SARASOTA/SIESTA KEY
Dressed up pups
Observer
PAGE 18
YOU. YOUR NEIGHBORS. YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD.
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2024
VOLUME 20, NO. 38
YOUR TOWN Tick, tock. Turn back your clock! Daylight saving time ends at 2 a.m. Sunday, Nov. 3.
Sarasota stands strong Despite impacts of three unique storms, the county is moving forward. SEE PAGE 3
HALLOWEEN HOOPLA
Courtesy image
Worked to the bone
After two hurricanes in two weeks — followed by two weeks of cleanup — when Glenn Darling was recently in Party City picking out Halloween costumes for his twin 4-yearold boys, he spotted some life-sized skeletons that gave him an idea. With the purchase of three skeletons later, he and his 7-year-old daughter, Isla, staged them in familiar scenes of late — raking, bagging leaves and hauling downed limbs — to give their neighbors a laugh. “For weeks, that’s what everybody has been doing and how everyone has been feeling,” Darling said. “After a while, you just feel kind of drained and lifeless ... worked to the bone.”
Ian Swaby
Sisters Addie Lesnick, 5, Ellie Lesnick, 5 and Penny Lesnick, 7 came as the Sanderson Sisters at Boo! at The Bay Oct. 25.
Families enjoy an afternoon of costume fun and frivolity at Boo! at The Bay. PAGE 18 Ian Swaby
Back to the beach
Hurricane Milton’s wrath left behind debris, but it also washed away sand from the county’s beaches. Yet at Siesta Key Beach, on Oct. 26, lifeguards returned to their stands and the concessionaire opened. Nicole Rissler, director of parks, recreation and natural resources with Sarasota County, spoke to the improvements on Oct. 24. She said the county was able to reclaim most of the displaced sand, moving it back on the beaches. “We took some hits, but like our lifeguard stands, we stood right back up, and we’re excited to welcome people back,” she said.
A+E
Restoring history A former home of Selby Library comes back to life. SEE PAGE 14
$1.00
Forty years of young voices INSIDE
Ian Swaby
A worker lays flooring for the restoration project at the Chidsey building.