State Fair Hound

An independent view of the New York State Fair

Month: August 2020

Locked Out

Driving past the New York State Fairgrounds these days is a painful experience. EMPTY LOT 18

The 2020 Fair should be beyond the halfway point, heading into the homestretch with Labor Day weekend in sight. Instead, entrances are are locked up, the parking lots empty, the grounds abandoned.

There’s no sign of the explosion of excitement and joy that normally makes this our favorite time of year. The Governor thinks we had to cancel this year’s Fair to spare our citizens widespread and dangerous exposure to that damn virus.

If this were some other part of the country, he’d be right. CHEV COURT AUG. 16

But local folks have made the sacrifices necessary to keep infection totals very low. We deserved a chance at some form of the Fair experience by employing the same cautious practices that we’ve been following to make New York a national leader in reducing cases.

Due to this controversial decision, made by one man, we aren’t currently enjoying those majestic buildings, gyrating rides, gleeful kids and amazing critters. Your nose isn’t breathing in frying peppers, prize flowers, decomposing hay or greasy funnel cakes. There’s no music, no excited screams, no sizzling sausages.

Happier days are ahead, no doubt. But it’s over 350 days until those gates swing open for the 2021 New York State Fair. Meanwhile, disconsolate Fair fans, financially devastated business owners and idled workers are left to contemplate what might have been.

 

Coulda, Woulda, Shoulda

Fans of the Beach Boys know the phrase “Endless summer,” a celebratory term recognizing the joys of sunshine, parties, dancing, cookouts, soft breezes, friends and music. But summer does end and for Central New York, every summer culminates in the fabulous New York State Fair. Every summer that is, except this one.

BEACH BOYS CAR 17Apparently we can have bowling, restaurants, malls, parks, beaches and some team sports with health clubs on the verge of joining the list. But Andy Cuomo has decided that we can’t have a State Fair, not even a radically modified, carefully limited, strictly regulated State Fair. It’s part of the Gov’s  stranglehold on the reopening of the New York State economy and the infuriating, silent acceptance of his dictates by other elected officials.

Let’s recognize County Executive Ryan McMahon for protesting some of Cuomo’s decisions while keeping a balanced approach and prioritizing the wellness of his constituents. You have to wonder if he would have endorsed opening of the expanded, 18-day State Fair, which was scheduled to run Aug. 21 through Sep. 7. Recent data has supported loosening of regulations in support of both economic recovery and social normalcy.

As previously reported here on State Fair Hound, the state of Delaware bucked the trend and opened its State Fair for business on  July 23. Since the closing of Delaware’s 10-day Fair on Aug. 1, feedback on how it went has been scant. From what information is available on the web, that event, which wrapped up on Aug.1,  got mostly positive reviews, despite having been modified from its usual format.

Sometimes you have to take a shot.

Sometimes you have to take a shot.

Delaware’s Fair is considerably smaller than New York’s in terms of acreage, attendance and running length, but the coastal state’s model could have been followed here. They spaced out patrons, mandated mask-wearing in most places and cleaned and sanitized rigorously.

It would have been a massive job to hold the New York State Fair under such guidelines, but The Hound still thinks it was possible.

Meanwhile, we’re awaiting word from the Fair on smaller events to be held on order to give Fair fans a taste of their favorite event. So far, there have been drive-up food sales and big-screen movies or concerts. That’s small consolation. There could be more, so let’s see what comes along. Whatever it is won’t be enough in a summer that never really started.

 

New Math

You may have heard on Channel 5 news Wednesday at Noon  that Wednesday would have been the first day of the canceled New York State Fair. Actually, the 18-day Fair was set to start on Friday, Aug. 21. It's simple math--the Fair always ends on Labor Day. Count backward 18 days and you open on Aug. 21. As usual, you can't trust the news you get from the station's parent company, Sinclair Broadcasting.

You may have heard on Channel 5 news Wednesday at Noon that Wednesday would have been the first day of the canceled New York State Fair. Actually, the 18-day Fair was set to start on Friday, Aug. 21. It’s simple math–the Fair always ends on Labor Day. Count backward 18 days and you open on Aug. 21. As usual, you can’t trust the news you get from the station’s parent company, Sinclair Broadcasting.

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