62 °F Ocean City, US
November 4, 2024

August, September helped tourism

CAPE MAY COURT HOUSE – A strong end of summer and an early fall lift in visitors to the County has helped to offset the lodging revenue losses created by the pandemic shut down in March, April, and May, according to county Tourism Director Diane Wieland.

April losses were 99 percent compared to April 2019, generation slightly over $3,000 for the month.  Hotels and motels opening to full capacity in July started the increase in Occupancy Tax collection.  Cape May County’s occupancy tax rate exceeded all other counties in both August and September with a combined total of more than $5 million collected and 80 percent of the year-to-date amount.  Overall, as of Sept. 30, tourism revenue is down 24.7 percent over the same time period in 2019.

 The latest Occupancy Tax data released by the New Jersey Treasury shows August numbers to be 7.5 percent under the rate collected in 2019.  September data exceeded expectations and came in at 17.3 percent over the same period in 2019.  This represents an increase of $247,415.91 and is 5 percent of the room rate. Cape May County has not seen an increase in monthly occupancy tax collections since February 2020, according to Wieland.  

 The Occupancy Tax data is posted monthly and used as a benchmark to measure overnight stays in hotels, motels, and bed and breakfast inns.  Based on the Department of Tourism’s annual survey, the average overnight visitor spends $374 per day, this spending spreads over all sectors and impacts, food and beverage, retail, recreation, and transportation.

“We knew by the size of the crowds, August and September were busy months, but we did not expect to see September numbers exceed last year,” Freeholder Director Gerald M. Thornton, liaison to the Department of Tourism, said. “The summer season started at 46 percent below last year and we have been able to bridge the gap by almost half.  While this is encouraging, we still have segments of the industry that are having difficulty recovering from the shutdown and subsequent restrictions.  Restaurants have been the hardest hit, and we are still dealing with reduced capacity.  

“Many cannot continue to operate much longer with 25 percent indoor capacity and colder weather will curtail most outdoor dining,” he said.

Short-term rentals are booming with some realtors reporting double and triple the number of rentals this time last year.  Remote work and virtual learning is keeping second homeowners in the county during the fall and into the winter months.  Home sales are reaching record numbers among beach counties.

 and Cape May County is part of the boon in sales. These new homeowners along with second homeowners will support local businesses and attractions.

 “Cape May County has topped all other counties in New Jersey in August with $3.3 million generated in Occupancy Tax collection.  In September, we were the only county that generated more than $1 million with $1.67 million collected.  Visitor behavior during the pandemic has changed the dynamics of the traditional vacation season and has created a new visitor looking for non-beach experiences.  Our diverse assets that include eco and agri-tourism activities give residents and visitors the opportunity to be safe outside with room to social distance,” reported Diane Wieland, County Tourism Director. 

 “It is our hope that the vaccine will turn things around quickly and we can go back to some semblance of a healthy tourism industry.  While we are showing signs of recovery, the impact of losing one in every four dollars generated last year is huge.  With the balance of the year looking promising, any loss of tourism revenue is devastating to our small businesses in Cape May County,” added Thornton.

MORE

Page 3 — August/September Tourism Report

Cape May County launched a confidence campaign in April promoting the outdoors and open spaces with CDC restriction clearly part of the message.  This was coupled with a dedicated safety campaign called, “Safely Together” that featured television, print, radio, and social media reminders to follow protocols while visiting the county.  Cape May County COVID-19 cases were among the lowest compared to other areas in the state and region. 

Related articles

Upper Township up in air over events, sports

Officials want more information to avoid putting residents at risk By BILL BARLOW/Special to the Sentinel PETERSBURG – As emergency measures drag on through the summer and COVID-19 seems unlikely to disappear anytime soon, members of the Upper Township Committee worked on plans for special events and sports in September.  The local governing body is […]

State getting 2.6 million rapid COVID-19 tests

Governor also announces end to taxing combat pay, disaster declaration By DAVID NAHAN/Sentinel staff New Jersey will be receiving 2.6 million rapid COVID-19 tests that should allow the state to double its testing capacity over 12 weeks. Gov. Phil Murphy announced Monday, Sept. 28, that after talks with the White House over the weekend, the […]

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *