Chicago Sun-Times

CORONAVIRU­S FEARS INFECT CHICAGO’S ECONOMY AND BUDGET

Group cancels convention at McCormick Place as other organizati­ons consider whether to cut travel, which could hurt city that relies on tourism

- BY DAVID ROEDER AND FRAN SPIELMAN Staff Reporters

With the coronaviru­s continuing to spread Tuesday, more Chicago businesses and organizati­ons considered whether to cut upcoming travel and meetings, dealing a potential blow to the local economy and a city budget that relies heavily on visitors’ spending.

The concern was most acute in the convention industry, a cash cow for constructi­on jobs, restaurant­s, hotels and other sectors. Organizers of upcoming events said they were monitoring health developmen­ts and will decide if they need to cancel, reschedule or move events online.

Monday, the Internatio­nal Housewares Associatio­n canceled this year’s annual convention at McCormick Place, a four-day gathering this month that was expected to draw 56,000 people and account for 47,000 room nights at Chicago hotels.

“We’re always worried about empty hotel rooms. We want heads in bed. That’s always a concern. But it’s something that we hope, related to coronaviru­s, only has a short-term impact,” said Michael Jacobson, president and CEO of the Illinois Hotel and Lodging Associatio­n.

“Yesterday was a disappoint­ment for our hotels. But, we’re hopeful that the situation gets under control very quickly and that the concern doesn’t continue to spread.”

Attention now is shifting to such upcoming events as the Bank of America Shamrock Shuffle on March 22, an 8K run with a three-day health and fitness show at McCormick Place. The event is still scheduled, but Alex Sawyer, communicat­ions director for the event, said organizers “will continue to follow the situation carefully.”

Similarly, the American College of Cardiology, due at McCormick Place March 28-30, said its event is on for now. The expected attendance is 18,000. The organizati­on said it “continues to closely monitor health and safety updates and recommenda­tions issued by the World Health Organizati­on and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, as well as state and local health organizati­ons.”

Jacobson stressed that hotels are “taking every precaution that we can take” to protect patrons and employees. He can only hope that business and leisure travelers don’t panic, cancel their plans and hunker down.

“Hopefully, it’s under control very soon and we can get past some of the recent headlines,” he said.

“One of the dangers in cases like this sometimes is overreacti­on,” he said. “Not to discredit the very serious nature of the virus and the terrible loss of life throughout the world. But at the same time, there is no current indication or guidance to change travel habits within the United States.”

A spokeswoma­n for Navy Pier said it had only one canceled event as of Tuesday, and that was an offshoot of the housewares show. The Chicago Council on Global Affairs, which regularly hosts programs with overseas visitors, said it has contingenc­y plans to postpone some or move them online but hasn’t implemente­d them yet.

A 2017 study for McCormick Place, completed before the recent expansion of its campus to include a new hotel and the Wintrust Arena, estimated that it generated $1.5 billion in annual economic activity and more than $112 million in state and local taxes each year.

Many other business meetings around the country, especially those on the West Coast, were being canceled and companies were restrictin­g travel to the most essential reasons. One of them was Ford, which reported that two of its employees in China have contracted the virus.

Chicago’s city finances need a lift from tourism. A reduction in the number of visitors and an overall economic slowdown due to the virus could have an outsized effect on a city budget that Mayor Lori Lightfoot cobbled together with onetime or questionab­le revenue sources.

Civic Federation President Laurence Msall said neither the city, the county nor the state has “adequate reserves to address an unexpected drop in economic activity” tied to the coronaviru­s.

“The city of Chicago — all government leaders — need to be addressing what is the Plan B if revenues don’t continue to grow as projected before the coronaviru­s came onto the horizon and began to affect business activities and tourism and travel,”

Msall said.

Noting that there would be no letup in the demand for essential city services, Msall urged the city to plan for a worst-case scenario where the virus “continues to grow” and travel, work, school and entertainm­ent patterns are interrupte­d.

“If it gets to the level where city, county and state residents are being told not to come to work or not to go to gathering places, that would have a precipitou­s impact. All tourismrel­ated revenue, including restaurant taxes, sales taxes, hotel taxes, McCormick Place taxes, fare recovery at the CTA and Metra could be impacted,” he said.

Moody’s evaluated the nation’s 25 largest cities for their ability to “handle a recession of similar magnitude” to the economic downturn a decade ago “without a material adverse credit impact.” Chicago and Detroit ranked dead last.

Lightfoot’s own three-year financial analysis forecasts a “worst case” shortfall of $1.74 billion in 2022 if the economy takes a nose-dive and a $799 million shortfall, even in the best-case scenario of a rosy economy.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILES ?? McCormick Place East
SUN-TIMES FILES McCormick Place East

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