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Every rental property on Siesta Key can now easily offer their valued GUESTS & VISITORS FREE ACCESS to the Siesta Key Fitness Center!
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DECEMBER 2016 | 941.349.0194 | ISLAND VISITOR PUBLISHING, LLC | www.SiestaSand.net | COMPLIMENTARY
SKVA MERGER A merger years in the making became reality in early November
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HOLIDAY CHEER
The 2016 Holiday Cheer for Kids Fighting Cancer program is currently underway
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FOOD TRUCK With changes having been made at their request in October, the Sarasota County commissioners on Nov. 8 unanimously approved a revised food truck ordinance
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FRANK COLSON
A comprehensive exhibit and sale of work by the late Frank Colson will take place at the historic house and studio
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WHO’S PLAYING
Key Stories to Watch in 2017
By Roger Drouin
In the upcoming New Year, some unresolved issues are going to take center stage, and several proposed projects could mean significant changes for the island. Siesta Sand takes a look at Eight Big Stories to watch in 2017 — from the question of what’s going to happen to Big Pass, to a simmering debate over a 357-foot segment of North Beach Road. Other stories include the Siesta Promenade proposed for 24 acres of Siesta Key gateway property, as well as an effort to bring a Trolley to the Key.
The Big Pass Question
What’s going to happen with the Lido Beach Renourishment project? That remains the single biggest news question of the new year. The renourishment is a complex project that involves many different aspects— including the installation of two rock groins on Lido’s shoreline and removing 1.2 million cubic yards of sand from Big Pass, which has never been dredged before, to place on Lido. As a result, critics worry about the greater chance of unintended down drift impacts, including on Siesta Key. However, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers officials say they can’t find compatible sand that matches Lido Beach— except in Big Pass—and so the Corps has been pushing ahead with permitting for its $19 million plan to buffer the beach. The Florida Department of Environmental
Protection (FDEP), meanwhile, has agreed to extend by 30 days a decision on its next step in the Lido Renourishment Project permit process. Despite an addition delay caused by Hurricane Matthew, the agency expects to make a decision sometime this month (December). The Sarasota County Commission voted unanimously on Aug. 23 to ask the Army Corps of Engineers to withdraw its 2015 Finding of No Significant Impact regarding the Lido Renourishment Project and, instead, to pursue an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) with a much more thorough review of potential negative consequences of dredging Big Pass, as well as alternatives to that plan. In a July 14 letter, the Siesta Key Association (SKA) asked the commission to call for an EIS. It remains to be seen, as of press time, what action the County Commission will take next. The FDEP will conduct a Public Information Session regarding the Big Pass Dredging Permit in an open-house style meeting set for November 30 from 6 to 7:30 PM in the meeting room of the Sarasota County Fire Department Station No. 2 located at 2070 Waldemere Street in Sarasota. The Siesta Key Association invites members and neighbors to share questions and comments at their December 1 monthly meeting. The meeting will take place in the Parish Hall at St. Boniface Church on Siesta Key at 4:30 PM.
Siesta Promenade
Benderson Development wants to transform an old mobile home park at the northwest corner of U.S. 41 and Stickney Point Road into a large, mixed-use lifestyle center. Although Benderson’s proposed “Siesta Promenade” is off the Key, if constructed, it would become the largest new project in the area and it would likely impact Siesta in more ways than one. In September, Benderson Development once again modified plans for its large project for the 24 acres of vacant land. In an attempt to address neighborhood concerns, the development company has put together an alternative plan comprised of fewer overall residential units, shorter buildings bordering the adjacent residential neighborhood, and two smaller hotels instead of one, taller hotel. The plan shrinks overall residential units from 586 to about 400, Todd Mathes, director of development at Benderson, told Siesta Sand in September. The commercial aspect of the project is unchanged. Concurrently, the developer is continuing to seek county approval for a “Critical Area Plan,” or CAP, designation for the proposed Siesta Promenade, which would clear the way for an increase in density. On Oct. 11, the County Commission was slated to discuss and vote on the “boundary” of a CAP for the project. Continued on page 41
Initial work on master pump station underway on Siesta Key By Rachel Brown Hackney The new master pump station that will replace the Siesta Key Wastewater Treatment Plant will have triple redundancies and it will not be designed to allow any discharge into the Grand Canal, Sarasota County staff members told about 60 people during the November Siesta Key Association (SKA) meeting. While work is underway to
convert the plant to a pump station, David Cash, the county’s Water/Wastewater Division manager, explained, a 2-milliongallon water storage tank — one of the original pieces of equipment on-site — will be left in place for use in the event of an emergency. He referenced the discharge of partially treated effluent into the Grand Canal during heavy rainfall
that was caused by then-Tropical Storm Hermine in late August. The total effort that will lead to the decommissioning of the more than 40-year-old wastewater plant comprises three phases at an expense of approximately $20-million, Greg Rouse, the county’s utility asset manager, pointed out. The plant is scheduled to go offline in December 2017,
though the Florida Department of Environmental Protection (FDEP) permit for its operation allows it to continue to function until June 2018, Rouse noted. Additionally, the new facility should be much quieter and much less a source of bad odors than the current one has been, Cash told the audience. Continued on page 36
New county impact fees for seven types of services to go into effect April 1 By Rachel Brown Hackney www.SarasotaNewsLeader.com Meet Sara Nelms, recording artist of the abbum “Lover, No Longer”
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SAND CASTLES
Whispering Sands: a retirement community complete with sunset views and Gulf breezes
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With Chair Alan Maio having made the motion, the Sarasota County Commission voted 4-1 on Nov. 8 to implement new impact fees for seven different types of services at the 100% level, effective April 1, 2017. Commissioner Carolyn Mason
was in the minority on the decision, which followed a public hearing that had been continued from Sept. 6. Staff had recommended the board phase-in the new fees at the 80% level this spring, followed by the 90% level in 2018, making
April 1, 2019 the date the full, legally defensible amounts would become effective. That was based on discussions with “the affected stakeholders,” Matt Osterhoudt, interim director of the county’s Planning and Development Services Department, told the
board. “You’re going to cost the taxpayers of Sarasota County millions of dollars [by phasing-in the fees],” Sarasota attorney Dan Lobeck, president of Control Growth Now, said during the hearing.
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