The Telegram (St. John's)

Chase the Ace fundraiser nets $5.8M for St. Kevin’s parish

- BY SUE BAILEY

Three sets of crumbling concrete steps have just been fixed heading into the St. Kevin’s church, office and community hall in the Goulds.

Now the Catholic parish can figure out how to spend the rest of its $5.8-million windfall.

“We’re just waiting for railings,” said Carol O’brien, organizer of a wildly successful Chase the Ace fundraiser that turned the Goulds area into a sort of weekly carnival last summer.

“It was really a once-in-alifetime experience,” she said of the hoopla. “I miss it. I miss the people, I miss the feeling of togetherne­ss and camaraderi­e and just the general excitement.”

The profits will be put to good use, O’brien said Monday in an interview.

“Our church steeple, we have a leak there that we just can’t seem to figure out.

“Our cemetery, we’re doing an expansion,” she added. “The majority of our funds are earmarked just to keep us operating in the black for the next number of years. That’s the biggest thing.”

Chase the Ace in the Goulds made national headlines and lasted more than 44 weeks with ever-increasing jackpots.

Starting before dawn on Aug. 30, about 60,000 ticket buyers formed massive lineups that snaked through the community. There were picnics and singalongs throughout the day before a couple from nearby Conception Bay South finally drew the winning ace of spades and won the $2.6-million prize.

O’brien said the parish spent just over $152,000 in total on “profession­al fees,” including Brink’s trucks to safely move cash and extra police officers for security.

The $5.8-million figure is after all expenses, she explained. In addition to operating costs and building maintenanc­e, the parish will use those profits to improve its food bank, which handed out about $300,000 worth of donations last year, O’brien said.

The provincial economy has been battered since offshore oil prices crashed in 2014. If hard times and the lure of easy cash attracted some ticket buyers who couldn’t afford it, O’brien said that can’t be helped.

“Nobody can control what an individual chooses to do with their money. It’s a concern always, but we have no control over that.”

O’brien said all spending decisions will be made by committee, overseen by the parish council and made available to church members.

The church wasn’t the only Goulds institutio­n enriched by the hoopla.

“It was a screaming success for the Goulds, no doubt,” said Martin Hefferman, co-owner of Greco’s Pizza and Frozu Frozen Yogurt, just behind the parish hall. “Our sales probably tripled on Chase the Ace days.

“There were lineups out the door.”

Like anything, there were pros and cons, Hefferman said in an interview.

 ?? TELEGRAM FILE PHOTO ?? Crowds gather outside St. Kevin’s Parish Hall in the Goulds in August for the final draw of the hugely popular Chase the Ace fundraiser.
TELEGRAM FILE PHOTO Crowds gather outside St. Kevin’s Parish Hall in the Goulds in August for the final draw of the hugely popular Chase the Ace fundraiser.

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