Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Mayor says Big Easy needs more of tourist taxes

- KEVIN MCGILL

NEW ORLEANS — A night’s stay at a New Orleans hotel can involve as much as a 15 percent bite in taxes and fees. Yet barely more than 1 in 10 of those tax and fee dollars — out of an estimated $166 million collected annually — finds its way into city coffers.

That’s according to estimates by an independen­t research agency that last calculated the figure in 2015. New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell’s still-new administra­tion says the city needs and deserves a bigger share.

When Cantrell took office in May, she inherited many lingering infrastruc­ture challenges: potholed streets, drainage problems and a drinking water system plagued by periodic boilwater advisories. But an attempt to get a bigger slice of that tourism revenue to address those needs could be a tall political order for the new mayor of the city famous for Mardi Gras, Jazz Fest, Bourbon Street carousing and much more.

Much of the money goes to major state-owned tourism draws: the Superdome and its neighborin­g arena, as well as the sprawling Ernest N. Morial Convention Center beside the Mississipp­i River. Changing the flow of money would require legislativ­e action.

But so far the mayor’s call for a “fair share” for the city has gotten a cool reception from Gov. John Bel Edwards and the president of the state Senate — as well as from one of the top spokesmen for the tourism industry.

“Over time, the city of New Orleans has not put one dollar into the building of the Superdome, the building of the convention center; has not put one dollar into the operations of the Superdome or the Convention Center; has not put one dollar into the average, every-year renewal and refurbishm­ent that has to take place,” said Steve Perry, one tourism booster.

Perry is CEO of the nonprofit New Orleans & Co., which promotes tourism. He recently unveiled the industry’s answer: a proposal that, rather than cost the industry any of its current revenue stream, would raise the hotel tax another 0.55 percent in anticipati­on of another $6.7 million a year to meet infrastruc­ture needs.

Perry said the plan would be to immediatel­y raise $81 million with a bond issue, to be financed with the new revenue stream. He said that the money could be used to make some initial repairs to the city’s infrastruc­ture and to develop a master plan for longer-term infrastruc­ture spending.

“Seed capital,” is what Perry called it.

“Not adequate,” was Cantrell’s response in a news release that followed.

“We’ve had plans from the outset,” said her statement,

which later added, “What we need is revenue.”

John Pourciau, the mayor’s chief of staff, said the projected annual bill for the city’s infrastruc­ture needs is between $80 million and $100 million.

Pourciau stressed that revenue from the 4 percent hotel tax going to the Louisiana Stadium and Exposition District — for the Superdome and adjacent arena — and the 3 percent tax dedicated to the authority that runs the Morial Convention Center are not the only parts of the hotel tax that the administra­tion believes should be up for discussion.

Pourciau said nonhotel levies,

such as a food and beverage tax that goes to the convention center, are also being considered.

“She’s looking at any and all revenue-raising opportunit­ies that are currently directed to hospitalit­y,” Pourciau said.

Cantrell spokesman Beau Tidwell said the proposals have met with “significan­t enthusiasm” from several legislativ­e partners, but he declined to say who might handle any city recommenda­tions in the coming legislativ­e session.

New Orleans’ economy is so heavily dependent on convention­s, tourism and major events — such as Super Bowls, Final Fours and the annual Sugar Bowl — that, Perry argues, it would be foolish to divert any money from what

is now used to constantly promote tourism while maintainin­g and upgrading the dome, the arena and the convention center.

“You get more money by organicall­y growing the economy and creating jobs and revenue than by disassembl­ing and trying to take revenue from the only thing that’s providing for us,” Perry has argued.

But Pourciau asserts that the tourism industry is just as dependent on the city.

“If the basic services of the city don’t work, the people aren’t going to come,” he said.

The back-and-forth will likely continue right up until the next legislativ­e session in April.

 ?? AP file photo ?? Members of the New Life Brass Band perform in the French Quarter section of New Orleans, where the mayor wants more tax and fee money for infrastruc­ture in the old city.
AP file photo Members of the New Life Brass Band perform in the French Quarter section of New Orleans, where the mayor wants more tax and fee money for infrastruc­ture in the old city.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States