Session 4
Topic:
Local Activities
Convenor:
John Greco
Note Taker:
Sheila Matheny
Participants:
(see sign in sheet)
Key themes, outstanding questions, observations:
Participants reported a variety of activities--fairs, festivals, parades, concerts--ranging from a few a year to one or two per month.
Activities targeted to kids get better turnout
Activities create good visibility, publicity, positive feeling in the community
Having an activities director makes a big difference (this is John's job, with City of Shinnston)
Important to make good use of volunteers
Start with small activities, see who always comes out, attends meetings, then create activities committee--open to everyone but want to get key people with useful skills--e.g., banker with financial skills
Need to plan activities 6-12 months ahead
Q: What about cost of activities? A: Example--Frontier Days--$1800 outlay, $5000 income
Business benefit--e.g., carnival staff ate three meals a day at one restaurant
Keep fees low to keep prices low for local people--alt example cited of fair that charges vendors $1200 each vs. $100--objective is to break even, not make money, the idea is to benefit the community broadly.
If you hire an activities director, pay salary not wages, the job would have a lot of overtime if wages, base salary +/- $11.50/hour. Start part time and expand from there.
Establish relationships with media from surrounding area.
Send fliers home with schoolchildren
Fundraiser—pizza and movies for kids, nice dinner for adults
Start out small and grow
Free events sell—take donations, sell refreshments, sell advertising in booklet
Other events: Battle of the Bands/Talent Show, Car shows, niche gatherings—e.g., antique outboard motors meet
Sponsors can provide banners (Pepsi, Coke) and goodies (bags, hats)
Extension CEOS clubs, FFA, 4H clubs also may be a resource for putting on events
Wiki recorder: Peter Hille
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