FEB. 16, 2022 FREE
VOLUME 30, NO. 17
The best News on Anna Maria Island Since 1992 Astheworldterns. 6
Q&A 021622.
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bb hunts tram update. 4
Meetings. 4 Tourism trends up. 5 Hb steps up for support animals. 5
Will a citywide slowdown improve roadway traffic and safety? Holmes Beach may get an answer to that question. City commissioners voted 3-1 Feb. 8 to approve a resolution establishing a citywide speed limit of 25 mph — effective the week that began Feb. 14 — in an effort to improve traffic safety and better integrate golf carts and low-speed vehicles on city roads. Commissioner Jayne Christenson voted “no.” Commissioner Kim Rash was absent with excuse. There have been several golf cart and LSV-related traffic accidents in the city over the past year. A hit-and-run incident May 20, 2021, resulted in surgery for the driver of a golf cart. A July 23, 2021, golf cart rollover resulted in a broken ankle for the driver. And a Nov. 29, 2021, head-on collision left golf cart driver,
10-20 YEARS AGO
Looking back. 7
AM officials discuss Pine Avenue projects. 8 Hb magistrate fines noisemaker. 9
Happenings Community events. 10-12
Lace up for AMe race. 13
Gathering. 14 Obituaries. 15 GoodDeeds. 15 Where’s Tuna Street.
Motorists drive Feb. 11 by a sign posting the speed limit — 35 mph — on Gulf Drive in Holmes beach. City commissioners approved a resolution Feb. 8 to establish a citywide 25-mph speed limit, a change taking effect this week. Islander Photo: Ryan Paice
TURN TO SPEED, PAGe 2
Cortez historians avert shortcake calamity by Kane Kaiman Islander Reporter
These civic-minded volunteers refuse to succumb. Cops & Courts. 18-19 When Cortez Village Historical Society president and longtime Cortez ComStreetlife. 19 mercial Fishing Festival booth organizer Local server competes for Kaye Bell fell ill in early February — only weeks before the Feb. 19-20 celebration — Miss Florida. 20 a group of volunteers sprang into action to Scenic highway work ensure their strawberry shortcake continues underway. 22 its decades-long festival legacy. “It just has to be done because that’s our big moneymaker,” Cortez Village Historical Sweet Florida-friendly Society treasurer Pat Potts said Feb. 9. debate. 23 Since the early 1990s, sales from the booth have produced a significant portion KRC men’s champ of CVHS’s operating budget. crowned. 24 The organization is dedicated to preserving Cortez’s history and the stories of the Anglers need patience, founding families of the fishing village. persistence. 25 CVHS helped secure the village’s 1995 Isl Biz: 26-27 designation in the National Register of Hiseuphemia Haye sells to toric Places and, in conjunction with the staffer. Organized Fishermen of Florida, saved the Albion Inn, a historic building, from demoCLASSIFIEDS. 28-29 lition in 1991 by raising $12,000 through PropertyWatch. 30 shortcake sales and other fundraisers. Potts is the captain of this year’s makepuzzle. 31 shift shortcake team and has already bought 16-17
NYT
HB lowers speed limit citywide by Ryan Paice Islander Reporter
Opinions. 6
Save a date. 10-11
islander.org
Cortez Village Historical Society founder Mary Fulford Green prepares strawberry shortcake at the 2004 Cortez Commercial Fishing Festival. Islander File Photo
the necessary dry goods. Peg Miller is tasked with securing the cakes, whipped cream and strawberries. On Feb. 7, Miller ordered about 132 pounds of berries from Goodson Farms, a produce wholesaler in Balm. Karen Carpenter is recruiting volunteers
to ladle berries over the cakes and sell books related to Cortez’s history in the booth. About a dozen volunteers from the Cortez Mobile Home Park plan to spend roughly five hours Feb. 18 cutting, sugaring and bagging the strawberries. According to Mary Fulford Green, who founded CVHS in 1984, Bessie Lou Mora Kromery and husband Herb are responsible for the festival’s shortcake tradition. The couple, who sold shortcake at the Manatee County Fair as a church fundraiser, shared ideas with Green, who hand-baked shortcake and organized sales until 2018. Bell took over in 2019 and streamlined the process into a two-day job. Bell has been involved with the fundraiser since about 2002. “It’s fun; it’s meeting people. And I think it’s showing people something really nice about Cortez,” she said Feb. 7. Bell is grateful for the volunteers and hopes to join the them on strawberry cutting day. In early February, the Florida Legislature unanimously voted to make strawberry shortcake the state’s official dessert. “The timing couldn’t be better,” Potts said. For more on the fest, see pages 4, 11.