Boat building, sales could end up dry-docked
MIKE WHITEHEAD
Ahoy.
The movers and shakers of the Newport Harbor area should take
notice that the city of Lake Elsinore has finally recognized the
importance of boating. Elsinore is the largest natural lake in
Southern California, and I have always thought that the lake has huge
potential as a boating community.
Now, an Irvine company called Marina Developers LLC has proposed
building a boat mall, taking the idea from the auto mall concept with
full support from the city. The ambitious plan shows 175,000 square
feet of showrooms, 40,000 square feet of service area and 30
dealerships for trailer boats up to 36 feet in length. In addition,
the plans include a marina with 300 slips and dry storage for 500
boats. The 75-acre site will be mixed-use, but the emphasis will be
on boating, and it includes an in-water sea trial area.
Why is the city of Elsinore interested in this project? The
estimated economic effect will include $2 million in sales tax and
local economic activity of $200 million a year. Hoping to open on
Memorial Day in 2005, this complex is expected to lure customers from
neighboring counties, including Orange County. The dilemma for our
local dealers is that this new boat mall might hurt our local boat
dealers.
On the East Coast, Super Sonic Sales will open its boating
mega-center in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. this year with an
82,000-square-foot facility. Florida has recognized the value of
boating for years, with redesigned waterfronts, the largest boat show
and an increase in support from public officials. Lee County
commissioners in Florida are considering a lawsuit against the
federal government about the manatee speed zones and the restrictions
on boating, especially the long channel runs. The eel grass problem
in Newport Harbor comes to mind.
The National Marine Manufacturers Assn. and Michigan State
University in June founded the Recreational Marine Research Center,
which will research boating at the national, regional and local
levels.
“The recreational boating industry lacks a central place to
coordinate and capture data and is greatly hampered by the scarcity
of solid information to support both individual business decisions
and broader advocacy efforts,” association President Thom Dammrich
said. “The [center] will pool the efforts and resources of interested
entities to fill this void and conduct research that would be
prohibitively expensive for any one organization to undertake on its
own.”
Seeing the importance, the Great Lakes region that includes
Michigan, Minnesota, Illinois, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, New York,
Ohio and Indiana is having an economic study performed by the center.
The economic value of boating to the region will be reported using a
grant from the Great Lakes Commission, and the study will include
boating’s economic value of boating, salaries, wages, benefits,
taxes, service industry, fuel, repairs, storage and ancillary
services.
The Newport Harbor area, which includes Costa Mesa, must recognize
the importance of boating and the immense economic value. We have
seen the exodus of boat manufacturers, with only a few builders
remaining on the Westside, and I do not want to see boat dealers
leaving the area, too.
High office and dock rent, lack of dockage and other communities’
enticing new dealerships are affecting our marine industry. We need
to determine the economic value of boating to the harbor area, and
commissioning a study by the center would be an excellent start.
I think that the cities, chambers of commerce and the Newport
Beach Conference and Visitors Bureau should know the effect of
boating on our local economy with actual numbers listed in a detailed
summary.
We need to act and act swiftly as other communities have seen the
value of boating, whether in the high desert with manufacturing or
Elsinore’s planning to capture the trailer boat market.
Lido Village would make a great boat mall instead of condos.
Tune in to my “Boathouse Radio Show” this and every Sunday from 4
to 5 p.m. on KCBQ-AM (1170), or listen over the Internet at
https://www.boat
houseradio.com . You can call in to the toll-free listener line at
(888) 344-1170 and join in on Southern California’s only boating talk
radio show, broadcasting along the coast from San Diego to Oxnard and
out to Santa Catalina Island.
Safe voyages.
* MIKE WHITEHEAD is the Pilot’s boating and harbor columnist. Send
him your harbor and marine-related thoughts and story suggestions by
e-mail to mike@boathousetv.com or visit https://www.boathousetv.com.
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