Cruise-In relocation would be great for Aldergrove, bad for Langley City
The Langley Good Times Cruise-In has attracted huge crowds to Langley City over the past 20 years.
Langley Advance file photo
The suggested relocation of the Langley Good Times Cruise-in
to Aldergrove would be great news for Aldergrove. It would not be good news for
Langley City.
It appears that there is no chance Cruise-In will take place
in the City this year. Society president Wayne Patterson has stated his group
will either move to Aldergrove or not operate the highly successful car show and
community event at all. It may well be the end of the line for the event, if it
does not work out to move to Aldergrove.
He said the City was simply asking Cruise-In to absorb too
many costs. In particular, asking the society to pay a portion of policing
costs for Friday night was too much for the directors to stomach. Considering
that Cruise-In does not have any Friday night activities in Langley City, their
reluctance to pay for any policing costs is completely reasonable.
What is particularly unfortunate is that this year marks 20
years since Cruise-In started. Initially, it was a small show on the one-way
portion of Fraser Highway, staged to help draw attention to downtown businesses.
It soon grew much larger, drawing 100,000 people and as many
as 1,500 vehicles on display. This is not at all surprising, given the many car
enthusiasts in Langley and the surrounding area, and the unique venue that the
streets of the City offered.
The benefits it has brought to Langley City have been massive
exposure, a free event open to all, additional business for some (but not all)
local businesses and a large sum each year for charities.
All those benefits could accrue to Aldergrove. That would be
a good thing. Langley Township Mayor Jack Frioese is very open to the event
moving to Aldergrove, a community he has a soft spot for, and is quite positive
that the Township would not be asking Cruise-In for nearly as much money to
offset additional policing costs. The Township and Cruise-In directors will be
gathering information over the next 30 days before a final decision is made on
this year’s show.
The streets of Aldergrove could be very conducive to
offering a similar atmosphere for Cruise-In. The biggest challenge would be
that Fraser Highway is a major though street, so a good detour route is
essential.
Given the can-do attitude of many Aldergrove residents, this
can likely be easily overcome. When Remembrance Day takes place at the Aldergrove Legion each
Nov. 11, Fraser Highway is closed for a time (not as many hours), and it doesn’t
seem to be an issue. That event has got larger each year and people in
Aldergrove have easily adjusted.
Cruise-in is an opportunity for many volunteers to help out –
something that Aldergrove has plenty of. It would be an opportunity to showcase
Aldergrove’s business community and other attractions. It would also put Aldergrove
on the map and offer exposure in a way that has rarely occurred before.
Many Aldergrove residents have felt for years that the
Township treats their community as a poor cousin to the rest of Langley. Having
Cruise-In there would change that. The biggest one-day event of the year
anywhere in Langley would now be in Aldergrove.
There are still details to work out, and it isn’t a done
deal by any stretch of the imagination. However, the idea of moving to Aldergrove
seems to fit in well with the vision of the directors of Cruise-In, which is to
operate a family-oriented car show from which local charities benefit. Given
that the Township seems to be pretty flexible on the charges it would levy, an
Aldergrove Cruise-In could end up benefiting both the community and charities
even more than the Langley City show has.
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