Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

RNC would benefit hotels, restaurant­s

Suggesting no increase overstates liberal claim

- Vanessa Swales

While the mayor and Milwaukee political leaders have welcomed the possibilit­y of hosting the 2024 Republican National Convention, a group of liberal community groups from across the state has decried the effort.

The coalition includes Voces de la Frontera Action, Never Again is Now, SEIU Wisconsin State Council, Freedom Action Now and Black Leaders Organizing Communitie­s. The groups issued a statement on June 2 urging Milwaukee Mayor Cavalier Johnson not to seek the convention. .

The statement listed a series of disadvanta­ges to the convention, including this claim:

“Milwaukee's hotels and restaurant­s are already filled during the summer. The RNC convention will simply replace those who normally visit our city.”

Is that accurate?

New faces, same numbers?

VISIT Milwaukee, the city's convention and visitors bureau, spearheade­d the bid for the 2024 RNC and has noted that winning it would put Milwaukee in the national spotlight and elevate the city as a convention destinatio­n.

According to VISIT Milwaukee, the city should anticipate visitors reaching about 45,000 during the convention – a figure that includes 2,551 delegates, plus family members, media, operations personnel and more.

A spokespers­on said the city will need to secure 16,000 rooms for the convention. (For the 2020 Democratic National Convention, which mainly went virtual due to COVID, local organizers were able to secure 17,000 rooms.)

Peggy Williams-Smith, president and CEO of VISIT Milwaukee told WISN-TV in a March 22 report that there are roughly 19,000 hotel rooms in the city of Milwaukee.

With that background on hotels, let's look more closely at the claim.

The main argument by the liberal groups is that during the convention period, these hotel rooms are typically already booked solid anyway. Therefore, the convention itself would create a substituti­on effect and not really bring new people – and their money – to the city.

We'll set aside the fact that it is a major part of VISIT Milwaukee's job to fill those very rooms (by bringing convention­s to town and promoting Milwaukee as a tourist destinatio­n), and zero in on the numbers.

If Milwaukee wins the bid, the convention could be held during one of three proposed windows: from July 9 to July 25, from Aug. 13 to Aug. 29, or from Aug. 20 to Sept. 5.

During the same time periods in two recent years from before the pandemic, 2017 and 2018, occupancy rates hovered around 76% and 77% – with rooms costing anywhere between $140 and $175 per night, according to data from VISIT Milwaukee.

So, the groups are off on that point. As envisioned, the RNC would fill the rooms entirely.

Much like the overall $200 million “economic infusion” expected if Milwaukee wins the bid, VISIT Milwaukee based total hotel room revenue projection­s on a study by Cleveland State University on the economic impact of the 2016 RNC in Cleveland.

In Cleveland, the hotel occupancy rate went up 20.2% because of the convention, according to the study, and hotels had an average nightly rate at $290.

VISIT Milwaukee has estimated a total economic impact of $200 million from the convention (we rated a claim from the mayor about the size of the impact Half True). Williams-Smith now says hotel revenue alone could tally $23.2 million over the five days – a much smaller figure than the $32 million estimate she provided for that earlier item.

Victor Matheson, an economics professor at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachuse­tts, who has studied the economic impact on cities that hosted the Republican and Democratic national convention­s between 1970 and 2004, said it is important to note that some of the rooms would be full with or without the convention.

“Every hotel room is full and it's full of delegates,” Matheson said of estimates of the economic impact. “This has a huge economic impact, but they forget to note that even if the RNC wasn't in town, hotels are typically at 60% or 70% occupancy anyway. So they assume that those hotel rooms that are full of delegates would have been completely empty in the absence of the event. But of course we know that's not true.”

In any case, for purposes of this check, we are mainly interested in how full the rooms are – and all agree that they would not otherwise be at capacity during a typical week in August.

So on the hotel side of the equation, the groups opposing the RNC are overstatin­g their claim.

A closer look at restaurant­s

The impact on restaurant­s is similar, but more anecdotal. According to the study of the 2016 Cleveland RNC, restaurant­s there saw much success and many visitors.

The Cleveland study, which was carried out by a four-person team at Cleveland State University's Center for Economic Developmen­t, conducted two case studies of restaurant­s in the Cleveland area – both reported that they thrived during the convention.

As with hotel rooms, though, some of that business would be there with or without a convention. And the report did not mention how many diners were local residents versus convention­goers.

“Hotel bars are going to do well,” Matheson told PolitiFact Wisconsin. “If you're a server and a hotel bar, your tips are likely to be pretty good.”

While restaurant­s, bars and hotels may fare well during a mega-event such as a national political convention, safety concerns due to potential protests and heightened security may “dissuade casual shoppers and diners and result in major disruption­s for local residents,” according to the study of past convention­s.

One example cited in the study was that during the 2004 RNC in New York City, attendance at Broadway shows fell more than 20% compared with the same week a year prior despite the influx of thousands of visitors attending the convention.

“Anyone in their right mind who works in and around downtown Milwaukee is going to take that week off,” said Matheson. “They're not going to go to their usual happy hour place.”

Our ruling

Liberal groups opposing the 2024 RNC in Milwaukee claimed: “Milwaukee's hotels and restaurant­s are already filled during the summer. The RNC convention will simply replace those who normally visit our city.”

The groups have a point, in that the baseline is not zero. There are visitors who stay at hotels, and diners who eat at restaurant­s with or without a convention. But they vastly overstate the point by suggesting there would be no increase or benefit at all from the RNC.

Statistics have shown a typical Milwaukee hotel occupancy rate of about 76% in August. And clearly all restaurant­s are not 100% full either. So there clearly would be some economic benefit to bringing the event to the city, even considerin­g the substituti­on effect.

Our definition for Mostly False is “The statement contains an element of truth but ignores critical facts that would give a different impression.”

That fits here.

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