Myrtle Beach City Council made a lot
of headlines over its push to end the rallies over the past year, but
now that the Spring Harley Rally is here, city leaders are keeping
quiet.
The city's spokesman said the mayor
and other council members feel it's too early to declare victory.
Plus the city faces at least four
lawsuits that stem from measures taken to end the rallies, and City
Spokesman Mark Kruea said that prevents leaders from talking.
However, judging by weak attendance
during the first four days of the rally, it appears those measures are
working -- at least within city limits.
Myrtle Beach Mayor John Rhodes has
become the poster child for the end-the-rally push, at least in the
eyes of some bikers.
"If the mayor were here, I'd
tell him I think what he's doing is ridiculous, because it is,"
said Myrtle Beach biker Patrick Bubp.
Rhodes and city council passed 15
ordinances, including a mandatory helmet law, aimed at ending the
rallies.
Rally promoter Mike Shank was hoping
for the best and said he expected attendance to be somewhat down, but
he said he's surprised by the "ferocity" with which bikers
are avoiding city limits.
"The two questions they ask are,
'How do I get around the city?' and, 'Is that business in the
city?'" Shank said on Monday.
Shank says he sold 192 vendor permits
last year, and this year he's sold fewer than 70.
He said attendance to his vendors in
North Myrtle Beach this past weekend was down 20 percent over last
year.
When asked what the city thought of
the diminished attendance, Kruea said it's too early to talk about
that.
"I don't know that any of the
city council members have great deal to add at this point. The city
has been sued four separate instances. This is something that's under
pending litigation for us. It's not something that we will have a
great deal of comment on," Kruea added.
Neither Mayor Rhodes nor City
Councilman Mike Chestnut who led the march to end the rallies returned
phone calls to NewsChannel 15 Monday.
When asked why Rhodes or others
wouldn't at least talk in generalities, Kruea suggested the media
wouldn't settle for that.
"While they (the politicians)
may be able to talk in generalities, I'm not convinced the news media
can ask questions in generalities or will accept answers in
generalities."