Swap meet operators await fair board’s ruling
Deirdre Newman
The two companies vying to run the Orange County Marketplace have
ratcheted up their public relations campaign.
The Orange County Fair Board is contemplating considering a
competitor to Tel Phil Enterprises, which created the weekly swap
meet and has run it for 34 years.
American Park ‘n Swap submitted a bid in April but that bid was
deemed incomplete because American had omitted a document. Having
submitted the document since then and buoyed by a favorable
recommendation by the state Department of General Services, American
is plugging its ability to upgrade the swap meet and provide more
revenue to the fair board.
On Thursday, the board will decide whether to consider American’s
bid. The state suggested it should and called American’s omission
“immaterial.”
Tel Phil President Jeff Teller touts his company’s expertise from
three-plus decades of experience and emphasizes the camaraderie that
results from a family-owned and -operated swap meet.
He reiterated his opinion that American’s omission is indicative
of its inattention to detail. He also expressed concern that American
won’t be able to provide the same level of service Tel Phil does. He
compared Tel Phil’s management of the swap meet to the
standard-bearers of the aviation market -- Boeing and Lockheed.
“It’s like [American] saying, ‘I can build a fighter jet,’” Teller
said. “But Boeing and Lockheed can. If [American] can build one,
fine. But [customers] don’t want something that’s inferior.”
American officials contend they just want a fair shot at the
bidding process. They say they don’t understand why Tel Phil, with so
much experience running the Marketplace, is trying to discredit them.
“I don’t quite understand the huge lobbying effort that the
incumbent is putting on to have the bid disqualified and [not] let
fair play go through,” said John Fernbach, group president of
contract services for Delaware North. “All we want is the chance to
have [the board] score our bid, to be able to tell our story, to be
able to tell all the things Delaware North does on a national basis.”
Jeff’s father, Bob, started the Marketplace in 1969, renting
spaces for $1, while giving out coupons for the same amount to
potential vendors. It grew at an average compounded rate of 42% the
first 20 years, Jeff Teller said. It paid the state almost $5 million
last year and has paid the state about $110 million since it started,
Teller added.
It has evolved to an event of enormous variety where you can find
cars like Rolls Royce’s kitty corner to a market selling fruit and
vegetables. It typically draws 40,000 to 50,000 people a weekend. The
Marketplace prides itself on providing top-notch customer service,
Teller said.
“If you’re not satisfied with something you buy, I will refund the
money,” Teller said. “It’s kind of like Nordstrom. We don’t
advertise, but we do it. The customer feeling secure is critical.”
American is a subsidiary of Delaware North, a privately-owned
company based in Buffalo, N.Y., that specializes in the service
industries. Delaware North owns the Boston Bruins National Hockey
League team and operates hospitality and event venues at large-scale
tourist attractions like the Kennedy Space Center and Yosemite
National Park.
Fernbach said he considers the Marketplace to be well-run under
Tel Phil. But he believes American could improve upon it. While he
called American’s bid “comprehensive,” he said he was not able to
provide any details because the bids are sealed under a court order.
American runs swap meets in four locations around the country --
Phoenix, Little Rock, Memphis and Myrtle Beach. But Fernbach said
none of them is comparable to the operations at the Marketplace and
therefore it is unfair to compare them. While Teller has compared the
Phoenix swap meet to the Marketplace, Fernbach said the analogy is
not appropriate.
“The Phoenix market is a very apt and capable, probably three-star
market,” Fernbach said. “[Orange County] is a five-star market. It’s
not comparable and the same analogy I would take is ... we’ve won the
contract at Yosemite National Park ... and if you were to look at our
operations at Yosemite, at the one-star level, you’d go down to the
tented villages and you’d say, ‘How can the people who run the tented
villages run the Ahwahnee Hotel? And it’s us, providing a wonderful
experience in a one-star, two-star or five-star setting.”
Tel Phil attorney Stuart Suchman pointed out that American started
a swap meet at the Los Alamitos Racetrack about seven years ago but
it closed after 10 months.
American officials also assert that they will give the fair board
more revenue while not raising the vendors’ rates.
“The vendors are going to cry that [we’re] going to raise [their]
rates, but that’s not true,” said Tim Paone, an attorney representing
Delaware North. “Everyone can win in this.”
Teller said maintaining a family atmosphere is just as important
as making a profit.
“Any good business is one that makes money, but for us, it’s more
than just profitability -- it’s a sense of family,” Teller said.
Tel Phil’s bid includes some major investment in the fairground
properties, including a joint-use commissary and food preparation
area, Teller said.
If the fair board decides to consider American’s bid, it will use
a scoring process with “experience” as one of the categories. The
process gives all applicants equal consideration, fair board
president Ruben Smith said.
Smith said the board was looking for guidance on how to deal with
American’s original omission in the bidding process “and now we have
it.”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa and may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at deirdre.newman@latimes.com.
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