L.A. County Fair crowds grow 5%
The Los Angeles County Fair in Pomona ended a 19day run Sunday that drew 1.13 million visitors, a 5% increase from the previous year.
Managers of the annual celebration of deep-fried foods, dizzying carnival rides and barnyard animal exhibits attribute the increase to lower prices, new promotions and milder weather.
“One of the underlying issues that the community raised was that it was too expensive,” said Miguel Santana, president and chief executive of the Fairplex, the nonprofit that is home to the fair. He added that the temperatures were lower for the second two weeks of the fair, compared with last year’s scorching temperatures.
The attendance of paying customers — not county schoolchildren who are allowed in free of charge — was 1.13 million, up from 1.07 million in 2017.
To attract more paying customers this year, the fair did not raise entrance prices. Also, with the fair paying homage to the iconic cross-country Route 66, each food vendor offered a $6.60 meal package.
The fair also sold a package that included four season passes, plus parking and a collectible lanyard, for $66, a deal compared with the $180 price if the components were purchased separately, according to fair officials.
“As a whole, we did better financially than in the past,” Santana said.
The summer festival marks the second fair under Santana, the former top administrative officer for the city of Los Angeles who was tapped to turned the troubled nonprofit around after years of financial problems and controversy over high administrative salaries.