Chattanooga Times Free Press

Spending by CVB scrutinize­d

But local tourism officials defend $1 billion industry

- BY TIM OMARZU STAFF WRITER

Tennessee state Sen. Todd Gardenhire was impressed a couple of years ago when he sat down to eat with hundreds of others at the Chattanoog­a Convention & Visitors Bureau’s annual gala luncheon.

But maybe not impressed the way the CVB intended.

“I thought it was very lavish,” Gardenhire said. “They spent a ton of money. I’m sitting there thinking, ‘I don’t know how this benefits tourism.’”

That luncheon was one thing that inspired the Chattanoog­a Republican to introduce Senate Bill 665. It and a companion House bill introduced by state Rep. JoAnne Favors,

D-Chattanoog­a, propose to have the state comptrolle­r’s office audit the CVB.

CVB officials defended their work, saying they’ve been the driver behind the $1 billion tourists spend annually in the Chattanoog­a area. The bed tax — paid by visitors, not locals — has been a boon to the economy, they said, providing jobs and spurring constructi­on of new hotels that add to the tax rolls.

“I don’t think we’d have five brand-new hotels going up downtown if it was a declining industry,” said Keith Sanford, a longtime Chattanoog­a banker who a year ago became president and CEO of the Tennessee Aquarium, the treasurer of the CVB and a member of the Tennessee Tourism Committee.

But Gardenhire and Favors aren’t the only elected officials to question spending by Chattanoog­a’s tourism bureau, which is on track to get an estimated $7.8 million in county hotel-motel tax revenue in the current fiscal year. The sum is almost 20 percent more than the $6.5 million it got in fiscal 2016.

County Commission­er Tim Boyd, chairman of the county’s finance committee, has questioned travel expenses by the tourism bureau’s staff; the roughly $400,000 the CVB spent to remodel its rented office space on the 18th floor atop the SunTrust building downtown, and the fact the CVB gets 100 percent of the county’s hotel-motel tax revenue.

“Where is this money going? How is it being spent? Is it being spent effectivel­y?” Boyd asked at Wednesday’s County Commission meeting, adding that “CVB is spending $25,000 a month on travel expenses on a regular basis.”

MONEY COULD ‘HELP BUILD ELEMENTARY SCHOOL’

If the county decided to keep $2 million a year from the tax and give the rest to the CVB, that would be enough to fund $20 million in bonds. That “would go a long way toward constructi­on of a new elementary school,” Boyd said after the commission meeting.

“Maybe we can have a great CVB without them having all of the hotelmotel tax,” he said.

Boyd said that in the past, hotel-motel bed tax revenue was used to help fund constructi­on of such buildings as the McKenzie Arena, also known as the “Roundhouse,” at the University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a.

If anything, the CVB should get more money, said Bob Doak, the CVB’s longtime president and CEO, who has predicted visitor spending could reach $2 billion here in less time than the 15 years it took to grow from $500 million to $1 billion.

“We should probably be investing more money in tourism, not less,” Doak said. “The more you invest, the more you get in return.”

Sanford said, “When you get a 20 times or more return on your money, every dollar helps, because you’re really buying ad space in out-of-town markets. Every dollar you spend is going to get more families to come here.”

TOP-FLOOR OFFICE HELPS LURE BUSINESS

In response to Gardenhire, Doak said the tourism bureau’s annual gala lunch covers its expenses through sponsorshi­ps and by charging $500 a table.

“It’s probably a breakeven,” he said.

Doak also defended the decision to lease the 7,450-square-foot top floor of the SunTrust building on Market Street for about $146,000 a year, and to spend $404,149 to convert the space from the bank’s former cafeteria into offices before the CVB moved there in 2010.

“We were able to get that at a great rate,” said Doak, who said the fabulous view allows tourism bureau officials to showcase Chattanoog­a to visitors who are considerin­g holding events here.

“It’s a 360-degree view of our beautiful city,” he said.

Boyd questioned that, saying the bureau could have rented space in the same Broad Street building as the Chattanoog­a Area Chamber of Commerce and show off the city, say, during a meal at the Walden Club. The private club is atop the Republic Centre on Chestnut Street, downtown Chattanoog­a’s tallest building.

“Were those options even considered?” Boyd asked.

CVB WELCOMES ‘DEEPER DIVE’ INTO SPENDING

Boyd said he got an inch-thick stack of documents detailing CVB’s finances, travel expenses and credit card spending Monday from Hamilton County Auditor Jenneth Randall.

The documents haven’t been released to the public — and can’t be released — Boyd found out Tuesday, because of a recent change to state law that says “audit working papers” are confidenti­al.

The informatio­n Boyd got Monday is more detailed, he said, than a county audit report of the CVB that county commission­ers got at their meeting last week.

“The audit report that was handed out … doesn’t drill down and give the public the informatio­n that I think is necessary,” Boyd told commission­ers Wednesday.

Boyd and Doak both said they’ve had a cordial discussion. They plan to meet, and Boyd said he’ll direct detailed questions to CVB staff at that meeting.

Sanford said the audit informatio­n he’s seen doesn’t get down to the level of detail of credit card spending and receipts for such things as hotel rooms and meals purchased by CVB employees.

“I’m sure we’d all welcome [it], if the county wanted to do a deeper dive on it,” Sanford said. “We’re not hiding anything. So we welcome a look, as a board.”

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Todd Gardenhire

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