The dispute over whether to extend St. Augustine’s Nights of Lights festival has escalated into a public standoff between one of the county’s most influential tourism figures and city leadership, with economic forecasts, political pressure, and voter trust now colliding.
Irving Kass, a prominent local hotel owner and tourism leader, has argued that extending the event would provide crucial support for local businesses and employees during what he characterizes as a fragile economic period.
In a sharply worded letter to city commissioners, Kass warned that the stakes extend far beyond scheduling decisions, writing that “a single hour of your time could influence more than $120 million in seasonal economic activity.”

He argued that failing to act would deepen community frustration and warned that “voter engagement efforts will increase to ensure every eligible employee understands what is at stake” — and but threatening to boot commissioners via political mobilization.
Kass’s letter outlined what he described as misleading presentations by city staff, stating that “the framing created a misleading impression” and that “selective framing, rather than operational limitations, shaped the public narrative.”
He maintained that logistical complications associated with an extension were exaggerated. “Once the full context is understood,” he wrote, “the story will be clear.”
But St. Augustine City Commissioner Jim Springfield told The Citizen this week that the commission is unlikely to reverse course.

He said the current schedule was adopted after rampant resident complaints about traffic, congestion, and general disorder, and that backing away from it would undermine public trust.
“We made a promise,” Springfield said. Breaking that pact, he asserted, would be a breach of trust with voters.
He said he could envision revisiting the issue in January if there was tangible evidence of a severe downturn in business, but questioned Kass’s revenue projections.
“I don’t think there’s going to be a reduction of $120 million of business in two weeks,” Springfield said. “I don’t know where he’s getting those numbers from.”
Springfield pointed to continued economic activity regardless of the festival’s schedule.

“Martin Luther King weekend will still be a pretty big weekend,” he said. “There’s still going to be weddings. There’s still going to be the nightlife. St Augustine is going to be there, whether there’s Nights of Lights or not.”
Addressing the political implications of Kass’s letter, Springfield, who is note seeking re-election, said, “I took it as a threat to get people out of office if we don’t extend this. But I’m not intimidated.”
He added that a bloc of downtown workers and business owners would be unlikely to sway elections.
“There’s not enough employees who happen to work in the downtown area who are also residents of the city, that could sway the vote,” he said. “The residents are the ones who vote.”
With neither side backing down, the clash has become a test of competing priorities: economic urgency versus resident quality of life, and political pressure versus promises made.
