Rumours about Murray Bridge Show society not all accurate, president says
The show will not go ahead this year, but Anna Scheepers remains optimistic about 2021.

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At this time of year, Murray Bridge Showground would usually be abuzz with activity.
With the annual show only weeks away, volunteers from the agricultural and horticultural society would be tidying up pavillions and stockyards, taking entries and working the phones.
But this year, with the 102nd Murray Bridge Show cancelled due to COVID-19, the atmosphere is very different â downright troubling.
The show society is fighting for survival.
Show society's bank balance has been hit hard
President Anna Scheepers said three factors had combined to deal a hammer blow to the Murray Bridge Agricultural and Horticultural Society.
The first was the shutdown by Safe Work SA of a company which was to have provided rides at the 2019 show.
âAll the major rides we had booked to come to the show werenât there, and ... no-one came to look at anything else,â Ms Scheepers said.
âSo we didnât have a good show last year.
âWe found ourselves in a bit of a financial bind.â
That bind worsened when committee members became aware of what Ms Scheepers described as âpoor record keeping in the show officeâ.
Several section convenors and other committee members resigned in protest over the way the situation was handled.
âThere wasnât anything untoward that happened, but not everything that should have happened did,â Ms Scheepers said, choosing her words carefully.
âThat presented a problem for us, which we have now fixed.
âPeople make mistakes.
âI think we should leave our stones in the garden, from where Iâm standing â none of us is blameless in anything.â
Finally came COVID-19, smashing any chance at a rebound in 2020.
102nd Murray Bridge Show will go ahead next September
Still, the 2021 show would go ahead âcome hell or high waterâ, Ms Scheepers said, so long as COVID-related restrictions allowed it.
It would be a one-day event on Saturday, September 26, a date that was unlikely to change regardless of any clash with football finals or the pedal prix.
But the society would need to come up with $25,000 to $30,000 between now and the middle of next year to make it happen.
Insurance alone cost $12,000 per year; and keeping the showground running cost $500 a month, a task made harder when few visitors were using the RV friendly parking area.
She expressed confidence that the societyâs new treasurer, who came with âreally good credentialsâ, would help it squeak through.
âAt the moment ... weâre looking at putting together a good financial plan,â she said.
âBut weâre going to require funding from somewhere.â
The show will also need volunteers.
âWe understand people have lives, theyâre busy, they have all sorts of things to do, but an hour here or there can make a big difference,â she said.
A new committee will be elected at the show societyâs annual general meeting in November.
A final decision about the 2021 event will have to be made by about April.
âWe havenât lost our enthusiasm and passion for the show,â Ms Scheepers said.
âWe just need to drag it out a bit from this year into next.â
- More information, volunteer, donate: Visit www.murraybridgeshow.com.au, email secretary@murraybridgeshow.com.au, or phone 8531 0248 or visit the showground on a Thursday.
Photo of Murray Bridge Agricultural and Horticultural Society vice president Richard Hein and president Anna Scheepers: Peri Strathearn.