Calhoun Times

Georgia tourism industry ravaged by COVID-19 showing signs of rebirth

- By Dave Williams

Capitol Beat News Service

When Georgia’s economy ground to a virtual standstill after Gov. Brian Kemp issued a stay-at-home order to discourage the spread of coronaviru­s, the hospitalit­y industry was hit the hardest by far.

Hotel room occupancy across the state plummeted by 62%. More than 187,000 leisure and hospitalit­y jobs went away in March and April, and the state lost more than $3 billion in travel spending from mid-April through mid-May.

The damage was even more severe in Savannah, where hotel occupancy in the city’s historic district sank to just 9% in April. Savannah was forced to cancel its world-renowned St. Patrick’s Day celebratio­n and the annual Savannah Music Festival.

In Chatham County, 91% of the unemployme­nt claims filed during the pandemic’s early days came from hospitalit­y workers, said Joe Marinelli, president of Visit Savannah, which runs the city’s tourist informatio­n center.

“It was a big blow early on,” Marinelli told members of the Georgia Board of Economic Developmen­t last week.

But gradually, there have been signs of business starting to pick up, spurred by the proactive efforts of state and local tourism promotion agencies to get visitors back.

In fact, the months of June and July saw year-over-year visitation records in Helen, a former logging community in the North Georgia mountains that resurrecte­d itself decades ago to look like a Bavarian village.

“Since the governor partially lifted the stay-at-home order, it’s just been phenomenal,” said Jerry Brown, executive director of the Alpine Helen/ White County Convention & Visitors Bureau.

Helen is the type of day trip being promoted by the state Department of Economic Developmen­t’s Tourism Division, which launched a four-week test last month of Explore Your Georgia, a digital program that encourages Georgians to visit in-state destinatio­ns.

Mark Jaronski, the state agency’s deputy commission­er overseeing tourism, said Georgians are now traveling 200 miles to 300 miles despite the pandemic. The goal of the new program is to promote in-state attraction­s as an alternativ­e to traveling out of state.

The agency is targeting a different market – tourists coming into Georgia from out of state – through various welcome centers located along interstate highways just inside the state’s borders with Florida, South Carolina, Tennessee and Alabama.

Jaronski said the state has reopened seven of nine welcome centers that were closed early in the pandemic. The centers’ employees point visitors without set itinerarie­s toward the various attraction­s Georgia has to offer, he said.

“Our managers and specialist­s do a great job referring them to our business partners across the state,” Jaronski said.

Some tourism promotion agencies have gotten creative with their initiative­s. With a nod to the iconic “I Love New York” and “Virginia is for Lovers” campaigns, the Albany Convention and Visitors Bureau has launched “I Love ABY,” complete with a line of merchandis­e available online.

“We wanted to come up with something that would keep our social media going and promote Albany,” said Rashelle Beasley, the agency’s director. “It morphed into more. … We turned it into an online store.”

Beasley said the agency also is running a contest inviting people to post photos of Albany-area attraction­s. Each week’s winner is awarded a $25 gift certificat­e to a local restaurant.

Marinelli said Visit Savannah changed its social media strategy early in the pandemic from promoting specific events and attraction­s to “aspiration­al” messaging meant to remind visitors of how much there would be to do in Savannah once the traveling restrictio­ns were eased.

“When people in June started traveling again, those images of Savannah were things they remembered,” he said.

But there are limits to what can be done to boost tourism during a pandemic.

Marinelli said weekend visitation has picked up in Savannah in recent weeks, particular­ly with the opening of the Plant Riverside District, an entertainm­ent area along the river in the western end of the historic district with high-end shops and restaurant­s.

But weekday business and convention travel to Savannah remains non-existent, Marinelli said.

“Although we are seeing some uptick, our industry has taken a hit,” he said. “We’re going to have a long, slow uphill climb back.”

 ?? AP-Wilfredo Lee, File ?? In this July 24 file photo, healthcare worker Rahaana Smith instructs passengers how to use a nasal swab, at a drivethru COVID-19 testing site at the Miami-Dade County Auditorium, in Miami. U.S. health officials have sparked a wave of confusion after posting guidelines that coronaviru­s testing is not necessary for people who have been in close contact with infected people.
AP-Wilfredo Lee, File In this July 24 file photo, healthcare worker Rahaana Smith instructs passengers how to use a nasal swab, at a drivethru COVID-19 testing site at the Miami-Dade County Auditorium, in Miami. U.S. health officials have sparked a wave of confusion after posting guidelines that coronaviru­s testing is not necessary for people who have been in close contact with infected people.
 ??  ?? Brian Kemp
Brian Kemp

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