Arizona Hotels Thriving Despite Boycotts Over Immigration Law

Amused

Elite Member
Apr 14, 2001
57,503
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I guess this boycott is about as effective as Jesse Jackson's Nike boycott. LOL!!!

Arizona Hotels Thriving Despite Boycotts Over Immigration Law

Published July 27, 2010
| FoxNews.com

Signs set up by opponents of the Arizona immigration law are seen at the Arizona capitol July 26 in Phoenix. (AP Photo)

Arizona's tourism industry has a target on its back, but the widespread boycotts over the state's immigration law might not be hitting the mark.

Recent data compiled by a market research group show hotel bookings across the state -- as well as in tourism hot spots Phoenix and Scottsdale -- have been on the rise the past two months.

The numbers could dispel warnings from local officials that Arizona stands to lose a fortune and dampen the chances that cities and organizations will be able to compel the state to reverse its immigration law by choking its economy with a sanctions-style business boycott.

"Fundamentally, the boycotts have been unsuccessful," said Barry Broome, president of the Greater Phoenix Economic Council.

The data from hotel industry research firm STR showed that for the state of Arizona, hotel occupancy was up 5.7 percent in May and up 8.3 percent in June compared with the same time a year ago.

Related Links
Brewer Seeks Dismissal of Obama Challenge to Immigration Law In Phoenix, occupancy was up 10.6 percent in June; in Scottsdale, it was up 10.7 percent for the same period. Revenue also was up, with Arizona hotels raking in $148 million last month -- up more than 11 percent from a year ago.

Broome said the state also has been able to attract new businesses to locate in Arizona despite bad publicity. He said his group plans to announce 2,000 to 3,000 new jobs thanks to investment from California, where Arizona boycotts are in place in several major cities, over the next few months.

"Business continues," said Garrick Taylor, spokesman with the Arizona Chamber of Commerce and Industry.

That doesn't mean Arizona business groups are done worrying. To the contrary, they're still on high alert over the potential damage the boycotts could do in the long run.

According to the Arizona Hotel and Lodging Association, leisure hotel bookings are up after a record bad year in 2009, but the conventions and meetings sectors have taken a hit -- a development that could cost Arizona millions over the long term given that conventions are sometimes booked years in advance.

The Greater Phoenix Economic Council and Greater Phoenix Chamber of Commerce have launched a new website to build opposition to the boycotts. The site, "Stop AZ Boycotts," features video testimonials from Arizona workers about how the boycotts have negatively affected their livelihoods.

In one, a waitress at The Arizona Center said canceled conventions have cut her earnings in half.

Taylor said that despite the recent hotel data, the boycotts could hurt Arizona's image to the point that it's "no longer a destination that is on people's radar screen."

He said part of the problem is that the backlash contributes to instability in the local economy. "It's not exactly an economic development plan," he said.

Many of the boycotts were pitched as a way to pressure Arizona to rescind its immigration law, which makes illegal immigration a state crime. The groups claimed the law, set to go into effect Thursday unless a federal government court challenge prevents it, would lead to racial profiling by unfairly targeting Hispanics regardless of their immigration status.

City governments typically banned employees from traveling to the state and in some cases moved to reconsider contracts with state businesses.

But some of those campaigns ran into glitches along the way, watering down the impact. Los Angeles exempted from the boycott a contract with an Arizona company that provided its red-light cameras. The Los Angeles City Council also is reportedly considering another exemption for airport taxi company Super Shuttle, based in Arizona.
 

Zebo

Elite Member
Jul 29, 2001
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I am going there for a Survival Handgun Seminar in Sept. They had one in NV but I expressly chose AZ.
 

Double Trouble

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
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I did my little part. We went to the Grand Canyon on our vacation, supporting the great state of AZ in their battle.
 

Zebo

Elite Member
Jul 29, 2001
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I did my little part. We went to the Grand Canyon on our vacation, supporting the great state of AZ in their battle.

What did you think of that admission charge to get in to a national park with all the taxes we pay? I turned my ass around on GPs...pissed off the wife big time. Lucky I was towing our boat and we went to Lake Powell, free.
 
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Modelworks

Lifer
Feb 22, 2007
16,240
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ABC news had a segment on about how illegals were fleeing AZ because the law goes into effect in a few days. They showed vacancy signs and houses for rent. They interviewed some people that were upset . One guy said he has been here 14 years and now had to leave even though some of his children were here. Another was in law school and had been here since he was 6 and was upset.

Been here 14 years ? and still not taken the time to get legal ?
Since age 6 and now in law school complaining the he did nothing wrong , it wasn't his fault he was brought here at that age. Guess he never considered in all those years to become legal ?
 

thegimp03

Diamond Member
Jul 5, 2004
7,420
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ABC news had a segment on about how illegals were fleeing AZ because the law goes into effect in a few days. They showed vacancy signs and houses for rent. They interviewed some people that were upset . One guy said he has been here 14 years and now had to leave even though some of his children were here. Another was in law school and had been here since he was 6 and was upset.

Been here 14 years ? and still not taken the time to get legal ?
Since age 6 and now in law school complaining the he did nothing wrong , it wasn't his fault he was brought here at that age. Guess he never considered in all those years to become legal ?

14 years and not going through the legal immigration process...sounds like he shot himself in the foot.
 

xj0hnx

Diamond Member
Dec 18, 2007
9,262
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Been here 14 years ? and still not taken the time to get legal ?
Since age 6 and now in law school complaining the he did nothing wrong , it wasn't his fault he was brought here at that age. Guess he never considered in all those years to become legal ?

Of course not, it's obviously the state governments fault.
 

bullbert

Senior member
May 24, 2004
717
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Of course not, it's obviously the state governments fault.

No, it is George Bush's fault. Or it is the other George Bush's fault. Or it is all the Republicans' fault. Abraham Lincoln was the first Republican president, so it was Abraham Lincoln's fault.

[/sarcasm off]

Not a Tea Bag party member, or a Sock Puppet, but here comes the hate speech of Teabaggery and Sockpuppet rants from those who have no game...
 

sandorski

No Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
70,845
6,381
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ABC news had a segment on about how illegals were fleeing AZ because the law goes into effect in a few days. They showed vacancy signs and houses for rent. They interviewed some people that were upset . One guy said he has been here 14 years and now had to leave even though some of his children were here. Another was in law school and had been here since he was 6 and was upset.

Been here 14 years ? and still not taken the time to get legal ?
Since age 6 and now in law school complaining the he did nothing wrong , it wasn't his fault he was brought here at that age. Guess he never considered in all those years to become legal ?

On the flipside of this, I wonder what the affect is going to be on those Renting Homes to these People? I suspect Arizona is going to find out just how much the Illegals have been Contributing to the Local Economy.
 

bullbert

Senior member
May 24, 2004
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On the flipside of this, I wonder what the affect is going to be on those Renting Homes to these People? I suspect Arizona is going to find out just how much the Illegals have been Contributing to the Local Economy.

Reduce the UI from 99 weeks to 13 weeks, and those jobs will be filled shortly by Legals. As it stands now, those landlords may have to wait another year and a half before UI runs out for the masses.
 

spacejamz

Lifer
Mar 31, 2003
10,993
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On the flipside of this, I wonder what the affect is going to be on those Renting Homes to these People? I suspect Arizona is going to find out just how much the Illegals have been Contributing to the Local Economy.

You mean that $650M drain they place on the state coffers for hospital services and public schooling will now go away??? and another $150M that pays for the illegals in the AZ prison
systems??? Fvckin awesome!!!!
 

xj0hnx

Diamond Member
Dec 18, 2007
9,262
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You mean that $650M drain they place on the state coffers for hospital services and public schooling will now go away??? and another $150M that pays for the illegals in the AZ prison
systems??? Fvckin awesome!!!!

No man, it's all the sales tax they pay on all the things they buy like new cars, and houses, and fancy clothes and big screen TVs.
 

bullbert

Senior member
May 24, 2004
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No man, it's all the sales tax they pay on all the things they buy like new cars, and houses, and fancy clothes and big screen TVs.

No bank/S&L/CU home loans possible to illegals. Even *IF* they could pay cash, how would an illegal get title?
 

bl4ckfl4g

Diamond Member
Feb 13, 2007
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Since age 6 and now in law school complaining the he did nothing wrong , it wasn't his fault he was brought here at that age. Guess he never considered in all those years to become legal ?

Don't you have to leave before you can start the process? Where do you leave to if you are basically from here?
 

Red Dawn

Elite Member
Jun 4, 2001
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I'm switching planes in Phoenix on my way to CA. The fuck I care about their law, I'm not Hispanic.
 

Double Trouble

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
9,270
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What did you think of that admission charge to get in to a national park with all the taxes we pay? I turned my ass around on GPs...pissed off the wife big time. Lucky I was towing our boat and we went to Lake Powell, free.

I guess I've gotten used to the no-lube shagging we get from our government :(
 

Double Trouble

Elite Member
Oct 9, 1999
9,270
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All I know is a bunch of bands I like are boycotting AZ. :( Gogol Bordello

That's a pretty good way to help weed out the bands you want to support and not support. If they are stupid enough to boycott AZ because they want to enforce the law, then I would not want to support that band anyway. Download their music for free if you want to listen to it and don't attend their concerts.
 

Vette73

Lifer
Jul 5, 2000
21,503
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Sorry but that fox story does not tell anything. If you had half a brain you would see that.

"The data from hotel industry research firm STR showed that for the state of Arizona, hotel occupancy was up 5.7 percent in May and up 8.3 percent in June compared with the same time a year ago. "

Ok so what was it last year? If it was down 50% last year then 5.7 and 8.3 is next to nothing. Also what are other states doing? If others are up 20% on average then AZ would still be low. Maybe not due to this "boycott" but I guess since some have no brains this cartoon will help...

correlation.png
 

Vette73

Lifer
Jul 5, 2000
21,503
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Yep just as I thought...

"According to the Arizona Hotel and Lodging Association, leisure hotel bookings are up after a record bad year in 2009, but the conventions and meetings sectors have taken a hit -- a development that could cost Arizona millions over the long term given that conventions are sometimes booked years in advance."

: http://gretawire.blogs.foxnews.com/...ifornia-asking-to-be-boycotted/#ixzz0uyS3MMN6

So 2009 was really bad so any gain is still below average it seems. That and they admit they are still taking a hit in mettings and other high profit areas.

Just more selective stats to push their agenda from Fox, who would have thought.
 

Vette73

Lifer
Jul 5, 2000
21,503
9
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http://www.azcentral.com/business/articles/2010/07/28/20100728arizona-immigration-law-tourism.html


The gains through June give a depressed industry a little something to celebrate, but hoteliers and industry analysts caution that they don't tell the full story of the state of the industry or the immigration-law fallout.
First, the Valley was one of the hardest-hit hotel markets in the country during the recession, and this year's gains are off ultra-low numbers in 2009.


"We don't know how much more it could have been," said Robert Hayward, chairman of the Valley Hotel & Resort Association and a principal with Phoenix hospitality consulting firm Warnick & Co.
Most significantly, Hayward and others say, the true tourism impact of the immigration law likely won't show up in hotel-industry statistics until next year and beyond.




Yep just another BS thread from amused who likes to post BS stories from Fox without looking into them. Damm facts getting in the way again. :awe: