Return to Virginia Business - January 2003

Keeping ’em coming
Tourism hurt by terrorism and snipers, but location may make the difference

by Rob Morano

Monticello

Click to enlarge

Kat Imhoff has a problem, but it’s one her colleagues at tourist attractions around Virginia would love to share. The chief operating officer of Monticello faces a flood of visitors this month as Jefferson’s estate launches a year-long celebration of the 200th anniversary of the Lewis & Clark expedition. As Monticello’s first major new exhibit since 1993 and the focus of national attention, Lewis & Clark could double the site’s half-million annual visitors.

The problem is, where will they all park? Six satellite parking lots have been set up for the visitors, who start arriving Jan. 14 for the five-day kickoff. No one knows yet if that will be enough space. It’s a “logistical nightmare,” adds Wayne Mogielnicki, director of communications for Monticello. “For 2003, we’ll be Lewis & Clark headquarters.”

And not a moment too soon. Like much of the rest of the Virginia tourism industry, Monticello has been tested since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11. Attendance in 2001 was down 4 percent from 2000 and down another 2 percent through the end of November 2002 — relatively small losses compared to other states. War in Afghanistan, a weak economy and fears about the future conspired to keep visitors away from much of Virginia last year — as did the sniper that terrorized the region in October.

But for Imhoff and others, the state’s rich historical attractions, natural beauty and location a road trip away from major population centers should help its tourism industry rebound. “What I see is a continuation of the post-9/11 environment, and that’s more car travel and the traditional day and weekend trips where you just load up the kids in the car and go,” says Nancy McGehee, assistant professor of tourism at Virginia Tech. The Old Dominion might also hold particular sentimental appeal for Americans looking for inspiration in overcoming adversity. Says Imhoff: “We’re being confronted with what it means to be a democracy. What better time to come to Virginia?”

The answer could depend on the economy and not just in the Charlottesville area, where Monticello contributes nearly $50 million a year. Tourism is a bigger business in Virginia — and the nation and world — than most people realize. It’s the globe’s No. 1 industry, according to the Madrid-based World Tourism Organization, and one of the fastest-growing. Global spending on tourism in 1990 topped $263 billion. Even during the Persian Gulf War and recession year of 1991, it grew 3 percent, and 14 percent the following year.

But in 2001, tourism spending fell for the first time in decades — down 2.6 percent from $476 billion in 2000, and was expected to be flat for 2002. According to the Travel Industry Association of America, the U.S. was among the hardest-hit countries last year, with international visitor revenue falling 12 percent and not expected to reach the level of 2000 again until 2004. “Sept. 11 changed everything,” says the association's analyst Mike Pina. “It’s thrown a whole new dynamic into the mix. When people see planes fly into buildings, that’s not something you get over very quickly.”

If ever. Thanks to fears of war, terrorism and a faltering economy, the travel industry association's Traveler Sentiment Index fell 5 percent in the fourth quarter of 2002 to an all-time low. Virginia stands to suffer. The state ranks 10th nationally in traveler spending, and tourism occupies 211,000 workers, making it the third-largest employer (behind business services and health care) and the third-largest retailing sector (behind car dealerships and grocery stores), according to the Virginia Employment Commission.

While traveler spending in Virginia grew in 1991 and 1992 despite the recession and Persian Gulf War, the events of September 11 and afterward saw it drop from $13.1 billion in 2000 to $12.9 billion in 2001. It was the first decline in the 25 years the commonwealth has measured spending, according to the Virginia Tourism Corp.

Not helping matters are the state budget cuts and other challenges. The state’s tourism agency may not be in much of a position to change that in 2003, when it faces an all-but-certain slash in funding for advertising and promotions. It already has cut a department that helped localities market individual attractions and events, and has reduced or eliminated cruise ship and golf promotions as well as travel writer tours and trade shows. The agency also has been without a president since Gayle Morgan Vail resigned in March. Rita McClenny, director of the Virginia Film Office, has been serving as acting president since then, and Gov. Mark Warner was still interviewing candidates in early December.

While much of the state’s tourism business has slowly begun to recover, Northern Virginia continued to suffer throughout 2002. “We’ve had a horrendous year, probably the worst since World War II,” says Jim Rees, executive director of Mount Vernon in Alexandria. He projected attendance in 2002 would be down 25 percent from its high of 1.1 million in 2000, thanks to the terrorist and sniper attacks that canceled many school group tours — a third of Mount Vernon’s visitors. “The vast majority of our visitors come from that pool of 20 million a year who come to Washington as a destination. When that 20 goes down to 12 [million], that really kicks us in the pants.”

Both the region’s major airports — Dulles International Airport and Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport — have seen a drop in the numbers of passengers. But Rees is hopeful that a new convention center and World War II memorial in Washington will spark a turnaround this year. “Long term, I’m optimistic. We can only hope nothing else happens and there’s some sense of closure at some point.”

With Osama Bin Laden and war with Iraq still a possibility, that could be a long time coming. “I think there is a far greater sense of insecurity now,” says Martha Steger, director of public relations for the Virginia Tourism Corp. Danny Mitchell, executive vice president of the Virginia Hospitality and Travel Association, dreads any attack that could produce the kind of widespread fear created by the recent sniper shootings; five of the 13 shootings happened in Virginia. “That’s the kind of thing that paralyzes our industry,” he says. Mitchell says that a second war in Iraq or a worsening economy could also push tourism back over the edge. “You can’t say, ‘Hey, come watch the war on CNN here in our luxurious hotel rooms.’ It doesn’t even have to be an actual war or an actual recession. It can just be the mention of one. There’s a natural tendency not to spend money.”

Like Northern Virginia, Williamsburg also has also struggled — its hotel occupancy rose less than 1 percent last year. Competition from Florida’s Orlando-area attractions hurt: “They were way off in late 2001 and early 2002 because of fewer international visitors, and they started marketing in our traditional Mid-Atlantic and Northeast market. We really went head to head with them. But their marketing budgets are in the hundreds of millions of dollars, and that really hurt us,” says Dave Schulte, executive director of the Williamsburg Area Convention and Visitors Bureau. Colonial Williamsburg’s attendance dropped 8 percent in 2002, down from 931,000 visitors in 2001. If the industry does turn around it will be a gradual change, says Brad Garner of Smith Travel Research of Hendersonville, Tenn. “We think ’03 is poised to be OK to good. But I think most people are waiting for some kind of switch to go on, and it’s not going to be that way.”

One exception to the downward trend is Hampton Roads. Its hotel occupancy rates are up 6 percent from 2000. And thanks to a banner summer season, revenue per available room was up a staggering 12 percent (see chart). “The tourist industry here is in a mini-boom,” says Gil Yochum, chairman of the economics department at Old Dominion University and head of its Economic Forecasting Project. “Third-quarter 2002 tourism revenue was up 9 percent. You’ve got problems in Northern Virginia but here it’s amazing.”

One explanation may be a recent arrival at Norfolk International Airport. Southwest Airlines, known for its cheap fares, began flying to Norfolk a month after the September 11 attacks which led to an 18 percent increase in passenger volume through October 2002. “We could have had a 20 percent or 30 percent boost if it hadn’t been for [September 11],” says Charlie Braden, Norfolk International’s director of market development. But Yochum and other experts say the key to the region’s recovery hasn’t been airplanes, but automobiles. “It appears about 94 percent of our visitors arrive by car. We’re within a day’s drive of an enormous market and that’s had some very positive effects.”

Tourism businesses in the rest of Virginia hope that same advantage will help them as well. About 80 percent of the state’s 33 million annual visitors arrive by car. And more than 20 million people travel the Blue Ridge Parkway and Skyline Drive each year, making them the largest tourist attractions in the state by far. “If there is a silver lining, 9/11 has kept people closer to home and Virginia should reap those benefits,” says Mike Olsen, professor of hospitality and tourism management at Virginia Tech and executive editor of International Journal of Hospitality Management. “All things being equal, we can hope for some improvement in 2003.”

Low gas prices have helped. The national average for a gallon of regular unleaded was $1.44 in 2000 and $1.35 in 2001, with 2002 expected to be at the low end of that range. There’s no reason to think that will change much in 2003, even with another Gulf War, says Randy Green, manager of public relations for AAA Mid-Atlantic. “And it doesn’t really matter where gas prices go in terms of auto travel. Even if the price of gas were 50 cents higher, that’s only 20 bucks more for a 1,000-mile trip in a car that gets 25 miles per gallon,” he says. “Until it gets up above $2 or more, it’s not going to impact the volume of auto travel.”

The latest figures in fact show a 10 percent increase in visitation at Virginia’s welcome centers. And recognizing the importance of vehicle-borne visitors, the state is trying to make driving through the Old Dominion more pleasant. In May, the state began upgrading its 10 welcome centers and 31 rest areas with an $8.1 million reconstruction of the welcome center on I-85, a half-mile from the North Carolina border. The new 17,500 square-foot facility includes improved safety features, family-friendly restrooms and recreation space, and a tourism center with staff, tourism brochures and an interactive kiosk. Also in 2002, travelers with cell phones along the 325-mile-long I-81 corridor began dialing 511, a voice-activated service that offers information on traffic, accident, road construction and weather reports, as well as nearby dining, shopping, lodging, gas and tourist attractions. After calling 511, travelers can even have the service dial local motel or other business for them.

Still, even car travel isn’t immune to fear. The Fredericksburg region learned that lesson in October during the string of sniper shootings. Two people were shot — one at a gas station, the second in a store parking lot — and one victim died.

“It had a very dramatic effect on us,” says Karen Hedelt, manager of Fredericksburg’s Office of Economic Development and Tourism. Hotels emptied out and retail sales dropped, as did attendance at the region’s historic sites, which include Civil War battlefields and a quaint downtown district. The number of casual visits is still down about a third, she says. “It was shaping up to be a good year, but it went straight down the tubes.”

Return to Virginia Business - January 2003