WXPort
Sponsored by: Plattsburgh Area Weather Sponsored by CVPH Medical Center

Published December 03, 2008 10:45 pm - Tourism leaders seek added funds to keep visitor spending levels up.

Tourism industry guards against budget cuts


By KIM SMITH DEDAM
Staff Writer

LAKE PLACID — Knives banging on the budget table have put the hospitality industry on high alert.

Pending cuts to financial resources throughout New York better not include anything of the $21 million I Love New York marketing funds, tourism leaders contend.

If anything, they want redistribution to add more tourism funding.

GENERATING TAXES
Officials from the New York State Hospitality and Tourism Association gathered more than 40 top Lake Placid hotel, motel and restaurant-industry leaders Wednesday at Lake Placid Lodge to discuss key issues on the legislative table.

In 2007, tourism generated $7 billion in state and local taxes, said Daniel C. Murphy, the association's president, "not to mention the 672,000 jobs it supports."

With Wall Street's economic driver in a downslide that he called a "toboggan ride" — and 20 percent of the state's income going down with it — now is no time to cut funds to an engine that keeps the economy moving, Murphy said.

"Our mantra is, if we are not at the table, we might be on the menu. But a lot of our legislators, unfortunately, have never met a payroll" and have no idea what it costs to run, market and sell hotel, resort or restaurant services.

Assemblywoman Teresa Sayward (R-Willsboro) sat at the head table during the breakfast meeting and nodded readily in agreement.

MARKETING FUNDS
The major issue, Murphy told the group, is protecting I Love New York money, a $21 million pot of funds used to finance brand-making tourism efforts worldwide.

It represents a fraction of the net result.

Visitors spent $52 billion in New York in 2007," he said; that's more than $9 million a day.

With Pennsylvania spending $34.5 million on marketing, the region has stiff competition.

The Hospitality and Tourism Association is also monitoring legislation that would dictate where venues spend "service charges" and "gratuities" and is lobbying against the national Employee Free-Choice Act, legislation that would eliminate central vote-gathering requirements for union organizers in the hospitality industry.

SMART GROWTH FUNDS
Jim McKenna, president and CEO of the Lake Placid/Essex County Visitors Bureau, raised several local tourism funding concerns.

Grant funding initiated in the Adirondack Smart Growth program last year may go on the chopping block, he said.

The funds were intended to foster uniquely Adirondack green initiatives to bring communities together.

"I would encourage state lawmakers to keep that program," McKenna said. "If they want this area to remain pristine and unique, then they have to treat it that way."

Sayward said she believed the Smart Growth money would stay in the budget at least for next year. She encouraged local tourism leaders to meet with elected officials.

Years ago, she said, McKenna convinced the Essex County supervisors to buy into a collective marketing plan.

"Jim always came armed with a bunch of statistics. Numbers are important, numbers that particularly equate to dollars."

PAIN
Everybody is gong to end up feeling some of the pain, Sayward said.

But part of what lawmakers are doing is "peeling back the layers, economically speaking, to see, what can we not afford to mess with?"

In some cases, she said, additional monies could be spent to keep people working and keep visitors coming.

Affordable-housing initiatives should be maintained, McKenna said, as critical to the tourism industry.

He also called for additional support for infrastructure in Adirondack towns and for programs to help build small-business opportunity, such as new motels and visitor amenities.

"Adirondack communities need to be in a position to drive tourism."

E-mail Kim Smith Dedam at: kdedam@pressrepublican.com



print this story    email this story   




ADVERTISEMENT



Premier Guide
How to Contact Us

MAIN OFFICE
Press-Republican

P.O. Box 459
170 Margaret Street
Plattsburgh, NY 12901
(518) 561-2300


NEWSROOM
Hours:
Weekdays 8 a.m. to midnight; Weekends, 2 p.m. to midnight
Phone: 518-565-4131 Fax: 518-561-3362
E-mail: news@pressrepublican.com
Sports: 518-565-4124
Features: 518-565-4138


CIRCULATION/CUSTOMER SERVICE
Hours:
Weekdays 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Saturday and Sunday (phone only) 8 a.m. to noon.
Circulation Phone: 518-565-4110


CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
Hours:
Monday - Friday, 8am to 5pm
Phone: 518-565-4105 Fax: 518-561-1172
E-mail: classifieds@pressrepublican.com
Obituaries & Legals: 518-565-4178
Obituary E-mails: obits@pressrepublican.com
Legal Ad E-mails: legalads@pressrepublican.com

Today's Front Page
View P-R Frontpage:   Click on the image of the Press-Republican frontpage to view our frontpage archives.

Subscribe:  Click here to receive a subscription to the Press-Republican for as little as $13.00 per month.

Frontpage Reprints:  Click here to purchase a reproduction of a full page of the Press-Republican.
Today's Front Page
SITE INDEX
NEWS:  Local NewsPolice, Fire CourtsBusinessMoney & MarketsEducationEnvironmentOutdoorsPolitics & ElectionsBirthsEngagementsWeddingsAnniversariesProperty TransfersLookbackWeather
SPORTS:  Local SportsHigh SchoolCollegeYouth & AdultSports ShortsOutdoorsFishingFlashbackToday's Sports Events
OPINION:  EditorialsCheers & JeersIn My OpinionLettersSpeakoutColumnsBlogs
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT:  Out & AboutMovie ReviewsEntertainment NewsCelebrity NewsLotteriesCrosswordsSudokuHoroscopes
LIFESTYLES:  PeopleHome & GardenHealthSeniorsFaith & SpiritualityFamily
OBITUARIES:  Current obituaries & search past yearObituaries archiveGuestbooksObituary submission guidelines
PHOTOS, ETC.:  Featured galleriesRecent newspaper photosBonus SportsCommunity EventsFull Page ReprintsAudio Slide ShowsVideoWebcams
SEARCH ARCHIVES:  Past 7 Days2007 - Present1999 - 2007Very Old Archives (Historic Newspapers)
LIVING HERE:  Clinton Co.Essex Co.Franklin Co.Day Away
MARKETPLACE:  ClassifiedsLegal Ads Find a jobFind a carBuy a Classified adFree CouponsAdvertiser Index
ABOUT US:  Contact usAdvertising Information 
© 2009, CNHI

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.CNHI Classified Advertising NetworkCNHI News Service
Associated Press content © 2009. All rights reserved. AP content may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Our site is powered by Zope and our Internet Yellow Pages site is powered by PremierGuide.
Some parts of our site may require you to download the Flash Player Plugin.