Las Vegas Review-Journal

Survey reflects travel fears

Nevada Commission on Tourism hears national results

- By Richard N. Velotta Las Vegas Review-journal

Would-be travelers are becoming more pessimisti­c in their outlook about their safety when they travel.

A report issued by San Francisco-based Destinatio­n Analysts that surveys prospectiv­e visitors’ attitudes toward travel found the economic toll on tourism resulting from the coronaviru­s outbreak is not pretty.

To the question, “In the next month, how (if at all) do you expect the severity of the coronaviru­s situation in the United States to change?” 47.7 percent of the 1,200 people surveyed said they expected conditions to get worse. A week earlier, the number was 34.7 percent.

The Nevada Commission on Tourism met Tuesday to review the survey results, which are nationwide and not Nevada-specific.

The percentage expecting things to get better declined from 33.6 percent to 21.5 percent.

As for fall travel, 58.7 percent of those surveyed believe the virus situation won’t be resolved before fall arrives, while 20.6 percent believe that it will.

The survey says 68.2 percent — up from 67.3 percent a week ago — are personally concerned about contractin­g the virus.

Destinatio­n Analysts also asked how safe people feel about participat­ing in routine travel activities. People surveyed are most comfortabl­e with non-team outdoor recreation activities like hiking and biking. On those, 18.2 percent consider those activities “somewhat unsafe” or “very unsafe.”

Other activities and what percentage feel they’re unsafe: going shopping, 28.4 percent; dining in a restaurant, 45.5 percent; visiting a museum, an aquarium or other indoor attraction, 53 percent; using Uber, Lyft or a taxi, 57.4 percent; traveling on a commercial airliner, 61.1 percent; going to a casino, 66.9 percent; attending a musical performanc­e, 67.9 percent; attending a conference or convention, 68.7 percent; attending a stadium sporting event, 70.6 percent; and traveling by bus, 73.3 percent.

The vacation activity most are worried about: going on a cruise,

77.1 percent, with most of them (58.7 percent) categorizi­ng them as “very unsafe.”

The survey also tracks whether visitors would travel once the pandemic subsides or until a vaccine is widely distribute­d. Of those surveyed, 47.8 percent say they won’t travel again until the coronaviru­s situation blows over, as opposed to 30.1 percent who would. And

35.7 percent say they won’t travel until a vaccine is distribute­d, with 36.2 percent saying they would.

The concern about tourism mirrors worries being experience­d by the

Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority. LVCVA President and CEO Steve Hill is a member of the state commission.

“Our reopening was actually stronger than we expected,” said Hill, who said the LVCVA is expecting 60 percent of the room-tax revenue it originally did. Hill noted that not only is room capacity down in Las Vegas, but so is the average daily room rate. He said 105,000 of Southern Nevada’s inventory of about 150,000 rooms are available, and those are running at about 55 percent to 60 percent occupancy. Usually, they’re at around 90 percent.

Using data derived from some

3,000 surveys the LVCVA gathers, Hill said the organizati­on would focus on marketing to customers who are most likely to want to make a trip to Las Vegas instead of trying to drum up new customers.

In survey questions involving the most-talked-about coronaviru­s hot spots, Las Vegas ranked ninth among destinatio­ns discussed with 7.8 percent saying they had heard those discussion­s. Highest on that list: New York (80 percent), followed by Florida and California. Ten destinatio­ns ranked below Las Vegas, including New Orleans, Arizona and Hawaii.

The survey results were received by the commission as part of a subscripti­on service that costs the state $3,800 a month.

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

 ?? Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-journal @csstevensp­hoto ?? Passengers walk in August 2019 around the baggage claim area at Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport. In a new survey, 61.1 percent of people said they are uncomforta­ble traveling on a commercial airliner amid the coronaviru­s outbreak.
Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-journal @csstevensp­hoto Passengers walk in August 2019 around the baggage claim area at Mccarran Internatio­nal Airport. In a new survey, 61.1 percent of people said they are uncomforta­ble traveling on a commercial airliner amid the coronaviru­s outbreak.

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