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SkillsUSA members in KC in 2007.
    Summary: While the news media in Kansas City was breathlessly focusing on the potential loss of two minor conventions over a controversial Parks Board appointment, the city's largest convention---which took up 25,000 rooms (versus a potential 250 rooms by the SCLC)--announced it is leaving for Louisville.  01-17-2008

Kansas City losing SkillsUSA convention to Louisville, Kentucky
By RICK ALM, Kansas City Star 
      Kansas City has lost another convention. This time it�s the big one.
    Virginia-based SkillsUSA announced Wednesday that its annual National Leadership and Skills Conference for high school and secondary students would move to Louisville, Ky., for 2015 through 2020.
    �SkillsUSA loves Kansas City. We�ll be here for seven more years, and we�d love to come back,� said Tim Lawrence, SkillsUSA executive director, who traveled here Wednesday to deliver the bad news to the Kansas City Convention and Visitors Association.
    �The sole reason is space,� said SkillsUSA spokesman Tom Holdsworth. He said the organization had outgrown Kansas City.
    The group�s need for increased meeting space and hotel rooms every year is outstripping the city�s capacity to keep up. The event first met here in 1994 and annually ranks as the city�s largest convention.
    Last year the event resulted in $14.8 million in spending by conventioneers, who filled more than 25,000 hotel room nights.
    Association President Rick Hughes was stoic Wednesday after meeting with Lawrence. �It�s kind of a tough week for us,� he said. �This decision came down to bricks and mortar � adequate footage. �I�m just surprised that they are willing to compromise with us over the next seven years.�
    Hughes said SkillsUSA�s move out of Kansas City should force the twin issues of a new downtown hotel and another Bartle Hall expansion to the front burner at City Hall. �You can�t build for one group,� he said. But he said the Sprint Center, the Kansas City Power & Light District and other new visitor amenities would start building critical mass.
    �Over the next five to six years we�ll see the need for real expansion, and we�ll have the demand to fill it,� he said.
    The decision to pull out had nothing to do with the controversy over Kansas City park board member Frances Semler, whose membership in the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps led La Raza to move its convention and the head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference to threaten a boycott of the city.
    Lawrence said his organization wasn�t even aware of the controversy until he arrived in town Wednesday and read about it in The Kansas City Star.
    Link to rest of story: http://www.kansascity.com/105/story/448137.html
DID SCLC PULL PHANTOM CONVENTION FROM KC?
   The head of Kansas City's Convention and Visitors Association said on the Darla Jaye radio talk show on 980 KMBZ (1/16) that the Southern Christian Leadership Conference's major recent announcement that it was pulling its convention out of Kansas City boiled down to the group "Has decided not to reconsider" holding it in Kansas City.
    The entire announcement (1/15) by the SCLC is beginning to sound simply like at attempt at silly PR grandstanding. According to Hughes, the group had never even booked any rooms or put down any deposits. 
   Hughes went on to say the convention "Did not exist" in an article by DeAnn Smith of the Kansas City Star (below).  We understand that Star columnist Mike Hendricks also attended the SCLC news conference. We look forward to his take on the issue on Friday.
01-16-2008

SCLC president threatens boycott of Kansas City if Semler is not removed
By DEANN SMITH
The Kansas City Star

     A national civil rights leader said Tuesday that he would call for a boycott of Kansas City if the mayor did not remove a controversial park board member.

    Charles Steele Jr., president and chief executive officer of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said Tuesday that the organization would make its point economically if Frances Semler, a member of the Minuteman Civil Defense Corps, remained on the park board.

     Steele said that Mayor Mark Funkhouser�s appointment of Semler, an opponent of illegal immigration, was part of a pattern of racial insensitivity.

     �We are asking all civil rights organizations to stay out of Kansas City. We are going to shut you down,� Steele said. �� We will take all the monies away from here. � Nobody should come to Kansas City.�

     The boycott would include marches, Steele said, but beyond that, �I believe in the element of surprise.�

     Steele made his comments at a news conference announcing that the SCLC�s board in early November had decided to hold its annual convention in New Orleans this summer instead of Kansas City. Steele said the announcement was timed to coincide with activities honoring Martin Luther King Jr., who co-founded the SCLC five decades ago.

The national NAACP board should join the SCLC and the National Council of La Raza and pull its convention from Kansas City, Steele said.

    The national NAACP board has voted to hold its 2010 convention in Kansas City, but some leaders have publicly voiced misgivings because of the Semler controversy.

    But local NAACP officials have supported keeping the convention in Kansas City.

Funkhouser said in an interview that by pulling their conventions, the civil rights groups were financially hurting Kansas City�s minority residents and businesses. Semler is a good park board member, he said.

    Funkhouser said minority neighborhoods had been left behind during recent prosperous times.

    �I want to know where these people were who are now ranting at me while the city was leaving behind large segments of the minority community,� the mayor said.

Kansas City convention officials said the SCLC had contacted them about holding their convention in late July at the Kansas City Marriott Downtown, where Tuesday�s news conference was held.

    They said that the SCLC asked about 250 hotel rooms but never put down a deposit. The vast majority of the expected 2,000 attendees would have been area residents, said Rick Hughes, head of the Kansas City Convention & Visitors Association.

    The convention �did not exist,� Hughes said in another interview. �They are canceling nothing. They are not taking anything away.�

    Hughes said that the SCLC never got beyond the most preliminary stages in scheduling its convention in Kansas City, and that was last summer.

    The national SCLC board�s decision to move the convention drew mixed reviews from local SCLC members.

     Kansas City, Kan., resident Adele Morgan said one woman should not hurt Kansas City�s economy.

    �Why not stay?� she said. �There is always going to be adversity.�

     Later, during the annual SCLC Community Luncheon at the Marriott, the Rev. Nelson        
    �Fuzzy� Thompson praised leaders of the city�s Hispanic community for supporting the SCLC�s decision to move its convention.

     Thompson said the African-American and Hispanic communities had forged an alliance because of Semler�s appointment.

     �Never again will we be separated by anything,� he said. �We will stand together.�

Steele said at the luncheon that those seeking to fulfill King�s dream of racial, political and economic equity should remain vigilant and not give in to bickering or jealousy.

    �You always have to fight for your civil rights,� Steele said. �You can�t expect a (political) system that enslaved you to save you.�

 
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