Thursday, April 6, 2017
By NATARIO McKENZIE
Tribune Business Reporter
nmckenzie@tribunemedia.net
Junkanoo Carnival band owners still face thousands of dollars in losses, their Association president said yesterday, as the farce surrounding the event deepened with its original dates being restored.
Dario Tirelli, the Bahamas Junkanoo Carnival Band Owners Association’s (BCBOA) president, said organisers had misjudged the fallout from the abrupt two-week postponement.
He told Tribune Business that Association members have now been left to try and salvage their relationships with revellers, who had expressed outrage at the announcement earlier this week that Carnival had been postponed to May 18-20, forcing many having to cancel their travel plans.
“I don’t think they realised the repercussions from the international market, and also the local market,” Mr Tirelli said of the Bahamas National Festival Commission.
“I think that they gambled and they lost. They didn’t realise the magnitude of the support from the locals, and the backlash from the international persons. They never realised how many people were coming.
“If they had a relationship with the bands, they would have had a good understanding of how many international revellers were supposed to come.”
Mr Tirelli added: “It was shocking to them that we did almost 2,000 last year. I’m trying to figure how to go back to these people. Some have already cursed us out, asking what kind of ‘banana republic’ we have here.
“Some have cancelled and some say that there are still coming, but we have to throw an event for them. You’re looking at almost 3,000-4,000 people that were scheduled to come and already have spent thousands of dollars.
“Now they are trying to salvage this thing to our detriment. Some bands went and locked down hotel, airfare and transportation as part of the deal. We’re looking at thousands and thousands of dollars that we are going to lose.”
Bahamas Junkanoo Carnival is now back to its original dates. The Nassau leg is once again scheduled for May 4-6, and the Grand Bahama leg, which had been scrapped earlier this week back for April 28-29.
The BNFC on Tuesday explained that it made the “difficult decision” to postpone Junkanoo Carnival due to conflicts with the general election timetable. The announcement, though, triggered a major backlash from the local and international community.
It was this, and the potential fall-out for the Bahamas at it relates to its international reputation among travellers and tourists, that appears to have caused an abrupt re-think and reversal on Junkanoo Carnival.
Visitors coming to this nation specifically for Junkanoo Carnival would have had to cancel, costing them thousands of dollars in hotel and air fares, with the Bahamas having to endure angry social media reviews and postings read by persons across the globe.
The two-week postponement to May 18-20 also threatened to cost Carnival bands, those affiliated with them and service providers “millions” in lost sales and cancellations.
This, in turn, would have undermined a key Government rationale for holding Carnival and subsidising it to the tune of almost $20 million over its first two years - creating jobs and small business entrepreneurial opportunities, and unleashing the ‘cultural economy’.
Now, the constant ‘back and forth’ over the Junkanoo Carnival dates threatens to exacerbate and deepen a self-inflicted debacle, with the uncertainty threatening to further damage the event’s brand and that of the wider Bahamas.
Comments
DDK says...
It was just plain stupid to schedule this event and the general election so close together. Think of all the money paid out in salaries to the politicians and the personnel of the agencies involved who did not have the smarts to foresee the problem. Avoiding such a conflict should not be considered rocket science. Another crying shame.
Posted 6 April 2017, 4:14 p.m. Suggest removal
Chucky says...
There was no conflict, what are you thinking?
Bahamians can vote, we are not bound to party 24/7 you know.
Posted 6 April 2017, 5:35 p.m. Suggest removal
birdiestrachan says...
Dammed if you do, and dammed if you do not. I do not consider My Country a banana
Republic. It is to bad for Bahamians who will buy into that fallacy.
Posted 6 April 2017, 6:14 p.m. Suggest removal
ohdrap4 says...
says bvirdie while she eats her bamsi bananas
Posted 7 April 2017, 7:21 a.m. Suggest removal
ThisIsOurs says...
**No birdie your damned if you do foolishness**. Starting a non Bahamian "carnival" was foolishness, they could have had a greater local reception if they made it Bahamian, with beautiful Bahamian Junkanoo based "show time" (cheaper & lighter) costumes. Changing the date of an internationally marketed event was foolishness. Hence the damning
Posted 7 April 2017, 1:06 p.m. Suggest removal
DreamerX says...
I don't even see the conflict of the election and carnival being the same time. That's like saying all the bars and number houses should be closed on election day. Every time I voted I see at least few on duty officers half drunk by midday at the polling centers....everyone wants to have public outcry about something.
Posted 7 April 2017, 10:36 a.m. Suggest removal
ThisIsOurs says...
"*was shocking to them that we did almost 2,000 **last year**.*"
This is where the whole "they didn't realize" argument breaks down for me, if you knew you had 2000 last year, wouldn't you think, gee, we might have 2001 people who buying tickets, let's rethink this crazy "change the date for a rally" plan
Posted 7 April 2017, 1 p.m. Suggest removal
Sparko says...
There's a lot of truth in what Mr Tirelli says. Some of us have been trying to tell people abroad about the carnival but this sort of uncertainty completely undermines those efforts. As well as infuriating people who have faced losing a lot of money, it's damaged tour and cruise operators' confidence in the Bahamas - not just for Junkanoo Carnival but for other events.
What I don't understand is why the government allowed this to happen. It knew that it would have to schedule the election for, at the latest, 7 May, so why did it allow things to drift so long? The government may be thinking only a couple of weeks ahead, but everyone else, from cruise ship companies and hotels to carnival bands and food vendors, has to plan months or years ahead.
Posted 8 April 2017, 6:04 a.m. Suggest removal
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