Volume 30, No. 11
The Best News on Anna Maria Island Since 1992
Astheworldterns. 6 AM-Mote pier design hits snag. 3
Q&A 010522.
3
Meetings. 4 Opinions. 6
10-20 years ago
Looking back. 7
Center projects budget $uccess. 8 BB plans pier projects in 2022. 8 HB prioritizes road improvements. 9
Save a date. 10
Plunging into 2022
Moose mermaids welcome 2022
Announcements. 10
Get in the game. 12
Where’s Tuna Street.
16-17
GoodDeeds. 18 AME calendar. 19
Streetlife. 20 Addressing pelican harm on Skyway pier. 21 Catastrophic manatee loss. 21
Resolutions for 2022. 23 A year of sports. 24 Cooler weather, switching fishing tactics. 25
Isl Biz: 26 Island businessman authors memoir. 27
Classifieds. 28
NYT puzzle. 31
Flashback ’21
The year in review
July-December
Gathering. 14
Remembering lives lived in 2021. 15
islander.org
Participants in the Shamrock Shiver Charity Plunge — some in costumes — rush Jan. 1 into the Gulf of Mexico. Clancy’s Irish Pub & Grill on Cortez Road in Bradenton sponsors the annual Shamrock plunge on New Year’s Day at Cortez Beach in Bradenton Beach. An after-party took place at the bar. See more from the event, page 13. Islander Photo: Tomas Gomez
Happenings
Obituaries. 14
Jan. 5 2022 FREE
By Lisa Neff Islander Editor
Linda Frank and husband Joe of Bradenton, a Bradenton Beach Moose Lodge member, visited the beach at the lodge Dec. 31, where niece Teresa Haugher and her granddaughter Layla Hurtt, 10, visiting from Kentucky, created their greeting for 2022: a mermaid made of sand and shells collected on the beach and at Siesta Key and Nokomis beaches. Islander Photo: Linda Frank
In a flashback to July 2021, islanders shared hopes for a return to normalcy with the accessibility of the coronavirus vaccine. But then came the spikes associated with the Delta variant of the novel coronavirus, followed near the year’s end by the Omicron variant. Throughout the year, a local artist continued to add ribbons — each representing lives lost — to her COVID-19 memorial. Some island nonprofits canceled events while others adapted pandemic protocols or returned to pre-pandemic operations. Tax dollars and business revenues showed a record year for the island, despite some restrictions on travel and public health concerns. While there were plenty of #AMIparadise posts about white sand beaches and clear blue waters, locals in government, working The lawsuit was emailed to the mayor, on the water and living on the coastline commissioners and city clerk, allowing the raised alarms and expressed environmenholiday weekend to mull it over. tal concerns, especially about pollution and Kaleta owns a number of properties water quality. in the city, including Bali Hai Beachfront The Dec. 29 edition of The Islander Resort, Coconuts Beach Resort, the Islands reviewed the first half of 2021. West Resort, 305 73rd St. and 102 48th St. Now, a look at the second half of the Blaming former Holmes Beach Com- year: missioner Jean Peelen for beginning the animosity in 2012, the lawsuit claims that July Kaleta “no longer feels that he can petition Tropical Storm Elsa prompts states the city, outside of this judicial avenue, and of emergency: Ahead of TS Elsa, local and achieve a fair and just result.” Florida officials declared states of emerThe lawsuit, filed with the U.S. District gency and opened sandbagging stations.
Developer drops NYE bombshell on HB By Ryan Paice Islander Reporter
Developer Shawn Kaleta dropped a $3.125M bombshell on New Year’s Eve. Attorney Michelle Grantham of the Bradenton-based Najmy Thompson law firm filed a lawsuit against Holmes Beach in federal court Dec. 31 on Kaleta behalf of Kaleta, claiming the city has run a “blackball campaign” against him, resulting in more than $3 million in damages and demanding a jury trial for injunctive relief.
Turn to NYE Bombshell, page 2
Turn to flashback, page 4