VOLUME
NO. 21
Happy St. Patrick’s Day
MARCH 17, 2021 Free
The Best News on anna Maria Island Since 1992 astheworldterns. 6 center brings back concert plans. 3
Q&A 031721
islander.org
Sunshine, white sand, aqua water beckon throngs
3
Meetings. 4 Vaccinated? What’s expected? 4 For the record. The early days of the virus. 5
Opinions. 6 10-20 YEARS AGO
Looking back. 7
hB, BB commissions talk ‘noise.’ 8-9
Save a date. 10-11
Happenings activities. 11
a throng of hundreds of beachgoers soak up the sun and dip in the waters March 12 along the shore of the gulf of Mexico at the Manatee Public Beach in holmes Beach. Temporarily last March, under government precautions due to the novel coronavirus, anna Maria Island’s public beaches were closed to everyone but residents. Islander Photo: ryan Paice
COVID rears up as 1-year anniversary arrives By ryan Paice Islander reporter
The coronavirus is showing it can’t be trusted. aMe news, spring break. “We almost made it to the other side 13 without a contamination,” Holmes Beach Gathering 14 Mayor Judy Titsworth told The Islander March 12. Springfest returns. 15 After a year without registering a single STREET MAP case of COVID-19, eight city employees 16-17 tested positive for the coronavirus after an unnamed staff member at city hall exposed them during the week beginning Feb. 22, according to the mayor. Streetlife. 18 Two family members of staff also were aM takes up home rule, exposed to the virus due to the outbreak. pier, lot splits, more. 19 Three of the 10 people infected were hospitalized for the illness. More bridge debate. 20 Titsworth and code compliance officer BB commissioner wins small-boat race. 21 Private or public preserve? 22
Sunny, hot and keep your distance. 23 champs crowned in football, horseshoes. 24 cool nights prolong wintertime bite. 25
ISL BIZ: CLASSIFIEDS. 28
PropertyWatch. 30
NYT puzzle.
JT Thomas were among those infected in the city hall outbreak, where the administrative staff, building and police departments operate. Titsworth “It can happen to anyone,” Thomas said. Titsworth said she began feeling ill Feb. 26 and immediately sent an email closing city hall. She tested positive later the same day. Thomas City hall was closed Feb. 26-March 5 while the city hired a crew to sanitize the building. Unexposed staff worked from home until city hall reopened to staff who tested negative March 8.
Thomas told The Islander March 12 that he had recovered and tested negative for the virus and returned to work. “I think our mayor and our commissioners did a great job showing awareness and shutting us down,” Thomas said. “Everybody worked together to isolate it, secure us and make sure everybody was safe.” Titsworth said the outbreak was a testament to the virus’ contagiousness since the city has employed multiple safety measures to prevent its spread within city hall. Measures include restricting access to appointments only, hand-sanitizer stations and requiring that people wear face masks inside city buildings— with some exceptions for age, health conditions and to consume food and beverages.
While the Fin had already offered patio seating, it is limited to about 25% of the indoor dining area. Hurst said when the horne patio was full, rather than dine indoors or wait, a number of customers would instead leave. And then, in March 2020, the World Health Organization declared a hurst pandemic. The virus was spreading around the globe, across the states, and governments were responding with safer-athome orders, curfews and shuttering nonessential businesses.
An emergency “safer-at-home” effort to “flatten the curve” in Florida and reduce the burden on hospitals lasted seven weeks. “It was supposed to be gone by April,” Hurst said of early promises from government officials. After an attempt to transition to a takeout-only service proved to be insufficient to balance the costs, Hurst shuttered the Fin April 1, 2020. In Bradenton Beach, John Horne, owner of the Anna Maria Oyster Bar, 200 Bridge St., also closed his four restaurants last spring, during the lockdown. Horne and Hurst this past week lamented the impact from the sudden, temporary closures of their businesses a year ago, when both found themselves with kitchens full of
TurN To covid, Page 4
Businesses embrace recovery as pandemic hits 1-year By amy V.T. Moriarty Islander reporter
After a year no one will forget, island businesses are seeing signs of recovery. “March and April are our two busiest months,” Rick Hurst told The Islander March 11. Hurst co-owns and manages the Freckled Fin, 5337 Gulf Drive, Holmes Beach, where a 100% capacity crowd is standard. A year ago, even before a safer-at-home order was enacted in Florida, Hurst was seeing an impact of the novel coronavirus that first spread in China and then parts of Europe before reported cases in the United States. People were beginning to stay home. And when they did go out to eat, they often sought outdoor dining options.
TurN To BUsiness, Page 2
The next best thing to our famous St. Patty's Day Parade. Beach Bistro chefs will be presenting a five course Irish dinner & drinks in our beautiful new outdoor space The Doctor's Garden.
5312 Holmes Blvd, Holmes Beach FL
Celebration Begins 6:30pm
Call (941) 281-5595 for tickets & more information.