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Tim O'Meilia, Post reporter who captured county's quirks (PBP) 1-13-14Publication: Palm Beach Post; Date: Jan 13, 2014; Section: Local; Page: 5B TIM O'MEILIA 1948 -2014 Tim O'Meilia, Post reporter who captured county's quirks By Sonja Isger Palm Beach Post StaffWriter PALM BEACH GARDENS -- In thousands of stories over the span of five de- cades, Tim O'Meilia re- vealed Palm Beach Coun- ty in all of its quirky and endearing details. He unveiled everything from the mating habits of alligators to the elements of bridge construction — not to mention the ori- gins of at least one pig in a parade. O'Meilia was a soft -spo- ken man who began his career at The Palm Beach Post in 1972, telling sto- ries often with a wink — seldom a roar. "Every story Tim touched was magical," Post Publisher Tim Burke said. "He never had an off -day. For decades his beautiful words, every one of them chosen care- fully, told the stories of our communities." That magic died late Saturday after a sec- ond battle with cancer. O'Meilia was 65. His fami- ly was working on funeral arrangements Sunday. The son of a building engineer, O'Meilia was born in Texas and quick- ly transplanted in South Florida. His father be- came a councilman in North Palm Beach. O'Meilia met his wife on the local softball fields — he was the home -for- the -break college coach, Debbie on a team with his younger sisters. After graduating from Notre Dame, he came home and walked into the Post newsroom. "I needed a job," he said recently. In the years to follow, O'Meilia quickly demon- strated a knack for mak- ing a comet's passing in- teresting and the annual arrival of turkey vultures worth pausing over in the morning print — even the sixth time. How often, after all, does one read about vul- tures "whose idea of a sumptuous meal is de- caying road kill" staking "their seasonal claim to some prime island prop- erty: the lush, green bird sanctuary across the road from Mar- a- Lago ?" Though they went down easy, every word was considered — so much so, he said he sweated talking to a class of fourth-graders about writing. He feared his ad- vice was of little help for kids preparing for the timed precision of state- wide exams. "What do you do when you get stuck? Write. Get coffee. Come back lat- er and write it again," O'Meilia recalled of his unedited thoughts. We had better gov- ernment, we had bet- ter crime reporters, but I never knew a better pure writer — someone who could catch an Irish lilt and give you all the when and wheres and history you'd want in 15 inches," said Paul Blythe, his co- worker for many years and his boss for a few. His favorite passage? A 1985 ode to a St. Pat- rick's Day parade: GUESTBOOK Shareyour condolences PalmBeachPost. com/obits It was only a wee bit of a pig and a wee bit of an idea, butMauryPow- er is only a wee bit of a sa- loon- keeper, even wearin' his top hat. And oI' Blue now was a horse of a different color. Green, he was. And more handsome than a squeaI- ing pig just beggin'to be bacon." Silvered from age, thinned from illness but still enamored with words, O'Meilia had a tougher time picking fa- vorites. "I like everything," O'Meilia said. "I loved profiles. The story on the cafeteria manager at the Riviera Beach elemen- tary school. The lady at The Breakers who had a hair - cutting concession. Those were fun stories about real people in real places." As for memorable pas- sages, one popped to mind: "Why are the ga- tors crossing the road? They're looking for love in all the wet places." His recollection ended there, but the story charged on: "Just think of each road- side canal as a singles bar for alligators." O'Meilia often was tapped for bigger or more serious assignments as well. Hurricanes. A pope's visit. A dispatch from teacher- astronaut Christa McAuliffe's home- town after the shuttle Challenger exploded. As important as Writing was, his family got equal play. He and Debbie timed their wedding be- tween the national fast - pitch and slow -pitch play- offs. Anniversaries were wedged between sporting events and news. Their sons — Roi- ly and Casey, now grown — had their lives woven with Hurricane Andrew coverage, local circus pa- rades and the like. Even when O'Meilia re- tired in 2008, he con- tinued to cover Palm Beach County, writing about coastal communi- ties for The Coastal Star, a monthly paper based in Ocean Ridge. "I've had a front -page story in four different de- cades," he said with satis- faction. The biggest boast he could muster came more as an aside. He'd come across a few of his clips in retirement and caught himself thinking, "Man, I used to do pretty well. I used to be better than I thought." He was much better than even that. sisger @pbpost.com Twitter: @sonjaisger Tim T`'` O'Mellla ;1 +, P began his career at The Post In Y ' -:,k 1912. GUESTBOOK Shareyour condolences PalmBeachPost. com/obits It was only a wee bit of a pig and a wee bit of an idea, butMauryPow- er is only a wee bit of a sa- loon- keeper, even wearin' his top hat. And oI' Blue now was a horse of a different color. Green, he was. And more handsome than a squeaI- ing pig just beggin'to be bacon." Silvered from age, thinned from illness but still enamored with words, O'Meilia had a tougher time picking fa- vorites. "I like everything," O'Meilia said. "I loved profiles. The story on the cafeteria manager at the Riviera Beach elemen- tary school. The lady at The Breakers who had a hair - cutting concession. Those were fun stories about real people in real places." As for memorable pas- sages, one popped to mind: "Why are the ga- tors crossing the road? They're looking for love in all the wet places." His recollection ended there, but the story charged on: "Just think of each road- side canal as a singles bar for alligators." O'Meilia often was tapped for bigger or more serious assignments as well. Hurricanes. A pope's visit. A dispatch from teacher- astronaut Christa McAuliffe's home- town after the shuttle Challenger exploded. As important as Writing was, his family got equal play. He and Debbie timed their wedding be- tween the national fast - pitch and slow -pitch play- offs. Anniversaries were wedged between sporting events and news. Their sons — Roi- ly and Casey, now grown — had their lives woven with Hurricane Andrew coverage, local circus pa- rades and the like. Even when O'Meilia re- tired in 2008, he con- tinued to cover Palm Beach County, writing about coastal communi- ties for The Coastal Star, a monthly paper based in Ocean Ridge. "I've had a front -page story in four different de- cades," he said with satis- faction. The biggest boast he could muster came more as an aside. He'd come across a few of his clips in retirement and caught himself thinking, "Man, I used to do pretty well. I used to be better than I thought." He was much better than even that. sisger @pbpost.com Twitter: @sonjaisger