The Coastal Star's Posts (4240)

Sort by

10796588489?profile=RESIZE_710xParents and kids can get a close-up view of prehistoric life when they visit the ’Dinosaur Explorer’ exhibit, which opens Sept. 15 at the Cox Science Center and Aquarium in West Palm Beach. Besides dinosaur displays and actual fossils, visitors will find a variety of interactive exhibits. Photos provided

10796589284?profile=RESIZE_400xBy Janis Fontaine

The Cox Science Center and Aquarium, formerly the South Florida Science Center and Aquarium, has undergone several upgrades and improvements as well as a name change.
On Nov. 15, 2021, the center announced a record donation from Howard and Wendy Cox of Palm Beach. Their $20 million gift is nearly half of the center’s $45 million capital expansion campaign.
That support helps the museum bring outstanding content to families. Kids can draw inspiration from the “Dinosaur Explorer” exhibit, which will open Sept. 15. It features a series of dinosaur displays, authentic casts and actual fossils. A variety of interactive activities rounds out the experience.
The center just published its 2022-23 Education Guide, available on its website. Here are two of the most popular programs:
The GEMS Club — Girls Excelling in Math and Science — is in person again. Designed for students in grades 3-8, the club meets the last Tuesday of the month from 5-7 p.m. for pizza, hands-on activities and a female guest speaker. Topics: Newton’s Power Struggle (Sept. 27); Deep Sea Destruction (Oct. 25); Unveiling the Universe (Nov. 29), and Light Up the Night (Dec. 27).
Code Palm Beach is continuing its coding workshops for kids ages 6-14 through fall. Code Palm Beach is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit that hosts monthly events with volunteer teachers to introduce K-12 students to computer coding technology. This beginner course meets from 2 to 3:30 p.m. Saturdays, Sept. 17, Oct. 15, Nov. 19 and Dec. 17. Advance registration required. An intermediate course will also be offered. Call 561-425-8918 or visit codepalmbeach.com or email team@codebeachtech.org.
The Cox Science Center and Aquarium is at 4801 Dreher Trail N., West Palm Beach. 561-832-1988; www.coxsciencecenter.org.

Songs, rhythm and more
Most of the Schoolhouse Children’s Museum programming is geared to ages 2-5. The museum still closes from 12:30 to 1 p.m. for cleaning, a coronavirus precaution that stuck, program manager Linda Abbott said.
“The playground stays open if you just can’t bear to leave,” she said.
Here are a few programs offered in September:
Music Circle with Noam Brown is an intro to music for your toddler. Held at 11 a.m. Thursdays through December.
Baby Rhythms is a fairly new but popular class that exposes the littlest ones to the magic of rhythm. It meets at 11:30 a.m. Tuesdays.
Sensational Story ’n More is a weekly story time offered on Tuesdays at 10 a.m. and Wednesdays at 3 p.m. through Nov. 30.
Messy play, a favorite for kids and adults because they don’t have to clean up, will continue on Thursday afternoons.
The Schoolhouse Children’s Museum is at 129 E. Ocean Ave., Boynton Beach. 561-742-6780; www.schoolhousemuseum.org.

Family art classes
The Boca Raton Museum of Art’s popular Saturday art class for families will continue at 10 a.m. Sept. 10 for kids aged 5 and older and a parent, grandparent or adult guardian. The inspiration for the project is drawn from a current exhibition, and September’s program is “Monumental Backdrops.” The exhibit, “Art of the Hollywood Backdrop: Cinema’s Creative Legacy,” features scenic backdrops made for movies from 1938 to 1968. $5 for adult members, $10 nonmembers.
The Boca Raton Museum of Art is in Mizner Park at 501 Plaza Real. 561-392-2500; bocamuseum.org.

Nature explorations
Gumbo Limbo Nature Center had a silent partner of local advocates and protectors called the Friends of Gumbo Limbo since it was founded in the 1980s. Many of the programs were offered with the support of the nonprofit. Then the coronavirus came. It seemed like it might destroy the nature center and derail the Friends, but instead the organization came back with a bigger mission and a new name: the Gumbo Limbo Coastal Stewards.
The Nature Center educators are excited to welcome kids back to in-person programming. Reservations are required for these programs.
During the Citizen Science Squad, kids aged 9 and older gain hands-on experience in the collection of scientific data that are used in Gumbo Limbo’s conservation of coastal and marine ecosystems. Offered 2-3 p.m. Sept. 24. Resident/Gumbo Limbo Coastal Stewards $5; all others $8.
Little Wonders is a chance for you and your child, ages 3-4, to learn about the nature around us through stories, exploration and crafts. 10-11 a.m. Sept. 17 and Oct. 15. Resident/Gumbo Limbo Coastal Stewards $8; all others $10.
Nature Detectives is a monthly kids program that features story time, exploration and crafts for ages 5-6. Learn the wonders of nature together through story times, explorations and crafts. Offered from noon-1 p.m. Sept. 17 and Oct. 15. Resident/Gumbo Limbo Coastal Stewards $8; all others $10.
Gumbo Limbo Nature Center is at 1801 N. Ocean Blvd., Boca Raton. 561-544-8605; www.gumbolimbo.org.

Marine life adventures
Since 1998, the Sandoway Discovery Center has been protecting our environment and introducing visitors to freshwater and marine animals. Learn about native and invasive reptile species. Meet sharks and other fish at the coral reef pool. Explore the private shell collection and the native plant and butterfly garden.
Special events:
Discovery Series: Reptiles — Sept. 22. Two sessions are offered: Session 1: 2:30 p.m.; Session 2: 3:15 p.m. A hands-on discovery of reptiles and why they are important through crafts and artifacts. $8 non-members, $2 members. Reservations required. Best for ages 3-5 years.
Beach Cleanup — Volunteers needed for a beach cleanup from 8-10 am. Sept. 17.
Ongoing programs:
Alligator Meet and Greet — 2:30 p.m. Wednesdays and Saturdays. This program features an informative talk about alligators and a chance to meet a baby alligator. Included with admission. All ages.
Aquarium Feedings — 2 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday. Daily feedings teach fun facts about marine life. Included with admission.
Story time with Darlene — 11 a.m. Wednesdays. Hear a story about an animal adventure and meet some resident critters.Included with admission.
Animal Encounters — 3 p.m. Fridays. Meet the resident animals and learn about their behaviors and characteristics.
The Sandoway Discovery Center is at 142 S. Ocean Blvd., Delray Beach. Some programs are free with admission of $6 for ages 3 and older. 561-274-7263; sandoway.org.

Read more…

By Janis Fontaine

The Judaic holiday Rosh Hashana celebrates the biblical birthday of the world, and it’s a holiday from which everyone could really benefit. The 10 days between Rosh Hashana, which begins Sept. 25, and Yom Kippur, which begins Oct. 4, carve out a period of candid self-reflection called the Days of Awe.
The High Holidays’ themes — forgiveness and repentance — are twofold: We are supposed to both ask for and give others forgiveness. It’s a time of honest evaluation of ourselves as spiritual people. It’s not about how successful we were at work in the last year, but how successful we were at life.
10796582067?profile=RESIZE_180x180Rabbi David Steinhardt of B’nai Torah in Boca Raton says Yom Kippur builds an awareness of who we are in this world.
He wants everyone to leave despair and helplessness behind, and know that we have more strength and agency in the world than we realize.
Steinhardt has been the senior rabbi at B’nai Torah Congregation serving the Boca Raton community for more than 20 years.
B’nai Torah is the largest Conservative synagogue in Southeast Florida with over 1,300 membership families. He expects 75-80% attendance at services this year.
This is what the High Holidays mean to him in 2022:
“I am often asked: Is there a bigger purpose whereby the meaning of traditions and holidays can speak to our lives and our world?
“While traditions help create connections to the past and deepen religious feeling, I propose that our inherited traditions also require a language that speaks to the needs and challenges of today. As we stand before the Jewish High Holy Days, I’d like to present a possibility.
“The most profound message of the High Holidays reminds us that the world was created with one person. Rosh Hashana is called the birthday of the world. As it began with one, it is renewed with each one of us. We all matter. So, in a world that is so deeply divided, and where there is so much violence, anger and hostility, and intolerance for the ‘other,’ our tradition tells us to look at ourselves and see what we can do to create change for the better.”
Rosh Hashana is followed by 10 days of repentance and concludes with the holiest day, Yom Kippur. 
“The central idea of teshuvah, which means repentance or return, is defined by a call to examine ourselves, recognize what we have done over the year, perhaps see the things we could have done differently, perhaps look at the hurts we caused and see where we can improve,” Steinhardt said. “During this process, we might ask ourselves, how can I be kinder, more patient, more forgiving, or more giving in this world?
“I acknowledge it is not always easy in a world that constantly presents to us tragedy, sadness, conflict, issues and events that make us feel overwhelmed and often helpless. But it is in these exact moments of personal reflection that we can have personal agency to fix some of the problems around us.
“At the end of the day, we can hardly change another, but we can bring about change when we look at ourselves and see what we can do better.
“I wish all a good, healthy and meaningful New Year! Shana Tova.”

Ideas for self-reflection
In a post for the 10 questions project at MyJewishLearning.com, Joey Soloway, a TV writer, producer and director whose credits include Six Feet Under and Grey’s Anatomy, included these ideas for self-reflection:
• What’s a significant experience that has affected you over the past year?
• Is there something that you wish you had done differently this past year? Or that you’re especially proud of?
• Describe an event in the world that has impacted you this year.
• Describe one thing you’d like to achieve by this time next year. Why is this important to you?
• Have you had any spiritual experiences this past year? This can include secular, artistic, cultural, and so on. • How would you like to improve yourself, your life, next year?
• Is there something (a person, a cause, an idea) that you want to investigate more fully next year?
• What is a fear that you have and how has it limited you? How do you plan on overcoming it this year?

Janis Fontaine writes about people of faith, their congregations, causes and community events. Contact her at fontaine423@outlook.com.

Read more…

10796577466?profile=RESIZE_710xMelissa Perlman of Delray Beach won gold in the women’s masters half-marathon at the Maccabiah Games and captained the U.S. effort in endurance sports. Photo provided by Melissa Perlman

By Janis Fontaine

Melissa Perlman of Delray Beach has represented the United States at the quadrennial Maccabiah Games in Israel several times, but this year was special. Perlman was asked to use her experience to recruit and lead a team of athletes as the commissioner of endurance sports.
She grew up hearing about the games from her father, who competed in 1973. She first attended the games as a junior, running track on the 1997 team. She won four bronze medals.
Years later, in 2013, Perlman felt compelled to make supporting the games her passion project and she returned to Israel to represent the USA for the second time.
“I understood the true meaning of the games and the importance of thousands of Jews from all over the world coming together to show our strength, our resilience and our pride,” she said.  
Perlman’s athletes won a bevy of medals in July 2022, competing in the half-marathon, cycling, track and field, and the Maccabi man/woman, which consists of four events that test running, cycling and swimming endurance.
Perlman, 40, won a gold medal in the half-marathon in the masters division. But more important, she and the other athletes “made new lifelong friends, and left with a better understanding of Israel and our Jewish history,” she said. 
The Maccabiah Games, conceived in 1912, were first played in 1932. Sometimes called the Jewish Olympics, the games are open to all residents of Israel and all Jews, no matter where they live. Every four years, athletes from more than 60 countries compete in more than 40 sports. The Maccabiah Games are the third-largest sporting event in the world; only the Olympics and soccer’s World Cup are bigger. 
For the first time in the history of the games, the United States president attended the opening ceremonies, and Perlman was part of a group of about 200 USA athletes chosen to attend a private meeting with President Joe Biden. Perlman said he told the crowd: “I am so darn proud of you. You have demonstrated to the world that we can do anything.” 
Perlman, who owns the local PR company BlueIvy Communications, says the Maccabiah Games are “an opportunity to shout from the rooftops that I am proud to be Jewish, that I am an athlete and I am strong,” Perlman wrote in an article in the Jewish Journal. “I know that if the Maccabiah Games continue to thrive and grow, so will the Jewish people, and our resilience and strength in today’s ever-changing world.” 

10796578683?profile=RESIZE_710xFirst Presbyterian Church of Delray Beach held a ’blessing of the backpacks’ during worship on Aug. 7. The elders helped to bless the backpacks and all the students were given luggage tags. Tim Stepien/The Coastal Star

Back-to-school prayer
A few local churches offered “a blessing of the backpacks,” but if you want to do your own, here’s a prayer from St. Gregory’s Episcopal Church in Boca Raton:
“Lord Jesus Christ, in whom all things are renewed, refreshed and refined, we pray that you will guide us into this new year, lighting our path with your love, truth and wisdom. We pray for all students, families, teachers and school officials for encouragement, joy and hope and we pray for each one’s safety and well-being. May each heart be open to receiving the blessings of learning and growing together in you. Amen.”

Forum discussion resumes
The Interfaith Café has resumed its in-person monthly meetings, with the next taking place from 7-9 p.m. Sept. 15. The title of the discussion is “Here we go again: How to begin another year with the right perspective,” and the speaker is Rabbi Boruch Shmuel Liberow. He co-directs the Chabad Student Center, which serves the college community at FAU, Lynn University and Palm Beach State College.
The rabbi, who is also a certified life coach and a chaplain, will speak along with his wife, Rivka. They’ve been active in the Boca Raton community since 1998.
The Interfaith Café meets at the South County Civic Center, 16700 Jog Road, Delray Beach. Each month features a presentation by a guest speaker and a discussion about notable topics. People of all faiths are welcomed.
For more information, call Linda Prior at 561-330-0245 or visit the Facebook page at www.facebook.com/DelrayBocaInterfaithCafe.

Music at St. Paul’s returns
Mark your calendar: Music at St. Paul’s 2022-2023 season begins at 3 p.m. Sept. 18 with the Trillium Piano Trio, featuring Ruby Berland, violin, Cornelia Brubeck, cello, and Yoko Sata Kothari, piano. The suggested donation is $20, but students younger than 18 get free admission. Tickets are available only at the door on the day of the concert. St. Paul’s is handicapped accessible. For more information, visit musicstpauls.org.
Here’s the rest of the lineup:
Con Brio Quartet — 3 p.m. Oct. 2, with Stojo Miserlioski, clarinet
Strings and Keys — 3 p.m. Oct. 30. Delray String Quartet with Marina Radiushina, guest pianist
John Rutter’s Requiem for All Saints — 3 p.m. Nov. 6. The Choir of St. Paul’s performs under the direction of Dr. David Macfarlane, director. The chamber ensemble performs.
German Romantics — 3 p.m. Nov. 27. Duo Beaux Arts: Catherine Lan and Tao Lin, pianists.
A Festival of Lessons and Carols for Christmas — 3 p.m. Dec. 11. The Choir of St. Paul’s performs under the direction of Macfarlane.

Bazaar donations needed
The ECW at St. Gregory’s Episcopal Church needs donations for its Fall Bazaar, scheduled for Oct. 29. Kitchen items, accessories, holiday decorations, artwork and jewelry in good condition are wanted.
The women also need baskets to fill with gourmet items like nuts and other snacks, coffee, tea and hot chocolate. Items can be delivered to the Thrift Store or church office at 100 NE Mizner Blvd, Boca Raton. Call 561-395-8285 or visit www.stgregorysepiscopal.org.
Send religion news to Janis Fontaine at fontaine423@outlook.com.

Read more…

10746311056?profile=RESIZE_710xA leatherback hatchling makes its way into the ocean in Boca Raton after a release by Gumbo Limbo Nature Center. Photos by Tim Stepien/The Coastal Star

By Joe Capozzi

Walk along the beach at Red Reef Park in Boca Raton and it’s hard to miss evidence of a bumper crop of sea turtle nests so far this season. 
Dozens of nests, each cordoned off in triangulated sections with orange wooden stakes, dot the sand along the city’s 5 miles of beach.
Also marked in the sand: fresh tire-like tracks from adult loggerheads, greens and leatherbacks going from and back to the ocean after dropping and burying their eggs, along with much smaller tracks from new hatchlings headed to the ocean.  
“The season has been extremely busy, I mean, record breaking,’’ David Anderson, the sea turtle conservation coordinator at Gumbo Limbo Nature Center, said as he stood at the shoreline just before sunrise on a July morning. 
“I keep running to Home Depot to buy more wooden stakes,’’ he said. “We usually get 700 or 800 loggerheads a year and we are already well over 700. We are on pace to possibly have an all-time record high of loggerhead nests this season.’’

10746311878?profile=RESIZE_710xBoca’s sea turtle monitor says there’s no rhyme or reason to the booming number of nests — each season is unpredictable.

Sea turtle nesting season started March 1 and ends Oct. 31.
Five species of marine turtles nest in Florida, but only three — loggerheads, leatherbacks and greens — typically come ashore on South County beaches. All five species are listed as endangered or threatened and protected under the Endangered Species Act.
Last year, Gumbo Limbo counted 647 loggerhead nests, 21 leatherback nests and 190 greens. As of July 20, those numbers were 837, 19 and 116, respectively. 
Although the pace of loggerhead nesting historically slows down in August, Anderson said, Boca Raton will at least come close to breaking the record of 1,075, set in 1990.
Just to the north, nest counts in Highland Beach are trending up, too: 719 loggerheads, 13 leatherbacks and 159 greens as of July 15, compared to 814, six and 284, respectively, all of last year. 
“We’re doing gangbusters. We are definitely having a banner year,’’ said Joanne Ryan, who monitors sea turtle nests along the town’s nearly 3 miles of shoreline. 
Lexie Peterson of Sea Turtle Adventures, a nonprofit that monitors a 3-mile stretch of beach that includes Briny Breezes, Gulf Stream and parts of Ocean Ridge, reported “a pretty good season so far.’’ 
As of July 19, the count was 515 loggerhead nests, 50 green and nine leatherbacks. Last year, the group counted 666 loggerheads, 76 green and 24 leatherbacks. 
For the other parts of Ocean Ridge, about 2.5 miles of beach, Christine Perretta of DB Ecological Services counted 425 loggerhead nests, 12 green and 10 leatherbacks as of July 20. Last year, those numbers were 318, 51 and 16, respectively.
In Delray Beach, sea turtle monitor Joe Scarola said the numbers were not as dramatic but still on pace for a robust finish.
As of July 1, he’d counted 248 loggerheads, eight leatherbacks and 11 greens. Last year, the tally was 356 loggerheads, 15 leatherbacks and 28 greens, he said. 
“It started off with a bang, like we were going to break all records again this year. But it kind of slowed down in June. We are pretty much on par for what we had last year,’’ said Scarola, who patrols the city’s 3.4-mile shoreline.
In South Palm Beach, there were 300 loggerhead nests, 12 green and one leatherback as of July 20. The totals for last year were 214, 19 and one, respectively.
There’s no rhyme or reason to Boca’s high numbers this year, said Gumbo Limbo’s Anderson, emphasizing that every season is unpredictable.
He pointed out how it takes 25 years for loggerheads to reach sexual maturity and reproduce. Female marine turtles nest every two to three years.
“Maybe it’s good news that the population is doing great and conservation efforts from decades ago are starting to finally make a difference,’’ he said.
What is certain is that Anderson and his other seven sea turtle conservation team staff members have been busier than usual this year. 

10746312674?profile=RESIZE_710xA leatherback hatchling measuring a few inches heads to the sea along the Boca Raton shore. BELOW RIGHT: A nesting sea turtle left its tracks in the sand at Boca Raton.

10746313287?profile=RESIZE_584xHatching season at peak
Every morning during nesting season, they divide into three groups and search the city’s 5 miles of beach for evidence of nesting activity from the previous night. 
They’ll follow female tracks and mark new nests with stakes and a sign to keep the area protected so the 100 or so eggs deposited in each nest are safe during the two-month incubation period. 
They’ll check previously marked nests to see if they had any hatches or have been disturbed by foxes, raccoons and birds. Three days after a nest hatches out, the team will excavate and take an inventory of what was inside to determine its success. 
Any live hatchlings they find are brought back to Gumbo Limbo Nature Center and are released on the beach at night or just before sunrise. 
All nests, including so-called false crawls when the mother turtle emerges from the ocean but doesn’t lay eggs, are recorded with GPS and tracked on iPads. 
“We are also in the hatch-out season, so we have been having a lot of nests hatch out, which is really cool to see,’’ said Peterson, of Sea Turtle Adventures.
“It looks like the sand is boiling and you see a bunch of baby turtles pop up and all 100 at once will hatch and make their way down to the water following the moon and the stars.’’
Gumbo Limbo and Sea Turtle Adventures offer periodic hatchling release tours, but the tours scheduled for the rest of the summer are sold out.
For more information, go to www.myboca.us/2133/Turtle-Walks-Hatchling-Releases and www.seaturtleadventures.com/event-registration.
The tours raise money that goes back into the turtle monitoring programs. They also help raise awareness about conservation efforts, including ongoing campaigns to eliminate beachfront street lights and house lights that distract sea turtles. 
“The best way you can get people to care about sea turtles is to see them,’’ Peterson said. 
Although there’s no guarantee tour participants will see an adult turtle or a hatch-out, the rest of Gumbo Limbo’s night tours will feature live hatchlings.

From bucket to ocean
“For the rest of the summer, we are going to have buckets of hatchlings to release every single night,’’ Anderson said as he stood at the shoreline before sunrise on a Monday in July. 
He reached into a bucket and, one by one, released onto the sand nine loggerhead hatchlings, discovered a day earlier during a nest inspection. After the first few waves lapped over them, the hatchlings headed to the ocean in the direction of the glow from the approaching sunrise on the horizon.
A minute or so later, he released six leatherback hatchlings. 
“It’s amazing,’’ he said, watching them scramble into the sea. “Millions of years of instinct. They know exactly what to do and where to go. Those loggerheads will swim 5, 10, 15 miles off shore until they reach the edge of the Gulf Stream current where the large mats of sargassum seaweed are, and that will be their home for a while.‘’
With so many predators to elude, hatchlings’ chances to survive to adulthood are about 1 in 1,000. If they reach the Gulf Stream current, those odds improve.
“They will be well camouflaged, have something to eat and be able to hang out amongst those mats and at the mercy of the ocean currents for the next few years of life until they reach juvenile size and they’ll return to the coastal waters,’’ Anderson said.
“They have incredible navigational abilities to migrate to feeding and foraging grounds and back to nesting grounds, on an every-other-year cycle, and sometimes to the exact same spots. It’s pretty amazing.’’

Read more…

10746248865?profile=RESIZE_710xTown Clerk Erika Petersen chats with a patron at Manalapan’s J. Turner Moore Memorial Library. Jerry Lower/The Coastal Star

 

Behind the Books: Librarians open up about ever-expanding services to community

 

By Larry Barszewski

The Manalapan and Gulf Stream libraries would be the envy of their neighbors — if only those neighbors knew how much tax savings residents in the two towns reap because of their petite libraries.
Manalapan contributes $54,000 a year to its J. Turner Moore Memorial Library on Point Manalapan. If the library didn’t exist and town residents had to pay property taxes to the Palm Beach County Library District instead, their tax bills would be more than a million dollars higher this coming year.
“My sales pitch every year is it’s worth $54,000 to operate the library and have the events that we have and save the residents that much money,” Manalapan Town Manager Linda Stumpf said at the town’s first budget workshop in June.
“Most people don’t understand it,” Mayor Keith Waters added.
The Rita L. Taylor Gulf Stream Library doesn’t even have a line item in that town’s annual budget. But by having the 13-by-14-foot library, which takes up a single room in Town Hall, Gulf Stream property owners will avoid paying more than $800,000 in county library taxes this coming year.
The library’s hundreds of books have sat on its shelves for decades and don’t include any recent novels typically popular at libraries. The library, open during Town Hall’s normal operating hours, gets more use as a conference room for town officials than as a place where residents go to find a good read.
Taylor, the long-serving town clerk for whom the library was named last year, doesn’t remember the last time there was a visitor drawn to the library itself.
“I think maybe someone had taken out a book six or seven years ago,” Taylor said.
The only other municipality in a similar situation is the Village of Golf, which has a library in a room in its Village Hall and is not part of the county system. In Palm Beach, the town makes annual donations to the Society of the Four Arts Gioconda and Joseph King Library, which is treated as the town library.
The annual sum Palm Beach contributes to the King Library — $363,230 this year, for example — is much larger than what Manalapan gives its library, but so are the tax savings for town residents. If Palm Beach were part of the county system, its taxpayers would owe more than $14 million this coming year.
Ocean Ridge tried to get out of the county library district in 2009 by setting up its own community library at Town Hall, but the county rejected its request to leave. The county library director at the time said the town didn’t have a separate town allocation for the library and it didn’t provide sufficient services to meet Florida Public Library Standards.
The county’s library tax bill for Ocean Ridge property owners was about $361,000 back in 2009. It will grow to almost $800,000 this coming year.
South Palm Beach and Briny Breezes are also part of the county system. South Palm Beach taxpayers paid about $267,000 to the library district this year and Briny Breezes taxpayers about $38,000.

County library history
Who pays county library taxes and who doesn’t goes back to decisions made a half-century ago, according to a 1986 history of the county system included in the Florida Library History Project.
Briny Breezes and Ocean Ridge, which didn’t initially qualify to be part of the county system set up in 1967, were permitted to join in the early 1970s, the history says. Around the same time, Manalapan and Gulf Stream, which had been included in the new system, were allowed to leave.
In order for Manalapan to secede from the county library district and its taxes, the town had to have a library of its own, which its voters supported in a referendum, according to the book Overdue in Paradise: The Library History of Palm Beach County.
Getting out of the district isn’t quite as simple anymore. The County Attorney’s Office has determined that “to withdraw from the district a city must levy a tax against its residents for library services,” according to County Library Director Douglas Crane. The county would also likely require the municipality to have more elements of a full-service library than Manalapan or Gulf Stream currently has.
On the other hand, if an independent municipal library isn’t providing a higher level of service, it probably can’t be forced into the county system, Crane said. The state requires towns and cities to meet full-service standards only if they are applying for state aid.
“There is no mechanism to my knowledge, either at the county or state level, that requires a municipality to annually verify their commitment to library service if they are not applying for the State Aid Grant,” Crane said in an email to The Coastal Star. “There is also no mechanism to my knowledge to force municipalities that were never historically part of the Library District to join it.”
Residents of Boca Raton, Gulf Stream, Highland Beach, Manalapan, Palm Beach and Golf have to buy a nonresident card if they wish to take advantage of services from the county library or participating municipalities, Crane said. The county’s current rate is $55 for six months or $95 for a year, he said.
Boynton Beach, Delray Beach and Lantana are part of a cooperative with the county that allows their residents to use the county’s system for free.

10746251090?profile=RESIZE_710xFinancial benefits
Manalapan and Gulf Stream aren’t the only coastal communities that benefit financially from not being part of the county library taxing district, which includes unincorporated Palm Beach County and 24 municipalities.
Other communities, including those providing full-service libraries, end up paying less to have their libraries than if they belonged to the county system.
Taxpayers in Boca Raton, which budgeted $7.2 million for city libraries this year, including debt service, would have owed about $15.8 million if they had been in the county library system.
In Boynton Beach, which had $2.8 million in its budget for its library this year, taxpayers would have instead owed $4 million if they were in the county district.
Highland Beach’s $424,800 library budget was less than the $1.6 million its taxpayers would have owed if they were part of the county system.
Even Lantana, which would have owed only about $773,000 if it were part of the county system this year, had a lower library budget of $568,286.
Delray Beach supported the nonprofit Delray Beach Public Library Association to the tune of almost $1.5 million this year, but its taxpayers would have owed $7.3 million to the county if it had been in the county system. That figure would be closer to $8.3 million this coming year because of rising property values.
The difference is less about cities running their libraries more efficiently than it is about how wealthier communities in large taxing districts pay more proportionally than less wealthy communities, Crane said in another email.
“The fact that wealthy communities pay more into a taxing district does not correlate to the efficient cost to deliver a service,” Crane said. “It only demonstrates that a municipality would be a net contributor to the district. This is true of the County General Fund which includes all the municipalities listed.”

10746252881?profile=RESIZE_710xA curved wall in Manalapan’s library is the only hint that the library hides the town’s 400,000-gallon water storage tank. BELOW RIGHT: The circular outline of the water tank is apparent in this aerial view of the library. Photos by Jerry Lower/The Coastal Star and from Google Maps

10746253679?profile=RESIZE_584xA community library
Manalapan officials are pleased with the success of their library, even if its collections are not heavily used. On July 13, there were only 58 books, DVDs, CDs and audio tapes listed as checked out by patrons.
The library functions like a community clubhouse, attracting patrons to some well-attended events there. Those include an open house at the beginning of the season when residents are returning to town, a farewell party at the end of the season before most leave, occasional speakers and piano concerts (the library has a Yamaha grand piano).
“The events are much higher quality than you’d ever expect from a library this size,” said Mary Ann Kunkle, a 36-year resident who was picking up a book and some DVDs on a recent Wednesday.
The Manalapan library is a “two-fer” for the town. Not only did the library allow the town to get out of the county’s library taxing district, its current home wraps around the town’s unsightly 400,000-gallon water storage tank, hiding it from view.
The only thing that hints of the tank is the interior oval wall of the library that bends around the tank and has a collection of about 40 paintings for sale on it.
“I think it’s a great place to meet people, or a nice place to go and relax,” said town resident Robert Cuyar, who has used the library and attended functions there for decades. “They have a good selection. They have many of the current books.”

Read more…

10746247069?profile=RESIZE_710xA loggerhead hatchling trapped in a plastic cup nestled in sargassum. Photo provided by Sea Turtle Adventures

Every season has its heroes. In the South Florida fall, public safety and tree removal workers should get medals for cleaning up after the inevitable storms; in winter, hardworking nonprofit event planners prove essential to the success of the philanthropy season; and in the spring, lifeguards deserve bonuses for keeping flocks of tourists safe at beaches.
In the summer — the hot, muggy summer — the residents who walk the beach picking up trash are the ones deserving trophies. Every day they are out crunching through mounds of sargassum to hand-pick shreds of plastic, bottle caps, empty bottles and other debris from our shoreline.
Many do this year round, but in the summer the labor is especially important — this is when thousands of baby sea turtles are trying to make their way to the sea. And this year so far, a near-record number of baby loggerheads are heading through daunting odds — about 1,000-to-1 against surviving to maturity — to first reach the ocean, and then the Gulf Stream.
The last thing these hatchlings need as they struggle down a seaweed-laden beach is to end up trapped inside a plastic cup. But that’s what happened last month when a monitor with Sea Turtle Adventures stumbled across a trapped hatchling on the beach in Gulf Stream.
Luckily, monitors were there to safely release the turtle. Sea turtle monitors are another under-recognized group providing essential service each summer.
But it’s the residents who head out each day with nothing more than a bag or bucket for gathering the trash that challenges baby turtles as they head to the sea — other more organic dangers include crabs, hungry birds and the occasional raccoon or fox.
Once the hatchlings make it over the sand and seaweed into the water of the Atlantic, they’re targets of predatory fish and hovering birds.
If the baby turtles make it safely to the Gulf Stream, their diet will consist of small bits of sea life and jelly fish — items that look just like floating plastic. Plastic ingestion is quickly becoming a major factor in turtle deaths throughout the world.
That’s why the efforts of those individuals who pick up trash along our beaches should be heralded.
In the grand scope of all the plastic that will end up in the world’s oceans and washing onto every shore, their efforts may feel minuscule. But any effort to get plastic out of the ocean and off the beach is an important effort — especially for a tiny turtle stuck inside a plastic cup.

— Mary Kate Leming, Editor

Read more…

10746244900?profile=RESIZE_710xEda and Cliff Viner of Gulf Stream created the nonprofit Eda and Cliff Viner Community Scholars Foundation in 2015. Tim Stepien/The Coastal Star

By Brian Biggane

Raised by a single mother and working to support her when she became ill, Daniel Bencivenga was not a likely candidate to have an opportunity to further his education — despite his exemplary academic performance at Spanish River High School in 2016.
The Eda and Cliff Viner Community Scholars Foundation changed that. And six years later, Bencivenga is on track to earn his law degree from the University of Florida next spring.
“The Viner Foundation has played a huge role in my life and I am not sure where I would be without them,” Bencivenga wrote in an email.
When Eda and Cliff Viner of Gulf Stream were married in 2015, they decided to start a foundation to offer educational opportunities for economically challenged students.
“He used to send kids to camp,” said Eda, 62, “and I felt my kids had never been to camps and they turned out fine. But without a college degree in today’s world, it’s hard to survive. I thought that would be a better cause for the community, so we decided we would send 100 kids to college at a time.”
The couple settled on 10 high schools in south Palm Beach County and reached out to guidance counselors and other school staff to spread the news.
“We wanted to pick kids who were going to go to school in Florida,” said Cliff, 73. “For two reasons: One, our money goes further than if they went to someplace like Harvard, and two, these kids are more than likely to come back and serve the community.”
The qualifications are not easy: Students must maintain at least a 3.0 grade-point average — the Viners say qualifiers average about 3.6 — and have more than 300 hours of community service by the time they graduate high school.
The Viners’ initial class in 2015 had only 18 students, but they now receive more than 100 applicants every year and have 130 in the program. The top 50 applicants are selected each year, whereupon the Viners interview them — and often their parents — before paring the number to about 30.
“Our community is a melting pot, so we want to help everybody,” Cliff said. “Good grades and need are important, but we want to see character, because character is something you cannot teach.”
Each student selected is paired with a mentor, typically a community leader who will monitor the student’s progress throughout the college years and beyond.
“At first we just asked our friends to be mentors,” Eda said, “but as time has gone by, the community has really gotten involved. The Rotary of Boca Raton has gotten us at least 20 mentors and interviewers every year. Then we bring the kids and distribute food to the needy at Christmas. So, we help each other.”
The Viners said Rotary had a scholarship program but wasn’t tracking its recipients the way their program does. So, they joined forces. Similarly, Boca West had a Cribs to College program but didn’t have the college element. So Boca West has also signed on.
“The way you get them to graduate is to monitor them every step of the way,” Eda said. “That doesn’t stop until the day they graduate.”
The total outlay for the program surpassed $800,000 this year, not a penny of which goes to administrative costs. Niki Knopf, Cliff’s daughter, is executive director of the foundation and Eda, who spent eight years on the board of the Florence Fuller Foundation, resigned that post in December to help ease Knopf’s workload.
The investment in each student is more than monetary.
“We also have a social services program,” Cliff said, “with doctors, counseling, legal services, dentists. If the student or their family needs things, they don’t run off the tracks.
“Many times with students like this a family emergency arises and the kid will have to leave school and come home to take care of it. We make sure that doesn’t happen.”
Atlantic High in Delray Beach, where more than half the students come from families living at or below the poverty line, has had the most students in the program, with Boca Raton High next.
Other affiliated schools are American Heritage, Spanish River, Olympic Heights, Donna Klein Jewish Academy, Katz Yeshiva, Saint John Paul II, Village Academy and West Boca.
“If a kid is so extraordinary that they can go to Harvard, they’re going to be OK,” Eda said. “But there’s so many that do well but they’re not Mensa material, and they don’t have the money to go any further. Those are the kids we want to help. All they need is money and opportunity.”
Of the 130 students now in the program, about 50 attend the University of Florida, with lesser numbers at Florida State, Central Florida, Florida Atlantic and Florida International.
“We partner on a lot of students with the Florida Prepaid College Foundation,” Cliff said. “They have hundreds of kids they want to find matches for. We’re matching for them but they also match for us. They have 40 to 50 of our kids.”
While the program produced its first college graduates in 2019, many of the students have continued their education into careers such as law, medicine and engineering.
Cliff Viner, who was a partner in the NHL’s Florida Panthers, 2003-13, and served as general partner from 2008 to 2013, and Eda have four children: Niki, Eric, Amanda and Elyse Cromer.
The foundation will hold its annual fundraiser on Jan. 28 at the Signature Flight Support hangar at Boca Raton Airport.
For more information, see vinerscholars.org.

NOMINATE SOMEONE TO BE A COASTAL STAR
Send a note to news@thecoastalstar.com or call 561-337-1553.

Read more…

By Larry Barszewski

Manalapan’s newly proposed budget includes a half-million dollars to kick-start its switch from septic tanks to sewers, as well as money for 5% pay raises and a 5% one-time bonus for town employees.
Town commissioners set a tentative property tax rate of $3.00 for every $1,000 of taxable value at their July 26 meeting, following their second budget workshop that morning. That’s a 5.3% drop from the current tax rate, but one that still amounts to a 21.2% property tax increase due to the town’s skyrocketing property values.
The commission will hold public hearings on the budget and tax rate at 5:01 p.m. Sept. 16 and 27 at Town Hall.
Commissioners opted against having a more significant tax rate reduction in order to address some key priorities, which include getting the town off septic tanks and making sure town employees are fairly compensated for the work they do.
Town Manager Linda Stumpf included $520,000 in the town’s $6.6 million operating budget to pay for some of the professional fees and needed studies for the septic-to-sewer conversion project and possibly other utility projects.
“That will help with the projects and the planning of the projects,” Stumpf said. If the money was not included in the budget, the town would have to borrow the money to do that preliminary work, she said.
Commissioners plan to give 5% pay raises to employees on top of a 5% pay boost they awarded in March, hoping to keep them from looking elsewhere for employment and creating a cushion for them during a time of high inflation. Stumpf said employees would be pleased, especially since the town’s police contract called for only a 3% raise this year.
Still, Commissioner John Deese said the town ought to do more to help employees during a difficult financial time. He successfully persuaded other commissioners to add the 5% bonus that would be a one-time deal and would not continue driving up salary costs for years to come. The bonus will cost about $110,000, he said.
Deese also requested a salary study be done so the town can decide if other salary adjustments will be needed later to stay competitive with other municipalities.
“I understand we have a smaller town, but we also get services far and above what you would have in other towns,” Deese said. “It’s a real serious and competitive marketplace out there and I think if we don’t address that and pay more attention to it, we could potentially find ourselves in a more difficult position going forward.”
Among other notable items:
• The budget includes money to hire a new security company to handle duties at the guard house on Point Manalapan following dissatisfaction with the current company. The new figure, $264,532, is a 30% increase from the current budget.
• The cost for fire-rescue services from Palm Beach County is increasing 13.1%, to $1.79 million, the largest increase in the past five years. Interestingly, the increase is due to rising property values in South Palm Beach, which the county uses to determine Manalapan’s assessment. South Palm Beach saw a big boost in its property values due to condo construction there.

Read more…

By Joe Capozzi

Developer William Swaim has offered to sell 3.3 acres of submerged land to Ocean Ridge, part of a proposal he says will allow him and the town to “put down their swords’’ and end years of litigation. 
Town officials apparently are not interested. Now, Swaim said he won’t rule out suing the town to recoup the land’s market value.
In a June 15 letter to the town, an attorney for Swaim’s Waterfront ICW Properties said his client would sell the land to the town for $750,000, “a steep discount” from its fair market value of $4.8 million. 
The 3.3 acres is adjacent to a 9-acre submerged tract that the town purchased in April for $1.5 million as part of a plan to rezone the area from residential to conservation/preservation and open the area for recreation. 
But Swaim’s offer has several conditions. Among them: The town must transfer the 3.3 acres’ density rights (14 units) to another site in Ocean Ridge, identified by Waterfront at a later date. It also calls for the town to issue a one-time “height restriction waiver” on the property identified by Waterfront at a later date. 
“The goal here is for Waterfront and the town to put down their swords and work together to consummate a transaction that results in an ideal outcome for both sides,’’ Waterfront attorney Michael Nullman said in the letter. 
“We see this framework as a mutually beneficial opportunity for both Waterfront and the town, which has the added benefit of resolving all pending issues and disputes pending between Waterfront and the town.’’
The letter asked the town to respond in 15 days. That never happened, prompting Nullman to address town commissioners during public comments July 5 “to follow up to ensure everyone had a chance to review that and if anyone had any questions.’’
No one on the dais had any questions and the offer was not discussed.
A week later, Town Attorney Christy Goddeau told The Coastal Star she was “not aware of any direction to respond to the letter or place it on an upcoming meeting agenda. Since the letter is related to the settlement of potential, and certainly threatened, litigation, no further comment is provided at this time.’’
Swaim told The Coastal Star he was surprised by the lack of response. 
“In 35 years of development in South Florida, I’ve never seen a town stick their head in the sand like this town has. They refuse to meet, refuse to discuss anything, do not communicate at all. Zero. Nothing,’’ he said. “We get crickets. That’s why Michael went to the meeting, because nobody is responding.’’ 
The conditions in his proposal, Swaim said, are only fair since he would be giving up plans to develop the 3.3 acres. He said he does not own any other land in Ocean Ridge. And if the town approved the proposal, he said, any height restriction waiver would be compatible with surrounding properties. 
“I doubt seriously it will ever be used, but it’s another right we would have,’’ he said.
“To be honest with you, I thought this was a gift,’’ he said. “It’s everything they want and I’m just trying to get out even.’’
Swaim has been fighting with the town for years over his efforts to build a road and develop the 3.3 acres in the lagoon. In July 2021, Waterfront ICW Properties sued the town in U.S. District Court alleging a claim for inverse condemnation and $10 million in damages. The suit was dismissed without prejudice six months later. 
If the town doesn’t approve his latest proposal, Swaim said, refiling the federal lawsuit “will end up happening and they will have to pay full retail in the courts.’’

Read more…

By Joe Capozzi

The tax rate in Ocean Ridge will remain at $5.50 per $1,000 of taxable value next year, commissioners decided in July, but residents can still expect higher bills because of an 18.26% increase in property values across town. 
At budget workshops on July 5 and Aug. 1, commissioners added $250,000 for a drainage project on Harbour Drive North, $150,000 to replace the Town Hall generator, $50,584 to upgrade the town’s finance software, and $10,000 for new signage related to the Old Ocean Boulevard pedestrian safety program. 
At $10,060,329, the proposed budget, nearly 14% higher than the current year spending plan, provides for 5% raises for non-union employees. It will also raise the minimum salaries of some positions to bring them into line with salaries offered by other towns of similar size across Florida.
Commissioners on Aug. 1 debated how to provide a financial boost to eight employees whose salaries, unlike those of most other employees, were in need of a market adjustment to cover inflation. Instead of giving them an additional raise, the commission agreed to pay each of the eight employees a stipend of roughly $4,200. The salaries included those of the police chief, lieutenant and the building official.
The budget also includes $62,000 for a public works position that includes qualifications for an electrician.
The spending plan will be discussed again Sept. 6 before the final version is adopted on Sept. 19.
With a $5.50 tax rate, the owner of a $1 million home will pay $6,504 in town taxes next year, about $1,000 more than was paid this year.

Read more…

By Joe Capozzi

For the second time in less than four years, Ocean Ridge commissioners are looking for a new town manager, a search they hope to complete within the next four months.
Town Manager Tracey Stevens is leaving Sept. 11 to become town manager and finance director for Haverhill. She will make $134,400, a little more than her Ocean Ridge salary of $132,500.
Stevens, who replaced Jamie Titcomb in March 2019, submitted her resignation on July 15.
10746236694?profile=RESIZE_180x180“I really wasn’t looking to leave Ocean Ridge, because I love serving the residents here. However, I was presented with an opportunity that I couldn’t pass up to manage the town of Haverhill which aligns with my professional and personal goals,’’ Stevens said. 
“I will truly miss serving the residents of Ocean Ridge and working alongside some of the best colleagues in local government any town manager could ask for. I am confident that the extremely competent and professional staff that Ocean Ridge employs will carry on my care and compassion for the town.”
Commissioners hope to hire an interim town manager in early August and a full-time manager by Thanksgiving, if not sooner. 
At a special meeting Aug. 8, they plan to interview three candidates for the interim job: Michelle Berger, a former Port St. Lucie City Council member who served as Sewell’s Point town manager in Martin County from October 2019 to January 2022; Lynne Ladner, a former interim town manager in the Pinellas County town of Kenneth City; and former Lake County Manager Alan Rosen.
With help from the Florida City and County Management Association’s senior advisers program, a free service that offers assistance in finding new town managers, commissioners hope to interview full-time manager candidates in October.
Commissioners will advertise for candidates in similar-sized seaside towns in and out of Florida. Stevens, who had worked for the town for six years, also served as finance director as part of her town manager duties.  A majority of town commissioners said they are sorry to see Stevens go, and some suggested political pressure may have played a role in her decision.
“She has a very good offer and probably a little less stress,’’ said Mayor Susan Hurlburt. “She proved herself to be a true professional at every turn. She doesn’t do things lightly. This must have taken a lot of thought.’’ 
“A sad day for our town indeed,’’ Vice Mayor Kristine de Haseth said in an email to Stevens and the other four commissioners July 15. 
“Tracey was hands down the most professional, transparent, impartial and hard-working town manager we’ve ever had. She has helped us transition to a sustainable, wonderfully staffed town with an admirable level of service on all fronts. She will be sorely missed and difficult to replace.
“But don’t think for one second that the inmates will be allowed to run the prison again. Those days are in the rearview mirror.’’
That last comment struck a nerve for political opponents of de Haseth, who criticized her choice of words on social media. On Aug. 1, de Haseth publicly apologized for using “a figure of speech that was never intended to be taken literally. I would never characterize our residents and our staff that way,” she said, adding that her internal email “was circulated to select members of the town by a fellow commissioner” whom she did not name.
Commissioner Martin Wiescholek called Stevens’ departure “a huge loss for our town.”
“I can only hope we find a replacement who is equally as good as she is and equally as committed. I know she is very well liked with the residents, and her open door policy I’m sure will be missed by many when she is gone,’’ he said.
“Everybody should be able to move on to bigger and better things and I wish her luck,’’ said Commissioner Geoff Pugh, who has served on the commission through five town managers. “Through five town managers, she has been a reasonably efficient town manager.’’
Commissioner Steve Coz, a frequent critic of Stevens, offered no public comments about her departure. 
At a special meeting July 25 to discuss her transition, Stevens asked — and received — permission to start consulting work for Haverhill on her free time at night and on the weekends. “It troubles me,’’ Coz said of her request, “but I don’t see any other way around it.”
Haverhill encompasses 0.6 square mile on both sides of Belvedere Road just west of Palm Beach International Airport. That’s slightly smaller than Ocean Ridge, according to the U.S. Census.
But the towns are vastly different. For one, the average household income in Haverhill is around $80,000, far below Ocean Ridge’s average of just under $216,000.
And Haverhill’s population, 2,300, is much more diverse — nearly 39% Latino, nearly 29% African American and 25% white. In Ocean Ridge, 91% of the town’s 1,830 full-time residents are white.

Political issues involved?
While the other three commissioners gave Stevens glowing reviews in her most recent evaluation, Coz and Pugh raised questions about her abilities and effectiveness. 
Hurlburt and Wiescholek are up for election in March 2023. A loss by either of them could lead to a shift in the commission’s opinion about the manager. 
“She told me she was leaving because she was unexpectedly offered a position that she could not refuse,’’ Wiescholek said. “And not knowing what her employment status is after the ’23 election, she probably didn’t want to take a chance on being unemployed in April 2023.’’ 
On Aug. 1, several residents offered kind words about Stevens.
“Tracey, your resignation is a true loss to Ocean Ridge. You will be truly missed,” former town Commissioner Zoanne Hennigan said.
“It’s been disheartening to know that we’ve had some town leaders who have overtly and covertly sabotaged this previously well-run machine,” Hennigan said. “We are no longer ‘Mayberry’ or the ‘Village of Endless Summer.’ We have some significant issues to solve. Let this pettiness stop so we can move forward.”
Stevens’ impending departure comes a month after Town Clerk Karla Armstrong announced she was leaving to attend law school. Armstrong will be replaced by Kelly Avery, who has worked as deputy or assistant clerk in West Palm Beach, Wellington and Gulf Stream. 
Hurlburt said she spoke briefly to Ocean Ridge Police Chief Richard Jones about the idea of doubling his duties and serving as interim town manager but they both agreed it would be too much work for him.
Even if Jones wanted to serve as interim manager, he could not do both and the town would have to hire an interim police chief, said Town Attorney Christy Goddeau.

Read more…

By Larry Barszewski

A remodeling plan for Manalapan’s Plaza del Mar could lure more restaurants to the shopping center by expanding its covered space for outdoor dining.
The changes would be to five mostly vacant suites on the westernmost portion of the plaza at 250 S. Ocean Blvd., at the southwest corner of Ocean Avenue and State Road A1A.
Town commissioners approved a special exception July 26 that will allow contractors to demolish the interiors of five suites and push back the storefronts to make room for outdoor seating space. The suites are between the Art Basil restaurant, which already has outdoor seating, on one side, and the Thaikyo Asian Fusion restaurant and Tipsy Nail & Lash bar on the other side.
The suites are vacant except for a tailor in one of them.
“There are a number of vacancies in one section of the property that have essentially remained vacant for quite some time,” said Craig Tulepan of Kitson & Partners, the shopping center’s property manager. The vacant suites are “irregular in shape and they are way, way too deep.”
While the average tenant is looking for bays 60 to 80 feet deep, the ones to be remodeled are up to 110 feet deep, Tulepan said.
“What we’d like to do is redo these bays so that the depths are much shorter,” Tulepan said. The recessed storefronts will then provide room for outdoor seating, he said.
“We believe by doing so, it’ll enhance our efforts to lease these spaces. It will bring some new and exciting tenants into the center. We’ll be bringing some restaurants into the center,” he said.
There are no restaurants lined up to move in yet, Tulepan said. The changes are in anticipation of future interest. “Our leasing individuals tell us that we do have an absolute interest in the location,” he said.
The commission’s approval allows for the changes, but the plaza will still have to go through the town’s approval process for architectural design.

Unfinished home to seek 2 more years; mayor vents
How long does it take to build a house?
Commissioners aren’t happy that the one at 1140 S. Ocean Blvd. still isn’t finished five years after owner Mark Sherman first pulled a construction permit for the work in 2017. At their July meeting, commissioners were asked for a permit extension to allow a new contractor, Mauro Brothers, to complete the work within two years.
Mayor Keith Waters said the continuing construction situation was disturbing.
“The inability to put a house on the ground and have it up in five years is untenable in this community,” Waters said. It shouldn’t take more than two years, he said.
“We’ve been remarkably patient, remarkably patient,” the mayor said of the Sherman home. “I have taken a great deal of flak, personally, from people who have to deal with that, live near that and are part of that construction.”
Town Manager Linda Stumpf told contractor Tony Mauro, who represented Sherman at the meeting, that the commission could grant only an 18-month extension — and it would come with the same $63,283.50 fee that the town would charge if Sherman applied for a new permit that would be good for two years.
Mauro then withdrew the permit extension request so that Sherman can file for a new permit and the extra six months it provides.
The house is barely half-finished, with 45% of the work remaining. That amounts to almost $1 million of the original $2.2 million plan. The permit fee is based on the cost of what’s left to be done.
“They’ve had some pretty major issues with construction. That’s why he’s made the change” in contractors, Mauro said of the owner. “As you know, he’s not a full-time resident. He’s been trusting some people to manage the project and finish it.”
The new building permit will be the third for the property. Sherman had to pull a second one in 2019 after commissioners denied a permit extension request then.
“I understand the frustration,” Mauro told commissioners. “This project is going to get finished, I have no doubt. So, this is the last time you’re going to see us.”
Not everyone was convinced.
“He’s going to be back in 24 months,” Vice Mayor Stewart Satter said after Mauro had left the commission chambers.
“He absolutely will,” Stumpf added.
In other action, commissioners approved an ordinance increasing the length of time for special exceptions and variances. The time allowed to begin construction following the issuance of a special exception or variance goes from six months to a year. The time needed to finish construction increases from 18 months to two years.
The commission also approved special exceptions for pedestrian tunnels underneath A1A for homes at 1890 and 1900 S. Ocean Blvd., and for an oceanside beach house at 1900 S. Ocean Blvd.
It also is allowing street-facing garage doors at 1400 Lands End Road. The garage will be farther back on the property and the owner has agreed to landscaping to hide its view from the street.

Read more…

By Steve Plunkett

Highland Beach town commissioners on Aug. 2 postponed discussing whether to have their staff review and approve building permits for Gulf Stream projects after Delray Beach pulled out of a similar arrangement in May.
Because Mayor Doug Hillman was absent, Vice Mayor Natasha Moore moved the agenda item to an Aug. 4 special meeting.
“He wanted to be part of that discussion,” Moore said.
But resident Jack Halpern said it was “highly disappointing” to him as he read the meeting agenda beforehand to see the proposal up for consideration with little to no discussion in previous meetings.
“I absolutely cannot understand why we are offering services of Highland Beach to support Gulf Stream,” he said. “There is no benefit, no added benefit to the residents of Highland Beach.”
According to the proposed agreement: “Fees charged to Gulf Stream properties shall be the same as those charged to Highland Beach properties, and all permits shall be processed on a first-come, first-serve basis, with permits from neither municipality receiving priority over the other.”
Gulf Stream town commissioners were expected to OK the agreement at their Aug. 12 meeting.
Because of Delray Beach’s long processing times, Gulf Stream officials had been advising residents to hold off on applying for building permits until Highland Beach could take over. Highland Beach has said most permits could be approved in 10 days.
Highland Beach Building Official Jeff Remas has said Gulf Stream generates 800 to 900 permit applications a year. He said Highland Beach is processing 2,000 to 2,100 permits a year, so adding Gulf Stream work would be a 40% increase by his calculations.
Delray Beach stopped performing engineering, floodplain and landscaping review for Gulf Stream plans last spring after it discovered its building department was doing them without needed City Commission approval.
Gulf Stream temporarily enlisted its consulting engineering firm Baxter & Woodman for the engineering and floodplain portions of the permits, and landscape architect Dave Bodker of Delray for the landscape review.
Delray Beach officials had told Gulf Stream the city would have to charge extra for those reviews — which Delray residents receive as part of the normal permit process — even though Gulf Stream residents paid the same fees as their Delray Beach counterparts.
City officials also had warned that Delray Beach politics might thwart extending an agreement with Gulf Stream.
“It seems the constituents are very upset with the amount of time it is taking to process their permits,” so they ask “why are they also processing Gulf Stream’s permits,” Gulf Stream Assistant Town Attorney Trey Nazzaro had said.
The agreement between Highland Beach and Gulf Stream would be of a “continuing nature,” with either side able to terminate it by giving no less than 90 days’ written notice.

Read more…

By Steve Plunkett

A whopping $4.4 million increase in the estimate to fix roads and drainage in the town’s Core district led Gulf Stream commissioners in July to propose raising property taxes for the first time in seven years.
The new price for the Core part of the capital improvement plan is $11.1 million, up from $6.7 million a year ago and equal to the originally envisioned cost of the entire 10-year CIP.
“We certainly hope to fine-tune that and have the cost come down when we get into the finer points of the design,” Rebecca Travis of Baxter & Woodman consulting engineers said. Travis presented her firm’s preliminary design of the project on July 8 and said it was on schedule to start construction next July.
But commissioners that day also had to set a proposed property tax rate for the budget year that starts Oct. 1. They settled on keeping the rate the same as this year’s $3.67 per $1,000 of taxable value. That will bring in an additional $551,000 in revenue, an 11.8% tax increase.
The rollback tax rate, which would have generated the same revenue as the previous year, was $3.28 per $1,000. Gulf Stream had adopted the rollback rate or gone below it every year since September 2016.
“As long as the residents, you know, are getting what they want — and the scope of the project, the CIP, the paving and drainage is something everyone’s been after us about — we keep it the same,” Vice Mayor Tom Stanley said of the tax rate.
Mayor Scott Morgan also argued against using the rollback rate.
“We don’t want to be shocking the residents next year or two years from now with a much larger tax increase should that become necessary,” he said.
Public hearings on Gulf Stream’s fiscal 2023 budget and property tax rate are scheduled for 5:01 p.m. on Sept. 9 and Sept. 21 at Town Hall.
The proposed operating budget is $9.3 million, up 8.1% from $8.6 million in the current fiscal year.
Town Manager Greg Dunham said his budget includes a 5% cost-of-living pay raise for employees. The consumer price index for South Florida in April was up 9.6%, he said.
Morgan shot down an idea to also give town workers an “inflation correction” to their pay. Instead, he asked Dunham and Rebecca Tew, the town’s chief financial officer, to compute giving employees a sum to offset the higher gas prices they pay to commute to Gulf Stream.
“I guarantee that the employees will appreciate anything that can help pay for the gas and the food bills,” Dunham said.
He and Tew will come back to the commissioners in August with figures on the fuel offset. Dunham, Town Clerk Rita Taylor, Police Chief Edward Allen and Police Capt. John Haseley, who already receive car allowances, would not get the offsets.
Travis said fears of persistent inflation and shortages of road building and drainage materials forced the engineers to use a 30% contingency for the cost estimate instead of the typical 20%, adding $855,723 to the bottom line.
“The materials availability has really become a problem recently,” she said.
Engineers plan to use “valley gutters” on both sides of the roads in the Core to channel stormwater to outflow pipes. The gutters, which the company recently used in Jupiter Inlet Colony, are concrete, 2 feet wide and slightly V-shaped. They are considered drivable space in the roadway.
Travis’ colleague Jeff Hiscock said he is working with The Little Club to expand one of its lakes to filter more stormwater before it reaches the Intracoastal Waterway. The South Florida Water Management District has indicated it will approve the Baxter & Woodman drainage plan if a lake is enlarged by a quarter-acre.
But the club, Hiscock said, wants to see if the district will OK expanding multiple lakes by smaller amounts equivalent to a quarter-acre instead of adding all the new water surface to just one lake.

Read more…

Gulf Stream: Migrant landing — July 7

10746230691?profile=RESIZE_710xA Border Patrol agent watches as residents check out a boat that came ashore about 3 a.m. July 7 and carried eight migrants from the Dominican Republic. Six of those aboard were located. ‘The other two — they know that one of them got into a cab and left,’ Gulf Stream Police Chief Edward Allen said. Jerry Lower/The Coastal Star

Read more…

10746183275?profile=RESIZE_710xIf it looks like something is missing in this picture looking north along the 4000 block of North Ocean Boulevard, it is. Gulf Stream’s undergrounding project got rid of power lines and poles. Photos by Jerry Lower/The Coastal Star

Burial of utility lines took decade, blew budget, but original backer voices no regret

By Steve Plunkett

It’s almost over!
Gulf Stream’s signature municipal project — to bury its electric, telephone and cable TV lines underground and remove the unsightly poles and overhead wires — neared an end on Aug. 2, with only two poles still standing, all but closing a tangled chapter of the town’s history that traces its roots to a hurricane in 2005 and endured cost overruns, a federal lawsuit and lots of time.
Town Manager Greg Dunham, who asked visitors to Town Hall if they saw anything different after Sea Road in front of the building was de-poled, was surprised at their reactions.
“A lot of people don’t even notice that the poles are gone,” he said.
Outside auditor Ron Bennett noted a happy coincidence as he delivered the latest town audit on July 8.


10746218852?profile=RESIZE_710xA crew from Blackwood Solutions loaded up dozens of utility poles that had been temporarily stored behind Town Hall.

“The undergrounding loan—it was actually paid off on April 1 I believe, the last payment, so as of now the town has no debt. You’re debt-free,” Bennett said.
Gulf Stream borrowed $2.43 million in 2012 to jump-start the project while it collected property owners’ assessments for the work. Owners of single-family homes paid $11,907 on average, while condo owners paid $7,057 on average, either upfront or in annual installments.
The genesis for the ambitious project was a celebratory lunch and a conversation at the now-closed Ellie’s ’50s Diner in 2005 in Delray Beach, former Vice Mayor and then-Civic Association President Bob Ganger recalled.
The association-sponsored luncheon honored workers from Ohio and Kentucky who were helping restore power to Gulf Stream after Hurricane Wilma struck.
Ganger asked the president of the workers’ firm what the town could do to be less vulnerable to high winds. “And he said bury your overheads,” Ganger said.
What followed was a contentious vote and an even more contentious system of special assessments to pay for the work. Residents approved the plan to bury the utility lines in 2011 and agreed to bear the then-expected $5.5 million cost.
“I honestly believe it was the right thing to do. I believed it when I started the project and I believe it today, but we’ll only find out when we have another hurricane and we’ll see just how well the system can be put back together again,” Ganger said.
Construction was to have begun in May 2012 but didn’t get going until late 2013. The original completion target for the south and north phases of the project was somewhere in the first half of 2015.
Cyclical economic factors contributed to delays and overruns. Coming out of a recession, contractors were looking for work and gave low bids. Material prices also were low. Utility companies downsized their staffs, pushing into early retirement experienced workers who knew how to handle complicated projects.
In 2016 with the national economy rolling again, the cost of most everything had gone up and companies were understaffed. The entire undergrounding project cost $6.5 million. Gulf Stream officials approved spending an additional $510,000 that year from the general budget to underwrite the work.
The project south of Golfview Drive finished in 2018. Work on the second phase, from Golfview north, started in late 2016. At one point, Gulf Stream sued AT&T Inc. to get it to finish burying its lines.
“I don’t think there’s any question. It took longer; it was more expensive than we anticipated. But in the long run it’s certainly going to be worth it,” Mayor Scott Morgan said in July.
The last poles removed were those along State Road A1A.
“As a historian,” Ganger said, “I think every once in a while you ought to step back and say, what did we do, how did we do it and what was the outcome. What we did I thought was extremely well done. The outcome took long, a lot longer than we anticipated.”

Read more…

10746158866?profile=RESIZE_710xBy Joel Engelhardt

The party activist who said she instigated the local Republican Party’s censure of state Rep. Mike Caruso faces him for the Republican nomination for state House in the newly drawn District 87.
A Highland Beach commissioner who has put $200,000 into her own campaign goes against a Russian-born adoptee who calls herself an “America-first patriot” for the Republican nomination in Boca Raton-area District 91.
And two newcomers, one well-ensconced in the local Republican Party, face off in state Senate District 26, with the winner facing Democratic incumbent Lori Berman in the Nov. 8 general election.
Those are the state House and Senate primary battles that appear on the Aug. 23 ballot for voters who live on the South County barrier islands. Several unchallenged candidates will move directly to the general election without a primary. Here’s a breakdown of the six candidates in the three contested races:

House District 87: Mike Caruso vs. Jane Justice
Caruso, 63, a Delray Beach resident, won his first state House seat in 2018 when he defeated Democrat Jim Bonfiglio by 32 votes out of nearly 80,000 cast. He beat Bonfiglio again in 2020, but this time by 11,000 votes.
Then came redistricting, and the state split the South County barrier islands that he used to serve into three House districts. He’s running in Republican-leaning District 87, which starts at the Boynton Inlet and covers Hypoluxo, Lantana, Manalapan and South Palm Beach, as well as large swaths of West Palm Beach and Palm Beach Gardens, before ending at Marcinski Road in Jupiter.
Caruso’s Delray Beach oceanfront condo, listed on his 2021 financial disclosure form as a $3.3 million asset, is no longer in the district, meaning he’ll have to establish residency to the north if he wins. In all, Caruso reported a net worth of $4.1 million.
In the past few months, Caruso faced an uprising from within the Republican Party of Palm Beach County. The party executive committee voted to censure him and block him from running again as a Republican after he endorsed a Democrat, Katherine Waldron, in her four-way primary for the House District 93 seat covering Wellington. 
He said he made the endorsement because he and Waldron, a Port of Palm Beach commissioner, worked well together on Bahamas hurricane relief and he considered her a friend.
But he said he casts party line votes 99% of the time and retained the support of the state Republican Party, which not only did not oust him but has given him $20,650 in staffing and polling assistance since June 21, according to Caruso campaign reports. 
In total, Caruso has raised $146,000 as of July 15 and spent $61,000.
His opponent, Jane Justice, said she led the campaign to censure Caruso when she found out he had endorsed Waldron, whom she called “a radical Democrat.”
“I question why Caruso is in our party,” Justice said.
Justice, 66, says she’s a grass-roots activist, not a politician. Her campaign website says she will fight for election integrity, school choice, parents’ rights and against mask and vaccine mandates and inappropriate sexual material in children’s schoolbooks.
“I’m a ‘We the people’ candidate,” she said. “People know who I am. When our constitutional rights are being infringed on, I’m going to stand up.”
She spoke recently before the Palm Beach County Commission on election integrity, challenging the accuracy of machines that help duplicate damaged ballots so they can be fed through counting machines.
She said she wants to severely limit voting by mail because it has ushered in “a lot of fraud” and ballots should be counted by hand, not by a tabulating machine that could be connected to the internet. 
Like Caruso, she supports the recently enacted 15-week ban on abortion in Florida. While he wouldn’t take a position on an outright ban, which may be proposed in the next legislative session now that the Supreme Court has removed the federal right to abortion, Justice said she believed there needs to be some exceptions that would have to be decided by a doctor and patient.
She has raised $22,000 through July 15, about half in loans from herself, and spent nearly $10,000. She lists her 2021 net worth as $410,000, including her Greenacres condo, which is not in the district.
The primary winner will face Democrat Sienna Osta in the general election.

House District 91: Christina DuCasse vs. Peggy Gossett-Seidman
The Delray Beach woman competing with Highland Beach Commissioner Peggy Gossett-Seidman portrays herself as an “America-first patriot.” 
“I love America and I love the Constitution,” Christina DuCasse says on her campaign website. “I grew up in Boca Raton and I have spent the last 20 years invested in this city.”
DuCasse, 29, a first-time candidate for office, does not mention that she was born in Russia, the birthplace listed on her September 2017 marriage license to Boca Raton firefighter Dustin DuCasse. 
Responding to a call about her birthplace, DuCasse said she had been born in Russia, adopted at the age of 7, raised in South Florida and is an American citizen. She declined to discuss her adoption further or to discuss the issues facing voters in District 91, but she agreed that her personal story made her more conscious of the importance of liberty. 
“I hope to be a voice to stand for freedom,” she said.
On her website, she stakes out positions in line with Gov. Ron DeSantis on border security, mask and vaccine mandates and critical race theory.
On elections, she supports ending early voting, limiting mail-in ballots to people in the military and “those who absolutely need it” and “paper ballots only — no machines!” It is not clear if she would support hand-counting of ballots.
On abortion, she writes, she will “fight for the rights of all people, including the unborn.”
Through July 15, she raised $12,300 and spent $7,200. She listed her net worth as $249,761, including the $430,000 value for her townhome outside the district in Delray. She reported her primary income in 2021 of $22,000 came from cleaning houses. 
For Gossett-Seidman, the triumph of getting three bills passed this year by the state Senate and House for projects in Highland Beach, where she has served as a commissioner since 2018, met the harsh reality of Gov. DeSantis’ veto pen.
She understood his veto of the two biggest items, requests for $700,000 toward drainage improvements along State Road A1A and $400,000 for a new fire station, because the money is available in a different state program, one she and the bill sponsor, Caruso, are pursuing. 
Gossett-Seidman, 69, born in Michigan, has lived in Highland Beach since 1991. She first won her Highland Beach commission seat in a four-candidate race in 2018 and was re-elected to a three-year term without opposition in 2021. 
She has raised $275,000 through July 15, including $25,000 from the Florida House Republican Campaign Committee and $200,000 as a personal loan. She has spent $52,700. 
She listed her 2021 net worth at $22.2 million, including her Intracoastal-facing $4 million home. But the bulk of her fortune, $17.2 million, is in Apple stock, for which she credited her husband, a doctor, who bought it in the 1990s when the stock was selling for less than $1. 
Despite the money, the former sportswriter said she drove her 2005 Suburban until it conked out on a recent trip to Tallahassee, wears 2-year-old tennis shoes and clips coupons.
“What can I say? I’m very Midwest that way,” she said.
She supports the state’s 15-week abortion ban but said she doesn’t expect the Legislature to ban abortion entirely. “I’m flexible. I will look at all the facts.”
She harbors some concerns about election integrity but said it really falls on the election supervisors in the state’s 67 counties. 
She is not a supporter of mask mandates, saying “in the beginning it seemed like a great idea but after a while the science wasn’t there to wear a mask.” 
She agrees with removing some books from classrooms, describing a kindergarten book citing the terms KKK and negro. “I don’t know why you need to teach a 5-year-old that. It makes no sense,” she said.
DuCasse and Gossett-Seidman face off for the seat formerly held by Emily Slosberg-King, who is not seeking re-election. The district includes all of Boca Raton, most of Highland Beach and much of west Boca.
The winner faces Democrat Andy Thomson, a Boca Raton City Council member.

Senate District 26: Steve Byers vs. Bill Wheelen
Since 2015, Bill Wheelen has been volunteering with the local Republican Party. Earlier this year, he said he received the group’s Jean Pipes Award for volunteer service at a Mar-a-Lago dinner headlined by Donald Trump and DeSantis. 
While he contemplated a run for the congressional seat held by Lois Frankel, he saw the crowded field of Republican challengers and said he opted for the state Senate seat now held by Democrat Lori Berman. 
At the same time, Steve Byers decided to run, creating a two-way race for the nomination.
While Wheelen answered questions and discussed issues with The Coastal Star, Byers, who appears on shared campaign postcards with DuCasse, did not respond to repeated phone calls.
Both men live in the sprawling district, which extends along the beach from Boca Raton’s Red Reef Park to the Boynton Inlet and stretches west to Belle Glade. Wheelen, 68, lives in Wellington; Byers, who will turn 54 in August, lives off of Hagen Ranch and Lake Ida roads west of Delray.
While Berman has raised $127,000 without a primary opponent, Wheelen has nearly $11,000, including $7,000 in loans from himself, and Byers has $5,000, including $4,800 he lent his campaign. 
Wheelen listed his net worth at $765,000, including $720,000 for the value of his home. 
Byers listed his net worth at $2.6 million, including a $210,000 Porsche 930, three properties in the Pittsburgh area and $1.3 million for his Wellington home.
On the abortion issue, Wheelen, a practicing Catholic, admits to being conflicted.
“I follow church teaching. However, I’m also more pragmatic than that. It’s really not my place to tell you what you should do. If science says 15 weeks, that’s where we stop,” he said.
He has concerns about election integrity, particularly fraud through vote-by-mail ballot harvesting, and opposes mask mandates. 
His No. 1 priority is school safety, which he says requires hardening schools and spending whatever it takes.
“Gun control has nothing to do with it,” he said. “The more gun control we have, the less law-abiding citizens have them.”
He writes on his website about how his father barely had enough money to pay rent and wouldn’t eat until the children did. He took a job as a janitor on Wall Street and became a trader, putting two children through college. 
Byers calls himself a “serial entrepreneur” on his website. He parlayed success in Amway sales into a consulting business that he said worked on projects for IBM and the CIA. Among businesses he started since then is one as a beekeeper. 
“I’ve got thick skin,” he writes on his website. “I have taken the stings of the bees to put honey on your table. I will take the stings of politics to put honesty in your government.”

You can find a story online with House maps at https://thecoastalstar.com/profiles/blogs/along-the-coast-new-map-carves-barrier-island-into-three-district. A Senate story is at https://thecoastalstar.com/profiles/blogs/along-the-coast-senate-seats-changing-as-well.

For a sample ballot go to: www.pbcelections.org

Read more…

By Jane Smith and Mary Hladky

After years of frustration with a state law that prevented cities and counties from regulating outdoor smoking, Delray Beach and Boca Raton are finally in position to clear the air at their beaches and parks.
Both cities are taking advantage of a new state law that allows local governments to impose cigarette smoking bans in outdoor areas.
The proposed smoking bans at beaches and parks, passed on first reading in Delray Beach on July 19 and introduced in Boca Raton on July 26, could take effect in August if approved as expected. The ordinances also would cover vaping (using electronic devices).
But cities still won’t be able to stop anyone from lighting up a stogie outdoors, because the new state law exempts the smoking of unfiltered cigars from local regulation.
“To me, it makes no sense,” Boca Raton Mayor Scott Singer said. “Cigar smoke travels further and typically is more potent.”
State Sen. Lori Berman, D-Boynton Beach, told Delray Beach commissioners during her legislative update at their June 7 meeting that the cigar exemption was kept in place because one state senator wanted it.
Despite the cigar exemption, the new law is welcome news.
Local governments have railed against state laws that take control out of their hands, as had been the case with outdoor smoking and continues with firearm regulations. While cities and counties may prefer local control, the state on some issues sees the need for uniform laws and preempts local governments from making their own rules.
Berman called the new state law “a reverse preemption,” giving back control to local officials on the smoking issue.
Boca Raton’s planned ordinance is one victory for Singer in his years-long attempts to end state preemptions that prevent cities from enacting their own laws on local matters.
“This is one rare instance where the state has not preempted us and returned home rule back to cities on a specifically local issue,” Singer said.
Boca Raton did what it could in the past to discourage smoking at public beaches and parks. While it could not ban smoking, it posted signs urging visitors not to smoke.
The state took away the ability of local governments to regulate outdoor smoking in 2003. At one point, Sarasota County ignored the state law and imposed a beach smoking ban, but the ban was later thrown out in court.
In 2013, then-State Rep. Bill Hager, R-Boca Raton, filed legislation to allow local governments to ban smoking at parks and beaches, but it didn’t pass.
Local governments had to wait until July 1 when the state changed the Florida Clean Indoor Air Act to the Florida Clean Air Act, allowing local control of smoking at public beaches and parks.
Boca Raton will fine violators $100. Delray Beach has not set its fine schedule.

Read more…

By Steve Plunkett

Ocean Ridge Police Officer Nubia Savino has ended her 5-year-old lawsuit against former Vice Mayor Richard Lucibella in a confidential, out-of-court settlement.
The resolution came just two days after a mediator declared both sides at an impasse. Dismissal of the lawsuit was posted to the court’s docket on June 20.
Richard Slinkman, Savino’s attorney, was limited in what he could say about the case.
“The matter has been resolved and she has dismissed her lawsuit,” he said.
Savino, who filed suit as Nubia Plesnik and later married, was part of the police team that charged Lucibella with resisting arrest in October 2016.
Her lawsuit, filed in June 2017, alleged Lucibella “committed a battery upon [her] by intentionally causing harmful or offensive contact with [her] by pushing [her] and further physically contacting her during the course of the arrest.”
A second count claimed Lucibella’s actions were negligent.
Lucibella, now 68, had $10 million in insurance for personal liability. Savino’s suit said she was seeking at least $15,000 in damages, the legal threshold.
Slinkman had said Savino suffered from shoulder pain after the arrest and only wanted what a jury felt was fair and just.
“I can tell you that I do not expect such to be in excess of Mr. Lucibella’s $10 million insurance policy,” Slinkman said when the suit was filed.
Much has happened in the courts since then.
Lucibella faced two felony charges — resisting arrest with violence and battery on Savino’s colleague, Officer Richard Ermeri — and a misdemeanor, use of a firearm while under the influence of alcohol.
He was found not guilty in February 2019 of the felonies but guilty of simple battery, a misdemeanor. The firearm charge was dropped at the start of the trial.
The next month Lucibella appealed the misdemeanor battery verdict, but the 4th District Court of Appeal in April 2020 upheld his conviction without comment.
In October 2020 he filed a police brutality lawsuit against Savino, Ermeri and the town of Ocean Ridge. The town was dropped as a defendant last November.
The case is now at the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta after the officers’ lawyers appealed a judge’s pretrial ruling.
The genesis of all the legal activity was a 2016 scuffle at Lucibella’s oceanfront home. Savino, Ermeri and Sgt. William Hallahan went there after neighbors reported hearing shots fired. They confiscated a .40-caliber handgun and found five spent shell casings on the backyard patio.
The gun was later determined to belong to Police Lt. Steven Wohlfiel, a friend of Lucibella’s who was visiting.
During the arrest, Lucibella was pinned to the patio pavers and suffered injuries to his face and ribs. Savino said in her initial police report that she went to the department-approved urgent care center for “injuries to the left side of my body,” including shoulder, arm, wrist and foot. She also reported being placed on restricted duty.
Lucibella sold his home at 5 Beachway North in June 2021 for $8.6 million after buying a $1.7 million house in a county pocket next to Jupiter.

Read more…