The News-Times (Sunday)

Report: State hospitalit­y jobs struggling to recover from pandemic

- By Keith M. Phaneuf

Connecticu­t has known for months the coronaviru­s hit its hospitalit­y industry harder than those in most other states.

Now it’s learned things are worse than many thought.

According to revised projection­s from the American Hotel & Lodging Associatio­n, Connecticu­t will have regained — by year’s end — slightly less than 72 percent of the 26,225 direct hotel industry jobs it lost during the pandemic.

Those 7,400 unfilled jobs is significan­tly worse than the 5,900-position-gap the AHLA forecast for Connecticu­t back in May.

“The pandemic has been devastatin­g to the hospitalit­y industry workforce, wiping out 10 years of hotel job growth,” the associatio­n wrote, adding that the hotels and other lodgings are expected to end 2021 down 500,000 jobs compared with 2019 employment levels.

Direct hotel jobs, such as housekeepe­r and front desk attendants, do not include workers from restaurant­s, retail operations, tourist attraction­s and other small businesses supported by the lodging industry.

Only four states — Hawaii, Illinois, Massachuse­tts and New York — along with the District of Columbia, are projected to have regained a smaller percentage of direct hotel jobs than Connecticu­t will have by year’s end.

“We are still facing incredible challenges,” said Ginny Kozlowski, executive director of the Connecticu­t

Hotel and Lodging Associatio­n.

Perhaps the biggest, she said, is regaining the full contingent of business travelers who comprised 60 percent of the customer base at Connecticu­t hotels, motels and bed and breakfast operations before the pandemic.

Vacation and other leisurerel­ated travel has recovered well this summer, though there still some work to do, Kozlowski said. But business-related travel has lagged considerab­ly.

For example, are many companies going to permanentl­y limit their convention­s, retreats and planning meetings?

Will salespeopl­e who normally visit their customers four or five times a year now do it just once — and stay in touch the rest of the time via online conferenci­ng?

“That’s where we’re not sure,” Kozlowski said.

Another unknown pressing the industry is the coronaviru­s itself.

Kozlowski praised Gov. Ned Lamont’s administra­tion for Connecticu­t’s strong effort to promote vaccinatio­ns. As of Monday, 71 percent of residents age 12 and older were fully vaccinated.

And she noted the governor and legislatur­e have been supportive in other ways.

Between the new, two-year state budget and federal coronaviru­s relief funding, Connecticu­t officials have dedicated more than $60 million in new resources that will assist tourism promotion and the hospitalit­y sector.

David Lehman, Lamont’s economic developmen­t commission­er, said a portion of those resources

also will support a new grant program to assist hospitalit­y and related businesses. That program likely will be unveiled early in 2022, he said.

And none of that assistance includes another $150 million the state deposited directly into the unemployme­nt trust fund. The state has borrowed more than $700 million to keep the fund afloat, and the debt is expected to approach or top $1 billion by year’s end. Businesses normally are assessed to cover such debts, so that $150 million payment effectivel­y is direct tax relief to all businesses.

Eric Gjede, a specialist in labor and labor and tax issues for the Connecticu­t Business and Industry Associatio­n, said Wednesday any additional deposits the state could make into the unemployme­nt

trust would be a boon to all businesses. Gjede added that the business travel situation may not return to prepandemi­c levels this year, which means Connecticu­t’s hospitalit­y sector may remain vulnerable.

“It’s very clear things aren’t back to normal, by any stretch of the imaginatio­n,” he said.

The co-chairs of the legislatur­e’s Appropriat­ions Committee, Sen. Cathy Osten, D-Sprague and Rep. Toni Walker, D-New Haven, have asked Lehman’s office for more data on the beleaguere­d hospitalit­y sector.

Osten said she fears some of the jobs, because they are lowpaying, will remain unfilled because Connecticu­t’s battle with the coronaviru­s is not over.

“Some people have gone on to other fields and are not interested

in coming back to this direct contact job,” Osten said.

The state’s COVID-19 infection test positivity rate crept upward in recent weeks, topping 2.5 percent on Tuesday.

The Delta variant of the virus , which was originally identified in India, is now likely dominant in the state, according to Nate Grubaugh, epidemiolo­gist at the Yale School of Public Health.

Kozlowski said the industry has not ruled out an appeal later this year or early in 2022 to Lamont and the legislatur­e for more assistance, adding that she believes many state officials have been closely monitoring what is happening in this sector of Connecticu­t’s economy.

“There is an acute awareness that we’re in serious trouble,” she added.

 ?? Yehyun Kim / CTMirror.org ?? Revised projection­s show Connecticu­t will have regained by year’s end less than 72 percent of the 26,225 direct hotel industry jobs it lost during the pandemic.
Yehyun Kim / CTMirror.org Revised projection­s show Connecticu­t will have regained by year’s end less than 72 percent of the 26,225 direct hotel industry jobs it lost during the pandemic.

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