The Islander Newspaper E-Edition Wednesday, Jan. 06, 2020

Page 1

VOLUME

JAN. 6, 2021 fREE

NO. 11

The Best news on anna Maria Island Since 1992 astheworldterns. 6 Treehouse heads to Fla. Supreme Court. 2 Island food pantry collects $30K. 3

Opinions. 6 Privateers’ conquest. 7

10-20 YEARS AGO

Looking back. 7

Plunging into 2021. 8-9

What’s up on aMI? 10

Islander Poll. 11 Happenings

announcements. 11

2nd semester begins. 12 1st CoVID-19 vaccines go to elderly. 13

STREET MAP 16-17

Gathering.

Obituaries. 19 GoodDeeds. 19 Streetlife. 20 Meetings. 21 Manatee delegation to meet. 21 Vacated banks concern HB mayor. 22 Fueling at boat ramps revisited. 24

Walking into 2021. 25 Strange times in sports. 26 Ringing in 2021 with great fishing action. 27 CLASSIFIEDS. 28

PropertyWatch. 30

NYT puzzle.

Islander of the year for 2020

And the winner is … YOU. You win for your diligence regarding your wellness, for maintaining safety guidelines and lessening the risk for yourself and others, for caring enough to protect your family. You wore the mask, day in and day out. You maintained social distance. You sterilized, cleansed, and upheld all the mandates for safety. YOU YO OU WIn. YOU win the C COVId-19 challenge. You win Islander of the Year. Yes, you win Islander of the Year! And you! And you! And you! You — our safety-above-all-else survivors — win. We all thank you! And toasts you.

Islanders honored, remembered, 1992-2020 By Bonner Joy Islander Publisher

18

islander.org

The Islander takes pride in recognizing members of the Anna Maria Island community for contributions and concern for making this slice of paradise an even better place to live. Since the newspaper started in 1992, The Islander has sought to make its path by partnering with organizations and making their goals one and the same, by reporting the news of record and by telling the tales of people who live and work on AMI. If it’s not about the island or the people who live and flourish here, it’s not likely to be read here.

By the end of the first and second years of publishing, we sought a way to say thank you to the people who worked for a better island. And, in 1993, we found a worthy champion and launched an Islander-of-theYear award. The first award was presented posthumously to Cagnina for the year 1993 and the next to Ray Simches for 1994. Both served as mayors in Anna Maria. Our third Islander of the Year is still striving for a better way, better bridges — especially a low, bascule bridge replacement for the Cortez-Bradenton Beach link for island-mainland traffic. She now lives

on the mainland, but a big slice of her heart is with us in the battles we face to maintain paradise. Seldom do we recognize people whose job it is to serve the community. We look for those who give from the heart ... our Islanders of the Year:

July bradenton beach stands alone with 
no mask mandate: Face masks were made mandatory in Anna Maria and Holmes Beach in late June but Bradenton Beach officials rejected resident requests for a similar city rule. Longboat
Key
sewage
line
breaks: A wastewater pipeline between Longboat Key and the mainland broke, spilling millions of gallons of raw sewage in mangroves along Sarasota Bay. Center
shuts
down
for
COVID-19: The nonprofit announced it would close for 14 days after a staff member tested positive for COVID-19 and others displayed symp-

toms of the virus. May
tourist
tax
tumbles: Manatee County tourist tax revenue for May — collected by the government in June and reported July 1 — totaled $558,014, a drop of 48.99% from May 2019. COVID-19
cases
soar
‘like
a
wildfire’: Manatee County reported a record 288 positive cases on one day July 3. The county ranked 11th of 67 counties for positive cases. Bridge
Street
flips
switch: The power was running from new underground lines on Bridge Street as the Bradenton Beach Community Redevelopment Agency’s project to

katie Pierola, 1995: Katie Pierola had served six years as mayor of Bradenton Beach and her last term had just ended in 1995. She proved to be a bulldog at grantgetting, enacting improvements and bringing about positive change in office, and the city TuRn To IslaNDERs, PagE 4

Flashback 2020: The Islander’s Year in Review Part II

Compiled by Lisa neff Islander Editor

Many islanders embarked on the second half of 2020 masked and cautious, as COVID-19 cases soared “like a wildfire.” The pandemic dominated the news nationally and at the local level throughout the second half of the year, but the period also brought a primary and general election, a tropical storm and a tornado, a massive sewage spill on the shore of Sarasota Bay, the completion of a beach renourishment project and the full opening of the new Anna Maria City Pier. A look back at the second half of 2020.

TuRn To flashback, PagE 14

WE'RE BACK WITH A NEW MENU, OUTDOOR SEATING, TAKEOUT, & DELIVERY. AND OF COURSE THE GREAT COOKING YOU LOVE. O R D E R

O N L I N E :

E A T H E R E F L O R I D A A M I . C O M

5315 GULF DRIVE HOLMES BEACH, FL 34217

(941) 778-0411


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