Press release from the City:
Mayor offers grants for amateur sporting events to come to Fort Wayne
City Will Help Local Organizations Bring Tournaments HereMayor Tom Henry today announced an innovative new grants program designed to help bring amateur sports events to Fort Wayne. The grant program will help attract amateur and recreational (not professional) sporting events, to the community to stimulate a significant amount of new money into the local economy from visitors attending as competitors or supporters of a regional or national event.
This grant program is designed to encourage local organizations to host their sports tournaments in Fort Wayne. Its purpose is to grow sports tourism, sustain jobs in our city’s hospitality and service industries and increase the economic impact from visitors’ spending. For example, IPFW’s Consumer Research Center documented that a youth basketball tournament with 300 teams generated over $1.2 million into Fort Wayne in one week.
“We are in an enviable position in Fort Wayne,” said Mayor Tom Henry. “We have several sports complexes with the ability to draw crowds, such as Spiece, Hefner Soccer Fields and the new ice facility, to name just a few. With this program, we have an opportunity to capitalize on the existence of these venues and to offer incentives to bring tournaments in to Fort Wayne. Amateur and club sports is a growing and popular area of event marketing. In this very competitive field, we want to make sure Fort Wayne is a top-of-mind location for all sorts of tournaments and showcases.”
Other benefits from this program include generating regional/national media exposure for the City of Fort Wayne; help city-owned sports venues (new ice arena, Parkview Field, Kreager Fields) and other privately-owned facilities (Spiece, the Dome, IPFW Athletics, USF, Indiana Tech, the new ice arena) to bid for and attract sporting events; assist not-for-profits sports organizations (CVB, Sports Corporation) to attract regional or national events; and increase the quality of life for our citizens by bringing more sporting events to Fort Wayne for them to enjoy with the friends and families. Â (Please note: the new ice arena is not a city-owned sports venue. Â This was a mistake in the press release.)
The Sports Business Development Grant Program (SBDG) will assist non-profit organizations to host, recruit or bring athletic events consisting of games, exhibitions, tournaments, and other sports-related events to Fort Wayne, Indiana. The grants are designed to help defray the start up costs, hosting fees, promotional expenses and operating expenses to attract an event. Events must be amateur or recreational and must meet one or more of the following criteria:
Generate out-of-city participants or spectators in significant numbers:
- 2,000 or more participants from players, teams and officials
- 1,000 or more hotel room nights used by attendees, either teams or spectators
- 5,000 or more spectators in attendance, with 50% from outside the county
Additionally, events must generate an increase in visitor spending in the city’s hotels, restaurants and attractions while generating regional and/or national media exposure for Fort Wayne.
The first grants will help the FW CVB and FW Sports Corporation to bid against other cities 1) to host the 2010 United States Sports Specialty Association’s National Youth Basketball Championship at Spiece Fieldhouse, (9,000 people); 2) to host the new Big Ten Invitational Pre-Season Soccer Tournament (5,000) ; and the 2010 Indiana State High School Girls Basketball Championship, which can’t be held in Indy due to a conflict. (20,000).
Grant applications should be received at least 6 month prior to the event to the City of Fort Wayne Community Development Division. A maximum of $10,000 grant per organization can be awarded. A 2nd, follow-up grant may be awarded the following year worth 50% of the original grant for the same event.
The SBDG Review Committee will consist of the President of the Convention & Visitors Bureau; the City Community Development Division Director; and President or Executive Director of the Fort Wayne Sports Corporation, and the Director of Parks and Recreation. The Review Committee will make its recommendations to the Mayor of Fort Wayne. The Mayor will have final approval and has directed that $40,000 will be set aside each calendar year to fund the SBDG.
Some examples of allowable expenses funded by the grant would include bid fees or hosting fees, bid packet preparations, advertising and media buys, and on-site hospitality expenses with the exception of alcohol. In addition, grant money could be used to production and technical expenses to organize and coordinate the sporting event, site rental, and non-monetary awards for competitors. Examples of expenses not allowed to be covered by the grant money include purchase of permanent equipment, building renovation or remodeling, and expenses for teams traveling outside of Fort Wayne to compete.
The new Ice Arena will be city-owned? That’s the first to have been heard on that!!
John – I’m trying to clarify/verify this.
The new ice arena will not be city-owned. It was an error in the press release, as verified by City PIO Rebecca Karcher.
I’m confused.
Sorry about not putting a title on this post originally. I was at work and in a hurry. I’ll have to read it through, I just skimmed it quickly before posting.
Freudian slip?
After all these years of binging huge amounts of revenue to the city Spiece Fieldhouse is finally getting some love! They have been having some amazing tournements bringing in thousands of kids and their spending parents and nobody seems to notice!
My only worry is that Sports Corp. is tied at the hip with the Coliseum Bunch!!
I joined the Sports Corp several years ago. I was told of the benefits to me. Basically all I got was a listing on a website with no link. I tried to call back a year later trying to figure out what the heck I paid for but could get no answer or reply. I got one packet from them once having mainly to do with a “Between the Lines” organization at Tahcumwah/Ash Center. This organization later was going to potentially compete against what I was doing at one time after they came up with a “study” that there was a shortage of facilities and leagues to play volleyball for adults and kids. I don’t know where the hell they were looking for the adult leagues… I have the biggest league in Indiana and multi-hundred mile radius. And there’s plenty of places for the youth clubs to play. Volleyball is very portable.
One note about “studies” is it seems to be that they can say what they want to if it’ll fake the way toward some grant money or other kind of support.
The CVB sounds like they are really on top of things. Next time I’m downtown I’ll sign up for that… if they’ll have me I guess. And that’s great if there is some support for what Spiece is doing.
Mike – would you qualify for any grants? Were you approached or did you have knowledge about the program? I’m curious about it.
That was a different little dealie the BTL was working on for themselves as I understand it. I’ll have to try and remember more but it was someone who was successful in Atlanta and was trying to do that here and it fell through, or maybe they got something to come through in a smaller realm for themselves. I’m not sure I’m supposed to know that either.
Sorry, I meant did you have any foreknowledge of the grant program the Mayor just announced…
Oh… no.