The Gold Coast Bulletin

It pays to keep party rolling

- NICHOLAS MCELROY Think Tank, P19

CALLS to scrap the annual Schoolies celebratio­ns have been slammed by the head of Gold Coast Tourism despite claims the end-of-year party tarnished the city’s reputation.

Each year in November up to 30,000 graduates visit the Gold Coast from around Australia where they are said to inject up to $48 million into the local economy.

Gold Coast Tourism chairman Paul Donovan said business people and tourism operators should not be critical of the rite of passage.

He said it would be impossible to stop school leavers coming to the Glitter Strip.

“If you don’t have Schoolies they’ll still come to the Gold Coast,” Mr Donovan said.

“Look at what happens in Bali and places like that. It’s a tradition.”

As it stands there is a government-run party precinct, additional emergency services and support from the Red Frogs Christian volunteer group to help keep the party under control.

“Why would you knock it? The kids are protected in the precinct,” Mr Donovan said.

“Everyone knocks Schoolies (but) the kids have plenty of money, they stay at the accommodat­ion, they eat and go to the theme parks.”

He said operators needed to market themselves to schoolies during the two-week celebratio­n which some say turns families away from the Gold Coast during the peak summer season.

Mr Donovan said safety for the hordes of school leavers was paramount and one area that should be tightened ahead of this year’s event were regulation­s surroundin­g electric hire scooters.

Queensland Tourism Minister Kate Jones said Schoolies celebratio­ns on the Gold Coast were an institutio­n which had become a lot safer over the past decade. “It’s about how do we turn the exposure Schoolies has for the Gold Coast into long-term visitors choosing to come back,” Ms Jones said.

“For a lot of young people it will be their first visit so if they have a positive experience they will think of it as a place they will want to come back to and visit when they have their own families.”

It comes as Wyndham Cruises general manager Dean Griffin told the Bulletin the celebratio­ns should be dumped.

“I think we need to be portraying the right images and this certainly doesn’t happen when Schoolies is on,” he said.

“A big thing for me, being in a tourist operation, is fewer people visit Surfers Paradise during this festival – especially young families, and young families are good yielding tourists. My past experience of Schoolies is the only traders who do well are fast food outlets and bottle shops.”

Commercial developer Tom Ray was equally damning and suggested both Schoolies and the Gold Coast 600 V8s event should get the boot.

In the Bulletin in May he asked: “Do images of these two things, portrayed into people’s loungeroom­s and on their social media, project the image of the Gold Coast that we should be seeing?”

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