- Named Best Florida Newspaper In Its Class -
VOL 22 No. 13
January 5, 2022
The Shamrock Shiver Charity Plunge was a great time for a great cause. BY JASON SCHAFFER SUN CORRESPONDENT | jschaffer@amisun.com
Shamrock Shiver a New Year’s tradition JASON SCHAFFER | SUN
BRADENTON BEACH - A large crowd gathered between Seventh Street and 10th Street on Jan. 1 for what’s become a New Year’s Day tradition The Shamrock Shiver Charity Plunge. And while the weather was anything but polar – sunny, 71-degree air temperature, 70-degree water – the enthusiastic bunch of “plungers” managed to overcome a few shivers and get wet for all the right reasons. Participants dressed in their most festive attire and jumped into the Gulf of Mexico for a great cause. The event, sponsored by Clancy’s Irish Pub and Grill, is in its 14th year and has raised more than $306,000 to date. This year’s goal was $40,000, and organizers think that goal is attainable. “Customers could fill out a paper and make a donation through Clancy’s, or just come out here and make a donation,” said Danny Moore, a Clancy’s employee who used his megaphone to move the crowd from land to sea at the stroke of noon. “Employees, loyal customers and anybody else in the community who wanted to come out were more than welcome.”
Participants gather for a group photo before hitting the water in the 2022 Shamrock Shiver Charity Plunge. SEE SHIVER, PAGE 23
From beach parking and proposed giant bridges, to new elected leaders and the loss of too many old friends, 2021 on Anna Maria Island likely will be remembered as a slightly strange and active year in which everything was overshadowed by the specter of the COVID pandemic. Here is a look back at some of the stories that made headlines on AMI.
2021 in Holmes Beach BY KRISTIN SWAIN SUN STAFF WRITER | kswain@amisun.com
HOLMES BEACH – Anna Maria Island’s biggest city was home to some of the Island’s biggest issues in 2021. The year began in the same manner as some previous years, with city leaders facing off in legal battles with the owners of the two-story beachfront treehouse at Angelino’s Sea Lodge. With legal issues still pending in Manatee County Circuit Court, tree house owners Lynn Tran-Hazen and Richard Hazen getting no relief on fines from the Holmes Beach special magistrate during hearings, the fate of the treehouse is still up in the air after almost a decade of legal battles. At the beginning of 2022, the treehouse is still right where it was a year ago – aloft in its beachfront perch with its future undecided, though Tran-Hazen did state in mid-2021 that if once all legal options are exhausted, the court decides in the city’s favor, the couple will have the treehouse removed. SEE HOLMES BEACH, PAGE 23
INSIDE NEWS OUTDOORS CASTLES IN THE SAND REAL ESTATE RESTAURANTS CROSSWORD CLASSIFIEDS
4 20-21 22 22-25 26 29 30
Person of the Year:
Peggy Nash
At 90 years young, Peggy Nash’s commitment to the community and her faith keeps her busy with volunteer work.
Anna Maria: The Year in Review Several community events returned to Anna Maria in 2021.
BY KRISTIN SWAIN
BY JOE HENDRICKS
ANNA MARIA – If you’ve ever stepped into the Roser Guild Thrift Shop or attended one of the church’s events, you’ve likely seen Peggy Nash hard at work volunteering, taking photos or helping someone else out with whatever they need. If you’re lucky, you’ve had one of her famous orange cookies. Known affectionately as Mrs. Peggy, Nash has been a force for good in the Anna Maria community for more than 40 years. After moving to Anna Maria in June of 1977 with her husband, Bob, Nash said she joined Roser Memorial Community Church the first Sunday after they arrived. In speaking with The Sun on Dec. 30, Nash recalled the move to Anna Maria fondly, noting that
SUN STAFF WRITER | kswain@amisun.com
SUN CORRESPONDENT | jhendricks@amisun.com
ANNA MARIA – The pending Reimagining Pine Avenue safety improvements and the pending Mote Educational Outreach Center were among the projects initiated in Anna Maria in 2021. The year was also marked by the return of several community events that were canceled in 2020 due to the coronavirus pandemic.
JANUARY
In early January, a fishing trawler sank offshore of Anna Maria and littered the Bean Point beach area with debris that required a significant clean-up effort by the city and Manatee County. SEE ANNA MARIA, PAGE 28
SEE NASH, PAGE 26
BRIDGE Street
BALD eagles among those found
sparkles on New Year’s Eve. 11
in Christmas Bird Count. 3 ISLAND Players ready to present ‘Blithe Spirit.’ 8
Anna Maria Island, Florida
The Island’s award-winning weekly newspaper www.amisun.com