Meeting
Presenters:
Bob Mills, Ocean Center
Evelyn Fine, Mid-Florida Research
David Moore, PFM, Financial Advisor
Jim Wachtel, Dickens & Associates
Audience
Attendance:
Larry Cohen Oceans Resorts
Gary Brown Sun Viking Lodge
Bob Davis Hotel/Motel Association
Sharon Mock DBACVB
Michael Porter CII
Rick Hamilton Ocean Center
Chad Smith Ocean Center
Rhonda Orr Volusia County Financial Services
Frank Gummy Legal Dept., Volusia County
Charlene Weaver CFO, Volusia County
Jay Glover PFM
Ann McFall Volusia County
Charles Fagan Ramada Inn Speedway
Jim Cameron Daytona Beach/Halifax Chamber of Commerce
Call to order
Board Chairman Dwight D.
Lewis, called the TDC Board Meeting to Order at 9:00 a.m. With the
exception of Steve McGuire and Christina Travis, all Board Members were
present.
Approval of Minutes as
Mailed
Minutes for the October
16, 2001, TDC Board Meeting were unanimously approved by Board Members
upon the Motion of Lori Campbell- Baker and Seconded by Gilly Aguiar.
Mr. Lewis – called the
roll to make sure everyone was in attendance, and introduced Dana Li,
from the Best Western as the new member.
We have a presentation of
the quarterly financial report by Bob Mills.
BOB MILLS – has been
with the Ocean Center for about two months. What I have handed out is
not necessarily the financial statement, I was thinking about the
information everyone at this meeting was really interested in is to find
out what kind of surplus the Ocean Center is running; and really taking
a look at the bigger picture than just one quarter. Besides that,
governmental accounting doesn’t take effect at the lightning speed
that I’m used to in private industry, and the books are still open
(believe it or not), so even though we ended the quarter and the year
September 30th, a lot of things have not gelled yet and things still
have to be done, and when you look at these figures, please remember
they are extremely preliminary, and one of the first items is the Resort
Tax which you are extremely interested in, it is extremely preliminary
that is just an estimate, it is based on the activity that is the result
of the receipts in the General Ledger to date. Not all of the resort tax
that we will be receiving and allocating to us is reflected, so I put in
there the estimate, actually I think it will probably be higher than
that. I have broken down the resort tax, the income is derived from
Events, Concessions, which is part of the events; Rentals which is
basically an internal type of rental with Adventure Landing and
Investments, that is the interest we earn on our fund balance and other
sources of income.
Next is General Operating
expenses, I’m not presenting this as you would normally a governmental
entity, I’ve put this more in format that you would find in a
"for profit" business. The margin from operations is almost
always the one that most business people look at, and this year it is
anticipated the margin should be about $449,000 to $450,000, and then we
have Capital Expenditures, we have not spent all the money that was
allocated for Capital Expenditures for the year, leaving us an excess
revenue over expenses of $229,000 for the year, that adds down to the
bottom line to increase your fund balance in a "for profit"
business that’s your retained earnings; so we’ve added the $229,000
to the fund balance at the end of last year giving us approximately $1.9
million dollars in the Fund Balance.
MR. LEWIS – Any
questions for Bob?
GILLY AGUAIR – On the
rentals, you say that is mostly the lease with Adventure Landing, so
that’ s money that we really don’t have, that’s accrual isn’t
it?
BOB MILLS – No, they
actually make monthly payments, there are actually two rentals that they
give us, one is on the land, and the other is for parking space in the
parking garage, but they are billed on a monthly basis and are paying us
on a monthly basis also.
LORI CAMPBELL-BAKER –
Am I understanding that on the first line we were budgeted for $1.8
million but we actually took in more resort tax as of this time?
BOB MILLS – That’s
what I believe will happen, yes.
LORI CAMPBELL-BAKER –
So that’s a projection on your part?
BOB MILLS – It is a
projection on my part. Last year the final analyses the resort tax that
was credited to the Ocean Center was a little over $2 million, I think
it was $2 million $29 thousand dollars, somewhere in that range, and the
broad data as to collection for this year is actually more than last
year; so I anticipate it will be a little bit more than this.
MR. LEWIS – We don’t
have this on the agenda, but I would like to ask Rick if he will discuss
operation of what is going on, are you having any calls for conventions
that you can’t handle, and how’s the business looking since…
RICK HAMILTON – Good
question. Business is still looking good; we had a little downturn, or
cancellation for the weeks after September 11th, but since then
everything has picked back up. Of the two things that canceled, one came
back, and it was bigger than it was before it canceled, so we feel very
optimistic about everything that’s going on. Convention groups are
calling, we are working closely with everyone, with the Ocean Walk
Alliance, and things are looking good right now for us.
MR. LEWIS – So you
haven’t seen a decline on the calls you’re still getting?
RICK HAMILTON – No,
none what so ever.
MR. LEWIS – We are
going to have a presentation by Evelyn Fine
Copies of the
presentation of the Meeting Planners Discussion Group were handed out.
EVELYN FINE – When last
you met, and we were looking at some of the plans for the center, I made
the comment that the one thing we haven’t done to any extent is put
the plans and some of the goals on a table in front of Meeting Planners,
and we thought it would be useful to do that. As part of the research
program, for the Convention and Visitors Bureau, we have planned some
focus groups with Meeting Planners in places such as Washington D.C.,
Atlanta, etc.; some of the markets Meeting Planners would typically come
to Florida from. We decided to allocate time at the most recent one in
Washington D.C. for Meeting Planners to specifically discuss their
requirements from a destination and a convention center. The planners
that we recruited, for those not familiar with the process, we recruited
planners from a facility in Washington D.C. but we also gave them a list
of planners that Sally form the Visitors and Convention Bureau gave us,
people that she felt might be interested, might be suitable, but they
were planners that had to have used at least 1000 rooms in a Florida
destination, and a Convention Center at least twice in the last four
years. So, these are the list of people that we would hope would be on
our list of prospects for any kind of future development, any kind of
future expansion. The respondents were recruited from a list that the
Convention and Visitors Bureau gave us.
We began the session by
discussing a little bit about what has happened since September 11th,
and I felt it was useful to know what was happening out there and what
was on the Meeting Planners minds, and I will just point out that what
Rick said was exactly right, they said that although for the first
couple of weeks after September 11, they had some concerns about what
was going on and had to cancel some short term business, they were
seeing a big improvement, in fact they were seeing more people come to
their meetings, and people seemed to be really dedicated to getting to
meetings. Obviously in the north, a lot of the drive markets did
exceptionally well, even so, they were looking at not changing any of
their plans for future meetings and expected business to continue to be
pretty good.
After discussing that we
discussed nation choices, what went into that kind of choice, we
discussed their convention center use and satisfaction with existing
centers and we spent some time discussing their requirements from a
convention center.
Finally the respondents
were asked to consider changes to an existing hypothetical center. We
said here is the break down in room allocation, for an existing
anonymous center, this is what has been suggested and we would like you
to tell us what you would like to see. Whether you would do what has
been suggested, or if you would change, allocate in different ways, etc.
I would like to point out
a couple things, first of all this is one focus group. As we plan our
other focus groups over the next several months we will continue to ask
these kinds of questions, and look at them. Since the responses were so
homogeneous, since they were so clean on what they wanted, we felt it
was useful to bring you what their major likes and concerns, etc. were.
As always the Meeting Planners were very forthcoming, they like talking
about what they want and don’t want. They are real clear on it, and
again as always, what we found was that the Meeting Planners were really
pretty cohesive in what they wanted, although, we would find someone out
in space on one thing, for the most part, what their demands were, what
they liked or didn’t like about convention centers was pretty clear,
and pretty accurate for most of them.
About destinations,
Florida remains a major meeting destination. You can’t beat the
weather in Florida, and although they talk about the weather in other
destinations such as Chicago, Las Vegas, etc., Florida is still #1 in
terms of attracting their attendees. They want to meet in Florida, it
gets them good attendance and certainly when talking about families,
Florida is always positive. Most of these people were using either Miami
Beach, Orlando and some were using Tampa as well, and they were
exceptionally satisfied with all these cities. We did not hear any kind
of major complaints about them. In fact, over the years we have heard
people complain about the Orlando Convention Center, but this time
around, what they are saying is they seem to have gotten their act
together, they are more willing to talk to them, they have a different
approach to marketing than they have had in the past and they were doing
some really good business with them. Some said they wanted to use the
Ft. Lauderdale and Ponte Vedra areas, but were having trouble getting
into them, so the business is pretty strong in those areas. The
interesting thing is they don’t know a lot about cities outside the
major cities. When we read a list of cities to them, they were unaware
of convention facilities in most places outside of the major cities. The
factors that they consider when looking at cities in descending order
(in your handout) are:
-
Large properties with
a range of 400-300 rooms
-
Cost to organization
of using the area
-
Cost to attendees of
using the area
-
Having all meeting
space under one roof
-
Direct flights from
major hubs (amount of carriers)
-
Convention center
functionality
-
Major brand hotels
-
Wide variety of
priced properties
-
Full service
properties
-
Family activities
-
International Airport
-
Available shuttle
service between hotels & convention center
Accessibility of
"night life" was a very minor issue for them. They were really
looking for the business end of it, easy to get to, affordable and a
functional convention center.
We then gave them a list
and asked them to rank convention centers factors, and again, they are
listed in descending order:
-
Cost of facility and
provided services
-
Ample breakout rooms
(average of 29)
-
Exhibition hall
layout and functionality
-
Ample exhibit space
(average 71,000 sq. ft.)
-
Navigation from point
to point within facility
-
Meet & feed
capability in the same facility (average 2000)
-
Accessible &
professional sales & planning and convention
staff
-
High quality food
service operation (non-arena style)
-
Recommendation of
those who have used the facility before
-
Shuttle service from
hotels to facility
-
Convenient parking
Also mentioned were
ability for planners to control lighting/air without having to send for
somebody and types of hotels in the vicinity of the center and
conveniently located, well equipped office for their staff.
We then asked them about
some specific factors, which might affect their convention center
choice. The first one was: divided exhibition space in one or more
areas, (i.e. foyers, hallways, separate buildings etc.) That was just
not acceptable to them. Conference, meals, breakouts, in separate
buildings such as a campus setting was just not acceptable to them. This
was unanimous. Conference, meals, breakouts in both the convention
center and adjacent hotels were acceptable in the proper circumstances.
In other words, if you had a food function or breakout in a hotel in the
morning and then went to the convention center for the balance of the
day that would be acceptable; or if you had a function at the hotel at
night after they left the convention center that was acceptable. They
would not tolerate nor would they accept transferring between the hotels
during the day, that was simply not acceptable. The use of multiple
hotels and motorcoach shuttling between convention center and various
locations was acceptable, maybe they don’t love it, but they are used
to it and they understand that is what life is all about. They even have
to do it in places like Miami and Orlando so they are not surprised by
that. The respondents were used to and spent a lot of time in two story
convention centers, but told me how important it was to have escalators
and good navigation between the two floors, but again, that’s
something they have had to become accustomed to.
We then put on the table
the specs for the existing center, and we said, this is what exists,
this is what is suggested, and again this is up to you to tell us what
would work and what wouldn’t work. It was interesting, we showed it to
them in three phases, but they didn’t like the idea of three phases.
They said how do we buy a building that is maybe going to be here or
there, the most they were comfortable with was two phases, they thought
that a third phase with only 5000 sq. ft. didn’t make much sense to
them, and again, that’s not their issue, they don’t care how we
finance it or how the building is going to be built.
Only two respondents
wanted additional Ballroom space; all wanted additional meeting space
suggesting 25,000 to 105,000 sq. ft. About half wanted additional
exhibit space suggesting 30,000 to 70,000 additional sq. ft.
Also, if you are thinking
about renovating using state of the art audio-visual equipment, a
non-arena feel to the space, good signage and staffing.
Again, this is just one
discussion group, but what struck us was just how homogenous they were
and how clear they were on certain specifics. Any questions?
JIM BAZEMAN – These are
Meeting Planners? They are what I call people movers; don’t they
basically decide where they are going to go?
EVELYN FINE – Yes.
JIM BAZEMAN – I’ve
been told that less than 200 people actually book 75 to 80% of the
business nationwide. Is that right?
EVELYN FINE – I don’t
know, it’s not a figure I’ve ever heard.
JIM BAZEMAN – My point
is this, we’ve been talking about exhibit space, now all of a sudden
the people who bring people here want conference rooms. Are we headed in
the wrong direction?
EVELYN FINE – Based on
what these Meeting Planners have told us, conference and meeting space
is what they are looking for.
GILLY AGAIUR – They
need that for the breakouts, if it’s a company function or an
industry, they are doing learning sessions and so forth, and the meeting
space is quite important to just about everyone.
JIM BAZEMAN – If we had
to make a choice right now, do we go for meeting space or exhibit hall.
My point is this, we have "X" amount of dollars, my priority
from what I have gathered so far is exhibition space, now I’m hearing
this. When will you have other focus groups that you can report back to
us?
EVELYN FINE – Probably
the middle of January we will have completed the range.
TOM STAED – What was
the size of these meetings?
EVELYN FINE – They used
1000 rooms.
TOM STAED – Ten Meeting
Planners?
EVELYN FINE – Yes.
TOM STAED – They need
29 breakout rooms?
EVELYN FINE – They said
they need an average of 29.
STUART ARP – Of those
ten people how many actually have trade shows?
EVELYN FINE – They all
had exhibit space. All indicated exhibit space was very important to
them; they had to satisfy their exhibitors who are footing the bills in
many ways, that was a profit center for them. So they wanted to make
sure their exhibit space was successful that their planners were herded
to and from the exhibit space is a natural flow of the meeting.
LORI CAMPBELL-BAKER – I
think this is critical information, it is so easy to go down a path that
is not the right path, and missed it completely. We were talking about
moving to the next tier, and getting those meetings, but we could miss
the boat completely by not building in what they need. I too, was
surprised by 29 breakout rooms but it will be interesting to see what is
coming up next with these groups.
JIM BAZEMAN – We have a
building right now, do they know the size, shape and function of the
building right now?
EVELYN FINE – They know
the amount of space we allocate for each function of the building.
Ballroom space, meeting space and exhibit space.
JIM BAZEMAN – What I’m
saying is could we remodel to make it more acceptable to what they want
with what we have? We ’re going to grow some, but did they have a
chance to give you any input about this particular building?
EVELYN FINE – That’s
what they did. They gave us the amount of space they would like to see
in each one of those function spaces. We didn’t say design it, because
that’s not their function. We just said, "How much space would
you like to see added to this to make it functional for you and for you
to consider this building."
MR. LEWIS – You say you
are going to be meeting with another group?
EVELYN FINE – Yes sir,
we are planning another group in Atlanta and possibly in Chicago as
well. We are checking to see what the Meeting Planner behavior in those
areas is right now.
MR. LEWIS – Do you have
the numbers that you will be meeting with?
EVELYN FINE – We always
do the same thing. Eight to ten planners in each group.
STUART ARP – What is
the exhibit space we were considering? How many sq. ft. were we talking
about?
JOHN MASIARCZYK –
124,000 sq. ft.
STUART ARP – We were
talking about 124,000 sq. ft. and this group is saying 30,000 to 70,000
is what we need. Obviously we were doing a lot less breakout meeting
space than they said we needed.
RICK HAMILTON – I don’t
have the Johnson report with me Stuart, but I think it said that 70% of
the groups within the continental United States used 100,000 sq. ft. or
less. Evelyn, did you say you want to be able to feed 2000 people, but
at the same time their least priority was another ballroom, and I don’t
know how you’re going to feed them without ballrooms.
EVELYN FINE – Good
point, but they were thinking they might have some of those food
functions at a hotel.
LORI CAMPBELL-BAKER –
When you were talking to them about Miami and places they know of do
they know about Daytona Beach?
EVELYN FINE – No.
MR. LEWIS – Maybe you
could ask them how they get information on places.
EVELYN FINE – That’s
an ongoing process. They always want to hear from the town itself and
from the local Visitor and Convention Bureau, they even wanted people
there from the Airport and transportation industry when they make these
kinds of decisions.
GILLY AGUAIR – The 1000
rooms, would that be considered the top tier? We thought if we did our
space we would jump to the top of the second tier of convention centers,
not going against the Orlando, Chicago, L.A. type of markets.
EVELYN FINE – Sally
would be better able to answer that.
Gilly repeated his
question for Sally to hear.
SALLY – I think it
depends on the configuration of the meetings and what the real specs
are, and a lot of the things we were trying to get our hands around is
the number of rooms involved with the convention that also has a trade
show that needs maximum space. There is a point at which you don’t get
your return on investment based upon requirements of a meeting, so is
this the upper second tier, I don’t think so, I don’t think we’re
there yet. I think this would be very medium size in terms of centers
around the country. I talked to a man from Virginia Beach yesterday, and
he said that unless we get in the mode of a 25 year plan, we look to
expand or renovate every seven or eight years, to do this on a piecemeal
basis is not a good approach. I thought that was good advice. What we
are doing now is just bringing ourselves up to where we should be or
could be to do good media conventions, but we need to talk also about
our long-range plans.
STUART ARP – A 1000
room convention is not a top tier convention. You are talking 3000 to
4000 rooms for these big centers. This is the kind of thing we should be
listening to. If you break down all my meeting space, new and existing,
I have 31 rooms. No one is going to come in and break them all out. When
we have a potential customer what do they need, and what don’t we
have? I am not booking when they need exhibit space that I cannot
provide. We have the issue of going back and forth across the street,
and that is an issue. We’ve talked about the garage and the beach
shops connected; maybe we do another connector with our building to try
to bring that all together.
The next ten people you
talk to may give you another answer.
EVELYN FINE – Most of
what we heard was not a surprise, in terms of "under one roof"
that sort of thing. We’ve never looked at specific numbers before and
that is what we are continuing to gather. But, they’ve always been
clear about convenience being important, that accessibility, mobility,
functionality.
GILLY AGUIAR – About
the meeting space, 29 might be a good number, but I don’t think they
all have to be quite as big. A room this size is considered meeting
space, as long as it has the audio/visual hookups to do power point and
slide shows etc. to have their meeting. Some rooms could be about this
size and typical ones that I see when we go to conventions are about 40’
x 80’, it’s just enough room to put chairs, and have a meeting.
EVELYN FINE – There was
one other interesting point, we had one person there who was a Meeting
Planner for Communication Workers of America, and because they have to
use union facilities they are more and more out of places to go. We have
always heard the other side, that unions are expensive to use, but it
seems that not just unions but other associations are looking for places
to make them feel good about who they do business with. They are
narrowing the places they can go, not expanding them.
GILLY AGUIAR – Another
interesting observation is that they want the space to be comfortable,
not an arena type space.
EVELYN FINE – They’ve
been to arena’s they don’t want to do it if they don’t have to. We
heard so many comments about the Orlando facility, that it is an
elegantly done building, that they felt it was a real professional
building, and what was interesting is that people used to complain that
it was to big. Orlando has figured out how to put multiple meetings in
their space, and each one of them feels that they own that space. They
have done a good job of turning around a problem that they had and that
we have been hearing for years. They say if they are in Orlando and they
are in one end of the building they know their headquarters hotel is the
Peabody, if they are in the other end they know their headquarters hotel
is the Omni. They have easy access to it and it is no longer a problem,
so that huge building, that for years was a liability, is not to these
big planners any longer.
SALLY – There were
three of the planners who commented that Orlando was the best of the
seven or eight that they have used. And most of these people have been
just about everywhere and are used to the very, very best facility, so
they really know exactly what they want.
GILLY AGUIAR – The one
thing about the Orlando center is it is still a nightmare to get to and
from in the morning and afternoon, and that is another reason they want
everything under one roof.
TOM STAED – I think you
need to also refine what kind of conventions or meetings are we really
searching for in this community. It’s a different kind of convention
that brings in a lot of people that is spread up and down the beach than
the one that brings in a thousand people who want one convention we need
to have the ability to do those 5000 to 6000 person meetings that spread
this thing up and down the beach and not just centralized. Certainly the
majority of them are going to be the centralized ones, but we also need
to do that, and I’m not sure what kind of convention people those ten
folks were.
EVELYN FINE – Let me
remind you that it was 1000 minimum rooms, some of them were well up
from that. We can specify who we want and Sally gave them a list of who
we felt was appropriate for us. But down the road, we can recruit by any
specs.
TOM STAED – We need to
spec out what kind of groups we are really searching for. The people who
are using Vegas, Orlando and Chicago are very rarely going to come to
even an expanded one here. In my opinion a Best Western that has 4500 to
a convention will have things that this facility will probably never
have.
MR. LEWIS – I thought
it interesting that in their destination response they said there were
too many distractions in Orlando. There are some kinds of conventions,
like you were saying Tom; they go to Vegas to have fun and they wanted
the distractions. The kind that we want, I would think, are the kinds
that don’t want too many distractions.
Who are we trying to
attract, and what do they want or need, before we go further than that.
EVELYN FINE – These
people were people that Sally thought had potential to be here. They
were our market. They did fit our demographic and our character. People
that we would go after.
JIM BAZEMORE – The fact
that we are on the beach our biggest asset right over there, a block
away, did that come into play at any time?
EVELYN FINE – I have to
tell you that in all the years we’ve been doing focus groups with
Meeting Planners, the one thing they’ve never said that was important
to them was the beach. Orlando doesn’t have a beach, Miami Beach does,
but the convention center is not on the beach. We thought outdoor
activities might be important, it’s not, even golf. Although they like
to play after, everybody has golf. The same things that attract a
leisure group do not attract these major groups. They ’re very
specific, very business like.
GILLY AGUIAR – The
beach would become a factor if they bring their families.
JIM BAZEMORE – Or
staying longer, or coming earlier.
MR. LEWIS – This is
just one group, we are attracting another facet of the convention
business that attracts another type of group.
Audience Question:
Gary Brown, Sun Viking
Lodge
Would there be any
benefit to looking at the parallels between us and Orlando, as far as
they have been through three or four renovations, and to see by what
percentage they increased exhibit space, what percentage they increased
breakout rooms and conference space and if each year they keep adding
one segment and one keeps shrinking. We might be able to extract some
information from them, obviously we are never going to be in that
market, but if we see their trend we may be able to benefit from them.
Each time they make an addition there might be something there that will
benefit us.
MR. LEWIS – I think
that would be good information for us to have. Even if we aren’t in
that same market, we are in the same region and will tend to follow
those trends down the road, I would think. So I think that is
information we need to look at.
STUART ARP – We need to
look at if we have "x" amount of exhibit space currently, and
they’re saying 30,000 to 70,000 additional look at other exhibit space
that meet that criteria and say do you need more breakouts, how many do
you have, what are the complaints about your facility and does this work
for the type of things for that size group.
MR. LEWIS – I think
this is some of the most important information that we’ve gotten, and
I want to thank Sharon Mock, she’s the one that had it put on the
agenda. It has been important to all of us. The concern about getting
down the road in our thoughts without doing enough research and going
the wrong way, is a very dangerous thing. I think we really need to do
the research and the way we are headed is the proper way. I’m sure
everybody here wants to hear the report when you’ve finished the next
meeting in January.
JIM BAZEMORE – Let me
ask her to come back after each one and give us a report.
MR. LEWIS – Thank you
very much Evelyn.
GILLY AGUIAR – I guess
it shows that campus concept wasn’t good.
MR. LEWIS – Now we’re
going to have another discussion, I know Charlene did this earlier, but
no matter what we want, we have to be able to fund it. There’s a
ceiling to the amount of money we have to work with, or debt service
that we can afford to pay back. As I was looking at our projected
phases, and I think phase I was $60 million, that can’t be phase I, we
don’t have $60 million. Phase II on down the road. We need to make
sure what kind of revenues we have or ability for debt service and make
sure that money is reflected in our phasing that we are looking at. Then
we have to make we’re on board and get that funding everybody’s
looking at and we’re talking about, and that’s the extra 1% on the
resort tax. Charlene, would you tell us about that?
CHARLENE WEAVER – Good
Morning, thank you for inviting us back, and hopefully we will provide
some helpful information to you. I did ask David Moore, our financial
advisor with Volusia County to join us. David, you might want to sit up
there next to Dwight. His assistant Jay Glover is also here. I wanted to
briefly remind you of a couple of things; the last time we were here we
gave some information to you, and we’ll go over that again today if
you would like to have that. Without the extra penny, we have about $10
million, which probably won’t do too much for your plans. With the
extra penny, based on the pro forma financial statements, which were
done by Johnson Group, we used the amount we showed for debt service,
which was around $2 million. All of the growth, however, was used for
operating beyond that point, so that was the perimeters we used; that we
had $2 million for debt service, and what that would generate. David ran
a couple of scenarios whether it was 20 or 30 years, and he can go over
those with you, but it’s not anywhere close to $60 million, so we’ve
got some issues we ’ve got to sort out; either we’re going to devote
more to debt service and less to operating or we’re going to pare back
the building program, whatever you decide.
MR. LEWIS – Charlene,
you’re basing this strictly on the Halifax Area’s?
CHARLENE WEAVER – Yes,
the portion that’s collected in the Halifax Areas.
TOM STAED – Not the
entire county?
MR. LEWIS – The other
two cents has been pledged by the entire county to get the funding for
this, but additionally, we’re looking right now at the Halifax
portion. If we can do it all together that’s part of the discussion.
If we want to have it for the south west or the south east and the west,
that’s different, and we’ll have to see if they will buy into it.
David…
David Moore passed out a
packet to the Board Members.
DAVID MOORE – What I
passed around is the same thing we looked at two or three months ago, if
you’ve got the book from the last time, there’s nothing different.
We looked at market conditions, interest rates are almost identical to
what they were last time, so Charlene asked that I reinforce and update
what we talked about last time. The first page is tracking the bonds
that financed this facility. The third and fourth pages are the numbers
that we should go over. The bottom of the third page just highlighted
using the same debt service that you are paying right now, but extending
it out an extra 20 or 30 years you can pick up an extra $10.5 million at
twenty years, and just short of $17 million if you went up to thirty
years. Assuming you can use the revenues you have now for the next
thirty years you would get that much extra. That does involve going back
and restructuring the existing debt. That would have a small cost, about
$1000 to do that, in order to get to the $17 million. If interest rates
were to rise in the next year or two, the cost of doing the
restructuring would increase. If you get the $17 million now and to do
the restructuring costs you half a million dollars it’s a dollar for
dollar decrease in the benefit to you. So, keep in mind as you move
forward you are going to assume these numbers are available, if interest
rates go up, that number goes down. On the last page, as Charlene
referenced, this assumes that all $2 million per year from the Halifax
area that additional 1% is available. If any of that needs to be used
for operations, you would have to decrease the amount you can borrow.
For 20 years you can get about $20 million for 30 years you could get
about $30 million. That would be in addition to the amount you can get
by just restructuring the existing debt, so the total would be around
$45 million for 30 year financing. That’s the long and short of it.
Just a brief comment, tourist development tax revenues have had a pretty
big test after September 11th, and Orange County and Osceola County in
particular, as you all probably know took a huge hit, and that has
caused the financial markets to look at these types of financing much
more critically.
RICK HAMILTON – I have
been told that to do an issue now on tourist ties, you have to have a
secondary pledge to back it up. Is that true or untrue?
DAVID MOORE – It would
depend on how much you are borrowing, if you were borrowing the max
here, they’re just looking for coverage, if you were only using half
the revenues that were available you are fine; but if you were doing
something that would require the use of all the revenues and your pro
forma for operating the facility uses every other penny, then you would
need some sort of back up.
MR. LEWIS – What is the
tourist tax since September, do you have those figures Charlene? It’s
about flat isn’ t it from where we were last year?
CHARLENE WEAVER – We’re
on track.
MR. LEWIS – So we haven’t
taken the hit they have in Orlando.
CHARLENE WEAVER –
Listening to Rick this morning it sounds like we’re going to be OK,
our sales tax is even holding so far, but that remains to be seen if it
holds.
RICK HAMILTON – There’s
a huge difference, like Evelyn alluded to, Daytona is a drive market,
and Orlando gets a great deal of business through air travel, and that
industry is suffering.
JIM BAZEMORE – If you
had to have back up, what are you talking about?
DAVID MOORE – A pledge
from some other entity, whether it was from the county or a letter of
credit from a bank, the bottom line is, they just want to see some
coverage, if you have a real tight pro forma they are going to look to
the people that are behind you.
JIM BAZEMORE – Since
this is County owned and operated would they look at the county as a
whole?
DAVID MORE – We’ve
seen facilities where some of the businesses involved were hotels and
restaurants, we’ve seen areas where they have occasionally gotten
together and put some sort of assessment behind them also. There are all
sorts of structures out there, but the most common would be some sort of
back up, which I believe originally there was some sort of back up from
the county and the city…
FRANK GUMMY – Just the
city.
DAVID MORE – So there
are all sorts of places you can go to get it. But that’s a deal some
people would have to cut.
GILLY AGUIAR – But that
would go away by the time we were looking for the money.
DAVID MOORE – I think
that if what you said about your collections is true, the tests that you
have had in the last three or four months, is a pretty significant test
as to what would happen in a crisis to your tourist development tax
revenues. The fact that they have been fairly stable… Right now it
might be very difficult to get financing, but as things get settled,
even four or five months from now you could go and show them that even
through September and October the revenues have either had modest
increases or have been flat. You’ve got a pretty good case that you
are different from Orlando or particularly Osceola County which is
devastated, I think 20% to 30% off.
TOM STAED – What months
have you calculated the tax through?
CHARLENE WEAVER –
Through September and October, we have November’s as well.
TOM STAED – So you’re
a month behind?
CHARLENE WEAVER – We
don’t have December’s yet, but we have October and November.
GILLY AGUIAR –
September was down, October was flat, right? And then November was up
2%.
TOM STAED – You get it
a month later, so when you’re talking about September, you really mean
August revenue.
CHARLENE WEAVER – We
are a month behind, we have November reported which would be for the
month of October.
FRANK GUMMY – That’s
correct.
TOM STAED – I have one
more question, you have the revenue and expenses, operating and debt
service mixed together, and long ago we used to keep the debt separate.
The bond revenue from the TDC created a surplus throughout the early
stages when they weren’t mixed together. We used to keep the operating
expenses separate, and make the facility generate its own operating
expenses. This is combining them, there’s probably no other way to do
it anymore; but it cuts down on the amount of money used for bonds.
MR. LEWIS – I think we
can break it out, so at least we can look at it.
TOM STAED –
Historically if that number is growing then we’re not going to get
very much.
JIM BAZEMORE –
Originally, we wanted the center to just break even, then we could take
that additional money and use it for advertising, a sort of self
generating thing. That was our goal. I don’t think we ever got there,
but it’s what we tried to get to.
FRANK GUMMY – I was
here too, and I don’t remember this center ever projected to produce
revenues to cover its expenses.
JIM BAZEMORE – I didn’t
say projected, I said our goal!
RICK HAMILTON – David,
if I understand you correctly, shouldn’t we go ahead and refinance and
put the $17 million in an escrow account if the market is favorable at
this time?
DAVID MOORE – The
refinancing does not produce any savings today. It would be a $120,000
loss today. You are right, rates are very low today, and if you had a
project defined, if you were willing to do that and take out the cost
associated with the old debt, but there are tax restrictions about when
you spend the money, you have to have a project well defined before you
can go out and borrow. There are issues we would have to work through
with bond counseling before you could just go out and issue them.
RICK HAMILTON – So you
can’t do it without a project?
DAVID MOORE – You have
to have a pretty good thought about what the project is going to be. In
the old days, when you borrowed money you could make a little bit on it,
now days you can’t.
MR. LEWIS – What are we
paying for interest rate right now?
DAVID MOORE – It’s
5.5% I believe and now you’re about 5%.
MR. LEWIS – It’s
interesting to me, when you talk about expansion, and you talk about
Orlando being down 20% and we’re not down very much and it’s a
drive-in business that we have here, but yet, Evelyn said that when she
met with these planners they were still doing conventions. Are they
driving more to the conventions?
EVELYN FINE –
Conventions are planned several years out, so they’re projecting for
the business that’s ongoing, but yes, conventions are still filling
up. I think it is the leisure market Orlando is losing all the business
on. Their convention center made up within a few weeks, so I think the
leisure is where they’re losing business. St. Augustine, for instance,
is down 27% and that’s all leisure.
GILLY AGUIAR – We need
to look at these planners and see how many of these convention people
are within driving time from here because of the airline problems.
STUART ARP – That’s
D.C. which is primarily national association, so that would not be drive
in people.
EVELYN FINE – The vast
majority of the large ones are like that. That’s why we’re going to
Atlanta and going to Tallahassee as well.
GILLY AGUIAR – I think
that is important too, how many groups do we have that are within drive
range.
STUART ARP – Maybe do
something in Tallahassee about the big state associations that we can’t
do now. They’re limited to the State of Florida, so they’re looking
at Orlando, Tampa and Miami circuit. How many more of those can we
capture?
Audience Remark:
Sharon Mock, Daytona
Beach Area Convention & Visitors Bureau
Sharon Mock – Stuart’s
right Tallahassee and in Washington D.C. where we did the focus group,
there are probably 20,000 associations headquartered in Washington D.C.
They’re not likely to be a drive-in market. Your drive-in market is
your religious groups, those kinds of groups that will bring their
families and come from all over.
STUART ARP – Regional
associations can be based from anywhere, but Atlanta’s not a bad place
for regional association to be based out of and even some in Florida,
that might be the next thing to look at.
MR. LEWIS – I haven’t
heard a lot of discussion about the funding being the 1% addition to the
tourist development tax. Is anyone admittedly against that, or is it a
consensus that this is the way it should be funded.
JIM BAZEMORE – The only
way sir? How about letting someone else carry some of the load, such as
the restaurants and things of that nature, because up till this time the
hospitality industry has carried everything. And yet, they certainly
benefit. Certainly, when Stuart’ s full this town does a lot of
business.
MR. LEWIS – This has to
be solved. If that is the case, it isn’t going to come out of the
general fund and out of the county tax coffers, I can assure you of
that. And I don’t think you could pass ½% sales tax right now. This
is the only funding method I can see right now, so if anyone has another
idea we need to get it on the table right now and look at it.
GILLY AGUIAR – Frank,
isn’t there a Florida State Statute for a taxing district in what we
perceive to be the value added area?
FRANK GUMMY – No.
GILLY AGUIAR – So if we
were to extend the bonds we have and have the penny we would have $73
million.
DAVID MOORE - $45
million. The things that are generally looked at for these things are
different restaurant taxes, rental car taxes, etc. You could try to do
some type of assessment program, but I don’t know how that would work.
STUART ARP – Could you
do a combination, ½ a penny from hotel, and look at restaurant and car
rental as a way to offset some of that?
RICK HAMILTON – It
takes a legislative act
FRANK GUMMY – You would
have to pass a general law for the whole state to do it.
STUART ARP – Not
likely.
FRANK GUMMY – I haven’t
noticed them passing a lot of laws for additional taxes.
DAVID MOORE – I think
Orlando and Tampa have looked at some of these types of things. First, I
don’t think you could get it through Tallahassee, and there has never
been a time when the people wanting this type of thing adopted are on
the same page. And in the end they find out it is not as much money,
locals go to the restaurants, there are a lot of reasons why it ends up
not working.
JIM BAZEMORE – Bottom
line, it’s easy to add a penny, I think the County Council has the
right to do it right now. In other words, the County Council can do it
right now, but in the hospitality industry how much can we handle? As I’ve
said before, I’ve actually heard people ask the rate, then how much
tax is on top, and if you think people aren’t watching that,
particularly in a downturn they are counting those pennies, and I am
concerned what they are charging in Washington and Philadelphia, I
believe Dwight went somewhere where it was 12% to 15%; and New York went
up high and came back down. I’m just trying to spread the load, we do
need it. There are other people out there that want our business, and
the beach can only draw so much.
MR. LEWIS – I think
that’s healthy discussion, and I want to hear what everybody thinks
about this. But till we solidify that and know where we are getting
financing we’re just doing a lot of talking. If the consensus of this
group is we are not going to do it that way, we may need to postpone a
few things. It depends on whether we feel this expansion is needed and
we want to do it as a community. If we do, in my opinion, this is the
only way we’re going to get it done.
JIM BAZEMORE – Before
it was county wide, we thought the whole county wanted it. It’s the
only really big one in the area. Now, on the next expansion you are
taking out the southwest and southeast, so that leaves the Halifax area,
which carries the bulk of the load anyway, because the rooms are over
here. Every time you take something out of the pot there is that much
less, which we have to raise here. We used to have 19,000 rooms; we have
13,000 rooms now. Our income is reduced, we have more load and we all
want it.
MR. LEWIS – Even within
the Halifax area you have some of the smaller hotels and motels who feel
like they don’t benefit from it and they’re not all supportive of
the expansion, because they don’t see the benefit of it to themselves.
When the building was first built Deltona wasn’t even a city. If we
are going to get money from these areas, even though they don’t want a
convention center in their area, they only have so much tax revenue and
they need to spend it where it will do their citizens the most good. If
you look at what is collected in the southeast or the southwest it is
not as much as in the Halifax area, so I don’t think that makes a very
big difference anyway.
GILLY AGUIAR – We took
that penny in southeast and it generates $200,000 towards our budget. So
it’s not going to be very much. Even with the penny, we don’t have
enough money to do Phase I.
MR. LEWIS – That
depends on what Phase I is and that’s why we haven’ t locked in what
to do.
GILLY AGUIAR – One
question I have for Rick, if we could get the financing could this place
be self sufficient if you were operating on a "full time"
basis?
RICK HAMILTON – You’re
saying that we break even operationally, is that right?
GILLY AGUIAR - Yes, if
you’re running trade shows etc.
RICK HAMILTON - Saving
more debt. No. That’s not going to happen.
GILLY AGUIAR - No, I don’t
mean the debt on the building, I mean the actual payroll, stagings,
work, etc.
RICK HAMILTON – In the
convention industry, everything is an economic impact to the community,
and not to the facility.
GILLY AGUIAR – So we
have to ask the general public to be behind supporting this facility, so
it will bring dollars to the community. We need to have an idea of what
that amount is.
LORI CAMPBELL-BAKER –
Do we have a report like that?
GILLY AGUIAR – Like Tom
said, if we break out the operational part of this, then project what it
would be if we had 200+ days a year…
RICK HAMILTON – Again,
I think that information is in the Johnson Report.
LORI CAMPBELL-BAKER – I
think it will be impossible to pass a tax right now. When we get to it
we need a lot of back up information to tell people this is good for
them, and not just for the facility. It is not a money maker for the
facility, but it is for the community.
STUART ARP – If you
look at the tax of other counties that were provided a few months ago,
we’re on the high end, but if you look at the real tourist areas i.e.,
Orange, Osceola, Pinellas, Dade, Hillsborough, we’re still behind some
of those. Could we change the way we divide the 5% bed tax as a way to
help out.
MR. LEWIS – Charlene
would you get us an update on this, there were a lot of taxes passed
between July when this came out and now.
TOM STAED – What is the
hotel community position on this, both the association and the small
hotels.
Gary Brown, Sun Viking
That’s a good question,
there is both sides to the argument. Obviously the smaller the property
the less interest there is and the benefit they see from having a
convention center. The smaller property owners will probably be less
supportive that the larger property owners will be.
TOM STAED – Has the
hotel association taken a position on this?
GARY BROWN – No we have
not.
TOM STAED – The statute
that allowed you to split the first one, now allows you to split the
thing without getting another one passed?
FRANK GUMMY – The third
cent, we believe could be levied on a less than county wide basis.
STUART ARP – This one
that I have is dated December of 2000. It is a year old. Tampa is 11.75%
Dade is 13.5%, but that depends on where they are located. Pinellas
which is St. Petersburg is 11%, Osceola is 12% and Orange is 11%. These
are the main people we are competing with.
MR. LEWIS – We are
11.5% right now with the new ½% school tax.
TOM STAED – There are
only two counties that are ahead of us with the 11.5%.
JIM BAZEMORE – So if we
put another penny on we would go to 12.5%. Is that not one of the
highest in the state?
STUART ARP – Yes,
except for Dade, it would be the highest.
MR. LEWIS – You said
you were going to add what some of them have passed. You added ours, but
not theirs.
STUART ARP – Duvall is
12.5%, that is Jacksonville. Their convention facility there is not much
bigger than this one, in terms of size.
MR. LEWIS – I think you
in the hotel association need to discuss this more, you are the ones who
benefit from it. When people come here and enjoy themselves, they come
back. They don’t necessarily go to the same hotel, they go to other
areas. And I think we have all benefited from the Ocean Center being
here. If the Ocean Center wasn’t here I don’t think we would have
13,000 rooms.
GARY BROWN – Remember
that most of the hotels and motels in Florida are 50 rooms and less.
TOM STAED – The bottom
line is the convention center benefits a broad segment of the
population.
MR. LEWIS – OK. Mr.
Wachtel, what can you do for $10 million?
Jim Wachtel of Dickens
& Associates passed out a packet to the Board members.
JIM WACHTEL – The good
news is Phase I we have been talking about is not $60 million like
somebody said, the bad news it is more than $17 million that we’ve
been talking about.
As I sat here and
listened, basically what we have done is talk theory and philosophy and
a lot of nice things. My charge from the last meeting was to start
putting something down in concrete that really meets the needs that we
find from Evelyn and the rest of the community. We need to decide on
what size is Phase I, what size is going to be the full build-out, and
how much is it going to cost. Then we have the problem of how to pay for
that.
The first step is to get
all of these interests together, and turn out a concrete set of
guidelines and goals, that we are going to provide so many square feet
of exhibition space, and so much meeting room, and we have to have so
much pre-function space to make it all happen, and it has to fit with
the existing building. That conceptual planning is the next step. It
involves all of the stakeholders, not just the design team. We would be
the leaders and facilitators of the organization, but it would be
directed by the Ocean Center, it would have to include the Convention
& Visitors Bureau, we would have to ask the Hotel/Motel Association
to be involved. We would try to get Charlie Johnson involved since his
pro forma’s have been the basis of this all the way along. We would
ask Stuart to get the HPE people in to lend their expertise, and if
appropriate we would get the Chamber of Commerce and the economic
resources of the county together and decide how much we need to have;
and that the facility we are going to build is actually going to bring
in the conventions, and be that tool that we need to develop this
industry.
What we see is a starting
point of a day long meeting, a big brainstorming charette that would
bring all these people together, look at the amount of money we have,
what has been recommended; put all that into a master design document.
Look at the design criteria we would need to have such as the volume of
the space, how big does the exhibition space need to be, how big does
the meeting room need to be? How do people circulate from this facility
to that facility to the parking garage, to outside areas? Then develop a
document that says "we’re going to have 70,000 square feet of
exhibition space, and that requires so much support space" then let
our designers develop a concept that really fits on the site. In my
investigations of a couple months ago, we know that most of this will
fit on the site, but it will be tight. What decisions do we make, do we
go up to a second floor, do we try to make it a little smaller, and how
are we going to do that?
Over a course of about
two months, to through a process to decide upon how much square footage
that’s got to be in the eventual build-out. Phase I, which is
important to everybody, and how is that actually going to function in
the environment we’ve got here? That becomes the actual discussion
point, how much will it cost, when will it be on line and how much money
is it going to bring in.
I anticipated that the
first task could take place after the first of the year, but I think
after listening to Evelyn that we may want to wait till after her next
focus group, and use that information along with this to start that
planning process.
We will have a hard time
making this happen without support from the whole community. We want a
facility that is going to compete with Orlando, Miami and Jacksonville.
It has to have a thorough review of everything going on and a thorough
and professional product.
Construction would start
somewhere about the middle of 2003 and projecting a year for
construction. So the facility is not going to be on line till 2004, and
that is when the bulk of the money is going to be needed. It is not
going to be tomorrow, it is going to be 2 ½ years from now.
JOHN MASIARCZYK –
Someone mentioned planning 25 years ahead. I look at these maps and
charts and focus groups, and I agree, I think we need to have a lot more
focus groups. We’re in a locked area here. We are 17 years from when
the original building was planned. If we are thinking of doubling it
again, how are you going to do it, where? Would it not be prudent to
look at the location? There is no reason that the Ocean Center as it
sits could be modified somewhat. All these things that have been said
here were not taken into consideration. Like the airport. They talk
about traffic; some of you drive over here all the time. I drive over
here occasionally; to me it’s a nightmare getting here. We have people
coming from out of state; this is not an easy place to get to.
STUART ARP – Where are
you going to move it where there are hotels. Jacksonville has their
convention center a mile from their hotels and they are probably going
to move it.
JOHN MASIARCZYK – Based
on everything I’m hearing, people want easy access. If you build a
convention center, the hotels will come. No matter where you build it.
STUART ARP – It didn’t
happen in Jacksonville.
JOHN MASIARCZYK –
Again, I don’t know your business at all, I’m just saying that based
on everything I’ve heard this morning, this location may not be the
best location, because it doesn’t give you expanding room unless you
displace more and more of your other areas. We need to think about 25
years from now where we want to be. We are putting a burden on
everybody. You are talking about extending 1983’s notes, creative ways
of financing. You are in a pretty locked area here. I just felt I had to
say it.
GILLY AGUIAR – One of
the things I brought up in the earlier meetings, being everything to
everybody. I had talked to Jim about remodeling the Ocean Center and
doing away with the ice skating and the concerts. They have one ice
skating event in March, booked for the year. What will it take to fill
this space? You will still get your church groups, they will sit in
chairs and they do at the other facilities. Being everything to
everybody is very expensive, then you run into the issue of the land.
This is a very good size building, where half your meeting space could
be along the sides and fill in the electric we need. Taking away the
arena effect. It might be cost effective to use this as the expansion
then come back and put the archways and so forth in the middle and tie
it all together but you can close it off, like Orlando does. They don’t
have concerts at their facility; they have a place for concerts. They
want to have meetings. We have spent 17 years trying to be everything to
everybody, but yet not being enough for anybody. You can’t take a
first tier concert because the tickets would be so outrageous, you don’t
get much ice skating, we tried the franchises, with hockey and so forth,
is that an option to people?
TOM STAED – The
community was promised a multiple use building, how that would float is
undetermined.
GILLY AGUIAR - Even with
graduation, we could put chairs on the floor of the exhibit space. I don’t
see anything that we are trying to do that couldn’t be done if we
brought the building up to what we are trying to build. We are taking
$160,000 out of Rick’s pocket and asking him to make the money work.
We would gain a lot of space because you also have the problem of the
walkways from the front of the buildings. I think Stuart is right, at
some point we need to make a walkway over to those facilities. I don’t
think the community would be that upset with us. I think they have seen
that we can’t be everything to everybody with this size of building.
You probably hear it more here than I do in the southeast, but I think
we have an antiquated building for what we built it for.
STUART ARP – We could
still do the Home & Garden shows and that type of community thing.
GILLY AGUIAR – If you
brought it up you could do all the electric the way it should be. Take
some of the seating and extend the hallways out, make it a very
plausible walkway coming from the hotels across the street instead of
people coming up and letting people out on the street. I just don’t
know how much it would cost.
JIM WACHTEL – I think
that’s something that could be investigated here, the feasibility of
having the arena and the multi-purpose space, and what do you gain.
GILLY AGUIAR – You
could take some of the seating from the arena area. I don’t know about
the design factors, but you would still have the atrium effect.
STUART ARP – If you
look at the diagram you could probably double your space.
RICK HAMILTON – You
have to remember all your service areas are under the seats. If you take
out the seats you have to relocate your service areas, the mechanical,
the electrical etc.
JIM WACHTEL – I don’t
think it is feasible to take that stuff out, but it may be feasible to
build some other meeting spaces, breakout rooms, etc. up in where the
seating is, and still have some walkways to the front and the back of
the building.
STUART ARP – To add the
breakout space, let’s say convert the ballroom to exhibit space then
add whatever more meeting space we need. That would give you 60,000, and
they are saying they want 30,000 to 70,000 over what we have. I guess
they want 30,000 to 70,000 over what we already have?
RICK HAMILTON – When
you take out the wall we have 60,000 now, the walls to the service
quarters. But then you don’t have the meeting facilities and the
breakout rooms.
GILLY AGUIAR – Maybe
this could be the two story start of it. We go with what we have on the
floor as exhibit space and have enough escalator movement, etc. to move
them up to breakout rooms upstairs, and bring them back down into that
and that goes straight through. So now your space can be divided. I don’t
know; I’m not an architect.
RICK HAMILTON – I don’t
know either, but I think Jim can take a look at that, when he gets into
it, I think you’ll find it’s more expensive than to build the space.
FRANK GUMMY – What are
your arena revenues, Rick?
RICK HAMILTON – I would
have to look, approximately $160,000.
GILLY AGUIAR - $160,000
last year with four concerts. It’s just something I’m throwing out
there. Over a twenty-five year period we’re going to fill into a spot
where we’re comfortable, and I don’t think we will want to grow any
further trying to chase bigger and bigger conventions. I think we will
find our niche and keep it up, keep it nice, and keep the quality of the
service will be what we will be doing at that point. I don’t think we
will be chasing the Orlando’s and building. We won’t have the space;
we won’t have the hotel rooms for it.
TOM STAED – I’d like
to see what you have been putting in here, historically. How far back
would you have that information?
RICK HAMILTON – All the
way.
TOM STAED – It would be
interesting to see, and I think that’s another issue. Hoteliers are
going to want to know before they enthusiastically agree to put another
penny on their head. Just what is the marketing plan going to be? Is it
going to be conventions that all fit in the center of the community, or
is it going to be meetings and exhibits and events that spread the
entire length of the beach?
RICK HAMILTON – We gave
you a break down of the events at one of the first meetings.
GILLY AGUIAR – It was
four concerts last year.
RICK HAMILTON – As we
go forward we are having less and less concerts and more meetings and
conventions, which is what we’ re supposed to do.
MR. LEWIS – I don’t
think we’re at the point of thinking about a central planning phase
till we think about where we’re…Yes, ma’am.
SHARON MOCK – Excuse
me, I think many of the convention groups we have are repeat business.
Once they come here they really do like it, and they want to come back.
Now geographically, some of them have to move around the country, so we
may only get them once every five years, but they do come back. We have
a good track record with that.
MR. LEWIS – Let’s get
the information about the trend in Orlando, what they are getting more
of and less of, whether it affects us or not, I’d like to see that.
Evelyn will have another meeting in January where we can get some more
information as to what the planners are looking for. I think we need to
look at that before doing a contract to the council to approve. We need
to know exactly where we want to go.
GILLY AGUIAR – I agree,
we need to let Evelyn go. We need to get the numbers and find out what
the financial burden is as far as the operational expense there.
RICK HAMILTON – It’s
huge.
GILLY AGUIAR – I know
it’s huge, but the place is huge, and if you took it by the square
foot and figured it out it might give us an idea what our operational
budget is going to be to run this place.
MR. LEWIS – Rick, would
you work on that information?
RICK HAMILTON – Yes
sir.
MR. LEWIS – I think we
have had a good meeting. I think we have done a 180 degree turn in some
places, but I think it’s important we do this, so we don’t go off in
the wrong direction without examining where we are trying to get to. We’ll
get another meeting set up. We’ll try to get this information first, I
don’t think we’ll have a meeting in January, if you get a
cancellation notice, it’s because we don’t have anything together
for you.
Is there any old
business?
New business?
JOHN MASIARCZYK – I’ve
had a couple people ask me, and it makes it easier with Ms. Li here from
the Deltona area. There’s been some talk about withdrawing the
southwest and the southeast Volusia money from the Halifax area
budgeting. Meaning that money’s not going to be there. Is this the
area where ideas and suggestions should be brought up about southwest
Volusia? For future building. We’ve got a consideration in our area
that we’ve got to do something because of Sanford and Seminole County.
I don’t know if anyone has seen their plan for convention space down
on the river; it’s substantial. I don’t know what it does to the
Ocean Center, and us but with all the building and all the growth down
in the Heathrow area, I imagine they will pull a lot of stuff in there.
Most of those buildings are not equipped to hold large gatherings, and I
think that’s the real reason for it. We’ve looked at it, and started
talking about it, and there is some talk going on in the community.
Would it be easier to work with this group, or do you want us to set up
a group down there to start talking on their own. I don’t want to come
in here and say we want to withdraw our money from what’s going on,
because I too think the Ocean Center needs to be vital, we need it for
Volusia County. We have no intentions of that kind of facility down
there, nor do I suggest that we move, when I talked about moving, this
location down there. We’re happy, you keep it!
But, we do need to put in
a large facility, graduating our kids from High School is something I’ve
thought about for years. The parents don’t like the idea of them
having to drive all the way to Daytona for graduation. The schools don’t
have a facility big enough, so we are looking at building a facility
down there. Do you want that information brought through here or do we
not want to muddy this water, and get a group down there?
MR. LEWIS – I don’t
think we need to muddy this water. I think you need this kind of group
the re, but what you end up with these things, and we need to discuss
them, if it’s only going to be the Halifax area’s money backing…
FRANK GUMMY – The two
cents is matched county wide.
MR. LEWIS – It’s just
the one cent.
JOHN MASIARCZYK – I
know that, and I’m not trying to change that. We’re starting to talk
about the future. Talking about separating that money, so that is
another source of revenue to pull off what we want down in that area. I
didn’t want it to be a conflict or a misunderstanding that when we
start talking about a building down there that it has anything to do
with what we’re doing here.
MR. LEWIS – I think you
need to keep that separate. You need to form a group down there. I think
what we need to decide if the additional penny is only going to be from
the Halifax area, why would you be sitting here determining what’s
going to happen with it? I don’t think this is the place to talk about
another project.
JOHN MASIARCZYK – I
just think support for a project this big needs to be county wide. When
you talk numbers this big to the average person, he’s going to go
"WOW". When I showed them the square footage…We don’t have
that conception in west Volusia; the biggest building we have holds 150.
You’re talking about thousands.
MR. LEWIS – I think it’s
important to have open dialogue like this, whether the press is here or
not, we all live in the same county. We have varying interests, but we
want to bolster each other and work together to make this the best
county we can. I don’t like to see it get separated, it’s one county
with diverse interests. Whatever we can do to help one another should be
done; and I think this convention center has served our county very
well.
STUART ARP – Many of
our employees that work here live in Deltona and Deland.
JOHN MASIARCZYK –
Sanford is a major concern to us about what they are doing on the
lakefront. We have problems with our people to the south who want
nothing done on the lakefront, and they are continually building and
growing. Our people flood to the west now, it’s hard to get them to go
east, so they are going to have less and less of an impact or use of the
Ocean Center if Sanford does carry off what they want to do. In fact,
you’re going to see our side of the county spending even more time
going west, instead of easterly, which helps the county.
Adjournment
The meeting was adjourned
at 10:52 a.m.
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