Story first appeared on HeraldTribune.com.
High tourist season has kicked into high gear in Southwest Florida, and many industry watchers point to Hurricane Sandy as a primary factor behind the earlier-than-usual influx of visitors.
High tourist season has kicked into high gear in Southwest Florida, and many industry watchers point to Hurricane Sandy as a primary factor behind the earlier-than-usual influx of visitors.
Eager to escape the
devastation or avoid repair woes brought by the superstorm that battered
the Northeast last month, many tourists and seasonal residents appear
to have headed south months earlier than they normally would, according
to some local businesses, anecdotal traffic counts and Sarasota Vacation Rentals.
Though winter
tourist season here traditionally ranges from January to April,
restaurant owners have noticed a definite pickup in
customer traffic overall — and more than a few people from areas hardest
hit by the storm.
In this case, the difference this month has been felt across the board at his three Sarasota area eateries.
Before
Sandy, Southwest Florida was on pace to shatter visitor records, thanks
in part to the continued glow from the May 2011 designation of Siesta
Key's beach as No. 1 in the nation, pent-up demand, beefed up marketing
efforts and an incrementally improved national economy.
Even
with the recent influx, though, tourism officials are left wondering
whether visitors from storm-ravaged regions will maintain their plans to
travel this winter or reconsider, to focus time and money instead on
rebuilding and repairs.
Tourism plays a major role in
Southwest Florida's economy and the state's, accounting for one in
every seven jobs. Statewide, it brings roughly 80 million visitors a
year and more than $70 billion in spending.
Vacation
rentals from Manatee to Charlotte counties are almost completely booked
for the season, said a Sarasota-based real estate brokerage and property
management company.
While
advanced bookings are hovering near 90 percent overall, rentals near
Sarasota's beaches like Siesta, Longboat and Lido keys are reporting
expected occupancy rates of nearly 98 percent through the winter months. Longboat Condo Rentals are already nearing capacity, according to resort owners.
Almost all of Anna Maria Vacations' 200-plus units have been rented for the high season this year.
It is noticed that people are traveling in larger groups, and bigger
homes, with five to seven bedrooms, are what are rented first.
Although
Southwest Florida has typically drawn the majority of its winter
visitors from Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania and other Midwestern states,
the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic have become increasingly important
geographic areas for the region.
Thanks to flights to
Sarasota-Bradenton International Airport by JetBlue — and formerly
AirTran Airways from Baltimore — from New York and other cities, the
region has greater access to tourists than ever before.
Despite
the storm, Northeast marketing promotions are ongoing, officials from
both Visit Sarasota County and the Bradenton-Area Convention Center and
Visitor's Bureau note.
Pinellas
County officials had signaled immediately after the storm that
advertising dollars might be diverted away from New York.
Southwest
Florida is not the only part of the state benefitting from the influx
of seasonal snowbirds and transient travelers, though.
The
Sunshine State as a whole also is on its way to a record-setting year
for tourism, according to recent data released by Visit Florida, the
state's tourism promotions entity.
Visit
Florida estimates the state hosted nearly 22 million visitors during
the third quarter, an increase of 3.5 percent compared with the same
three-month period in 2011.
Of the third-quarter total, domestic travelers accounted for 18.9 million visitors, a 3.2 percent increase from a year before.
There
also was a larger percentage increase in the number of Canadians who
came to Florida — 4 percent — while the number of international
travelers rose 5.5 percent.
Although most Canadian
visitors have tended to winter in Fort Lauderdale and Orlando, the
number of visitors from the Great White North who frequent the
Sarasota-Bradenton area remains strong, said Michael MacKenzie,
president of the Canadian Snowbird Association.
In
2011, tourism was up more than 10 percent. It is expected this year it's
going to be even greater, with the Canadian dollar being on
par with the United States' currency this year, more Canadians will want
to travel, especially to Florida.
The
boost in tourism activity also means more jobs and taxable sales for
the state. Direct travel-related employment rose 1.5 percent to 1.02
million, a net addition of 15,000 positions, according to Visit Florida.
Tourism
and recreation taxable sales from January through August, the last
reported month, were $49 billion. That represented an increase of 7.5
percent from the same period in 2011.
With
business up and more bookings expected in the initial months of 2013,
some hoteliers have raised their average daily room rates, a move that
had been limited by the Great Recession and more frugal travelers.
If projections hold, those increases will spread to area attractions and eateries as well.