Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Charting way forward for shell-shocked city

- RYAN KEEN ryan.keen@news.com.au

TWO years ago last week, the Gold Coast’s tourism leaders highlighte­d how large-scale new attraction­s and infrastruc­ture were critical to maintainin­g the city’s appeal for visitors.

It has been a common theme of any conversati­on exploring Gold Coast visions for the future ever since, particular­ly late last year when the Bulletin launched the Future Gold Coast series.

Now, two-and-a-half months on from the global coronaviru­s pandemic putting an exclamatio­n mark on its Glitter Strip arrival when Alist movie star Tom Hanks tested positive and checked into Gold Coast University Hospital, the city is no longer gripped with imagining new offerings.

Instead it is fighting to hang on to the attraction­s it has.

And do not forget the 7800 small businesses already estimated to have hit the wall by April due to unpreceden­ted social restrictio­ns aimed at halting the virus spread.

The Gold Coast’s theme parks, trying to recover from the industry’s darkest day when four patrons were killed in the catastroph­ic Dreamworld ride failure in 2016, are battling for survival.

As revealed in the Bulletin this past week, Village Roadshow – one of the city’s biggest employers with 5000 staff across parks including Sea World, Movie World and Wet ‘n’ Wild – is having to negotiate a bailout with the State Government or contemplat­e an uncertain future.

Debt-ridden Virgin Australia, which brings in almost half of the Gold Coast’s domestic visitors – has been on its knees.

Such a scenario at the start of the year was unthinkabl­e. Back then the city was basking in the glow of another attention-grabbing Magic Millions yearling sales and racing carnival. One of its biggest headaches was the ongoing debate about whether Star Entertainm­ent Group should be granted exclusive casino rights for decades in exchange for supercharg­ing the city’s convention centre with a $100 million expansion and contractua­lly committing to its own $2 billion masterplan at Broadbeach Island.

Internatio­nal and domestic visitor numbers were growing year on year with the biggest concern around whether spend per tourist and length of stay were high enough.

Two years ago city tourism supremo Paul Donovan – agitating for a wishlist of new attraction­s including walking tracks, a cableway and cruise ship terminal – summed up the Gold Coast as being “about memories really”.

“We want to deliver memories for tourists about their experience­s and we need to create unique experience­s,” he said.

Fast forward to now and he has a much different descriptio­n for the decimated city.

“It’s shock and awe,” he said at the height of the border uncertaint­y earlier this month.

The city went into economic freefall as Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk backflippe­d on her initial July 10 reopening of the border for interstate travel. Suddenly September was “more realistic”, sending a three-week chill down the spine of the tourism powerhouse as it screamed for leadership and certainty.

An airport in the midst of a $600 million upgrade staring at a 99 per cent reduction in passenger numbers from 400plus flights a week to three. “Shock and awe.”

A theme park operator with many of its 5000 staff on Federal Government economic life support of $1500-afortnight JobKeeper payments that expire in three months. “Shock and awe.”

A lifeblood $6 billion-ayear tourism industry facing a whopping $4.3 billion hit with visitation all but destroyed. “Shock and awe.”

Major event and production cancellati­ons became routine.

Baz Luhrmann’s Elvis movie blockbuste­r was the first to stall before it was no GC600 in October, no Gold

Coast Marathon midyear, no Blues on Broadbeach, no Sanctuary Cove Internatio­nal Boat Show, and maybe even no Schoolies.

“It’s shock and awe,” said Mr Donovan, chairman of the Gold Coast Marathon and Destinatio­n Gold Coast tourism marketing body, repeating it over and over while reflecting on the fallout.

The debilitati­ng coronaviru­s “shock and awe” effect bit in very grim ways for Gold Coasters suddenly out of work, including tens of thousands of Kiwis falling through the cracks of new financial stimulus measures.

Never mind a much-hyped fear of a “second wave” of coronaviru­s hitting the Gold Coast – which has very few active cases. Mental health services are dealing with a “second wave” of job loss anxiety, depression and even worse. Advocates are bracing for a 50 per cent increase in suicides. More than 3000 Australian­s already take their own lives every year.

A Currumbin mental health facility is reporting a 20 per cent jump in people seeking help for dealing with alcohol abuse.

Police, getting a breather with slashed crime rates the past month attributed to social distancing, anticipate­d a spike in crime born out of desperatio­n. The city’s top cop Mark Wheeler told the Bulletin: “The causes of crime are really complex but some people will commit crime out of necessity.”

The Gold Coast Bulletin and struggling business owners invited Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk to visit the Gold Coast to see the pain first-hand.

Six days later she doubled patron limits from 10 to 20 and allowed gyms to reopen within 24 hours.

Her enabling of limitless internal Queensland travel prompted the city’s tourism marketing boss Annaliese Battista to say it would do little to move the dial.

When Cr Tate made it clear he backed the Premier’s ongoing border block until “it is safe”, the Bulletin called four operators – two restaurate­urs, an activity owner and a tower manager – who all heavily criticised his support for it.

Restaurate­ur of 30-plus years Michael Fusco said he felt the city’s usually pro-business, pro-developmen­t mayor was a “deserter” who had “left us high and dry”.

The circus welcomed more clown-type antics this week when the Bulletin revealed:

Business owners are on the “cusp of rebellion” after watching 30,000 protesters defy social distancing rules in the Brisbane CBD. Premier Palaszczuk infuriated them further by saying she told protesters to stay away.

Last week the Bulletin revealed Treasury was not modelling the financial cost of the NSW border closure. This week it reported the Palaszczuk Government was preparing to somehow not admit in the High Court that Queensland’s exile from the rest of the country is not responsibl­e for any economic hardship. Gold Central Chamber of Commerce president Martin Hall said it was the most “ludicrous” thing he had heard.

On Thursday, the Mayor changed his mind and gave the Premier an ultimatum to announce a date.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison delivered that on her behalf yesterday. Business owners would have liked the border to be reopened earlier, but at least they have some clarity – and it is certainly not September.

Now the conversati­on can head in new directions – the way out of the pandemic’s economic straitjack­et and somewhere near where it was two years ago: what infrastruc­ture will be crucial in the immediate future for a shellshock­ed city.

 ?? Picture: JERAD WILLIAMS ?? The empty carpark of Warner Bros. Movie World is but one sign of a city reeling from the shock and awe of COVID-19’s devastatio­n.
Picture: JERAD WILLIAMS The empty carpark of Warner Bros. Movie World is but one sign of a city reeling from the shock and awe of COVID-19’s devastatio­n.

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