A fair future in Costa Mesa
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Where else around here do a 3,500-pound steer, Jessica Simpson, The
Go-Go’s, thrill rides and a lot of fried food co-exist for almost a
month of entertainment? Disneyland? Last we checked, no giant,
animatronic horses greet riders of It’s A Small World.
That’s not a knock on the “Happiest Place on Earth.” But there’s
something small-town-Americana about a fair that the big theme parks
can’t duplicate.
As we’ve said before on these pages, the Orange County Fair --
right in our own back yard -- succeeds each year in promoting our
state’s agricultural heritage, while entertaining us with quirky and
fun offerings that range from barnyard fashion shows to some hip
concerts at the Pacific Amphitheatre.
Coming off of last year, in which two people were injured on fair
rides, organizers this year focused on promoting more of a family
atmosphere. They added more parking and shaded seating and tables,
began a new janitorial service and continued new efforts like
spontaneous roaming entertainment on the fairgrounds.
Fair Chief Executive Becky Bailey-Findley called this year a “year
of refinement.”
It has apparently paid off.
A record 963,850 tickets were sold this year at the 112th Orange
County Fair. Last year -- a year Bailey-Findley called “unsettled”
because of the ride incidents -- the fair welcomed 881,596 visitors.
A successful fair is good for the city and good for residents,
many of whom the fair employs.
“We’ve been here for over 50 years,” Bailey-Findley said. “For
many people, especially in Costa Mesa, the fairgrounds provides their
first job.”
People come here for the fair.
Talk has sprung up about the possibility of selling the
state-owned fairgrounds property, what the California Performance
Review released this week calls “surplus” land. Lawmakers will be
looking at the land to see if it should be unloaded and if the fair
should move. The goal is to find money to bolster the state’s ailing
finances.
When people think of Costa Mesa, they think of the fair, and we
think it belongs here. Perhaps that’s a biased perspective. But just
as the fair celebrates the state’s heritage, we feel Costa Mesa is
every bit a part of the fair’s heritage.
We hope it’s here for a good, long while.
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