JFK meet aims to bring tourism $$ back to boro
Times
Ledger, September 12, 2002
The
city’s aviation, business and tourism leaders met in southeast
Queens Monday to discuss ways to recapture billions of dollars lost
in the borough since Sept. 11. Just two days before the anniversary
of the World Trade Center attacks, nearly 80 local, state, and
federal leaders...
The city’s
aviation, business and tourism leaders met in southeast Queens
Monday to discuss ways to recapture billions of dollars lost in the
borough since Sept. 11.
Just two days before the anniversary
of the World Trade Center attacks, nearly 80 local, state, and
federal leaders brainstormed about how to revitalize the hotel and
air transport industries that have been struggling for the last
year.
The roundtable discussions were hosted by City
Councilman James Sanders, Jr. (D-Laurelton) and featured panelists
from the state Economic Development Corporation, the Port Authority
of New York and New Jersey, Delta Airlines, and New York City and
Company, the city’s tourism agency. The meeting was held at the JFK
Sheraton, just north of Kennedy Airport.
The nation’s airline
industry suffered an $8 billion loss in 2001, and experts are
predicting another $5 billion loss by the end of this year, said
Rhianna Quinn-Roddy, director of civic and public affairs for
Delta.
In Queens, this means about 15,000 lost jobs at
Kennedy and LaGuardia airports, as well as related industries that
serve the airports, said Marie Nahikian, executive director of the
Queens County Overall Economic Development Corporation.
“In
Queens especially, aviation is an important economic engine,”
Sanders said. “It has been the No. 2 job generator (after health
services) in this borough.”
Aside from the industry slump
after Sept. 11, both Kennedy and LaGuardia airports have slipped
among the ranks of national airports, and growth at both has slowed,
said Jonathan Bowles, research director for Center for an Urban
Future, a non-profit group.
Kennedy dropped from the seventh
busiest passenger airport in the nation in 1991 to the 14th busiest
in 1999. LaGuardia dropped from the 15th busiest to the 20th, Bowles
said.
In cargo, Kennedy fell from the busiest airport in the
nation in 1991 to the third busiest in 1999, with companies like
United Parcel Services, Federal Express and Airborne Express
gradually moving their operations to Newark Airport, Bowles
said.
Among the key problems facing Kennedy Airport, in
particular, is a lack of ground access to the airport for commercial
vehicles bound for air freight companies. Since commercial vehicles
are not allowed on the Belt Parkway, the trucks must use the
overburdened Van Wyck Expressway, Bowles said.
“For too long
city and the state officials have been ignoring the most important
point – ground access,” he said. “Trucks simply cannot get in and
out of the airport.”
To combat this, Sanders said he has been
talking with Deputy Mayor Dan Doctoroff about opening the Belt
Parkway to small cargo vans for certain hours of the day, allowing
the vans to make a quicker trip into Manhattan during peak hours for
the cargo industry, such as 11 p.m. to 5 a.m.
Bowles and
other speakers also pushed for the extension of the AirTrain light
rail system. The system, which is due to open from Kennedy to Howard
Beach this fall, would be much more useful as a one-seat ride to
Manhattan, Bowles said.
“Let’s make it a one-seat ride to
Manhattan,” he said. “Let’s make sure we get the fullest use out of
it.”
Sanders also told the group that he would introduce
legislation in the Council that would increase the funding for New
York City and Company for increased tourism advertising. The tourism
agency is now working with a budget of $14 million, a paltry sum
when compared to Las Vegas, which spends $132 million on tourism,
Sanders said.
“We simply cannot compete this way,” he said.
“We have to raise this to a level that we can compete
at.”