March 2021
Serving Hypoluxo Island, South Palm Beach, Manalapan, Ocean Ridge, Briny Breezes, Gulf Stream and Coastal Delray Beach
Volume 14 Issue 3
Along the Coast
Trump carried coast, but Biden made inroads, analysis shows
Personality likely drove part of vote, some on island say By Paul Blythe How red, or blue, are the towns and neighborhoods that make up The Coastal Star’s distribution area? Red enough that Donald Trump won South Palm Beach, Manalapan, Ocean Ridge, Briny Breezes, Gulf Stream, most of Highland Beach and coastal Boca
Raton, and parts of coastal Lantana, Boynton Beach and Delray Beach. Blue, here and there, to the extent that Joe Biden won most of coastal Delray Beach, a sliver of Highland Beach, a part of coastal Boca Raton, and the County Pocket between Gulf Stream and Briny Breezes. That’s 15 of the distribution area’s 20 precincts that went for Trump, and five for Biden. Or 53.9% of the area’s overall vote that went for Trump, compared to 45.4% for Biden, according to a Coastal Star analysis of data from the Palm Beach
Local races heat up
Ocean Ridge, Delray Beach and Lantana
Pages 11,18,23
County supervisor of elections website. Not too surprising in an area where Democratic voters are outnumbered both by Republican voters and those registered with other parties or no party. Of the distribution area’s 27,624 voters registered in time for the Nov. 3 election, 11,258 or 40.8% were Republicans, 8,154 or 29.5% were Democrats and 8,212 or
29.7% were other or no party. What is surprising, perhaps, is that Biden picked up more non-Democratic votes than Trump did non-Republican ones in 18 of the 20 precincts, for an area total of at least 1,856 such crossover votes compared with at least 620 for Trump. Those pickups helped Biden win five precincts even though Democratic voters outnumbered Republicans in only three of them. And they contributed to Biden’s winning Palm Beach County, 56% to See PRECINCTS on page 10
Brighter days for tourism We are in the middle of South Florida’s prime weather months. COVID-19 has meant fewer tourists, but plenty of people still are finding their way to South County beaches, and an upswing in tourism may be imminent. ‘Tourism is in recovery but is not as strong as we had hoped,’ Palm Beach Tourist Development Council Executive Director Glenn Jergensen wrote in an email to The Coastal Star. ‘The bright side is 80% of Americans are ready to begin traveling over the coming months, and summer — which is our drive-market season — could be strong as folks get vaccines and decide to take a trip.’ LEFT: (l-r) Ellen Christy, Diane Bourgeois, Elizabeth Edwards, Tom Goulet and Deanna Chandonnet, visitors from Boston, converse Feb. 26 with Delray Beach lifeguard Chris Javens. Tim Stepien/The Coastal Star
Along the Coast
Region a hotspot for firms on move Pandemic pushes techies, others to friendly climate By Mary Hladky When looking to move his corporate headquarters out of Los Angeles, Ben Spoont, CEO of e-sports and gaming company Misfits Gaming Group, set his sights on Florida. He considered Miami, Fort Lauderdale and Orlando. But Boca Raton won out.
Misfits Gaming leased 18,000 square feet of space at The Park at Broken Sound and made the move last year. Spoont grew up in Boca Raton, giving the city a big edge. He valued the quality of life, availability of good office space and the relatively low cost of doing business in the city. “Boca afforded us more bang for our buck,” Spoont said. Beyond that, he is seeing a transformation in
The Boca Raton Innovation Campus, once the IBM plant, designed by Marcel Breuer and Associates, is emblematic of Boca’s history See TECH on page 16 as a technology hub. Tim Stepien/The Coastal Star
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Horse haven Coastal equestrians saddle up at Delray stables. Page AT1
Opting out Reclaimed water use drops in east Delray. Page 26 Meet the new Norton CEO. Page AT9