Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Yes, tourism dollars have plummeted

- D.L. Davis

Major industries in Wisconsin have sustained significant economic losses during the coronaviru­s pandemic, and nowhere is that more apparent than in the tourism sector.

Wisconsin plays host to about 112 million tourists in a year, according to the WorldAtlas website, and 2019 was “a record setting year, and the largest year for Wisconsin in at least a decade,” said Wisconsin Secretary of Tourism-designee Sara Meaney. However, the loss of revenue in 2020 is massive, she said.

In a May 24 appearance on the WISN-TV (Channel 12) show “UpFront,” she said, “Unemployme­nt in our state in general is at about a quarter of our population. It’s actually over 50% of travel and tourism-related jobs that are now facing unemployme­nt.”

Meaney went on to say that just in the weeks since the pandemic hit, the state has lost more than a billion tourism dollars.

“Since the week ending March 14, Wisconsin actually saw a drop in tourism spending compared to last year of $1.7 billion,” she said.

Wisconsin’s tourism industry should come back a bit this summer. Some northern resorts have opened and state campground­s reopened June 10, according to the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.

But that tourism recovery could be an uphill climb if Meaney is correct that year-over-year weekly travel spending in the state has dropped $1.7 billion since March.

Let’s take a look.

The evidence

Craig Trost, Wisconsin Department of Tourism communicat­ions director, pointed PolitiFact Wisconsin to the U.S. Travel Associatio­n, which commission­ed a study by Tourism Economics, the firm the department uses for its economic impact data.

The U.S. Travel Associatio­n is a national, nonprofit organizati­on representi­ng the travel industry, with various sectors — including transporta­tion, lodging, retail, recreation, leisure and entertainm­ent and food service, meetings and trade shows.

Adam Sacks, president of Tourism Economics, explained in an email to PolitiFact Wisconsin that the analysis is based on a combinatio­n of factors: daily hotel data (nights and revenue) from STR, a research company that tracks the hospitalit­y industry; flight data (seats and passengers) from Airline Data Inc. and the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion; and drive travel data (outside 50-mile radius) from Arrivalist based on mobile device data.

Trost said the week ending March 14 was significant because that is when COVID-19 began significantly affecting tourism spending.

“Since the beginning of March, the COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in over $176 billion in losses for the U.S. travel economy,” the report states. According to the report, Wisconsin’s year-overyear net change in weekly travel spending from the week ending March 28 to the week ending May 16 are as follows:

Week ending March 28: down

$200 million

Week ending April 4: down $204 million

Week ending April 11: down $206 million

Week ending April 18: down $213 million

Week ending April 25: down $218 million

Week ending May 2: down $217 million

Week ending May 9: down $216 million

Week ending May 16: down $214 million

Total: down $1.688 billion

When going back earlier in March, the report notes losses for the week ending March 14 at $17 million and the week ending March 21 of $50 million. That brings the total to $1.775 billion.

Tourism officials Romy Snyder, CEO/ president of the Wisconsin Dells Visitor and Convention Bureau, said it will take time to correctly analyze and know the true financial effect of COVID-19 on Wisconsin Dells.

“We do know the loss of visitors has been detrimenta­l to the local tourism economy,” Snyder said in an email. “According to 2019 numbers, the spring and summer seasons account for 66% of direct visitor spending in Wisconsin Dells.”

Snyder said area businesses are ready to welcome visitors.

“Wisconsin Dells’ businesses are working to accommodat­e current visitors to the area in a safe manner by increasing sanitation procedures and limiting capacities and hours of operation,” Snyder said. “We know Wisconsin Dells has strong brand awareness in the Midwest, which will help our area when people are ready to travel and are looking for an accessible vacation destinatio­n with a diversity of activities.”

Jon Jarosh of Destinatio­n Door County said area businesses have been getting ready and opening.

“Everybody has a little different protocol in terms of what they’re going to allow at their particular business,” Jarosh said on the same “UpFront” program where Meaney appeared via remote.

“We’re asking our visitors and residents that are out and about to just respect the individual businesses and what they are asking for. But by and large most businesses are going to be asking that their customers do wear a face covering of some sort and also just practice social distancing guidelines.”

A major Dells attraction, Noah’s Ark water park, set its opening date for June 20, the first day of summer. The water park plans a number of precaution­s in line with recommenda­tions from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Our ruling

Meaney said the state’s tourism losses have topped $1.7 billion since March.

Data from weekly studies commission­ed by the U.S. Travel Associatio­n, an organizati­on with over 1,100 members nationwide, found that beginning the week ending March 14, when the COVID-19 crisis first began to significantly impact tourism spending, Wisconsin was down $17 million compared to a year earlier. The drop in year-overyear travel spending in the state mounted weekly, with the latest available report reporting a drop of $214 million for the week ending May 16. That brings the state tourism sector drop to $1.775 billion since the week ending March 14.

For a statement that is accurate and there’s nothing significant missing, our rating is True.

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