|
Their booster club has a budget of around $80,000 to pay for everything from travel expenses to customized music and drills. About one-fourth of that budget comes from running a concession stand at Panthers games. In their best season, they raked in nearly $26,000.
Last season wasn't as profitable, so the boosters already have scaled back. Taking away all their Panthers-generated dollars would cripple the program.
"The funding we have to travel would be gone," band director Chris Rugila said. "We'd probably go down to one, maybe two competitions. We'd have to cut programs or add fees to the students. ... I'm an NFL fan and I'd hate to see a lockout because I like to watch football on Sundays. But it's also really going to directly impact my life, my students' lives and my professional life. A lot of things I've tried to put in place are in jeopardy."
Todd Roser can relate.
His father started Roser's Fine Dry Cleaning and now he runs it. There's a single location, in Kenner, La., and about one-fourth of the business is tied to the New Orleans Saints. He not only cleans the uniforms of stadium employees, he also does personal valet dry cleaning for players. The dropoff would begin right away if there are no offseason workouts, minicamp and training camp to bring guys to town.
"I'd feel it, big-time," said Roser, who already is fretting the possibility of laying off employees.
The Jets aren't laying anyone off. But they are among the few teams announcing plans to trim their payroll.
Salaries for coaches and others on the football side could be chopped by 25 percent. On the business side, almost 100 workers will have to take a one-week, unpaid furlough every month until there's a deal. They can apply for unemployment during their time off and if no games are missed, owner Woody Johnson plans to reimburse them for lost income.
Dave Gibson wishes he had such a safety net.
Gibson is sales director for a Holiday Inn located one block from Reliant Stadium in Houston. Here is how heavily his hotel's bottom line is tied to the NFL: The food and drink tab on a typical weekend is $2,000; it's close to $12,000 on a weekend when the Texans are home. There's also a bump in occupancy. All 238 rooms were rented for both preseason games last year and they sold out for a Monday night game 1 1/2 months in advance, "which never happens," he said.
"If the season doesn't happen, you're looking at least $100,000-$120,000 out of our pocket. Gone. Irreplaceable," he said.
Then there's St. Ann's Episcopal Church in Nashville, Tenn.
The church collects $30,000 a year from cars parked on a parcel of land originally purchased for an eventual expansion. The money generated goes right into the mortgage, and leaders have earmarked reserve funds to make up for it this year, if necessary. Their fears about an NFL work stoppage are part financial, part spiritual.
"Our mission is not to park cars," said Ken Love, senior vestry warden. "Our mission is to feed the hungry and the homeless and to spread God's word and to be a witness to the city. ... Where I have a greater disappointment is we won't be there for the crowds of people that walk by on a Titans' Sunday. And it's just more sort of the chance to be that contact with people will be missed."
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching & Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries
Community |
Perspectives
|
Law & Courts |
Leisure Time
|
Spiritual Life |
Health & Fitness |
Teen Scene
Calendar
|
Letters to the Editor