Q&A; -- The taste of doing business
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Times have been busy for Richard Luehrs, the president and chief
executive of the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce. The Sept. 11
attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon left the Taste of
Newport, originally scheduled for Sept. 14-16, in a difficult position.
The event has been rescheduled, entertainment intact, for this coming
weekend.
Then there’s the boat parade. In early September, the Chamber
announced that the annual Christmas event will be cut from seven to five
days and its route shortened beginning with the 2002 parade.
Luehrs took a moment to speak to Features Editor Jennifer K Mahal
about both events and what the Chamber does for a community.
What is the role of the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce in
its community?
Our mission talks about providing leadership, bringing together those
who do business in Newport Beach to improve an economic vitality through
business and community leadership. But we really do that through five
core competencies. Two of them are pretty much related -- government
affairs and political action. The Chamber has a political action
committee, and we endorse candidates. We take on independent expenditures
on behalf of those candidates. We get involved in political activities
like the Greenlight Initiative debate and a host of other statewide and
countywide issues....
When we talk about involving ourselves in the legislative process, it
is important to have a rapport with the legislative representatives, so
statewide, federally, locally with the City Council and with (county
Supervisor) Jim Silva, as well as the city staff members.... We stay
pretty well connected with the activities at city hall, county
government, the state of California, etc.
The third one is community development. Some of the activities that
we’re going to talk about today, the Christmas Boat Parade and the Taste
of Newport, get involved in either community development or economic
development, which is another core competency. In this particular case,
those two events focus themselves on both economic development and
community development because they involve the community.
Because the Taste of Newport has been so successful, it’s able to
generate some revenue that can be turned back through a grant program
that we have to a number of worthwhile organizations. So it fulfills a
couple of functions there. First and foremost, the community comes to
participate, and then secondly through the economic development, the
restaurants are being exposed and hopefully their customers are coming
back and enjoying a dinner later on that they may not have had they not
been exposed to it at the Taste of Newport.
Same thing with the Christmas Boat Parade. It gives us an opportunity
to expand the word about the harbor and the activities that go on at the
beach here so that people who might not be inclined to visit the
community before may do so after witnessing the Christmas Boat Parade....
Additionally, we get involved in economic development. This would be
our fourth core competency.... I believe right now 20 of the 24 members
of the city’s Economic Development Committee are members of the Chamber
of Commerce, so we obviously have some influence there. We are frequently
asked to help businesses either expand or to involve ourselves in
interacting with city staff on a variety of issues that face business and
that sometimes they feel are rules or policies that are counter to a
productive business cycle for a variety of different businesses in the
community, so we do intervene on their behalf.
And then, last but not least is membership services. And here we try
to provide some networking opportunities, some business relationship
building opportunities... like the Business at the Beach business
exposition, where business will be on display and we’ll encourage
businesses doing business with one another and see if we can’t keep that
kind of momentum going. If we do see a downturn in the economic vitality
that it’s a soft downturn and not something very severe. And if we can
try to help recover, we want to do that.
The Taste of Newport was postponed to Oct. 5-7. Tell me a little
bit about how the Chamber came to that decision.
Well, it just so happened that on Tuesday morning [Sept. 11] when the
tragedy occurred, we had a government affairs meeting scheduled at 7:30
a.m. that morning in our conference room. And it just so happens that we
have a television there and we were watching some of the activities and
the drama unfold. And knowing that this was Tuesday morning that on
Friday, just a couple of short days away, we were going to embark on a
rather significant undertaking for the Chamber of Commerce and for the
community.
And if you look at the mission statement for the Taste of Newport,
it’s a celebration of the fine dining opportunities that exist in Newport
Beach. Well if you looked at the picture of what was taking place on
Tuesday morning and then you looked at the mission statement, it was
pretty obvious to us in a hurry that this was no time for a celebration.
A couple of us met on Tuesday morning, about 9 a.m. after that meeting
and after watching some of the tragedy unfold, and we decided that we
should hold off any decisions for 24 hours, which we did. We decided that
we would meet at noon on Wednesday to make a decision. In the meantime, I
would ask staff to undertake the rather large task of determining whether
we could move all of our restaurants, all of the vendors and all of our
sponsors, to see if there was any conflict with moving the event from
that weekend to the weekend of the 5th, 6th and 7th.
And so we went out on a blitz of telephone calls, contacting each of
our participating restaurants, each of our sponsors, each of our vendors
to see -- the entertainment lineup -- to see if we could move the entire
event. So by Wednesday at noon, we did have a very ... clear picture that
we could, in fact, move the event to the 5th.
Do you think the postponement will affect the number of people who
participate or the number of restaurants that are participating?
We know of three [restaurants] that have had previous commitments, or
for one reason or another, can’t be with us. However, there were two
restaurants that couldn’t do the first two dates that now we’ve
re-contacted those so that now there may be a shift in a restaurant or
two or three, but primarily the bulk of them will move from the old date
to the new date without a problem.
{as for people going] that remains to be seen. You know, you have a
marketing plan that kind of leads you up the aisle and you get there and
you pull the plug, you know, 48 hours before, it’s tough. Now I have to
go back and try to reestablish that, and frankly a lot of our marketing
opportunities have been spent on that first effort. Now to go back and
re-market it, we’re in the process of, as we speak, of seeing just what
kind of a financial capability we have to go out and spend some money on
marketing to reintroduce people to the event.
Earlier this month, the Chamber announced that there will be
changes to the annual Christmas Boat Parade -- a shortened parade route
and a shortened number of days -- in 2002. Why did the Chamber decide to
make these changes?
First and foremost, I want to underscore the fact that there will be
no changes for 2001. The changes that we’re contemplating and have
suggested need to occur will commence with the 2002 Christmas Boat
Parade/
The reason that this has come up in the first place is that we have
seen a change in the character of boating and recreational boating in
Newport Harbor over the years. Remember now that I’ve been here for 20
years and have participated in the Christmas Boat Parade each and every
year.
Years ago, I used to go out in a little 18-foot whaler and marshal the
parade myself because I would get calls at home late at night from
restaurants complaining that the boats didn’t go by or there were too
many gaps in the parade or whatever the case was.
Business owners would call me and complain the next day about what
they observed. So I went out there on a regular basis trying to make sure
that the parade followed the course and prevented gaps, etc.
That was the beginning of a much more sophisticated and aggressive
approach that has grown out of that where we have a series of parade
marshals and a parade control officer each evening of the parade.
What’s happened over the years was that we have seen a drop off in the
number of participating vessels that both register with the Chamber of
Commerce and participating, as well as completing the given seven nights
or completing the entire parade route -- to where we have a hundred boats
start out and less than half of them finish.
If you look at the parade route and you see where it begins and
finishes, you’ll notice that the south side of Balboa Island, where a
great number of people gather each evening to view the parade, you’ll see
that that’s at the end of the parade. And that, quite frankly, there were
concerns about the quality of the parade at that end function. So we
started doing some surveying a year ago, and after the previous parade we
talked to our boat participants and we asked them “How many nights did
you come out? Why didn’t you come out more often? Did you complete the
route, and if you didn’t, why not?” and a series of questions like that
and it was very revealing. Boat owners told us that it was very onerous
for them in a very difficult time of year....
And so after going through a series of surveys and focus groups, we
held a series of meetings with potentially affected parties -- such as
restaurants and yacht clubs -- and we held another separate meeting with
the yacht charters, people who make money off of the parade each year, as
well as a host of interested parties.
Through that series of meetings it became apparent that we could make
some minor modifications to the parade route, as well as to the number of
nights, and that it would wind up bringing a better product to the plate
on the remaining nights and to the remaining route.
BIO BOX
Name: Richard Luehrs
Age: 54
Residence: Newport Beach
Job: President and chief executive of the Newport Harbor Area Chamber
of Commerce for the past 20 years
Education: Bachelor’s in accounting from Cal State Northridge
Family: Married with two children
Community affiliations: Serves on Newport Beach’s Economic Development
Committee, chairman of the city’s Building Code Board of Appeals, past
member of 552 Club Board of Directors
Hobbies: Involved with Our Lady Queen of Angels School, spending time
with children, recently broke his leg jumping into a hand cycle
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