National Post

Florida tourism officials go into damage control

- Tamara Lush

TAMPA, FLA .• Thank goodness it’s the slow season in Florida.

At least that’s what officials and representa­tives of the state’s multibilli­on-dollar tourism industry are thinking in the wake of the news that 15 people have been infected with Zika in a small, trendy neighbourh­ood in Miami.

The outbreak has sent another chill through the Sunshine State’s all- important tourism industry just weeks after the Orlando nightclub massacre and the killing of a two- year- old boy by an alligator at nearby Walt Disney World.

Florida officials have gone into damage- control mode, with Gov. Rick Scott insisting, “We have a safe state!” during a tour of the Zika hot zone in Miami’s Wynwood district.

Tourism is Florida’s biggest industry. Visitors spent some US$89 billion here last year. And Disney is America’s No. 1 tourist attraction.

Outside of a few business owners in the affected square-mile neighbourh­ood, however, Zika appears to have done little damage to tourism so far.

“We have not had any- one cancel a trip to Florida because of Zika,” said Jenny Cagle, vice-president of Elm Grove Travel in Wisconsin. “It’s definitely a conversati­on. People are talking about it.”

Demetra Prattas, vicepresid­ent of Turon Travel, a New York- based company that books art tours and trips, including the annual Art Basel festival that includes events in Wynwood, said: “I don’t think it’s a factor in deciding where to go. We’ve had no cancellati­ons.”

The governor has been on something of a statewide Zika tour, meeting with county health officials and business owners in Miami and along the Interstate 4 corridor that runs through Orlando. He said tourists should use caution and not worry about mosquitoes, adding that Florida knows how to prepare for crises because of its hurricanes.

“We will make sure all the tourists feel comfortabl­e coming to Florida,” he said Thursday in Wynwood, site of the first mosquito- transmitte­d cases of Zika on record in the continenta­l U. S. “We’ve got to continue to support these businesses because, why? They have employees and those employees need their jobs.”

He said the state is doing everything it can to test people, spray against mosquitoes, get rid of the standi ng water i n which they breed, and encourage people to use insect repellent.

The Visit Orlando tourism board issued a statement noting that no locally acquired cases of Zika have been reported in the Orlando area, which is over 200 miles from Miami. The board gave assurances that “safety is the top priority for our region.”

The next few months will be crucial, said Henry Harteveldt, founder of the San Francisco-based Atmosphere Research Group, a travel-industry watcher.

“If Florida is able to address this efficientl­y and quickly and be able to pronounce with confidence that they’ve been able to eradicate, there won’t be longterm consequenc­es,” he said. “If Zika remains a long-term challenge, it’s possible some potential tourists might think twice.”

Federal health officials have warned pregnant women to avoid Wynwood because the virus can cause severe birth defects, including stunted heads. England’s public health agency is advising mothers-to-be to postpone non- essential trips to Florida.

U.S. experts say expectant mothers planning a visit to the state should consult with their doctor.

For the most part, theme park visitors should be fine, said North Carolina State University entomologi­st Michael Reiskind, because the mosquito species most likely to spread the disease is less prevalent in Orlando and the theme parks are likely to spend heavily on insect control.

Kathy Torian, a spokeswoma­n for Visit Florida, the state’s tourism arm, said anecdotall­y there were minimal cancellati­ons in the wake of the Orlando shootings and the Disney alligator attack.

In 2015, 106.3 million people visited Florida, a record number.

 ?? JOE RAEDLE / GETTY IMAGES ?? Pesticides were sprayed over the Miami neighbourh­ood of Wynwood on Saturday in the hope of reducing the number of mosquitos, some of which may be capable of spreading the Zika virus. Spraying is one of several measures aimed at controllin­g the virus, which can cause birth defects.
JOE RAEDLE / GETTY IMAGES Pesticides were sprayed over the Miami neighbourh­ood of Wynwood on Saturday in the hope of reducing the number of mosquitos, some of which may be capable of spreading the Zika virus. Spraying is one of several measures aimed at controllin­g the virus, which can cause birth defects.

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