Annual festival feeling heat

By BRIAN KIDWELL
JOHNSON NEWSPAPERS
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2010
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The heat could be on between the Greater Ogdensburg Chamber of Commerce and the city over whether the Richard G. Lockwood Civic Center will ever host another North Country Wine, Beer and Food Festival.

The chamber-sponsored event was deemed a success when it was held Aug. 14 and 15 at the city-owned building on West River Street. But hot, humid weather during the weekend turned the facility, with its apparently spare ventilation, into a sweat chamber that prompted complaints from the chamber, the public and some of the festival's vendors.

Chamber Executive Director Sandra M. Porter said Wednesday the organization wants the festival to stay where it is. But the heat issue has given rise to second thoughts about other sites.

"We are rethinking the arena," she said.

More than 1,000 people generated enough revenue to guarantee the chamber a small profit on its $7,000 investment in marketing and publicity. Twenty-one New York state wine, beer, meat and produce vendors set up at the arena. There also was strong attendance for the accompanying show by 12 artisans at the city-owned Dobisky Center on Riverside Avenue in the Greenbelt.

But the weekend's high temperatures and humidity took their toll inside the Lockwood building, which has no central air conditioning and got by with a dehumidifier and one or two working fans.

Mrs. Porter said many of the vendors came back Sunday with portable fans to keep things cool at their tables. Several complained about the heat in the chamber's festival exit questionnaire.

City Manager Arthur J. Sciorra said Wednesday that the weather created "unusual circumstances."

No solution is on the horizon. Mrs. Porter said the New York State Armory on Ford Street and the Edgar A. Newell II Dome at Ogdensburg Free Academy have been mentioned as alternative sites. But neither guarantees cooler conditions on a hot day, and the armory requires an $1,800 fee.

The city charges the chamber nothing for use of the two buildings, although that may change if the festival becomes increasingly profitable. The city also allocates budget funds to the chamber, this year setting aside $11,250.

It also had been suggested by the artists that the vendors join them in the Greenbelt, setting up in tents. But Mrs. Porter said that setup would pose overnight security problems.

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