The Islander Newspaper E-Edition: Wednesday, June 27, 2018

Page 1

Top Notch

Artifacts unearthed. 2

Photo contest begins July 14. Go to islander.org for details

AsTheWorldTerns, friends, ready to rock. 6

VOLUME 26, NO. 35

4th of July fun. 12

Happy 4th of July

JUNE 27, 2018 FREE

Coast Guard rescues boaters off LBK. 3 Island ballots set for Nov. 6. 4-5

Op-Ed

Islander editorial, reader letters. 6

10-20 YEARS AGO

Looking back. 7

Meetings

On the government calendar. 8 Holmes Beach couple sues city over noise. 8

Save a date. 10

Happenings

Community announcements, activities. 11 Bye-bye benches. 16 WMFR explores consolidation again. 17 Bradenton ballpark tops in contest. 20 Visitors bureau promotes ‘cure.’ 21

Streetlife. 22 Smash-and-grab suspects sought. 23 Daycare dilemma. 24 Sea turtle enters marathon at Coquina. 26

The name game in Florida. 27 The world is watching. Are you? 28 What’s on the hook? 29

ISL BIZ Island business’s antihunger effort. 30

PropertyWatch. 31 CLASSIFIEDS. 32 NYT crossword. 35

The Best News on Anna Maria Island Since 1992

www.islander.org

Anna Maria Island readies for ‘big’ 4th of July

By Sandy Ambrogi Islander Reporter “Leave the beach the way you found it — only natural — because when you go home, the sea turtles will be coming.” That is Holmes Beach Police Chief Bill Tokajer’s message to July Fourth revelers. “It’s simple: have a great time, be safe, follow the rules and clean up after yourself,” Tokajer said June 21. It’s a sentiment echoed up and down Anna Maria Island in all three municipalities. Though the rules vary by jurisdiction, the basics are the same: No dogs on the beach, no fires on the beach, no alcohol on the beach, no glass bottles on the beach, no illegal fireworks anywhere. It’s one of the biggest holidays — if not the biggest — on Anna Maria Island, officials say. “We want folks to have a great holiday. We want Anna Maria Island to be a familyfriendly vacation place,” Tokajer said. “But we will enforce the laws.” Officials in the cities agree illegal fireworks are problematic on the holiday, and fireworks should be left to the professionals with permits. The Sandbar Restaurant in Anna Maria will host an island fireworks display just after dusk. Like Tokajer, Detective Sgt. Lenard Diaz of the Bradenton Beach Police Department said illegal fireworks cause headaches for officers. “If it explodes, projects or launches, it’s not allowed,” Diaz said. “Sparklers and poppers, like the ones sold in stores, these are Reed Mapes, left, and John Metz, founders of the political action committee KORN, look on June 21 as city commissioners discuss blocking their ballot amendments. See page 5 for the story. Islander Photo: ChrisAnn Silver Esformes

Isabella, 5 1/2, fills her bucket with water at the Manatee Public Beach June 24. The July 4 holiday is expected to bring bigger crowds. Islander Photo: Kathy Prucnell OK, but with supervision.” Tokajer said violators would have fireworks confiscated, and they could be fined or criminally charged. Diaz, Tokajer and Sgt. Mike Jones, the officer in charge of the Manatee County Sheriff’s Office substation in Anna Maria, said they will bring in extra deputies for patrols. “People are usually pretty good on the Fourth,” Diaz said. “I’m hoping that’s the same this year. PLEASE SEE JUlY 4 PAGE 3

New Top Notch photo contest launches July 14

The Islander’s Top Notch contest begins anew. The contest celebrates what still is known as the “Kodak moment,” despite the widespread switch from film to digital technology. Look to July 6 for the first deadline, including your July 4 holiday photos. The contest includes six weekly frontpage winners. Each will claim an Islander “More than a mullet wrapper” T-shirt or coffee mug. One weekly shot will take the top prize in the Top Notch contest, earning the photographer a cash prize from The Islander and certificates from local merchants. A pet photo winner is announced in the final week. Look online this week for complete rules and details. Please, note, each original JPG must be included in a single email with the name of the photographer; date the photo was taken; location and description, names of recognizable people; and address and phone number for the photographer. More rules — published online at www. islander.org — must be observed. — Bonner Joy


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The Islander Newspaper E-Edition: Wednesday, June 27, 2018 by The Anna Maria Islander Newspaper - Issuu