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September
1, 2003
The Muskegon Chronicle
By Dave Alexander
Tourism was big news in Muskegon during the summer of 2003
and it wasn't just about people camping at P.J. Hoffmaster State
Park, or visiting Michigan's Adventure Amusement Park or touring
the USS Silversides.
Although Muskegon was one of a handful of communities in the state
whose tourism numbers were up -- thanks mostly to the maturing
of high-profile festivals -- there was other tourist-related news,
which could bode well for future seasons.
* A high-speed ferry between Muskegon and Milwaukee was announced
this summer. Lake Express LLC of Milwaukee began construction
on a $18 million vehicle/passenger vessel that is expected to
begin operations in June.
* The Fourth of July weekend maxed out the tourism industry in
Muskegon County, with another overlap of the Muskegon Air Fair
and Muskegon's Summer Celebration.
* The regional tourism campaign, Michigan's West Coast, was launched
and began to market the urban tourist experience of Grand Rapids
with the beach experience of the Lake Michigan shoreline.
Muskegon County Tourism
Development Director Joanne Hatch said the events of the summer
show the progress the community has made in its tourism industry.
We have broadened our
horizons, Hatch said. Look back 10 years ago and people -- me
included -- never thought we could become a destination. We are
now a destination and we continue to grow in a very positive manner.
West Michigan's leading
tourist attraction -- Michigan's Adventure Amusement Park -- had
a slow start to the season because of the unseasonably cool June
and wet July. But, with near perfect August weather, crowds built
throughout the latter half of the season until two Saturdays in
August reached record-breaking numbers, according to park General
Manager Camille Jourden-Mark.
Michigan's Adventure's
parent company Cedar Fair LP will not announce seasonal park attendance
totals until later this fall, Jourden-Mark said. However, Hatch
predicted that the amusement park will show improved numbers vs.
last summer when 420,000 attended.
Grand Haven, too, bucked
the state trend and experienced tourism growth.
Marci Cisneros, Grand
Haven/Spring Lake Area Visitors Bureau director, said tourism
numbers from April through July were up, with some months registering
7 percent increases.
The Michigan State University
Travel, Tourism and Recreation Resource Center predicted a decrease
in travel spending across the state, with a few exceptions, notably
the lakeshore communities, she said.
Travel Michigan's Lake
Michigan Beachtowns campaign brought more visitors into the Grand
Haven area, Cisneros said.
West Michigan communities
participating in the Beachtowns campaign include Muskegon, Holland,
Silver Lake, Hart and Ludington. This year, the target areas were
Chicago and Indianapolis.
Muskegon County's tourism
strength in past years should not be a complete surprise, said
Wood, who has worked in the tourism promotion business in West
Michigan for the past two decades.
Muskegon County has
been working on tourism for 15 or 20 years, Wood said. It just
didn't happen overnight. We are now seeing the payoff. I see Muskegon
becoming a real competitor with others on the Lake Michigan coast.
Hatch said she spent
last week at a statewide conference of convention and visitors
bureau directors, finding that she was one of a few reporting
positive numbers for this year. While the industry trend was down,
she said Muskegon County had a stable tourism market the past
two years because of its festival development.
Hatch said the community
needs to continue to exploit the Heritage Landing festival grounds
on Muskegon Lake with new ethnic festivals based on Muskegon's
African American and Hispanic heritage. An expanded festival offering
could keep Heritage Landing in use all summer, she said.
The Unity Christian
Music Festival has come on as a strong force in the local festival
lineup. In three years, Unity has become financially successful,
drawing 40,000 people for the three-day event in August.
This is the second time
in three years Muskegon has hosted a tall ships event, and even
though crowds were down this year, Hatch said it was a successful
event in the quality of the experience and its draw of out-of-town
visitors.
Hotel and motel operators
on the county tourism advisory committee said that the tourism
industry must demand that the festivals not overlap on such a
popular travel weekend.
We turned away thousands
of customers, said Susan Jenkins, manager of the Best Western
Inn & Suites of Whitehall. With hotels filled, visitors
stay in other communities. If the events were spread out, other
less-popular weekends could become just as busy, the hotel operators
said.
Gamal Elkhouly, general
manager of Holiday Inn Muskegon Harbor, agreed. We are sending
our room tax dollars and our business to Grand Rapids on this
weekend, Elkhouly said.
We need to fix it, she
said.
Something not in need
of repair is the growing reputation of Pere Marquette beach as
a clean place to swim and play. Thanks to a monitoring and reporting
effort by the Muskegon County Health Department, Hatch said the
city of Muskegon has been able to receive the Blue Wave certificate
from the Clean Beaches Council in Fredricksburg, Va.
The designation has generated publicity in such publications as
National Geographic Traveler, USA Today, The Detroit News, The
Boston Globe and The Chicago Tribune. Hatch said this free publicity
is priceless.
We can't afford those
kinds of publications with such a national scope, Hatch said.
The bureau's advertising budget is about $150,000.
Muskegon's close relationship
with the Grand Rapids-led Michigan's West Coast tourism promotion
campaign has helped get the Pere Marquette clean beach story out
this summer, Hatch said. The regional effort has, in part, brought
national travel writers through Muskegon in February and July
with another group expected in September, she said.
Lastly, the summer of
2003 might be remembered for finally completing a deal that would
relink Muskegon to Milwaukee with cross-lake ferry service. A
ferry has not run between the two communities since 1970, and
re-establishing that link has been Muskegon's No. 1 economic development
priority.
The tourism industry
needs to spend this winter preparing for the expected launch of
the Lake Express service in June, Hatch indicated. The county
already has plans for a new packaging program to sell cross-lake
ferry tickets in conjunction with motel stays, meals in local
restaurants and admissions to area attractions.
With the cross-lake
ferry, we not only double our market geographically but we also
are able to move into a more densely populated urban area (Milwaukee),
Hatch said. And guess what, they don't have the beaches. That's
where the clean beaches become key.
© 2003 Muskegon Chronicle. Used with permission
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