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Tag: APP Tourism

  • Pinellas County Film Commission hopes to add more films

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    ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Pinellas County officials appointed Film Commissioner Dave Caputo to his post in October, and he is working to increase the number of films that represent the area for 2026.

    He currently administers an incentive program which saw a major downturn in projects after last year’s hurricanes but is expected to bounce back in 2026, according to Visit St. Pete-Clearwater.


    What You Need To Know

    • Dave Caputo began his tenure as the Pinellas County Film Commissioner last month
    • Caputo has more than 30 years of experience in the media production industry
    • The film incentive program saw a major downturn in projects after last year’s hurricanes, with only four qualifying for funds
    • It’s expected to bounce back in fiscal year 2026, with 15 projects scheduled 


    “The incentive program is to make sure that we’re showing off the beautiful locations in Pinellas County,” said Caputo. “This is really a tourism story.”

    Caputo began his tenure as film commissioner in October. Caputo moved to Pinellas County in 2018 and has more than 30 years of experience in the media production industry.

    “Most of my work has been in live television and pre-production television,” he said. “Good part of my crew was actually in on-location work.” 

    In fiscal year 2025, only four projects qualified for film incentive funds, according to Visit St. Pete-Clearwater. Compare that to 2024, where there were 10. Caputo said 2026 looks much stronger, with 15 projects expected to qualify.

    “We’ve seen a huge uptick in applications for our screen production incentive program, as well as permit applications,” he said. “We’re looking forward to even more.”

    Only six counties in Florida have a film incentive program. There is no statewide program. The 2026 budget for Pinellas County’s film incentive program is $1.025 million. Film projects that show off the area can get up to a 20 percent rebate on their total expenses.

    “Our screen production incentive program has a base incentive of 10 percent,” said Caputo. “There’s an additional 10 percent uplift if we can have a determination that there is a significant amount of tourism impact from the production as well as obvious landmarks.”

    Litewave Media founder Christian Cashmir said that having a film incentive program has been very important for the industry. Cashmir qualified for incentive funds for the movie Mother Nature and the Doomsday Prepper, which was released earlier this year.

    “Having a film commissioner that’s driving business here and cares about the filmmaking community is so essential,” he said. “We found that just meeting with Dave, he really has a great vision for this area and we’re excited to have him here.” 

    Last year, Breaking Bad creator Vince Gilligan filmed scenes with actor John Cena at the Litewave studios in St. Petersburg for the hit Apple TV show Pluribus, according to Cashmir. The episode aired earlier this month.

    “For Pluribus we did one day of prep and one day of filming here on the green screen in the studio,” he said. “We had a blast. Vince was here himself with a lot of the top key cast and crew.”

    Caputo said his goal is to build the St. Pete-Clearwater brand as a filming destination.

    “I’m very excited to be a part of the Visit St Pete-Clearwater team and really looking forward to kind of telling the story of Pinellas County,” he said. “Also getting out there and creating a lot more awareness for our incentive program.”

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    Josh Rojas

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  • Despite hurricanes, Pinellas 2025 bed tax collection only slightly down

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    CLEARWATER, Fla. — Visit St. Pete-Clearwater released its fiscal year 2025 Pinellas County bed tax collection last Wednesday which showed it was only down $4 million from the previous year despite the back-to-back hurricanes that devastated the area.


    What You Need To Know

    • Fiscal year 2025 Pinellas County bed tax collections were $92.5 million 
    • Clearwater and St. Petersburg were the leading producers of the bed tax  
    • The 2025 bed tax was 4.4% or $4 million lower than in 2024 
    • September visitor numbers were 14.4% higher than the previous year and helped to boost the annual total


    “We were down 4.4 percent,” said Eddie Kirsch, VSPC Digital and Data Director. “Considering we just went through two massive hurricanes this past year, it shows the resiliency of our area that I think is really worth noting.”   

    The fiscal year runs from October 2024 to September 2025. Kirsch said the September visitor numbers were higher than the previous year and helped to boost the annual total.

    “September development tax was… over 14-and-a-half percent above 2024,” he said. “That’s great numbers. We had about $4.8 million in collections.”

    The leading bed tax producing cities for 2025 were Clearwater, which brought in about $27 million and downtown St. Petersburg, which collected about $13 million, according to VSPC. The total bed tax collections for fiscal year 2025 was $92.5 million. Collections in 2024 were $96.7 million, 2023 was $98 million and 2022 was $95 million.

    “There’s not a whole lot of destinations out there that collect over $90 million annually,” said Brian Lowack, VSPC Pres. and CEO. “We’ve done it four years in a row, which is remarkable given last year’s event.”

    Lowack credited the newer infrastructure on Clearwater Beach for those hotels bouncing back faster, compared to older construction in south county areas like St. Pete Beach, which still have a few big hotels closed for repairs from the storms.

    “Some of the folks who would typically come down… maybe in the southern portion of the county,” he said. “Maybe they tried out a different destination on Clearwater Beach or St. Pete this year.”

    The Wyndham Grand Clearwater Beach General Manager Seth McDaniels said Hurricane Helene sent 6 feet of water into the basement of the hotel, causing multi-million dollars in damage, but luckily none of the front-facing guest areas were affected. McDaniels said the Wyndham reopened about a week after Hurricane Milton passed.

    “As soon as the bridge opened, I think it was seven days later, we were able to open the hotel up for business,” he said. “That was great for the community, for our team, to get back to work.”

    McDaniels said the hotel bounced back better than expected.

    “We recovered in a strong way, especially on occupancy,” he said. “We really only lost from 2024 three months out of the year. Everything else… we exceeded our occupancy expectations and year over year.”

    The general manager credits his staff and the VSPC “Still Shining” campaign for helping to get the word out after the storms that the area was open.

    “I think the biggest piece of it was really just kind of informing and giving confidence to our guests that we’re open for business,” he said. “Our team did an amazing job… We had drone shows. We put lists of all the restaurants in the area, bars, that were open.”

    The Pinellas County bed tax is used to market the area to visitors. It’s also used for capital projects that draw visitors, like beach renourishment or remodeling the Palladium Theater.

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    Josh Rojas

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  • How western N.C.’s tourist dependent businesses are surviving after Helene

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    OLD FORT, N.C. (AP) — Morning mist is still burning off the surrounding mountains when they appear: Small groups of helmeted riders on one-wheeled, skateboard-like contraptions, navigating the pitched streets, past the 30-foot granite Arrowhead Monument on the town square.


    What You Need To Know

    • Old Fort, like many other towns in western North Carolina, have reopened since Helene but are still struggling to get the word out to tourists 
    • Old Fort has been transitioning to a tourism based economy since furniture manufacturer Ethan Allen, one of the town’s largest employers, laid off more than 300 people in 2019 
    • Biking trails became one of the town’s biggest draws, but flooding from Helene washed many of them away and damaged nearby businesses like Old Fort Bike Shop which suffered $150k in uninsured losses 
    • Tourism has been slowed down by the 35 miles of the Blue Ridge Parkway that sit closed for repairs and aren’t slated to reopen until fall 2026


    They are among the 400 or so people converging on this Blue Ridge foothills town for FloatLife Fest, which bills itself as “the ORIGINAL and LONGEST RUNNING” gathering dedicated to motorized Onewheel boards. Swelling Old Fort’s normal population by half, the mid-September festival is injecting much needed money and hope into a town still recovering a year after it was inundated by the remnants of Hurricane Helene.

    “We should definitely come back again,” says Jess Jones, a 34-year-old marine biologist from Edinburgh, Scotland. “The vibe and the welcome that we got there was really nice.”

    That the festival occurred at all is a tribute to the area’s natural beauty, and the resilience of its people.

    Signs of progress are mixed with still-visible scars from Helene in this town about 24 miles (39 kilometers) east of Asheville. Most of Old Fort’s shops have reopened, even as workers continue clawing away at a debris pile downtown and some homes remain unlivable.

    Like other businesspeople in this tourist-dependent mountain region, bike shop owner Chad Schoenauer has been banking on a strong fall leaf-peeping season to help get him back on track after Helene. But many seem to assume Old Fort is still a wasteland.

    “‘Oh, I didn’t know that you were open,’” he says is a typical reaction.

    Helene’s floods and landslides interrupt outdoor tourism makeover

    When Helene swept through, Old Fort was well on its way to remaking itself as an outdoor destination, especially after furniture manufacturer Ethan Allen laid off 325 workers when it converted its factory there into a distribution center in 2019.

    “When the Ethan Allen layoff happened, local leaders started coming together and saying, `How do we use these beautiful natural assets that we have to diversify the manufacturing economy?’” says Kim Effler, president and CEO of the McDowell Chamber of Commerce.

    Named for a Revolutionary War-era stockade, the town decided to become a world-class destination for hiking, running, horseback riding and, most notably, mountain biking.

    “We have a red clay that makes some of the best trails in the country,” FloatLife founder Justyn Thompson says. “The trails are epic.”

    In 2021, the G5 Trail Collective — a program led by the nonprofit Camp Grier outdoors complex — got the U.S. Forest Service to agree to 42 miles (68 kilometers) of new multi-purpose trails. The effort began paying dividends almost immediately.

    “For every trail that we were able to open, we saw a new business open up in town,” says Jason McDougald, the camp’s executive director.

    The collective had just completed the 21st mile (34th kilometer) of trail when Helene, in Schoenauer’s words, hit “the reset button” by washing away trails and damaging businesses.

    When the storm blew through on Sept. 27, 2024, the Catawba River converged with the normally placid Mill Creek, leaving much of downtown under several feet of muddy water.

    Schoenauer, who opened his Old Fort Bike Shop in 2021, says it took two days before he could make it to town to assess damage to the business housed in a refurbished 1901 former general store.

    “I was numb coming all the way here,” he says. “And as soon as I got off the exit, I started crying.”

    The water rose more than 3 feet (1 meter) inside the shop, leaving behind a 10-inch (25-centimeter) layer of reddish-brown mud. The beautiful heart pine floors buckled.

    Schoenauer says he suffered about $150,000 in uninsured losses.

    At the Foothills Watershed mountain biking complex along the Catawba, the storm took 48 large shade trees and an 18,000-square-foot (1,672-square-meter) track built with banks and jumps.

    “We had a septic field, a brand-new constructed septic field for the business that was destroyed,” says Casey McKissick, who spent the last three years developing the bike park. “Never been used; not even turned on yet. And it all went right down the river.”

    McKissick says the business didn’t have flood insurance because it was too costly, and the threat of a catastrophic event seemed too remote.

    The damage amounted to $150,000. Worse yet was the loss of eight months of business, including last year’s foliage season.

    “We lost that really critical fourth quarter of the year, which is a beautiful fall,” McKissick says.

    Blue Ridge Parkway closure slows visitors’ return

    Gov. Josh Stein recently announced that travelers had spent a record $36.7 billion in the state last year. But that boom eluded the counties worst hit by Helene.

    Visitor spending in Buncombe County — home to Asheville — was down nearly 11% last year compared to 2023, according to the state Department of Commerce.

    In McDowell, tourist spending dropped nearly 3% in that same period. Effler says this June and July, foot traffic at the county’s largest visitor center was down 50% from last year.

    She blames much of that on damage to the Blue Ridge Parkway, which is consistently one of the most-visited of the national parks. About 35 miles (56 kilometers) of the North Carolina route — including long stretches in McDowell County — aren’t slated to reopen until fall 2026.

    McDougald says nearly every trail in the Old Fort complex was damaged, with landslides taking out “300-foot sections of trail at a time.”

    They’ve managed to reopen about 30 miles (48 kilometers) of trail, but he says about that many miles remain closed.

    Schoenauer reopened his shop in December, but traffic was down by about two-thirds this summer.

    “My business, revenue-wise, has shifted more to the repair side,” he says. “People trying to still recreate, but use the bike that they have just to keep it going and have some fun.”

    The Watershed complex opened in June, but without the planned riverfront gazebo and performance stage. And they’ve moved the bike jumps to higher ground.

    “It’s changed our way of looking at the floodplain, for sure,” McKissick says.

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    Associated Press

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  • Lingering hotel and rental closures impact bed tax collections in Pinellas

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    ST. PETE BEACH, Fla. — Bed tax collections in Pinellas County have been down for two months in a row with a major contributing factor coming from hotels and short term vacation rentals which have remained closed since last year’s hurricanes, according to Visit St. Pete-Clearwater.


    What You Need To Know

    • St. Pete Beach currently has four large hotels which have not yet reopened
    • Those hotels include The Postcard Inn, The Beachcomber, The Bellwether and the Dolphin Resort
    • The Beachcomber will reopen on Oct. 30
    • Bed tax collections in Pinellas County were down for June and July 


    “The majority of the shortfall is coming from… vacation rentals and some of our lower areas of Pinellas County,” said Eddie Kirsch, VSPC Dir. Digital and Data. “St. Pete Beach and a little bit of Madeira and Treasure Island areas as well.”

    St. Pete Beach currently has four large hotels that have not yet reopened. These include The Postcard Inn, The Beachcomber, The Bellwether and the Dolphin Resort. According to the latest VSPC data, 704 rooms remain closed in St. Pete Beach, with only 66 percent of the hotels open.

    “The Postcard’s coming back, the Beachcomber’s coming back. We all expect those pretty soon,” said Charlie Justice, Tampa Bay Beaches Chamber of Commerce Pres. & CEO. “The Bellwether’s still a little bit longer term, the Dolphin still a little bit longer term. And so we’re seeing it’s a long haul for some of these folks.”

    The Beachcomber has confirmed it will reopen on October 30.

    “Since closing, the iconic property that’s home to the legendary Jimmy B’s Beach Bar has restored its hurricane-damaged areas,” stated spokesperson Jessica Milton. “Including its first-floor guest rooms, meeting and event spaces, hotel lobby, swimming pool, and courtyard.”

    Justice said The Bellwether was severely damaged by the hurricanes and he expects the hotel to reopen in 2026.

    “They had so much of their infrastructure in the lower levels where the sand and the water infiltrated everything,” he said. “The damage was worse than they thought. So this does take a little bit longer.”

    At the Tourist Development Council meeting in August, it was revealed that bed tax collections were unusually down.

    “The TDT collections in June of 2025 was just shy of $7.5 million,” said Kirsch. “This was a little bit irregular from the previous few fiscal years for June. Ultimately, it was down about 12.2%.”

    Kirsch also said demand has slowed a lot in many areas of Florida. The Tourist Development Tax collections for July, the most recent data VSPC has available, showed the month was down 9.8% from the previous year. The total fiscal year to date TDT collections are down 5.46%.

    While the overall numbers have been down recently, Clearwater Mayor Bruce Rector pointed out that some areas of Pinellas County are still doing well.

    “Dunedin, St. Pete and Clearwater had a really good month,” he said. “We spent as a city $85 million to get back quickly.”

    According to VSPC, 94.8% of hotel rooms in Pinellas County are open. Captain Dylan Hubbard, the owner of Hubbard’s Marina at John’s Pass in Madeira Beach, said his business had its best June ever.

    “It’s tough because right to our south, right to our north, we have neighbors that are suffering,” he said. “So it’s hard to be on top of a mountaintop screaming, ‘Hey, this is the best year ever. We’re doing great.’ When other people around us still haven’t been able to open up or haven’t been able to recover or are still struggling.”

    Justice said the hotel closures in the south Pinellas County have caused a major drop in foot traffic, which has been affecting nearby businesses. He’s encouraging locals to visit those beach towns.

    “Be a tourist in your own hometown,” he said. “Come out to the beaches and enjoy what the tourists get to enjoy.”

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    Josh Rojas

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  • Don CeSar welcomes overnight guests 6 months after hurricanes

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    ST. PETE BEACH, Fla. — The Don CeSar hotel in St. Pete Beach welcomed overnight guests back a few days before their scheduled 6 month re-opening of April 1, according to General Manager Barbara Readey.


    What You Need To Know

    • The Don CeSar welcomed overnight guests back on March 28
    • Hurricane Helene sent a 2-to-3 foot storm surge inside the building on Sept. 26, 2024 
    • The reopening of the iconic Pink Palace will boost bed tax collections, which have been down in St. Pete Beach
    • The general manager said 34 of 277 rooms are still out of service but expected to come back in a couple of months


    “We just opened our doors on Friday and people are really wanting to come back,” she said. “They missed us, and the community has really embraced our reopening.”

    Readey said the iconic Pink Palace had been closed for renovations after Hurricane Helene sent a 2-to-3 foot storm surge inside the building on Sept. 26.

    “Our pools were entirely filled with sand. It was incredibly surreal,” she said. “Now we’re more resilient. Our electrical and mechanical are now raised. So the next storm won’t take us down.”

    The Pinellas County Tourist Development Council has been anxious to see The Don CeSar reopen, with its 277 rooms, as data have shown a significant decline in bed tax collections in St. Pete Beach since the storms.

    The December data, released at a TDC meeting in February, showed a 50% decline in Tourist Development Tax collections compared to the same month the previous year.

    “A significant decline still remains in St. Pete Beach. In those more southern beach communities,” said Eddie Kirsch, VSPC Dir. Digital and Data. “One positive note that I do want to point out here is that we’ve been seeing the demand really return at a faster click than the available supply.”


    January data showed a 38.4% decline in TDT collections.

    “We’re still seeing some deflation in our southern beach areas,” said Kirsch. “St. Pete Beach, Treasure Island and Madeira Beach.”

    At least four more hotels in St. Pete Beach, with a combined 627 rooms, are scheduled to reopen before the end of the year, according to Kirsch.

    “We’re paying close attention to the hotels and the projects that are reopening,” he said. “To make sure that as those start to reopen, we’re focused on driving demand.”

    The Don CeSar already got a jump by hosting a wedding this past weekend when the hotel opened early, according to Readey.

    “Our very first night on March 28, we did 153 rooms. It was at a very high average rate,” she said. “It’s worth every penny because you’re going to love it here.”

    The GM said 34 rooms where electrical lines had to be moved are still out of service but expected to come back in the next couple of months, along with the shops on the ground floor.

    “In mid-May our ground floor partially will open,” she said. “Including four retail stores and Uncle Andy’s Ice Cream and Coffee Shop.”

    Readey said nearly all the hotel staff has returned too.

    “We have the most loyal team members. We had 100 percent of many departments return after 6 months of being closed,” she said. “It’s amazing. I mean, Mother Nature was strong, but our steadfastness was even stronger.”  

    Following hurricane recovery and extensive renovations in 2017, Readey said the Pink Palace has never looked so good in its long storied history.

    “We’re 97 years young, and this is the best we’ve ever looked,” she said. “We are better than ever in product and, most importantly, service.”


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    Josh Rojas

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  • New hotel welcomes surge of visitors to Winter Haven

    New hotel welcomes surge of visitors to Winter Haven

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    WINTER HAVEN, FL. — Winter Haven has recently opened its first downtown hotel in over a century, looking to accommodate an increased number of tourist in the fast-growing area.


    What You Need To Know

    • Winter Haven, according to U.S. Census data, is one of the fastest-growing cities in the country. The city recently constructed a new downtown hotel to accommodate the increased number of tourists
    • In the last few years, over 500 hotel rooms have been developed which has boosted employment
    • The Winter Haven Chamber of Commerce reports that the Winter Haven-Lakeland area has experienced a 45% population growth rate between 2010 and 2020
    • The city of Winter Haven has been working on downtown redevelopment for the last 25 years

    Eric Labbe, the Director of Economic Opportunity and Community Investment in Winter Haven, says the new Staybridge Suites hotel will provide a place for visitors to spend the night, host conferences and events, as well as support local businesses.

    In the last few years, over 500 hotel rooms across the city have been developed, which Labbe says has boosted employment.    

    “Creating jobs is one of the big economic drivers here in Winter Haven,” he said.

    The Winter Haven Chamber of Commerce reports that the Winter Haven-Lakeland area has experienced a 45% population growth rate between 2010 and 2020.

    Labbe states that Winter Haven has managed to maintain its small-town charm, even with the recent growth, believing it is appealing to both visitors and residents.

    “They want something a little bit hometown, still has vibrancy and things to do, but isn’t quite so big,” he said.

    Angie Hibbard, the city’s Community Redevelopment Manager, is thrilled to see these changes take shape.

    “We’ve got enough money coming into Winter Haven to advance our parks and our system and infrastructure,” she said. “It’s a group effort to get where we are and to keep up with the growth. It takes both the residents, businesses and the staff.”

    Hibbard expects that hotel guests who visit as tourists will return to Winter Haven as friends, contributing to the city’s legacy.

    “To be able to help grow my city is beyond belief. You get to see a little bit more of the history,” she said.

    In total, there have been 894 hotel rooms added since the first Legoland Hotel opened in 2015.

    The city of Winter Haven has been redeveloping downtown for the last 25 years. Recently, the city opened the Sidewalk Cafe District on Central Avenue. They also plan to open an 88-unit apartment complex next month.

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    Fadia Patterson

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