The Islander Newspaper E-Edition: Wednesday, Dec. 23, 2020

Page 1

VOLUME

Merry Christmas!

NO. 9

DEC. 23, 2020 FREE

the Best news on anna maria island Since 1992

islander.org

Vaccine tracking, COVID-19 cases continue rise

Astheworldterns. 6 catching the sights, lights. 3 am seeks ‘citizen of the Year.’ 4 HB limits signs. 4 Holiday closures. 4

Meetings. 4

ing in. There is no time to waste!” Gov. Ron DeSantis The governor appears confident the tweeted Dec. 17. solution is on the horizon. According to a state“I’m pleased to announce that Walgreens ment released Dec. 17 by will begin their mission to vaccinate staff the Florida Department of and residents at FL’s long-term care facilities DeSantis Health, “367,000 doses of tomorrow in Jacksonville — 3 days ahead the Moderna vaccine will of schedule. I appreciate Walgreens for lean- be distributed next week,” under emergency By chrisann allen islander reporter

tDc members sought. 5

Opinions. 6

Special delivery

10-20 YEARS AGO

anna maria elementary school resource officer Josh fleischer, of the Holmes Beach Police Department, smiles Dec. 15 as he wheels in a load of poinsettias gifted to teachers and staff by the Parent teacher organization.

from the archives. 7 Santa’s helper. 8

RoadWatch. 8 camping an issue. 9

use authorization by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.” An FDA panel recommended the drug’s use Dec. 17. First-responders, education providers, the elderly and those with underlying health conditions will be the first to receive the vaccine, before the general public. In the meantime, new cases of the novel coronavirus continued to escalate in Manatee County. Between Dec. 11 and Dec. 17, 1,082 new cases of COVID-19 were reported by the Florida Department of Health. Anna Maria Island also has seen an increase in cases. As of Dec. 18, 107 people in Holmes Beach, 53 people in Bradenton Beach and 31 people in Anna Maria had tested positive for COVID-19 since the first case was reported in March in the county. According to metrics provided by the DOH as of Dec. 17, 19,612 people tested turn to COVID, Page 2

Ho, ho, ho: Tourism takes flight at SRQ

Save a date. 10

Happenings community announcements, activities. 10-11

By amy V.t. moriarty islander reporter

Spirits high, new ame semester approaches. Preschool gets crafty for christmas. 12

Milestones. 15 finding ami. 16-17

Gathering.

17-18 remembering lives lost.

Obituaries. 19 Streetlife. 20 get in the game. 21

ISL BIZ open-close. 22-23 report places blame for sewage spill. 24

Birders’ checklist. 25 Sporting news. 26 anglers reel in bounty. 27 CLASSIFIEDS. 28

NYT puzzle.

aBoVe Left: Kindergarten teacher Kelly crawford, left, and paraprofessional Britta rohrer receive gifts of poinsettias Dec. 15. aBoVe rigHt: anna maria elementary fourth-grader Jackson Kennedy helps deliver poinsettias to school Dec. 15. the poinsettias were a gift to ame teachers and staff from the Pto, and Jackson’s mother, Kari Kennedy, is Pto secretary. islander Photos: courtesy ame Pto/nicole Plummer

6600 Gulf Drive Holmes Beach, Fl 34217

(941) 778-6444

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Increased air traffic at Sarasota-Bradenton International Airport combined with a change in the targeted marketing had a positive impact on local tourism. But hoteliers report continued cancellations. At a Dec. 14 meeting of the Manatee County Tourist Development Council at the Bradenton Area Convention Center, 1 Haben Blvd., Palmetto, SRQ executive vice president Mark Stuckey reported the airport will finish 2020 stronger than it started despite the COVID-19 pandemic. The number of total passengers arriving at SRQ in October 2020 increased from the month prior. At about 120,000 passengers, fewer than the 170,000-plus in October 2019, the number was about even with 2018 and nearly double the number arriving in September 2020. In 2019, “we were the fastest growing airport in the entire nation” with a 43% growth over 2018, said Stuckey, SRQ’s chief of staff. One of the major factors for SRQ’s success is its ability to keep charges to airlines down because the airport is debt-free and has been since 2014. Airlines “can fly in here and fly out at half the cost of some of the other airports,” council member Jack Rynerson said. SRQ is “seeing more scheduled seats turn to TOURISM, Page 5


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