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Sask. event businesses taking financial hit due to inflation, gas prices

Sask. event businesses taking financial hit due to inflation, gas prices


As the country faces record high inflation and high gas prices, some Saskatchewan businesses in the event and wedding industry are taking a hit.


Trystan Meyers is the owner and operator of Armed with Harmony, a DJ service in Saskatoon, and says contracts for events are signed one or two years in advance, not anticipating the cost of everything going up.


“It’s really hard to be able to go back to retroactively say ‘well now this is actually the price of the service you’re getting’ or the costs associated with that,” Meyers told CTV News.


He says it’s “frustrating” because the price for simple things they use every day like microphone batteries and tape for cords are rising in price.


Meyers says his business is eating the cost as they want to remain reputable and have a good relationship with their clients.


“It’s definitely affecting our bottom line and having two years of COVID also affecting our bottom line before that, makes it quite challenging just to survive as a business,” he said.


Owner of RSVP Event Design Crystal MacLeod says “it’s been tricky” as she didn’t see inflation and high gas prices coming to this degree.


“At this point, we’ve just had to eat the cost and honour the contracts that were signed in some cases, three years ago because of postponements due to COVID,” MacLeod said.


MacLeod says her business notices the cost when it comes to gas for getting to and from events, picking up and delivering items, and shipping costs for new items.


“As a small business owner, you’re always worried. It’s such an up and down experience,” she said.


While RSVP Event Design is the busiest it’s been in 23 years, MacLeod says it’s due to postponed events from the pandemic. This summer MacLeod says most weekends are filled with two to three weddings.


Regardless of inflation and gas prices, MacLeod says she was already planning to raise rates by around 10 per cent and that it’s “necessary.”


As an event planner, MacLeod anticipates companies or couples can expect higher food costs for their event or wedding in the next year.


“I have found that people perhaps are just so excited to be gathering again they’re spending a little bit more money on things for their event that maybe they wouldn’t have considered before,” she said.


With the summer being completely booked up for corporate events and weddings, MacLeod says she’s never had to turn away as much business as she has in the last six months. She’s almost at the point where she’s getting close to capacity for 2023. 

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Sports This Week: Sask. rider excited for PBR team concept

Sports This Week: Sask. rider excited for PBR team concept

Abbey, Sask. rider Blake Smith has signed as a free agent with the Austin Gamblers

YORKTON – When it comes to sport development the PBR has proven itself rather adept at building ‘the brand’ of bull riding.

Certainly, bull riding has always been the premier element of rodeos, although I suspect there are saddle bronc riders, barrel racers and others who might take exception to that view. Still bull riders usually finish a rodeo as the highlight of the show.

So back in 1992 a group of 20 riders came up with the idea of shows with only bulls, and the PBR was born.

In the time since its founding PBR has become if not exactly a major sport when measured against football, baseball of stock car racing, at least a sport organization many have heard of.

According to pbr.com there are now more than 500 bull riders from around the world including the United States, Australia, Brazil, Canada and Mexico who hold PBR memberships, and events are shown on major networks such as CBS in the U.S. and TSN in Canada.

The success has been in large part because the PBR has always been innovative. They have married the product to key advertising brands. They have taken their events to what would not have been thought of US markets for rodeo, Los Angeles, Las Vega and New York among them.

And the PBR has changed how events are held, for example the PBR Global Cup pitting teams from the five big bull riding nations against each other in a team event setting.

And, now PBR is taking the idea of team versus team bull riding a step farther announcing recently the PBR Team Series, a new team-format league complementing its successful Unleash The Beast premier tour.

The PBR Team Series, which will span June to November 2022 in its inaugural season, following the May conclusion of the Unleash The Beast, is launching with eight founding teams playing a 10-game regular season culminating in a team playoff.

One of those teams is the Austin Gamblers, a team Canadian PBR fans are likely to flock too in-part because the Gamblers selected two-time world champion Jose Vitor Leme with the first pick in the PBR draft.

And of greater importance here in Canada, Griffin Smeltzer of Claresholm, Alta, and Abbey, Sask. rider Blake Smith have signed as free agents with the Gamblers.

Smith said the team concept appeals to him.

“I think it’s just awesome. I played hockey all my life and loved the team aspect,” the 20-year-old told Yorkton This Week. “I’m just thrilled.”

For Smith, who is in only his second year – his top finish was at the Lloydminster PBR Winter Classic last December – being part of a team will be a chance to learn, starting with sage advice Michael Gaffney who will coach the Gamblers.

“I can’t wait to get him videos of my riding,” said Smith who also competed in Yorkton last November.

It’s the same thing being on a team with someone like Vitor Leme. Who Smith said “will hopefully show” younger team members some of the things that have made him the best.

Smith also expects fans to like the team concept. He said when he was playing hockey fans liked wearing the home team’s jersey and he expects PBR fans to be the same.

For Smith being part of the inaugural edition of the Gamblers will be another step on a very new career, a career he said he has always wanted.

“I watched it for as long as I can remember,” he said.

And he recalls a mutton busting ride as a youngster where he made it around the arena when most fell almost immediately. The dismount had him landing on a stone, his hip left throbbing, but he still was thrilled by the ride.

“As soon as I was old enough I was steer riding at my local rodeos,” he said, adding he was hooked. “I couldn’t believe how much I fell in love with it.”

So turning pro was natural, something Smith said he wants to take as far as he can, while making some money along the way too.

To get better you of course need to ride bulls and lots of them.

“One hundred per cent, I’m always looking to improve myself,” said Smith, who went as far as to buy four bulls and set up a facility at home to practice.

Of course in Canada minus 40 weather in winter tends to limit ride options, so Smith called fellow Canuck Smeltzer to ask whether he should venture south to compete. The answer was a big yes.

“So I loaded up my truck and 25 hours later I was in Texas,” said Smith, adding for the last four months “I’ve been getting on bulls all over the U.S.. It’s been the best four months of my life. I’ve loved every minute of it.”

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Sask. ‘loser’ in single-event sports betting: MP | CBC News

Sask. 'loser' in single-event sports betting: MP | CBC News

CBC Saskatchewan is looking at single-event sports betting in the province. This story is part of a series examining its impact.


The Conservative MP who received backing from all parties for his private member’s bill to legalize single-event sports betting in Canada is critical of the pace of implementation in his own province.

“There’s winners and losers, and unfortunately, the province of Saskatchewan today is a loser,” said Saskatoon-Grasswood MP Kevin Waugh.

Waugh’s Bill C-218, also known as the Safe and Regulated Sports Betting Act, was passed by the Senate and received Royal Assent in late June 2021 and came into force on Aug. 27.

The legislation amended the Criminal Code to allow provinces and territories to conduct and manage single-event betting on any sporting event except horse racing, which is still maintained by the federal government.

Before the legislation became law, the only sports betting allowed in Canada was parlay betting — wagers that require the bettor to successfully pick outcomes of multiple events.

But Waugh has argued Canadians are spending about $500 million a year on that type of betting — a “mere pittance” compared to an estimated $14 billion spent annually on unregulated black market and offshore sports wagering websites, which offer single-event betting.

He said the latter activity isn’t subject to government regulations or taxes, isn’t creating jobs or economic opportunities in Canada, and isn’t contributing to consumer protection, education, harm reduction initiatives or support services.

Sask. ‘dropped the ball’: MP

Waugh said Saskatchewan government officials “haven’t done anything” with the file, other than hand it to the Saskatchewan Indian Gaming Authority (SIGA).

As part of an amendment to the gaming framework agreement between the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations and the provincial government announced in late September 2021, SIGA was given the authority to develop an online site that, among other things, would offer single-event sports betting.

SIGA has also been granted the authority to create sportsbooks in its casinos, as well as a five-year period where it will have exclusive rights to regulated single-event sports betting in Saskatchewan beyond what is offered through Sport Select.

The website is expected to launch sometime this year. In the meantime, Waugh said you can’t place regulated single-event sports wagers in Saskatchewan other than through Sport Select.

“The odds are horrible in Sport Select, I might add,” Waugh said. “They are not the same as they are in Ontario or B.C. or Alberta that have single-event sports betting right now.”

In November, the British Columbia Lottery Corporation (BCLC) announced that B.C residents had placed more than $25 million in single-event sports bets with BCLC within two months of the legalization of single-event betting in Canada. 

Waugh said he is “a little disappointed” in the Saskatchewan government.

“This thing was passed last June,” he said. “Saskatchewan Liquor and Gaming knew this was on the agenda. They should have watched it go through the process.

“There is no question Saskatchewan has dropped the ball.”

Waugh said it means lots of Saskatchewan people are still betting offshore and the government is not getting any money out of that.

“So once you get that going — and it’s hard to get these offshore customers to play in Saskatchewan and Canada legally — it’s going to take a long time because they’ve been playing for years and many of them are still playing offshore in Saskatchewan right now because we don’t have it,” he said.

CBC News asked SIGA, Sask Lotteries, SaskGaming, the Saskatchewan Liquor and Gaming Authority and the Western Canada Lottery Corporation for response to Waugh’s comments.

SIGA aiming for fall launch of online site

Lionel Tootoosis, SIGA’s senior vice-president of operations, said his organization has been very busy working with its partners on policies, procedures and internet gaming standards.

Tootoosis said there are a lot of entities involved in gaming in Saskatchewan and SIGA has to work with its partners.

“When you’re launching something new . . . we’re a highly-regulated industry, and we have to make sure we have everything in place and that we’re adhering to the laws and all the different parts to operating a business online,” he said.

Tootoosis said SIGA is currently in the middle of contract negotiations with a third-party provider and there should be an announcement in a few weeks.

He said it is aiming to have the new online gaming site launched sometime in the fall.

“We really feel we’ll be able to launch here in 2022,” he said. “We’re quite confident.”

WATCH | Canada moves to allow single-event sports betting:

Canada to allow single-game sports betting

Beginning Aug. 27, single-game sports betting will be legal in Canada, in a move many hope will move a $14-billion per year industry away from the black and grey markets. 1:26

He said at least two of SIGA’s casinos will be undergoing renovations to offer sportsbooks, but it needs time to assess the market and figure out how much it wants to invest in the infrastructure.

Tootoosis said SIGA will also need a couple of years to determine how much it is keeping from the “grey market” and bringing onto its own platform.

When asked how much sports betting the black market and offshore gambling websites are currently drawing from Saskatchewan, he said it’s really unknown.

“We do know it’s sizeable,” he said. “In the tens and tens of millions of dollars.”

Sport Select seeing upward trend in first-time single-event bettors

John Towns, the manager of communications and corporate affairs for the Western Canada Lottery Corporation, said single-event betting offered by Sport Select has generally seen a 15 to 20 per cent increase in new players month over month in the Prairie provinces and the territories since it launched in November.

That number is also broadly trending upwards month over month, he said.

Towns said the lottery corporation estimates a little over half of Sport Select players have placed single-event wagers during that time. However, he said the majority of play is still done through parlay bets.

“It’s the betting method they’re more familiar with,” he said. “And it also provides opportunities for players to win a little bit bigger than the single-event bets do.”

About nine per cent of Sport Select players primarily engage in single-event bets, he said.

Towns said that since single-event betting was introduced, the amount of money bet on Sport Select is up about eight per cent.

He said about 15 per cent of the last fiscal year’s Sport Select sales, or $7.1 million, was from single-event wagers.

When asked to respond to Waugh’s comments about Sport Select, Towns said sports lottery is different from other types of sports betting and it’s “not really an apples-to-apples comparison.”

“As far as a sports lottery product goes, we have consulted with our players and with our provincial partners and we’re happy with what we have in the market, but we’re always looking to improve it, as well,” he said.

He said Sport Select has been around for decades and has a dedicated following.

“A dedicated player base that we also don’t really want to kind of upend completely by changing the foundations of the product underneath them,” he said.


CBC Saskatchewan wants to hear personal stories from people in the province about their experiences with single-event sports betting. If you are willing to share your perspective in a news story, please email sasknews@cbc.ca.

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Sask. gov’t adding PST to most art, culture and sport events | CBC News

Sask. gov't adding PST to most art, culture and sport events | CBC News

The Saskatchewan government is raising the cost for people who want to attend big events or experience entertainment in the province.

A sweeping expansion of the provincial sales tax base was announced Wednesday with the release of the 2022-23 budget.

The changes come into effect in October 2022 and will see people paying an extra six per cent on ticket prices for big sporting events, concerts and professional theatre. 

The tax is also being added to movie theatres, museums, zoos and historical sites, as well as tickets for fairs, rodeos, trade shows and arts and crafts shows. Furthermore, it will be extended to people buying memberships to the gyms, golf courses and curling clubs. 

It will also be tacked on to hunting and fishing guide fees and outfitter services. 

Finance Minister Donna Harpauer said the expansion will generate about $21 million annually. She said it targets events and services already taxed under the federal goods and services tax (GST).  

The government did not consult with venues regarding these changes. Harpauer told reporters the expansion would not affect small groups hit hard by the pandemic.

“It doesn’t apply to your small town rodeos or events,” Harpauer said.” This is going to be bigger concert events, your Roughrider tickets. It’s your larger events.”

Opposition finance critic Trent Wotherspoon disagreed and said this tax expansion was another blow to  Saskatchewan people and industries struggling because of the pandemic. 

He called the government out of touch with working families, saying it didn’t make any sense for the government to add a tax onto “Rider games and concerts and rodeos and Agribition — on the things that will allow us to come together after the time we’ve had to be apart.” 

Saskatchewan’s government is expanding the provincial sales tax. (CBC)

 

The government said exemptions apply to tickets for school, university or minor league sports, amateur theatre productions that do not pay the artists and events put on by a public sector body.

Exemptions also extend to fees for youth programming, like hockey, dance and music, if the activities are run by a school or a non-profit.

Fundraisers where part of the cost of admission can reasonably be considered a donation to a charity are also exempt. 

More budget-related stories: