Strengthening the Future of Athens Special Events
Free-to-attend events are the heartbeat of Athens’ identity and a primary driver of our local economic ecosystem.
How Athens Special Events Are Funded?
Athens’ largest free-to-attend community events are funded in part through the Community Enhancement Program (CEP). CEP funding comes from the Hotel/Motel Tax — a 7¢ tax on every dollar spent on hotel and short-term rental stays in Athens-Clarke County. These funds are specifically intended to support tourism, economic development, and community-enhancing activities.
Special events are one of the most visible, public-facing uses of this fund. Right now, Special Events (Athfest, Twilight, Wild Rumpus, etc.) receive ONLY $250,000

The Current Situation
Meanwhile…
The Problem: The Sustainability Gap
Special events are not private ventures — they are public infrastructure. Rising Operational Costs: Combined event budgets have climbed to $800,000, yet current ACC support remains stagnant at $250,000
Special events are not private ventures — they are public infrastructure:
- They require police, permitting, sanitation, and emergency services
- They are free and accessible to all residents
- They generate tourism, hotel stays, and downtown spending
- They directly employ local musicians, artists, vendors, technicians, and staff
As production costs rise, events are increasingly forced to:
- Rely on unpaid labor
- Underpay skilled staff
- Reduce programming or scale
- Seek sponsorships that compromise the character of the event
$85,887
Mandatory City Costs (Police, Permits, etc.).
$250,000
Current City Support (CEP).
$800,000+
Combined Budgets of 10 Special Events
The Recommendations
Why this Matters
WHAT WE’RE ASKING
- Increase CEP funding for Special Events
- Align public investment with real costs and real impact
- Ensure Athens’ signature free events remain viable, safe, and community-centered
