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Re: NY Districts - POA
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If we start asking for sponsorship for a event that caters mostly to international and "visiting" teams, then I think we will lose out on a lot of sponsors for the Regional to the District. One of the selling points that is used to gain sponsors is that these students will be looking for work in 4-8 years and they would be good assets to invest in. If those "assets" are no longer local then is the desire to invest in them still alluring? |
Re: NY Districts - POA
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I strongly encourage ANY area considering a District transition to openly communicate with all stakeholders (including sponsors, teams and volunteers). Town Hall meetings, conference calls, newsletters, emails, etc are all great ways. And don't just communicate once, keep the dialog on going throughout the transition. As we made the transition in New England, we held a number of Town Hall meetings - some went smoothly, others did not... but we wanted to hear from our teams, and to share with them what we knew (and what we didn't), and what our plans were. Based on the feedback from these meetings, we made some changes to our plans. And don't forget about the event sponsors. We spent a lot of time talking with our major corporate Regional event sponsors. This went a long way in ensuring they were there to support us during and after the transition to Districts. |
Re: NY Districts - POA
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Re: NY Districts - POA
Just going to echo some problems that we might encounter when trying to organize a shift of New York to the district model.
1) Hosting district events in NYC would be hard. On the other thread about NY districts, there was a lot of talk about how NYC has really large schools, citing Townsend Harris, Stuyvesant, and Brooklyn Tech as examples. As a student at Stuyvesant, I can testify that the population numbers are deceiving. Even though our school has over 3500 students, the building is 10 stories tall. Unlike large schools outside the city, our school is not really a suitable venue for a robotics competition. I have also talked to members of team 2601 from Townsend Harris who have said about the same. Brooklyn Tech is probably the largest school building in the city and might be able to host a district event but that would probably not be enough.2) New York is the go-to regional for international teams Due to a myriad of reasons, NYC regional has become a regional with a high international attendance. It's part of what makes the regional so special. While many people say that international teams could just get automatically invited to DCMP, this places them at a severe disadvantage to teams that have gotten practice at their district events. It would be an unpleasant experience for teams that are often already at a resource disadvantage.3) DCMP would probably be in NYC. This is a more controversial point, but the NYC regional is a large publicity, helping NYCFIRST pick up sponsors, as well as hold robot demonstrations for sponsors. NYC regional has lots of competition tours as well as special robot demos for the sponsors. Having a big show event in the city is pretty important. This issue is easier to work around, because it is possible to hold the district champs in NYC, however, staying in NYC can be really expensive, and a lot of the teams that are pushing to shift to districts, want DCMP to be held upstate. Obviously this isn't make or break, but it does take away from one of the primary incentives for the district model: saving money.I don't mean to be a wet blanket but a lot of people on this thread seem to have their head in the clouds. These problems need to be addressed before NYC can shift to districts. |
Re: NY Districts - POA
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2. The First International scene will continue to evolve. Eventually people like the ASL teams will have regionals in their home countries where they will compete. Once NY goes into districts (I have talked to some RD's now it is happening) they will have to either compete at another international competition (Israel, Australia, ect) or start their own. Countries like Brazil, China, and Turkey are probably not too far from stating their own regional (Although you would probably know more about China). Many of these teams already only do a single event so it is not too big of an issue. I do enjoy the international teams but we can not treat them as our responsibility. 3. DCMP would be cool in NYC. It very clearly has the infrastructure to allow it but, its expensive. There are not too many obvious places to host an event other then the Javits center which is too expensive. Theres the Manhatten center which may be big enough, and of course places like MSG and Barclays both which probably will never happen. A long island DCMP however would not be too hard and would allow NYC to attend easier then a more centralized DCMP. The Nassau Colliseum comes to mind with it being vacant often now that the Islanders are gone. And, that would be a very cool place for a DCMP. NYC definitely presents challenges but I do not think they are as big as challenges like finding more volunteers. |
Re: NY Districts - POA
Hey Sam, thank you for bringing this topic up again. As a team administrator, the value add of the district model is certainly appealing. That being said, this has been a subject that I have kept tabs on for the last few years, and I do not expect NY to go District any time soon and am unsure if it even should. You are 100% correct that the hardest part of being a NY Metro team is the difficulty in participating in more than 1 event without travelling a great distance. While travel is not uncommon for many teams, it is particularly difficult in the NY Metro area as teams often struggle to find funding, and frankly it is impractical considering we have one of the densest concentrations of teams all of FIRST (something like 127 teams in a 35mi radius).
Honestly, at this point a 3 Regional event makes the most sense for the NY Metro area. Yes, it is unfortunate that this means that NY Metro teams will be spending $4000 more dollars to participate in two events than in a district model, but there extenuating circumstances that limit our ability to make that transition. KrazyCarl hits the nail on the head with one of Metro NY's most important considerations, we are one of the most popular regional events for international teams to attend. For example, we had the honor of hosting 12 international teams this year. This is an important opportunity for our students to interact with their peers from the world over, and it should be something that the NY Metro teams work to maintain. Moving to a district model in the Metro NY area complicates this matter though there are a couple options. The simplest option in this situation would be to reserve a number of slots in the NY Metro Championship for international teams, though to my knowledge this is unprecedented and I think would create issues if not discontent among teams on the cusp of qualification. A second idea could be to have a separate NY Metro district, while maintaining the NYC Regional. In this situation teams could choose to compete in either the standard NYC Regional at the Javits Center, the district events with a smaller district championship held separately from the Javits event, or both if they so choose. Oddly this actually becomes even more expensive, totalling a full $14000 for a team that participates in both the District, District Championship, and NYC Regional for a total of 4 events. I expect that in this situation, the NYC Regional would become more of a travel event, expanding its international and out-of-state participation. The Regional would probably lose some of its New Yorkness as lower funded NY Metro teams moved into the District. The problem here would be finding space, as there are few buildings with rooms large enough to host events. Furthermore, the district events would want to focus on spaces that have bleachers pre-installed, as their rental and assembly is one of the most onerous costs of an event. Frankly, a third Regional Event would be the easiest option at this point, and preferably one north of the City. We are slowly building interest here in Westchester County, but to my knowledge there are no NY teams between Ossining and Hudson, NY, a distance of 85 miles. This means that there is only 1 team in the 9 counties between Albany and Westchester. Luckily, this as been taken into account with the work that is being done to bring a 3rd Regional event to the NY Metro Region. Yonkers, has just announced the first area offseason event, and Ossining and we here at New Rochelle have been talking with the RD's on more concrete ideas. As mentioned before, the Westchester County Center was considered, but recent research has shown that it cannot fit our needs. |
Re: NY Districts - POA
You raise some good points however I should add Districts in NY is happening.
At this point its a matter of how soon. The regional directors are already working on it as First continues to push districts and cycle out of the regional system. |
Re: NY Districts - POA
A lot of these points were covered last year in the other New York Districts thread.
Champs on long island or the city would be more expensive than say an area just north of the city. Say poughkeepsie (im not sure if it has an actual venue that would work) as it is not far by Amtrak. Teams in the city can go home at night and its just far enough out of the city teams can get good rates on hotels. The big thing hurting teams in downstate NY is they never really have to travel much for competition. Upstate has been used to traveling because before Tech Valley, to attend a second regional you had to head to Canada, Ohio, Pittsburgh. With that being said it obviously would be in everyones benefit to have the least amount of travel possible. But some teams will get screwed over. I'm pretty sure 229 has come to terms with always having to travel. Another problem as others have said is venue costs. As I noted with Champs maybe even some schools just outside the city can be used to host districts. Cost and Volunteers is the biggest factor stopping NY from going to districts. As it is currently SBPLI is having trouble still continuing. It's lost some big sponsors over the years and as i recently learned, they get a huge discount when it comes to running the event. It in one of the cheapest regionals in terms of set up and running costs. |
Re: NY Districts - POA
My feeling has always been simple, I want districts for my team as soon as possible. The reason FIRST exists is for students to learn, if you play 8 matches a year, you aren't going to learn much and that unfortunately is the case for so many New York City teams.
For my team, we pay more than teams in districts for less matches even though we attend 2 regionals. Something about that feels wrong to me. The fact of the matter is that if tomorrow you told me that 694 was folded into MAR and that we had to take a 2-3 hour bus ride to our events, I would be ecstatic, because it would mean all the advantages of being in districts including unbag time, getting to attend 3 district events at a lower cost, getting to have a district championship, weekend events so that more students and mentors could attend, and much more that I am currently forgetting. We don't even need to have that many events in NYC for districts to be worth it for our teams, 1 or 2 districts and teams have to travel a bit for the other ones they attend and they are already getting way more matches, way more experience, and way more learning. As for the international teams, there are still plenty of regionals for them to attend, NYC just happens to do a good job getting them to come. If they did do a different event that is more inland the expense would probably be less because hotels in NYC are a nightmare and they would probably get a better experience from being exposed to fiercer competition. I don't have all the answers, but I think the main issue is that not enough people want this yet. Once enough people want it, I think it will be easier to make happen. |
Re: NY Districts - POA
There's been a lot of talk about venues (one of the more difficult aspects), either for a new regional, district events, or a district CMP. I'm going to quote a few aspects from the Official Regional/District Planning Guides, as a set of minimum requirements (notwithstanding scheduling).
Overall, these requirements can be pretty tough to meet, especially for high schools in NYC because it's not just the size of the school that matters, but also the physical layout of its space. And it's often difficult to find enough pit space that's an easy walk to the field, since many schools in the area don't have a second gym. The most likely venues then are basketball/hockey arenas (for completeness, the parent category), and I'm willing to bet that even many of those don't fit the requirements. |
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Re: NY Districts - POA
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Re: NY Districts - POA
(Apologies for a bit of thread Necromancy)
Now that the season is over, I've posted an updated FRC team map for NY state teams: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1Hg...PU&usp=sharing Note: The map is 1 pin per location and for locations with multiple teams (eg "New York, NY") the label is prefaced with the number of teams in parenthesis. This is culled from the TBA data for 2016 events, so only "active" teams are listed. (I believe "active" in this case is registered, but if a team did not play despite being registered, they are listed... but I don't think it applies to any teams here.) Some stats on this data:
Of the upstate teams:
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Re: NY Districts - POA
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Re: NY Districts - POA
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