Serving Highland Beach and Coastal Boca Raton
May 2022
Volume 15 Issue 5
Highland Beach
Along the Coast
Insurance bills soar through roof House, condo owners face spikes of 30% or more By Charles Elmore
Highland Beach Police Officer Nathania Lai patrols the Intracoastal Waterway aboard the town’s new 28-foot marine vessel. The police presence makes boat speeds drop even if Lai issues no citations. Photos by Tim Stepien/The Coastal Star
Boaters slow as new patrol shows up By Rich Pollack
Highland Beach resident Barry Axelrod was relaxing on his dock overlooking the Intracoastal Waterway on the last Sunday in April as boat after boat sped past on the way south to the annual Boca Bash celebration. “It was the scariest thing,” Axelrod said. “They were going really fast and they were going wherever they saw an opening to get around other boats.” Axelrod watched as the recklessness continued for about
an hour and a half and then witnessed a dramatic shift. “All of a sudden everything calmed down,” he said. Looking to his left, Axelrod saw the reason for the change: Highland Beach’s new police boat was heading his way and boaters were taking notice. “I’m thinking, ‘Thank God we have that boat,’” he said. Since its launch in early March, the town’s $164,000 police boat, with Officer Nathania Lai at the helm, has been doing what it did that
See PATROL on page 9
Lai uses radar if it looks like boats are going too fast. She also makes hand signals that tell boaters to ease up.
Palm Beach County’s southern coast might have been spared a direct hurricane strike in recent years, but residents are getting pounded by an insurance maelstrom only growing in intensity as the start of storm season approaches June 1. Home insurance costs for many are spiking 30% or more, agents say — and even doubling or tripling for some condo dwellers. “They’re obviously in a lot of shock,” said Steven Kirstein, owner-agent at Kirstein Insurance Services in Boca Raton, describing the customer reactions he is encountering. “No one likes it.” Insurers are not renewing tens of thousands of policies. Two have gone out of business since February alone. And those remaining are often demanding tough new terms or vastly scaling back what they will cover. Further shrinking the options: The state’s insurer of last resort, Citizens Property Insurance Corp., does not cover properties worth more than $700,000. Given the rocketing See RATES on page 23
Briny Breezes
Decades on, a warm remembrance
Brenda Dooley presents Dana Littlefield with two quilts, one for himself and another for his brother Nelson Littlefield. Jerry Lower/ The Coastal Star
Quilters surprise veterans with mementos to cherish By Ron Hayes
What do you say to a military veteran after you’ve said, “Thank you for your service”? In March, the Briny Breezes Hobby Club said it with needles and thread, yards of colorful fabric and countless volunteer hours.
On that breezy Tuesday morning, nearly a hundred neighbors and friends gathered by the town’s fountain to see 45 handmade quilts presented to men and women who had been members of the U.S. Armed Forces long before they were residents of Briny Breezes. As flags of the U.S. Army, Air Force, See VETERANS on page 14
PRSRT STD US POSTAGE PAID WEST PALM BCH FL PERMIT NO 4595
Hollywood backdrops Boca museum displays pieces from classic films. Page AT7
Hearing postponed Advisory panel will reconvene for proposed house on beach. Page 6
Wet and Wonderful Water aerobics makes a splash. Page AT1