WINTER 2011
INSIDE TRACK
Quarterly Newsletter for the Members of the Road Runners Club of America IN THIS ISSUE: ♦ ♦
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“P’s” of Permitting RRCA Represents at Olympic Trials Marathon 2012 Slate of Officers and Directors
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RRCA Staff Spotlight
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2012 Election Notice
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And more
RRCA BOARD OF DIRECTORS Brent Ayer President David Cotter Vice President Dennis Novak Treasurer Dan Edwards Secretary, At-Large Director Mark Grandonico Eastern Region Director Mitchell Garner Central Region Director Lena Hollmann Southern Region Director Bailey Penzotti Western Region Director Kelly Richards At-Large Director
UNDERSTANDING THE “P’S” OF THE PERMITTING PROCESS By: Jean Knaack
“I applied for a permit for a race. My organization wants to raise money for our charity, but they rejected the permit. What do I do now?” “I guess I have to get some kind of insurance before my town will give me a permit for our race in a few months.” “We have a great course and we’ve opened registration, but the police made us change our course before they would finalize the permit. Registration is already open, what do we do?” These are common statements and questions we hear at the Road Runners Club of America’s national office when new race directors contact us seeking advice. Often times these new event directors have been referred to the RRCA from a local government official or a leader of a local running club. Anyone that has directed a race can tell you that putting on an event is not as easy as picking an ideal course, on an ideal date, with an ideal charity partner, and then simply getting a permit as a formality. According to the book, Organizing Running Events, by Phil Stewart, race director of the Credit Union Cherry Blossom 10 Mile race in Washington, DC, you need to allow six months or more for the permitting process from start to finish. The length of time for your permitting process will depend on the distance of the race, complexities of the event, expected participant numbers for the race, and other factors that effect putting on a local road race. For 28 years, Road Race Management, Inc. has hosted an annual race directors conference focused on sharing best practices in road race management. One of the general sessions at the 2011 Road Race Management Race Directors Conference was The Changing Local Political Landscape for Events, led by William LaForge, JD. LaForge is an attorney in private practice and the principal of LaForge Government Relations, a government relations and lobbying firm. For more than 30 years, LaForge has been involved with the public policy arena at local, state, and federal levels. An avid runner and a triathlete, LaForge has completed 61 marathons, including 24 Boston Marathons, and he has logged more than 66,000 miles running. At the Race Directors Conference, Laforge outlined the important “P’s” of the permitting process: Planning Prevents Poor Performance in Permitting.
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