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| Street Talk |
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NOISEMAKER Native Sarasotan Kelly
Kirschner honed his leadership skills as a Peace Corps volunteer in northern
Guatemala, where he encouraged
activism in neighbors who had grown apathetic after a 36-year civil war. Now a
product manager for Bio-Pro Research, Kirschner heads the Alta Vista
Neighborhood Association and has been battling the Sarasota City Commission to
preserve local neighborhoods in the face of rapid development. Last April, he
organized a sit-in at city hall—175 people with black tape over their mouths—to
protest the commission’s approval of zoning changes that residents had
passionately opposed. Your father is a Republican who’s worked for pro-business interests and you’re a grassroots Democrat. How are you alike? We share a passion for common sense. His involvement and outspoken nature are part of my genetic makeup. How did your Peace Corps experiences lead to your Sarasota activism? In Guatemala I was assigned to city hall under a corrupt mayor. I was trying to identify people who had a conscience to work for the best interest in their community, trying to get them to participate in a system that needed so much help. It emphasized the connection that civil society has in making a local community great. Why go into politics now? It’s a very appropriate opportunity—before [my wife and I] have kids. What improvements need to be made within the city commission? The biggest thing is to bring back respect for the collective wisdom of the people of Sarasota.—Hannah Wallace HOT SEAT JOE BARBETTA Juggling growth and the environment. Newly elected Sarasota County Commissioner Joe Barbetta hasn’t had time to warm his seat yet, so it’s too soon to tell if his slow-growth stance will cause seismic changes. He replaces David Mills, who often cast the pro-development swing vote. An attorney and former chairman of the county planning commission, Barbetta defeated fellow Republicans Casey Pilon and John Lewis in one of the nastiest local primaries last fall. How did you weather such a nasty campaign? I had to be true to myself. I had made a promise I would not engage in a negative campaign, and I held up to that. It was unfortunate that I had to respond to the messages. You’ve been referred to as a [fellow commissioner] Jon Thaxton-like environmentalist. Are you? I’m a moderate growth environmentalist, and I don’t think it’s an oxymoron. I think those concepts can interchange without any problems. What are your priorities as a new commissioner? To get a handle on true growth management. How are we going to grow in the coming years? My feeling is more along the lines of redevelopment and infill, going over the areas that are stale and depressed and rejuvenating them first. The second priority is transportation. Everything we do seems to be automobile-oriented, and we have to get back to concentrating on another way to move people besides the car. The planning commission has had a contentious relationship with the commissioners. Have relations improved? I don’t think there’s real contentiousness. The planning board is the first sounding board, and if they deny something there’s a pretty good reason. It’s a healthy discussion. What’s your style as a leader? Innovative and proactive. I realize I have to be a good listener and a good learner. I’ll always look for cutting-edge ideas. I’m not real big on reinventing the wheel. I feel somewhere, someplace, someone’s got a solution. How concerned are you about the real estate slowdown? I think it’s a healthy thing and we’ll be out of it shortly. I do think there’s been a heavy reliance on the baby boomer population moving to Florida. The anticipation may have been a little over-hyped. What do you think of our touch screens? I understood the concerns of people prior to the election, but we had spent considerable money on this system, so that’s why I said then that we’ve got a couple more years of useful life. But with the ballot initiative, we don’t have a choice. The credibility of the touch screen has been jeopardized tremendously. I have no problem supporting what the voters passed—a state-of-the art paper trail. Tell us something that most people don’t know about you. I’m a motorcycle rider and an Eagle Scout and a former developer. —Kim Hackett Inside the visual arts with Mark Ormond Philip Heylen, Vice Mayor of Antwerp, Belgium—the home of Peter Paul Rubens—has made several trips to Sarasota in the past few years, meeting with municipal and arts leaders to form stronger cultural links. He hopes to do a series of projects with the galleries and museums and has been talking with Jill Kaplan of the Sarasota Season of Sculpture about bringing an artist from Antwerp here. He likes to stay at the Helmsley Sandcastle Hotel on Lido, where he once managed to offer Mrs. Helmsley a fresh towel as she was getting out of the pool before a half dozen staffers were able to rush over with one. How romantic can a museum be? How about reuniting two lovers who have been separated for many years? That’s just what is happening in Sarasota this Valentine’s Day month of February. The City of Amsterdam has loaned the Ringling Museum the companion portrait to its Frans Hals portrait of Pieter Jacobsz Olycan, purchased by John Ringling in the 1920s. Olycan’s wife, Maritge, who died five years later, was painted by Hals in 1639. A conservator at the Rijksmuseum whose parents live in Williamstown, Mass., has been cleaning Maritge’s portrait at the Clark Institute; the two paintings will move from the Ringling to the Clark in April. Hals painted more than 20 portraits of various members of the Olycan family. This month Nikitas (Nick) Kavoukles will have a show of digital media work at the JABU Center Gallery on Ivanhoe Street to benefit the Crowley Museum and Nature Center. Nick, a painter born in Greece and trained in Old-World techniques, doesn’t think of himself as a nature photographer, but he spent quite a bit of time at Crowley and Myakka gathering ideas. One morning, some yards away from him, a Florida panther materialized from the mist, paused to eye him, then continued on its way across his path. (He reported it to the ranger station, but no one believed him until they later found its tracks). He's also had close encounters with armadillos, hawks, wild pigs and “an amorous alligator” whose advances he discouraged. Most recently he found himself “ensnared in the vast, invisible web of a banana spider.” Who says artists don’t lead exciting lives? Transitions: Ramses Serrano has moved his Sonnet Gallery from Main Street to Towles Court’s historic Perry/Little House on Adams Lane, constructed in 1931 and designated a historic structure by the city in 2000. Just next door, on the corner, Tim Jaeger has joined forces with chef Rita Tyler to open the Canvas Café Leysin, which will offer Mediterranean cuisine with a restaurant and wine bar in a gallery setting. Jaeger, who most recently directed the Little Gallery, says he wants a place “where artists can hang out and have a glass of wine…a relaxed place where people know there is going to be someone they know.” STREET TALK LOVE AFFAIRS Waiting to wed, hot tips for singles and other romantic reports. By Kim Hackett
Valentine’s Day is near and love is in the air. But here in the Sunshine State, our government wants to make sure we don’t get carried away by it.
I DID AND I DO
People who have already said their “I do’s” get to re-ignite the spark with the annual Valentine’s Day “Say I Do Again” ceremony on Siesta Beach.
SINGLES' CITY If you haven’t had much luck finding that special someone, don’t despair–-Sarasota is the best city for singles, according to a recent Fortune article on retirement. |
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