Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Popular Gilroy Garlic Festival canceled indefinite­ly

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‘Finding another way to tell the world what makes us so special will require a regionwide discussion among residents and the agricultur­al industry.’

Gilroy Vice-Mayor Peter Leroe-Muñoz. “It’s a painful loss of a big part of our cultural heritage, along with funds generated for local charitable work.”

The big question now is whether Gilroy can revive or somehow replace the massive event that embodied many of the most attractive attributes of small-town Americana, along with garlic cook-offs and other reminders of its agricultur­al roots.

“Finding another way to tell the world what makes us so special,” Leroe-Muñoz said, “will require a regionwide discussion among residents and the agricultur­al industry.”

The bad news came in a Friday statement by Tom Cline, past president of the Garlic Festival Assn., and Cindy Fellows, vice president-elect.

“Obviously, we are left frustrated and disappoint­ed,” they said. “Our worldrenow­ned festival has helped showcase Gilroy and the South County for 42 years while raising many millions of dollars for local charities.”

The popular food festival suffered a tragic blow in 2019 when a gunman opened fire, killing three people, including two children, and wounding 17 others. Several people injured in the shooting sued the event’s organizers, saying negligent security contribute­d to the deadly encounter.

Compoundin­g problems, the all-volunteer festival associatio­n failed to generate any revenue from the start of the pandemic in 2020 to July

— Peter Leroe-Muñoz, Gilroy vice-mayor

2021, according to Cline, who was recently named Spice Man of the Year by the Gilroy Chamber of Commerce.

But the festival had been facing mounting financial problems for years before the shooting and the pandemic.

“The aftermath of the tragic shooting at the Gilroy Garlic Festival in 2019 brought to light the preexistin­g financial crisis of the Garlic Festival Assn.,” said Gilroy Mayor Marie

Blankley.

“The loss of vital adjacent parking now consumed with housing that began nearly 10 years ago resulted in the gradual depletion of their reserves, a path that was not sustainabl­e and without the ability to adapt to changing conditions,” she said.

It was a poignant end for the festival that helped make California the most festive farm state, with a cornucopia of crop celebritie­s — dry beans, avocados, dates,

kiwi fruit, almond blossoms — sprouting from Oxnard to Sonora.

Along with Castrovill­e’s Artichoke Festival, Gilroy’s garlic fest gained enough attention to prompt parodies in several of the state’s hipper small towns. Monte Rio, for example, once hosted the annual Banana Slug Festival — the “Slugfest” — and Coultervil­le sponsors a CoyoteFest, while Columbia draws crowds just itching to honor poison oak.

The first Gilroy Garlic Festival was held in 1979 with the help of 50 community volunteers, who did everything from peeling the socalled stinky rose and pouring beer to selling printed tickets — all 5,000 of them.

An aroma of success surrounded the initial event, which generated $19,000 for the community and newspaper headlines across the nation, including one in the Washington Post that proclaimed, “Fame is Nothing to Sniff at in Gilroy.”

Enthusiast­ic sponsors of the festival over the last four decades included Christophe­r Ranch, which supplied more than two tons of fresh garlic every year for its culinary offerings and supported events and projects including the annual Miss Gilroy Garlic Festival Queen Pageant and upgrades to the amphitheat­er stage.

Ken Christophe­r, a ranch executive whose grandfathe­r, Don Christophe­r, cofounded the festival, was unavailabl­e for comment.

But Steve Janisch, a head chef for the festival for 39 years and among many Gilroy residents struggling to come to terms with the cancellati­on, said, “the situation is frustratin­g.”

“Me and my festival crew were very tight-knit for years,” he said. “We were in charge of cooking scamp and squid and putting plenty of garlic in it.”

 ?? James Mohs Gilroy Dispatch ?? GILROY GARLIC FESTIVAL
Queen Aisha Zaza, right, watches chefs at the 27th annual event in 2005.
James Mohs Gilroy Dispatch GILROY GARLIC FESTIVAL Queen Aisha Zaza, right, watches chefs at the 27th annual event in 2005.

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