The Palm Beach Post

Posts Tagged ‘boating’

Testimony begins for doctor accused in boating accident that severed diver’s legs

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010 by Daphne Duret

STUART — Testimony has begun this morning in the trial of a Martin Memorial emergency room doctor accused of misdemeanor charges in connection with a January 2009 boating accident off the St. Lucie inlet that severed the legs of a Palm Beach Gardens diver.

Dr. Roger Nicosia could face up to 60 days in jail and a $500 fine if Judge Kathleen Roberts convicts him on charges of violating navigational rules that resulted in the accident that cost 27-year-old Robert Murphy his legs.

Murphy bowed his head and leaned onto the right side of his wheelchair this morning, sobbing as he listened to friend Mike Newman’s voice on a mayday call in the horrific moments after the crash,

Newman, who built and owned the boat from which Murphy and a group of friends dove that day, said he tried to wave Nicosia’s boat from the area to no avail.

“At first, I thought we got away lucky,” he said.

(more…)

Man dies after being swept away by tide at Fort Pierce Inlet

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

ST. LUCIE COUNTY — A 32-year-old man swept into the channel while swimming in the Fort Pierce Inlet Tuesday afternoon was pronounced dead less than two hours later, according to the state Department of Environmental Protection.

Lataurus Conley was boating near the Fort Pierce Inlet about 1 p.m. Tuesday and was swimming with friends in the inlet, DEP public information officer Amy Graham said in an e-mail. The outgoing tide swept Conley into the channel, and a fisherman helped in rescuing Conley. (more…)

Coast Guard Auxiliary to teach boating safety in Stuart

Thursday, September 10th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

STUART — Have you ever wondered why some of those markers on the water are red and some are green?

And why are they different shapes, anyway? Why shouldn’t I just wait until I need my life jacket to put it on?

What is the minimum length of boat that requires a second fire extinguisher — or a third?

Answers to these and many other questions will be yours just for taking the time to attend the Coast Guard Auxiliary’s program, About Boating Safely.
(more…)

Man, wife argued during anniversary cruise before he jumped, was saved off St. Lucie

Friday, September 4th, 2009 by Post Staff

PORT CANAVERAL — Martha Jackson was watching a wedding video with her nephew when she heard the splash.

Soon after, the Nashville, Tenn., woman heard a man yelling.

“You could hear him hollering for help,” said Jackson, who was on the last night of a four-night cruise to the Bahamas.

Authorities have not released the name of the 34-year-old Philadelphia man who jumped from his sixth-deck suite aboard the Carnival Sensation late Wednesday. The man, who was on the cruise celebrating his wedding anniversary, was rescued 1 1/2 hours later by the Disney cruise ship Wonder off the coast of southern St. Lucie County. (more…)

Martin County may allow businesses more development along shoreline

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

MARTIN COUNTY — If the Martin County Commission approves changes to the shoreline protection law next week, 28 properties with seawalls and hardened shorelines could develop marinas and restaurants within 20 feet of the water.

The change would allow the properties in Community Redevelopment Areas to expand within the current 20-foot wide protection buffer on hardened shorelines. The amendment includes a 10-foot construction setback for principal structures.

Commissioner Doug Smith, who proposed the change, said the amendment will allow waterfront properties to complete shoreline projects that could stimulate business. The waterfront was fruitful for development before the current shoreline protection law passed in the 1990s.
(more…)

Search has yet to turn up two men who never returned from weekend fishing trip

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009 by Post Staff

Two men who never returned from a weekend fishing trip out of Fort Pierce continued to go missing on Tuesday morning.

Vincent Faulkner and his brother-in-law Eric Ross left the Black Pearl boat ramp in downtown Fort Pierce about noon Sunday, Coast Guard officials there report. The search for them and the 14-foot boat they were on began after family contacted officials about 9:30 p.m. Sunday.

The search continues today, when the Coast Guard deployed a helicopter crew, a jet crew, a long-range aircraft crew and three boats to scour the seas.

As of last night the search area included 1,200 square miles. It is too early to tell how wide the area will be today, a spokesman said this morning.

Man arrested for walking naked at St. Lucie beach in sight of family

Thursday, July 16th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

gallagherkevin1FORT PIERCE — A Georgia man accused of walking naked along a beach about 100 yards from two children and their parents faces an exposure charge, according to a recently released arrest affidavit.

Kevin Francis Gallagher, 61, reportedly was spotted Tuesday afternoon by a St. Lucie County Sheriff’s deputy in a patrol boat. He also had a gun in a bag.

The deputy sighted Gallagher, of Snellville, Ga., about 100 yards north of where two children and their parents were swimming. The incident occurred in the 5500 block of South Ocean Drive.

“There was also a couple that told me they were walking down the beach towards the suspect and had to turn around and walk the opposite direction because the suspect was standing at the water edge,” the affidavit states.

Arrested on a misdemeanor charge of exposure of sexual organs, Gallagher was handcuffed and a gun was found in his carry bag.

The affidavit does not specify why Gallagher, listed as unemployed, was walking naked.

By Will Greenlee, TCPalm.com

Bless my ride: Fort Pierce church to hold benediction for cars

Thursday, July 16th, 2009 by TCPalm.com

FORT PIERCE — It’s common to do it to pets and boats.

But cars?

If your 1970 Plymouth Hemi ‘Cuda is nothing short of divine, you may want to submit it to the Blessing of the Cars as part of their 10:30 Sunday morning worship service. You could bring your Smart Car, too.

Saints Cyril and Methodius Byzantine Catholic Church at 1002 Bahama Avenue is inviting residents to the event.

The car blessing will commemorate the Feast of the Prophet Elijah.

“Tradition relates that Elijah was carried up to Heaven in a fiery chariot (2 Kings 1:12),’’ the pastor, Fr. Michael J. Sopoliga, wrote.

Byzantine Catholics are among the 23 “Churches” within the Catholic Church, officials said.

The Byzantine Catholic Church in Fort Pierce celebrates the 4th Century Eucharistic Liturgy of the early Christians. The church’s Slavic kitchen also is known for great pierogies and stuffed cabbage.

So anoint your engine with 10-W-40 if it needs it and visit www.byzcath.org/fortpierce, or call (772) 595-1021, for more information.

By Matt Prichard, TCPalm.com

$4M stimulus grant to restore oyster beds, create jobs in Martin County

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009 by TCPalm.com

MARTIN COUNTY — A $4 million federal grant announced Tuesday should mean restored oyster beds, cleaner water and about 100 jobs in Martin County.

The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration has allocated $4,024,969 to the Martin County Commission. At their meeting Tuesday, commissioners are scheduled to award a contract to build about 200 acres of oyster bed reefs in the St. Lucie River between the Roosevelt and Evans Crary bridges and in the Northwest Fork of the Loxahatchee River near Tequesta.

The money for the project comes from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, part President Barack Obama’s economic stimulus package. More than 800 applications for grants were made and 50 approved. Of the four projects funded in Florida, Martin County’s was the largest.

To qualify for the stimulus money, said Kathy FitzPatrick, a Martin County coastal engineer, the project had to be “shovel-ready.”

FitzPatrick said bids from contractors are expected Wednesday.

“If the commissioners award the bid on July 7,” she, “we’ll be out on July 7, 8 or 9 doing surveys on the St. Lucie and Loxahatchee rivers to see exactly where to put the oyster beds.”

Work could be completed in about a year.

FitzPatrick said “seven or eight” sites in the St. Lucie have already been permitted for beds. Patch reefs 30 feet in diameter and made of old oyster shells will be placed in the water near Martin Memorial Medical Center and Rio.

Closer to the Crary bridge, smaller reefs made of oyster shells in mesh bags will be placed in the water both as oyster habitat and to protect shorelines from erosion by boat wakes. Several landowners have signed on for mangrove plantings along their shorelines, FitzPatrick said.

County officials have identified 106 jobs that will be involved in the project, “everybody from marine contractors, barge operators, quarrymen for the huge amount of shells we’ll need, to nurserymen, scientists and ecologists,” FitzPatrick said. “There will be a lot of people employed by this over the course of the year, and almost all of them local.”

Oysters once thrived in the St. Lucie River, said Vincent Encomio, an oyster research specialist at the Stuart-based Florida Oceanographic Society.

“But over the years the St. Lucie has lost about 75 percent of its living oyster bed acreage,” Encomio said. “Creating more habitat for oysters will improve the habitat for all the other organisms that depend on the reefs to live.”

Oysters filter water at a rate of 40 gallons per oyster per day. With about 600,000 oysters per acre of reef, that’s 24 million gallons of water a day.

FitzPatrick said the bivalves will be able “to filter the entire volume of the river every month. That improvement to the water quality is very substantial.”

By Tyler Treadway

Police: Vero Beach man sinks dad’s BMW, then jumps from bridge for entertainment

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009 by TCPalm.com

VERO BEACH — A 25-year-old man rolled his father’s BMW into the Indian River Lagoon and then jumped 60 feet into the water from the Merrill Barber Bridge — all as a lark, police say.

Charges haven’t been filed in the 2:30 a.m. Monday incident. But George Peniston of the 100 block of Terrapin Point could face legal consequences, said police spokesman Officer John Morrison.

Jumping off a bridge could be considered disorderly conduct punishable by six months in jail.
(more…)

News, weather, sports on PalmBeachPost.com
Video from the treasure coast

Want to chat about the Treasure Coast? Want to rant or rave? Visit Backyard Chatter.

Do you have photos you’ve taken that you want to share with other readers? If so, send them here and we’ll publish them online and in The Palm Beach Post’s Neighborhood Post section on Thursdays. Be sure to include who shot the photo, where it was shot, where you live and the names of everyone in the photo. Let’s see your photo skills! Photos Browse the photo galleries here.

Treasure Coast police blotters Keep track of crime in your area with Neighborhood Post's weekly roundup of arrests.


Your home for youth sports news in Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast. Read the blog and share your comments.
Archives