Entire Letter, plus reaction over OP Quaker Arts Festival ending

January 28, 2018

Written By

Mary Friona Celani

The reaction is mixed from folks who’ve heard about the end of the Quaker Arts Festival.

We reported yesterday that the Orchard Park Jaycees have sent a letter to vendors, saying that after 56 years, the Quaker Arts Festival is over.

Some say the festival was getting fewer good vendors each year and the festival was going downhill for a few years, now.  Others say it was a tradition that they will sadly miss.

Here is the entire letter.

 

Dear Friends,
 
It is with heavy hearts that we, the Orchard Park Jaycees, announce that 2017 was the final year for the Annual Quaker Arts Festival. 
 
For 56 years we ran the project with such incredible, complete and unwavering support from the Orchard Park Central School District, Town of Orchard Park, Village of Orchard Park and Orchard Park Police Department.  They have been tremendous over the years in working with us to coordinate all the logistics of the Quaker Arts Festival.  We are forever grateful for their support. 
 
We would not have had such a successful run had it not been for our valued exhibitors, corporate sponsors, Boy Scout troops and other various community organizations, public attendees and business owners.  The support and relationship that we have established with our co-sponsors over the years, most recently Bee Publications, has been invaluable and one that we have truly appreciated and cherished.  The Festival was a time-honored tradition and one that many looked forward to year after year, including us. 
 
We were proud to have organized the Quaker Arts Festival since 1965 and we have been honored to present such an event to the community of Orchard Park and Western New York.  Over the years, we have had many loyal exhibitors participate in our Festival year after year.  They started out as exhibitors and then became friends.  We have met so many wonderful, talented people whom we have considered a pleasure to welcome into our Festival.
 
The Orchard Park Jaycees consist of all volunteers.  We have no paid employees.  We rely on our members, friends, family and other community organization groups to assist us with manpower.  That pool of volunteers and membership in community organizations has decreased over the years and we find it harder and harder to secure the manpower needed.  The culture of volunteerism is not as readily available as it has been in the past for various reasons.
 
The Quaker Arts Festival has been the primary fundraiser for the Orchard Park Jaycees since the Orchard Park Presbyterian Church asked us to run it in 1965.  When all and said the done, our purpose is the fact that we are a community organization dedicated to contributing to the betterment of our community and profits from the Quaker Arts Festival were invested in programs and projects that benefitted the community.  Over the years, we have been able to sponsor programs and projects for children, teens, high school students, families and senior citizens.  We have enjoyed those programs and projects over the years and will miss our involvement in those events.  We were also able to sponsor college scholarships, donations to various charities and community events and programs.  If we are not making the necessary profits to fund those projects, programs, donations, etc. we are defeating our purpose as an organization.
 
This decision was not an easy one.  There were several factors that brought us to this difficult decision.  The world is changing in so many ways.  We have had a decline in exhibitor participation, as well as public attendance, possibly because on-line shopping is so easily available.  Although we always had about 30-50 new artists and craftsmen each year, the total number of participants was decreasing for various reasons.  We have also lost a good number of vendors to retirement and aging.  The weather is always a factor and that too affects our exhibitor registrations and public attendance.
 
So many aspects of hosting this very large, outdoor event have changed over the years and more specifically within the last few years.  As you may suspect, the overall cost of running the Quaker Arts Festival and making it safe for all those involved was becoming a difficult task.  The costs for general expenses, food, consignment rentals, publicity and private security personnel have been increasing steadily over the last several years.  Those costs alone have increased over the last two years by 24%.  It was not difficult for us to predict that these expenses will only increase in the future.
 
In addition, to run an event such as the Quaker Arts Festival, not only must we feel comfortable running this event, we must also be substantially certain that the event is safe for vendors, patrons and the organizers.  Considering the increasing number of horrific events occurring in our country and rising costs, we are no longer able to ensure the welfare and safety of our patrons, vendors and organizers.
 
We sincerely thank every single person who accepted the responsibility to take on such a large undertaking and donate so much time and money to our event.  We as a committee have truly enjoyed working with all of you.  We have made many friendships and will miss seeing many of you in the years to come.  We wish you all the very best in the future and once again thank you for your participation in the Quaker Arts Festival.  We could not have survived for 56 years without your involvement!
 
Orchard Park Jaycees
Quaker Arts Festival

 

The festival is always a big deal for the Southtowns and Orchard Park. Some 300 or so vendors line the village streets and tens of thousands shop for those special products you can not find in stores.

More to come…

Bath Fitter

 

Rolly Pollies

 

Workbea Digital

 

About Me

 

 

Welcome to Totally Buffalo! A local lifestyle website.

My name is Mary Friona-Celani and I am the creator of this site! I’m a wife, a mom, a grandma, a Buffalo booster, an entrepreneur and a small business owner. I’m so glad you stopped by.  After 20 years in the buffalo media, I went out on my own to tell stories about the people, places, events and all-around fabulousness of this wonderful place we call home. Buffalo is different and so is this site. We are here to share stories, encourage kindness, and help make this a better place to live.

We’ll help those in need when we can through our charity arm, Totally Buffalo Cares.

We help local small businesses, artisans and vendors though our events and our Totally Buffalo Stores.

We’ll do all of this with a little help from friends in our community.

 

1 Comment

  1. Avatar

    “…Considering the increasing number of horrific events occurring in our country and rising costs, we are no longer able to ensure the welfare and safety of our patrons, vendors and organizers.”

    If that’s really how they feel, they should cancel any & all future events & simply disband the entire Orchard Park Jaycees program because they are a “community service organization” and everything they do is out in the community where these “increasing number of horrific events” occur. They did cite “increased costs and decreased vendor interest” as the reasons for ending the festival, and that’s completely understandable. But to throw this in there & make it seem like we’re taking our lives into our own hands by leaving the house is just f’ing stupid.

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