Close X
Tuesday, October 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Calgary Stampede Attendance At 22-year Low As Rain And Recession Thin Crowds

IANS, 18 Jul, 2016 02:14 PM
    CALGARY — The rain-plagued Calgary Stampede is reporting its lowest total attendance in 22 years.
     
    Spokeswoman Jennifer Booth says persistent rains are being blamed for cumulative attendance that reached just 1,088,000 at the 10-day western show, the lowest level since 1994 when 1,082,000 came through the turnstiles.
     
    The 2016 total is down about seven per cent from 2015 and off 13 per cent from the five-year average of 1.23 million.
     
    Attendance was in line with previous years for the first few days of the show but fell off as rain repeatedly pelted the grounds last week, prompting officials to cut its $18 general admission price to $5 between 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. on Thursday and Friday. On Sunday, 65,000 guests took advantage of a special offer of free admission in the morning and half-price tickets were available for the evening rodeo and Grandstand Show.
     
    Marketing manager Jenna MacMillan of Lammle's Western Wear and Tack says overall sales revenue was on par with previous years at its nine temporary stores on the Stampede grounds, but the product mix this year was quite different.
     
    She says the company sold thousands of plastic rain ponchos, while guests trying to add layers to survive the chilly weather drove sales of sweaters and hoodies.
     
    Alberta's economy is also taking some of the blame for lower numbers. TD Economics says in a report that Alberta's recession this year will likely be more severe than any of its past four recessions, with double the average decline in growth.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Declares Public Health Emergency After Overdoses

    B.C. Declares Public Health Emergency After Overdoses
     provincial health officer has declared a public health emergency after a dramatic increase in the number of overdose deaths in the province.

    B.C. Declares Public Health Emergency After Overdoses

    Woman Dies After Plunging Off 25-Metre Cliff At Whistler Mountain

    Woman Dies After Plunging Off 25-Metre Cliff At Whistler Mountain
    The 48-year-old woman's body was found at the base of a 25-metre cliff.

    Woman Dies After Plunging Off 25-Metre Cliff At Whistler Mountain

    Priyanka Chopra Beats PM Modi, Sanders Ahead Of Hillary In Time Online Poll

    Priyanka Chopra Beats PM Modi, Sanders Ahead Of Hillary In Time Online Poll
    The magazine said Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders won three times more votes than his rival Hillary Clinton, ahead of President Barack Obama, Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi and Pakistani activist Malala Yousafzai.

    Priyanka Chopra Beats PM Modi, Sanders Ahead Of Hillary In Time Online Poll

    Surrey Police Search For Whoever Toppled Four Power Poles With Chainsaw

    Surrey Police Search For Whoever Toppled Four Power Poles With Chainsaw
    BC Hydro and Mounties in Surrey, B.C., want to find the vandal who used a chainsaw to topple four transmission poles in the city's Green Timbers neighbourhood.

    Surrey Police Search For Whoever Toppled Four Power Poles With Chainsaw

    Two Pricey Watches Missing After Series Of Jewelry Heists In Vancouver

    Two Pricey Watches Missing After Series Of Jewelry Heists In Vancouver
    Two watches valued at $13,000 and $6,000 are still missing among those stolen in the robberies, about a week apart, at stores around the downtown core.

    Two Pricey Watches Missing After Series Of Jewelry Heists In Vancouver

    Downtown Office Vacancies In Calgary Hit 33-Year High, Real Estate Firm Says

    Downtown Office Vacancies In Calgary Hit 33-Year High, Real Estate Firm Says
    CALGARY — The hollowing out of Calgary's core has hit its highest level in more than 30 years and the situation in what was once the thriving financial pulse of the energy industry is likely to worsen, a commercial real estate firm says.

    Downtown Office Vacancies In Calgary Hit 33-Year High, Real Estate Firm Says