MADEIRA BEACH, Fla- The Hubbard family, owners of a marina complex and seafood restaurant on Florida's Gulf coast near Tampa, would just as soon forget that 2010 ever happened. The lingering economic recession, a record cold Florida winter and the effects of the Gulf oil spill stalled the tourist traffic this year at Madeira Beach, where the Hubbards have been a presence since the 1970s. All that came after the lousy economy landed a gut punch to their businesses in 2009.
"It was incredibly scary, because we didn't know if we were going to get oil" on nearby beaches, said Kathleen McDole, a Hubbard sister whose Friendly Fisherman restaurant saw a 20 per cent decline in business this year. "And neither did the rest of the United States and our visitors who come here. So they didn't come." The family's struggles this year mirrored those of most of Florida's tourism industry, which employs around 1 million people and accounts for more than one-fifth of the state's total sales tax revenue.
The year was even more disappointing because people in the industry originally had high hopes for recovery in 2010 after two straight bad years due to the recession. But then came a rare extended freeze last January, and the BP Deepwater Horizon accident and oil spill on April 20. Throughout the spring and summer, would-be visitors changed their plans amid visions of oil fouling the beaches and spoiling their holiday.
Deep discounts and strategic marketing were required to persuade more people to come to Florida, cutting deep into profits. When vacationers got here, they spent less at restaurants and attractions. "The collective impacts of the economic downturn, and certainly the oil spill, were as significant a challenge as we've (ever) had to face," said Chris Thompson, president and CEO of Visit Florida, the state's tourism bureau. The number of visitors to the state - roughly 80 million annually - has stayed flat the past three years, following years of solid growth throughout the decade, according to statistics kept by Visit Florida. But the discounting necessary this past year took an even bigger bite.
"Now they're running their businesses in a totally different manner," said Robin Grabowski, president of the Tampa Bay Beaches Chamber of Commerce. "They're doing more with less. When fewer people are coming into the hotel rooms and they're paying less to get that hotel room, that economic impact is less all around." The oil spill-and the widespread impression around the country that all of Florida's shores were awash in crude-came at a time when tourism officials were seeing signs that the industry was starting to recover from terrible years in 2008 and 2009, Thompson said. In reality, beaches in just six eastern Panhandle counties saw signs of oil-mostly in the form of tar balls and tar patties. Most of it has been cleaned up, although BP-funded crews are still working in some areas.
Laura Lee, spokeswoman for the visitors bureau for Pensacola-area beaches, said hotel and condo revenue was down 5 per cent for the fiscal year that ended September 30-"which we actually consider a victory." Area hotels benefited by having BP workers and large contingency of media in town for the summer, but at reduced rates. Oil started washing ashore in June and killed business in July, the biggest month of the year for the area's beaches. Revenue numbers for the month were off 25 per cent, with visitors paying about 11 per cent less than the previous July. (AP)