Nova Scotia

Sydney Chase the Ace drawing from Inverness

The weekend migration patterns in Cape Breton appear to be reversing, thanks to another Chase the Ace.

Jackpot of more than $500,000 to attract thousands of hopefuls

Volunteers in Sydney prepare ticket packs in advance of the weekend's $500,000 draw. (Holly Conners/CBC)

The weekend migration patterns in Cape Breton appear to be reversing, thanks to another Chase the Ace.

Last summer, people from the Sydney area flocked to Inverness each Saturday, as the jackpot for that community's draw grew past $1 million.

Now a draw hosted by the Horizon Achievement Centre and Ashby Legion in Sydney has people moving in the opposite direction.

Bill Dunphy, the Inverness partyline contact for CBC Radio's Information Morning, said while Inverness is 11 weeks into a new round of Chase the Ace, with a current jackpot of just over $12,000, some locals are opting to chase a bigger jackpot on the other side of the island.  

"It's kinda funny," Dunphy said. "I think this past Saturday it might have suffered for the fact that there's a bigger one in Sydney, and a lot of people in Inverness reciprocated in a manner in which everybody from the Sydney area came to Inverness during the summer. 

"I think we have people that are packing up and heading to Sydney every week."

'Chase the Ace economy'

Dunphy said people tell him they make a day of it in Sydney. They do a little shopping and have a meal before chasing the ace. The estimated jackpot for this week's Sydney draw is more than $500,000.

Stephen Tobin, the business development manager for the Horizon Achievement Centre, said more than 4,000 people turned out to the draw's six venues last Saturday, and 13,000 watched online.

"Restaurants and bars, a lot of them have actually contacted us for permission to livestream the event right in their establishments," said Tobin. "So we know that people are definitely coming here, and they're spending money."

Bill Dunphy said it's like a Chase the Ace economy has built itself up on Cape Breton, with money moving from one community to the next.  

"It stays in the community, which is better than seeing it go off to Lotto 6/49 or whatever."