Access All Areas March 2019 | Page 7

MARCH | AGENDA Quote of the month: “Shout out to anyone waking up feeling a bit lost, anxious or off kilter ... take a few deep breaths and keep moving xx” Bestival and Camp Bestival founder Rob Da Bank via Twitter @RobdaBank Council to charge non-local tax payers AV company pre-empts no deal Brexit Equipment rental company Press Red Rentals is opening a subsidiary in Holland to see off the perceived threat to its business from a ‘no deal’ Brexit scenario. The company rents audio-visual, sound, video and lighting equipment for use at events and exhibitions across the EU, working with exhibition stand builders, marketing agencies and productions companies from around the world. The company, which can freely move equipment and people around the EU thanks to freedom of movement, sees ‘no deal’ as a threat to this efficiency. “To protect the business within the EU, which accounts for some 70% of the company’s turnover, the decision was made to invest in setting up a base in The Netherlands said managing director Derek Tallent. “At the moment, servicing our clients’ requirements within the EU is quite straightforward. We can load a truck in Telford and deliver freely around the EU thanks to frictionless borders. Brexit will put a stop to that. We expect to still be able to trade with our clients in the EU, but this will only be possible by having to use ATA Carnets for the equipment, and Schengen Area Visas for our staff, processes that are costly and time consuming. It’s like turning the clock back 26 years to before the single market came into being.” He added: “We’ve had to make this decision to move part of our business from Telford to Roermond to protect the company and the livelihoods of our existing staff. We would far rather be investing in jobs here in Telford, but we have to be pragmatic.” The company is now actively recruiting staff in Holland, with the operation being headed up by existing staff member Joe Hoyle, who is relocating from the UK to The Netherlands. Europe post-Brexit.” Godiva Festival could be set to charge visitors if they live outside its home city of Coventry under new proposals. Coventry City Council, in an attempt to boost revenues and attract headline acts to the three- day event, could start charging people who live outside the city from next year. The festival, which has attracted performances from Tony Christie and Ronan Keating, attracts over 100,000 people each year, and would remain free for Coventry taxpayers. If approved by councillors, the new charge would come into force from 2020. Last year's 20th anniversary show saw performances from Tony Christie, Gabrielle and Ronan Keating. The council spent £460,000 staging the show in 2018 - three times higher than its original £150,000 budget. Plans will go before the city's full council on 19 February. Fyred up Deborah Armstrong, founder of event design company Strong & Co, weighs-in on the issue’s theme, Fyre Festival. She didn’t mince her words. “Oh dear, that means I’ll have to watch it” I thought when Access asked me to do a column on the Fyre Festival. Despite all the chat about it, I’d basically avoided delving in. I had a sense of feeling deeply sorry for people who work really hard to achieve a dream which then fails. Watching those fails is not how I love spending my evenings. That sympathetic feeling continued right up till the moment I realised this wasn’t so much a film about the event industry as it was about a cynical con. That was the moment he said: “selling pipe dreams to the average loser”. What a [....]. I’ll bet not a single one of you reading this resonates with that line, because we in the event industry are in the business of bringing wonderful dreams to life, to communicate, to elevate, to create memories and relationships. Not that guy, with him it could have been anything, a credit card, a festival... it was all just bullshit. 07