Posted on Tue, Sep. 20, 2005
Myrtle Beach debating biker rallies
Associated Press
MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. - When a panel got together to discuss the two motorcycle rallies held in Myrtle Beach each spring, the only thing folks seemed to agree on is the need to talk more about it.
About 100 people gathered Monday to hear a group of 20 business and government leaders discuss the rallies.
One suggestion was to move the Carolina Harley-Davidson Dealers Association Myrtle Beach Rally to April, instead of holding it in May.
Theater owners and golf promoters complained the rallies hurt their profits and should be moved or done away with but others said the area should welcome the bikers.
Owners of bars and beer distributors said they generate as much as a third of their income during the rallies.
It was the first time in years that various interests gathered to discuss the rallies and, to some, not much has changed.
"Deja vu," Atlantic Beach Mayor Irene Armstrong said. "Nine years ago, I sat in such a setting, a round table where there was an ad hoc committee formed. Guess what? We were discussing the same things we are discussing today."
But Wayne Gray, the chairman of the Myrtle Beach Area Chamber of Commerce which organized the forum, said getting everyone to the table was a big accomplishment.
He plans a task force to keep the talks going.
"We believe this is the first step in making these events better," Gray said. "At the end of the day, all of us work, live and raise families here."
About 500,000 bikers flock to the Grand Strand each May for the two rallies. The Harley-Davidson rally is held in mid-May while the Atlantic Beach Bikefest is held during Memorial Day weekend.
As both events have grown in recent years, so have community complaints. The chamber recently surveyed its 2,300 members and found that 70 percent who responded wanted the events changed.
"The problem is there has gotten to be so many bikers, it is overwhelming everything else," said David Brittain, who runs the Caribbean Resort and Sea Captain's House restaurant.
Horry County Council Chairwoman Liz Gilland suggested moving the Harley-Davidson rally to April. But the dealers association didn't like the idea either.
"We want to try to work with everybody in Myrtle Beach, but this is our 66th year. It would be awful hard for us to move it," said Gene Lummus, the association's president.
Bikers will come when they want to, added Brenda Spadoni of Better Brands beer distributor.
"May is what it is. We are not going to stop it," she said. "Why we are trying to do away with a certain group of tourists is beyond me."
Walt Standish, president of Beach First National Bank, said the nudity and nightlife that accompanies the rallies is not what the beach should welcome.
But the community is not responsible for the bad seeds, said Mickey James, president of the Myrtle Beach branch of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
"Four weeks out of the year we deal with bikers," he said. "You make it sound like eternity."