Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hot Springs sees bright future for dark day.

- CASSIDY KENDALL THE SENTINEL-RECORD

HOT SPRINGS — While April 8, 2024, is three years and eight months into the future, Visit Hot Springs is already planning for the day that will bring Hot Springs into the path of totality for a solar eclipse and, potentiall­y, a “million” visitors, marketing director Bill Solleder said Monday.

In a time such as the covid-19 pandemic, with the economy suffering, a million visitors may sound too good to be true. So where did Visit Hot Springs get its optimistic estimate? It all started with the reaction both Hot Springs and Casper, Wyo., received after the last total solar eclipse in 2017.

“Back directly following the 2017 solar eclipse, [Visit Hot Springs] had posted an event for the 2024 [eclipse] on our Facebook page … and we had immediatel­y got an overwhelmi­ng response from people who were interested in it, or said they were going to that event. I mean we’re talking like, at that time, 71,000 people said they were interested being in Hot Springs for the 2024 solar eclipse,” Solleder said.

“And then fast-forward,” he said, “a few months later, I was at the Destinatio­ns Internatio­nal Conference, and it so happened that one of the CVBs [Convention and Visitor Bureaus] from Casper, Wyo., was presenting on” their experience with the eclipse. “So I went to it and I learned that in Casper they were not ready for what happened.”

Although Hot Springs experience­d just 87% coverage during the 2017 eclipse, Casper experience­d totality as well as an enormous crowd that came to watch the phenomenon.

“At that time of year, Casper wasn’t a ski town; it was pretty much quiet, but they had calculated over a million people descended on Casper,” Solleder said. “So, I mean that sounds amazing and fun and whatnot, but what I had learned from the Casper presentati­on is that there’s a lot that goes into successful­ly hosting a million people in one small place.”

He said a town anticipati­ng such an influx of visitors should plan for everything from accommodat­ions to traffic organizati­on to benefit everyone, which is why the planning has already begun.

“So I learned a lot from Casper, and it really made me think about, well, we really need to be way ahead of the ball for Hot Springs,” Solleder said. “Because … the national park itself is an attraction, and … a lot of people believe Hot Springs is a magical place because of the thermal water and because of the presence of the crystals here, so now add a solar eclipse occurrence on top of that and I believe that Hot Springs will be a major draw for those who want to be here for the solar eclipse, being that we are in the direct path of totality.”

In an effort to market the big day, Visit Hot Springs has launched a “micro-website” that has a countdown clock and links that can be used to connect with the group to locate lodging and other informatio­n to begin planning for a trip to the city, according to a news release. The website is at totaleclip­searkansas.com.

“So with putting the website together, and I already presented on the event at the Arkansas Governor’s Conference back in March to not only let Hot Springs know about this, but the whole state to know about it,” Solleder said. “The whole state can come up with a plan and everyone doesn’t come to Hot Springs and we can spread the solar eclipse watchers across the state and kind of ease the burden on us.”

He added that Hot Springs will go so far as to have a “Solar Eclipse Path of Totality Committee.”

“I think someone like myself from Visit Hot Springs, someone from the National Park, someone from the city of Hot Springs, probably Oaklawn as well, should be involved in that committee,” Solleder said, “so that we can just plan for what could be a million tourists in Hot Springs on a single day, such as what happened in Casper back in 2017.”

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