Fish Fry revival expected
Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- Attempting to reignite the tradition that goes hand in
hand with battered Icelandic cod, Fish Fry organizers said Wednesday they
expect to revive the community event but in a much smaller version.
Mike Schaefer, the president of the Costa Mesa Newport Harbor Lion’s
Club, said he has been working with fellow members on the best plan for
this year’s Fish Fry -- scheduled for the first weekend in June.
“Right now, we anticipate doing some kind of Fish Fry,†Schaefer said.
“But right now things are just in the suggestion stage.â€
Preliminary plans for the scaled-down event call for the customary
fish dinner with some craft booths as entertainment, he said -- a stark
contrast to the heyday of the Fish Fry, which included a carnival, beauty
pageant and parade.
The Costa Mesa Newport Harbor Lion’s Club Board of Directors will make
a final decision about the future of the Fish Fry at its Jan. 29 meeting.
Schaefer said it is more important to restore tradition and get the
momentum back than to worry about a blowout event.
“Members have diminished, and the support we have is much smaller --
partly because we didn’t have the Fish Fry last year,†he said.
The annual event was unexpectedly canceled last year after a
disagreement about a lawsuit between the club and Orange Coast College --
which played host for the previous two years. The dispute left the Fish
Fry with no location. It would have been the tradition’s 58th year.
Club members were unable to find a location last year because of the
late notice, and they could not use the event’s historic site at Lions
Park because of construction of the city’s new Downtown Recreation
Center.
The completed recreation facility is still a challenge because
additions to the park have reduced much of the open space, mandating a
much smaller celebration.
“It is definitely not big enough for a carnival-type event,†Schaefer
said.
Lions Park is still the preferred spot for the Fish Fry, Schaefer
said, because the club does not want a carnival on school grounds while
classes are in session, and the Orange County Fairgrounds are too costly.
Sandi Benson, a member of Costa Mesa’s special events committee, said
the changes to Lions Park will determine whether the event can be held
there.
Benson said the city would not be able to make a commitment until more
concrete plans were presented by the Lion’s Club.
“I hate to see them not be able to have an event. It was so
unfortunate what happened at OCC. If there is anyway we can help them, we
want to do that,†Benson said.
Schaefer said he is looking for help not only from the city but from
fellow Lion’s Club members. So far, only his chapter has been responsible
for Fish Fry. The president is now looking to incorporate other area
chapters to make it a collaborative event.
If more Lion’s Club members became involved, it would solve many of
the problems the organizers have had with finances and manpower. Schaefer
said membership in his club has dropped 20% to 30% in the past two years.
“We’re just not getting new members like we used to,†he said.
* Lolita Harper covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.