The Gold Coast Bulletin

GAMES COMPO CALL

- PAUL WESTON REPORTS

GOLD Coast small businesses want the State Government to conduct a review and provide compensati­on to traders who suffered during the Commonweal­th Games.

In a letter to Games Minister Kate Jones, co-owner of NightQuart­er in Helensvale Michelle Christoe said her income during the Games was down by two thirds while expenses doubled.

GOLD Coast small businesses want the State Government to conduct a review and provide compensati­on to traders who suffered during the Commonweal­th Games.

NightQuart­er at Helensvale, which employs 600 people and more than 100 small businesses, said trade reached 10-20 per cent of what was promised during the city’s biggest-ever event.

In a letter to Games Minister Kate Jones, NightQuart­er co-owner Michelle Christoe said GOLDOC encouraged the entertainm­ent precinct to be part of Festival 2018, for which it delivered 75 events.

GOLDOC had forecast that 1.55 million people would pass through the Helensvale transport hub, providing 15,770 in bus queues and 2000 moving from heavy to light rail daily, Ms Christoe wrote. But the transport scare campaign turned people away and NightQuart­er found:

● Users had to return to park’n’ ride locations within an hour of their event;

● Day-trippers from Brisbane and northern NSW dropped from 19 per cent to one per cent of business;

● Five stallholde­rs left permanentl­y and 20 closed during the Games;

● Small businesses which would sell $9000 a day were below $700.

“Our income during this time was one-third of our usual takings and our expenses doubled,” Ms Christoe wrote.

Small businesses want the federal and state government­s conduct a review and “provide some relief to small business on the Gold Coast”.

“We have since been quieter than normal trading and definitely not the economic boost that was promised,” Ms Christoe wrote.

“We thought there would be a campaign to offset what had happened, to offset the scare campaign.”

Bonney MP Sam O’Connor said at least $1 million in contingenc­y funds had been “returned” to the Government and should be used to help small business.

“This money has been budgeted by the State Government as part of the funding provided to ensure the Games were a success. It is already committed to the Gold Coast,” he wrote to Ms Jones.

Ms Jones plans to reply to both letters as the government determines how to best use the contingenc­y funds.

Acting Games Minister Leeanne Enoch last night told the Bulletin: “We’ll give priority to initiative­s that deliver the greatest legacy outcomes for Gold Coasters.

“A post-Games evaluation report is on track to be published in 2019. A final evaluation report is also expected in 2023. The post-Games report will include detail about the benefits of initiative­s like Festival 2018, the GC2018 Reconcilia­tion Action Plan and the sports asset legacy program.

“It will also include detailed economic, trade and tourism benefits as well as an analysis of how Games venues have been utilised.”

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