August 7, 2015
Transcription
August 7, 2015
WHAT’S HAPPENING Lobsterfest! n Aug. 6-9 eafood lovers chow down on Florida’s clawless lobster during a tasty “feastival” ursday-Sunday, Aug. 6-9. Key West Lobsterfest features savory events from lobster S n More! See page 10 boil to street fair starring the crustacean prepared in a variety of ways. Festivities celebrate the bounty of Florida Keys’ lobster season that opens Aug. 6. Famous for its sweet and tender meat, the Keys’ spiny lobster often served steamed with drawn butter, paired with a seasoned stuffing or cold in savory salads. Festival benefits scholarship fund for Key West High School students. n INFO keywestobsterfest.com I AM MILE MARKER NEWS Terry Schmida Mile Marker News bio eteran journalist Terry Schmida has been a familiar face in Florida Keys’ writing circles since arriving here from his native Canada two decades ago. He is the son of a former advertising copywriter-turned-published novelist and counts several other colorful scribes in his family tree. He published his first periodical, “e Box,” in grade school and conducted his first television interview at age 10. Schmida holds an honors degree in Political Science from Concordia University in Montreal. V He began writing for the Key West Citizen in 1996 as a freelancer, later working his way up to the positions of Police Reporter and the Arts and Entertainment/Paradise Editor. In 1999 and 2000, he moved over to a general assignment position at the weekly Island News. During that time, he also contributed to that publication’s sister paper, Celebrate!, the first LGBToriented periodical on the island. In 2001, Schmida returned to the Citizen as the Features/Food/Health/ Real Estate Editor. Most recently he served as that paper’s Education and Social Services Reporter. Over the years, Schmida has received numerous community awards and citations for his writing, particularly for his work with nonprofit organizations such as Literacy Volunteers of America, Wesley House Family Services, and the Key West Woman’s Club. He serves on the board of the Key West Firehouse Museum and also Samuel’s House, which provides housing and supportive services to homeless women, women and men with children, and intact families. A committed education advocate, Schmida is a mentor with the Take Stock in Children scholarship program. In his spare time, he has authored three books about the history of crime and law enforcement in Monroe County. Schmida is pleased to be joining the Konk Life/Mile Marker family. 2 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 “e successful news organizations of the future will be those locally owned and operated with a real connection to the communities they serve,” he said. “Advances in technology have evened the playing field to the point that bigger is no longer necessarily better and a quality product has become the paramount consideration. I’m looking forward to working with other like-minded professionals the fastest-growing newsgathering company in the Keys.” — Terry Schmida Schmida welcomes input from the community at [email protected] “New tips are particularly welcome,” he said with a smile. n MARATHON NEWS Marathon city manager search to be completed by month’s end BY TERRY SCHMIDA MILE MARKER NEWS If all goes as planned, the City of Marathon should be in a position to offer an employment contract to one of two short-listed candidates for the city manager slot, by the end of the month. Now that Marathon City Council has voted to conduct in-person interviews with top candidates, Charles Lindsey and Lyndon Bonner, it’s just a matter of timing the interviews to fit the candidates schedules, prior to the Aug. 11 or Aug. 25 council meetings, so that a final selection pronto. Current City Manager Mike Puto is technically available through the end of the year, but has signaled his intention to step down from the position as soon Senmartin added that while he’s happy to interview both candidates for the job, Lindsey’s experience as the former operations manager at Coast Guard Station Marathon, from 2010-13, gives him a leg up on the competition. “I think I’m happiest with Lindsey right now,” he said. “It’s important to note that Lindsey was a Coast Guard commander here before, and his wife was a Marathon High School teacher, so he’s lived here and knows the town. But I am not completely sold. e other guy has to be given a fair shake.” For his part, Bonner served as the city manager of North Miami beach during 2011 and 2012, and claims to have visited Marathon numerous times. as a replacement can be installed. As during the recent searches for high profile postings, such as the new in-house city attorney, which was snagged by 39-year-old David Migut, the two top picks for city manager will be receive $500 to assist with meals, a hotel room and travel expenses. “We took our five candidates and did Skype interviews with them,” Vice Mayor Mark Senmartin said recently. “And [on July 28] we whittled it down to two people, Charles Lindsey and Lyndon Bonner, who are going to be coming down here for in-person interviews . . . . “With any luck, at [the Aug. 11] meeting we can vote to hire one of them, and then move forward with contract negotiations.” 3 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 Senmartin and the other council members have been looking for a new city manager since Puto informed them in April of his decision to step aside. e vice mayor also said the council will like to have the new city manager in place and working by early fall. “It’s conceivable that by Sept. 1 we could have a new manager in place,” Senmartin said. “e hiring process has taken a little bit longer than we expected, but as I made clear from the beginning, I wanted us to hire a good, qualified person. We had Mr. Puto in place, so there wasn’t an emergency.” n [email protected] COUNTY NEWS august 7-13, 2015 Published Weekly Vol. 1 No. 21 PUBLISHER/EDITOR Guy deBoer NEWS WRITERS Mark Howell, Terry Schmida, Emily Schulten PHOTOGRAPHERS Larry E. Blackburn, Ralph De Palma DESIGN Dawn deBoer LEAD DESIGNER 609.903.3996 KONK Life/Mile Marker News Julie Scorby KONK Life Real Estate 305.304.2098 & Photo Page Designer Christie Voss KONK Life Real Estate 954.531.5978 Mile Marker News Real Estate & Photo Page Designer CONTRIBUTORS Guy deBoer Key News Mark Howell Howelings Louis Petrone Key West Lou Kerry Shelby Key West Kitchen Robin Mayer It’s Your Environment Roxanne E. Fleszar Your Financial Future Albert L. Kelley Business Law 101 Harry Schroeder High Notes Diane Johnson In Review ADVERTISING 305.296.1630 Susan Kent|305.849.1595 REAL ESTATE REPRESENTATIVE [email protected] Sarah Sandnes|305.731.3223 [email protected] Advertising Deadline Every Friday PRINT-READY advertising materials due by Friday every week for next issue of KONK Life. Ad Dimensions Horizontal and Vertical: Full, 1/2, 1/3, 1/4, 1/8 page, bizcard Ad Submissions JPG, TIFF, PDF — digital formats only Send to [email protected] CIRCULATION Kavon Desilus ASSISTANT Ben Neff ASSISTANT Mile Marker News is published weekly by KONK Communications Network in Key West, Fla. Editorial materials may not be reproduced without written permission from the network. KONK Communications Network (305) 296-1630 • Key West, Florida www.milemarkernews.com n More! See page 5 Derelict vessel session heads for Key Largo BY TERRY SCHMIDA MILE MARKER NEWS bodily injury. ose efforts, however, went nowhere, during the much-derided and rancorous session. During the period from June 2014 though May of this year, the county spent over $150,000 in Boating Improvement Fund cash to rid the area of derelict vessels, but the problem is expected to continue, for a variety of reasons. Among the solutions proposed during the Tallahassee meeting, one held particular appeal to Sheriff Ramsay. “I like the idea of requiring the boat's owner and the buyer to both go to the tax collector's office at the same time, and registering the boat in the buyer's name right away,” Ramsay said. “It might be a little more inconvenient to the seller, but this way the county will know who owns these crafts immediately, and who it is we have to contact, should the need arise.” e sheriff added that such a move would circumvent current regulations that make it easy for owners to dispose of unwanted vessels by signing them over to people with no interest – or ability – to provide for their upkeep. e stubborn issue of how to deal with derelict, or “at risk” vessels will be the subject of a state session and open meeting sponsored by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission (FWC) set for 2:30 p.m. Aug. 13, at the Murray E. Nelson Government and Cultural Center in Key Largo. e meeting will be one of five held around the state, following a survey, completed in December, regarding "anchoring of non-liveaboard vessels" outside approved public mooring facilities drew nearly 12,000 responses, including 600-plus from the Keys. e hearing also comes on the heels of an early July, FWC-sponsored gathering held in Tallahassee, that was attended by Sheriff Rick Ramsay and a delegation of other county government representatives. Attempts were made during the last legislative session to address the issue of the vessels, which pose a serious threat to maritime navigation, and carry the risk of both property damage and serious MONROE SHERIFF’S OFFICE He spoke with the driver of the truck, telling him he was not allowed to park there at that time. e beach closes at 11 p.m. e man said he was just getting some sleep before heading north. Deputy Prince asked him for his identification and checked it through Sheriff’s Office computers. He discovered the man—61-yearold Terrence Haynes—was reported missing out of Port Saint Lucie. He asked Haynes to step out of his truck so he could speak with him further. Haynes became agitated, put the truck in drive and sped away. Deputy Prince ran back to his patrol car, radioed for assistance, then followed in an attempt to stop Haynes. | Continued on page 15 Man commits suicide in front of deputy A man reported missing from Port St. Lucie shot himself in the head in front of a Sheriff’s deputy. Deputy Jorge Prince was on patrol, checking the end of Old Boca Chica Road on Big Coppitt Key at 12:30 a.m. He saw a Ford F150 truck parked at the barricades, so he got out of his patrol car to check on it. 4 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 COUNTY NEWS Smith for MosquitoControl: Veteran commissoner runs for sixth term BY TERRY SCHMIDA MILE MARKER NEWS Longtime Florida Keys Mosquito Control District Commissioner Stephen Smith has long been associated with things that fly. e Daytona Beach native worked as Cape Air’s man in the Keys for nine years and is now putting his marketing talents to work for Mokulele Airlines, a Hawaii-based carrier trying its luck down this way. Smith also spends a fair amount of time shuttling to conferences and other other business events on behalf of the Tourist Development Council and Newman PR. For two decades now, however, Smith has toiled to rid Monroe County airspace of mosquitoes, the result of an epiphany he had walking around his own neighborhood in Key West. “We had a horrible mosquito problem back when I ran in ’95,” Smith said. “I called Mosquito Control one time to ask for help, and they told me to go to Scotty’s and get a fogger. I did that, and it brought some temporary relief, but didn’t solve the bigger problem. at’s when I decided to run myself.” Bug board districts mirror county commission district boundaries, and Smith has represented his District 3 Sneakers for Students n Boys and Girls Club of the Keys rough Aug. 16, iHOP and the Boys & Girls Clubs across the State of Florida team up for the upcoming school year with the annual Sneakers for Students program. Bring in a pair of new or used sneakers to a local iHOP and get a free shortstack of pancakes. All sneakers to club members of the Boys and Girls Club of the Keys. e Boys and Girls Clubs of the Keys’ teams up with the Key West IHOP location at 3416 Roosevelt Avenue in Key West, (305) 292-6319. n INFO Dan Dombroski, (305) 296-2258 seat for five four-year terms. He’ll be seeking a sixth mandate as five-member board’s sole Democrat in the November 2016 election. (Mosquito Control is the only county entity in which candidates for election register their partisan views.) Back in the ’90s, Smith and fellow Commissioner Bill Shaw found themselves sued for “interfering with an advantageous business relationship.” It only served to harden Smith’s resolve to reform the agency. “We basically said, if you guys don’t do your job, you won’t have a job,” Smith said. “We weren’t doing mosquito control. ere was no scientific approach, and we had no biologist or entomologist on staff.” At the time he was elected, Mosquito Control had endured a decade of budgetcutting Smith claims left it woefully unprepared to perform its core mission of keeping people from getting bitten by mosquitoes and potentially contracting the diseases some carry. “We were flat broke,” Smith said. “We had to borrow money to make payroll, and we only had three trucks in the entire county doing fogging. e rest weren’t operable. You dig yourself into holes like that by continuously cutting the millage rate, cutting taxes.” | Continued on page 8 Blood Centers merge Two of Florida’s independent, not-for-profit blood centers, OneBlood, Inc., and e Blood Alliance, Inc., will merge effective July 31. e newly formed organization will distribute more than one million blood products annually, serve over 210 hospitals throughout most of Florida, parts of Georgia, Alabama and South Carolina and employ more than 2,400 people. “e landscape of the blood industry is rapidly changing and it demands that we continue to evolve and diversify to meet the needs of our hospital partners and their patients,” said Don Doddridge, president and chief executive officer of OneBlood. “We are confident that the merger will have a positive impact in further defining the new template for the future of our industry and ensuring our communities have a progressive, forward-thinking local blood center that is here to serve for years to come,” said Doddridge. More stringent transfusion protocols, health care reform and advances in medical science are all helping shape a new era of blood banking. “Bringing the two organizations together is the right thing to do for our communities,” said Dr. Marsha Bertholf, medical director of e Blood Alliance. “We can no longer rely on the business models of the past to take us where we need to go in the future. Hospitals want larger scale blood centers | Continued on page 6 FIRM: Support flood insurance fairness for county SPECIAL TO MILE MARKER NEWS e Fair Insurance Rates in Monroe (FIRM) Board of Directors supports and urges all FIRM members and the general public to support H.R. 141 Flood Insurance Premium Parity Act 2015 and the recently submitted H.R. 2918 Flood Insurance Fairness Act of 2015, introduced by Florida U.S. Congressmen Curbelo and Murphy on June 25—bills that expand upon last year’s Homeowner Flood Insurance Affordability Act (HFIAA) and would provide rate relief to Americans paying flood insurance for non-primary residences and rental properties. According to Congressman Curbelo, H.R. 2918 will “ensure all Americans have access to affordable flood insurance, by guaranteeing that all non-primary r esidences and business properties receive the same rates provided to primary homes under HFIAA.” Fair Insurance Rates in Monroe is proud to call Congressmen Curbelo and 5 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 Murphy friends and supporters of the long standing FIRM mission “to achieve residential, condominium, and commercial property insurance rates in Monroe County that are neither excessive, discriminatory, nor unaffordable and ensure appropriate physical and financial protection for property in the Keys to sustain and support our communities.” n About The Blood Alliance BLOOD CENTERS MERGE | Continued from page 6 to serve their multiple locations. e merger will allow us to accommodate their needs and still keep the hometown connection,” said Bertholf. In addition to mitigating cost to hospitals and patients, the merger is expected to bring additional operational efficiencies and further stabilize the blood supply, especially in times of natural disasters such as hurricanes and enhance donor outreach initiatives. OneBlood CEO, Don Doddridge, who began his blood banking career in Jacksonville, will lead the newly merged organization and an 11 member board of directors will provide oversight, governance and guidance. Integration of the two organizations will begin immediately. In addition, e Blood Alliance will undergo a rebranding phase in the coming months and transition to the OneBlood brand. n and ended July 21. Participation was open to the public. As part of the challenge, contestants were provided weekly hints, tips, and other educational information on healthy eating habits and integrating exercise into their routine. Weekly challenges and prizes were also included in the program. is contest provided a cash incentive to motivate participants to learn and stick with a newfound wellness regimen. Proceeds were split among the top three biggest losers (competitors who lose largest percentage of body weight). Over 455 pounds were lost during the 10-week period among 30 Monroe County residents participating. is translates to over three people in pounds, based on an average weight of 150 pounds per person. Congratulations to the winners of the challenge: e Blood Alliance (TBA) provides blood to more than 30 hospitals and medical facilities in Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina. It provides a safe and adequate blood supply to the regions it serves and is a member of America’s Blood Centers – a national network of independent community blood centers responsible for nearly half of the nation’s blood supply. TBA has been enriching lives since 1942 and is a non-profit community blood center licensed by the FDA and accredited by the AABB. n INFO igiveblood.com 1st Place Scott Russell HEALTH Monroe County Property Appraiser, lost 18.1 percent of his baseline bodyweight and won $497. Scott Russell Regarding his 1st Place Winner secrets to weight loss, Russell says, “I counted calories and tried to stay between 1,500 to 1,800 a day. I also made my best attempt at 20-30 minutes of light exercise, like walking, daily.” His daily diet typically consisted of oatmeal in the morning, a snack at 10 am, six inch sub or sandwich for lunch, an apple and/or banana at 2 pm, followed by a sensible home cooked meal at between 5 p.m. and 6 p.m. and a yogurt as an 8 p.m. snack. Russell continues, “I ditched all soda products, including diet sodas, and drank lots of water daily. Lots and lots of water!” He also noted that this challenge allowed him to stay accountable for his diet and used portion control. And the winners are . . . About OneBlood OneBlood is a not-for-profit 501(c)(3) community asset responsible for providing safe, available and affordable blood to more than 200 hospital partners and their patients throughout most of Florida and into parts of southern Georgia and Alabama. OneBlood was established on January 27, 2012 when three of Florida’s independent, not-for-profit blood centers merged. Together, OneBlood brings more than 100 years of lifesaving experience to the community. OneBlood distributes nearly one million blood products annually, employs more than 2,000 people, operates more than 70 donor centers and deploys nearly 200 of its signature Big Red Buses throughout its service area for blood drives. n INFO oneblood.org Top row from left: Healthiest Weight Coordinator Gayle Glover, Jane Cardwell, 5th Place Winner; Nicole Normal, Runner Up. Bottom row: Wendi Ney, Pedometer Challenge Winner and 4th Place Winner; Jo Bennet, 2nd Place Winner; Jennifer Duyser, Runner Up. n Healthiest Weight Florida Callenge, Biggest Loser e Florida Department of Health in Monroe County announced the winners of the first Department of Health-led citywide Biggest Loser and Healthiest Weight Florida Challenge in Key West. e 10-week challenge launched May 12 2nd Place Kevin O’Connell (No image due to Law Enforcement policy) Kevin O’Connell, Law Enforcement, lost 16.1 percent of his baseline body- 6 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 weight and won $298. Kevin says, “I biked around the island, about 10 miles about four or five days a week.” Kevin, who worked night shift, “always used to look to junk food,” but has changed his eating habits. Kevin started dieting earlier in the year. He was on the Medifast diet before the challenge began and continued it halfway through the challenge. He has lost an overall 90 pounds this year and eight inches around his waist. He says, “I have felt the best I’ve ever had now that I’ve lost weight. I have more energy and sleep a lot better now.” 3rd Place Jo Bennett Jo Bennett, City of Key West Planning, lost 12.8 percent of her baseline body weight and won $199. Jo Bennett “I cut out 3rd Place Winner snacks and kept my calories below 1,000 every day. I ate protein—lean meat, fish, chicken and shrimp.” Regarding her exercise habits, “I rode my tricycle to work, three miles each way, 20 minutes total, four times each week. It’s like spin class on wheels!” Side Challenge Winners • Pedometer Challenge— Cheryl Martin Jones, Monroe County Code Compliance • Food Journal Challenge— Wendi Ney, Voice Over Artist Weekly biggest losers awarded prizes, including classes to Crossfit Key West, Gravity Pole and Fitness Studio, Old Town Fitness, Pilates Studio of Key Mary Moeller West, Stay Fit Stu- Runner Up dio, and CoffeeMill Dance Studio. Gift certificates also awarded to participants, including Fury Water Adventures, Gourmet Nibbles and Baskets, the Westin— | Continued on page 15 IN THE LOWER KEYS Turn up the heat! n Aug. 13-16 Duval St. Later, themed parties are scheduled at local resorts and clubs. Saturday’s planned highlights include a guided trolley tour showcasing the sites, history and culture associated with Key West’s flourishing LGBT community. Among the day’s other temptations are on-thewater fun and a pair of nighttime parties for adventurous attendees. e following day, water enthusiasts choose to swim, snorkel, sun or relax on remote sandbars in the Keys’ backcountry during Blu Q’s all-male “Sandbar Sunday.” In addition, pool party at Island House. roughout Tropical Heat, explore Key West’s museums and nature centers by day and drag shows by night. Tropical Heat VIP access passes available offering savings on event admission costs, or attendees can pay individual event admissions. n INFO www.tropicalheatkw.com Key West is set to sizzle with a long weekend of all-male adult fun ursday through Sunday, Aug. 1316, during the annual Tropical Heat festival. Tropical Heat offers four days of revelry and more than a dozen events in the island city whose openness and respect for diversity have made it a worldrenowned gay vacation destination. e heat wave begins ursday, Aug. 13, with a 5:30 p.m. kick-off party at Island House Resort, 1129 Fleming St., followed by the “Sunset Sail & Splash” with Blu Q, Key West’s longest running all-gay sailing charter. Night’s festivities end with a show at the 801 Bourbon Bar’s cabaret, 801 Duval St. Festival attendees can make a splash Friday during a paddleboard excursion with Nomadic SUP or a clothing-optional afternoon pool party at the Bourbon St. Pub, 724 chronic lung disease that is the United States’ leading genetic killer of children and young adults. Scheduled celebrity participants include Major League Baseball Hall of Famer Wade Boggs, former Denver Broncos football player Mark Cooper and former NASA space shuttle astronaut Bruce Melnick. Anglers and teams earn points by catching and releasing fish in the tournament’s fly, spin/plug or general/bait categories. Awards based on the most points accumulated representing all species of a slam. Preceding the main event is e Angling Company’s Superfly, a one-day, one-fly tournament | Continued on page 15 S.L.A.M. celebs n Sept. 11-13 Anglers test their skill at catching tarpon, permit and bonefish during the annual Robert James Sales S.L.A.M. Celebrity Fishing Tournament Friday to Sunday, Sept. 11-13. e catch-and-release event pits anglers against the species dubbed the “big three” game fish of the flats. S.L.A.M. is the first in an annual Florida Keys autumn tournament trilogy benefiting the fight against cystic fibrosis, a life-threatening 7 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 KEY WEST LOU COMMENTARY e stealing of America BY LOUIS PETRONE house ladies willing to dance with anyone who can pay their way. Major corpoMILE MARKER NEWS rations and the rich buy all the tickets. oney controls elections. Million dollar contributions are the Election results provide direct result of Citizen United decided control of Congress, the decision making several years ago. Recall, corporations process of government. Results even are persons. ey have a right to be control Presidents. heard, etc. Called freedom of speech. ere is an old saying . . . He who Citizen United and subsequent decisions pays the fiddler calls the tune. How true! paved the way. e modus operendi. Big money controlling the governContributions would be to super PACs. ment has resulted in elected politicians e money in turn found its way into a becoming feudal serfs of those who have candidates coffers. All legal. the money. Elected officials no longer For years, the United States recogrepresent the people. Major nized the danger of large corporations and the rich amounts of money influencreap the benefits of laws that ing elected persons. Contribumake it easier for them to tions were limited. Today, increase their net worths and unbridled. profitability. To the detriA perfect example is ment of the American people. Hedge-Fund magnate Roger Former President Carter Mercer. He donated $11 recently said that the United million to a super PAC supStates was an oligarchy. He porting Ted Cruz. If he had was correct. He said the donated directly to Cruz’s LOU United States became that campaign, his contribution PETRONE way because of unlimited powould have been limited to COLUMNIST litical bribery. Correct again. $2,700. Who is screwing who here? Carter claims that large unlimited Today, there are three ways to make contributions by the rich are “. . . a com- contributions to candidates. plete subversion of our political system e first is the old-fashioned method as a payoff to major contributors.” He of personal direct payment. Limited by observed that elected officials consider law. e $2,700 thing. e second is the “. . . unlimited money as a great benefit relatively new super PAC indirect way to themselves.” which permits corporations and the rich Our elected representatives are dance to give unlimited dollars into the mil- M SMITH FOR MOSQUITO CONTROL | Continued from page 5 ough a coordinated effort with other commissioners, Smith said, Mosquito Control was able to build itself up into an effective, modern organization. Florida Keys Mosquito Control District Commissioner Stephen Smith, left, fills out papers for FKMCD Commissioner District 3. lions. e third involves contributions via non-profit groups. Referred to as 501(c)(4) contributions. Disclosure not required. Quite frankly, the non-profit one confuses me. I cannot figure it out. All I know is that the contributor to the non-profit fund is not disclosed. Important to those who do not want the public to know who they might be trying to influence or buy. Analyzing which candidate is taking in the most money is difficult. Direct contributions are one item. Super PACs another. Considered separately for accounting and disclosure purposes. Via the direct contribution route Hillary Clinton as of 7/31 had raised. $47.5 million. She had raised twice as much as any other candidate. Jeb Bush raised only $11.4 million re the direct donation route. A far cry from Clinton’s $47.5 million. However, Bush had raised considerably more when super PAC monies were considered. Bush had raised $103 million as opposed to Clinton’s $15.6 million. Scott Walker announced his candidacy on July 13. Within days, Wisconsin billionaire Diane Hendricks contributed $5 million to the Walker Super PAC. In two weeks, Walker took in $20 million total via super PAC contributions. He even announced he was going to finance his candidacy with super PAC dollars rather than direct contributions. Walker appears to be a favorite among super PAC contributors. His Wisconsin governor years have been supported by the Koch brothers. In addition to the $5 million Hendricks contribution, Marlene Ricketts gave $4.9 million. e owners of the Chicago Cubs $2.5 million. en there are those candidates who have few if any supporters with the big bucks. Bernie Sanders, for example. He raised $15.2 million via direct contributions. Significantly less from super PAC monies. Direct contributions represented 76 percent of the $15.2 million. Ted Cruz has taken in $38 million via super PAC contributions. Glad to receive the money. However, he is right up front condemning the process. An intelligent man. He speaks effectively out of both sides of his mouth. He recently said, “Lobbyists and career politicians today make up what I call the Washington Cartel . . . . (ey) on a daily basis are conspiring against the American people.....career politicians’ ears and wallets are open to the highest bidder.” Joe Biden says that “.....where the money is, there’s almost implicitly some string attached.” John Dingell, the 29 term Democratic Congressman from Michigan, recently stated, “.....our government has largely been put up for sale.” John Kerry in his farewell remarks to the Senate in 2013 said, “. . . alliance of money . . . is steadily silencing the voice | Continued on page 13 “Over the past 15 years, we took a very aged fleet of aircraft that flew above our homes and replaced them with more energy-efficient equipment,” Smith said. “And for each aircraft or helicopter we purchased, we paid cash. e planes and choppers both have the same engines, so we’re saving money with mechanic costs. We’ve significantly reduced pesticide use, and increased larvicide spraying, to about a million acres per year. We also have a modern facility in Marathon that didn’t exist when I entered office.” at Category 4 building is able to shelter the district’s aircraft, Smith added, obviating the costly need to fly them to the mainland in the event of a storm. “We have a modern lab now, staffed by biologists and entomologists, and know exactly what kind of mosquitoes are flying in each part of the Keys,” Smith said. “We know what we need | Continued on page 9 8 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 IN THE LOWER KEYS Poker Run bikers hit Overseas Highway, U.S 1 n Sept. 17-20 Motorcyclists can travel one of America’s most incomparable highways and explore the Florida Keys island chain during the 43rd annual Phil Peterson’s Key West Poker Run. Scheduled ursday through Sunday, Sept. 17-20, the event typically draws riders from throughout the United States on up to 10,000 bikes. Participants are to traverse Overseas Highway (U.S. Highway 1), 113-mile roadway from mainland Florida to Key West, crossing 42 bridges and discovering long vistas of breathtaking open water. As well as offering a unique motorcycling experience, the Poker Run raises funds for the Diabetes Research Institute and charities of the Key West Sunrise Rotary Club. rough Aug. 31 bikers can register to ride online at petersonsharley.com Beginning Sept. 1 registration is to be open at Peterson’s Harley-Davidson of Miami, 19400 NW 2nd Ave., and Peterson’s Harley-Davidson South, 19825 S. Dixie Highway. STEPHEN SMITH | Continued from page 8 to do to eradicate them. We also have an educational outreach program that helps provide locals and visitors with the sense that they’re safe.” Following heavy rain, the commissioner added, the district is up in the air, spraying, before sun-up, and after sundown. A team of inspectors also makes Upon registering, each participant receives a poker sheet and can purchase a weekend parking band. Drivers of cars and trucks also can participate in the run. Bikers who want to explore the Florida Keys prior to the main event can participate in parties and adventure tours around the island chain Monday through Wednesday, Sept. 14-16. Starting at 8 a.m. ursday, Sept. 17, Poker Run participants are to ride the Overseas Highway from Miami to Key West, stopping at designated points to draw cards. Holders of the 10 best poker hands are eligible to play in a winnertake-all round of Texas Hold ‘Em, competing for a new Harley-Davidson 500 Street motorcycle or $6,000 cash. e high-stakes round is set for 11 p.m. Saturday at Rick’s/Durty Harry’s Entertainment Complex, 202 Duval St. A section of Key West’s lower Duval and Greene streets is to be closed to car traffic and open only to motorcycles and pedestrians during much of the Poker Run, so bikers with weekend parking passes can park on the street to display their bikes. Other attractions include a ursday night “Upper Duval Crawl” and bar stroll, bike merchandise market, “Biker Bash” and street party, custom bike show, tattoo contest, blessing of the bikes and parties at Key West watering holes. Events conclude Sunday, Sept. 20, with a waterfront brunch at the Conch Republic Seafood Co., 631 Greene St. in Key West’s Historic Seaport. n Payne runs for Yaniz’ seat in the upcoming Oct. 6 election but just gained another. Two weeks after Fredy Varela, Sr., pulled out of the race for the District IV city commission seat for health reasons, Richard Payne, a retired Monroe County judge, filed election papers. Payne, 73, was an original supporter of Varela. Payne moved to Key West in 1971, working initially as a county prosecutor. In 1975, he was appointed assistant county attorney, where he advised the Monroe County Zoning Board. BY PRU SOWERS KONK LIFE STAFF WRITER Key West City Commissioner Tony Yaniz lost one challenger for his seat house calls to get at “the mosquitoes that bite you, the shy females who live under your deck,” as Smith calls them. And, during four of the last five years the board, an independent taxing district, has also voted to set their millage rate at rollback, keeping a lid on taxes. Looking ahead, Smith sees challenges in the future. “e genetically modified mosquitoes are just another tool that our program could have in its arsenal,” he said, refer- ring to a controversial proposal to test release the critters in Key Haven. “But at this point I would find it very difficult to support testing them down here. ere just isn’t enough community support at this point.” e district must also stay focused on new diseases, and new ways to kill “nuisance” mosquitoes. Overall, however, Smith believes that his record speaks for itself, and for the job he plans to do, should he 9 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 Key culture e street scene became more colorful when the City of Key West installed four permanent rainbow crosswalks at the intersection of Duval and Petronia streets in the heart of the island’s LGBT entertainment district. Spanning the intersection, the crosswalk feature bands of the six colors of the rainbow flag, an recognized symbol of gay and lesbian unity. Spearheaded by the city and Key West Business Guild, the rainbow crosswalks are composed of preformed thermoplastic color blocks alternating with white stripes. e project marks the first time in Florida that an intersection has been connected with rainbow crosswalks. n In 1980, Payne was appointed a county judge, where he served for nine years. He then ran and won election as a judge on Florida’s 16th Judicial Circuit, where he served three terms for a total of 18 years before retiring as trial judge in 2008. He remained as a senior judge until 2013, when he retired from the bench. Incumbent Yaniz was first elected commissioner in 2011. e seat will be for a three-year term, instead of the usual four years, as Key West synchs its election cycle with the state’s. n win reelection. “I’ve been very proud to serve and I feel I’ve done a very good job of doing what we need to do,” he said. “I’ll be giving 110 percent, should I be elected again. I know mosquitoes aren’t sexy. It’s not a game or a fun thing, but if we didn’t have the bug board, we’d run from our cars to our houses.”n [email protected] WHAT’S HAPPENING Goings-on this August . . . Lobster season started Aug. 6! hearty appetite and a fondness for lobsters are mandatory during the 18th annual Key West Lobsterfest, a celebration of Florida lobster set for ursday through Sunday, Aug. 7-10. e events salute the tasty crustacean following the Aug. 6 start of the Florida Keys lobster season. Known as spiny lobsters, the Keys’ clawless crustaceans offer sweet and tender meat. Many people prefer them steamed with melted butter, while others enjoy their lobster baked and stuffed, blended into a creamy bisque or chilled in salads. e festivities kick off 6 p.m. ursday, Aug. 7, with a lobster boil at the Sunset Tiki Bar & Grille, 617 Front St. As well as lobster, the feast also includes shrimp, andouille sausage, corn on the cob and new potatoes. Other attractions include live entertainment and libation specials. Friday night’s schedule features a lively Duval Crawl with more than a dozen featured bars, plus a jammin’ party at Rick’s/Durty Harry’s Entertainment Complex, 202 Duval St. e festival’s undisputed highlight is the tastebud-tempting Key West Lobsterfest Street Fair, noon to 11 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 9, in the 100 through 500 blocks of Duval. Lobster lovers sample offerings ranging from tantalizing appetizers A to traditional dinners with all the trimmings. All lobster served will be caught by Keys lobster fishermen, ensuring fresh-off-the-boat flavor, and dishes will be prepared by chefs from leading local restaurants. Attendees also can browse and buy vendors’ art, crafts and merchandise and rock to the sounds of a free outdoor concert. e music is slated for 1-10:30 p.m., with performances by top local and regional acts on a stage at the intersection of Duval and Greene streets. e festival’s savory schedule concludes with a Sunday lobster brunch at the DoubleTree by Hilton Grand Key Resort, 3990 S. Roosevelt Blvd. Reservations are required, (305) 293-1818. Key West Lobsterfest benefits a scholarship fund for Key West High School students. n INFO keywestlobsterfest.com MWKWF reveals true crime secrets n Aug. 14-16 nternational No. 1 bestselling author Jeffery Deaver, keynote speaker for the upcoming Mystery Writers Key West Fest, knows full well how to put into practice the reality of a crime in his writing. Deaver’s suspenseful writing and uncanny ability to deliver detailed plot twists have garnered him an armload of awards and books translated into over 25 languages. His Jeffery Deaver book “e Bone Collector” features in the film Angelina Jolie and Denzel Washington. Deaver effectively uses police jargon in a way that stays true to the facts but doesn’t turn us away from the plot build-up despite our lack of knowing the code. But just how does he pull this off? Deaver and more than 20 authors and true crime experts gather during the Mystery Writers Key West Fest, Aug. 1416, to help participants uncover what it takes to make a crime ring true in the craft and genre of mystery writing. What exactly constitutes a crime scene? How do you determine the boundaries? How do you document it, lift fingerprints, package the evidence? Who enters the scene and who doesn’t? “Murder & Mayhem in Paradise” themed fest answers these questions during a three-day weekend of panels, presentations and parties open to authors, aspiring authors and non-writing mystery-buffs. • 1p.m. Friday, Aug. 14: two workshops led by Monroe County Sheriff’s Detective Manny Cuervo and Crime Scene Investigator John Underwood. e two will set up a typical scene for investiga- I Donovan Frankenreiter Call-out for vendors, volunteers, sponsors! n Aug. 30 Key West Art & Historical Society and Key West Concerts seek food and artist vendors, volunteers and sponsors to support a festival-like atmosphere during the Donavon Frankenreiter concert at Fort East Martello’s, 3501 S. Roosevelt Blvd., on Sunday, August 30 | Continued on page 12 10 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 tion and answer questions while they work with the tools of their trade and figure out whodunit. • Saturday’s “Crime in the Florida Keys/Florida Straits” panel moderated by award-winning writer James O. Born and features true crime experts: Florida Department of Law Enforcement Carol Frederick, Joint Interagency Task Force Jim Linder, Drug Enforcement Administrator Ken Davis (ret), Monroe County Sheriff Rick Ramsay, KWPD Chief Donie Lee, USCG Commander Jim Fitton (ret). ey will riff on the Keys criminal riff-raff and the details of strange crimes that surround them. n INFO mysterywriterskeywestfest.com n More FINALIST, page 13 Honoring Healy Jeremiah Healy Mystery Writing Award, e Jerry, will be presented at the Mystery Writers Key West Fest, Aug. 14-16. Winner will claim a contract with Absolutely Amazing eBooks, free Mystery Writers Fest registration, hotel for two nights and a bobble-headed Jerry trophy. Award salutes the author’s legacy as influential mentor credited with helping and advising many aspiring writers. No fee to enter. n INFO mysterywriterskeywestfest.com SHORTANSWERS BY J E F F J O H N S O N n P A U L A F O R M A N e answer is ‘no’ Dear Short Answers: When two adult couples go out to dinner together, is there a nice way to say we don’t want to split the check 50/50 when we clearly spent far less than the other couple? My husband and I don’t drink, and we often split a single entree. It doesn’t seem fair to split the check when we probably spent half of what the other couple spent. But it’s always a bit awkward when people just throw down their credit card and say “let’s just split this.” Pinched Dear Pinched: We think “I’ll just have an appetizer” or “share entree” types should eat with one another and be sure to bring your calculators. e rest of us don’t mind buying our friends a drink. e law of the land Dear Short Answers: When two men get married are they “husbands” or is one the “husband” and one the “wife?” I want to make sure I am being “politically” correct. KFM Dear KFM: Both men are usually referred to as husbands. is isn’t about political correctness, but the law. e short answer is . . . Dear Sister: Yes, of course you should go, and behave yourself. We understand the feelings, but sometimes you have to do what you have to do. Mine field Dear Short Answers: I just met my son’s new girlfriend, and he wants to know what I think of her. My honest reaction is she is not smart enough, not pretty enough and not interesting enough to be dating my son. But I don’t think that’s what he wants to hear. Without totally lying, what’s the best response to his question? Parent Problem Dear PP: It is unlikely he wants to hear your dismissive response. We advise asking him questions—why he cares about her, what they enjoy together. Your questions may help him find his own view which, after all, is the one that really matters. Racing against time Dear Short Answers: What can you do if a boy you like likes someone else? And he only has two months to be with me because he is moving! How can I get him in two months? Help Me! Dear Help: Stop, look, listen. is sounds all wrong. Forget about him. Dear Short Answers: My sister’s daughter has PAULA FORMAN & become ultra-orthodox and JEFF JOHNSON moved to Israel. I am an Dear Short Answers: atheist, and orthodox Do you think that a Christian religious moments are difficult for me Conservative and a Liberal Democrat can to understand or accept. My sister wants have a happy marriage? Friend of a Friend me to travel to Israel for my niece’s wedDear FOF: Depends on what they ding. I feel I’ll be anywhere from aggrathink marriage is—if they agree on that, vated to outright angry the whole time anything is possible. n I’m there, but my sister really wants me there. Money isn’t an object. Should I go? Sister-Act Ground rules Life is complicated. “Short Answers isnt. Send a question about whatever is bothering you to [email protected] or go to www.shortanswers.net and a psychologist and sociologist will answer. A selection of the best questions appear in Konk Life. Good Deeds See Real Estate, page 23 11 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 WHAT’S HAPPENING Goings-on! CALL-OUT | Continued from page 11 e family-friendly concert, which is part of the KWAHS Music At Martello Series, features pro surfer-turned-musician Frankenreiter and young Australian Cody Simpson, who will send out their breezy, laid-back acoustic vibes to as many as 900 concertgoers during an early-evening concert. Frankenreiter’s concerts are known for his “feel-good” music and relaxed atmosphere that also ramps up at times for upbeat dancing in front of the stage. Artist and food vendors sought to compliment the evening’s “back-yard casual” set-up as well as the acousticsmooth sound and folky, island vibes that both musicians are well known for. Event organizers are also looking for volunteers for set-up, cleanup and parking; volunteers will receive a free ticket in exchange for an hour of work. Sponsorships also available and will be featured in all media materials. Direct all volunteer, art and food vendor inquiries to [email protected] View ponsorship packages at keywestconcerts.com/sponsors Portions of the concert’s proceeds, sponsored in part by Florida Keys Media, We Cycle, WonderDog Productions, Ecoscapes, Help Yourself, and Shipyard Brewing, will help fund KWAHS educational programs and initiatives. e concert is expected to sell out; advanced discounted ticket purchase is available at www.KeyWestConcerts.com for $25. Doors open 4:30 p.m.; the opening show at 5:45 p.m. Tickets purchased on site are $30, children under 12 free. Parking available for $5; bike parking is free. n INFO kwahs.org Depression images exhibit the Keys Arthur Rothstein, one of the most influential photojournalists in American history,is featured at Key West Art & Historical Society’s Custom House Museum with more than 40 pieces of the photographer’s work exhibited. e show features iconic black-andwhite images taken during Rothstein’s assignment with the Farm Security Administration—a program established by President Franklin D. Roosevelt as part of his New Deal to help struggling farmers—where he was “instructed to visit Key West to capture on film some of the out-of-work residents affected by the Depression,” says Cori Convertito, KWAHS curator of Exhibitions & Collections. “e 1930s was an era without television news,” says Convertito. “Roy Stryker, Rothstein’s boss at the FSA, thought photographs—distributed in newspapers and magazines—would provide a window into the plight of displaced agricultural and industrial workers, demonstrating the need for government assistance and documenting successful programs. Rothstein carried out an incredible amount of research before visiting any location. I think this gave him a distinct advantage over other photojournalists. He could empathize with people’s situations.” In January 1938, the 22-year-old arrived in Key West, a city slowly beginning its recovery from the devastating effects of the Great Depression. Rothstein’s photographs of spongers, cigar-makers, barbers fishermen, residents and archi- tecture vividly demonstrated to the world both the frailty and resilience of the Florida Keys communities. A recipient of more than 35 photojournalism awards during his 50-year career, Rothstein’s photographs have appeared in numerous exhibitions and are in permanent collections of museums throughout the world, including the U.S. Library of Congress—providing “an indelible visual record of life in the United States, particularly during some of the dark years of the Great Depression,” says Convertito. After his assignment with the FSA, Rothstein went on to become staff photographer for Look magazine, chief photographer in China for the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration, staff photographer at Parade magazine, staff columnist for e New York Times, faculty member at several different universities and the author of 9 published books on photography and photojournalism. e exhibit runs to Nov. 10. Also include objects from the Key West Art & Historical Society permanent collection to augment the two-dimensional images, such as cigar-making equipment, sponging tools, fishing equipment and Depression-era ephemera. n Arthur Rothstein Sex on reef, anyone? ivers take to Keys’ reefs to witness a delicate reproductive phenomenon that occurs in the middle of the night when coral polyps release millions of gametes (eggs and sperm) in synchronized mass-spawning rituals. e natural event takes place late July, August and September full moons. e fantastical underwater exchange of gametes means the continued survival of coral reefs including boulder corals such as brain and star corals as well as the protected branching species, elkhorn and staghorn corals. is year, because the July full moon falls on July 31, researchers and scientists anticipate a potentially earlier-than-normal spawning period, perhaps release in early August. Most commonly, the eggs and sperm enter the water in massive quantities. e spectacular white excretion covers a broad geographic area to maximize chances of fertilization and overwhelm nearby predators with more food than they can consume. When egg and sperm unite, the newly formed larvae or “planula” ascends to the surface to free-float in the current. Within a matter of days or weeks, the planula settles to the bottom to grow into a polyp and eventually form colonies. What triggers the event remains unclear. Scientific observations indicate a connection between coral spawn, lunar cycles, water temps and tidal and 24-hour light cycles. n D Keys’ dive operators schedule coral spawning night dives around Aug. 29 and Sept. 28 full moon dates. 12 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 WHAT’S HAPPENING Jeremiah Healy finalist n MWKWF, Aug. 14-16 ey West author Crichton Lewis is one of four announced finalists in nationwide competition for the inaugural Jeremiah Healy Mystery Writing Award to be presented at the second Annual Mystery Writers Key West Fest, Aug. 14-16. Finalists and their titles are “Square Grouper” by Crichton Lewis of Key West; “All Hocked Up” by Jack Bates of Rochester, Mich.; “Portside Screw” by Gregory S. Dew of Ponce Inlet; “Dark End of the Rainbow” by J.E. Irvin of Springboro, Ohio. Sponsored by Absolutely Amazing eBooks, the award salutes the late author’s legacy as influential mentor credited with helping and advising many aspiring writers. Writers from all over the country answered the call that invited candidates to submit the first three pages of a finished, unpublished mystery manuscript. e winner will claim a book-publishing contract with Absolutely Amazing eBooks, free Mystery Writers Key West Fest registration, hotel accommodations for two nights, and a bobble- K headed “Jerry” trophy. Submissions judged by a committee headed by the late author’s fiancé, mystery author Sandra Balzo, along with film critic and publisher of Absolutely Amazing eBooks, Shirrel Rhoades; immediate past executive vice president of Mystery Writers of America, Ted Hertel; and Gary Warren Niebuhr, library director and author of numerous nonfiction works on crime fiction. e Mystery Writers Key West Fest sponsors include the Mystery Writers of America—Florida Chapter, e Florida Keys Council of the Arts, the Key West Citizen daily newspaper and other local businesses. Event registration is $125 for three days of panels, presentations and social events with a Who’s Who of world-class mystery writers and true-crime experts, plus three meals. n INFO mysterywriterskeywestfest.com LOU PETRONE want it back? If so, we have to work for it. Citizen United must be reversed. Only the Supreme Court can do it. Which means the next member of the Court has to be a Democrat. Get involved. Watch for whom you vote. Party affiliation should not be the guiding force in who to vote for. Make candidates keep promises made. Let them know you are watching. Keep in mind that money talks, bullshit walks. Another reason Citizens United has to go. It is said we have become a 1 percent / 99 percent society. ings are bad. For the people. Not the rich. Some say power still resides with the people. It has only diminished. I say under present circumstances less power is no power. We are supposed to be and once were a government of the people, by the people, for the people. We have become a government of the rich, by the rich, for the rich. Is this what we want? n | Continued from page 8 of the vast majority of Americans . . . corrosion of money in politics . . . muzzles more Americans than it empowers . . . an imbalance that can only sow the seeds of unrest.” In 2009, a year after the bank created recession, John Durbin said, “e banks.....are still the most powerful lobby on Capitol Hill.....they frankly own the place.” e America we knew is gone. Do we 13 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 ‘United at Last!’ In celebration of Florida’s legalization of same-sex marriage this year, Key West’s two Waldorf Astoria Resort properties—Casa Marina at 1500 Reynolds St. and e Reach at 1435 Simonton St.—offer a “United” package for same-sex weddings. On private beaches, both properties offer panoramic ocean views, spa treatments and amenities ideal for weddings. Package includes a compliment suite upgrade for the united couple, personalized welcome amenity and turndown service of a bottle of champagne and chocolate-covered strawberries on the wedding night. (Available through Dec. 31.) n INFO casamarinaresort.com thereachresort.com WHAT’S HAPPENING BrewFest highlights Labor Day a tasting of limited-release drafts paired with live music. ursday’s highlights are to include a “beer run” between the Waterfront Brewery and e Porch, 429 Caroline St., complete with beers at each stop and finisher medals for participating “athletes.” Among Friday’s attractions are the Scavenger Hunt Pool Party with Florida Keys Brewing Co. at the Southernmost Beach Resort’s Pineapple Pool, 1319 Duval St., and the All AmeriCAN Summer’s Eve party featuring leading craft beers in a can at Ocean Key Resort’s Sunset Pier, 0 Duval St. e festival’s centerpiece, the BrewFest Signature Tasting Festival with more than 150 beers from around the world, is set for 5-8 p.m. Saturday on Key West’s South Beach overlooking the Atlantic Ocean at 1405 Duval St. Admission is $35 per person/advance or $40 at the door. Lager lovers also can choose to pay $75 per person for admission to a 3-5 p.m. VIP tasting. Among other events are beer brunches and late-night gatherings, the eight-course tapas-style Sam Adams Beer Dinner at the Southernmost Beach Café, 1405 Duval St., “tap takeovers” at local watering holes and a Monday night bingo bash at Key West’s landmark Green Parrot, 601 Whitehead St. n INFO keywestbrewfest.com Coming this September n Sept. 2-7 ans of beers and ales can sample more than 150 varieties, including unique microbrews, at the sixth annual Key West BrewFest, set for Wednesday through Monday, Sept. 2-7. e schedule features brew-focused dinners, beer and cigar gatherings, a lighthearted “beer run,” pool parties, a lavish tasting festival on the beach and other enticements for thirsty attendees. e event is presented by the Southernmost Beach Resort and the Key West Sunrise Rotary Club of the Conch Republic, and benefits Rotary charitable initiatives. Beers range from intriguingly named offerings such as Purple Haze lager and Hemp Ale to local favorite Key West Sunset Ale and specialties from the Keys’ Florida Keys Brewing Co., Bone Island Brewing and Islamorada Beer Company. BrewFest starts at 5 p.m. Wednesday, Sept. 2, with a kick-off party at Key West’s new Waterfront Brewery, 201 William St. Later Wednesday attendees can enjoy a beer dinner featuring Chef Wayne Keller’s intriguing recipes and/or F (800) 354-4455 14 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 WHAT’S HAPPENING! The Art Studio SUICIDE | Continued from page 4 He found Haynes’ vehicle down the road, about half-mile from the intersection with highway U.S. 1 with Haynes standing in front of his vehicle, facing away from the deputy. Haynes was smoking a cigarette with one hand, but Deputy Prince could not see Haynes’ other hand. He ordered Haynes to show him his hands. Haynes raised a gun to the side of his own head and fired one shot, killing himself. Deputy Prince called for medical assistance and performed CPR on Haynes until rescue units arrived, but he was declared dead by paramedics.n HEALTH | And the winners are . . . | Continued from page 6 Latitudes and Bistro 245, GNC, Tropic Cinema, and Big Pine Bicycle Center. e department will be starting another Biggest Loser and Healthiest Weight Florida Challenge – a mini eight week challenge—on September 23, concluding by the anksgiving Holiday. e challenge will require a $30 up-front fee to be paid, which includes the registration fee and a weekly weigh-in fee. Participants of the challenge are required to weigh-in every Wednesday morning for eight weeks. Proceeds will be split among the top three biggest losers. e method for weight loss will be up to the participant. For more information, contact Alison Morales Kerr, (305) 809-5607, Alison.Morales@flhealth.gov e Biggest Loser Challenge Program by FDOH-Monroe is part of the department’s Healthiest Weight Florida Initiative. Healthiest Weight Florida is a public-private collaboration bringing together state agencies, not-for-profit organizations, businesses and entire communities to help Florida’s children and adults make consistent, informed choices about healthy eating and active living. Florida Department of Health works to protect, promote and improve the health of all people in Florida through integrated state, county and community efforts. S.L.A.M. | Continued from page 7 based at Hurricane Hole Restaurant & Marina, Mile Marker 4.5 oceanside. Fishing is Friday, Sept. 11. Registration for the S.L.A.M. is 46 p.m. Friday at the DoubleTree by Hilton Hotel Grand Key Resort, 3990 S. Roosevelt Blvd., followed by a kickoff reception, silent auction, rules meeting and live auction. Fishing the S.L.A.M. is 7 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 12; 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 13. Public joins anglers and celebrities at a dockside party 3-5 p.m. Saturday at Hurricane Hole. Tournament awards party is 35 p.m. Sunday at Hurricane Hole. Entry for the S.L.A.M., which includes two days’ charter fees with a professional guide, is $3,700 for a two-angler team. e Superfly entry fee is $350 per angler who also fishes the S.L.A.M. or $500 per angler who only fishes the Superfly. n INFO www.redbone.org 12535 Overseas Hwy., Marathon (305) 289-9013 www.keysartstudio.com n Recurring weekly classes . . . Crash Course in Glass Cutting Tuesday, Saturday — $35 Learn the fundamentals of glass cutting. Learn about glass cutting tools, safety while cutting glass, and breaking glass after it has been scored. Introduction to Glass Fusing By appointment only —$145 Basics of glass fusing. Learn about different types of glass fusing materials. Beginning level of how to use them. Make a tile, jewelry. Weekly Glass Workshop Thursday, Friday, Saturday Special glass workshop each week. Clay Wheel Throwing — $45 Wednesday, Saturday Learn basic techniques of centering and how to throw a pot on the wheel. Wednesday 4:00 – 5:30 Saturday 12:30 – 2:00 / 4:30 – 6:00 Clay Hand Building—$25-$65 Tuesday, Friday, Saturday Ages 12 and up. Choose from house address plaque, teapot, wind chimes, mirrors, vases/pitchers, animals, pockets, clock, plates/plaques, masks, sugar and creamer, colored clay workshop or free form. Kid’s Clay Hand Building—$25 Ages 5-11. Build a pinch pot or coil pot. Create a small sculpture. Basic clay techniques. 1 hr class. Family Fun Night — $5/child; $7/adult — first Friday every month Bring the family for a paint-your-own pottery group project! Includes pizza. Square Grouper / My New Joint Lounge 22658 Overseas Hwy., Cudjoe Key (305) 745-8880 www.squaregrouperbarandgrill.com n Thursday Michelle Dravis 7-11 pm Friday Larry Baeder 7-11 pm Saturday Erikson Holt 8pm-Midnight 15 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 Island Yoga 5800 Overseas Hwy., Suite 40, Gulfside Village; islandyogafl.com n Monday Prana Flow/Alanda 10:30-11:30am Hatha Flow/Jolie 5:15-6:15pm Hot Vinyasa Flow/Jolie 6:30-7:30pm Tuesday Yin Yoga/Jolie 8:45-9:45am Hatha Flow/Jolie 10-11am Wednesday Vinyasa Flow/Nichole 10-11:15am Yin Yoga/Jolie 5:15-6:15pm Hot Vinyasa/Jolie 6:30-7:30pm Thursday Vinyasa Flow/Nichole 10-11:15am Heated Hatha Flow/Shaina 6:30-7:30pm Friday Yin Yoga/Jolie 8:45-9:45am Yoga Flow/Jolie 10-11am Saturday Vinyasa Flow/Nichole 9:45-10:45am KIDS Yoga/Nichole 11-11:45am Sunday Zen Restorative/Alanda 10:30-11:30am The Hurricane 4650 Overseas Hwy., (305) 743-2220 n Friday-Saturday 0807-08 Chaz Blakemore Wednesday 0812 Open Mic with Tony Friday 0814 The Doerfels Saturday 0815 Karen Weber & Funkin’ Conchs Porky’s Bayside 1410 Overseas Hwy., MM 47.5, (305) 289-2065, porkysbaysidebbq.com n Entertainment, 6pm-9pm daily Sundays-Mondays Tony Napoli Tuesdays Cajun Night with Joe Mama Wednesdays Treasure Chest Radio Show— live broadcast and free raffles Thursdays Jesse Jett Friday-Saturday Tim Dee Yappy Hour at Faro Blanco, benefit for SHARK PHOTOS BY BARRY GAUKEL Jenny Rohlmann of SHARK greets guest and their pets. Former Mayor Dick Ramsay visits with SHARK Animal Control Officer Jenny Rohlmann. SHARK resident Lady Kevin with friend and volunteer Gracyn Starnes. Lady Kevin is in need of a permanent home. Charlee with her dog Lemmon checking out the Yappy Hour crowd. 16 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 Yappy Hour at Faro Blanco, benefit for SHARK PHOTOS BY BARRY GAUKEL Finley and Gracyn Starnes with their dogs Captain and Gilligan. Charlee and Tyler enjoying Yappy Hour. Trish Hintze’s dog Taz making a big friend. Madison is a sweet 12 year old looking for a quiet home. The Light House Grill offering Yappetizers. 17 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 2015 Lobster Mini Season PHOTOS BY BARRY GAUKEL Steve Merten from Jacksonville with a 2+ pound lionfish. Glad to have that beast off the reef and on it’s way to the grill. Marathon’s Tom Cluff with a nice bug. This years lobster tournament included harvesting lionfish. Well over 100 lionfish were removed from the reef and served up for dinner. Wendy Hall with tournament winner Alec Betmam. Alec’s lobster weighed over 5 pounds. FWC Biologists Mike McCallister checking in lobster and lionfish. 18 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 2015 Lobster Mini Season PHOTOS BY BARRY GAUKEL Scott Fryer of Tilden’s Scuba Center estimates over 1,100 scuba tank air fills this mini season. Tilden’s hosted a lobster, lionfish tournament. We need help removing lionfish, the non-native Indo-Pacific lionfish have no predators in the Atlantic and are wreaking havoc on our reefs. Corbin and Taylor of Marathon having fun & demonstrating how to catch lobster and keep your hands free to spear a lionfish...I think? Tilden’s hosted a lobster, lionfish tournament. We need help removing lionfish, the non-native Indo-Pacific lionfish have no predators in the Atlantic and are wreaking havoc on our reefs. 19 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 The Florida Keys FDOH back-to-school vaccination clinic in Marathon n Aug. 18 e Florida Department of Health in Monroe County offers required immunizations for school at its three healthcare clinics throughout the Florida Keys. Florida Keys students are scheduled to return to the classroom Aug. 24. “ere are only a few weeks left before school starts,” School Health Coordinator TalleyAnne Reeb said. “Now is the time to ensure that children who are about to return to school are properly immunized.” New and transferring students, kindergarten students and those entering seventh grade will need to provide proof of immunizations prior to enrollment. Returning students should have already completed the required shot series. Parents are encouraged to review all records. ere is never an out-of-pocket expense to parents for vaccines provided to their children through the health department. e state provides vaccines at no cost for children 18 years or younger under the Vaccines for Children (VFC) program. VFC also covers up to age 19 years if still in high school. Parents are reminded to bring their Administrative Assistant Needed ASAP in Marathon Flex work schedule in fast paced environment. Great attitude, friendly personality, dependable, drama free, documemt composition, spreadsheets & Customer Service req. Real Estate, Flex MLS, Excel, Quickbooks, Google Forms, Mailchimp, Social Media, Website design, A+ Send resume, income and yrs.exp. in each area to: Wayne Carter CEO Marathon and Lower Keys Association of Realtors [email protected] Phone 305-743-2485 health insurance card if they have health insurance. If the insurance covers the vaccines, DOH will bill the insurance company directly at no cost. Parents also reminded to bring a copy of the child’s immunization records to help identify any needed shots and prevent the immunization nurse from beginning the entire series again. Parents asked to consider recommended vaccinations in addition to those required to return to school. Parents can make an appointment or childrenaccompanied by a parent can go to a Florida Department of Health in Monroe County clinic: • Ruth Ivins Center, 3333 Overseas Hwy., Marathon; (305) 289-2708. Back to School Walk-in clinic here is Tuesday, Aug.18, 9-11:30 a.m. and 1-3:30 p.m. • Roth Building, 50 High Point Road Tavernier; (305) 853-7400: Friday, Aug. 21, 8:30-11:30 a.m. and 1-4 p.m. Roth also offers evening appointments on most Wednesdays. n INFO www.Monroe.FloridaHealth.gov 20 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 The Florida Keys REEF Fest comes to the Florida Keys SPECIAL TO MILE MARKER NEWS Divers and marine researchers at the Key Largo-based nonprofit Reef Environmental Education Foundation celebrate the success and impact of marine conservation programs in the Florida Keys during REEF Fest, ursday to Sunday, Sept. 24-27. REEF Fest events open to the public. Activities and education initiatives include a lineup of seminars, social gatherings and diving opportunities at America's best dive sites along fish-filled coral reefs, accompanied by some of the most prestigious names in diving and marine preservation. Festivities begin ursday with afternoon seminars followed by a welcome party at the Caribbean Club, a setting for the Humphrey Bogart film "Key Largo" and a breathtaking sunset locale situated at mile marker (MM) 104. Friday and Saturday are full days with diving in the mornings, seminars in the afternoons and social events in the evenings. Attendees can meet famed underwater naturalist and photographer Ned DeLoach, who is to sign books at a Friday evening open house. A celebration dinner party Saturday features live music by e Scuba Cowboy, silent and live auctions and a three-course meal highlighted by Valencian paella, a classic southern Florida dish. Visit reef.org/RE- EFFest2015/socialevents. Each day of REEF Fest offers opportunities to book with area dive operators to join ocean experts on fish ID surveys, coral nursery, wreck and lionfish dives. A percentage of dive charter proceeds bene- fit REEF's ocean conservation programs. Visit reef.org/REEFFest2015/diving. Free educational seminar topics include Fish ID, e Lives of Blennies, Fish Behavior, Grouper Moon, Invasive Lionfish and more. Also scheduled is a presentation by Marty "Mr. Big" Snyderman, well known for his photographic expeditions with whales and sharks as well as other big animal adventures. All seminars area free, but pre-registration is recommended. Each is held at the Murray Nelson Government Center, MM 102 bayside. Visit reef.org/REEFFest2015/seminars. Specially priced REEF Fest accommodations available at Key Largo hotels. For details, go online: reef.org/ REEFFest2015/lodging Event information: reef.org/ REEFFest2015 or (305) 852-0030 INFO reef.org/REEFFest2015 (305) 852-0030 Dear Members, I would like to take this opportunity to welcome to you. Diana Weber with Coldwell Banker Schmitt Diana is a new Realtor© Member applicant and we are pleased that she has chosen MLKAR as her life long resource for her professional and personal growth. Any objections must be in writing and sent to Wayne Carter, Association Executive, within 14 days of this notice. We hope you take advantage of this time and make her feel welcome. We are here to serve you and only a phone call or email away. Feel free to contact us at anytime with questions or suggestions of how we can serve you better. Wayne Carter Association Executive, [email protected] • Alysha Aratari, Association Assistant, [email protected] Marathon and Lower Keys Association of REALTORS®, Inc., 5800 Overseas Highway, Suite 15, Marathon, FL 33050 Phone: 305-743-2485 Fax: 305-743-4679 21 www.milemarkernews.com • AUGUST 7-13, 2015 The Florida Keys Good Deeds Phone (305) 743-2485 or Fax (305) 743-4679 www.mymlkar.com Listing Office Selling Office Sold Date List Price Sold Price Southernmost Realty (KW) Key West Real Estate Sales & Rentals, LLC (KW) Coldwell Banker Schmitt RE Co. Lower Keys Office Century 21 Schwartz Realty (ISL) RE/MAX All Keys Real Estate Century 21 Schwartz Realty BPK Coldwell Banker Schmitt RE Co. Lower Keys Office RE/MAX All Keys Real Estate Coldwell Banker Schmitt RE Co. Lower Keys Office Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate Co. Action Keys Realty FL Keys Inc Coldwell Banker Schmitt RE Co. Lower Keys Office Coldwell Banker Schmitt RE Co. Lower Keys Office Allison James Estates & Homes Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate Co. Keller Williams Realty Premier Properties Coldwell Banker Schmitt RE Co. Lower Keys Office American Caribbean Real Estate-Lower Keys Century 21 Schwartz Realty BPK Coldwell Banker Schmitt Islamorada Century 21 Schwartz Realty BPK Coldwell Banker Schmitt RE Co. Lower Keys Office Coldwell Banker Schmitt RE Co. Lower Keys Office Coldwell Banker Schmitt RE Co. Lower Keys Office Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate Co. Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate Co. RE/MAX All Keys Real Estate Island Breeze Realty, LLC American Caribbean Real Estate - Middle Keys Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate Co. Island Breeze Realty, LLC Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate Co. Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate Co. Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate Co. American Caribbean Real Estate - Middle Keys Hawks Cay Resort Sales LLC Coco Plum Real Estate Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate Co. Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate Co. Coldwell Banker Schmitt Islamorada Ocean Sotheby's International Realty Ocean Sotheby's International Realty Ocean Sotheby's International Realty Realty World - Freewheeler (Islamorada) American Caribbean Real Estate Coldwell Banker Schmitt Islamorada Realty World - Freewheeler (Islamorada) American Caribbean Real Estate Coldwell Banker Schmitt Islamorada Allison James Estates & Homes Allison James Estates & Homes RE/MAX Keys Properties American Caribbean Real Estate Coldwell Banker Schmitt Key Largo Century 21 Schwartz Realty (ISL) Keys Country Realty & Dev. Inc Coldwell Banker Schmitt Key Largo Coldwell Banker Schmitt Islamorada Coldwell Banker Schmitt Key Largo Realty World - Freewheeler (Islamorada) Glenn Hoover Real Estate Services South Florida, LLC Keller Williams Realty Premier Properties Century 21 Schwartz Realty (KL) Fortune International Realty Coldwell Banker Schmitt Key Largo Ocean Sotheby's International Realty American Caribbean Real Estate American Caribbean Real Estate American Caribbean Real Estate Fortune International Realty Miami New Realty RE/MAX Keys Properties Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate Co (KW) Key West Real Estate Sales & Rentals, LLC (KW) Coldwell Banker Schmitt RE Co. Lower Keys Office Berkshire Hathaway Homeservices Knight & Gardner Realty Preferred Properties (KW) Century 21 Schwartz Realty BPK Coldwell Banker Schmitt RE Co. Lower Keys Office Dolberry Realty LLC Coldwell Banker Schmitt RE Co. Lower Keys Office Coldwell Banker Schmitt RE Co. Lower Keys Office Coldwell Banker Schmitt RE Co. Lower Keys Office Coldwell Banker Schmitt RE Co. Lower Keys Office Coldwell Banker Schmitt RE Co. Lower Keys Office Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate Co (KW) Coldwell Banker Schmitt RE Co. Lower Keys Office Century 21 Schwartz Realty BPK Action Keys Realty FL Keys Inc Century 21 Schwartz Realty MTH A Key Real Estate Inc. Coldwell Banker Schmitt RE Co. Lower Keys Office Berkshire Hathaway Homeservices Knight & Gardner Realty American Caribbean Real Estate - Middle Keys RE/MAX All Keys Real Estate Century 21 Schwartz Realty- KeyWest RE/MAX Keys To The Key Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate Co. American Caribbean Real Estate - Middle Keys Island Breeze Realty, LLC American Caribbean Real Estate - Middle Keys Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate Co. Realty Associates Florida Properties Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate Co. Non Res Member Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate Co. Island Breeze Realty, LLC Hawks Cay Resort Sales LLC Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate Co. Coldwell Banker Schmitt Real Estate Co. Century 21 Schwartz Realty (KL) Coldwell Banker Schmitt Key Largo Century 21 Schwartz Realty (ISL) Realty World - Freewheeler (Islamorada) Ocean Sotheby's International Realty American Caribbean Real Estate Island Equity Real Estate Bayview Properties Realty World - Freewheeler (Islamorada) Ocean Sotheby's International Realty Coldwell Banker Schmitt Islamorada Allison James Estates & Homes Century 21 Schwartz Realty (ISL) RE/MAX Keys Properties KeyIsle Realty-Lower/Middle/Upper Keys Ocean Sotheby's International Realty Moorings Realty, Inc Keys Country Realty & Dev. Inc Coldwell Banker Schmitt Key Largo Coldwell Banker Schmitt Islamorada Coldwell Banker Schmitt Key Largo Realty World - Freewheeler (Islamorada) Illustrated Properties Real Estate Coldwell Banker Schmitt Key Largo Outside Of MLS American Caribbean Real Estate Island Equity Real Estate Ocean Sotheby's International Realty Coldwell Banker Schmitt Key Largo Century 21 Schwartz Realty (KL) Outside Of MLS Coldwell Banker Schmitt Key Largo Miami New Realty Waterfront Fine Homes 7/17/2015 7/24/2015 7/21/2015 7/30/2015 7/23/2015 7/27/2015 7/31/2015 7/17/2015 7/31/2015 7/29/2015 7/23/2015 7/17/2015 7/20/2015 7/29/2015 7/29/2015 7/23/2015 7/23/2015 7/20/2015 7/21/2015 7/17/2015 7/22/2015 7/20/2015 7/22/2015 7/24/2015 7/28/2015 7/20/2015 7/20/2015 7/29/2015 7/22/2015 7/24/2015 7/23/2015 7/20/2015 7/17/2015 7/17/2015 7/23/2015 7/28/2015 7/17/2015 7/28/2015 7/24/2015 7/29/2015 7/20/2015 7/24/2015 7/28/2015 7/17/2015 7/17/2015 7/28/2015 7/30/2015 7/30/2015 7/23/2015 7/24/2015 7/24/2015 7/21/2015 7/17/2015 7/30/2015 7/28/2015 7/30/2015 7/17/2015 7/24/2015 7/28/2015 7/28/2015 7/17/2015 7/17/2015 7/17/2015 7/17/2015 7/22/2015 7/23/2015 7/30/2015 7/30/2015 7/23/2015 7/24/2015 7/20/2015 7/23/2015 $ 549,500.00 $ 235,000.00 $ 699,999.00 $ 349,900.00 $ 499,000.00 $ 225,000.00 $ 598,000.00 $ 195,000.00 $ 598,000.00 $ 525,000.00 $ 479,000.00 $ 449,000.00 $ 115,000.00 $ 319,800.00 $ 44,500.00 $ 577,000.00 $ 499,000.00 $ 449,900.00 $ 425,000.00 $ 169,000.00 $ 325,000.00 $ 299,000.00 $ 234,900.00 $ 279,000.00 $ 367,000.00 $ 475,000.00 $ 995,000.00 $ 660,000.00 $ 1,586,000.00 $ 299,000.00 $ 385,000.00 $ 219,000.00 $ 649,000.00 $ 599,000.00 $ 329,000.00 $ 389,000.00 $ 169,900.00 $ 450,000.00 $ 149,000.00 $ 549,000.00 $ 369,000.00 $ 469,000.00 $ 2,350,000.00 $ 120,000.00 $ 1,800,000.00 $ 635,000.00 $ 349,000.00 $ 449,000.00 $ 325,000.00 $ 484,000.00 $ 260,251.00 $ 310,000.00 $ 338,000.00 $ 339,900.00 $ 325,000.00 $ 58,000.00 $ 135,000.00 $ 99,000.00 $ 389,000.00 $ 399,000.00 $ 795,000.00 $ 292,000.00 $ 1,399,000.00 $ 889,000.00 $ 799,000.00 $ 525,000.00 $ 399,000.00 $ 349,000.00 $ 1,124,900.00 $ 639,000.00 $ 429,000.00 $ 445,000.00 $ 535,000.00 $ 215,000.00 $ 665,000.00 $ 365,000.00 $ 496,000.00 $ 215,000.00 $ 540,000.00 $ 185,000.00 $ 540,000.00 $ 495,500.00 $ 450,000.00 $ 435,000.00 $ 106,000.00 $ 254,100.00 $ 44,500.00 $ 550,000.00 $ 485,000.00 $ 436,500.00 $ 382,000.00 $ 150,000.00 $ 300,000.00 $ 290,000.00 $ 225,000.00 $ 275,000.00 $ 311,000.00 $ 395,000.00 $ 889,000.00 $ 650,000.00 $ 1,450,000.00 $ 262,000.00 $ 375,000.00 $ 203,000.00 $ 600,000.00 $ 561,500.00 $ 329,000.00 $ 350,000.00 $ 164,000.00 $ 375,000.00 $ 137,200.00 $ 500,000.00 $ 350,000.00 $ 442,000.00 $ 2,100,000.00 $ 60,000.00 $ 1,700,000.00 $ 625,000.00 $ 326,000.00 $ 425,000.00 $ 300,000.00 $ 519,000.00 $ 260,521.00 $ 305,000.00 $ 325,000.00 $ 315,000.00 $ 315,000.00 $ 56,000.00 $ 128,000.00 $ 90,000.00 $ 340,000.00 $ 387,000.00 $ 700,000.00 $ 292,000.00 $ 1,300,000.00 $ 850,000.00 $ 734,000.00 $ 510,000.00 $ 396,000.00 $ 310,000.00 $ 1,037,000.00 $ 615,000.00 $ 420,000.00 $ 445,000.00 Street # Street Name 12 380 17165 17225 20842 144 1014 24971 1014 107 27477 27457 Lot 7 27415 Lot 1 642 657 367 3954 29517 1 2785 30035 117 1053 Lot 16 2917 939 23 389 425 1215 11200 12399 350 7015 1129 65821 65821 120 79901 79901 79786 1 156 169 88500 113 138 142 221 147 500 500 153 170 94825 126 23 1015 97501 601 193 108 117 1 104500 9 4 26 29 15 Calle Uno Ave F KINGFISH Green Turtle 1st Cutlass Lagoon 5Th Lagoon Indies Martinique Martinique ST VINCENT Guadaloupe Antigua Blackbeard Heck Blackbeard No Name FLYING CLOUD Overseas Highway Koehns Angelfish Sandy 28TH STREET OCEAN Calle Ensueno Sombrero Copa Doro Treasure Anglers 89Th Street Ocean 97th 1ST AVENUE GULF Overseas Cocoanut HARBOR VILLAGE Pebble Beach OVERSEAS Overseas Hwy Sands OVERSEAS HWY 205 OVERSEAS Overseas Flamingo Hammock VALENCIA Venetian Overseas Key Heights Airstream Seminole Ojibway Ocean View Burton Burton Dove Lake Dove Lake Overseas Highway BAY HARBOR Lycaloma Snapper Overseas Fishermans LORELANE 4TH 4Th Bonefish OVERSEAS Pompano North MANGROVE ABACO North Ocean Based on information from the MLKAR MLS for the period of 0724/15 through 07/31/15. Key/Island Year Built Property Type BR Waterfront MM Rockland Key Big Coppitt Sugarloaf Key Sugarloaf Key Cudjoe Key Cudjoe Key Summerland Key Summerland Key Summerland Key Ramrod Key Ramrod Key Ramrod Key Ramrod Key Ramrod Key Ramrod Key Little Torch Key Little Torch Key Little Torch Key Big Pine Key Big Pine Key Big Pine Key Big Pine Key Big Pine Key Big Pine Key Marathon Marathon Marathon Marathon Marathon Marathon Marathon Marathon Marathon Marathon Grassy Key Duck Key Duck Key Long Key Long Key Long Key Upper Matecumbe Key Upper Matecumbe Key Upper Matecumbe Key Upper Matecumbe Key Plantation Key Plantation Key Plantation Key Plantation Key Plantation Key Plantation Key Plantation Key Key Largo Key Largo Key Largo Key Largo Key Largo Key Largo Key Largo Key Largo Key Largo Key Largo Key Largo Key Largo Key Largo Key Largo Key Largo Key Largo Key Largo Key Largo Key Largo Key Largo Key Largo 2013 1958 1996 1960 1989 Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Vacant Land Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Vacant Land Residential Vacant Land Residential Residential Residential Residential Vacant Land Vacant Land Residential Residential Residential Residential Vacant Land Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Vacant Land Vacant Land Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Vacant Land Vacant Land Vacant Land Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential Residential 3 2 3 3 2 Yes No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No No No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes No Yes No Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes Yes No Yes Yes No No No No No No Yes No Yes Yes Yes No Yes No Yes Yes No No 9 10 17 17 21 23 24.5 25 25.5 27.5 27.5 27.5 27.5 27.5 27.5 28.5 28.5 28.5 29 29.5 30 30.5 30.5 31 48.5 49.5 49.5 49.5 50 50 52 52 53 53 58 61 61 65.6 65.6 68 80 80 82 83.2 86 86 88.5 88.5 89 89 89 91.5 92.5 92.5 92.5 92.5 94.5 95 95 95.5 97.5 99 100 102 102 104 105 105 106 106 106 905 1985 1949 1985 1990 2007 1988 1958 1991 2015 1987 1974 1984 1977 1995 1962 1983 1978 1973 1974 1975 1967 1979 2007 2000 2000 1985 2003 1986 2004 1976 1976 1985 1995 1976 1960 1971 1986 1984 1986 1991 1991 2015 1988 2013 2005 1983 1987 2014 1992 2014 1981 1969 1978 1990 2001 1985 3 2 3 3 3 2 3 3 3 3 6 2 3 4 2 3 2 3 2 2 1 3 3 3 2 2 2 1 3 2 2 4 5 2 3 2 3 2 2 2 2 3 4 3 2 3 7 4 3 3 2 2 2 3 3 3
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