Antelope Valley Press

South Florida businesses feeling benefit of Super Bowl

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MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. (AP) — Dena Lowell typically employs about 12 full-time people to work in her restaurant and catering company.

That is, until Super Bowl week. She’s needed a lot more help over the last few days.

Lowell owns one of 188 companies in the South Florida area that were picked to help with various details of the Super Bowl. The NFL calls the program Business Connect, where companies with certified minority, woman, veteran, lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgende­r ownership are encouraged to apply and see how they can be involved with football’s biggest week.

From catering to cleanup, flowers to staffing, the NFL and local organizers sifted through tons of applicatio­ns to find the right people and companies that could handle Super Bowl business.

“For my company, the impact is huge,” said Lowell, whose restaurant called The Cook and The Cork received two contracts — tasked with providing about 12,000 pieces of food in all for two separate tasting events, including one of the primary tailgates Sunday at Hard Rock Stadium. “And when it’s huge for me, you know the impact trickles down all around the community.”

Business Connect, which the NFL has used at past Super Bowls, is designed in part to ensure that much of the money generated by events surroundin­g the game remains in South Florida after the teams and celebrity guests leave.

Competitio­n was fierce for the contracts, and many applicants didn’t get picked. For this Super Bowl, the NFL required that any company that applied had to have an office in Miami-Dade, Broward or Palm Beach counties; be at least 51% owned by a woman, minority, veteran or LGBT individual; have various certificat­ions and have been in existence since at least 2016.

Contracts went to companies that could provide bartenders, janitors, photograph­ers and painters. Others were asked to provide generators, linens, hardware and golf carts. On the applicatio­n, businesses were warned that it would be daunting: “Come ready to work hard. We have one shot,” it said.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Workers arrive outside of the Hard Rock Stadium before the NFL Super Bowl 54 football game between the San Francisco 49ers and the Kansas City Chiefs, Sunday in Miami.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Workers arrive outside of the Hard Rock Stadium before the NFL Super Bowl 54 football game between the San Francisco 49ers and the Kansas City Chiefs, Sunday in Miami.

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