Anna Maria Island Sun September 29, 2021

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- Named Best Florida Newspaper In Its Class -

VOL 21 No. 51

September 29, 2021

Reimagining Pine Avenue will not include one-way streets The proposed Pine Avenue safety improvements call for buffered sidewalks and bike paths. BY JOE HENDRICKS SUN CORRESPONDENT | jhendricks@amisun.com

ANNA MARIA – One-way streets will not be part of the Reimagining Pine Avenue safety and traffic improvements being discussed by Anna Maria city commissioners. The commission reached that 5-0 decision during a special meeting on Wednesday, Sept. 22. The decision to eliminate the concept of the one-way streets was met with approval and relief by attending residents. The commission also reduced from four to two the potential design alternatives that contracted traffic engineer Gerry Traverso first presented on Aug. 19. The commission selected Alternatives 2 and 3 as the choices they will continue discussing. Mayor Dan Murphy noted these two alternatives may include variations to be proposed later by commissioners Deanie Sebring and Doug Copeland. The safety and traffic improvements discussed Wednesday pertain to Pine Avenue only. Potential improvements to Spring Avenue and Magnolia Avenue will be addressed later. JOE HENDRICKS | SUN

The proposed elimination of the parallel parking spaces along Pine Avenue remains a topic of city commission discussion.

Piney Point ‘closure’ not the last word When it comes to phosphate plants, “closed” doesn’t mean “gone.” Piney Point and its problems will be here for a long, long time. BY CINDY LANE SUN STAFF WRITER | clane@amisun.com

PALMETTO – When the former Piney Point phosphate plant is finally closed, the site will require monitoring – permanently – the Florida House of Representatives' Agriculture and Flooding Subcommittee learned last week. Closure of the environmentally-compromised site “… does mean that we’ll be doing monitoring of the site perpetually now until you and I are long gone from this planet,” subcommittee member Rep. Tobin "Toby" Overdorf (R- Port St. Lucie) said to Florida De-

INSIDE NEWS 4 CALENDAR 7 OUTDOORS 18 REAL ESTATE 22-27 OBITUARIES 27 CROSSWORD 29 CLASSIFIEDS 30-31

partment of Environmental Protection (FDEP) Secretary Shawn Hamilton on Sept. 22 during Hamilton’s update on Piney Point. “Yes, sir. Long-term monitoring will be required. That is a fact and is expected,” said Hamilton, calling the closure process of the site at 13300 U.S. Hwy. 41 N. a “multi-year event.” A leak was detected at the site in a gypsum stack that holds a retention pond on March 25, and FDEP approved the discharge of 215 million gallons of contaminated water into Tampa Bay to avoid an even larger spill that could have flooded area homes and businesses. The damaged area was patched. The contaminated water contains phosphogypsum process water, seawater, rain, dredge material from Port SEE PINEY POINT, PAGE 23

SEE PINE AVE., PAGE 19

Introducing the 2021 Holmes Beach commission candidates Five candidates are vying for three seats on the Holmes Beach commission this November. BY KRISTIN SWAIN SUN STAFF WRITER | kswain@amisun.com

HOLMES BEACH – The November election is looming and there are five candidates seeking the support of voters to earn one of three seats on the city commission for the next two years. The candidates include incumbent Commissioners Terry Schaefer and Carol Soustek, former commissioners John Monetti and Pat Morton and political newcomer Renee Ferguson. The Sun reached out to each candidate and will feature their answers to some of the issues facing the city of Holmes Beach

and its residents, beginning this week with the question, "Why should voters cast their ballots for you?"

RENEE FERGUSON

• Regularly attends Holmes Beach city commission meetings, planning commission meetings, code compliance special magistrate Ferguson hearings, parks and beautification committee meetings, Island Transportation Planning Organization meetings, Coalition of Barrier Island Elected Officials meetings, and Manatee County board of county commissioners’ meetings • Served on the Holmes Beach parking and congestion committee, code enforceSEE HOLMES BEACH, PAGE 20

HEAD FOR HANKS

APPLY TO RUN for the Anna

Sept. 29 from 4-6 p.m. to help out sea turtles and shorebirds. 5

Maria Commission next month. 4 VOTERS WILL DECIDE a beachfront land swap proposal. 8

Anna Maria Island, Florida

The Island’s award-winning weekly newspaper www.amisun.com


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