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Bradenton Beach man electrocuted during Tropical Storm Eta

Bradenton Beach man electrocuted during Tropical Storm Eta

Updated Nov. 16, 2020 – BRADENTON BEACH – Longtime Island resident Mark Mixon died Wednesday evening from an accidental electrical shock he received during Tropical Storm Eta.

According to Det. Sgt. Lenard Diaz, of the Bradenton Beach Police Department, the fatal accident occurred at a home Mixon was working on at 211 Bay Drive N. The police department received the dispatch call at about 5:30 p.m. Wednesday.

“The Fire Department and EMS were there. When we got there, a guy came running up to us and said his friend just got electrocuted,” Diaz said that evening.

According to Diaz, Mixon was placing sandbags around the bayside of the Bradenton Beach home before the accident occurred.

“He went inside his storage room, which is part of the house and on the ground, and there were approximately 3 inches of water inside the storage room. When he walked inside, he didn’t realize he had an appliance still connected to electricity. He walked inside and he was electrocuted because the appliance was partially in the water,” Diaz said.

Diaz said the storage area contained a washer and dryer and some tools. He later said he believed the dryer to be the source of the electrical shock.

Diaz said Mixon’s friend tried to pull Mixon out of the storage area, but he felt electricity surging through the water and discontinued those efforts and called 911.

“When we got there, we couldn’t walk in until the electricity got turned off, which took approximately 30 minutes. We then brought him out and checked his vital signs and he was deceased,” Diaz said.

When contacted that evening, Manatee County Public Safety Director Jake Saur provided some additional details. He said Manatee County EMS was among those who responded to the 911 call.

“Our 911 center called FPL. This was the first time in my 20 years we’ve had to call FPL and ask them to de-energize a portion of the county. That takes a lot to do and they asked us if we’re sure we want to do this because we could take out power to a lot of other critical things. We’ve never really done that before, but we did it in this case so we could get into that home,” Saur said.

Around that same time, several Bradenton Beach residents noted on Facebook that they had lost power.

When contacted that evening, West Manatee Fire Rescue Chief Ben Rigney confirmed the electrocution. Rigney did not provide the victim’s name but did say the victim’s next of kin was notified of the accident.

“The next of kin was on scene,” Rigney said.

“They had an electrocution. It came in at approximately 5:35 today. Our responders went there. When they first walked in they felt a little tingle so they had to back away until they got FPL out there,” Rigney said.

“They were unable to access the patient due to the power still being on. They had to wait for FPL to secure power to the area before going in to check on the patient and he was confirmed DOA (dead on arrival),” Rigney said.

Rigney said this was the first time he was aware of a significant portion of the power grid being turned off in response to an emergency call.

Several years ago, Mixon took over operations of Jim Mixon Insurance Inc., the family-operated, Holmes Beach-based insurance agency founded by his father, Jim. After the agency was sold, it was renamed Waller-Mixon Insurance.

Holmes Beach resident and County Commissioner Carol Whitmore knew Mixon well.

“I’ve known Mark since the 70s or 80s. He grew up in Holmes Beach. He used to be my neighbor on 84th Street for many years before he moved to Bradenton Beach. Mark was a very quiet man and he helped his parents with Mixon Insurance. He was a very hard worker. He took pride in succeeding his parents in the family business and carrying on the family legacy. I know more people than I can count in Manatee County and on the Island who got their insurance from Mark. After they sold the business, I heard he stayed busy repairing and remodeling houses,” Whitmore said.

Patrick Shomo owns the property at 209 Bay Drive N., next door to the scene of the accident. He also spoke kindly of Mixon.

“Nobody lived there. Mark told me it was his personal project house and he’d been working on it mostly alone,” Shomo said.

“Mark was good people and has been nice to my family since we became neighbors in October. He hit it off with my wife and kids and talked to my 9-year-old son about fishing, always letting him chase a lost lure onto his property. We are all sorry to see him gone. He was also my insurance agent for years. The Island lost a good man,” Shomo said.

Holmes Beach resident Margie Motzer said, “We were so sad to hear about Mark. He was such a nice guy and he will be sorely missed.”

Holmes Beach resident Scott Moore said, “Mark was a great guy. He was a really nice guy and everybody on the Island liked Mark.”

Moore’s daughter and longtime Island resident Kelly Moore Hunt said, “It’s so tragic. Mark was such a good person. I have his smiling face in my head. When we were children, we used to stay at his house all the time. He was so welcoming to all the kids and he treated us like a second dad. I ran into him about a year ago and he said if you need anything you come to me. He was the most loving, caring human and he was always there for his friends. He grew up on the Island and he was all about Anna Maria Island.”

AMI, Manatee County incur minimal damage during Tropical Storm Eta

AMI, Manatee County incur minimal damage during Tropical Storm Eta

ANNA MARIA ISLAND – The Island escaped serious property damage from Tropical Storm Eta, however, a life was lost.

On Wednesday evening, longtime local insurance agent Mark Mixon was electrocuted at a home he was working on at 211 Bay Drive N.

According to Bradenton Beach police, Mixon was killed while standing in about 3 inches of water in a storage room with a washer and dryer. A friend tried to pull him out of the storage area, but felt electricity surging through the water and called 911. By the time FPL turned off power to the area, emergency workers declared Mixon dead.

AMI, Manatee County incur minimal damage during Tropical Storm Eta
Several sailboats sank near the Bridge Street Pier and floating day dock. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Elsewhere in Bradenton Beach, the storm also sank six sailboats. Three sailboats and a dinghy sank alongside the floating day dock next to the Bridge Street Pier. Joined by the dinghy that became lodged in one of the dock’s roller brackets, two sailboats sank at the east end of the floating dock. One of those sailboats lies partially underneath the Bridge Street Pier and small area of the pier’s TREX composite decking was damaged and now requires repairs or replacement.

The floating dock survived mostly unscathed, with one underside float coming loose and some minor exterior damage to the dock’s eastern edge.

One sailboat sank next to the new police department boat lift at the west end of the floating dock. The police boat and the boat lift also came through the storm unscathed.

The floating dock and the east end of the Bridge Street Pier, including the T-end, were closed Thursday morning and remain closed until further notice.

A large catamaran sank in the waters just south of the pier. Another large sailboat came to rest near the city-owned dinghy dock near the Bridge Tender Inn. The last section of the dinghy dock is also missing.

AMI, Manatee County incur minimal damage during Tropical Storm Eta
A large catamaran sank near the Bridge Street Pier in Bradenton Beach. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Another sailboat sank alongside and below the Cortez Bridge, near the Bradenton Beach Marina. Marina President Mike Bazzy said it was not known whether that vessel came from the Bradenton Beach or Cortez side of the Intracoastal Waterway. Bazzy said all the boats docked at the marina survived the storm with little to no damage.

AMI, Manatee County incur minimal damage during Tropical Storm Eta
This sailboat sank below and beside the Cortez Bridge. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

At 7 a.m. Thursday morning, Mayor John Chappie and Lt. John Cosby were already evaluating the sunken vessels and the damage to the pier.

“The floating dock held up well. The boat lift held up well too,” Cosby said.

AMI, Manatee County incur minimal damage during Tropical Storm Eta
The new police department boat lift and the police boat came through the storm unscathed. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

When asked about removing the sunken vessels, Cosby said, “We’re going to have to get these out quickly and we’ll go from there. We’ll have to see what funding becomes available. The boats are privately owned, so that’s some sticky ground with FEMA – they don’t like to take care of private property.”

The city typically relies on West Coast Inland Navigation District grants for the removal of derelict, abandoned and sunken vessels in the unmanaged waters south of the pier. The city may have to absorb the initial cost to remove the sunken boats from the floating dock and dinghy dock and hope to recover those costs later.

AMI, Manatee County incur minimal damage during Tropical Storm Eta
The Bridge Street Pier was damaged when struck by a sailboat that broke loose from the nearby anchorage. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Cosby also mentioned two structure fires that he said did not appear to be serious.

One of the new palm trees installed in the roundabout at the east end of Bridge Street lay toppled and blocked a portion of the roundabout, but the tree was righted and standing upright again by mid-day. Cosby said he wasn’t aware of any other downed trees or downed power lines elsewhere in the city.

Some of the mobile homes in the nearby Pines Trailer Park experienced flooding and some Bradenton Beach residents who live elsewhere in the city noted on Facebook that they experienced flooding too.

Holmes Beach

As the morning unfolded, a steady stream of vehicles proceeded through the standing water along Marina Drive, near the Island Branch Library and Holmes Beach City Hall. The water there appeared to be at least a foot deep, if not higher.

AMI, Manatee County incur minimal damage during Tropical Storm Eta
Vehicles traveling along Marina Drive in Holmes Beach had to travel through standing water. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

When contacted at 9:40 a.m., Police Chief Bill Tokajer provided an assessment of the storm damage in Holmes Beach.

“We had some serious flooding in some areas. We had more rain than we have seen in quite some time. In some areas, the water was as deep as I’ve seen since I’ve been here. It was really deep on Marina Drive in front of the police department. It was deep further down on Marina Drive and on Gulf Drive toward Haley’s Motel,” Tokajer said.

“It was deep going around the bend by the beach. Sixth Avenue was bad, and Avenue B and C had some flooding. I think a lot of it was because of the high tides combined with all the rain. A lot of docks and marinas had water over the edge too,” Tokajer said.

AMI, Manatee County incur minimal damage during Tropical Storm Eta
There was significant flooding along Marina Drive, near Keyes Marina in Holmes Beach – Joe Hendricks | Sun

“We didn’t have any injuries. We had quite a few people who got stuck or drove into a ditch. And we had one tree down off of 51st and Fifth that was blocking the road,” Tokajer said.

Throughout the morning and early afternoon, Gulf Drive provided a much drier route through the city than Marina Drive.

Anna Maria

Although he was still assessing the damage Thursday morning, Anna Maria Mayor Dan Murphy believed the city fared well and sustained little damage. He said there had been some power lines that went down on the north end of the city and there was still street flooding in the general vicinity of Bean Point.

AMI, Manatee County incur minimal damage during Tropical Storm Eta
Residents placed this no wake sign along North Bay Boulevard in Anna Maria. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

A drive through the city late Thursday morning revealed North Shore Drive covered with standing water near Bean Point. There was a substantial amount of standing water covering North Bay Boulevard between Jacaranda Road and Alamanda Road.

Significant street flooding was also present at and around the intersection of Gladiolus Street and Poinsettia Road.

AMI, Manatee County incur minimal damage during Tropical Storm Eta
This home at the corner of Gladiolus Street and Poinsettia Road in Anna Maria experienced heavy flooding. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Murphy said the new City Pier did not appear to suffer any damage during the storm.

Manatee County

At 10 a.m. Thursday morning, Manatee County Information Outreach Manager Nick Azzara conducted a virtual tropical storm update and press conference via Zoom videoconferencing. Azzara was joined by several county staff members who provided information specific to their departments.

County staff reported no significant damage throughout the county and said most of the damage was limited to flooding, fallen trees and tree limbs, power outages and boats that sank or ran into something – including one boat that collided with a bridge on the Manatee River and now requires removal.

Emergency Management Chief Steve Litschauer said 30 people took shelter at Manatee High School and left the shelter Thursday morning. He said no one took shelter at Mills Elementary School in Palmetto, so that shelter was closed at 5 p.m. Wednesday evening.

Azzara said wind gusts of up to 60 mph were reported in Manatee County and approximately 8 inches of rain fell in the most heavily rained upon areas that included the coastal regions.

Litschauer said slightly fewer than 3,000 people lost power during the storm and as of 10:12 a.m. Thursday morning, 1,136 power outages remained throughout the county.

Azzara said the county beaches on Anna Maria Island would remain closed for the day and reopen Friday morning. He said the same about the Island Branch Library in Holmes Beach.

The Manatee County School District decided later in the day that all public schools would reopen Friday morning for in-person learning, as opposed to being limited to virtual learning only as originally planned before the storm arrived.

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Bradenton Beach man electrocuted during Tropical Storm Eta