Vendors vow to fight longer fair
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Deirdre Newman
Some Orange County Market Place vendors who opted to sell their wares
at the fair to compensate for a lost weekend of the swap meet say
they lost money in the endeavor.
“It was a complete flop,” said Rick Horn, whose company, Southwest
Design, sells furniture. “We even lowered our prices 20% on the last
weekend to try to generate some business. Honestly, I didn’t sell any
furniture at all.”
The fair board offered spots to vendors at the fair after it
decided to expand the fair an extra weekend to accommodate crowded
conditions. Only 85 of the 900 vendors, less than 10%, took them up
on the offer, said Tom Askew, president of the vendors’ association.
The dismal financial return has prompted some of the vendors to
say they will lobby even harder to get the fair back to its 17-day
schedule next year.
“I think we’ll put up more of a fight for them not to stretch it
out so long,” Horn said. “We’ll stand together and unite and prevent
that from happening again.”
Fair President Becky Bailey-Findley said the feedback she got from
customers about the vendors was positive.
“[Customers] appreciated the new vendors and the variety,”
Bailey-Findley said. “And because we were able to rotate vendors
three different times, customers noticed that.”
In April, Askew accused the fair board of not doing enough to
alleviate the loss of another weekend of the swap meet, which he
pegged at about $2 million. Vendors had asked for rent relief to
compensate for the missed weekend.
Board members said they were sympathetic to the vendors’ concerns,
but it would have been inappropriate and illegal to interfere with
the relationship with Tel Phil Enterprises, which contracts with the
vendors.
Instead, it invited the vendors to sell at the fair, offering two
runs of six days and one run of nine days.
Officials set up a new selling area and named it “Kids’ Alley” to
give it a catchy moniker like the “Crafters’ Village,” Bailey-Findley
said. They also added some colored lights to liven the area up at
night, she added.
But the vendors weren’t enthusiastic about the area.
“The location they gave us wasn’t really desirable,” Horn said.
“You couldn’t really see it. It was just like a bunch of white
tents.”
Others said the dip in fair attendance from last year also
dampened their sales.
“Everyone involved with the fair knew it was a terrible deal as
soon as no one showed up,” said Adam Pitale of Adam’s Polishes, who
sold at the fair for the second year in a row. “We lost $8,000 this
year.”
Askew said that 80% of the swap meet vendors who participated in
the fair were disappointed with their revenue.
“I don’t think too many of them would want to come back and do it
next year, or they would want to be in a better place,” Askew said.
Bailey-Findley acknowledged that exhibiting at the fair has its
ups and downs.
“For some vendors, it was a new experience, and like anything,
some are going to have a better reaction to it than others,”
Bailey-Findley said. “Some did very well, and some of our other
long-term vendors did not do as well.”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa and may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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