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Tag: manatee county

  • COUNTY BY COUNTY: What to expect from Idalia around Tampa Bay

    COUNTY BY COUNTY: What to expect from Idalia around Tampa Bay

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    Our Spectrum Bay News 9 Weather Experts have broken down, by county, what to watch for with Idalia. For the latest forecast updates, you can check here.

    Citrus

    Main impact: Until Wednesday afternoon

    Tropical Storm Warning

    Winds (coast): 30 to 40 mph, gusts to 60

    Winds (inland): 20 to 30 mph, gusts to 40

    Rainfall: Additional 2 to 4 inches, locally higher amounts near the coast

    Storm Surge Warning

    The potential for up to 5 to 8 feet above ground within surge prone areas

    Hernando

    Main impact: Until Wednesday afternoon

    Tropical Storm Warning

    Winds: 20 to 30 mph, gusts to 50

    Rainfall: Additional 2 to 4 inches, locally higher amounts near the coast

    Storm Surge Warning

    The potential for up to 5 to 8 feet above ground within surge prone areas

    Pasco

    Main impact: Until Wednesday afternoon

    Hurricane Warning

    Winds (coast): 35 to 45 mph, gusts to 70

    Winds (inland): 20 to 30 mph, gusts to 50

    Rainfall: Additional 3 to 6 inches, locally higher amounts

    Storm Surge Warning

    The potential for up to 6 to 9 feet above ground within surge prone areas

    Pinellas

    Main impact: Until Wednesday afternoon

    Hurricane Warning

    Winds: 30 to 40 mph, gusts to 65

    Rainfall: Additional 3 to 6 inches, locally higher amounts

    Storm Surge Warning

    The potential for up to 4 to 6 feet above ground within surge prone areas

    Hillsborough

    Main impact: Until Wednesday afternoon

    Hurricane Warning

    Winds: 20 to 30 mph, gusts to 50

    Rainfall: Additional 3 to 6 inches, locally higher amounts

    Manatee

    Main impact: Until Wednesday afternoon

    Hurricane Warning

    Winds (inland): 20 to 30 mph, gusts to 50 mph

    Winds (coast): 20 to 30 mph, gusts to 55 mph

    Rainfall: Additional 2 to 4 inches, locally higher amounts

    Storm Surge Warning

    The potential for up to 4 to 6 feet within surge prone areas

    Polk

    Main impact: Until Wednesday afternoon

    Tropical Storm Warning

    Winds: 20 to 30 mph, gusts to 50 mph

    Rainfall: Additional 1 to 3 inches, locally higher

    Our team of meteorologists dives deep into the science of weather and breaks down timely weather data and information. To view more weather and climate stories, check out our weather blogs section.

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    Spectrum News Weather Staff

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  • Where to find last-minute gas

    Where to find last-minute gas

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    Many Floridians are preparing for Idalia, and soon many will be searching for gas as the storm gets closer.

    With the GasBuddy Outage Tracker, drivers can search for gas stations nearby, as well as filter by the following criteria:

    • Has Fuel & Power
    • Has No Power
    • Limited Fuel Options
    • Has No Fuel & Power

    Click/Tap on the image below to locate gas stations near you and check their status. For the best results, be sure to share you location. You can also track outages on your phone by downloading the GasBuddy app for Android or iOS.

    Screenshot of the GasBuddy Outage Tracker (Courtesy: GasBuddy.com)

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    Spectrum News Staff

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  • Send us your severe weather photos

    Send us your severe weather photos

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    Share your weather photos with us and you may see them on our newscast.

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    Dan Trotter

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  • Investigation into contaminated gas yields stations that can resume sales

    Investigation into contaminated gas yields stations that can resume sales

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    TAMPA, Fla. — After an investigation into reports of contaminated gas from the Port of Tampa being delivered to multiple gas stations, the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services said Tuesday that 17 stations remain under a stop sale order.

    State officials announced Sunday that it had identified a potentially widespread fuel contamination caused by human error at the Port of Tampa that impacted gas stations in the Tampa Bay area supplied by Citgo.


    Any fuel purchased from 10 a.m. on Saturday, Aug. 26, through Sunday, Aug. 27, at impacted stations has a strong likelihood of being contaminated with diesel fuel.

    Impacted stations were ordered to stop selling gas until the contaminated fuel is replaced and tanks are cleaned. Once the stations are cleared or have completed a corrective action plan fuel will once again be safe for purchase.

    “I am grateful to the hard-working men and women at FDACS who responded to this incident swiftly and thoroughly,” said Commissioner of Agriculture Wilton Simpson. “It is never good to have such a catastrophic error for consumers, but particularly during a time when Floridians are evacuating from a potentially dangerous storm. I firmly believe our department was able to mitigate what could have been a worse situation. We stand ready to assist those whose vehicles and equipment were impacted by contaminated fuel.”

    State officials also said there are no reports of disrupted fuel supply in the region.

    After emergency inspections and testing, FDACS has determined the following:

    Six stations did not receive the contaminated fuel shipment:

    Dan’s Car Wash: 39522 US Highway 19 N., Tarpon Springs

    7-Eleven: 3437 US Highway 19, Holiday

    7-Eleven: 13411 Fish Hawk Boulevard, Lithia

    Quick & Easy Stop: 4529 Bee Ridge Rd., Sarasota

    Palmers Easy Stop: 903 Cattleman Rd., Sarasota

    2K Express 5: 6202 N 40th St., Tampa

    Eight stations have been inspected, remediated, and cleared by FDACS for fuel sales:

    7-Eleven: 720 Chiquita Boulevard, North Cape Coral

    7-Eleven: 2604 Skyline Boulevard, Cape Coral

    7-Eleven: 601 Pine Island Rd. S.W., Cape Coral

    7-Eleven: 6050 Dean Dairy Road, Zephyrhills

    7-Eleven: 714 Burnt Store Road, Cape Coral

    Handy Foods Store #87: 3205 Lee Blvd., Lehigh Acres

    Faulkenburg CITGO: 5320 Faulkenburg Road, Tampa

    PJI LLC: 7977 W Dunnellon Road, Dunnellon (Regular and premium fuel was not contaminated, only diesel fuel)

    17 stations remain under a stop sale order pending laboratory confirmation:

    7-Eleven: 4325 Lee Boulevard, Lehigh Acres

    7-Eleven: 12750 South Cleveland Avenue, Fort Myers

    7-Eleven: 290 Lakeland Park Road, Lakeland

    7-Eleven: 940 S Broad St., Brooksville

    7-Eleven: 1626 Meadow Road, Lehigh Acres

    7-Eleven: 2401 James Redman Parkway, Plant City

    BJ’s Wholesale: 1929 Pine Island Road N.E., Cape Coral

    BJ’s Wholesale: 9372 Ben C Pratt Six Mile Cypress Pkwy., Fort Myers

    BJ’s Wholesale: 13585 NE 86th Path, Lady Lakes

    Handy Foods Store #86: 21321 Palm Beach Blvd., Alva

    Superday CITGO: 1595 South McCall Road, Port Charlotte

    Bolton One LLC: 15434 US Highway 19, Hudson

    JHW #310 – DBA Avenue CITGO: 11867 N. Williams St., Dunellon

    AL Prime – Daytona Beach: 1898 S. Clyde Morris Blvd., Daytona Beach

    Choice Food & Gas: 310 N Central Ave., Umatilla

    Perfection Station 5: 9931 N Florida Ave., Tampa

    Rogers Petroleum: 134 N Desoto Ave., Arcadia

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    Spectrum News Staff

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  • Summer Circus Spectacular in final week of 18th annual show

    Summer Circus Spectacular in final week of 18th annual show

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    SARASOTA, Fla. — Before the lights. Before the cheers. Before the performance — it’s a quiet stage and an empty house.


    What You Need To Know

    • Summer Circus Spectacular continues through Saturday, Aug. 12
    • One-hour show filled with circus arts
    • 18th year at the Historical Asolo Theater at the Ringling Museum in Sarasota 
    • Created by Pedro Reis, founder and CEO of the Circus Arts Conservatory

    Tersit Dersu is the opening act for the Summer Circus Spectacular at the Historic Asolo Theater at the Ringling Museum in Sarasota.

    Dersu warms up by softly bouncing balls off a clear apparatus that she and the crew wheeled on stage.

    “Juggling is practice and patience,” she said.

    Dersu adds more balls to the flow, creating a double two-bounce roundabout of a circle whirring of white.

    She said she knew at 15 that she was destined to perform.

    “It’s been like 10 years of practicing,” she said.

    “Circus makes the impossible possible,” said Pedro Reis, the founder and CEO of the Circus Arts Conservatory. “They’re juggling. There’s aerial, there’s grace. It’s a combination of movement and dance.”

    Reis started the show after retiring from his own international adventures on the high wire.

    Dersu’s performance skills have taken her from her native Ethiopia to stages around the world.

    “You do what you love, you travel,” she said.

    Dersu said meeting and working with people from different countries and cultures has been amazing.

    “I love my job,” she said.

    And when she does her job, the crowd — they love it too. 

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    Virginia Johnson

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  • Expert: Turpentine industry wealth built on natural resources, slave labor

    Expert: Turpentine industry wealth built on natural resources, slave labor

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    BRADENTON, Fla. — Before citrus was king in Florida, one local expert says longleaf pine soared — not just in height, but in worth.

    “Maybe this is where humans discovered this resource inside the tree,” said Matt Woodside, pointing out a protruding ball of slow-dripping sap on a longleaf pine tree.


    What You Need To Know

    •  Manatee Village Historical Park is offering a “Living off the Land” exhibit
    •  Its focus on turpentine camps where enslaved people and prisoners — some of whom were wrongfully convicted — did free, labor intensive work
    •  The park focuses on pioneering days in Florida, from 1840 to 1918
    • A turpentine camp is located on site from the Manatee/Sarasota Country area

    Woodside is the Curator at the Manatee Village Historical Park, and he’s standing in the middle of the area’s pioneer-era buildings on their Bradenton site.

    He says sap byproducts like pine tar was a major component in the booming naval industry.

    Woodside created an exhibition “Living off the Land,” devoted to early Florida industries — like turpentine camps — built on the backs of enslaved people and prisoners, some of whom were wrongfully convicted.

    “The economic impact was second only to the cattle industry for a time in Florida,” said Woodside. “So before citrus and other vegetables, the railroads that could get those products out to northern market, cattle and turpentine were really the economic engines in Florida.”

    Woodside has an example of a turpentine still at the village as well — it’s the bottom part of a metal container where pine tar gathers.

    “We believe that this still was used locally at one of our local turpentine mills here,” he said. “We had dotted four, five or six in the Manatee and Sarasota regions.”

    Woodside says the artifact, and the entire historical village, is here to show how hard people toiled to live in Florida during the days of the pioneers.

    “Just to appreciate what it took for to get to the point where all the things we have today were based on people coming and taking advantage of the natural resources here to build their lives,” said Woodside.

    The exhibition “Living off the Land” is open through November of 2024.

    Woodside said the turpentine industry eventually changed and modernized, which caused the turpentine camps to shut down.

    Longleaf pine populations are estimated at about 10% of their original footprint in the southeastern region of the United States.

    The Manatee Village Historical Park focuses on the pioneering time in Florida, from about 1840 to 1918.

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    Virginia Johnson

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  • World Tai Chi Day celebration about relieving stress, achieving balance

    World Tai Chi Day celebration about relieving stress, achieving balance

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    SARASOTA, Fla. — As we prepare to enter Asian American and Pacific Islanders Awareness Month, there is a free Tai Chi demonstration at the city recreation center in Bradenton.


    We met Brian Nell at Cypress Pillar Healing Arts.

    “This is a fantastic little healing center in Sarasota,” he said. “And we are in our indoor movement space.”

    The space is devoted to bringing the ancient Chinese martial art Tai Chi to masses.

    The World Tai Chi Day celebration at G.T. Bray Recreation Center in Bradenton is part of their mission.

    Nell starts with a meditation to get bodies aligned and minds in tune.

    He says it’s how to combat stress.

    “But now we must honestly look at ourselves, find where we hid it and teach ourselves to relax,” Nell said.

    “So I actually was introduced to Tai Chi when I was 17 years-old at a seminar,” he said. “And as a 17-year-old practicing jiujitsu, that’s the last thing you want is to move slow, but it planted a seed.”

    After a serious back injury, Nell turned to Tai Chi.

    “And as a direct result was able to overcome those injuries and realized this was something I wanted to pass on,” he said.

    “Balance is a big one, especially as we get older. This becomes a depreciable skill,” Nell said. “So the more that we train the body, the better off we are in the long run.”

    World Tai Chi demonstrations are happening Saturday from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. The event is free.

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    Virginia Johnson

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  • Sample local honey, sip some mead: Lola-Bee-Looza in Terra Ceia

    Sample local honey, sip some mead: Lola-Bee-Looza in Terra Ceia

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    TERRA CEIA, Fla. — Each frame of a bee box hosts a tableau of events unfolding simultaneously.


    What You Need To Know

    • Noble Nectar Apiaries removes bees and re-homes them
    • The inaugural Lolla-Bee-Looza Festival will be held Saturday
    • The festival will help raise funds for donation-based removals, as well as outreach for the next generation of potential pollinator protectors
    • More On the Town with Virginia Johnson

    Each is a little civilization and Matt Davis is checking on them. 

    “They are a big part of making sure our ecosystem thrives,” said Davis.

    These wild honeybees are his rescue animals.

    He and his wife’s company Noble Nectar Apiaries removes bees and re-homes them. It’s an alternative to exterminating infestations. One of their new bee home spaces is under a massive oak tree behind a horse and a stable on Terra Ceia.

    It’s going to be the site of their first ever Lolla-Bee-Looza. The festival all about our bee friends.

    Matt Davis of Noble Nectar Apiaries showing frames of bees from a bee box. (Virginia Johnson/Spectrum Bay News 9)

    But before Davis gets close-up, he needs to suit up. Then smoke up with a bee smoker.

    It’s a stainless-steel container with a little air pump. Davis lights up pine needles and closes up the smoker, pumps the bellow and smoke shoots out of a top nozzle.

    Smoke is a pheromone blocker for bees.

    “Basically, what it does is it kind of interferes with their ability to talk to each other,” said Davis.

    It also stirs the bee’s appetites for honey. “Which helps them not be so grumpy,” Davis said, smiling.

    It’s important the bees be “calm-ish” so Davis can check the hives.

    “Make sure we had a queen that’s actively laying in eggs. We look for pollen and nectar, and we also look for signs of mite infestations and just the overall health of the bees,” he said.

    Even more important to Davis: helping people remove bees even with financial difficulties with their new non-profit organization “The Bee Musketeers.”

    “So it’s a win-win for everyone,” said Allison Davis. “The person who needs it gets it done and the beekeeper still gets paid, and then we started to working alongside some of the people in the city to get the houses repaired afterward.”

    The festival will help raise funds for donation-based removals, as well as outreach for the next generation of potential pollinator protectors.

    “It feels good to help young people to live alongside bees and other pollinators, and not consider them a danger or a pest,” said Davis. “It’s important for our food and for the ecosystem in general.”

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    Virginia Johnson

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  • 4-H student learns about fat, feed and hair sheen raising steer

    4-H student learns about fat, feed and hair sheen raising steer

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    PALMETTO, Fla. — Maverick the steer likes a clean coat and the cool off that comes with a wash down.


    What You Need To Know

    • Manatee County Fair Jan. 12-22
    • Steer Sale Jan. 14, 1 p.m.
    • 4-H students spend months raising animals for fair competitions; it’s their Super Bowl
    • Manatee County 4-H’er Mason Huttinger shampoos and blow-dries his steet Maverick every day

    Every day after school, 16-year-old Mason Huttinger is in his grandparents’ Palmetto field taking care of him.

    “I work with him, I spend my time with him. Like talking to him. Saying his name,” said Huttinger, a Manatee County Home Grown Heritage 4-H Club member.

    Huttinger got Maverick last summer, with the goal of growing the best-tasting beef and the shiniest hide in Manatee County by the week of the county fair.

    Every day since June of 2022, he’s washed and cared for this animal. Maverick has nearly doubled in size for the big show and beef auction.

    “I think it’s good it’s going to someone who will eat it and not waste it,” said Huttinger. “And it’s good for me – helping someone else.”

    That’s right. Maverick is a walking steak and a throw rug.

    After his shampoo and rinse, it’s blow-out time. It can take 45-minutes to dry Maverick.

    Huttinger says it’s part of the care he needs.

    “He doesn’t get sick and he feels much better,” said Huttinger.

    Plus Maverick gets a special hair conditioner — more product than Huttinger uses on his own hair.

    And more brushing.

    “I brush him up to keep the hair growing up,” explained Huttinger.

    Darkness falls as Huttinger finishes caring for Maverick, and Huttinger guides Maverick to his pen.

    “I’m ready to put him in his stance and feed him, and he goes to bed,” said Huttinger.

    The stance is the pose for fair judging.

    Maverick’s reward: a barley-based supper with a big side helping of hay. He eats 23 pounds of it a day.

    Huttinger hopes his investment will win Maverick “Overall Supreme Beef Breeding Champion.”

    But Maverick’s already given him a bigger prize — his ideals as a future farmer.

    “He’s going to a family that will love him and feed their kids.”

    Happy steer equals a good meal.

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    Virginia Johnson

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  • Colonneso Elected Treasurer for Florida Clerks Association

    Colonneso Elected Treasurer for Florida Clerks Association

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    Press Release



    updated: Jul 25, 2018

    Angel Colonneso, the Manatee County Clerk of the Circuit Court and Comptroller, was recently elected and sworn in as the treasurer for the Florida Court Clerks & Comptrollers at its summer 2018 conference.

    In her new role as treasurer, Colonneso is responsible for overseeing the reporting of the finances for the Florida Court Clerks & Comptrollers, the statewide, nonprofit member association comprised of the Florida Clerks of the Circuit Court and Comptrollers. She previously held the position of secretary for the organization.

    I’m honored to serve this organization as treasurer and work with fellow clerks to serve the citizens of this state.

    Angelina M. Colonneso, Manatee County Clerk of the Circuit Court and Comptroller

    Celebrating its 40th anniversary, the summer conference took place from June 25 – 28 in West Palm Beach. The four-day convention incorporated training sessions on public records requests, electronic filing, audits, data extraction and analysis tools, among others.

    “I’m honored to serve this organization as treasurer and work with fellow clerks to serve the citizens of this state,” said Colonneso.

    Established in 1969, the Florida Court Clerks & Comptrollers is celebrating its 40th anniversary. The organization provides local government support services, technical assistance and accreditation opportunities for all members of the association. For more information, visit www.flclerks.com.

    About the Manatee County Clerk of the Court
    The Florida Constitution established the Clerk of the Circuit Court & Comptroller as a public trustee, independently elected to protect public funds and public records while executing the functions of Clerk of the Circuit Court, County Comptroller, Treasurer and Auditor, Clerk of the Board of County Commissioners and County Recorder. The Clerk oversees a staff of more than 275 people, responsible for performing nearly 1,000 constitutional or statutory functions or duties, representing the broadest and most diverse mantle of responsibility of any locally elected official. The citizens of Manatee County elect the Clerk of the Circuit Court & Comptroller to a four-year term. Currently, Angelina M. Colonneso serves as the Clerk of the Court. For more information, call 941-749-1800 or visit www.ManateeClerk.com.

    For more information, please contact:

    Alicia King Robinson
    360AliciaK@gmail.com
    941-716-4434

    Source: Manatee County Clerk of the Court

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