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In Hilton Head Island, S.C., officials stress to callers that the destination is closer to Atlanta than Gulf Coast beaches and maybe only an hour farther for people from places such as Nashville, Tenn., said Charlie Clark, spokesman for the island's Chamber of Commerce. But the push has to be done carefully. "We feel for our tourism partners along the Gulf Coast," Clark said. "No destination wants to see this happen." So far, bookings haven't spiked because a lot of callers are just checking their options, said Lindsay Fruchtl, spokeswoman for the Tybee Island Tourism Council. "They were not sure if their deposits would be refunded. I think they were mainly checking availability in case they change their plans," Fruchtl said. Beaches are big business for Southeastern states. Alabama has just two coastal counties, but visitors spend more than $3 billion a year
-- better than a third of all tourism money in the state. Tourists spend $60 billion a year in Florida, accounting for nearly a quarter of all the state's sales tax revenue. And in South Carolina, tourism is the state's biggest industry, with vacationers spending more than $10 billion a year, the majority of it along the coast. The oil slick has been similar to a hurricane threat -- but the specter of most hurricanes torment coastal residents for a week, maybe two if they form far out to sea. The agony over where the oil will go seems to have no end in sight, said Morgan, who survived and rebuilt after Hurricane Ivan devastated the region in 2004.
"With Ivan, we knew we were going to get help," Morgan said. "With this, we don't know if we're going to get help or how we'll get help." Muehlfelt said she will continue watching the news about the oil spill and weigh her options right up until she hits the road for her 1,000-mile trip with her husband, 17-year-old daughter and 21-year-old son. Several days ago, though, her plans suffered another blow when storms flooded Nashville, a key point on their trip. "I wonder," she said, "if God isn't telling us not to go at this point."
[Associated
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