The Day

MARITIME FESTIVAL ORGANIZERS CONTEMPLAT­ING THREE-DAY EVENT’S FUTURE

- — Brian Hallenbeck

New London — Less than two months ago, the 5th annual Connecticu­t Maritime Heritage Festival drew thousands of people to the city’s waterfront, spurring an estimated $84,000 in direct economic activity, organizers of the threeday event reported Tuesday.

The question they’re now pondering is whether there will be a sixth annual festival.

“We’re trying to assess where we go from here,” said Bruce MacDonald, the festival’s chief operating officer. “We did this on a shoestring last year (2017), without state assistance, and if we’re going to continue making this investment in the city, we’re going to need help. We need money to bring in ships.”

A descendant of OpSail Connecticu­t events in 2000 and 2012, this year’s maritime heritage festival, held Sept. 8-10, featured the USS Cole, a guided-missile destroyer and the U.S. Coast Guard cutter Thunder Bay. More than 6,000 visitors toured the Cole, festival organizers say.

Total attendance for the festival was hard to calculate, MacDonald said, because the festival is not a ticketed event and there are several points of entry. But, he said, the head count likely was “a multiple” of the number who toured the Cole.

MacDonald determined that direct spending on ship-related expenses and retail vendor sales during the festival amounted to $65,855. Festival expenditur­es for goods and services, including advertisin­g, public relations, website management and materials related to the Great New London Chowder Challenge, generated another $18,100 in spending.

The sums don’t include the additional business downtown bars and restaurant­s did during the event, MacDonald said.

The Connecticu­t Municipal Electric Energy Cooperativ­e, which served as the title sponsor of this year’s event, has agreed to fill the same role again next year. Other key sponsors this year were Atlantic Broadband, Starkweath­er & Shepley Insurance Brokerage, Crocker’s Boatyard and F & F Distributo­rs.

Still, “Going forward, we’re going to need more help,” MacDonald said. “We’ve got some decisions to make.”

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