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Key Peninsula Community Fair
A look behind the scenes
By Chris Fitzgerald
KP News
When fair-goers enjoy the seventh
annual Key Peninsula Community Fair over the weekend of
July 13-15, it’s a pretty good bet no one will wonder
how, why or when this extravaganza was created. It’s all
part of the plan of a handful of longtime and new
volunteers committed to making life on the KP unique,
enjoyable, and memorable — without unduly calling
attention to themselves.

The rides are
among the fair attractions, and this year
the
midway has been expanded. Photo by
Kristen Pierce |
The KPCF is owned by three local
nonprofits: KP Civic Center, KP Business Association,
and Longbranch Improvement Club. The volunteers who
create the fair every year are drawn from these
organizations, or are individual community members
giving back to their communities.
Since last October’s annual fair
board meeting at which newly elected board members were
seated, a new vision for the fair has been taking shape.
Vice President Michael Hays says, “This group is working
very well as a team.”
In the ensuing months, the board
and its member affiliates have been meeting once to
twice a month for meetings lasting one to three
hours. Then, the wild ride behind the scenes begins. Six
weeks prior to the fair, board and members (by now
committees with details in tow) meet at least once a
week, with a flurry of email, faxes and phone calls
in-between. During fair “week” — those days before,
during and after the event — most of these people work
full time or more on fair projects, last-minute details,
you-name-it. If it looks like a fair, smells like a
fair, tastes like a fair, it’s because a lot of people
devoted every waking hour, vacation-time and after-work
time to making it happen.
“Nobody gets paid one penny. All
this work is done on a volunteer basis, on behalf of the
community,” Hays said.
All profits from the fair, other
than some startup money for the following year, go back
to the three nonprofit owner organizations. These are
community support-based groups, and each equal one-third
portion of proceeds eventually finds its way right back
into the community in the form of services. And the
cadre of volunteers “are doing this all for the
enjoyment and support of our community, and nothing
else,” Hays said.
This year’s fair is operating on a
budget of a little more than $50,000, with expectations
of a 20 percent net on those revenues, according to
Hays.
The first year, the fair was about
half the size it is now. In an email to the KP News,
Hays wrote, “The fair made money its first year and
continued to do so until last year, when it broke even.”
He explained that last year was a “turn-around year when
the fair invested pretty heavily to upgrade the product”
including the entertainment and the midway. The board
expects to show a “respectable” profit this year by
creating an event that is fiscally viable, and a
community showcase of talent, art, and regionally
excellent entertainment.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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