Like a pot of pierogies left on the stove too long, a trademark dispute involving the name of the popular Polish delicacy is threatening to boil over.
Four years ago, civic-minded residents of Edwardsville, Pennsylvania, launched a festival tied to the pierogi, the potato-filled dumpling that is ubiquitous in a region whose coal mines drew waves of Polish immigrants more than a century ago.
The Edwardsville Pierogi Festival has been a rousing success — so much so that it has caught the attention of a chamber of commerce in suburban Chicago, which runs a highly popular “Pierogi Fest” and says the Pennsylvania upstarts are infringing on its trademark.
Photo: AP
Lawyers for Pierogi Fest recently sent a letter demanding the Edwardsville organizers either stop using the name or pay a licensing fee.
In Edwardsville, population 4,700, the threats have gone over as well as undercooked kielbasa.
The town is in Luzerne County, the only county in the US where Polish is the most common ancestry.
“People are beside themselves. It’s ridiculous,” said Jackie Kubish Moran, president of the Edwardsville Hometown Committee, which runs the Pennsylvania event. “There’s a lot of pride in this area when it comes to people and their heritage. They’re going to protect that.”
The food fight has landed in federal court, where lawyers for the Pennsylvania group on Monday filed a lawsuit against the organizers of the event 1,127km away in Whiting, Indiana, which has been around since 1995 and draws about 300,000 people a year from around the nation.
“No person on planet Earth is going to confuse the Edwardsville Pierogi Festival with a suburban Chicago ‘Pierogi Fest,’” said Jim Haggerty, the lawyer for the Edwardsville group. “We don’t think they’re acting in good faith and we think they’re bullies.”
The Whiting-Robertsdale Chamber of Commerce registered Pierogi Fest as a trademark in 2007. The chamber’s lawyers say the Edwardsville Pierogi Festival is “likely to cause consumer confusion,” and are threatening to sue not only the event organizers, but its sponsors, too.
Pierogi Fest chairman Tom Dabertin said Tuesday that his group has licensed the name to similar ethnic food festivals around the country, and is willing to talk with the Edwardsville group about a similar arrangement.
He said the chamber, which runs the festival, is justified in defending its trademark.
“Disney does it. Coca-Cola does it. Kleenex does it. If you have a trademark, you have to protect it,” he said.
Debbie Konefal, the third-generation owner of an Edwardsville restaurant that serves Polish and American cuisine, called the notion that people would confuse a pair of pierogi festivals 1,127km apart “a little silly.”
Like others in Edwardsville, she was flabbergasted by the Whiting chamber’s stance.
“There is no way we could possibly be in competition with them,” said Konefal, whose restaurant uses the pierogi recipe of her great aunt.
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