FORT MYERS, Fla. (
If it's going to stay - it's going to need some help,
both from city leaders and the community.
"We are confident we are going to have a Zombicon,"
organizer Janet DeMarco said. "But for us to have it in the city of Fort Myers,
we need to have some positive commitment."
The annual zombie gathering, which brought about 30,000
people to downtown Fort Myers in October, is typically the highest-grossing
night of the year for area bars and restaurants. But three months after the
event, Zombicon owes the city $15,256, and future events might be in
jeopardy.
"We are going to give it to the collection agencies,
and they are going to go after it," Saeed Kazemi, city public works director
said. "But the bottom line is, if they don't pay, they are not going to get a
permit next year."
Zombicon paid the city a $624 deposit to cover the
expense of closing downtown streets but hasn't paid anything since the October
event, said Dawn Fellows, permit coordinator for the Fort Myers engineering
department. The city gave Zombicon 30 days from the event to pay, meaning
organizers are about two months late.
The bill includes cleanup ($6,000), police presence
($5,460), and renting a city stage ($119), Fellows said.
DeMarco said event staff is doing its best to pay the
city. Part of the problem is the city turned down Zombicon's application last
year for a $50,000 special event grant, a decision DeMarco called a huge
mistake. To save money in 2012, the city only awarded grants to events that
received money in 2011. Zombicon did not qualify in 2011 because it was not yet
an official non-profit.
On Tuesday, city officials will meet to review the way
it awards those grants.
Zombicon organizers also tried something new in October
- they put on a zombie convention at the Harborside Event Center, which featured
zombie vendors, entertainment and panels by stars from the movie "Day of the
Dead" and TV show "The Walking Dead." In previous years, there was no
convention, and the event consisted of tourists and locals in zombie makeup
partying on downtown streets. With the new convention, expenses skyrocketed from
about $40,000 to about $160,000.
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Fewer than half as many people as expected bought
tickets for the zombie convention. DeMarco said she was hoping for at least
4,000 people. Instead, no more than 1,500 showed up.
"We truly thought more people would have come to our
convention from our home town," DeMarco said. "We had out-of-towners come, but
it seems the local people were more interested in the free party."
DeMarco was also hoping party goers would donate money
to the cause, but not many did.
But Zombicon was successful in its charity drives,
DeMarco said. The event brought in 5,016 pounds of food for the Harry Chapin
Food Bank and 314 units of blood and 40 bone marrow donors for Lee Memorial
Health System.
Even if Zombicon is given a permit this year, without a
grant from the city and donations from the local community, it may have to leave
the area, DeMarco said.
"We are definitely looking at our options - we have
to," she said. "We've definitely been approached by other cities and other
areas."
Ryan Walker, bar manager of The Red Rock Saloon on
First Street, said Zombicon is their busiest day of the year .
"I would be very upset if they don't have it this
year," he said. "Not only is it lucrative for all the businesses down here -
it's fun."
Kazemi said the city last spoke with Zombicon
organizers more than a month ago, when organizers said they were still trying to
get money from their sponsors and would pay off the debt. Now organizers are not
returning city calls, he said.
DeMarco said the city hasn't tried to call. She
wouldn't say how much money Zombicon raised in October, explaining organizers
are still counting revenue and collecting money.
Zombicon can still receive up to $15,000 from the Lee County Visitor &
Convention Bureau, which approved a grant to reimburse the event for out-of-area
advertising, according to Nancy MacPhee, program manager for product development
at the bureau. DeMarco said organizers are putting together final reports for
the bureau, and will receive the reimbursement once the reports are in.
Kevin Offerman, president of City Tavern on Bay Street,
said his business doubled during Zombicon. It's a good event, Offerman said, and
he helped organizers last year with a $600 sponsorship.
"I appreciate the hard work that everybody puts into
Zombicon," he said, "And I hope that it works out to where we can have Zombicon
in the future."