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November 21, 2009

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More money or doors close: Lenoir City leaders express desire to consider funding

Published: 9:00 AM, 10/21/2009 Last updated: 1:44 PM, 10/24/2009
 

Author: Tammy Cheek


Loudon County Visitors Bureau representatives pled its case to Lenoir City Council Monday for funding to keep open the bureau's doors. 

Doug Davis, chairman of the bureau's board of directors and supporters gathered at City Hall to address the city council during its workshop and asked for $32,000 from Lenoir City Council to do that. This is in addition to the $25,000 the city has already appropriated to the bureau. 

"I had talked with Doug late last week about some things that are going on at the Visitors Bureau - not good news," Mayor Matt Brookshire informed council members. "Some of you may have already heard by this point, so I asked Doug what we could do." Brookshire invited Davis to Monday's workshop so Davis could present its circumstances and its possible future.

Davis related Monday, Oct. 12, Loudon County Commission cut the Visitors Bureau's funding from 36 percent of the hotel-motel tax revenues to 29 percent. This is a $32,000 cut. 

"That's what we're begging for," Davis said. 

"This is the third year of consecutive funding cuts," he said. "It's kind of like you get a house payment. Your house payment's a thousand dollars a month, and you're going along and you cut it, you're funding's $1,200, you're OK. You're down $1,100, well then you drop below $1,000, the note's still due at $1,000 month, and we no longer can survive."

"We would be basically out of business Feb. 28," Davis said. He added that would leave the bureau with enough reserves to keep the building paid for because Loudon County Chamber of Commerce does not have the funds budgeted to take over the bureau's responsibilities. 

He warned the bureau would have to immediately stop all activities related to bringing in new events to the county, including a 2011 major fishing tournament, on which the bureau is currently working, and 2011 water skiing championships.

"There could be serious legal consequences to our board if we go into contracts with people and we can't fulfill the contracts, so that's why we have to start cutting back on those things right now," Davis said. "You already have two tournaments coming in April 2010 that if we weren't here, parks and recreation would probably have to handle them for us. 

He listed some assets the city would lose, should the visitors bureau not be funded, which are the Highway 321 welcome center; interstate signage for the welcome center and billboards on Interstates 40 and 75; the bureau's tourism Web site and domain name; the marketing presence - it is in 13 state welcome centers and 20 rest areas across the country; and printed materials. 

"We were requested this year to send 120,000 materials," he said. "These were not just blank mailings; these were requested from somebody who wanted promotion about the county."

Davis also listed all the event procurement functions, including new events for the county and the city; marketing/advertising functions, as ads it has in "Southern Living," "Tennessee Vacation Guide," online advertising, tourism partnerships and more; and access to tourism marketing branch from the state. 

"We currently have a $5,000 grant that we're using," he said. 

Additionally, should the bureau not be funded, Davis warned the county would go from a three-star status in tourism maybe down to a two-star. 

That may, in turn, affect the grant money to cities for which Lenoir City may apply, he said.

Loss of a bureau would also affect event coordination for the two FLW Tour and Bass Federation fishing tournaments, scheduled for April 2010; coordination and task of payment of annual fees to the Appalachian Quilts and Civil War Trails, in which the bureau has gotten involved; and the coordination and task of the Tennessee Trails program, which is part of the Highway 321 scenic highway program. 

Davis said the events in which the bureau has got under contract is the FLW Collegiate Tournament, which would generate approximately $100,000. 

"That's not in sales tax; that's what people spend, when they come here, to do those tournaments," he said. "The revenue you get from those comes from the hotel-motel tax. So, really, it's outside people who fund the visitor's bureau; it's not local taxes. We don't get any money from your taxes or from the county."

The bureau is under contract with FLW for $250,000. 

Concerning a bass tournament in the works for 2011, Davis said he couldn't name the organization involved in that tournament because contract negotiations are continuing, but he did say everywhere that organization has been, it has generated $13 million to local economy minimum. He noted this event is "like the super bowl of bass fishing tournaments." 

A waterskiing championship, which is being negotiated, is expected to generate $150,000 local spend money. 

He said in 2006, tourists spent $36.97 million, which brought in $.92 million in local tax receipts. In 2007, tourists spent $38.29 million, which brought in $.96 million in tax receipts; and in 2008, tourists spent $42.28 million, which brought in $1.06 million in tax receipts. 

He compared that to the bureau's budget of $176,000. 

"That's a pretty good return on your investment," he said. "And it's not tax dollars that we're taxing the local residents, it's taxes that people are coming into the area give to you.

"I think what happened, we got to doing pretty well, since Mary (Bryant's) been here, we've been getting these FLW events in here," Davis said. "And, we've done a real good job. There are 18 or 19 of us on the staff, and we're free. We're all volunteers." 

"This money (city and county revenues generated by tourism) that comes in, it helps all the education programs," City Council member Bobby Johnson Sr. said. "That sales tax comes into the school program. If you don't have that, that's going to hurt our schools.

"It will affect the county and the city also," Johnson noted.

Davis said some people have asked "How come the city doesn't take over this function or how come the county doesn't take over this function?"

He said the FLW organizations will not work with municipal or county governments. 

"They don't like doing that," he warned, adding they prefer to work with visitors' centers.

Rick Terry, a volunteer with the bureau and Lenoir City businessman, urged the city to help the visitors bureau. 

"There are communities out in the middle of nowhere that would die to be in the geographic location that we are sitting in here," Terry said. "These people drive through our front yard. They come over here and they drop that tax at these hotels and motels.

"All we have to do is market the best product properly," he said. "It has got to be the best return on your investment that you can ever have." 

Terry said since he moved out here in 1973, he has seen the area's growth. 

"In the last 10-15 years, the Visitors Bureau and the boards and the people who served on this board way before I served on this board did a wonderful job of creating and bringing people into this community," he said. "We cannot let the visitors center and its functions die. 

"We've got to step up to the plate. It must be funded," he said. "It is such an insignificant amount of money that requires to run this properly.

"It started out as a partnership, and we got half that (hotel-motel) tax money," Terry said. "Now, we're getting so much less. We need to focus on what we can be doing, not where we can try to cut. We've cut it to the bone. We need this thing funded."

"If this (the bureau's closing down) were to happen to the visitors bureau it would be absolutely devastating for our business," said Francie Harkenrider, general manager and one of the owners of Watts Bar Bell. 

She checked with various visitors centers in the area. While one center had 123 calls a year and 123 e-mails a year, Loudon County Visitors Bureau's calls and e-mails were in the thousands. 

"We couldn't survive without the visitors bureau," she said. "Mary and the ladies there have just done a phenomenal job."

Jerry Reed with Tennessee Valley Winery also expressed his support of the visitors bureau.

"My business, we live and die by tourism," he said. "We're right on the interstate. The more people we can bring to this area, the more people we see in our business. 

"It's sort of a no-brainer; the more people you bring in here to bring money, you receive tax dollars on it, that's free money," Reed said. "I can't think of anything better than that.

"I think you've got to fund it (visitors' bureau)," he said.

Brookshire expressed his support of the bureau.

"I want this council to at least be open-minded about trying to find some additional revenues for them this year so they don't have to close their doors," he said. "It's hard to see what goes on at the visitors bureau in a way that you can actually put your hands on it, something tangible. We think about it as kind of a bonus. 

"If our local budget's in good enough health, then we'll do it because it's a bonus," he said. 

"Imagine a building out there (on Highway 321) with closed doors," Brookshire suggested. "What kind of signal is that sending to people about this community, about (Highway) 321?

"I think the three star to two star designation could be key," he said. "If we lose the visitors center and suddenly, through the governor's three-star program, we're no longer a three-star community and go down to two, not only does that affect leverage on grants, but it also affects interest that we could pay on money that we borrow.

"It's tough right now, we all know that," the mayor said. "We have looked at our sales tax revenues, and they're down. I think they are down more than we expected at this point. But, what's going to happen in a couple of years, when we bounce back and, say, we let the visitors' bureau close?"

"Give us a little time to look and see if there's some way we can do it," Brookshire told Davis and the group. "We'll certainly give it our best shot. I want to see it (the center) stay open. I think it's a function that has to continue. There's no way we, as a city, can pick up the slack."

Council member Tony Aikens asked City Administrator Dale Hurst to bring some numbers back to the budget committee. 

"I think we would be foolish not to try to do something to try to help them," Aikens said. 

Following the city council meeting, visitor center representatives headed to the Loudon County Commission's meeting on Monday.

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