Tourism gives big boost to city coffers
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Noaki Schwartz
NEWPORT BEACH -- Tourism-generated dollars exceeded property tax revenues
by half a million this fiscal year, putting visitors at the top of the
city’s agenda.
“I think it’s great,” said Mayor John Noyes. “[The Conference and
Visitor’s Bureau] does a good job. It points out that we are, in part, a
good tourist city.”
Rosalind Williams of the Conference and Visitor’s Bureau presented the
City Council last week with a check facsimile for $21 million. The large
sum inspired Noyes to jokingly ask if the council could actually cash it.
Last year, the check was for slightly more than $20 million, Williams
said. A larger advertising budget and a hike in hotel rates were
responsible for the increase, she said.
“The average rate people are paying to stay in hotels has increased to
$140,” Williams said, adding that this means more revenue for the city.
The Conference and Visitor’s Bureau is already gearing up for the new
fiscal year, which begins in two months. It is currently developing a
marketing plan and ironing out a budget.
“We’re planning to do more,” she said. “We’re generally trying to further
develop upper-class tourists for Newport.”
And this, Noyes said, is what the city needs -- the “good tourists” that
stay in the city’s hotels and eat at its restaurants, as opposed to the
annual summer wave of beachgoers.
The city is currently focusing on out-of-town visitors, in part, because
it is National Tourism Week.
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