Fairgrounds sale draws community ire
Alicia Robinson
The fair board sent a clear message Thursday that the Orange County
Fairgrounds are not underused, contrary to an assumption made in a
report highlighting inefficiencies in state government.
The California Performance Review, commissioned by Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger, cited the state-owned, 150-acre fairgrounds as an
example of “underutilized or surplus property.” Fair board members
voted unanimously to tell state officials the fairgrounds “is an
example of a highly utilized state property ... and should not be
considered surplus property for sale.”
Dozens of residents agreed, giving several hours of comments about
how important the fairgrounds is to Costa Mesa -- both culturally and
economically. A point of contention was that the state report
mentioned the annual three-week Orange County Fair, but none of the
other 100 or so events held at the fairgrounds each year.
“The testimony that has been given today was overwhelming,” fair
board President Patricia Velasquez said. “I believe if the people
that served to put that review together had known of all the other
uses [besides the fair] they would never have classified it as
underutilized.”
Those who spoke addressed both the designation of the fairgrounds
as underused and suggestions by 70th District Assemblyman John
Campbell that fair operations be relocated to the planned Great Park
in Irvine and that the fairgrounds be sold to help the state budget
deficit.
They were unequivocally critical of the sale idea, and many
mentioned what the fairgrounds have meant to children, disabled
people and other members of the community.
“This is not just a piece of property, it is a community,” said
Will Harrison, president of the Orange County Farm Bureau. “If we
lose this asset, our connection to our agrarian roots will be
severed.”
Other residents said moving the fair would make it less accessible
because the Irvine site is served by the clogged Golden State
Freeway, and relocating fairgrounds facilities would not necessarily
bring their 4.3 million annual users to the new site.
The board made its position clear on the fairgrounds’ importance
to the community, but it has no control over whether the fairgrounds
are sold.
Nothing official has been proposed beyond the concept of selling
the property, so the next step will be to explore the ramifications
of any formal proposal that is made, fair General Manager Becky
Bailey-Findley said.
Board members did say they support the idea of streamlining
government, which is the general thrust of the state report, and they
also support the report’s recommendation of reorganizing the state’s
agricultural associations as public corporations. Bailey-Findley said
such a reorganization would cut through some of the bureaucratic
restrictions on the fair as a state agency that make it hard to
compete with businesses in attracting entertainment.
“The most immediate advantages are just efficiency and being able
to respond more quickly to local needs, local trends,” she said.
Also at Thursday’s meeting, board members voted to bring the OC
Crush, a new professional ABA basketball team, to the fairgrounds,
where the team will build a temporary Air Dome structure and play 18
home games in a season that will last from November 2004 to March
2005.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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