Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lee: Resort fees unlikely to face legislator­s’ review

- By Richard N. Velotta Las Vegas Review-journal

Resort fees, the much-maligned charges many hotels tack on to tourists’ bills, are a market-driven issue Rep. Susie Lee doesn’t expect to be reviewed by legislator­s.

Lee, D-nev., addressed 30 representa­tives of the tourism industry on a variety of issues in a travel roundtable Wednesday at Delano Las Vegas.

“If people are so unhappy about the resort fees, they’ll quit paying them and the operators will have to deal with those ramificati­ons,” Lee said in response to a question after the forum about whether lawmakers would address resort fees as a consumer protection issue.

Last month, two attorneys

general filed lawsuits against hotel brands for their use of resort fees. On July 9, the attorney general for the District of Columbia filed a lawsuit against Maryland-based Marriott Internatio­nal Inc., accusing the company of deceiving customers by hiding a portion of its daily rates through resort fees. On July 23, Nebraska attorney general Doug Peterson filed a lawsuit against Virginia-based Hilton Hotels Corp, accusing the company of hiding the “true price” of hotel rooms through resort fees in an attempt to increase profits.

Former Sen. Claire Mccaskill, D-MO., introduced a bill to end resort fees on Feb. 25, 2016, well before

Lee took office this year. Lee said she wants to further research the issue, but at first glance, she said it’s a matter that should be market-driven. The bill was never taken up by the full Senate.

Lee took comments on a number of tourism issues in the “Travel Talks Roundtable,” sponsored by the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority and the U.S. Travel Associatio­n, a Washington D.c.-based organizati­on that lobbies on travel and tourism issues.

Lee encouraged tourism representa­tives to get behind an accurate U.S. census count, noting that Nevada getting its full share of revenue is particular­ly important for a state so reliant on tourism.

“I think that we continue to get short-shrifted in terms of federal money because of our population and not our visitation,” Lee said. Other issues from the forum:

The city’s transforma­tion to a hub for profession­al sports. “We really believe that Las Vegas can be the epicenter of sports,” said Desiree Reed-francois, UNLV’S athletic director. “We already have UFC and the (Las Vegas Motor) Speedway and being able to share the stadium with the Raiders, I’m sure the possibilit­ies

are endless, not only for the tourism dollars, but selfishly for some of our athletes to play a major championsh­ip in their backyard is special.”

Being ready for multiple events at one time. Several participan­ts applauded Las Vegas for adding hotel rooms, convention facilities and other amenities. Mark Shearer, senior vice president and chief financial officer of the Raiders, noted that Las Vegas must be ready for the eventualit­y of the Raiders playing a postseason playoff game at home at the same time CES is in town.

The need for a national passenger travel plan. LVCVA President and CEO Steve Hill participat­ed in an advisory group on travel and tourism that recommende­d developmen­t of a national plan. He noted that a national freight plan exists, but nothing for passenger traffic.

Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-477-3893. Follow @Rickvelott­a on Twitter.

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