page has received more than $101,000 in donations from those who support those efforts.

2024 hurricanes revisited; two piers remain closed
The Rod & Reel Pier as of Sept. 20, 2025. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

A Sept. 20 visit to the Anna Maria location revealed a sign affixed to the closed Rod & Reel Pier gate that notes the pier was built in 1947 and destroyed by Hurricane Milton last October.

“We will rebuild,” the sign says.

Plastic flowers, a pair of sandals, an inflatable water toy, seashells and other items have also been attached to the gate that now serves as a makeshift shrine to the lost pier.

2024 hurricanes revisited; two piers remain closed
The Rod & Reel Pier gate is now adorned with various items of remembrance. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

The city of Anna Maria and Mayor Mark Short recently received nine bid proposals from construction companies seeking the contract to replace the City Pier walkway. Short will soon present city commis­sioners with his recom­mended construction firm for the estimated $8 million pier replace­ment project that also includes repairs needed to restore the damaged and deteriorating T-end buildings.

2024 hurricanes revisited; two piers remain closed
What remained of the City Pier walkway was later demolished and removed and a new pier walkway will be built. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Short hopes to have the City Pier reopened in October 2026 and the county hopes to install a new ferry stop alongside the pier around that same time.

An anniversary of resilience

An anniversary of resilience

When Hurricane Helene struck the Anna Maria Island com­munities on Sept. 26, 2024, it brought with it a storm surge and level of destruction that the area hasn’t witnessed since 1921 when the Tampa Bay/Tarpon Springs hur­ricane struck.

Back then the islands weren’t heavily populated, but Cortez, then a vibrant fishing village, was all but wiped out. The waterfront was devastated and fish houses, boats and docks destroyed. During that storm, residents took refuge in the brick Cortez Rural Graded Schoolhouse, which today houses the Florida Maritime Museum.

The museum, which is closed for repairs from the effects of Helene, displays artifacts, photographs, charts and personal stories from that event. Their digital collection includes “Caught in the Storm: 100 Years of Hurricanes in Florida,” which covers the 1921 storm. That collection will likely be updated to include Helene and Milton.

On Anna Maria Island, the anniver­sary of Hurricane Helene and Milton will take its place in history alongside the hurricane of 1921, but it will also highlight how people pulled together, all views and politics aside, to rise to the challenge.

AMI Outfitters on Pine Street in Anna Maria was one of the many business on the Island that suffered major damage. “It’s hard to believe we’re approaching the one-year an­niversary of the hurricanes,” owners Dave and Jennifer Hagey said. “After being closed for 65 days to rebuild, we chose to view the damage as an opportunity to reset, just like the rest of the Island.

With incredible support from our community, we reopened and ended 2024 with our best year yet. From loyal customers showing up on Black Friday, to The Center of Anna Maria Island rallying volunteers, to Mayor Mark Short’s dedication, we were lifted by the people around us. A special thanks to Issa Homes for matching donations that helped small businesses like ours recover faster. Because of this support, we’re proud to celebrate our strongest year in 13 years of AMI Outfitters.”

Local fishing guide, resident and father Capt. Dave White was also negatively affected by the storms, but chooses to focus on his gratitude to others.

“A year later, reflecting on the impact of the storms, it’s very easy to be grateful for the placid September that we’ve had so far,” he said. “While the fishing was exceptional last fall, we had no clients calling to take advantage whatsoever. With the Island still in shambles, the outlook seemed very bleak at the time.

I created a discounted gift card opportunity for my repeat customers in order to generate revenue to pay my mortgage and help support my three little girls. This enabled me to get by until we had some tourist traffic in February and March. Some of us received a little economic boost from organizations like Suncoast Waterkeeper and the International Gamefish Association.

While many of us are still digging out from under the debt we slid into from the fall, we’re all hopeful for a busy spring season to climb back on top of the hill with a greater sense of accomplishment for overcoming the adversity of last year. It’s not a job that you can rest on your laurels and be frivolous about, financially. But I can’t see myself doing anything else!”

Many iconic structures like the Rod and Reel Pier, Annie’s Bait and Tackle and the Cortez net camp were lost to the storms, while others like the Anna Maria City Pier were heavily dam­aged, but it’s the sense of community and the way friends, neighbors and businesses pulled together to support each other that will remain as the lasting impression.

Anna Maria increases stormwater fees

Anna Maria increases stormwater fees

ANNA MARIA – Property owners in the city will see their annual stormwater fees double from $2 per 100 square feet of property to $4 per 100 square feet.

On Aug. 28, city commissioners Chris Arendt, Kathy Morgan and Gary Mc­Mullen voted in favor of the increase. Commissioner Charlie Salem opposed the increase and Commissioner John Lynch was absent with excuse.

Mayor Mark Short proposed the stormwater fee increase on July 24 when presenting the anticipated city revenues for the 2025-26 fiscal year that begins on Oct. 1.

At $2 per 100 square feet, the owner of a 5,000-square-foot property pays a $100 per year stormwater fee; at $4, the property owner pays $200 per year. At $2, the owner of a 10,000-square-foot property pays $200 per year and pays $400 at the $4 rate.

When seeking commission approval for the increase, Short said, “The city has identified well over $15 million in stormwater-related repair work that needs to be done in this city. A lot of that work relates to things that were either damaged or destroyed during the storm (the 2024 hurricanes).”

Short said the $4 rate will double the $328,000 originally projected for 2025-26 stormwater fee revenues to $656,000.

Anna Maria increases stormwater fees
This alley-like stormwater swale allows stormwater to travel over it, and down into it, as part of Anna Maria’s stormwater and drainage system. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

He said the additional revenues would help address the most immedi­ate stormwater and drainage needs, which include making significant repairs to the stormwater and drain­age swales located throughout the city and repairing or replacing the WaStop valves damaged during the 2024 hurricanes. Installed inside drainage pipes, WaStop valves prevent water from flowing back into the pipes that discharge stormwater into canals and other water bodies.

“We have 19 of them and they’re all either broke or need repair. Those two things are mission critical in terms of short-term fixes for this city,” Short said.

Salem questioned the fairness of assessing stormwater fees based on the size of a property rather than the portion of the property that’s covered with structures and other non-permeable items that hinder drainage. He said the owner of property with 10% lot coverage currently pays the same stormwater fee as the owner of a property with 40% lot coverage and there should be better way to assess the impact that has on drainage and stormwater retention.

Anna Maria increases stormwater fees
This infiltration trench along North Shore Drive helps transport stormwater to a nearby drainage grate and outfall pipe. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Salem agrees there’s much work that needs to be done to improve the city’s drainage and stormwater retention capacities, but he questions whether those improvements warrant increasing the stormwater fee when many property owners are still facing hurricane-related financial challenges that include delayed flood insurance reimbursements.

“For those reasons, I’m reluctant to support an increase,” he said.

Short said the city’s stormwater utility fee assessment program was established a long time ago and the city must follow the methodology implemented at that time.

Participating by phone, Arendt asked if there’s a way to remove from the fee calculations the portions of the sandy beachfront properties that extend into the coastal conservation zones and don’t negatively impact drainage.

The beachfront properties at the tip of Bean Point range from 34,000 square feet to 91,000 square feet. At the $2 rate, the owner of a 65,000-square-foot property pays a $1,300 stormwater fee that increases to $2,600 at the $4 rate.

Short said the current methodology doesn’t allow any deductions.

“I do believe there’s a better way, but the city’s hands are tied right now in terms of how this can be done. We can take a look at this in the future. I’m not opposed to that,” Short said.

Arendt doesn’t think it’s fair to base the fee primarily on the amount of a property’s pervious or impervious surfaces because many different factors impact drainage.

“I think that cost should be spread out fairly,” he said.

Participating by phone, City Attor­ney Becky Vose suggested the city hire the Raftelis consulting firm to assist the city in evaluating and potentially altering the current fee calculation methodology.

Morgan said she’s concerned about increasing costs for property owners but she’s more concerned about the potential for more flooding and flood damage if nothing is done.

“We really need to address this problem sooner rather than later,” she said.

“I agree with Commissioner Morgan,” McMullen said. “This is something we can’t kick down the road.”

After noting that flooding occurs during heavy rains and not just during hurricanes and major storms, McMul­len said, “These WaStops are critical.”

WaStops also help prevent flood­ing associated with high tides and king tides.

Short said the fee increase won’t solve the drainage and flooding problems but it’s a step in the right direction. He also said the city received a grant that will pay for a citywide stormwater resiliency study that evaluates how the city can best address future stormwater, drainage and flooding challenges.

Public input

Archer Way resident Kevin Hutchinson said his street floods every time it rains and he attributes that to a previously contracted city engineer who recommended removing a drainage pipe that was 14 inches in diameter and replacing it with two pipes that were 6 inches in diameter. Hutchinson said two catch basins were also eliminated. He said he’s lived there for 30 years and never had a problem with flooding until those changes were made. He said the city engineer later admitted to him and others that removing the pipe was a mistake that would be corrected, but it never was.

Pelican Lane resident Kevin Farrell said building footprints were smaller and there was more permeable land when he moved to the Island in 2011. He said things have changed since then and the city needs to adapt to those changes. He said the stormwater fee is calculated the same for residents who live in smaller homes with more permeable space and better stormwater retention and large vacation rental homes with greater lot coverage and less stormwater retention and drainage capacity.

“It is patently absurd to tax people based on the square footage of their lot,” he said.

North Shore Drive resident Tania Pike said she lives on a large lot with one house and a lot of permeable space. Dur­ing the many years she’s lived there, she’s watched many large lots get divided into 5,000-square-foot lots that then get covered with a 4,000-square-foot home and a large pool.

She doesn’t think it’s fair that the same stormwater rate is applied to her property and one of those proper­ties. She also said drainage solutions in place 10-20 years ago might no longer be the best solutions.

Anna Maria increases stormwater fees
This Anna Maria street was badly flooded the day after Hurricane Milton struck. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Gulf Drive resident Jim Sullivan supports increasing the storm­water fee increase and finding a more equi­table way to calculate the fees later.

“If you don’t do something quickly, what harm is that going to bring down the road?” he said. “This seems to be the best alternative today. These storm drains don’t work. That’s not a good idea; and potentially we’re going to have worse weather than we used to.”

Hardin Avenue resident Jean Murray asked if the city has pursued other ways to raise the money needed for stormwater repairs and improvements.

In response, Short said the total stormwater budget for the new fiscal year is $3.3 million, with $2.6 million of the projected stormwater revenues coming from the Southwest Florida Water Management District, FEMA, the Hazard Mitigation Grant Program and other sources, with ap­proximately $600,000 coming from stormwater fees generated at the increased rate.

McMullen said pumps and pipes would ultimately provide a better way to address future flooding but that approach is even more expensive. He then made the motion to approve the city resolution that estab­lishes the increased stormwater fee.

Suncoast Waterkeeper reports heavy toll on mangroves from 2024 hurricanes

Suncoast Waterkeeper reports heavy toll on mangroves from 2024 hurricanes

The 2024 hurricane season took a heavy toll on mangroves across Sarasota and Manatee counties, according to the data from Suncoast Waterkeeper’s second year of the Mangrove Rangers program.

“One of the most striking findings came from a protected site in Sarasota Bay. Last year, it was used as our model site, scoring as one of the healthiest mangrove forests in the region. After the hurricanes, however, nearly half of its canopy was lost, dropping its health score from 90 to 59,” according to the Suncoast Waterkeeper August newsletter. “The health score is composed of two indices: One for canopy volume and one for leaf health. The loss of canopy at the protected site demonstrated that there isn’t a forest out there protected from Mother Nature and her increasingly powerful storms. However, it also demonstrates the ability of this coastal forest to serve as the initial defense against powerful winds and waves that are weakened by these majestic trees before reaching inland.”

Two new monitoring sites in Palma Sola Bay, located in protected areas, were introduced.

“Protected Site 7 ranked among the top performers, indicating strong ecosystem functions such as erosion control, improved water quality, serving as a fish nursery and providing a bird rookery. Site 7 resilience in the absence of trimming or development pressure was evident by its health score. The second protected site, Site 6, exhibited signs of strain, characterized by low canopy volume, which may be attributed to its proximity to a busy road and exposure to the 2024 hurricanes,” according to the newsletter.

The results highlight challenges along with hope for mangrove recovery.

“As storms intensify and development pressures grow, protecting mangroves is more critical than ever. These trees are not just coastal vegetation; they serve as a frontline defense for our communities and a vital lifeline for local biodiversity and the economy,” the newsletter stated. “The Tampa Bay Regional Planning Council (2023) estimates that flood protection benefits from the remaining mangrove systems in Manatee County amount to $54.3 million per year.”

Kapok tree removed due to weather impacts

Kapok tree removed due to weather impacts

ANNA MARIA – A massive kapok tree transported and trans­planted at a residential property in the 700 block of North Shore Drive in April 2024 was recently removed and replaced due the weather conditions it was exposed to during the storms and hurricanes that followed later that year.

The transplanted kapok tree was removed in early June and replaced with a bombax (“red kapok”) tree in early July.

Kapok tree removed due to weather impacts
A bombax tree stands where the kapok tree once stood. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Sarasota-based Michael A. Gilkey Inc. owner Michael Gilkey served as the landscape architect and landscape contractor for the initial Ross Built residential construction project and the recent tree replacement project.

When contacted last week, Gilkey discussed the string of natural events that led to the majestic tree’s demise.

“I am absolutely heartbroken,” he said. “The tree was so beautiful and it took a lot of effort to get it there. I take a lot of pride in the trust of my clients to bring them healthy material. We’ve planted trees that size and bigger and this is the first one I’ve lost; and it hurts.

“This tree had been prepped for 18 months for the move to get the storage of nutrients and sugars needed for this type of relocation. We installed the tree in April because we wanted to do it before the tree flushed. As it comes out of dormancy from the winter months in mid-April or so, it starts to put out new foliage. The timing of the installation was based around protecting the nutrient buildup in this tree.”

The weather impacts that followed were too much for the transplanted tree to survive.

“We had a weird storm in the middle of the summer. There was a lot of flooding and a good bit of wind. The tree had already flushed and it lost half its foliage in that mid-summer storm. Then we had the first hurricane of the year, Hurricane Debby, which wasn’t a direct hit to us, but we still had winds at 60-70 miles an hour. The tree had flushed back out and it lost its foliage again. When this happens, it’s depleting the nutrients and sugars because the foliage is not taking in the sunlight; and there are not enough roots in the ground to help it recoup that energy,” Gilkey explained.

“And then with Helene, we had several feet of saltwater inunda­tion and there was so much water moving that the 12-foot buttress roots we attached to the tree were pushed and moved. The wind stripped the tree again and the saltwater burnt the roots. This tree is a fairly saltwater-tolerant tree, but after you go through multiple events of losing foliage, its resistance is lower each time.

“When Milton hit, it was the nail in the coffin. We lost power to the well. There was no water turned on in Anna Maria and we had no way to wash the salt off the tree; and it was very hot dur­ing the two weeks after Milton,” Gilkey said. “At that point, it was just too far gone. It’s hard to turn a tree that’s in decline, even a healthy tree with a robust root system. There was nothing we could do. It was ‘Mother Nature’ and the whole sequence was unfortunate.”

Gilkey said the removed kapok tree was 60-80 years old and the new bombax tree is approxi­mately 15 years old.

“We replaced it with another variety of the same tree. The tree we planted is a massive tree on any other site, but as a replacement to the tree we had it looks miniscule. The new tree’s probably 35 feet tall and 15-18 feet wide. It’s a large tree but you can’t replace the stature of that tree we had there.”

City defends attorney, invoices

City defends attorney, invoices

BRADENTON BEACH – Mayor John Chappie, city commissioners and Police Chief John Cosby responded to criticism of post-hurricane invoices submitted by City Attorney Ricinda Perry at an Aug. 21 commission meeting, defending both the expenditures and Perry herself.

Cosby, serving as director of public works after Hurricane Helene hit the city in September 2024, asked Perry to assist with emergency operations at a FEMA-reimbursable rate of $150 per hour in addition to Perry’s FEMA-reimbursable hurricane-related legal rate of $220 per hour.

The city was flooded with up to 4 feet o f water after Helene swept past Anna Maria Island in the Gulf of Mexico. Damage included Gulf Drive being left covered in sand and impassable, with many ground-floor buildings filled with several feet of sand, no electricity and debris preventing access to many structures.

“I’m sure you’re aware of the recent media concerns and issues that had been brought forward,” Mayor John Chappie said, referring to an editorial in the Aug. 20 issue of The Islander newspaper criticizing Perry’s invoices for November and December 2024 totaling $91,050 for post-hurricane work.

Perry said her obligation is to the city.

“You (the city) are my client. I answer to you. I don’t answer to anybody else,” she said. “You hold me accountable. I have nothing to hide and I’m proud of the work that we did and I stand behind everything I’ve billed to the city.”

Perry said she did what Cosby asked her to do and fully documented her invoices.

“I worked with our contractor that submits these costs to FEMA,” Perry said. “Hopefully FEMA will approve all but 12.5% of these charges that are in front of you for my hurricane work, so the taxpayers are not exposed to this bill.”

Perry said there are many layers of oversight to the FEMA-related billing.

“It goes through the FEMA review process, and I think even the county or state has some review and oversight for our expenditures that go in for FEMA reimburse­ment,” Perry said. “Then on top of that it goes on a public agenda to be vetted by the public and vetted by you, the client, the elected officials. Staff looks at all of this.

“You were operating under a state of emer­gency and in a lot of respects the media has come out and said they have a vote of no con­fidence in the services that were rendered on behalf of the city by me,” she said.

“You can see the detail I put in my invoices. I don’t simply say ‘showed up at work.’ ” Perry said. “There were days I slept in my car at the police department to keep things going. Chief was charged in this instance with assembling a team to respond and get the community back in working order. And the question that largely needs to be answered is, did we succeed? Did Chief succeed in getting the city back open and running? You got the results that were needed.”

Perry’s invoice runs from Nov. 1 through Dec. 19 2024 and covers such items as attending daily brief­ings; meetings with staff, neighborhood and business owners and fire district personnel; conducting site visits to affected infrastructure; meeting with building owners regarding rebuilding requirements and FEMA compliance; drafting contracts for debris removal; build­ing department reorga­nization and managing public outreach, to name a few.

Chappie said all contract invoices over $2,000 must be submit­ted to the commission for review and are public record.

“As you are aware, I lost my right-hand man,” Cosby said. “With him being gone and not having another public works director to assist in this I reached out to Ricinda. I needed somebody that quick on their feet, educated, able to read contracts, RFPs, everything else that I knew was going to have to be put together to move this forward.”

Cosby said he was left with two choices – to ask Perry to help or hire a consulting firm at the cost of roughly $350 per hour per person for up to five people.

“The average consul­tant fee for what I was going to have her do for FEMA guidelines is $150,” Cosby said. “That’s why I came to the commission and said whatever she’s doing that’s not attorney-related I need you to approve the cost of $150 an hour. We ran that through FEMA, and they were comfortable with that and that is still moving forward.”

Cosby noted that Bradenton Beach was the hardest-hit govern­ment entity in Manatee County after Hurricane Helene.

“We had not just damage to our buildings, we have infrastructure damage that’s being repaired, there was no other way to do it, there was no one else to do it,” Cosby said. “There’s two of us, myself and Terri (City Clerk Terri Sancle­mente.) She was han­dling all the insurance issues, and you have to remember we still had to do our regular jobs. I still had to do payroll; scheduling and I had to guide the public works department.”

Cosby said he was working 16-18 hour days after the hurricane, sometimes being called back in the middle of the night for emergencies such as a diesel fuel spill.

“It’s individuals mouthing off that are not residents of Bradenton Beach that are not here and did not go through this,” Cosby said. “They have no clue what they’re talking about.”

“Things were hap­pening so fast, and our team was on top of it and I think you’re going to see the result of the expertise that our team has had when our FEMA reimbursement checks start coming back in and how well we have done our job,” Chappie said, adding the editorial was uncalled for.

Commissioner Ralph Cole said, “When we were under emer­gency management, they needed their space to do what they needed to do, and we got it done a lot cheaper and a lot faster than the other communities.”

“I just marvel at Ricinda’s ability and we’re so lucky to have her,” Commissioner Jan Vosburgh said.

Vice-Mayor Deborah Scaccianoce addressed criticism of city oversight and Perry’s invoices.

“We pass our audits with flying colors. There is so much oversight in our spending,” she said. “The lawyers for the other cities weren’t slinging mud, wearing boots, carrying cases of water and going out in the public. Not one of those attorneys took the time that Ms. Perry did to shlep around in mud and muck in that disaster that we lived through. But this attorney did do that. She is a member of this community, and she is not replaceable as a result of that.”

Scaccianoce said the city suffered 95% damage, according to Gov. Ron DeSantis.

“Anna Maria was marginal, Holmes Beach by comparison was marginal,” Scaccianoce said. “She (Perry) was here every day during recovery. The Chief was wearing a lot of hats, he had other stuff to do. Ricinda took responsibilities away from him so he could concentrate on getting done what he needed to do. What Ricinda contributed went above and beyond.”

“Bridge Street brought a sense of normalcy and hope back to this city and it was Ricinda who made sure that hap­pened,” Scaccianoce said. “The idea that any of this is inappropriate or not accept­able is outrageous. I challenge anyone to have put as much time and effort that Ms. Perry did as our city attorney during this catastrophe. And questioning her billing or our auditing processes or any of that is absolute nonsense. And I challenge any of those people – the writer of the editorial – where were you? I know where Ricinda was because I was on this Island and I watched her do it. She was bringing boots for people so they could navigate through the muck and mud. It’s really easy to sling mud at people when you’re sitting behind your computer. If you’re not boots on the ground, you have no right to open your mouth to discredit anyone. I am furious this is even put in question.”

Commissioner Scott Bear said he was disappointed that the Islander editorial made it personal about Perry.

“They didn’t come in and ask us why she was doing the work,” Bear said. “We were short-staffed, that’s why. To say the attorneys in those two cities (Anna Maria and Holmes Beach) didn’t charge anything, well, I can guarantee you, if they had been asked to do it, it wouldn’t have been done under their flat rate. To make a statement in a paper that they didn’t have additional cost, well no kidding, they also didn’t have 95% damage.”

“This malfeasance and fraud that are supposedly going on in the city, not just us, but the other two cities, were stripped naked by OPPAGA,” Cosby said, referring to a recent study by the Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government Account­ability. “They went through everything. If there were issues, we would have known about it and we came out of this well. It’s people that don’t know running their mouth. After what we went through it’s disheartening to have to deal with this.”

Boy Scouts replant City Pier shoreline

Boy Scouts replant City Pier shoreline

ANNA MARIA – On a rainy Friday morning, Anna Maria resident and Boy Scout William Pakbaz and the volunteers he recruited for his scouting project planted more than 150 native plants near the City Pier.

Pakbaz, the son of Anna Maria residents Julie and Siyamak Pakbaz, planned and organized the May 30 revegetation project and Mayor Mark Short and General Manager Dean Jones helped select the native plants the city paid for.

Boy Scouts replant City Pier shoreline
Several dozen native plants were planted near the City Pier. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

The revegetation project will help restore the hurricane-damaged Anna Maria shoreline between the City Pier and the Lake La Vista jetty. The completed project will also earn Pakbaz one of the 21 merit badges he needs to become an Eagle Scout.

Standing near the freshly replanted area and joined by the fellow scouts, scoutmaster, friends and family members who helped, Pakbaz said, “Today, we planted native plants next to the City Pier. We did that to beautify the area, fight erosion and repair some of the damage the recent hurricanes caused. I needed to do a project that benefits the community and I had to gather the volunteers and organize it myself. I’m grateful to all the people that helped me – my parents, Mayor Short and my volunteers.”

Boy Scouts replant City Pier shoreline
These scouts and other volunteers joined forces for the community-minded project. – City of Anna Maria | Submitted

Scoutmaster Travis McLeod said, “William put all this together and I’m very proud of him. It’s a great cause and a great project for him.”

Standing nearby, Jones, a former Marine, said “I’m so proud of them and it looks beautiful. Most of the plants here got destroyed by the hurricanes. We have gaillardia, beach daisies, saw palmettos, sea grapes and sea oats. To know it’s going to come back as beautiful or more beautiful than it was before is amazing.”

Jones said the sea oats were hard to find because so many hurricane-impacted coastal communities are replanting them.

“In about a month, you’ll see flowers on the beach daisies and the gaillardia. In a couple years, the sea grapes will be producing and the sea oats will drop their seeds and this will get even better,” he said.

Boy Scouts replant City Pier shoreline
The native plants will help beautify and protect the City Pier shoreline. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Jones said the city recently had a new riprap (rock) barrier installed along that shoreline to help prevent future erosion.

When contacted later that day, Short said, “I want to thank William, his scout troop and the volunteers that made this project possible. This is another step in the right direction as we continue our recovery efforts.”

Commission appearance

Pakbaz appeared before the city com­mission on May 27. When introducing Pakbaz to the commission that was already aware of his pending revegetation project, the mayor said, “He is heading down the path of achieving the Eagle Scout award, which is the highest award you can get in scouting.”

Short said Pakbaz approached him about doing a project that would help the city and after further discussion they decided to replace the landscaping destroyed by Hurricane Helene’s floodwaters. Short said the city ordered about 160 plants that are saltwater tolerant and accustomed to sandy and sunny conditions, and the public works department will water and maintain them as needed.

Pakbaz told the commission he recruited 15 volunteers for the project.

“Your application was about 30 pages long,” Commission Chair Charlie Salem said. “If you’re as thorough with the work as you were with the application, we’re going to be celebrating a great accomplish­ment. Thank you very much for helping us.”

“I promise I’ll do it to the best of my abilities,” Pakbaz told the commission.