Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Fair planners hope Latinos, Armenians attend

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Fair planners hope Latinos, Armenians attend

    Los Angeles Daily News
    March 19 2005

    Fair planners hope Latinos, Armenians attend



    By Rachel Uranga, Staff Writer

    The San Fernando Valley Fair will add more exhibits and animal shows
    and reach out to the Armenian and Latino communities to boost
    attendance at this summer's event, organizers say.
    Last year's attendance of 28,750 was up from 23,000 in 2003, but it
    fell far short of the 50,000 peak reached in the 1990s.

    "We have to reinvent ourselves," said David Honda, president of the
    San Fernando Fair Board, an appointed state board that runs the
    annual event. "We have a huge market for the fair in the San Fernando
    Valley but we have not been able to draw from it."

    The 59th annual fair is slated to run June 9-12 at the Hansen Dam
    Sports Center.

    Honda said there has been no major overhaul in operations. But
    organizers are working to expand the number of exhibits and increase
    attendance by at least 15 percent.

    In 2003, the fair was held at Castaic Lake and attendance slipped.
    The board brought it back to Hansen Dam last year and hired a
    full-time executive director. In January, it secured a $10,000 lease
    from the city to run the four-day fair at Hansen Dam through 2007.

    But still, there is no permanent home, one reason fair board members
    said it's difficult to draw sponsorship and develop a following.

    "We are really making a concentrated effort to bring in the whole
    community," said Catherine Garcia, the fair's executive director.

    This year, officials plan to advertise in Armenian newspapers and add
    more Spanish-language radio stations spots to their marketing
    campaign. Officials contacted dozens of schools and boys and girls
    clubs left out in previous years.

    Even local equestrian groups opposed to the fair board's proposal to
    permanently locate the fair at the Equestrian Center on the east side
    of Hansen Dam are joining the fair for the first time with a vaquero
    show.

    "We wanted to bring horses and that part of our rural heritage to the
    fair," said Debra Baumann, executive director of the Tujunga
    Watershed Council and Stakeholder who is organizing the vaquero show.

    The board has also added more animal-themed exhibits such as a sea
    lion splash show and "Tigers of India."
Working...
X