Organizers of the Monaco Air Duluth Airshow are getting a hard-won lesson in public relations after their president told the owners of six homes bordering the airport they’d have to be somewhere else during the show. Ryan Kern told the six families that since their houses were in the air show box, they’d have to leave home from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. for each of the three days (July 5-7) of the performance (he did offer them air show passes), according to the Duluth News Tribune. Well, the good folks of Lavacque Road in Hermantown, Minn., are reasonable folks who don’t appear to want to spoil anyone’s fun but they did kind of balk at Kern’s apparently self-imposed powers of eviction. The local police also noted that private property rights supersede the air show’s operational challenges. Fortunately, cooler heads (and a little spending money) prevailed. David Boe, the show’s public relations director, said the intent was never to try to evict people and he apologized for any misunderstanding. Then he offered each of the families $250 in cash and a $50 restaurant certificate to find something else to do on those days. “We really didn’t want to ruin the air show for everyone,” Melissa Pagnac told the News Tribune. “This is kind of a shocker. I never understood the whole ordeal.” Pagnac’s mother-in-law, Allison, said there’s some inconvenience but nothing she’s not prepared to handle. “I’d rather stay in my home, but what am I going to do? You can’t cancel the air show,” she said.
Air Show “Evictions” Recanted
Key Takeaways:
- Monaco Air Duluth Airshow organizers faced public backlash after their president told six families bordering the airport to vacate their homes during performance hours due to safety concerns within the "air show box."
- The homeowners resisted, and local police confirmed that private property rights took precedence over the air show's operational demands.
- The situation was resolved when the show's public relations director apologized, clarifying no eviction was intended, and offered each of the six families $250 cash and a $50 restaurant certificate as compensation for the inconvenience.
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