Illinois tourism industry facing obstacles amid rise in COVID-19 cases
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[August 14, 2021]
By Kevin Bessler
(The Center Square) – As the Illinois
tourism industry struggles to get back on its feet, some are stressing
that people need to feel safe in their venues in order to rebound.
The House Tourism Committee recently held a subject matter hearing on
ways the industry can rebound from the pandemic.
The hotel industry may have been hit the hardest. Illinois is among the
states that have lost the highest percentage of hotel jobs due to the
pandemic and are still hurting even as travel starts to return to normal
levels. Many blame the conventions held in Chicago that have yet to
materialize from before the COVID-19 pandemic.
Matt Murphy, who represents Illinois Hotel and Lodging Association, said
Illinois hotels lost $3.5 billion in 2020, and the recovery has been
slow.
“Every single metric we measure in terms of hotel performance continues
to lag, and even now, with some level of recovery, Illinois hotel
revenue is still lagging only at about a 50 to 60% recovery,” said
Murphy.
Murphy noted that hotel tax, prior to the pandemic, was one of the
fastest growing tax sources for Illinois.
Rik Edgar, general manager of the Peoria Civic Center, said ticket sales
have fallen off as of late and suspects its due to an increase in
COVID-19 cases.
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“We can read the tea leaves,” said Edgar. “People are
getting nervous, so the more we can do to make folks feel
comfortable, and it's much harder than dollars, but if we can do
that, we can survive this.”
Rep. Tim Butler, R-Springfield, said it is critical
for the tourism industry to remain open for business.
“We can’t have government-mandated shutdowns because we are not
going to be able to recover,” said Butler. “We are going to have a
hard enough time recovering as it is.”
Last week, the state announced $10 million dollars in grants will be
made available aimed at revitalizing tourism and bringing back
tourism attractions and festivals to the state.
The Tourism Attraction and Festivals Grant program will help develop
or enhance existing attractions, including museums, businesses,
events and festivals. The Department of Commerce & Economic
Opportunity will utilize ARPA federal recovery dollars to provide
grants ranging from $10,000 to $1 million and require a local match.
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