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Chicago street festivals struggling to survive amid rising costs, dwindling donations

Chicago street festivals struggling to survive amid rising costs, dwindling donations

Yahoo18-04-2025
The Brief
Chicago's beloved summer street festivals are at risk of disappearing due to rising production costs and declining gate donations.
Organizers have formed a coalition called "Save Our Street Fest" after many events, including Wicker Park Fest, saw donations drop by as much as 50% in 2024.
They are urging festivalgoers to contribute at the gate, warning that without public support, many festivals may not return after this year.
CHICAGO - Local street festivals are a beloved part of Chicago's summer identity, but organizers say the future of many of these events is now in jeopardy.
Pamela Maass, executive director of the Wicker Park Bucktown Chamber of Commerce, sounded the alarm in a Chicago Tribune op-ed published Friday, warning that escalating costs and declining gate donations are pushing some of the city's most iconic festivals toward the brink. Maass said her group has now formed a coalition of more than 20 Chicago festivals under the banner "Save Our Street Fest" in an effort to preserve these events.
What they're saying
According to Maass, Wicker Park Fest saw a 50% drop in gate donations in 2024 — a blow she called unsustainable. While vendor booths and concessions help fuel the local economy, she emphasized that those revenues go directly to the individual businesses, not the organizers.
"When you're walking past that gate thinking, 'My $5 doesn't matter,' everyone else was starting to think the same thing," Maass said.
Local perspective
Without sufficient gate donations, Maass said organizers are forced to scale back programming. Wicker Park Fest, for example, will lose one of its three music stages this year, and some vendor slots have been eliminated due to budget constraints.
She also noted that public safety costs are nearly on par with the price of booking original live music acts. Despite the perception that the city sponsors these events, Maass said local nonprofit chambers or community groups shoulder the full financial and logistical burden — including hiring private security, which is required to obtain city permits.
The coalition's message this summer is simple: donate at the gate.
Maass warns that if 2025 mirrors the donation shortfalls of last year, several festivals may disappear for good.
Street festival organizers who have joined this movement include:
Belmont Sheffield Music Festival
Ribfest Chicago
Andersonville Midsommarfest
Taste of Randolph
Wells Street Art Fest
Chicago Pride Fest
Square Roots Fest
Roscoe Village Burger Fest
Ravenswood on Tap
Wicker Park Fest
Northalsted Market Days
Thirsty Ears Festival
Edison Park Fest
Lakeview Taco Fest
Edgewater Music Fest
Ravenswood Art Walk
Lakeview East Festival of the Arts
Norwood Park Fall Fest
Lincoln Square Ravenswood Apple Fest
Oktoberfest in Avondale
The Source
This report came from an interview with Pamela Maas Wicker from the Wicker Park Bucktown Chamber of Commerce.
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