Q&A; -- Working on a master plan for the fair
- Share via
Curt Pringle loves the Orange County Fair and it shows. The former
state assemblyman lights up when he starts talking about his
responsibilities on the Orange County Fair Board, which he was appointed
to in 1998.
This year was a banner one for the 17-day, Costa Mesa-based fair,
which saw a 20,000 increase in attendance despite raising the entry fees
by $1. Pringle, the newly appointed board president, hopes next year’s
water-related theme, “Leap into the Fair,” will continue the upward
trend.
He sat down with Features Editor Jennifer K Mahal to discuss his new
position (a one-year term), the board and the Orange County Fairgrounds
master plan.
How did you get involved with the Orange County Fair Board?
Well, the true story is that as I was leaving the [California]
Legislature in 1998, Gov. Wilson asked if I would like to be appointed to
something as I left. I was considering a variety of things, but one thing
that’s always been of interest is how the fair operates and what happens
here. That had all of the the family votes behind it.
A lot of my time after the Legislature was to focus more on community
and family-related things, and this fits in perfectly. So I asked to be
appointed here, and he was gracious enough to appoint me.
Give me a quick explanation of what the board does for the Orange
County Fairgrounds and Exposition Center.
Well, it’s the board of directors for the overall operation here. A
lot of people see the fair as a two-week event at the summer, but in fact
with the hundreds of employees, many of which operate throughout the year
to keep the facility maintained and operational, to provide weekend
activities, to provide all the different programs and events that take
place here through the year -- the fair is a little city living here all
through the year and not just those two weeks when the whole Orange
County community, if not the Southern California community, maybe really
see it shine in its greatest form. But in fact, there’s activities here
through the year.
Mainly serving the community. The Orange County Fair itself isn’t a
county fair, per se, but it’s a state agricultural district that serves
this area, therefore all of the board members are appointed by the
governor. And they operate here, all nine of us, to serve as a board of
directors basically overseeing the daily operational aspects of the fair.
As the new president of the board, do you have any particular
concerns, or ideas or direction that you would like to see the board take
in the next year?
Right now, we’re in the middle of a master plan which includes
reviewing all of the buildings and operations of the fairgrounds itself
during fair time and outside of fair time, and for the next year that is
certainly going to be something we move forward with to ensure that we’re
looking at how the fair itself is operated and to maximize the use of its
grounds.
And through that process, there’ll be a lot of suggestions for change,
many of which will be adopted and moved forward with. But, part of the
purpose of having a master plan wasn’t just to do something, you know,
uncoordinated. I think it’s important to coordinate all of those
activities and to keep everybody informed, from the local residents to
the city people and all the other people who are invested in the fair
operation itself.
What’s the biggest challenge that the board faces?
The Fair Board itself, I mean there’s no question that the No. 1 focus
is how do you use this piece of property landlocked in Orange County to
maximize the community’s involvement during fair time and outside of fair
time. You know, our mission is really to focus on our core principle,
which is the agricultural foundation of this county, and make sure people
are aware of that.
You know we have Centennial Farm, which operates all through the year,
where you have tens of thousands of school kids come and visit every
single school day throughout the year, as well as the fair itself to make
sure people see the agricultural influence of this county. And sometimes
that’s lost on just bringing in big numbers and having a big show. But,
you want to be able to do that, to be able to grow from a fair that took
one-week period and brought in a couple hundred thousand, to now where we
have 17 days where we had 843,000 people visit our fair this year. You do
want to grow, but you also want to, through that growth, maximize
entertainment value and educational value that is our core principle.
What, if anything, is going to be done with the Pacific
Amphitheatre?
For many years, it’s been tied up in litigation and that is all
basically cleared away. And that’s really what gave us the ability to
move forward with our master plan. We said, OK, let’s look at all of the
aspects of this property and figure out how to utilize them, both to
maximize the value on the fairground, but to be sensitive to the
community around us.
So the ultimate decision will be made down the line. In fact, I think
there’re many way to insure that anything that’s done to the fairgrounds
is done with the greatest sensitivity to the neighborhood.
Personally, what would you like to see done with the amphitheater?
Well I just think it’s a shame that you have the largest outdoor
facility in Orange County deteriorating. I think with a lot of the
aspects it’s too big and can probably be made smaller and quainter, but
usable, and have limited use. But I don’t know when or how to ever get to
that point.
But, those are things that will be discussed over the next year or so
to insure that we’re being responsible in our actions.
What is your favorite event that happens here at the fairgrounds?
It certainly is the fair. My family, for the three years I’ve been on
the board, come every night of the fair. I feel that it’s a board
member’s responsibility to be here and bring guests to see things. And
it’s funny, certainly the kids want to go on rides every night, so we
limit it to a couple of rides every night so we don’t totally get thrown
apart. But every year it seems like we find one thing that we want to
take all our friends to see.
This year it was in Centennial Farm. They had three separate sows
deliver piglets, so we had 28, I think, -- or somewhere around that
number of baby pigs -- and to see them all through the stages. And then
we had the first ever calf that was born at fair time here.
And you know what, every night we went to visit, there were mobs of
people gathered around the babies, and to think that, yes, that really is
the purpose of this fair. To show people and to make people comfortable
with animal husbandry issues and those traditional issues that this
county was founded on. And to make people feel a part of that and enjoy
that and sense that. And this year, that really was our favorite part of
the fair, just looking at the baby pigs.
BIO
Name: Curt Pringle
Age: 42
Residence: Anaheim
Position: President, Orange County Fair Board
Job: Heads Curt Pringle & Associates, a public relations and
consulting firm in Anaheim
Family: Married, two children
Education: Bachelor’s in business administration and master’s in
public administration from Cal State Long Beach
Of note: Pringle served as a state assemblyman representing Garden
Grove and Anaheim from 1988-90 and 1992-98. He served as speaker of the
Assembly in 1996.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.