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PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
TOURISM KEY TO U.S. METRO ECONOMIES
Mayors, Industry Leaders Propose Plan to Help Boost Travel
Atlanta - Travel and tourism is a key contributor to the economies
of the nations 100 largest metropolitan areas, according
to new data released today by the U.S. Conference of Mayors,
the Travel Business Roundtable, and the International Association
of Convention and Visitor Bureaus. The research finds international
travel to the U.S. significantly suppressed because of the
weak economy and 9/11 and predicts it will remain threatened,
barring a concerted effort by the public and private sectors.
A summit of mayors, CEOs of convention and visitor bureaus,
and travel industry experts meeting here today endorsed a
detailed plan to stimulate travel and thereby boost metro
economies.
"We are here today because we realize the importance
of being proactive in the effort to stabilize this important
industry," said Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin, who chairs
the U.S. Conference of Mayors Travel and Tourism Task Force.
"As tourism goes, so goes the economic well-being of
our communities. We cannot and will not leave it to chance.
This task force will be very aggressive in pursuing the implementation
of our ten-point action plan to boost travel and tourism."
The report, developed by DRI-WEFA, an economic research firm,
is accessible at www.usmayors.org.
Key findings include:
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In 2000, travel and tourism
was a $263.4 billion industry in the nations top
100 metro areas, including $17.6 billion in New York,
$14 billion in Chicago, $13.6 billion in Los Angeles-Long
Beach, $11.2 billion in Atlanta, $3.5 billion in Pittsburgh,
and more than $1 billion in Colorado Springs. Travel and
tourism is the largest share of the gross metropolitan
economy in Las Vegas (14.4%), Honolulu (13.9%), and Orlando
(12.3%). |
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In 2000, tourism supported
3.9 million jobs in the nations 100 largest metro
areas, including Chicago (207,436 jobs), New York (198,998),
Los Angeles-Long Beach (177,264), Atlanta (172,954), Washington
(152,891), Dallas (140,661), Detroit (76,775), and Salt
Lake City (45,175). |
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A significant travel slowdown,
the result of the weak economy and 9/11, has hit metro
economies disproportionately hard, cutting more than 536,000
tourism-related jobs in the top 100 metro areas through
2002. Tourism job losses have been particularly severe
in Phoenix (-27.2%), Orlando (-24.5%), San Diego (-23.8%),
Lancaster (-22.9%), and Houston (-22.7%). |
 |
A reduction in international
visitors will cost metro areas more than $22.6 billion
in lost economic activity in 2001 and 2002, of which more
than $12.5 billion is attributed to 9/11. Losses were
largest in New York ($5.9 billion of which $3.3 billion
is attributed to 9/11), San Francisco ($2.1 billion of
which $1.2 billion is attributed to 9/11), Los Angeles
($1.75 billion of which $970 million is attributed to
9/11), and Miami ($1.6 billion of which $861 million is
attributed to 9/11). |
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International visits to the
United States are not expected to recover soon without
aggressive efforts by the public and private sectors.
The report projects that the nation could achieve an additional
$100 billion in international tourism spending from 2003
to 2007 if key strategic and policy decisions were made
to foster the recovery and growth of key tourism export
markets. |
"The United States is losing tourism market share, and
with it jobs and tax revenue, to our foreign competitors who
are spending vast sums of money to promote their countries,"
said Jonathan Tisch, Chairman of the Travel Business Roundtable
and Chairman & CEO of Loews Hotels. "We are the only
developed nation in the world that does not make a strategic
federal investment to promote our country as an international
destination. In fact, the U.S. is now the third most visited
country, behind France and Spain. The public and private sectors
must work together to reverse this trend."
Summit participants endorsed a ten-point action plan that
recommends:
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Establishing a Presidential
Advisory Council on Travel and Tourism; |
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Creating a destination marketing
pilot program, which would provide funding to specific
cities and states to undertake individual destination
marketing initiatives; |
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Increasing funding for the
Market Development Cooperator Program, a $2 million Commerce
Department matching grants program that would help cities
and convention and visitors bureaus promote their destinations
overseas; |
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Enacting the American Travel
Promotion Act, pending legislation to provide $100 million
in matching grants to stimulate the tourism industry;
and |
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Seeking restoration of tax
incentives to spur business travel and urge Congress to
make permanent the Work Opportunity Tax Credit and Welfare-to-Work
Tax Credit, powerful tools to help unskilled and disadvantaged
workers receive job training for employment in the travel
and tourism industries. |
"Tourism is the economic engine that drives communities
across our country both large and small," said Michael
Gehrisch, President & CEO of the International Association
of Convention and Visitor Bureaus. "Armed with this new
data, we can work together as an industry like never before
to give that engine a powerful jumpstart."
Summit participants included Philadelphia Mayor John Street,
San Antonio Mayor Ed Garza, Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick,
Las Vegas Mayor Oscar Goodman, Virginia Beach Mayor Meyera
Oberndorf, Jackson (Miss.) Mayor Harvey Johnson, Reno Mayor
Jeff Griffin, Knoxville Mayor Victor Ashe, Savannah Mayor
Floyd Adams, Roswell (GA) Mayor Jere Wood, North Little Rock
Mayor Patrick Henry Hays, North Miami Mayor Josaphat Celestin,
and Natchez Mayor Frank L. Smith, who all agreed they would
seek to engage Congress and the White House on travel and
tourism policy.
"As we meet in the tenth largest city in this country,
we are focusing on a significant aspect of our economy, travel
and tourism," said J. Thomas Cochran, Executive Director
of the Conference. "At this important summit, we will
adopt a mayoral action plan to take back to Washington. We
are pleased to partner with Jonathan Tisch of the Travel Business
Roundtable and Michael Gehrisch of the International Association
of Convention and Visitor Bureaus. This partnership compliments
our chair, Mayor Shirley Franklin, in touting the importance
of travel and tourism in our economy."
###
The U.S. Conference of Mayors is the official nonpartisan
organization of cities with populations of 30,000 or more.
There are 1,139 such cities in the country today. Each city
is represented in the Conference by its chief elected official,
the mayor. The primary roles of the Conference of Mayors are
to promote the development of effective national urban/suburban
policy; strengthen federal-city relationships; ensure that
federal policy meets urban needs; provide mayors with leadership
and management tools; and create a forum in which mayors can
share ideas and information. More information about the Conference
is available at www.usmayors.org.
The Travel Business Roundtable (TBR) is a CEO-based
organization representing all sectors of the travel and tourism
industry, including major airlines, hotels and lodging, restaurants,
retail outlets, travel management companies, car rental companies,
financial services institutions and others. In an August survey,
TBR found that price-cutting by the travel industry and enhanced
security measures at airports have stimulated demand and largely
restored the confidence of U.S. travelers, but that an industry
rebound remains uncertain, with leisure and business travelers
both citing the economy and the "hassle factor"
of traveling and delays as the prime reason they are traveling
less. The poll is available at www.tbr.org.
Founded in 1914, IACVB is an international trade association
representing more than 1,200 professional members from over
530 convention and visitors bureaus in 30 countries. The association's
mission is to enhance the professionalism, effectiveness,
and image of destination management organizations worldwide.
Visit IACVB on the web at www.iacvb.org.
Press contacts
U.S. Conference of Mayors - Andy Solomon 202-861-6766
Travel Business Roundtable - Debra Kelman 212-794-DKPR (3577)
International Assn. of Convention and Visitors Bureaus - Maura
Nelson (202) 835-4205
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