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VOL 21 No. 52
October 6, 2021
Environmental groups to sue over deep well injection plan A third lawsuit will soon be filed over Piney Point, this one opposing a plan to store its contaminated water in a deep injection well. BY CINDY LANE SUN STAFF WRITER | clane@amisun.com
Bishop Museum takes in manatee struck in Anna Maria Sound THE BISHOP MUSEUM OF SCIENCE AND NATURE | SUBMITTED
A manatee rescued from Anna Maria Sound in January after being injured by a boat strike has a new temporary home at The Bishop Museum of Science and Nature’s rehabilitation facility in Bradenton. Page 20
Anna Maria, Mote Marine reach pier lease agreement The interior buildout and exhibit installation is expected to be completed by March 2022. BY JOE HENDRICKS SUN CORRESPONDENT | jhendricks@amisun.com
ANNA MARIA – The city of Anna Maria and Mote Marine Laboratory have entered into a 10-year lease agreement for the installation and operation of the Mote Educational Outreach Center on the City Pier. The city commission approved the lease agreement by a 4-1 vote during a special commission meeting on Thursday, Sept. 30, with Commissioner Mark Short casting the only opposition vote. The Mote facility will be located inside the larger of two city-owned buildings at the T-end of the City Pier; and next to the City Pier Grill & Bait Shop that
INSIDE NEWS 4 CALENDAR 7 OUTDOORS 18 REAL ESTATE 22-27 OBITUARIES 25 CROSSWORD 29 CLASSIFIEDS 30-31
JOE HENDRICKS | SUN
The Mote Marine facility will be located inside this city-owned building on the Anna Maria City Pier. operates in city-owned space leased to business partners Brian Seymour, Vic Mattay and Nick Graham. SEE PIER, PAGE 27
SEE PINEY POINT, PAGE 26
HOLMES BEACH commission
BAYFEST IS BACK! Here’s
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Anna Maria Island, Florida
PALMETTO - Five environmental organizations notified Manatee County on Sept. 30 that they intend to sue the county over its plan to inject contaminated water from Piney Point into an underground well. The groups previously sued Gov. Ron DeSantis, Florida Department of Environmental Protection (FDEP) Secretary Shawn Hamilton, Piney Point owner HRK Holdings LLC and the Manatee County Port Authority in June over the dumping of 215 million gallons of contaminated water into Tampa Bay in March and April from a storage pond on a compromised phosphogypsum stack at the closed fertilizer plant. FDEP approved the discharge to avoid the stack’s collapse and potential for flooding area homes and businesses. The contaminated water spread throughout Tampa Bay and Sarasota Bay, transporting nitrogen and phosphorus that spurred a red tide bloom in April that caused fish kills and respiratory irritation, according to the plaintiffs. Red tide remains in medium concentrations in Manatee County waters, as well as Sarasota County to the south and Pinellas County to the north, according to the latest Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission report. FDEP sued HRK on Aug. 5 asking the 12th Judicial Circuit Court for injunctive relief to prevent any more discharges of wastewater from Piney Point, claiming that HRK failed to safely operate the gyp stacks and protect surface and groundwater. The state agency then issued a draft permit on Sept. 1 for Manatee County to build and test an underground injection well and a monitor well at 3105 Buckeye Road up to 3,300 feet deep to hold the wastewater. The monitor well to test drinking water would be up to 950 feet deep; the permit states that drinking water in the Floridan aquifer at the site is located at about 900 feet.
candidates discuss issues. 3, 15 BRADENTON Beach candidates present their platforms. 4
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