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Bicycling in the Lower Hudson Valley

State cutbacks puts Tour of Missouri in limbo

July
10

DAVID A. LIEB, Associated Press Writer, JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. / Gov. Jay Nixon is considering a $1.5 million cut to the Tour of Missouri that organizers say could force the cancellation of the September bicycle race.

The Department of Economic Development recommended the cut this week in response to Nixon’s request for agencies to identify savings in the state budget. A decision on it will be made in several weeks, Nixon’s spokesman Jack Cardetti said.

The state tourism division was supposed to supply just under half of the $3.3 million budget for the third annual race, which is scheduled to start Sept. 7 in St. Louis and end Sept. 13 in Kansas City.

The race is to include about 15 professional teams, including the Astana team for which Lance Armstrong rides and several others currently racing in the Tour de France.

Chris Aronhalt, an executive for the company managing the race, said Thursday that Nixon’s administration has already frozen the $1.5 million. Planning for the race is continuing while organizers wait to see what the governor decides.

“Without question it would be the end of the Tour of Missouri,” said Aronhalt, of Medalist Sports LLC, based in Tyrone, Ga. “It would not return. It’s such a momentum breaker it would be near impossible.”

The 2009 Tour of Georgia race already has been canceled because it could not find a title sponsor to supply funding.

Aronhalt said the potential cut in Missouri funding is particularly troublesome because organizers have already signed contracts and bought plane tickets for cyclists. If the state pulls out, the nonprofit Tour of Missouri Inc. will still have to cover those costs, he said.

“The race is only 60 days away. We’ve been planning on it for months now. It really is an immediate type of crisis situation,” Aronhalt said.

Nixon’s budget director, Linda Luebbering, said state officials would consider the potential economic effect of canceling the race while deciding whether to go through with the cut.

“The governor supports the race, just like he supports a lot of things that are going to be recommended to be cut,” Cardetti said. “The question is whether or not in these financial times the taxpayers can continue to pick up the tab for things like the Tour of Missouri.”

An economic analysis of last year’s Tour of Missouri found that spectators spent about $30 million, slightly more than half of which came from non-Missourians. The study was done by Germany-based IFM Sports, which has an office in St. Louis, and paid for by the state of Missouri.

Republican Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder, who has been one of the race’s top promoters, posted a letter Thursday on the race’s Web site urging cycling fans to call the Democratic governor’s office and lobby Nixon to release the money for the race.

“We are one of the most successful cycling events in all of the world in only three years of existence, but we still rely on that key sponsorship from the state of Missouri,” Kinder’s spokesman Gary McElyea said.

This entry was posted on Friday, July 10th, 2009 at 7:07 AM by Randall Wolf. Print This Post Print This Post | Email This Post Email This Post

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Randall Wolf Randall Wolf is Director of Photography at The Journal News/LoHud.com, and has ridden more than 80,000 miles on a bike during the past 35 years. Some of these miles include a three-week touring trip from Suburban Philadelphia to Nova Scotia and back at age 16 and a few years later a solo two-week trip to Montreal. In 1985, he photographed the first U.S.-based team in the Vuelta a Espana, a three-week professional cycling race throughout Spain. He has participated in professional teams and races throughout the U.S. including the national championship in Philadelphia, and Tour of Georgia. In the mid-Ô90s he competed as an amateur racer throughout the Northeast. Bike commuting was his choice of transportation while working in Baltimore and Toronto. He is a ride leader and member of the Westchester Cycling Club and Rockland Bike Club, and lives in Garrison with his wife.
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Robert Brum Robert Brum, an assistant metro editor for The Journal News/LoHud.com and The Rockland Express, grew up cycling the roads of Rockland County. He now lives in Queens and rides with the Long Island Bicycle Club. Brum logs between 2,000 and 3,000 miles a year cycling throughout the Northeast.
David Schloss David Schloss is the co-founder and president of the Rockland Bicycling Club. A lifelong cyclist and self-described bicycling addict, Schloss is also a professional writer, photographer and educator, he is also the director of a group that supports photographers, which allows him to travel the globe, sneaking in rides.
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