Sarasota Observer 7.23.15

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SARASOTA

Observer YOU. YOUR NEIGHBORS. YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD.

VOLUME 11, NO. 34

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Do we need a conference center? DIGITAL EDITOR

Charles Githler and Andy Dorr, of Githler Development, have been on a mission for decades to push Sarasota County into the upper echelon of what Dorr said is a $110 billion business­­-meeting industry. The biggest stumbling block: The county’s largest venue can’t accommodate more than 1,300 people, and Fortune 500 companies want more breakout space for smaller meetings during conferences. In 2009, the pair envisioned

ARTS+CULTURE

a $100 million facility to host national business conferences on public land — the city nixed that idea in favor of a parking garage and retail space. And that was just one of several proposals that have died due to economic downturns, a lack of political support to contribute tax dollars toward publicprivate partnerships and concerns about investing in what could be a risky long-term venture. But, as a booming tourism industry expands local tax coffers and the political landscape shifts in favor of more aggressive SEE CONFERENCE PAGE 3A

THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

Courtesy

Marni Mount participates in an archaeological dig at the Beit Guvrin caves outside of Jerusalem.

TEMPLE EMANUEL VISITS ISRAEL

Heather Merriman

Charles Githler, who used to own the Hyatt Regency Sarasota, and Andy Dorr, senior vice president of Githler Development

SELBY: IN FULL BLOOM NOW

LOCAL DRAMA

Playwrights vie for their time in the spotlight at The Players’ New Play Festival.

BLACK

YOUR TOWN

County commissioners see controversial investment as potential revenue-generator. ALEX MAHADEVAN

Birdhouse is not da bomb. PAGE 2A

More than 50 members of the Temple Emanu-El congregation recently returned from a 10-day trip to Israel. Rabbi Brenner Glickman led the trip that included exploring the desert fortress of Masada and a day in the Dead Sea. Participants also picked apples that were donated to Israel’s food pantries, made truffles in a chocolate factory, assisted in an archaeological dig, visited museums and historical sites, spent time in the Old City of Jerusalem and prayed at the sacred Western Wall.

Businesses brace for roundabout construction As the city begins work at Main Street and Orange Avenue, area businesses are feeling the effects.

TIE

DAVID CONWAY NEWS EDITOR

JUST MARRIED

Brent Lee Greeno and Ryan Robert Inskeep

INSIDE

Marie Selby Botanical Gardens celebrates its 40th anniversary this summer. Special events to honor the occasion will take place all year.

TH EN

READ THE STORY ON PAGE 16A

Although visible construction on a forthcoming Main Street roundabout didn’t begin until Wednesday, Gena Marini was dealing with issues caused by the project nearly two weeks earlier. Marini and her husband, Robert, are the owners of El Greco Café. The Mediterranean restaurant is located at the corner of Main Street and Orange Avenue, the intersection at which the city is working to install a roundabout over the next three months. SEE ROUNDABOUT PAGE 7A


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WH AT’S H A PPENING

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THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

WEEK OF JULY 23 2015 WHAT'S THE BUZZ?

DID mulls future of Five Points Park landscaping

“I definitely think the opportunity’s there. It’s just the case of political will.”

Although most visitors to Selby Five Points Park appreciate the shade from an oak tree on a sunny day, some of the grass at the downtown park is suffering because it sits in the shadows. The city is currently in the process of planning to replace the turf at Five Points Park, last installed in 2014. At Tuesday’s Downtown Improvement District meeting, city Public Works General Manager Todd Kucharski said the grass likely has to be replaced at least every other year because of the wear and tear it receives. One reason the grass needs frequent replacement is the level of activity in the park. Another part, however, is attributable to the shade trees cast in the park — and that’s a problem Kucharski wants the DID to consider addressing as it helps fund the maintenance. Kucharski said the city has consulted with turf experts to get a sense of the best practices for managing the grass at the park. By removing the turf in the shade and replacing it with other plants, the city can avoid dealing with patches of grass that don’t get enough sunlight. Although it’s still early in the planning stages, Kucharski said the city would consider adding turf elsewhere — possibly replacing a bricked area designed to be used as a stage, which currently doesn’t get much use.

Joe Barbetta, former county commissioner, on the possibility of a conference center coming to Sarasota. READ MORE ON PAGE 3A

BOMB SQUAWK

Were you stuck in traffic on Tamiami Trail Wednesday morning? The culprit: a birdhouse. The Sarasota Police Department closed U.S. 41, locked down Sarasota Memorial Hospital and evacuated nearby businesses when hospital security discovered a suspicious device at the corner of Arlington Road. The department’s explosives team examined what turned out to be a birdhouse with wire, fuses and a plastic jug attached. Officers gave the allclear at 10:20 a.m. after the roughly two-hour ordeal. Readers responded to the incident on Facebook. Courtesy of Sarasota Police Department

SOCIAL STATS Likes: 12 Shares: 20 Comments: 12

“One very dangerous BIRDHOUSE.” — Michael Goeller

Sarasota Police officers mobilize Wednesday morning, after Sarasota Memorial Hospital staff found a suspicious package.

“Don’t we tend to overreact? What ever happened to the old-fashioned way of dealing with this ... Walk up, open package and see what’s in it.”

“This day and age if they do not take every precaution and something does happen... they would have people suing left and right!”

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— Tammy Dodge Hickey

“Thank you Sarasota police and fire department who didn’t ‘overreact’ and kept all of our patients safe at SMH. Could have been something. You don’t take a chance.” — Ashley Light

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THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

Conference Center Catalyst FROM PAGE 1A

economic development, Dorr believes the time is now for the community to consider investing in a mid­­-sized conference center. With at least three county commissioners (Chairwoman Carolyn Mason, Commissioner Paul Caragiulo and Commissioner Alan Maio) going on the record in support of such a venue this month, and support from the private sector, their vision could be closer to reality than ever. “We’re an ideal conference location compared to many throughout the country,” said Dorr, who sits on the boards of Visit Sarasota County and the Greater Sarasota Chamber of Commerce. “We have wonderful recreation and leisure — hence why we draw 4 million people per year here.” During Visit Sarasota County’s budget discussion July 8, commissioners steered the conversation toward the need for more meeting space, citing limitations from the 20,000 square feet offered by the Hyatt Regency Sarasota, which is the largest venue near downtown. (See graphic.) Visit Sarasota County President Virginia Haley, however, remains a moderate voice in the discussion, urging a cautious approach to such a capital venture. Haley said her experience has shown successes — and failures — depending on how a community approaches large meeting spaces. “We really need a major dose of reality as we go through this process,” Haley said. “And we have to understand that they’re extremely expensive to build, but that there will be continuing operation expenses to market and sell the space.” With more than 1,000 new hotel rooms coming online downtown in the next few years, proponents assert that a conference center would help maintain demand throughout even the quiet months of the summer. “You’re looking at nearly doubling the hotel capacity in the north end of our county,” Dorr said. “That’s great, but we don’t want a bunch of big empty boxes sitting around.” Haley said she’s positive that won’t be an issue as her organization ratchets up marketing for smaller conferences and sports tourism continues to fill local hotels.

former County Commissioner Joe Barbetta. “I well remember our move from Sarasota to Fort Lauderdale in 1995 — hotels towering over the beaches, where scores of us could stay together in the same building and hundreds of us could be within a few minutes’ drive of the convention center,” said ARVO President Jeffrey Boatright in a 2013 message to members. “And what a convention center!” The Sarasota Chamber has included a conference center as an objective within its Sarasota Tomorrow initiative. Haley said she is meeting with County Administrator Tom Harmer this week to mull options for proceeding with a market study to determine viable locations and funding mechanisms for a conference center — or if the community needs one at all. “The last market analysis was done was in ’04,” Haley said. “There’s nothing about the industry that was going on in ’04 that really makes sense now.” One option for funding a study would be for the county to tap into the recent BP setttlement money to repay tourist tax coffers that were mined during the oil spill, Haley said. Dorr said such a study could cost around $75,000. “There’s a ripple effect to this,” Dorr said. “That’s going to ring the cash registers of the entire downtown.” Sarasota­­-Bradenton International Airport would be a major beneficiary of a conference center. “It’s a really big generator of air traffic and something airlines look at very closely,” said SRQ Airport President and CEO Rick Piccolo, who also touted the overall economic benefits of bringing

“You’re looking at nearly doubling the hotel capacity in the north end of our county. That’s great, but we don’t want a bunch of big empty boxes sitting around.” – Andy Dorr, senior vice president for Githler Development

VENUE MENU Here is the capacity of the largest venues near downtown Sarasota.

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Ritz-Carlton, Sarasota — 18,000 square feet

Hyatt Regency Sarasota — 20,000 square feet

The Resort at Longboat Key Club — 12,000 square feet 41

Lido Beach Resort — 6,000 square feet

N Map by Nicole Thompson

in company meetings. Small conferences of airport officials have resulted in local real estate sales. “A couple of my colleagues have bought property here for a second home,” Piccolo said. FINDING THE SWEET SPOT

Funding mechanisms for building and operating such a venue, viable locations and political will to push for answers to those questions remain hurdles — as they have for 20 years. Haley and Barbetta said such a venue needs to be as close to downtown and hotels as possible. In 2004, Fairway Development Group and Suffolk Construction proposed a 600,000-square-foot mixed­­-use development called Fairway Grande, consisting of a 90,000-square-foot luxury conference center, 275­­-room hotel, 35,000 square feet of retail and 700 parking spaces at the corner of Fruitville Road and North Tamiami Trail, which never came to fruition.

‘A RIPPLE EFFECT’

Local business leaders have also thrown their support behind the idea. “We’ve slowly been rebuilding stronger support, and last year we convened a group of about 10 of us and had some roundtable discussions,” Dorr said. “We decided we should again continue to try and build momentum.” The group hopes to attract meetings ranging from 2,500 to 3,500 participants and has been strict about refusing to refer to the development proposed as a convention center — which it said can characterize much larger venues. Those involved with conference center discussions repeatedly mention the Association for Research in Vision and Opthalmology annual meeting, which moved out of Sarasota in 1995. “They had to leave because there’s no place big enough,” said

Ramada Waterfront Sarasota — 10,000 square feet

Heather Merriman

Andy Dorr, senior vice president of Githler Development, and Charles Githler, who used to own the Hyatt Regency Sarasota, hope a mid-sized conference center will diversify Sarasota's economy and keep the hotel industry booming in the offseason.

In 2009, Githler sought to put a 50,000­­-square-­foot conference center, a 280­-room Embassy Suites hotel and a six-­­story parking garage at the corner of Palm Avenue and Main Street. Ultimately the city chose to build a parking lot on the site without a private partner. Most recently, a group that included venture capital firm Seven Holdings proposed 60,000 square feet of conference space as part of Sarasota Bayfront Now, which sought to build out the area around the Van Wezel. The city rejected those plans. Although Dorr said a local conference center with 80 meetings per year could generate a $60 million economic impact, it could require $500,000 to $1 million in public funding per year for operations. That doesn’t include the potential need for a public capital investment. “I think that’s a win all day long,” Dorr said. Barbetta said bed taxes could be tapped to fund a bond to cover a portion of the cost of a facility. “I think with the airport’s cooperation and the tourist tax on the rise, you could bond it out for $10, $15 or $20 million and sit down with a private developer for the rest,” Barbetta said. Dorr said he could see the venue operate under a special taxing authority, such as the Tampa Convention Center or the Bradenton Area Convention Center. The former features 200,000 square feet of exhibit space while the latter’s largest room is 32,400 square feet. “I think you have a commission that is working together,” Dorr said. “You’ve got to strike when you have the opportunity.” Haley said the topic surfacing at the recent county meeting was “one of the more pleasant surprises we’ve ever had.” “I definitely think the opportunity’s there,” Barbetta said. “It’s just the case of political will.”

“We really need a major dose of reality as we go through this process.” – Virginia Haley, Visit Sarasota County president

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THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

Girls Inc. welcomes new executive director All the latest news and information delivered to your inbox.

Angie Stringer, a former Girls Incorporated of Sarasota County employee, will start as executive director Aug. 31. KRISTEN HERHOLD OBSERVER STAFF

Girls Inc. of Sarasota County named Angie Stringer, a former employee, as its new executive director. The former director, Robin Rose, is moving to St. Augustine to be closer to her husband after two years at Girls Inc. Stringer has most recently served as director of major gifts at Children First in Sarasota and will begin her new position at Girls Inc. Aug. 31. “She worked for Girls Inc. for four years, left eight years ago and is now coming home,” said Girls Inc. Board President Jennifer Compton in a news release. “We could not be more pleased to welcome her back at this important time as we embark on new growth initiatives. We know she is the

“We know she is the right person to build upon the foundation laid and lead Girls Inc. to the next level as we continue to significantly impact the lives of young girls.”

To sign up visit

– Jennifer Compton, Girls Inc. board president

Courtesy photo

Angie Stringer

right person to lead Girls Inc. to the next level.” Stringer has more than 20 years of experience in the nonprofit sector. “It’s thrilling to be returning to an organization whose mission I hold very close to my heart,” Stringer said. “This is a very exciting time for Girls Inc. We are poised to move our programs to the next level, and I’m excited to be providing the leadership for the dynamic team that will get us there.” Girls Inc. is a nonprofit that aims to help prepare young women to lead successful, independent, educated and healthy lives. On July 27, the organization will begin its 30-day campaign to raise $70,000, which will go toward scholarships.

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Proposed parkland Bellora subdivision

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What’s in a name? A developer offered to pay to maintain a piece of city-owned land it wanted turned into a park. The city said no – and continues to search for a policy managing the renaming of public property.

e tiqu Living u o B ury R Lux NDTEION U C TR U NOW S N CO

DAVID CONWAY NEWS EDITOR

For more than a decade, residents of the Indian Beach/Sapphire Shores neighborhood have clamored for more parkland. And yet, when a developer offered to maintain a piece of cityowned land it sought to reclassify as a park, the proposal divided the board of the area neighborhood association for one reason: the name. In March, Louisiana-based developer Level Homes went in front of the city’s Parks, Recreation and Environmental Protection board to pitch its idea. It volunteered to provide maintenance for the land at the southwest corner of Corwood Drive and Bay Shore Road, a patchy tract with trees and a fence but not much

more. That land is adjacent to the Level Homes project Bellora, a 23-unit residential subdivision for which sales are scheduled to open shortly. As part of the offered deal with the city, Level Homes proposed the newly designated parkland — currently just city right of way — be renamed “Bellora Park.” “We thought it would be a good thing to do for the area,” said Jeff Gersh, vice president of land acquisitions for Level Homes. “The intent was just to maintain and keep it nice and tight.” Despite a seal of approval from the parks board in March, the proposal was struck down Monday as the City Commission unanimously voted against an agreement with Level Homes. The board was concerned about

giving up the naming rights for a piece of city property without getting something more substantial in return. “They’re enhancing the value, naming city property with the same name as a subdivision,” Commissioner Susan Chapman said. “I have a problem with that — the maintenance may indicate they have some claim over public property.” Todd Kucharski, the city’s public works general manager, admitted the property is only maintained three or four times a year by staff. That’s because there’s not much there right now — in the past, former City Commissioner Dick Clapp led a discussion about enhancing the land as a park space, but funding wasn’t available, and the push eventually subsided. Funding still isn’t available today, Kucharski said. Level Homes wasn’t interested in upgrading the proposed park, and per the proposed agreement, the city would still have to pay for the maintenance of any improvements it installed itself — another stumbling block for the city, considering the current state of the land. “This is not a park,” Kucharski said. “It’s a parcel of land that the city owns. It’s nothing more than a glorified right of way.” When the city agreed to rename Eloise Werlin Causeway Park in July 2014 in exchange for a $125,000 private donation, commissioners also directed staff to establish an official policy for renaming public property. More than a year later, they’ve seen no such policy brought back, another reason given for the denial of the Bellora proposal. “To allow ourselves to slip into

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THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

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“To allow ourselves to slip into this one sets a precedent that may not be in the best interest of the city and its constituency as we move forward.” – Willie Shaw, mayor

this one sets a precedent that may not be in the best interest of the city and its constituency as we move forward,” Mayor Willie Shaw said. Some commissioners indicated they would be open to revisiting the conversation if the terms of the proposal were altered. Gersh said Level Homes was undecided at this moment if it would try again to float a proposal for commission consideration. At the commission meeting, Indian Beach/Sapphire Shores Neighborhood Association President David Morriss spoke about his belief that Level Homes has been a good neighbor, and was offering to provide the service in good faith. Still, he admitted the group’s board was split — half of the members didn’t mind the name, but the other half favored a moniker reflective of the history of the neighborhood. Although the issue ended up being a dealbreaker for the commission, Morriss suggested the name wasn’t that important, no matter which direction the city favored. “I think people aren’t going to say either one,” Morriss said. “They’re just going to basically say it’s on Corwood and Bay Shore.”

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300 SOUTH PINEAPPLE | SANSARACONDO.COM JONATHAN ABRAMS, REALTOR® | 941 - 232 - 2868 JONATHANABRAMS@MICHAELSAUNDERS.COM

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THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

Jebco plans condo for North Trail Fresh off development of the Q townhomes on Ringling Boulevard, Jebco Ventures has submitted preliminary plans for more than 150 condominiums.

Jim Bridges hopes to pick up where other investors left off and successfully redevelop more than eight acres on the North Trail. And he’s already begun tackling one of the biggest hurdles to new development — the neighbors. “We’re looking to put a development there that’s very compatible with the neighborhood,” Bridges said. “This would actually be down-zoned (from current land-use restrictions).” Bridges’ firm, Jebco Ventures, is scheduled for a pre-application conference with the city of Sarasota’s Development Review Committee Aug. 5, to vet preliminary plans for roughly 150 condominiums behind the La Quinta Inn and Suites on the 1800 block of North Tamiami Trail. The land is currently owned by a group of investors, including Kim Githler. “I’ve done a lot of developments and I’ve been in business in a long time,” Bridges said. “This is probably one of the most exciting that I’ve been involved with.” The plans are currently split into three phases, the first of which would consist of 76 water-

front condos over parking along Whitaker Bayou and boat slips to service the development. The second phase would bring 80 units online around a central pool area while the developer hopes to work with city staff on a third phase that could include new commercial space along the North Trail. Preliminary plans show that none of the structures on the site would be taller than 45 feet, which is the maximum height allowable within the North Trail zoning district. “We know the plans being submitted are very limited, but we wanted to begin the discussion and get staff’s feedback on as many issues and concerns as possible,” said Jebco representative Joel Freedman in a letter to City Auditor and Clerk Pam Nadalini, “while at the same time see if some flexibility can be built into the approval for the third phase of the project.” Though past efforts to redevelop the project into a condominium and then a yacht club were met with public disapproval from the Tahiti Beach neighborhood across the bayou, Bridges said he has already met with nearby residents and received a positive

Alex Mahadevan

Over the last decade, Githler Development sought to replace the Yacht Center with two nine-story condominiums and subsequently a yacht club and gas station.

response. Tahiti Park Neighborhood Association President Jennifer Ahearn-Koch said North Trail Redevelopment Partnership board member Jay Patel helped bring about that meeting, during which Githler, Bridges and project consultants discussed the preliminary plans. “We were pleased with the idea of the condos and with their overall plan — which was just an overview,” Ahearn-Koch said. “But it still seemed like the concept was well thought through.” She then organized a meeting with neighbors to discuss the plans. “The neighbors had a number of questions, but the conversation was positive and constructive,” Ahearn-Koch said.

Jebco’s project is the latest residential investment proposal for the North Trail, joining a 33-unit apartment complex slated to replace the Monterey Village Motel across from Ringling College of Art and Design. On the commercial side, Casto Southeast Realty Services is planning a 2,250-square-foot Starbucks about a three-minute walk south of Jebco’s proposed site. Tahiti Park residents are keeping a watchful eye on that development, as well. Bridges said the condo project would attract a wide range of buyers, and is the largest piece of developable property around the downtown area. “It has all the pluses,” Bridges said. “I can’t think of any negatives.”

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T U E S DAY, J U LY 2 8

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THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

Roundabout construction off to shaky start BUSINESS INSIGHT

ROUNDABOUT FROM PAGE 1A

We talked to workers at other businesses to get feedback on the Main and Orange roundabout project:

Alex Mahadevan

David Conway

The city is attempting to minimize the impact from construction, but El Greco Cafe owners Robert and Gena Marini are convinced the roundabout project will keep customers away from their restaurant.

Marini stressed that she still loves Sarasota, but was frustrated by the current state of affairs around her business. Even for summer, she said, the downtown area has felt significant pressure from construction this year. She pointed to the nearby State Street parking garage, which finally opened Wednesday afternoon after five months of delay. Because of that, she thinks the project should have been put off until next year — although the city said they needed to take advantage of funding as it became available. “Well, find some other project to do, not something that will not work for the businesses,” Marini said.

“I think the closure will affect business a tremendous amount. New customers won’t be able to see our location. It’s dusty. Everything will affect it — especially considering the amount of time the construction will take.” – Maria Vazquez, Baltimore Snowball Factory

Alex Mahadevan

“I feel like (the roundabout) will help the flow of traffic a little bit more. I don’t think it’s going to affect our business— maybe it’ll pick up, because there will be more traffic flowing through the area and less congestion. I really don’t think it’s going to do anything to harm any of the businesses around here.” – Samantha Loder, Drunken Poet Cafe

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the project’s completion in early November, according to a city release. The city scheduled the work to fall during a relatively slow period for city businesses, wrapping things up as soon as seasonal residents returned to Sarasota. The city has embraced roundabouts, building three in the downtown area since 2010. Another is planned for the intersection of Orange and Ringling Boulevard. City Engineer Alex DavisShaw says the roadwaymanagement tools reduce congestion, among other benefits. “Roundabouts are safer for pedestrians as well as motorists, plus they’re more aesthetically pleasing,” DavisShaw said in the release.

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A two-month intersection closure began Wednesday, but preliminary work by Florida Power and Light earlier this month led to power outages at El Greco. “Our computer system fried,” Marini said. “We had to start hand-writing checks; it was a nightmare trying to figure out communication between the back and the front.” That preliminary incident got cleared up, but matters were made worse once the construction setup was in place. A green fence cordons off the construction area on both Main and Orange, narrowing the sidewalk and blocking access for vehicles traveling near one of the busier segments of the core of the city. Despite assurances from the city that construction would be relatively smooth, Marini already fears customers will stay away until the project is done. “We feel like we’re trapped right now,” Marini said. “It feels like a cage.” Wednesday morning, she says, the building was shaking as crews jackhammered the nearby street. The disruptive work continued until resident Bob Easterle, a patron of the restaurant, contacted City Manager Tom Barwin to complain about the disturbance during the lunch hours. “I hope our regulars will overlook this tiny detail and continue to follow us,” Marini said. The closure will continue until Sept. 30, at which point limited traffic will be let through until


OPINION / OUR VIEW

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SARASOTA OBSERVER

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YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

BEWARE: FORM-BASED VISION The ‘transportation summit’ was a prelude to a grander scheme for an urban-planner’s dream. Sarasota city residents, beware. That “transportation summit” that Sarasota city commissioners conducted 10 days ago, well, that’s just a tiny prelude of what is to come. While many Sarasotans are wondering about practical transportation issues — such as how everyone will possibly navigate the intersections of Fruitville Road and U.S. 41 and U.S. 41 and the John Ringling Causeway once the new downtown hotels and condominiums are completed — city staffers and the city’s Urban Design Studio have much bigger goals and visions. Take a look at the accompanying rendering. See the rail-guided, electric trams — “proposed” for North Trail? That’s just the start. Go through the Urban Design Studio’s Powerpoint presentations online, and you see the grander vision. City staffers and the Urban Design Studio have created a Sarasota Future Transit Map showing a commuter rail running from the airport to the John and Mable Ringling Museum, then through the neighborhoods between U.S. 41 and North Orange Avenue on to a downtown terminus. They show a “Fruitville Line,” and a Tamiami Tram Line (see drawing) from the airport to Southgate and a “Sarasota Seahorse Waterbus,” among multiple rapid bus routes and trolleys going to and from the keys. As Sarasota Observer News Editor David Conway wrote last week, city officials are “determined to lighten

MY VIEW

SARASOTA & SIESTA KEY

Observer “If we are to build a better world, we must remember that the guiding principle is this — a policy of freedom for the individual is the only truly progressive policy.” FRIEDRICH HAYEK “Road to Serfdom,” 1944 Editor / CEO / Matt Walsh mwalsh@yourobserver.com Publisher / Lisa Walsh lwalsh@yourobserver.com Chief Digital Officer / Emily Walsh ewalsh@yourobserver.com Executive Editor / Kat Hughes khughes@yourobserver.com Deputy Executive Editor / Jessica Luck jluck@yourobserver.com

the load on streets.” They want more “complete streets,” modified to accommodate what they call “multi-modal transportation” — bicycles, walkers, public transit, rail and fewer cars. They want to give Sarasotans more transportation options, a worthy goal. But the more you explore the grander vision, the more curious and concerned Sarasotans should become. This vision of lightening the load of cars is part of the vision underway to shift the city of Sarasota to a whole new system of zoning: formbased code. For more than two years, the city’s Urban Design Studio staff of Karin Murphy and Andrew Georgiadis has been creating this new zoning code with the expectation that it will be presented to the City Commission for adoption in spring 2016. The studio describes formbased code as “regulating the form of buildings and how they shape streets and public spaces.”

It looks great on paper. The studio’s renderings are impressive. But when government officials start talking about rail systems and “regulating the form of buildings,” taxpayers and property owners should take note. That traffic summit was just a teaser. We’ll show you more in future editions. Beware.

GIVE THEM GUNS Gov. Rick Scott demonstrated decisive and smart leadership last week when he ordered the Florida National Guard commanders to increase the protection of and arm the state’s National Guard recruiters — including quick approval for licenses to carry weapons. This is in contrast to the typically bureaucratic, weak-knee, PC response from the Pentagon, whose Army chief, Ray Odierno, made the ridiculous statement: “I think we have to be careful about overarming ourselves …” Give our soldiers the guns they need.

Forget global warming; data show next Ice Age is more likely

WELDON FROST GUEST COLUMN

OK, I confess. I believe in Climate Change. And why not? Constant change has been a part of the Earth’s climate history since the planet was formed 4.5 billion to 4.6 billion years ago. There has never been a long period of flat-line temperature in the history of the sphere. The question to me has always been: Is the activity of mankind having a real and manageable effect on the climate of the Earth? I can start to answer that question by first denouncing any severe climactic effect of carbon dioxide, or increasing levels of CO2 in the Earth’s atmosphere. For one thing, there have periods in the history of the Earth when CO2 concentration in the Earth’s atmosphere was nearly 20 times what it is today, and there was widespread glaciation on the Earth (e.g., Ordovician/ Silurian 420-450 million years ago, 4,000 ppm CO2). Furthermore, I can show you graphs of temperature and CO2 levels, the data for which was derived from Greenland ice cores, showing that CO2 continues to increase 200 to 600 years after a period of rising temperature changed direction — leveled off or and started to decline. Therefore, CO2 is an effect of rising temperature, not a cause of temperature increase. And why not? The Earth is 71% ocean surface, and it takes time for the water to give up its extra CO2 after it warms up. But I worry that the galloping hordes of doom-crying climate geeks are missing the big picture: The last nine Ice Ages lasted about 100,000 years

RECOMMENDED READING • “Fire, Ice and Paradise,” by H. Leighton Steward, pp. 135; 2009 — A terrific read for a technical or non-technical reader. • “Heaven and Earth — Global Warming, the Missing Science,” by Dr. Ian Plimer, The School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, The University of Adelaide, pp. 493; 2009 — This book is loaded with information. Dr. Plimer is a worldrenowned Australian climatologist.

each. They were more or less 90,000 years of cold, dry and windy (the Ice Age), and 10,000 years of warm and wet (the Inter-glacial period, which is what we are enjoying now). Note: Because of the over-lapping variations in the eight or 10 major drivers of climate, those are average “round numbers.” That 100,000-year period happens to coincide with the period for the completion of a cycle of variation in the eccentricity of the Earth’s orbital path around the Sun, from mostly circular to slightly elliptical and back. So it looks like that should be a major controlling factor. It doesn’t vary much, but the ice-core temperature history shows that the climate can shift surprisingly quickly from Ice Age to Inter-Glacial or back — sometime in as little as 100 years or so. OK, so why am I worried that the politicos have it all wrong about the potential of our being scorched by the Earth’s “CO2-induced” heat and drowned by rising sea-levels? Because 18,000 years ago, the edge of the North

American ice sheet was at Cincinnati. By 14,000 years ago the Earth had warmed up and the ice sheet had started to recede up to Cleveland. No coalfired power plants, no internal combustion engines, just Mother Nature working its magic climatic change like it has done many times before. Thus, the numbers could indicate that we have just about used up our 10,000 years of Inter-glacial period. Ho, ho, ho! Christmas in July. Bear in mind that some (presumably honest) scientists say that there hasn’t been any real temperature increase in the Earth’s temperature for the past 15 years. Hold on, didn’t we just have two horrendously cold winters? What if we get another couple really cold winters? Say, four real freezers in a row? Don’t the TV weathermen tell us that weather patterns tend to continue after they get established? Or maybe the two freezer winters were a false alarm, and I am getting ahead of myself trying to reach a conclusion that the next Ice Age is just around the corner — a couple centuries away maybe, or less. That is perhaps no more far-fetched than saying we are going to scorch and drown because we are burning fossil fuels when, in fact, the termite population of the world alone, or a couple of active volcanoes, puts more CO2 into the atmosphere than all of mankind. Well, it’s all a bit speculative because the science is still so loosey-goosey, but if, in the next five or 10 years someone starts yelling about the next Ice Age coming, remember: You read it here first! The Observer is always on the forefront of the news. And hang onto your Florida property. Weldon G. Frost, a resident of Longboat Key, served as a geologist and exploration manager in 10 countries on five continents for 37 years for Mobil.

News Editor / David Conway dconway@yourobserver.com Staff Writer / Amanda Morales amorales@yourobserver.com Digital Editor / Alex Mahadevan alexm@yourobserver.com Managing Editor/Black Tie-Season / Stephanie Hannum, stephanie@yourobserver.com Black Tie Editor / Heather Merriman Saba hmerriman@yourobserver.com Arts & Culture Editor / Nick Reichert nreichert@yourobserver.com Managing Editor/Design / Nancy Schwartz nschwartz@yourobserver.com Design Editor / Nicole Thompson nthompson@yourobserver.com Editorial Designer / Qing Tian qtian@yourobserver.com Director of Advertising / Jill Raleigh jraleigh@yourobserver.com Sales Manager / Penny DiGregorio pdigregorio@yourobserver.com Digital Sales and Business Development Manager / Kathleen O’Hara kohara@yourobserver.com Senior Advertising Executive / Laura Ritter, lritter@yourobserver.com Advertising Executives / Patty Ordonez-Bains, pobains@yourobserver.com Beth Jacobson, bjacobson@yourobserver.com Robert Lewis, blewis@yourobserver.com Rachel Livingston, rlivingston@yourobserver.com Suzanne Munroe, smunroe@yourobserver.com Richeal Parisi, rparisi@yourobserver.com Toni Perren, tperren@yourobserver.com Mike Petruzzi, mpetruzzi@yourobserver.com Sales Operations Manager / Susan Leedom, sleedom@yourobserver.com Sales Coordinator/Account Managers / Lori Downey, ldowney@yourobserver.com Classified Advertising Sales Executives/ Maureen Hird, mhird@yourobserver.com Deedie Parker, dparker@yourobserver.com Director of Creative Services and Information Technology / Kathy Payne kpayne@yourobserver.com Assistant Creative Services Manager / Brooke Schultheis, bschultheis@yourobserver.com Information Technology Operations Manager / Mike Herndon Advertising Graphic Designers / Chris Brock, John Day, Marjorie Holloway, Shawna Polana, Luis Trujillo, Allison Wampole Chief Financial Officer / Laura Keisacker lkeisacker@yourobserver.com Accounting Coordinator / Christine Galan Office Coordinator-Subscriptions / Donna Condon, dcondon@yourobserver.com

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SARASOTA OBSERVER

A glimpse of the way things were from the archives.

AIDS deaths have declined, but HIV cases are on the rise. MICHAEL KEHOE

Florida now has the highest number of new HIV cases in America, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Florida’s extensive program of HIV prevention, testing and education has fallen short. Education is mostly done at community events where HIV testing takes place. It is barely mentioned in the schools, media, at home or even among friends and students. Today’s youth are the fastest-growing segment of new infections, and when educated about HIV, their response is often, “If you get it, you can take a pill.” In most cases, treatment is limited to one pill a day; HIVpositive persons are subject to early onset of other conditions expedited by a compromised immune system and years of medicine. Today, an HIV person and

Morgan Hancock holds up her catch for Freeway the dolphin.

Cub Scouts Pack 150 stepped in to help with a fishing tournament at the Sarasota Sailing Squadron. Children cast their lines and reeled in enough fish to tide Freeway over for a while. Freeway was released at the mouth of the Manatee River in September 1993.

JULY 22, 1993 Mote Marine Laboratory & Aquarium picked up an Atlantic bottlenose dolphin in June 1993 and named him Freeway. Mote staff discovered he needed help getting fresh fish to eat. The

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Michael A. Kehoe is CEO and director of HIV Prevention and Education CARES Outreach Services Inc., 24 N. Lime Ave., Sarasota, FL 34237.

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is not who you are, it is what you do. HIV is transmitted via four modes: 1) direct bloodto-blood (includes sharing needles); 2) sexual fluids; 3) vaginal birth; and 4) breast feeding. Multiple sex partners, unprotected sex and sharing needles put one at a greater risk for transmitting or getting HIV; an STD increases the chance of getting HIV. Sweat, tears, saliva, insect bites cannot transmit the virus. The CDC has awarded millions of dollars to Florida for HIV prevention, education and testing, yet new infections are climbing. January to June 2015 statistics show 81 new HIV cases in Sarasota/Manatee, a 23% increase from the same period last year. AIDS deaths are down 17%, continuing the downward trend. But still, much needs to be done. To find a location for HIV testing in your area, go to www.hivtest.org or contact your health department. HIV is no longer a death sentence. It is a chronic care manageable disease. I should know. I have been living with HIV for more than 20 years. Life is good.

compliance/adherence to medical care can achieve an undetectable viral load and live a long, productive life. The caveat is this: You must take the test. A simple fingerstick test is antibody driven, 98.6% accurate with results in 15 minutes. Or the Fourth Generation Assay is a full-blood draw that generates results in about two weeks. Fear, alienation, stigma and discrimination prevent a person from taking the test and getting or staying in treatment. Getting tested too late can increase your chances of progressing to full-blown AIDS and also perpetuate the spread of the virus unknowingly to others. Death from AIDS is way down, while HIV is on the rise. Today, about 50,000 people are infected with HIV every year in the United States; one out of seven do not know they are infected because they were never tested. If you know someone who is infected or engaged in risky behavior, encourage them to take the test and get into care. Anyone can get infected. It

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THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

MY VIEW

Hoping ignorance vanishes is not enough

TH I S W E E K I N H ISTO RY

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SARASOTA OBSERVER

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YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

CO N V E RSAT IO N W ITH MIKE EVANOFF

A

s owner of Evie’s Tavern, White Buffalo Saloon and Evie’s Family Golf Center, along with valet services, a car wash and other entrepreneurial endeavors, Mike Evanoff knows what it takes to create a successful business. But as Evanoff has sought to open a new concept — which includes a bowling alley — on Sarasota’s Main Street, he’s run into delays with city building regulations. Now that he’s set a tentative Sept. 2 opening date for Evie’s Tavern, we talked to Evanoff about the future of downtown.

What excites you most about being on Main Street? I’m excited to be in a location where it’s active and where there’s a lot happening. There are other restaurants, there’s high traffic, and it’s a place to be. It’s exciting to be in an area with heavy traffic, rather than always having to be a destination location, which I’ve done in the past.

Heather Merriman Saba

How will the new Evie’s Tavern fit into the current culture of downtown? Back in the day the Sports Page was there — it was an iconic location. And now that they’re not, I think we’re filling a void on Main Street that has been there for a long time: a real sports bar with a full menu. Our menu is simple, and two lanes of bowling adds something new, fun and exciting in downtown Sarasota. What’s the latest on plans to convert the current Evie’s Tavern on Ringling Boulevard to a new concept? I was working with the landlord and we had a vision to go nosmoking, put in beautiful garage doors with glass that matched the building, have nice outdoor seating and give it a really a nice flow. We worked on that for about four to six months, but because we went for a special exception eight years ago and didn’t ask for outdoor seating, we’re not allowed to put seats out front now. So that hindered our vision. And because we wanted to put the garage doors in, the city said we would need a major conditional use permit, which costs anywhere from $15,000 from $20,000 and neither myself nor the landlord wanted to take on that expense. So we really have been handcuffed at this location. So, now, we’re going to make the change to the Office Bar SRQ anyway, and put in a new sign and redo the inside — and have smoking, unfortunately.

How is it working with the city? Every time you try to make something that’s going to better the city and better the people who live downtown, it seems like you run into a roadblock. And it’s hard to find somebody in the city that really wants to work with you. I know there are rules and regulations and you’ve got to follow them — and we do — but there’s just no easy way to do anything. Would you invest in other concepts within the city again? No. I was going to do a location in the Rosemary District, and I’m just tired. To try go through another process of getting something passed would take up too much time and too much money. How do you envision the future of downtown Sarasota? We can all see how it’s growing. The point I think we all need to realize is that with the arts and the restaurants and all the beautiful hotels that are coming, it’s not a small city anymore. It’s growing. The word is out about the city around the world. People are coming from everywhere now to see the beautiful beaches, the skyline, St. Armands and Main Street. It’s becoming a bigger destination than some people want, but we need to prepare for that. And I think it’s going to be a fun place for us to be. – ALEX MAHADEVAN

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SIESTA KEY 6100 Midnight Pass Road $5,999,000 | Web ID A4108479 Cheryl Loeffler & Martie Lieberman 941.302.9674

MYAKKA RIVER TRAILS

SIESTA KEY

800 North River Road $2,395,000 | Web ID A4126653 Joel Schemmel 941.587.4894

842 Mangrove Point Road $2,780,000 | Web ID A4101670 Joan Koplin 941.315.3221

SIESTA KEY

INDIAN BEACH

5827 Riegels Harbor Road $2,099,000 | Web ID A3998887 Judie Berger 941.928.3424

914 Indian Beach Drive $2,095,000 | Web ID A4103735 Joel Schemmel 941.587.4894

RITZ-CARLTON | THE RESIDENCES 1111 Ritz-Carlton Drive $1,100,000 | Web ID A3992638 Joel Schemmel 941.587.4894

VENICE 4700 Lemon Bay Drive $1,058,000 | Web ID A4102492 Carol Clark & Paul Clark 941.350.4500

VENETIAN GOLF & RIVER CLUB 173 Portofino Drive $764,900 | Web ID N5900471 Chris & Elizabeth Shiparski 941.375.1148

SORRENTO WOODS 1309 Vermeer Drive $475,000 | Web ID A4120163 Charlotte Hedge & Tom Hedge Jr. 941.350.0100

INDIAN BEACH 840 Indian Beach Drive $1,995,000 | Web ID A4103758 Joel Schemmel 941.587.4894

SUNSET PLACE 144 Puesta Del Sol $999,900 | Web ID A4112475 Tamara & Todd Currey 941.587.1776

AQUALANE ESTATES 1501 Ridgewood Lane $719,000 | Web ID A4112340 Tamara & Todd Currey 941.587.1776

MANASOTA KEY 5030 North Beach Road #4 $629,900 | Web ID N5904550 Bonye Smart 941.445.1501

GOLDEN BEACH | VENICE ISLAND

UNIVERSITY PARK

700 Golden Beach Boulevard #118 $449,500 | Web ID N5904589 Bonnie Price 941.350.3362

7315 Windemere Lane $449,000 | Web ID A4120519 Gloria Bracciano & Greg Van Natter 786.348.9488

RENTALS

CASEY KEY 2509 Casey Key Road $5,695,000 | Web ID A4126573 Valerie Dall’Acqua 941.445.7295

SIESTA KEY

COUNTRY CLUB EAST 7222 Belleisle Glen $399,000 | Web ID A4100808 Laura Stavola 941.447.4875

280 Golden Gate Point #5 $3,795,000 | Web ID A4111743 Joel Schemmel & Cheryl Loeffler 941.587.4894

SIESTA KEY

RIVIERA DUNES

1145 Horizon View Drive $1,590,000 | Web ID A4120317 Judie Berger 941.928.3424

809 3rd Street East $1,199,995 | Web ID A4105506 Arnie DuFort 941.224.8602

WEST OF TRAIL

LAKEWOOD RANCH CC

3811 Camino Real $959,000 | Web ID A3998361 Joel Schemmel 941.587.4894

VENICE ISLAND 601 Laguna Drive $550,000 Gwen Heggan 941.468.1297

AQUA

4740 Ocean Boulevard Parcel 2 $2,125,000 | Web ID A3996612 Peter Laughlin 941.356.8428

COUNTRY CLUB VILLAGE 13639 Legends Walk Terrace $990,000 | Web ID A4126982 Jim Soda & Stacy Haas-Goodwin 941.961.5857

11A

2309 Alameda Avenue $2,999,000 | Web ID A4107189 Steve Wexler 941.586.1124

NORTH VENICE FARMS 3157 Ewing Drive $1,875,000 | Web ID A3988911 Carol Clark & Paul Clark 941.350.4500

THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

INDIAN BEACH

BRADENTON 1717 71st Street NW $2,250,000 | Web ID M5842256 Cindy Pierro 941.920.6818

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7017 Kingsmill Court $789,999 | Web ID A4112117 Gloria Bracciano & Greg Van Natter 786.348.9488

VENICE ISLAND

COUNTRY CLUB EAST

1150 Tarpon Center Drive #109 $549,000 | Web ID N5782885 Stephen Lingley 941.809.7580

LAKEWOOD RANCH 12547 Highfield Circle $335,000 | Web ID A3996524 Laura Stavola 941.447.4875

14614 Newtonmore Lane $499,500 | Web ID A4120054 Laura Stavola 941.447.4875

PALMA SOLA PARK 1209 Santiago Drive $335,000 | Web ID A4127094 Martha Marlar 941.812.0455

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THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

Goodwill Ambassadors mingle at social event

COPS CORNER

JULY 18

END OF DAYS 10:44 a.m. — 200 block of South Palm Avenue Suspicion Person: Security at a church reported that a man was in the balcony area, talking to himself and making statements such as, “I am the apocalypse and armageddon.” A police officer escorted the man out of the church to further discuss his statements and assess his state of mind. After an assessment, the officer determined the man did not appear to be a threat to himself or others.

JULY 19

UNHAPPY MEAL 3 p.m. — 3800 block of South Tamiami Trail Suspicion Person: A man was walking on the sidewalk in front of a fast-food restaurant, yelling obscenities at passing cars. An officer made contact with the man, who said he was angry because someone in a car had yelled a vulgar insult at him. The officer stated that yelling at people passing the restaurant was not going to help his cause, and that he would be trespassed from the area if he continued. The man left the area without further incident. BARRIER TO ENTRY 9 p.m. — 900 block of North Beneva Road Criminal Mischief: A restaurant owner reported someone had damaged the front door of the business overnight. Because the damage to the door actually made the door harder to open, officers discounted the possibility of the incident being an attempted burglary.

G

oodwill Manasota hosted a social for Goodwill Ambassadors to meet and socialize with one another July 16, at Suncoast Porsche. The event included food, drinks and music for guests to enjoy while networking with Goodwill supporters and leaders from the organization.

JULY 19

GAS GUZZLER 11:41 a.m. — 1600 block of North Washington Boulevard Civil Problem: After pumping her gas, a woman drove away from a gas station with the nozzle still in the vehicle’s tank. The driver stopped, and an employee retrieved the nozzle. The woman said she was in a hurry to return her rental car and left the area. The employee said the nozzle could be repaired and that he did not want to pursue the issue.

– AMANDA MORALES

Vice President of the Goodwill Foundation Veronica Brandon Miller and Lisa Eding

JULY 20

BUZZKILL 1:22 p.m. — 2100 block of 13th Street Theft — From Building $300 to $20,000: The owner of a landscaping company reported that two of his chainsaws had been stolen. The owner said he purchased the company two weeks earlier, and an employee informed him that a former employee had taken the chainsaws and pawned them. Officers were able to locate one of the chainsaws, which the former employee had pawned 10 days earlier.

Photos by Amanda Morales

Goodwill Manasota President and CEO Bob Rosinsky addresses guests. Stanley Eding and Steve Altier with Bernie and Jayna Hamel

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THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

13A

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ampers walked a fine line — a tightrope, actually — at the Sarasota Christian School Circus Camp. For a week, children from kindergarten to sixth grade ran away with the circus. The goal of the camp was for students to learn the art of circus performing, led by Sarasota Christian School teacher and former circus performer Bonnie Shine. Shine also enlists the help of hand-balancing professionals of Duo Romanesc, Anthony Congdon and Ian Laidlaw. Among the moves that campers learned was the Spanish web, an aerial circus skill that required them to climb a rope suspended in the air and spin. Children also learned juggling and how to build a human pyramid and enjoyed carnival games. The theme even extended to snack time, which featured popcorn and circus animals crackers. At the conclusion of the camp, parents watched a performance of the new skills campers learned. The last day of camp this season was July 10.

Johnny Cavoli builds a fort with hula-hoops.

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peter g. laughlin, Broker associate 941.356.8428 peter.laughlin@sothebysrealty.com | peterglaughlin.com sotheby’s international realty® and the sotheby’s international realty logo are registered service marks used with permission. each office is independently owned and operated. equal Housing opportunity. property information herein is derived from various sources including, but not limited to, county records and multiple listing services, and may include approximations. All information is deemed accurate and neither suggests nor infers that sotheby’s international realty participated as either the listing or cooperating agent or broker in the sale or purchase of the properties depicted.

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Brianne Gamelin gets some help from Anthony Congnon.


JULY 23, 2015

SPORTS

Setting the

STAGE

The Sarasota Heat 16U travel softball team will compete in the ASA National Championships for the first time July 26 through Aug. 2, in Chattanooga, Tenn. JEN BLANCO SPORTS EDITOR

S

arasota Heat 16U catcher and rising Lakewood Ranch High sophmore Morgan Cummins’ eyes light up at the mere mention of the ASA National Championships. It’s been six years since Cummins, along with fellow Heat teammate Kourtney Linn, made her national championship debut. The two were playing on the Heat’s 10U team at the time. “ASA Nationals is really big in softball,” Cummins says. “It’s cool to be able to say that you have gone before and to tell the other girls how special it is.” Since then, Cummins and Linn have been focused on helping the Heat return to the national stage. The 16U team has fallen short in its last seven ASA National Championship qualifiers — but not this year. The 16U team qualified for the ASA National Championships, which take place July 26 through Aug. 2, in Chattanooga, Tenn., by winning the South Florida ASA Qualifier June 6 and June 7, in Plantation. “It was a relief,” says Linn, who will be a senior at Sarasota High this fall. “There was a lot of weight lifted off our shoulders knowing we’re the first 16s team to go.” “I was pleasantly surprised,”

coach Tony Cummins says. “Our main focus isn’t about winning championships but, rather, getting kids recruited for college. We are just (fortunate) to have the right mix of girls who play really well together.” Since winning its qualifier, the Heat have been busy working on basic fundamentals and skills that they hope will set them apart from the competition. At the beginning of the summer, Tony Cummins listed the specific areas the girls needed to work on to be successful on the diamond. During each practice, he picks one area for the girls to focus on, so they’ll be ready for any situation. “We’ve been doing a lot of detail-oriented work,” Tony Cummins says. “We’re hoping that if they practice enough the right (way) then, if they get behind, they’ll know what to do in the back of their heads. We’ve got some incredibly hard-working girls.” The Heat practice three days a week — one day of which is spent in the batting cages at Extra Innings. In addition, when the team isn’t competing in a tournament, the girls will scrimmage one of the other Heat teams or have a three-hour practice on the weekend. It took the girls a solid month after their respective high school seasons ended to get used to playing together again, especially the

girls from district rivals Lakewood Ranch, Braden River and Sarasota. “It’s definitely interesting,” Tony Cummins says. “They have to set their high school pride aside and play together as a unit. It’s difficult. We call it ‘knocking off the high school rust.’” The Heat spent the summer competing in qualifiers across Florida, as well as one in Chattanooga, Tenn., and also has competed in tournaments in New Jersey and Colorado. After taking eight days off, the Heat boarded a plane for the Atlanta Legacy Showcase July 17 through July 19. From there, the team will head to Chattanooga to prepare for the ASA National Championships. Although the Heat have aspirations of winning a national title, the girls are seeking to use the experience as a way to get recognized and hopefully recruited for college. Seven of the Heat’s players already have verbally committed to colleges, with several more having either secured offers or drawing interest. “There’s going to be a lot of college coaches there, so I just want to do everything I can to help the other girls get offers and commitments by the end of the summer,” says Cummins, who verbally committed to LSU. “That’s the biggest goal other than winning.” Contact Jen Blanco at jblanco@ yourobserver.com.

Photos by Jen Blanco

Second baseman Hannah Roberson works on fielding drills during practice July 9.

“Our main focus isn’t about winning championships but, rather, getting kids recruited for college. We are just (fortunate) to have the right mix of girls who play really well together.” — Tony Cummins, coach

SARASOTA HEAT 16U ROSTER n Braden River High Brooke Farrow Casey Farrow n Lakewood Ranch High Morgan Cummins Gretchen Ebert Maddie Koczersut Maddy Yoder n Manatee High Kelli Gault n Riverview High Marina Clark Deanna Stevens n Sarasota High Alexis Albero Brittany Bendel Alexis Johns Kourtney Linn Hannah Roberson n Bishop Verot High Erin Kyle n Venice High Carryne Martin Antonia Rosa

The Sarasota Heat 16U softball team will compete in the ASA National Championships July 26 through Aug. 2, in Chattanooga, Tenn.


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WEEKLY ROUNDUP

ODA scores hoop dreams

F

ormer NBA player and Out-of-Door Academy basketball coach Marcus Liberty hosted the Liberty Edge basketball camp July 6 through July 9, at ODA’s upper school campus. More than 30 players participated in this year’s camp, which was designed to provide players with the fundamentals they need to improve their game. Players learned a variety of basketball skills and techniques, including shooting form, defensive positioning, rebounding, fullcourt press strategies. – JEN BLANCO

15A

THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

ODA freshman Declan McCann enjoyed learning more about the game and working with the coaches.

Joe Kelley, 14, plays basketball for Sarasota Christian.

Photos by Jen Blanco

Cobey Harraway, 14, said his favorite part of camp was the one-on-one drills. Sarasota Military Academy sophomore Garrett Gill goes up for a shot.

Check out what’s happening This Week In Sarasota! THEATER

Back to School Physicals

Starlite Players shines spotlight on local playwrights

Since opening The Starlite Room last year, owner Tyler Yurckonis has carved out a niche for his swanky lounge and restaurant. Not only is it a place to grab a classic cocktail, it’s also quickly becoming a hangout for performing arts enthusiasts and a hub for entertainment …

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Sports Physicals

Sprains Strains and Broken Bones

25 School & Sports PHYSICALS

READ MORE AT THISWEEKINSARASOTA.COM

NEWS

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Evie’s on Main Street to open Sept. 2


Classifieds 28A Games 27A Real Estate 22A Weather 27A

JULY 23, 2015

YOUR NEIGHBORS THREE THINGS

The Selby house was built in the mid-1920s on the property.

Attention to details is key in these homes. PAGE 21A

CALENDAR

SELBY SUCCESS

How did the gardens grow? Check out what’s happening this week. PAGE 20A

Marie Selby Botanical Gardens celebrates 40 years of growing the gardens to become a world-renowned facility.

WEATHER AMANDA MORALES STAFF WRITER

A least tern and her two baby chicks are spotted on Siesta Key. PAGE 27A

Marie Selby’s favorite flower was a rose, not an orchid. However, 40 years later, it is orchids and other epiphyte plants that have put Marie Selby Botanical Gardens on the map as a world-class botanical gardens. “We lucked out, it could have been a prickly succulent,” said Cathy Layton, chairwoman of Selby Gardens’s board. “One of the wonders of Selby is that the early brains involved decided of all the plants that they could focus on that they would do epiphytes ,and that our culture would come

to love and appreciate epiphytes.” Epiphytes, such as orchids, bromeliads, aroids, cacti, mosses and ferns, are easy to spot due to the fact that they grow upon or are attached to another plant or object for physical support. Orchid-lovers can thank Dr. Carl Luer for the decision to take the gardens in the direction toward epiphytes. But first he had to secure the grounds. BILL AND MARIE SELBY

Bill and Marie Selby started visiting Sarasota in 1909 — they loved spending time outdoors. Bill Selby, a sportsman who had made his fortune through his family’s

REAL ESTATE Casey Key home sells for $5,392,500. PAGE 22A Collection horticulturist Tracy Calla walks through the greenhouse.

oil and gas company, spent his time hunting and fishing. In the mid-1920s they decided to build their retirement home on five acres along the Sarasota bayfront. Marie Selby planned the landscaping around the home and planted flowers along the roadway and peninsula of the property. Without any heirs to their estate, the Selbys created the William G. and Marie Selby Foundation with Palmer Bank as its trustee. Bill Selby died in 1956; a year before his death he set up a charitable trust with $3 million. In June 1972, a year after the death of Marie Selby, it was announced that she willed her home, grounds and adjacent vacant lot to the north of the property to be used as a botanical garden. She left $2 million to provide an endowment for the gardens’ operation and maintenance; the remaining $16.5 million from the estate was left to the foundation. Dr. Carl Luer, a surgeon in the area, served as a director for the board at Palmer Bank. In a paper Luer submitted to “Lankesteriana,” Lankester Botanical Garden’s scientific journal, he details how he was able to convince then Palmer Bank Board Chairman Bill Coleman about the feasibility of creating a botanical garden. When Luer presented the idea to the board, initially there was no enthusiasm. But, in private, Coleman was receptive to Luer’s proposal. The board voted in favor of Luer creating Marie Selby Botanical Gardens. But the gardens faced opposition from the City Commission and the city’s building, planning and zoning boards. Among the concerns about the property and gardens were traffic,

SIGNATURE EVENT A six-week-long orchid extravaganza will open to the public Feb. 14. Visit selby.org for more information.

FUN FACTS n An average of two weddings per week are held on the property every year. n Selby Gardens’ first animal mascot was a stray cat named “Bleu Bayou” because he was found along the shores of the Hudson Bayou. n Selby Gardens’ scientists have conducted more than 200 research expeditions to more than 30 countries all over the world. n Selby Gardens is the world’s only botanical garden that specializes in epiphytes (plants that grow on other plants without taking any nutrition from the host plant). n The plants in Selby Gardens’ living collection total more than 20,000. n The Ann Goldstein Children’s Rainforest Garden, which opened November 2013, is the world’s only outdoor, elevated rainforest garden. n The logo for the 40th anniversary uses a print from the Selby Gardens rare book collection that includes works that date back to the 1770s.


SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

taxing, parking and the impact on the neighbors. At the end of 1972, the city granted permission to build the gardens. Luer sought consultation from experts at the University of Florida and New York Botanical Garden. Once it was determined that epiphytes would thrive at the location, he sought the help of one the best-known orchid scientists at the time, Cal Dodson, to help guide Selby. Luer went as far as flying down to Ecuador, where Dodson was living at the time, to persuade him to join the team at Selby. “There was really a unique camaraderie between those early people realizing what potentially important work they were doing,” says Director of Botany Bruce Holst. Holst has called the gardens and labs at Selby home for 20 years. In 1973, Dodson was named as the first executive director for Selby Gardens. The first two people Dodson hired were gardeners to help tame what had become an overgrown property. Slowly the staff grew to include a secretary and two doctoral candidates. The date of July 7, 1975, is cited as the official opening of the gardens; admission was $1.

|

THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

17A

TIMELINE

June 1972 It is announced that Marie Selby states in her will that her property be used as a botanical garden.

Orchids bloom in the workspace in the conservatory.

“Marie probably knew what an epiphyte was, but she had no idea what the gardens would become.”

1972 By the end of the year, the city of Sarasota grants exemption for Marie Selby Botanical Gardens to inhabit the bayfront property. 1973 Marie Selby Botanical Gardens is founded, and the historic Christy Payne Mansion on the adjoining property is purchased. July, 7, 1975 The gardens officially opens to the public.

— Director of Botany Bruce Holst

SEE SELBY PAGE 18A Butterfly garden curator and volunteer Barbara Feinberg works in the garden.

Grover Yancy mows the Great Lawn in 1980. He was Marie Selby’s gardener since 1961 and continued his employment as a gardener for Selby Gardens until he retired in 1992.

1975 The first issue of Selby Botanical Gardens peer-reviewed research journal, “Selbyana,” is published. 1979 Mulford B. Foster Bromeliad Identification Center is established. 1998 The Christy Payne Mansion is added to the National Register of Historic Places. November 2013 The Ann Goldstein Children’s Rainforest Garden opens.

Courtesy photo

Marie Selby Botanical Gardens founder Dr. Carl Luer chats with Selby Gardens President and CEO Jennifer Rominiecki.

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THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

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and Ecuador. “It hasn’t changed much in the scope of what it does,” says Bruce Holst, director of botany. “What has changed is that over the last 40 years, and in the 20 I’ve been here, we’ve added a tremendous number of collections to our herbarium and to our living collection. We’ve created a very, very rich environment to study tropical plants.” This year makes the 40th year that Selby Gardens has been in full bloom. Events throughout the year will celebrate the milestone. “While we are certainly a Sarasota treasure, our collection is actually at the world-class level of excellence,” Jennifer Rominiecki, CEO and president for Marie Selby Botanical Gardens. “We have scientists, researchers, botanists and horticulturists that visit us from all over the world because of the depth and breadth of the collection we have here.” Portraits of the gardens’ namesake, Marie Selby, hang in virtually every building on the property. This includes the entryway to the horticulture building, where so much of the gardens’ reputation has been built through its work with epiphytes, long after Marie got a chance to see it blossom. “Marie probably knew what an epiphyte was,” Holst said. “But she had no idea what the gardens would become.”

SELBY FROM PAGE 17A

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Pulling into Palm Avenue from Mound Street, visitors cross over a quilt of faded crimson-andbrown Augusta Block bricks — Selby Gardens’ own yellow-brick road of sorts. The gardens and property provide a snapshot of early 1900s Florida dripping with tropical foliage. An hour before the gates open to the public, the gardens are abuzz with volunteers circulating with wheelbarrows filled with tools for their morning tasks. Across from the Christy Payne Mansion a group of volunteers are spotted along the administration building combing for weeds between trees and shrubs. The gardens survive and thrive under the supervision of a staff of 46 employees and a network of 642 volunteers who contribute an estimated 61,000 hours per year. Volunteers perform tasks that range from laying mulch to serving as curators for the butterfly garden. That tropical environment at Selby Gardens is maintained with the more than 20,000 greenhouse plants that include some specimens that have been kept alive for more than 40 years and come from the botany department’s various expeditions to exotic locations in Brazil, Belize

“We have scientists, researchers, botanists and horticulturists that visit us from all over the world because of the depth and breadth of the collection we have here.” — Jennifer Rominiecki, CEO and president for Marie Selby Botanical Gardens

VIDEO Go behind the green at Marie Selby Botanical Gardens with a series of exclusive interviews at YourObserver.com. The first video is on volunteer Barbara Fein-

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Ducks are among the wildlife that includes cats and birds that roam the garden.

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COFFEY & COMPANY

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THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

19A

Brandy Coffey ABR,CIPS,CLHMS,CRS,RSPS,TRC Licensed Real Estate Broker Keller Williams Luxury Homes International

Golf Course to Gulf Coast Luxury

917 MACEWEN DR, OSPREY Custom built 4,068 SF, 3 bed +den (possible 4th BR), 4 bath oversized 3-car garage, in prestigious Oaks Golf and Country Club. Home features open floor plan, Chef’s kitchen, travertine flooring, custom pool/ $1,195,000 spa, full summer kitchen, tranquil views of the lake, and more!

1358 HARBOR DR, SARASOTA Situated on a prime homesite in Harbor Acres w/180 degree views of downtown SRQ, the Ringling Bridge, Sarasota Bay, and amber sunsets! Private 5 bed/5.5 bath estate with elaborate security system, hurricane shutters, and is gated. Spacious kitchen w/a large island, 4 ovens, wine fridge, recipe desk, solid wood cabinetry, $4,750,000 and a 6 grill Thermador gas range. The large deep water boat dock will accommodate a 75 ft yacht.

296 OSPREY POINT DR, OSPREY Spacious 7,092 SF home located in the exclusive Oaks Country Club! This

5342 HIDDEN HARBOR DR, SARASOTA Secluded Jewel on Siesta Key! A tropical oasis with almost an acre

home features many custom design features with soaring ceilings, double crown molding, and travertine flooring throughout. Gourmet kitchen featuring a climate controlled wine storage room, large pantry, upgraded stainless appliances, and views of $1,599,900 the pool. 2 master suites, a deluxe office, custom media/theater room, and private guest suites.

401 N POINT RD. #704, OSPREY Panoramic views of the Intracoastal Waterway and the Gulf of Mexico! The Ducal offers the ideal floor plan for entertaining w/a 27X24 great room. 4 BR, 3 BA. Plenty of amenities at the Oaks Preserve!

of land on Roberts Bay. Large private Bayou with mangrove peninsula. Deep water basin on a protected waterway with two boat docks. If you are looking for an opportunity to build an extraordinary new residence, this amazing property is probably $3,150,000 the best kept secret in all of Sarasota!

1430 POINT CRISP RD, SARASOTA Fantastic opportunity to own nearly 3/4 of an acre on Point Crisp! Stunning

$799,900

views surround this exceptional Siesta Key property with breathtaking open bay views on both the north and south ends. This property boasts nearly 371 ft of open bay frontage. This 1950’s “Old Florida” style home was once the home of author John D. $2,830,000 MacDonald. 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, and a separate guest house with 2 bedrooms and 1 bathroom.

436 E MACEWEN DR, OSPREY Gorgeous golf course and water views from this 3 bed/3.5 bath + Office home

3505 WHITE LANE, SARASOTA Gorgeous Arthur Rutenberg 4 bed, 3 full/2 half bath home on the Hansen Bayou! Easy

located in The Oaks Golf & Country Club. Open great room floor plan, formal living & dining rooms, crown moulding, pool/ spa, wood flooring, & more! Newer A/C, home has been re-plumbed, and pool has been resurfaced. Enjoy all of the amenities $649,900 The Oaks Country Club has to offer.

boating access to the Intracoastal. Gourmet kitchen with a gas range, solid wood cabinetry, granite counter tops, custom backsplash, top of the line appliances, and wine refrigeration. Outdoor living area with kitchen & fireplace, Infinity Pool with waterfall, spa, 60’ Dock w/lift (10k lb.) boat & (2) jet skis, Pella windows, Loft/Bonus Room. Furnishings and jet skis are negotiable. $2,449,000

77 OSPREY POINT DR, OSPREY Gorgeous Home in the Oaks Country Club! This home is perfect for

517 BLUE HERON DR, ANNA MARIA This 4 bed, 3.5 bath elevated custom home is perfect for entertaining

7322 WESTMORELAND DR, SARASOTA Enjoy breathtaking panoramic views of Sarasota Bay and the city

416 BAYSHORE DR, OSPREY Custom, one of a kind 2 bed/3.5 bath home in Osprey. 180 degree views of Little

entertaining with a unique courtyard plan. Stunning lake views from every room bring the outdoor beauty inside.This home offers a spacious kitchen for preparing your favorite meal and a lg lanai & pool, perfect for relaxation. Enjoy all of the amenities $549,900 the Oaks has to offer.

from this oversized lot situated in Whitefield Estates. This bayfront property boasts over one acre, 156 feet of direct bayfront, a private deep-water dock, and a large, open pool deck. Excellent opportunity to build your dream home or renovate an existing $ 1,520,000 1960’s home!

with large open spaces and a light airy ambiance. Chef inspired kitchen, private elevator, pool/spa w/summer kitchen, custom dock w/7,500lb boat lift, & more! Enjoy gorgeous views from nearly every room of the house as well as your private $1,995,000 balconies!

Sarasota Bay with a private boat dock. Spacious kitchen with Neff cabinetry, granite countertops, SS appliances, & wine refrigerator. Expansive first floor bonus room with kitchenette and full bath. Large, private 1 acre lot. Bay front pool and spa.

$1,599,900

941.284.4474 Cell Phone | 877.308.6311 Toll Free | 888.756.6624 Toll Free Fax

177125

22 S. Links Ave., Ste #204, Sarasota, FL 34236 www.insarasotarealestate.com


20A

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THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

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File photo

Jamie Overmiller greets guests at the Greater Sarasota Chamber of Commerce Power Hour Luncheon in April, at Salute! Restaurant.

BUSINESS 175457

FRIDAY, JULY 24 TOTAL WELLNESS

POWER HOUR LUNCHEON Runs from 11:45 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Chart House Restaurant, 201 Gulf of Mexico Drive, Longboat Key. Power Hour Luncheon is an opportunity for Greater Sarasota Chamber of Commerce members and potential members to meet, greet and eat. Guests have the opportunity to introduce themselves to the group. Admission is $20 for members and $30 for non-members. Registration is required. Call 556-4034.

COMMUNITY SATURDAY, JULY 25

CAFFEINE AND GASOLINE Runs from 8 to 10 a.m. at Phillippi Estate Park, 5500 S. Tamiami Trail. SRQcars Caffeine and Gasoline is a monthly car show, hosted by Sunset Automotive Group, that takes place the last Saturday of the month at Phillippi Estate Park. Cars of all makes and models are welcome to participate in the lineup. There will be free coffee and donuts. Admission is free. Visit srqcars.com.

175759

RUMMAGE SALE Runs from 8 a.m. to noon at Sarasota County Farm Bureau,

7289 Palmer Blvd. The Learning and Families Summer Rummage Sale will donate 100% of the proceeds to the homeschool group. Any items you would like to donate for the sale can be dropped off at the location from 5 to 7 p.m. Friday, July 24. Email LAFnews@gmail.com.

SATURDAY, JULY 25, AND SUNDAY, JULY 26

MYSTIC FAIRE Runs from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Sarasota Municipal Auditorium, 801 N. Tamiami Trail. The 5th annual Mystic Faire will feature all things metaphysical. The event is the largest psychic fair in Southwest Florida with more than 75 exhibitors and more than 25 psychics. Listen to free lectures and visit psychics, healers and vendors. Admission is $7 for one day or $10 for both days. Visit srqauditorium.com.

SUNDAY, JULY 26

GULF COAST ST. DAVID’S WELSH SOCIETY SUNDAY BRUNCH Starts at 1 p.m. at Turtles Restaurant on Little Sarasota Bay, 8875 Midnight Pass Road. Learn about Welsh culture, songs and traditions while getting to know club members. Tickets are $9.99 plus tax and include a mimosa with brunch. To RSVP, contact Ronnie Crain at 922-4801.

Daisy Cotton COOL, CASUAL CLOTHING 20% OFF STORE WIDE SALE

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941.925.5833

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BEST BET THURSDAY, JULY 23

SAMPLE SARASOTA Starts at 5 p.m. at Mandeville Beer Garden, 428 Lemon Ave. The Central Sarasota Farmers Market, Geraldson Community Farm and Edible Sarasota present Sample Sarasota, an evening foodie market. Enjoy free samples, locally crafted beer and locally produced food from a variety of vendors, including restaurants, bakeries, farms, food producers and other local businesses. Admission is free. Visit the Central Sarasota Farmers Market Facebook page: facebook. com/CentralSarasotaFarmersMarket.

ENTERTAINMENT SUNDAY, JULY 26

TOUR OF SCOTLAND SCOTCH TASTING Runs from 6 to 8:30 p.m. at VOM FASS, 1469 Main St. The VOM FASS Tour of Scotland Scotch Tasting will explore from the Lowlands to the Highlands and Speyside to Islay to bring the tastes of each region. Indulge in independently bottled Scotches served by a well-informed staff. Admission is $35 per person. Must be 21 years or older. Call 365-2137.

To see a complete listing of events, visit

YourObserver.com

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SARASOTA OBSERVER

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21A

THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

T HR EE T HINGS

All in the DETAILS

ON A GRAND SCALE 1409 S. LAKE SHORE DRIVE

This gated Oyster Bay estate was originally designed by famed architect Tim Siebert back in 1957 but has been substantially updated and enlarged over the years. What makes it special is the dramatic living/dining area enclosed in glass and overlooking the pool and .83-acre waterfront lot, complete with a dock. Other details include a stone fireplace, vaulted ceilings and oak floors. It’s a large expansive family home, with a total of six bedrooms and 5,615 square feet. You’ll even find a pecky cypress guest cottage, said to be brought over from Siesta Key years ago. Priced at $3 million. For more information, call Kelly Quigley (356-9954) or Linda Dickinson (350-3304) of Michael Saunders & Co.

Plan and proportion are the hallmarks of any well-designed house, but it’s the details that make the difference. ROBERT PLUNKET STAFF WRITER

C

arefully thought out choices when it comes to flooring, windows, finishes and decorative elements can transform an ordinary home into something special. Some

are there from the beginning; others are added during renovations and remodeling. Here are three Sarasota homes currently on the market that illustrate the enormous difference that attention to detail can make. MORE HOMES ON PAGE 24A

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REAL ESTATE

22A

SARASOTA OBSERVER

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THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

Four-bedroom Casey Key home sells for $5,392,500 ADAM HUGHES RESEARCH EDITOR

A

home on Casey Key tops all transactions in this week’s real estate. Donald and Shirley Pence, of Sarasota, sold their home at 3601 Casey Key Road to Sean Murray and Deborah Henretta, of Cincinnati, for $5,392,500. Built in 2004, it has four bedrooms, six and a half baths, a pool and 6,991 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $6.6 million in 2005.

SARASOTA Oyster Bay Estates Peggy March, trustee, of Sarasota, sold the home at 1511 S. Lake Shore Drive to James Rutledge, trustee, of Sarasota, for $1 million. Built in 1965, it has four bedrooms, three baths, two half-baths, a pool and 3,847 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $900,000 in 2001. Sarasota Bay Club Sarasota Bay Club LLC sold the Unit 814 condominium at 1301 N. Tamiami Trail to Leslie and Lois Fishman, of Sarasota, for $980,000. Built in 2000, it has two bedrooms, two baths and 1,772 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $595,500 in 2000.

9008 Midnight Pass Road 1 A4108038 $729,000 Karen Cash Greco

Siesta Key 941-966-8000 941-504-6927

516 Tamiami S Trail 205 Nokomis/North Venice A4121731 $565,000 941-966-8000 Robert Moffatt & Peggy Wellman 941-374-0811

Weber Joan Verizzo, trustee, of Sarasota, sold the home at 1008 Sylvan Drive to Emanuel Zlotolow, trustee, and 1275 Bayshore LLC for $950,000. Built in 1958, it has three bedrooms, two and a half baths, a pool and 1,586 square feet of living area. The Landings Elizabeth McClellan Price, trustee, sold the home at 5134 S. Kestral Park Way to Danielle Beatt, of Sarasota, for $810,000. Built in 1987, it has three bedrooms, four baths, a pool and 3,662 square feet of living area.

Bruce Fox, of Sarasota, sold his home at 1669 Landings Lane to Rafael Miccio and Eleonora

Lodi, of Sarasota, for $527,000. Built in 1987, it has four bedrooms, four and a half baths, a pool and 4,306 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $465,000 in 1988. Kentwood Estates Thomas and Jennifer FitzGerald, of Geneva, N.Y., sold their home at 1550 Eastbrook Drive to David and Evelyn Williams, of Winston Salem, N.C., for $570,000. Built in 1974, it has three bedrooms, three baths, a pool and 2,596 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $380,000 in 2012. Lewis Combs Equine Real Estate LLC sold the home at 1640 Waldemere St. to John and Stephanie Flores, of Sarasota, for $569,000. Built in 1950, it has three bedrooms, two baths and 1,826 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $669,000 in 2006. La Linda Terrace Thomas Veale, trustee, sold the home at 2164 Arlington St. to Lauren and Todd Brue, of Sarasota, for $450,000. Built in 2007, it has four bedrooms, three baths, a pool and 2,380 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $417,000 in 2008.

RESIDENTIAL REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS

JULY 6- JULY 10

Other top sales by area JULY 6 TO JULY 10 SIESTA

SARASOTA

$2.2 million Stephan Witzer, trustee, sold the home at 7909 Midnight Pass Road to Mark Ruzycki and Teresa Bauer, of Ontario, Canada, for $2.2 million. Built in 1991, it has four bedrooms, four and a half baths, a pool and 4,872 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $1.45 million in 2012.

$1.56 million RGB-Architects PA sold two properties at 2315 Mietaw Drive to Richard Rostant and Kathy StoutLabauve, of Sarasota, for $1.56 million. The first was built in 2014 and has four bedrooms, four and a half baths, a pool and 3,088 square feet of living area. The second, built in 2014, has two bedrooms, one bath and 597 square feet of living area.

PALMER RANCH $664,500 Linda Slack, trustee, of Sarasota, sold the home at 4700 White Tail Lane to Thomas and Rebecca Williams, of Bethesda, Md., for $664,500. Built in 1990, it has three bedrooms, two baths, two half-baths, a pool and 3,007 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $348,000 in 1997.

OSPREY $515,000 Janet Shalkop, of Osprey, sold her home at 177 Sea Anchor Drive to Lauren St. Louis, of Osprey, for $515,000. Built in 1982, it has two bedrooms, two baths, a pool and 2,281 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $60,000 in 1982.

MORE LISTINGS PAGE 24A

8994 Wildlife Loop A4121431 $725,000 Kim & Michael Ogilvie

Sarasota 941-951-6660 941-376-1717

4923 Sabal Lake Circle A4126747 $599,900 Stephanie Bugatti

Sarasota 941-966-8000 941-504-0978

20 Whispering Sands Drive 204 A4121324 $599,000 Michael Bruno

1771 Ringling Boulevard 1211 A4123548 $549,900 Elizabeth Gardini

Sarasota 941-951-6660 941-356-0096

3870 Spyglass Hill Road A4110974 $519,000 Kristina Talkie & Judy Arreola

Sarasota 941-349-3444 941-266-8658

436 Bellini Circle A4127146 $489,000 Susan Mitchell

Siesta Key 941-966-8000 941-320-3229

Nokomis/North Venice 941-951-6660 941-780-5085

1366 Roberts Bay Lane A4111505 $2,195,000 Alix Wexler & Paul Romley

9150 Blind Pass Rd #504 A4112691 $474,900 Team Dunn

Siesta Key 941-349-3444 941-350-2742

Siesta Key 941-349-3444 941-809-2154

8776 Midnight Pass Rd 105C A4123910 $444,444 Marlene & George Marshall

Siesta Key 941-349-3444 941-539-8850

O

ur exclusive global connections place our entire collection in front of millions of prospective buyers and increase awareness of Florida’s Gulf Coast as an incomparable destination.

LOCAL LEGACY. GLOBAL VISION. 3960 Torrey Pines Blvd A4122884 $440,000 Kristine Niehaus & Christy Neff

7303 Periwinkle Drive A4117760 $1,980,000 Anne-Marie Tardif

Sarasota 941-349-3444 941-376-4950

1878 Mesic Hammock Way N5904484 $435,000 Michelle Hupp

®

®

Venice 941-485-5421 941-773-5464

Sarasota 941-349-3444 941-350-3077

6237 Donnington Court A4111966 $359,000 Lyn Purmort

Sarasota 941-966-8000 941-928-7472

2213 Sonoma Drive E A4123071 $349,900 Victoria Stultz

Nokomis/North Venice 941-966-8000 941-387-5676

104 Albatross Road D5905773 $349,000 Joanne Pattona

Rotonda West 941-473-7750 941-626-0880

2516 Wilkinson Circle A4127074 $349,000 Lee Byron and Sue Keal

Sarasota 941-349-3444 941-350-5542

5046 Blvd Of The Roses A4126838 $339,000 Judy Nimz

Sarasota 941-951-6660 941-374-0196

128 Inlets Boulevard 128 N5904195 $335,000 Laura Bennawy

Nokomis/North Venice 941-485-5421 941-416-3132

4853 Sandy Pointe Court A4126928 $329,000 Lenore Treiman

Sarasota 941-966-8000 941-356-9642

10508 Crooked Creek Drive N5903213 $328,000 Scott Johnston

Venice 941-493-2500 941-232-5482


SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

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THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

Jenifer Schwell

TOP BUILDING PERMITS These are the largest city of Sarasota and Sarasota County building permits issued for the week of July 6 through July 10, in order of dollar amounts.

61 S. Boulevard of the Presidents • St. Armands

PERMIT

APPLICANT

1500 North Drive

Pool

Michele McNeill, trustee

$59,287

1839 Alta Vista St.

Deck

Sara Eddy

$47,000

888 Blvd. of the Arts

Renovations

Michael Williams

$35,000

35 Watergate Drive

Alterations

Clare Segall

$30,000

2435 Wood St.

Pool/Deck

Donald Rosenberg

2478 Bahia Vista St.

Windows/Door Joan Loux

1690 Arlington St.

Mechanical

Edmund Bermudez

$13,922

687 Freeling Drive

Dock

Lee Ann Corry

$12,810

1891 Boyce St.

Mechanical

Joan Lyon

$12,665

1350 Main St.

Mechanical

William Tobin

$11,300

941.780.0968

A trusted real estate professional, Jenifer Schwell brings 25 years of in-depth market knowledge and expertise to work on your behalf. Her command of the market and time-tested negotiating experience, often dealing with intricate and complex transactions, produce a flawless transaction without stress or last minute concerns. From the very first meeting to closing and beyond, Jenifer’s guidance makes buying or selling real estate a true pleasure. As a result, she has earned a long list of loyal clients who have bought and sold properties with her many times over, and trust her implicitly. You can be confident you are working with the very best when you choose Jenifer. Please visit JeniferSchwell.michaelsaunders.com to learn more.

C I T Y O F SA RAS O TA ADDRESS

23A

AMOUNT

$27,298 $14,250

SA R A S O TA CO U N T Y ADDRESS

WHAT NAME

AMOUNT

7792 Holiday Drive

Addition

Donald Borowske

$400,000

1639 S. Lake Shore Drive

Addition

Jeffrey Crystal

$200,000

5740 Midnight Pass Road

Remodel

James Risk III

$160,000

1608 Stickney Point Road

Alterations

Robert Westpheling III

$94,000

2325 Majestic Way

Addition

Ted Thompson

$46,000

4240 Breezeway Blvd.

Alterations

Michael Kolligian III

$39,500

2010 Tocobaga Lane

Re-roof

Jeffrey Spotten

$35,700

1505 Pelican Point Drive

Remodel

Michel Tcherevkoff

$33,500

6552 Waterford Circle

Pool/Deck

Vito Abrusci

$32,500

4042 Via Mirada

Pool/Patio

Gertrude Fineroth

$29,500

1058 Hancock Avenue A4126970 $320,000 Scott Haynes

148 Da Vinci Drive A4121921 $289,000 Dan Freed

445 N Orange Avenue 310 A4126717 $237,000 Francoise Borel

1124 N Lake Shore Drive A4122942 $6,395,000 Linda Dickinson & Kim Ogilvie

Sarasota 941-907-9595 941-544-7282

Nokomis/North Venice 941-966-8000 941-735-0770

Sarasota 941-388-4447 941-228-3768

925 Beach Rd 209 A4118588 $319,500 Harvey & Ethel Lovelace

9590 High Gate Drive 1914 A4120594 $275,000 Marilyn Vespoli

4326 Pates Street D5905841 $219,000 Mitch Mesenburg

2007 Guy Peterson modern and a revered Sarasota School of Architecture residence as guest quarters. Exceptional in every way. Siesta Key MLS A4114360 $3,950,000

Source: Sarasota County; city of Sarasota

Siesta Key 941-349-3444 941-586-7390

Sarasota 941-966-8000 201-926-7272

Port Charlotte 941-473-7750 419-357-2954

2244 Siesta Drive A4117196 $299,900 Brian Loebker

2313 Robinson Avenue A4113797 $249,990 Daria Spina

5551 Bentgrass Drive 11-203 A4125323 $129,900 Matthew Cannon

Sarasota 941-349-3444 941-735-4393

1765 Lincoln Park Circle A4113794 $2,195,000 Tony Boothby

Sarasota 941-951-6660 941-799-1948

300 S Pineapple Ave 801N A4110738 $1,999,900 Jonathan Abrams

Sarasota 941-349-3444 941-232-2868

308 Calle Miramar S2 A4118725 $1,850,000 Karen Chandler

Siesta Key 941-349-3444 941-544-4919

285 Lookout Point Drive A4108793 $1,749,000 Victoria Stultz

Osprey 941-966-8000 941-387-5676

4619 Higel Avenue A4121604 $1,590,000 Veronika Bajtala

Siesta Key 941-349-3444 941-504-0307

1044 Tocobaga Lane A4112552 $1,445,000 Sara Ferguson

Sarasota 941-966-8000 941-320-2709

2300 Wason Rd A3993244 $1,395,000 Marcia Salkin

Sarasota 941-383-7591 941-376-6121

486 E Macewen Drive A4115318 $1,077,400 Nicole Dovgopolyi

Osprey 941-966-8000 941-356-5849

Sarasota 941-349-3444 941-650-7207

Sarasota 941-951-6660 941-228-2030

Sarasota 941-966-8000 941-350-3304

Mid Longboat 383.5502 • South Longboat 383.7591 • St. Armands 388.4447 • Main Street 951.6660 Palmer Ranch 966.8000 • Siesta Key 349.3444 • Venice 485.5421 • Englewood 473.7750

171880

A Waterfront Estate of Timeless Moderns


SARASOTA OBSERVER

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THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

Three Things

has one bedroom, one bath and 963 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $250,000 in 2011.

FROM PAGE 22A FROM PAGE 21A

Alan and Lisa Roof, of Sarasota, sold their home at 2171 Hyde Park St. to John Baez and Deborah Barron, of Sarasota, for $206,500. Built in 1949, it has two bedrooms, two baths and 1,004 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $215,000 in 2005.

OUT OF THE PAST 1041 INDIAN BEACH DRIVE

Original details in an older home are crucial to its charm and character. This 1940s home near Ringling College is loaded with features that have been carefully maintained and preserved. In the living room you’ll find an overscaled flagstone fireplace, plus a beamed ceiling and terrazzo floors with tile borders. Many of the rooms are paneled in wood, and the kitchen retains its original period cabinets and shelving, plus a black-and-white tile floor. Priced at $225,000. For more information, call Carolyn Kenney of Michael Saunders & Co. at 223-7111.

PALMER RANCH Turtle Rock

Patrick and Elizabeth Ann Kennedy, of Sarasota, sold their home at 4813 Hanging Moss Lane to Mark Haslett and Erika Figueroa-Haslett, of Sarasota, for $629,000. Built in 1999, it has four bedrooms, three baths, a pool and 3,231 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $800,000 in 2006.

Tamiami Park

Lori Carey, of Sarasota, sold two properties at 3944 and 3940 S. East Ave. to IVMAX Properties LLC for $415,000. The property at 3944 was built in 1959. It has four bedrooms, two baths and 1,247 square feet of living area. The property at 3940 was built in 1959, and it has four bedrooms, two baths and 1,152 square feet of living area. They previously sold for $192,000 in 1998.

SIESTA KEY

Eric and Marguerite Surette, of Sarasota, sold their home at 4795 Hanging Moss Lane to Kimberly Carruthers, of Washington, D.C., for $628,300. Built in 1998, it has three bedrooms, three baths, a pool and 3,204 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $790,000 in 2005.

Casarina

Isles of Sarasota

Siesta Isles

NOKOMIS

Frank and Joan Poplawski, of Sarasota, sold their Unit 510 condominium at 5880 Midnight Pass Road to Fremantle Properties LLC for $760,000. Built in 1982, it has two bedrooms, two baths and 1,713 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $340,000 in 1998.

LIGHTNESS OF BEING 5054 GULF OF MEXICO DRIVE

Victor and Christina Flore, of Sparta, N.J., sold their home at 5916 Mariposa Lane to David and Elizabeth Clark, of Chicago, for $544,000. Built in 2007, it has four bedrooms, four baths and 2,521 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $548,300 in 2007.

Richard and Wanda Wilsen, of Sarasota, sold their home at 808 Idlewild Way to David and Yvette Varnadore, of Sarasota, for $720,000. Built in 1964, it has three bedrooms, two baths, a pool and 1,843 square feet of living area. It previously sold for $274,000 in 1996.

Sometimes rising to a chalBayshore Road Curtis and Christi Petzoldt, of lenge can produce extraordinary Monarch Beach, Calif., sold two results. This three bedroom properties at 1703 Bayshore Road bayfront home on Longboat to Robert and Elisabeth Straub, Key sits on an extremely narrow of Nokomis, for $4.05 million. lot. But inspired planning has The first, built in 2000, has four produced a jewel box of elegant bedrooms, five and a half baths, design. The main living area a pool and 6,096 square feet of occupies the middle level, with a Horizons West living area. The second, built in coffered-ceiling great room that Howard and Marsha Miller, of 2000, has two bedrooms, one is enclosed in glass and which Uniontown, Ohio, sold their bath and 999 square feet of livoffers views of tropical vegetaUnit 902 condominium at 6140 ing area. They previously sold for tion and the bay. Upstairs is the Midnight Pass Road to Douglas $3.85 million in 2003. master suite, with tree top views and Lisa Clark, of Phoenix, Md., and a balcony. There’s even a for $550,000. Built in 1967, it view from the marble bathtub. The home is set on a third of an acre and has deeded beach Read more real estate transactions at TRY ON A access. TRY ON A Priced at $1.65 million. For more YourObserver.com TRYKoy ONofA information, call Lynne Contact the Penny Hill Group to learn more Coldwell Banker at 544-5117.

TRY ON A

ONLINE TAILORED MORTGAGE

TAILOREDMORTGAGE MORTGAGE TAILORED TAILORED MORTGAGE

Scott Kolbe

St Armands

Siesta Key

Island of Venice

325 John Ringling Blvd Sarasota, FL 34236 941-388-3325

5250 Ocean Blvd Sarasota, FL 34242 941-349-8697

300 West Venice Ave Venice, FL 34285 941-488-0649

Contact the Penny Hill Group to learn more

Contact the Penny Hill Group to learn more NMLS ID: 450543 KolbeHill Group to learn more ContactScott the Penny Scott Kolbe NMLS ID: 450543 Penny Hill ScottNMLS Kolbe ID: 450543 NMLS ID: 365464 NMLS ID:Penny 450543 Hill Penny Hill NMLS ID: 365464 Penny Hill Melissa Rickey NMLS ID: 365464

TRYONONA A TRY

TRY ON A

TAILORED MORTGAGE TAILORED MORTGAGE TAILORED MORTGAGE

Melissa Rickey NMLS ID: 450635 Melissa Rickey NMLS ID: 450635 Melissa Rickey NMLS ID: 450635 NMLS ID: 365464

Contact the Penny Hill Group to learn more

NMLS ID: 450635

Call 941.228.6100 941.312.2478 today Call today today Call 941.228.6100 941.312.2478 Call today

Contact the Penny Hill Group to Call 941.312.2478 today Call 941.228.6100 today or email pennyhillgroup@everbank.com email:the pennyhillgroup@everbank.com Call 941.545.1275 today email pennyhillgroup@everbank.com or email:the pennyhillgroup@everbank.com Call 941.312.2478 today Call 941.228.6100 today email the pennyhillgroup@everbank.com or email:pennyhillgroup@everbank.com pennyhillgroup@everbank.com email: the pennyhillgroup@everbank.com ororemail email: pennyhillgroup@everbank.com Scott Kolbe

Contact the Penny Hill Group to learn more

learn more Scott Kolbe

NMLS ID: 450543

Scott Kolbe

NMLS ID: 450543

Penny NMLS Hill

Penny Hill13ERM0324. NMLS ID: 399805

Melissa Rickey NMLS ID: 365464

Penny Hill

NMLS ID: 399805 13ERM0324. NMLS13ERM0324. ID: 399805 13ERMO324. NMLS ID: 399805 © 2013 EverBank. All rights 13ERM0324. NMLS ID: 399805 © 2013 EverBank. All reserved. rights reserved. © 2013ID: EverBank. All rights reserved. © 2014 EverBank. All rights reserved. NMLS 365464

NMLS ID: 450635

© 2013 EverBank. All rights reserved.

Melissa Rickey

BEST

THE

ID: 450543

NMLS ID: 365464

NMLS ID: 450635

y’s Shae priekr on th

177102

24A

Call 941.228.6100 941.312.2478 today Call today

Lunch & Dinner

pennyhillgroup@everbank.com or email email:the pennyhillgroup@everbank.com

Served from 11:30 am

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT

Call 941.228.6100 941.312.2478 today today O FCall 7 DAYS A WEEK

DINING

VENICE

Find current specials and promotions at DaiquiriDeck.com

177100

S I E S TA K E Y

pennyhillgroup@everbank.com or email email:the pennyhillgroup@everbank.com

1600 Harbor Drive S., Venice (1.4 miles south of Venice Ave.)

13ERM0324. NMLS ID: 399805

© 2013 EverBank. All rights reserved. 941-488-1456 or visit us on the web at sharkysonthepier.com

BRINGING ITALY TO SIESTA KEY Sun.-Thu:4-10pm Fri-Sat: 4-11pm Happy Hour: 4-6pm daily. Reservations Recommended • 5104 Ocean Blvd. 941-349-1423 • 13ERM0324. www.cafegabbiano.com NMLS ID: 399805 © 2013 EverBank. All rights reserved.

NEW ENGLAND SEAFOOD AT ITS BEST! Mon.-Thurs. 11:30-9 pm, Fri. & Sat. 11:30-9:30 pm Open Sundays 11:30-9pm • 5157 Ocean Blvd. 941-349-2323 • www.sarasotalobsterpot.com SIESTA KEY’S MOST AFFORDABLE KID FRIENDLY SEAFOOD RESTAURANT! Open Daily for Lunch & Dinner • 1200 Old Stickney Point Rd. 941-349-3885 • www.captaincurts.com VENICE’S WATERFRONT LANDMARK SINCE 1976. Boat or Car • Lunch & Dinner • Open Daily 1st Floor Tavern • 1968 Tarpon Center Dr. 941-484-9551 • www.crowsnest-venice.com

175842


SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

Introducing

|

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25A

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AN ALTERNATIVE TO TRADITIONAL HEARING AIDS Inserted In Only minutes with • No surgery • No pain • No medication

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www.floridamedicalhearing.com 2807 University PKWY Sarasota, FL 34243 941-822-8919

SARASOTA SOUTH 6529 Tamiami Trail Sarasota, FL 34231 941-925-0022

VENICE BEACH

4250 S Tamiami Trail Venice, FL 34293 941-496-7600

176836

SARASOTA NORTH


26A

SARASOTA OBSERVER

|

YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

NEW PRICE

"Judie was always available to us during the sales process of our home on Siesta Key. She and her team represented us in 5330 Siesta Cove Drive

$1,999,000 8254 Roseburn Court

$1,975,000 9119 Midnight Pass Road

$1,190,000

Huge price reduction! Spectacular Bay front home near Siesta Beach with boat dock and 13,000 lb. boat lift. 4 beds/4 baths/2 offices.

Exquisite custom home. Pristine, unparalleled quality and finishes. Lakefront estate lot in gated golf community. 5 beds/5 baths, office.

Investors - Siesta bay front 4-plex. Four 1 bed/1 bath remodeled units. Close to beach, rear decks with bay views, 3 boat slips.

NEW LISTING

UNDER CONTRACT

SOLD

a successful and professional manner. We would not hesitate to highly recommend her in the buying or selling of real estate in the Sarasota/Siesta Key market.” -Lisa and Ed Block Siesta Key, FL and Milford, CT

5300 Ocean Boulevard ph3

$985,000 103 Sand Dollar Lane

Penthouse full Gulf views, floor-to-ceiling windows. Heated pool, tennis courts, fitness center. Steps to Siesta beach and village.

lp $755,000 Updated 4 beds/3.5 baths/2-car garage, 2-story beamed ceiling, granite counters, wood cabinets, high-end stainless appliances.

449 Canal Road

lp $1,295,000 Walk to Siesta Key village and beach. 3 beds/3 baths/2-car garage. Great rental history. Wood floors, boat dock, private pool.

Cinema Tour: www.SiestaKeyTour.com

SIESTA KEY

a Leader in SaraSota reSidentiaL SaLeS Voted SaraSota Magazine’S FiVe Star agent: “BeSt in CLient SatiSFaCtion” 9 YearS in a row SpeCiaLizing in LuxurY Marketing and negotiation

941.928.3424

Judie Berger pa, aBr, gri

JUDIE.BERGER@SOTHEBYSREALTY.COM

HOMESOFSARASOTA.com Sotheby’s International Realty® and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered service marks used with permission. Each office is independently owned and operated. Equal Housing Opportunity. Property information herein is derived from various sources including, but not limited to, county records and multiple listing services, and may include approximations. All information is deemed accurate and neither suggests nor infers that Premier Sotheby’s International Realty participated as either the listing or cooperating agent or broker in the sale or purchase of the properties depicted.

very

Selling Sarasota Successfully 

Tom, Pat & Spencer Hanly 941.388.2331

pahanly@gmail.com • hanlyhomes.com

es hor S b Clu t Key y r t n oa Cou Longb

Choosing the Right Realtor Makes All the Difference

Hanly & Associates

Luxury Living 3BR/3 Baths $949,000 www.530wedge.com St. Armands Circle * Sarasota

LV10722

EXCEPTIONAL RESULTS YEAR AFTER YEAR IS WHY SERIOUS SELLERS AND BUYERS CALL

Stephanie Church Stephanie Church 941.724.5448 941.724.5448

3035 RIVERIA DR., SARASOTA 7445 Sanderling Road, Sarasota

StephanieChurch@michaelsaunders.com StephanieChurch@michaelsaunders.com

7814Westway CREST Road, HAMMOCK, 1425 SarasotaSARASOTA

Located in exclusive centralwaterfront Sarasota within easy reach ofSiesta the area’s Discover an lifestyle, beautifully poised on myriad of shopping, dining and blissful beaches, this stylish, Key within the only gated Gulf front community in Sarasota. This oversized fully renovated three-bedroom home Heron is ideal for relaxed lot rests between the Gulf of Mexico and tranquil Lagoon Florida From the moment youClub step into the foyer, the with 89 living. feet of water frontage. The Sanderling residents enjoy deeded comfortable beach access, private cabanas hugging the shores of the Gulf,array a home’s ambiance prevails. An amazing of 15 slip bayside marina, tennis a vibrant social calendar. updates make this three home feelcourts like and new.

www.StephanieChurch.com www.StephanieChurch.com

Impeccably maintained by its original owner, this beautifully Positioned on Westway Drive, arguably the most prestigious address in appointed three-bedroom offers an easygoing Sarasota, this expansive level grassedhome lot features an impressive 96 feet lifestyle in the premier community of The Built in 2002, the of water frontage, with sweeping views over Hammocks. the Gulf of Mexico and New residence backs a scenic lake, a peaceful Pass. In addition to theonto new seawall, a boat dockcreating is already permitted and setting. can be customized to meet your watercraft needs, while private deeded beach access invites you to relax on the pristine sands of Lido Beach. MLS# A3993117 $2,800,000

MLS#A4117546 $499,900

177251

MLS# A3986618 $2,000,000

MLS#A412715 $269,900

www.facebook.com/srqrealestateagent www.facebook.com/srqrealestateagent


SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

FORECAST THURSDAY, JULY 23 High: 88 Low: 77 Chance of rain: 40%

27A

THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

SUNRISE / SUNSET

W EAT HER

NATURE’S BEAUTY WITH

|

Sunrise Sunset

Thursday, July 23

6:49a

8:25p

Friday, July 24

6:50a

8:25p

Saturday, July 25

6:50a

8:24p

Sunday, July 26

6:51a

8:24p

FRIDAY, JULY 24

Monday, July 27

6:51a

8:23p

Tuesday, July 28

6:52a

8:22p

High: 87 Low: 76 Chance of rain: 60%

Wednesday, July 29

6:52a

8:22p

MOON PHASES

SATURDAY, JULY 25 High: 83 Low: 74 Chance of rain: 90%

July 31 Full

Aug. 22 First

Aug. 14 New

RAINFALL

SUNDAY, JULY 26 High: 84 Low: 74 Chance of rain: 80%

Samantha Bisceglia submitted this photo of a least tern and its baby chicks, taken on Siesta Key.

Aug. 6 Last

Visit YourObserver.com to submit your local weather or nature-related photos. Each weekly winner will be entered into a monthly drawing for a $25 gift card. One grand prize winner will receive a $5,000 flooring makeover, to be announced in October.*

Wednesday, July 15

Trace

Thursday, July 16

0.36

Friday, July 17

0.58

Saturday, July 18

0.01

Sunday, July 19

0.01

Monday, July 20

0.00

Tuesday, July 21

0.21

*Grand prize winner must own a home in Sarasota or Manatee counties.

ONLINE

Enter your photos and see all the winning photos

at YourObserver.com/weather and by visiting our Facebook and Twitter pages

YEAR TO DATE:

MONTH TO DATE:

2015 18.24 in.

2015

2014 27.43 in.

2014 2.07 in.

2.19 in.

4551 N. Washington Blvd.,Sarasota • 941.355.8437 2510 1st Street W., Bradenton • 941.748.4679 1734 S. Tamiami Trail, Venice • 941.493.7441

CROSSWORD

Awarded 2014 National MOHAWK Dealer of the Year!

SIDE TO SIDE by Mary Jersey 91 List extender, briefly 93 Composer Bela 97 ___ different tune (changed one’s mind) 98 Word with “hot” or “cold” 102 First-stringers 103 Shooting star 104 “___ bad!” 105 “Arrivederci, ___” 106 Logical half in a skull 108 Certain American voter 111 Any Simon and Garfunkel song, e.g. 112 Forearm bone 113 Jellied garnish 114 Pugilist’s ploy 115 Agile 116 Pager sound 117 Brit’s “Baloney!” 118 Husky loads

DOWN

©2015 Universal Uclick

ACROSS

1 Nickel-and-___ (cheapskate) 6 Office fill-in 10 Search, as the horizon 14 Bagpipers’ hats 18 “Lizzie Borden took ___ ...” 19 Coward’s lack 21 “Stop right there!” 22 Hand cream ingredient 23 Certain baseball player 25 What most people use for writing 27 “... 15 miles on the ___ Canal”

www.manasotaonline.com

175742

a a reflection reflection of of nature’s nature’s beauty beauty

28 Islet 29 Boat area 31 Large blood vessel 32 Batters’ postures 34 Sheeplike 35 Tarzan’s “kin” 36 Dwarf with glasses 37 R&B singer Mary J. ___ 38 “Ready when you ___!” 39 “Malcolm in the Middle” dad 42 Good friend 44 Itchy skin problem 45 Approve, as a university 50 It’s attached to a manicurist’s board

53 Some are cautionary 55 Word with “bar” or “area” 56 Abounding 57 Arrow’s partner 58 Spanish finger foods 59 Bloodhound feature 60 Conventional 63 Reduce, as prices 64 Headwear tied under the chin 65 Chest material 66 “Calm down” 67 Personal teacher 68 Like mosaic stones 70 Test a modified paper airplane, e.g.

71 Riboflavin, for one 74 Bete ___ (bugbear) 75 Bagpipers’ skirts 76 Pull up a chair 77 “Young Frankenstein” assistant 78 Tolkien creatures 79 African country 80 Where bluegrass music is popular 83 Become established 85 Cleanse 87 Zip 88 “Don’t give up!” 89 Type of jazz 90 Shaped like a megaphone

1 Broad valleys 2 Dead to the world 3 Secret society 4 Renew, as a subscription 5 Call, as a game 6 Oakland’s major league team 7 Slimy and serpentine 8 Like some scientists? 9 Tooth next to a canine 10 Holy structure 11 Oscar winner for “The Cider House Rules” 12 Aquatic organism 13 Ultimate degree 14 California border lake 15 Chili-hotness unit 16 ___ Carlo 17 Alternative to a coupe 20 Drummer Barker 24 Shrinking polar covering 26 Get progressively thinner 30 This minute 33 Cheat on a test 35 Parentheses, e.g. 37 Cold one 38 Hotshot pilots 39 Sizable sandwich 40 Mideast ruler

41 Mouse action 43 Hard work 45 Apple treatment, once 46 Kind of indicator 47 Out-and-out 48 Like some threats 49 Reason to cram 51 Practice 52 Chicken ___ (itchy illness) 54 The highest point 58 Things paid at booths 59 ___ note (scribble) 61 “Garfield” canine 62 “Dear old” guy 63 Decided not to bug 64 However 66 Have confidence in (with “on”) 67 Tennessee NFLer 68 Still playing after regulation 69 Author Ephron 70 Lemon cover 71 Big shot 72 Film ___ (movie genre) 73 Imitate a donkey 75 Brown seaweed 76 Blueprint detail, briefly 79 Eccentric 80 Birdhouse attendant 81 Remain in hiding 82 Choir voice 84 Cold War concern 86 Wool type 90 Forty winks 92 Wilde of old Hollywood 93 Loses hair 94 Depleted 95 Send to another doctor 96 Frayed and ragged 97 Angler’s gear 98 Bungle 99 Calf, to a cowboy 100 Correct the spelling 101 Game room activity 103 Like stallions and bulls 104 What that isn’t 107 Emulate Aladdin 109 Fed. documents producer 110 “No ___, ands or buts!”

CRYPTOQUIZ Each of the following cryptograms is a clue to the identity of a U.S. Supreme Court justice. Using the hints Y=E and D=S, decipher the clues to name the justice.

1. V Y K E G Q O X Z B 2. D Y X V Y F Z V J R P A Z V 3. K V Y D O U Y B F 4. G Z O Q Y J 5. R Q N D F Y Z U This justice served on the Court from 1921 to 1930:

SUDOKU

Solve the puzzle by placing the numbers 1 through 9 in each row, column and box.

07-23-15


2

7

CLASSIFIEDS 5

Thursday, July 23, 2015

1

5

9

The Sarasota and Siesta Key Observers reserve the right to classify and edit copy, or to reject or cancel an advertisement at any time. Corrections after first insertion only. *All ads are subject to the approval of the Publisher. *It is the responsibility of the party placing any ad for publication in The Sarasota and Siesta Key Observers to meet all applicable legal requirements in connection with the ad such as compliance with town codes in first obtaining an occupational license for business, permitted home occupation, or residential rental property.

7

Items Under $200 For Sale

Autos For Sale

ADVERTISE YOUR MERCHANDISE with the total value of all items $200 or less in this section for FREE! Limit 1 ad per month, 15 words or less. Price must be included next to each item. No commercial advertising. Ad runs 2 consecutive weeks in 1 Observer. 941-955-4888 Or Email ad to: classified@yourobserver.com (Please provide your name and address) Or Online at: www.yourobserver.com Or mail to: The Observer Group P.O. Box 3169 Sarasota, Fl 34230 BATTERY 12/VOLT: for Harley Davidson/ lawn mower or wheelchair, $30 o/b/o. 941-953-4186. COMPUTER: DELL Dual Core, refurbished, $80, 941-756-6728. FIESTAWARE: 5 piece place settings; 2 Scarlet; 1 Lemongrass. $25/ea. 941-706-2399. GOLF CLUBS, Ladies, R/H, Daiwa golf bag. R-300, 3-SW, woods, 1, 3, 5, graphite shafts, Odyssey putter. $125. 941-350-5651. PACK’N PLAY: Fisher Price, like new, nice cond., $50. Call 941-371-3513. PATIO SET: Table 48” glass top, 4 sling back chairs, beige. Excellent condition. $175. 941-232-0276 ROGER CLEMENS Rocket Arm Baseball Pitching Training System, $25.00. 863-221-8666. DOUBLE/FULL MATTRESS & boxspring Simmons mattress. $50. Call (407) 808−2920. ESTATE JEWELRY: 10 watches, 4 rings, 5 brooches, $100. tioday@aol.com 921−5341. LAWN DECORATION: Windmilll $125.00. (941) 270−2707.

(metal)

6’,

PATIO SET, filing cabinet, glass top, 2 chairs $50, 4 drawer file cabinet, $35. (941) 724−0519. SEWING MACHINE: white, ex−console table, attachments, $79. Bee Ridge/Beneva 926−1978. SOFA: DARK green, high back,Very condition, $195. (941) 746−7398.

good

Garage/Moving/Estate Sales

2

8

Hawley Motors II 5741 Pinkney Ave. 941-312-5890 www.hawleybudgetcars.com

ESTATE SALE Friday, July 24 - 8:45a.m. – 2p.m. 862 Placid Lake Drive Rivendell in Osprey

2011 Chevy Cruz LS, only 44K/miles, clean Car Fax, local vehicle, $11988 2006 Lexus IS250, silver/black, 1 owner, clean Car Fax, nice car, $14988 2012 Ford Focus SEL, 4/door, red, very low miles, $13588 2005 GMC 2500 HD SLE extra cab, 4X4, white w/tan, 1 owner, clean Car Fax, $13988 2004 Toyota Solara Convertible XLEV6, red w/tan top and tan leather, 89K/miles, $8988 2010 Ford Mustang Convertible V6, white w/saddle leather, loaded, clean Car Fax, $12988 2008 Toyota Avalon Limited, white w/tan, loaded including navigation, sunroof, 1 owner, clean Car Fax, $14988 2009 Honda Civic LX, 4/door, black, $9988 2007 BMW 328I, black w/tan interior, sunroof, leather, nice car, $11988 2007 Mercedes Benz C 230 Sport, locally owned and well maintained, $11988 2009 Honda Odyssey EX 3.5 V6, only 72K/miles, new tires, like new cond., $13988 2008 Mercury Mariner Premier, leather, moon roof, V6, 56K/miles, new tires, $12988

Beautifully furnished large home: 2000 Mustang convertible, PA House cherrywood 3 part cabinet & corner cabinets, dining room table/chairs, server, media cabinet, entrance hall table; Lexington 4 poster king size bed set (no bedding), queen bed set, sofa bed, grill, power tools, TV, nice decorative accessories, end tables, 2 computer desks & coordinating stands, files, tapestry, paintings, nice linens, kitchen, Christmas items, patio lounge chair, recliner, rocker, wedding dress, lady's & men's clothing & more.

8

3

Hawley Motors Over 32 Years in Business Sarasota’s Oldest Dealership Financing Available Cars Wanted - We Buy Cars! 941-312-5890

Autos Wanted OSPREY MOTORCARS BUYS ALL CARS 941-966-7585

7

Pix: www.estatesales.net Sale by Julie McClure

Business Opportunities JAN PRO CLEANING FRANCHISE: $950 Down Required, Financing Available for growth, Includes customers. Earn up to $10,000 Month+. Call 941-907-8141.

7

Help Wanted HOUSEKEEPING: FOOD shopping, cooking, laundry, odd jobs. M-W-F, 4p.m.-7p.m., $14/hr. Osprey. 966-7184. ORGANIC SALON needs professional stylist and receptionist. Call 941-545-2691.

2

This week’s Cryptoquiz answers William Howard Taft July 23 (Medium, difficulty rating 0.53)

This week’s Sudoku answers

4 5 8 9 2 1 7

CASH FOR Old Military Items. Swords, uniforms, insignia & old guns. Call 941-416-3280.

HOT TUBS, Swim Spas, Fiber Glass Pools. Direct from Florida’s largest manufacturer at wholesale pricing. Save $$$$! 941-462-0633.

6 5 4 7

3 6 5

8 2 9

8 6 1

2 5 3 9 4 7

9 2 7

6 8 4 1

5 3 4 1 1

Auctions

7

9 2 8 3 6 4 1

3 1

Pools/Spas

ESTATE AUCTION Estate of Michael Provost 10:00am, Saturday, August 1 On-site, 6415 East 18th Ave, Bradenton, FL 4BR / 3BA Home on 2.99± Acres

9

1) Republican 2) Secretary of War 3) President 4) Bailey 5) Olmstead.

Merchandise Wanted

7

7

5 3

9 6 8 2

5 4 9 2 3 6 8

2 4 9 3 6 8 5 7 6 8 3 7

1

1

5 2 9 4

This week’s Crossword answers

Trucks • Large Equip. • Large Variety of Tools • Landscape Equip. • Military Vehicles • Bucket Trucks • Heavy Duty Trailers & Much More! Higgenbotham Auctioneers 800-257-4161 higgenbotham.com 10% Buyer’s Premium M.E. Higgenbotham, FL Lic# AU305 AB306

Want Some Mad Money?

WE BUY CARS. TOP $$ PAID FOR YOUR VEHICLES. Call Hawley Motors, 941-923-3421.

Furnishings

Storage

classifieds.yourobserver.com

FOLDING TABLES: 4 new burlwood - mahogany with matching stand, 22”x18” when open. Gumps price $598. Sacrifice $299. 941-927-4638.

STORAGE FACILITY Boat/ RV/ Trailer. Secure facility, low monthly rentals, Clark Rd area. 941-809-3660, 941-809-3662.

Sell Your Item for Free! $200 or less

3

LV9433

1

INFO & RATES: 941-955-4888 • Fax: 941-362-4808 • EMAIL: classified@yourobserver.com • ONLINE: classifieds.yourobserver.com HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 8:30am-5pm • DEADLINES: Classifieds - Tuesday at Noon • Service Directory - Friday at 3pm • PAYMENT: Cash, Check or Credit Card

2015

EXPLORE the

CLASSIFIEDS for great deals. Visit classifieds.yourobserver.com


SARASOTA OBSERVER

YourObserver.com

30A Classifieds

www.yourobserver.com

Condos/Apts. For Rent

NORTH CAROLINA Mountains. Cool summer weather, beautiful views, excellent investment. Buy your homesite while prices are still depressedbuild when you are ready. Sarasota Developer, Sherell Johnson has several ideal locations in Maggie Valley & Waynesville and will help you find what is right for you. Good inventory of resale homes as well. Contact Sherell at sherellwj@aol.com or 828-734-8528

Vacation/Seasonal Rentals LBK: 1BR furnished condo, water views, includes cable, Longboat Harbor. Covered parking, no pets/ smoking, Gulf/ private beach house access. Boat dock available. Available July 1st - Dec.31st. $800/mo. +utilities. 248-231-3793.

Adult Care Services

YOUR VERY own Paradise on 2 acres. Open Saturday 11-2pm and Sunday 1-4pm. Refreshments served. 4757 Hunters Run, Sarasota. 3BR/3.5BA, 3924 SF, office, den and master suite dressing room. Private & quiet location. Excellent school district. Updated. Pool + private pond + basketball court + 3 car garage. Newer roof and A/C. Beautiful setting with great views from every room. $750,000. Trade Up to this Home and I’ll Buy yours for Cash!!! Beverly Perez, Broker Associate, Horizon Realty International. 941-323-4600

WHY LEAVE THE SAFETY AND COMFORT OF YOUR OWN HOME to receive professional, affordable, compassionate care? Elder Care Services provides a variety of customized care options, perfectly tailored to your personal needs and lifestyle. Our specialized services include, but are not limited to: Homemaking, errands, doctor visits, transportation, meal prep with special dietary needs, medication supervision, and so much more. Call today for more information, 941-377-4465 or visit us on the web at: eldercaresarasota.com. Licensed, bonded, and insured. Lic#30211372

BLUE FISH CLEANING INC. 941-705-3812. Insured, Bonded. Affordable reliable home cleaning, $80, 2 cleaners, 2 hours. BRAZILIAN CLEANING Service by Maria. Residential. Meticulous Cleaning. Excellent References. Free Estimates. Reliable. Lic./ Ins. 941-400-3342. EDLA’S CLEANING SERVICES: Residential Commercial, New Construction. Meticulous, deep cleaning top to bottom. We Guarantee. Affordable & Reliable. Excellent References. Free Estimates. Licensed and Insured. Weekly and Bi-weekly. 941-536-7447. ND SPARKLE. We are a family business experienced in both home and office cleaning great rates. Call for a quote. 941-330-4466. Email: norgrasi@hotmail.com NEED A Cleaner? Experienced, dependable and ready to begin! Residential. Excellent references. Claudia C. Cleaning Services 941-773-6895

Computer Services

Pressure Cleaning

SHIP YOUR CAR, TRUCK OR SUV anywhere in the United States. Great rates, fast quotes. Call Hawley Motors, 941-923-3421.

MITCHELL HANDYMAN. Painting, Carpentry, Tile, Pressure Cleaning. Total Home Improvements, Repairs. Small and large! 941-284-8488.

PRESSURE WASHING: Residential and Commercial. ECO Cleaning. Roofs, lanais, pool areas, etc. Roof coating also. 941-251-5948.

ALUMINUM

BRICK PAVERS Brick Pavers

3FTJEFOUJBM *OTUBMMBUJPO 3FQBJS .BJOUFOBODF

Dustin Yoder yoderaluminum@gmail.com

We service all manufacturers

FPL Rebate: Up to $660 Recycling Credit: Up to $250 Additional Discounts Up to $1,230

FREE 4FSWJDF $BMM

$49.95 5VOF VQ

must present coupon at time of service

must present coupon at time of service

LIC. #CAC057147

Â?Driveway Â?Pool Deck Â?Patio Â?Lanai

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|

THE SARASOTA /SIESTA KEY Thursday, July 23, 2015


| THURSDAY, THE /SIESTA KEY JULY 23, 2015 30A SARASOTA SARASOTA OBSERVER Thursday, July 23, 2015

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THE| SARASOTA /SIESTA KEY SARASOTA OBSERVER THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015 31A

176628

32A Classifieds YourObserver.com


SARASOTA OBSERVER

|

YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

the finest services of real estate

Betsy Sublette, REALTOR® 941.284.8483

Daniel Volz, REALTOR® 941.893.3757

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GOLDEN GATE POINT | SARASOTA UNDER CONSTRUCTION AQUA offers two beautifully appointed full-floor residences directly on Sarasota Bay ranging from 3,400 to 5,700 square feet under air, each with a private two-car garage and an individual boat slip. With a full-time concierge, luxurious state-of-the-art amenities and proximity to downtown, AQUA redefines elegance, prestige and gracious living. OFFERED FROM: $2,995,000

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The Plaza at Five Points | 50 Central Avenue | Suite 110 | Sarasota, FL 34236 | 941.308.6554 Cheryl.Loeffler@sothebysrealty.com | CherylLoeffler.com Sotheby’s International Realty® and the Sotheby’s International Realty logo are registered service marks used with permission. Each office is independently owned and operated. Equal Housing Opportunity. Property information herein is derived from various sources including, but not limited to, county records and multiple listing services, and may include approximations. All information is deemed accurate.

177247

32A


INSIDE: BLACK

TIE

JUST MARRIED: Brent Greeno and Ryan Inskeep 8 > < SUMMER READS: Our book critic has some suggestions for readers of all tastes. 4

ARTS + CULTURE THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

YOUROBSERVER.COM

SCENE & HEARD

The Ringling bests personal attendance record The Ringling, which includes the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, the Historic Asolo Theater, a circus museum, bayfront gardens, an education center and the Ca’ D’zan mansion, has set a new attendance record. Between July 2014 and July 2015, The Ringling attracted approximately 400,209 visitors. That total beats its previous attendance record of 384,323 visitors during the 20132014 fiscal year. Since 2011, The Ringling has seen attendance climb 33%. “A lot of this is because of the increased tourism due to the growing economy, but even before the collapse, our attendance wasn’t anywhere near these numbers,” says Steven High, executive director of The Ringling. According to High, 65% of The Ringling’s visitors come from different states, 25% from Sarasota and Manatee counties, and 10% of visitors come from international countries. Photo by Nick Reichert

Arthur Keyser, Connie Schindewolf and Jeffery Kin, all playwrights, are ready to make their plays better at the 2015 Players New Play Festival.

Local Drama Local playwrights vie for their time in the spotlight at The Players’ New Play Festival. The winner will see his or her play take center stage in August.

NICK REICHERT A+E EDITOR

T

he past week at The Players Theatre has been dedicated to something wholly unique to the Sarasota theatrical community: a festival that consists of 100% new plays written by local playwrights. PAGE 2

Maria Lyle Photography

Katherine Michelle Tanner in Banyan Theater Company’s “The Amish Project.”

ONLINE Read theater critic Marty Fugate’s reviews of “The Amish Project” and “I Hate Hamlet,” and see film critic Pam Nadon’s review of “Mr. Holmes” at

YourObserver.com.


2

ARTS + CULTURE

|

YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

LOCAL DRAMA: The new play’s the thing FROM PAGE 1

Founded in 2001, the Players New Play Festival, which runs from July 20 through July 25, has become a summer tradition at Sarasota’s 80-plus-year-old community theater. Open calls with no admission fee draw an average of 40 plays from playwrights who live from Tampa to Naples. An anonymous panel of four or five judges rates the plays based on a range of criteria. Those five or six plays that have the highest ranking out of a 100-point scale are awarded finalist positions for public readings on the stage of the Players Theatre. “Almost every reading we have here, there is an aha, goose bumps moments” says Jeffery Kin, artistic director of The Players Theatre and organizer of the festival since 2004. “Readings force playwrights to think in a different realm. They’re all ready to listen. And they’re all ready to learn.” The Players’ festival is unique in that it’s limited to local adult playwrights who are presenting their latest full-length plays to the public for the first time. Each night, one of the five finalist plays is read. Kin and his festival coordinator, Sandra Musicante, schedule the week so that every playwright can see his or her play read, and also organize acting auditions and assign directors to each play. The winning play from the weeklong festival will receive a full production in August 2016 at The Players Theatre. The play-

LAST YEAR’S WINNER “Not Our Time” By 2014 New Play Festival winner Bernie Yanelli When: 7:30 p.m. Aug. 20 through 22, and 2 p.m. Aug. 23 Tickets: $15 “Not Our Time” is a coming-of-age story set in 1969 in the rural South. A young African-American football star must choose between what he wants for himself and what his best friend and mentor want for him.

Nick Reichert

Arthur Keyser and Connie Schindewolf are finalists in the Players New Play Festival, organized by Players artistic director Jeffery Kin, right.

wright and director will collaborate to improve plays based on audience feedback and response. The readings themselves are bare bones, so they don’t distract from the characters and writing. That means no grand entrances and exits, no blocking and no

“Art is subjective, and we’re fortunate to have people honestly tell us what they think. I’ve never learned anything from someone only telling me my play was good.” – Arthur Keyser, Players New Play Festival finalist

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ARTS + CULTURE

YourObserver.com

File photo

Llywelyn Jones’ “That Wasn’t Me” was the 2013 winner of the New Play Festival. Jones won the festival once before, in 2006 with “Blackout.” He is a finalist again this year with “Why Can’t I Be You?”.

“Readings force playwrights to think in a different realm. They’re all ready to listen. And they’re all ready to learn.” – Jeffery Kin, organizer of the Players New Play Festival

IF YOU GO

FINALISTS

Players New Play Festival When: 7:30 p.m. July 20 through July 25 Where: The Players Theatre, 838 N. Tamiami Trail, Sarasota Tickets: $10 per night; $24 for three nights; $35 for whole festival Info: Call 365-2494 or visit theplayers.org

“Let Me Be Frank” by Connie Schindewolf Director: Pam Wiley Narrator: Kristi Hibschman Mary: Lynne Doyle Frank: Tom Aposporos Cece: Jordan Boyer Amanda: Natalie Robison Jim: Richard Russell

giant sets or embellished costumes. Whether they technically win or lose, entrants say they win because of the massive learning experience the festival provides. “It’s a phenomenal experience,” says Connie Schindewolf, whose play, “Let Me Be Frank,” is a finalist at this year’s festival. “It’s kind of overwhelming all of a sudden to hear your words on stage and seeing the characters come to life when they’ve been in your mind for sometimes years.” Schindewolf’s entry focuses on the struggle of a family dealing with its patriarch’s descent into Alzheimer’s disease. Schindewolf says she started thinking about the play nearly four years ago, when she reflected on the death of her grandmother, who exhibited Alzheimer’s-like symptoms in the late 1970s and early 1980s that were dismissed as senility. Schindewolf spent more than

“Ludlow” by George Loukides Director: Ken Basque Narrator: Anthony Spall John: Ian Weir Hannah: Eliza Engle Mary: Alyssa Goudy Clara: Jordan Obbema Louis: Andrew Mileham Bruno: Dave Downer Felix: William Allred Rockerfeller: Craig Engle

25 years in the St. Louis area as a high school theater teacher. She retired and moved to Sarasota in 1999 and started focusing on writing plays. Arthur Keyser’s play, “Before Steepletop,” focuses on the career of Pultizer Prize-winning poet Edna St. Vincent Millay. It is a finalist in the festival. Keyser has been in love with writing and the theater his whole life. Both his parents were born deaf, and they made reading and writing a key part of his upbringing. Keyser put his writing and reading skills to work as a corporate lawyer for 50 years in Philadelphia, but he always felt something was lacking. Getting involved with The Players Theatre after retiring in 2004 to Sarasota with his wife prompted him to become a playwright. “I had been going to the theater my whole life as a kid,” says Keyser. “When I was 80 years old I

“The Nearly Final Almost Posthumous Play Of The Not Quite Dead Sutton McAllister” by Kris Bauske Director: Tim Fitzgerald Reader: Rod Rawlings Duffy Donnelly: Ric Goodwin Edith Entwhistle: Lynne Doyle Albert Entwhistle: Tom Aposporos Tori Russell: Alana Opie Sutton McAllister: Ray Crucet

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THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

volunteered here and got involved with a senior theater troupe.” He lacked acting skills, but members in his troupe noticed his habit of adding notes to the scripts and changing story and character details. They encouraged him to keep writing. Now, Keyser has written 40 short plays and six full-length plays. He and Schindewolf, who has written nine shorts and recently completed her third fulllength play, say The Players Theatre’s New Play Festival is invaluable to them and their playwriting peers because it gets their work shown and, more importantly, gives them inspiration and tips to improve their writing. “As someone who’s trying to be a playwright,” says Keyser, “I’ve got to get used to the idea that art is subjective, and we’re fortunate to have people honestly tell us what they think. I’ve never learned anything from someone only telling me my play was good.”

“Why Can’t I Be You?” by Llywelyn Jones

“Before Steepletop” by Arthur Keyser

Director: Jeff Dillon Jason James: Ryan O’Dell Phil Fresquez: William Alfred Melanie Ritz: Lucy Manuel Howard Martin: Cliff Roles Reader: Ariel Baker

Director: Dan Higgs Narrator/Felice: Melliss Swenson Vincent: Amanda Heisey Young Sheldon: Mike Manley Older Sheldon: Charlie Tyler Walter: Tom Aposporos

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ARTS + CULTURE

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YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

Summer play book

Book reviewer Jennifer McPheeters shares what titles you don’t want to miss this summer.

JENNIFER MCPHEETERS BOOK CRITIC

IF YOU BUY All of these titles are available at Bookstore1Sarasota, 1359 Main St., Sarasota. Call 365-7900 for more information.

“The Book of Speculation” by Erika Swyler In her debut novel, Erika Swyler tells the story of Simon Watson, a young librarian whose mother and younger sister have followed a family tradition of becoming circus mermaids. Generations of these “mermaids,” including Simon’s mother, have drowned — always on July 24. In June, Simon receives a fragile, damaged book that contains a message suggesting a connection to his family. As the fateful July date approaches, Simon increasingly fears for his sister as he attempts to unravel the mystery of the book and its relation to his family. Magical and compelling, this is a great read for anyone looking for a fantastical escape.

FOR FRANCOPHILES FOR LAUGHTER AND BIBLIOPHILES ... MIXED WITH TEARS ... “The Little Paris Bookshop” by Nina George

Monsieur Perdu, proprietor of a floating bookstore in a barge on the Seine, has a knack for prescribing the perfect book to address any hardship and heartbreak in life — except for his own. All that remains from the great love of his life is an unopened letter, and when he is finally persuaded to read it, he sets out to the south of France with a small but colorful band of travel companions on a journey of healing. “The Little Paris Bookshop” is a tribute to the power of books, perfect for anyone who loves them.

WE’RE MAKING A DIFFERENCE… AND YOU CAN, TOO!

Elsa’s grandmother is eccentric and a bit ... off, but she is devoted to Elsa, 7, and loves her fiercely. And Elsa, who is an outsider and knows it, finds solace in her grandmother’s love and the stories she tells. When Elsa’s grandmother dies, she leaves behind a collection of apology letters to people she has wronged, which Elsa sets about delivering. This is a deeply satisfying read, not only because of Fredrik Backman’s unusual cast of characters, but also because of his ability to relay Elsa’s adventure of grief and discovery with great humor and compassion.

DISCOVER

Each year, thousands of Florida students start school without the basic class supplies they need to succeed. At Fifth Third Bank, we want to change that.

FAMILY FUN THIS SUMMER

Join us in providing students with backpacks, pencils, pens, notebooks and other essentials by making a cash or school supply donation. All donations stay local and benefit the communities we serve.

FAMILY WORKSHOPS

KIDS QUESTS

THU, 3:00 – 6:00 PM SAT, 1:00 – 5:00 PM Join our drop-in art-making program appropriate for children ages 4–10. Free to the public.

WED & SAT, 1:00 PM, $2 per child Play a game or enjoy an activity in the gallery. Please register.

SUMMER CIRCUS SPECTACULAR TUE – SAT, through AUG 1 Thrilling entertainment for “children of all ages.”

Let’s make this year better for students in our community who want to learn.

All Fifth Third Bank financial centers will be accepting donations during July 13 - August 1, 2015.

“My Grandmother Asked Me to Tell You She’s Sorry” by Fredrik Backman

DISCOVER MORE

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ARTS + CULTURE

YourObserver.com

FOR A COMPELLING BEACH READ ...

FOR HISTORY BUFFS...

“The Rocks” by Peter Nichols

“Dead Wake” by Erik Larson In “Dead Wake,” Erik Larson turns his gift for narrative nonfiction to the tragic sinking of the Lusitania, a luxury transatlantic ocean liner that sailed out of New York, bound for Liverpool, England, in the first year of World War I. Although the Lusitania’s captain, William Thomas Turner, believed in and relied upon traditional rules of warfare that exempted civilian ships from attack, Walther Schwieger, the German captain of Unterseeboot-20, did not. Larson tells the history of the Lusitania as it has never been told before, deftly placing the events in political and social context. This is a must-read for lovers of history.

Set against Mallorca’s beautiful Mediterranean coast, “The Rocks” opens with a tremendous and bitter argument between Lulu and Gerald, whose marriage ended tragically more than 50 years ago. As Peter Nichols moves backward in time, slowly unraveling the circumstances that led to this fracture, he simultaneously reveals a new Romeo and Juliet romance emerging between Lulu and Gerald’s unrelated children. This book of family, tragedy and mystery is a perfect summer page-turner.

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THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

FOR FANS OF MEMOIRS AND POETRY ...

FOR MORE THAN JUST A GOOD LAUGH ...

FOR FANS OF HISTORICAL BIOGRAPHY ...

“Ordinary Light” by Tracy K. Smith

“Sick in the Head” by Judd Apatow

“The Wright Brothers” by David McCullough

Pulitzer Prize winner Tracy K. Smith is best known for her poetry, but in “Ordinary Light,” she applies her lyricism, insight and wit to telling her own life story. She is the Harvard-educated daughter of a devout stay-at-home mother and an engineer father whose familial and personal histories inform her poetry and are described with grace in this volume. A coming-of-age tale that grapples with faith, race and the bonds of family, “Ordinary Light” is a touching and beautifully written memoir about a brilliant young woman growing up in a loving, happy family.

Over more than 30 years, beginning with a job at his high school radio station and continuing to the present, Judd Apatow has interviewed an impressive array of comedians, including Mel Brooks, Steve Martin, Jerry Seinfeld, Jon Stewart, and Lena Dunham. In “Sick in the Head,” Apatow has collected the most impactful and revealing of these conversations in a collection that explores what motivates individuals who spend their lives trying to make other people laugh. This is more than a humorous book — although it is certainly that. It is an insightful examination of the comedic psyche.

David McCullough, a master historian and twotime Pulitzer Prize winner, examines the lives of Wilbur and Orville Wright in “The Wright Brothers.” Drawing from a treasure trove of personal diaries, notebooks and private family correspondence, McCullough depicts the tale of these two brothers and their world-altering endeavors. This is not simply a depiction of what happened on the Outer Banks of North Carolina in 1903; it is an examination of the Wright brothers’ family and upbringing. A wonderful summer read for history buffs.

AND A FEW FAVORITES THAT ARE WELL WORTH A RE-READ THIS SUMMER ... “Ava’s Man” by Rick Bragg

“Anne of Green Gables” by L. M. Montgomery

“Ava’s Man” is the beautifully written biography of a southern family and its patriarch, the author’s grandfather. Authentic and moving, “Ava’s Man” is a biography that fiction and nonfiction readers alike will love.

Many of us read “Anne of Green Gables” as children and fell in love with Anne Shirley, the Cuthberts and their lives on Prince Edward Island. Although the story has come to be known as a children’s book, readers of any age will enjoy a trip back to a simpler time in Avonlea.

“Freakonomics” by Stephen J. Dubner and Steven D. Levitt “Freakonomics” is readable and thought-provoking — and not just for those who enjoy books about economics. Now 10 yearsold, it has redefined the genre. If you haven’t read it, you should, and if you have read it, consider a re-read this summer.

“The Great Gatsby” by F. Scott Fitzgerald

“Plainsong” by Kent Haruf

The definitive American classic, “The Great Gatsby” has captivated legions — and decades — of fans. Filled with decadence, obsession and danger, “Gatsby” is a quick read ... and well worth a second.

It’s the opposite of showy, but this novel of the Great Plains is as moving and evocative as they come. One of my all-time favorites, this one will stick with you long after “The End.”

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ARTS + CULTURE

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YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

REVIEWS

FINAL WEEK! DON’t mIss It!

The ciRcus aRTs conseRVaToRy

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Charles Westley Lattimore Jr. and Marta McKinnon

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“The Cotton Club Cabaret” runs through Aug. 9, at Westcoast Black Theatre Troupe, 1646 10th Way, Sarasota. Call 366-1505 or visit wbttroupe.org for more information.

WINNING

TEAM!

Advertising Coordinator, “Plate-Spinner” The Observer Media Group (OMG) is a highly regarded, family-owned and operated multimedia publisher serving a premier target audience in Sarasota & Manatee County.

Summer

MARTY FUGATE THEATER CRITIC

The Cotton Club was an incubator of talent in the Harlem of the 1920s and 1930s. The same can be said of the Westcoast Black Theatre Troupe in the Sarasota of the 2000s and 2010s. Fittingly, “The Cotton Club Cabaret” was the troupe’s first production — and the close of its 15th season, as well. Nate Jacobs’ original production is part feel-good revue, part history lesson. In case you missed the Francis Ford Coppola movie, the Cotton Club was a night club in the heart of Harlem. The club thrived during Prohibition — which ended in 1933, after which the club didn’t thrive so much. It moved uptown in 1936 and folded four years later. Gangsters owned it. Exploitation of African-American culture was the style. In the audience: whites only, with the exception of “high yellows” at lousy tables. On stage: your standard racist tropes from the cotton-picking stereotype implied by the club’s name to the white boy fantasy of Rousseau’s noble savage, transposed to the heart of darkest Africa. Sexy savages, in other words. Jungle music. You get the drift. Without hitting you over the head, Jacobs reminds you of this uneasy legacy in the setups between bits. This revue is not, after all, a guilt trip. It’s a Sizzle 5/18/15 wayadofObsv.pdf reclaiming — and2:07:28 own- PM

ing — the musical legacy of Duke Ellington, Cab Calloway, Fats Waller, Ethel Waters and others. And what great music they left behind. The versatile music director, LaTerry Butler, leads a ninemember cast; he also plays the keyboard in a three-piece band. The performers, to quote Nigel Tufnel, dial it up to 11. Dancers Terrell Alexander, Chakara Rosa and Joshua Thompson create a constantly shifting kaleidoscope of dance under Donald Frison’s sizzling choreography. Singers Ariel Blue, Shelton Brown, Tarra Conner Jones, Earley Dean, Charles Westley Lattimore Jr. and Marta McKinnon alternate between duets and group productions. The show blasts to life with Waller’s “The Joint Is Jumping,” honors Ellington with “Take The ‘A’ Train,” gives the audience a sly wink with Calloway’s “Minnie the Moocher” (of “The Blues Brothers” fame), schools the audience on exploitation with the cringe-worthy “A Jig in the Jungle” and closes with — what else? — a soul-stirring gospel number, Clara Ward’s “How I Got Over.” The joint was indeed jumping by that time. (Some audience members were ready to jump out of their seats.) Jacobs lovingly directs the revue he created. The music he honors has lost none of its power. The musicians who created should not be forgotten. They won’t be — not if Nate Jacobs can help it.

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ARTS + CULTURE

YourObserver.com

M

–NICK REICHERT

THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

7

J&K

SarasotaMOD Weekend preview odern design and architecture aficionados gathered July 15, at the VUE sales gallery on Washington Boulevard, to get a taste of this year's SarasotaMOD Weekend. The event will run Nov. 6 through Nov. 8, at the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art and classic midcentury homes in Sarasota. Members of the Sarasota Architectural Foundation walked through the programming of this year's festival, which will feature a complete replica of Paul Rudolph's Walker Guest House.

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KITCHEN • BATH • STONES

Photos by Nick Reichert

Cabinets In - Stock

Joe King, Sarasota architect and builder, discusses building the Walker Guest House replica.

Special Pricing for Contractors

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BLACK TIE

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YourObserver.com

THURSDAY, JULY 23, 2015

BRENT AND RYAN HOW THEY MET

Brent Lee Greeno and Ryan Robert Inskeep met seven years ago. When Ryan walked into a bar with his sister, Brent thought they were a cute couple and bought them a round of drinks. Once Brent found out they were not in fact a couple, he and Ryan continued to talk and began to fall in love. THE PROPOSAL:

Brent proposed to Ryan four years ago, but he was turned down. A year later, it was Ryan who proposed to Brent. His response: not until it’s legal. They signed the domestic partnership registry last year and started planning their wedding in January. CEREMONY AND RECEPTION:

Given Brent’s job as the go-to audio visual guy of many charity galas in town, he had to carefully select the wedding date after the busy season died down. The couple did not have a traditional wedding with best men, but Brent did ask friend and boss Stephen Moyer to officiate. More than 250 friends and family attended the affair June 11, at Marie Selby Botanical Gardens. Brent’s cousin Jenny Silbert sang a version of “Just Like Heaven” by The Cure as the couple walked down the aisle, both accompanied by their respective families, while friends Bob and Terri Jack escorted the couple’s dog, Zeke, down the aisle. At the end of the ceremony, local talent Chris Eisenberg sang “I’m Gonna Be” by the Proclaimers and guests made their way to cocktails under the banyan trees. The party continued with a reception following at Michael’s On East. Brent had a few surprises for his groom up his sleeve. Early on in the planning stages Ryan had seen a threetiered pizza, and because it is his favorite food, he wanted that to be the cake. Brent originally said no, but then surprised him with the pizza cake. Secondly, Brent had asked Noriko Sidlow to play some Chopin on the

piano — Ryan is a classically trained pianist, and Chopin is his favorite composer. The third surprise was a performance by Ian and Anthony of Duo Romanesc. Guests enjoyed dinner and most importantly, Brent’s mother’s homemade macaroni and cheese — she cooked enough for everyone to enjoy.

Photos by Cliff Roles

Clockwise, from top left: Ryan Inskeep and Brent Greeno; the couple’s wedding bands; Bob and Terri Jack escort the couple’s dog, Zeke, down the aisle; Ian and Anthony of Duo Romanesc perform at the reception; and guests Phil King, Dolly Jacobs Reis and Dennis Stover.

Where Sarasota Gets Engaged™ 3979 SOUTH TAMIAMI TRAIL | (941) DIAMOND | DIAMONDVAULTJEWELERS.COM

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