We have put on a great event year after year. I think we're building a lot of momentum each year, especially at Expo 10 with Acura's arrival as a sponsor and SPEAKER (!!!!) at the banquet.
Our 'base' of regulars - drivers, instructors, even organizers - is East Coast/Mid West. And it is a large group.
How many regulars can make it to a west coast expo (25%?) and how many new people will fill the void and actually show up from the west coast? What if this is a flop? If it does not go as well as we want, will we be able to recover for Expo 12? Where are our instructors coming from and who can 'vouch' for them? In the past most of our instructors have been people we know - all very qualified, but definitely OUR type of instructor as we have been very focused new drivers.
I don't think we are BIG enough to take a huge gamble on the west coast. I would love to have one out there, who wouldn't? But I am more concerned about the future of expo, not just the NEXT expo.
I really want to build upon what we did last year and the years prior. I think sticking closer to our base and continuing to add loyal ITR Expo people is the way to go. We are still very small in the scheme of things, we are not big enough or resourceful enough to jump around all over the country like NSXPO does - nor do we all have the money! ( or we'd have an NSX -
![Razz :P](./images/smilies/icon_razz.gif)
i REALLY want us to go to Mid-Ohio with Acura and HPD.
I just don't think we are large enough to make the leap to the west coast.
Also, and I have not been keeping up so maybe something is changed - but I share many peoples' fears about having NASA involved AT ALL in our event.
Again, I'm not trying to start a flame war or point fingers at anyone, but I think I speak for many long time members (who have and have not spoken up (sadly)) when I say that I'd prefer to build on what we've done so far before we take a giant chance with so many unknowns associated with going so far outside our home base. I want expo to continue to happen each year, and I'm concerned that if we take a giant risk and it doesn't go as well as we hope (I acknowledge it may go very well, but there are SO many unknowns, we have a hard enough time getting everything to go smoothly when the event is closer to home!!), we may be shooting ourselves in the foot.
Chris