bserver O LONGBOAT
You. Your neighbors. Your neighborhood.
free • Thursday, JULY 26, 2012
INSIDE
DIVERSIONS news
Don Wallace’s plays hit close to home. PAGE 18A
Rick Kerby sets the stage for a new home. INSIDE
OUR TOWN
benefit breakdown
Key Club’s golf courses sustain minimal Debby damage. PAGE 7A
by Robin Hartill | City Editor
Pension freeze would retire DROP Elimination of the Deferred Retirement Option Plan and other changes are part of a town proposal to freeze pension plans, according to a new Q&A.
Vicki
File photo
+ Vicki hasn’t left the building Vicki the swan is back in the water. Swankeeper David Novak calls her improvement “dramatic.” Although she is better, Novack said it’s hard to say if she will breed next season. In other swan news, Stan and Wendy’s cygnet is being “a wild child,” according to Novak. The cygnet is trying to hang out with the new pair of swans who want nothing to do with it. Novak managed to get the familial trio back together for a feeding. He says the young cygnet is not viable for another six to eight weeks.
To begin receiving monthly retirement benefits, town employees could have to actually retire — as in stop working for and collecting a paycheck from the town. If the town freezes its pension plans, it would drop DROP (the Deferred Retirement Option Program) for employees who aren’t enrolled as of the freeze date, according to
a Q&A placed on the town’s website, longboatkey.org, that answers 75 questions about a proposal to transition employees from current defined-benefit plans to definedcontribution 401(a) accounts, in which employees would receive a town match of up to 13%. Any employee who receives the monthly pension benefits they
earned prior to the freeze date would be required to terminate his or her employment with the town. DROP employees are effectively retired but continue to work for the town, and the town places their monthly pension checks in an interest-bearing account.
LBK CONFIDENTIAL by Robin Hartill | City Editor
Mediation doesn’t end litigation for Longboat Key Club
+ Historical Society on summer hiatus
IPOC President Bob White said that the mediation process was completed but didn’t rule out the possibility of future discussions.
The Longboat Key Historical Society will be closed for the summer and will re-open Oct. 1. If you need to contact the Historical Society, direct inquires to docent Vera Freeman at 383-2952.
+ Kiwanis gives scholarships Out of 77 applicants, the Kiwanis Club of Longboat Key, through its tax-exempt scholarship foundation, has granted scholarships to 19 youth from Sarasota and Manatee counties. The group awarded $2,000 scholarships to 14 scholars and $1,250 to five students of Manatee Technical Institute. Scholarship Chairman Weldon Frost and his committee of Dr. Larry Kassouf, Glenn Peterson, Dr. Jim Whitman and Matt Walsh, reviewed every application to arrive choose the recipients.
Turtle tracks
OH, MY DARLIN’
Week of July 15 through July 21
Nests...............................50 False crawls.....................35 2012 2011 Nests 565 243 False crawls 415 198
SEE PENSION / 2A
Rachel S. O’Hara
Clementine Schwartz, 7 1/2, helps to pick up balls after doing hitting drills at tennis camp Monday, July 23, at the Longboat Key Club and Resort Tennis Gardens. This was the eighth week of the 10 one-week tennis camps at the club.
One day of mediation didn’t end more than four years of legal wrangling involving the Longboat Key Club and Resort’s proposed $400 million Islandside redevelopment-and-expansion plan. Town Attorney David Persson wrote in a July 18 email to the Longboat Key Town Commission: “Mayor Brown and I attended a confidential mediation in an attempt to arrive at a settlement regarding the above matters. Regretfully, mediation was unsuccessful. Since the rules of mediation require confidentiality, I am unable to discuss with you what occurred during the mediation. If you would like to discuss anything else, please contact me at your convenience.” The conference took place Wednesday, July 18 with retired Pinellas-Pasco Circuit Judge George Greer mediating. It took place at Inn on the
Beach, and the Key Club and Islandside Property Owners Coalition (IPOC) each footed half of Greer’s $300-an-hour fee, according to stipulations filed in the Sarasota County Clerk of the Court’s Office prior to mediation. IPOC President Bob White, Sanctuary resident Jim Thomas and L’Ambiance resident Irwin Pastor were listed as IPOC’s representatives for the discussions, while Key Club General Manager Michael Welly, former Loeb Partners Realty President and Chief Operating Officer Michael Brody, and Loeb Vice President Adam Tegge represented the Key Club. Those participating in the conference reserved the hours from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., but Persson emailed commissioners at 4:07 p.m. that day to let them know that discussions were unsuccessful.
SEE KEY CLUB / 2A
INDEX Bridge Bites....... 23A Briefs....................4A
Classifieds ........ 25A Cops Corner....... 10A
Crossword.......... 25A Opinion.................8A
Real Estate........ 15A Weather............. 24A
Vol. 35, No. 1 | Two sections YourObserver.com