Business above usual this Memorial Day
Andrew Edwards
Today, a few good men can get a free dinner at the Arches restaurant
in Newport Beach. Restaurant owner Dan Marcheano said an active-duty
Marine eats for free on Memorial Day.
“That’s what you have to do,” Marcheano, a retired Marine said.
“They’re the reason we have so much fun.”
Memorial Day -- a time for Americans to remember the deeds of
fallen soldiers -- is part of a three-day weekend that has become one
of the busiest travel days of the year and an unofficial start to
summer.
John Wayne Airport operators expect the weekend will be their
busiest period since Christmas season, deputy airport director
Courtney Wiercioch said. She said 84,000 travelers were expected to
pass through the airport between Friday and Wednesday.
Memorial Day weekend “officially kicks off our summer season,” at
the Four Seasons Hotel Newport Beach, hotel spokeswoman Pam Blanton
said. The hotel’s spa was booked solid for the weekend, when two new
menus were to be introduced.
Blanton and George Lysak, executive director of sales and
marketing for the Balboa Bay Club & Resort in Newport Beach agreed
that hoteliers tend to see a rise in the amount of vacation travelers
around June. However, resorts still depend on clear weather for
business to pick up.
“June really starts the summer season,” Lysak said. “Here you have
a little bit of the June gloom, which can affect leisure travel.”
“We’re kind of at the whim of the weatherman,” she said.
For the fiscal year beginning in July, Newport Beach officials are
counting on summer travelers to pay the bulk of the year’s bed tax,
city revenue manager Glen Everroad said.
Newport’s projections call for hotel visitors to shell out $8
million worth of bed taxes over the upcoming fiscal year, and
Everroad said 65% of that money is expected to come in July, August,
September and next June. Everroad is also looking forward to the city
receiving $1.1 million from travelers staying at vacation rentals. He
anticipates 80% of those funds will be paid during summer months.
Not all hotels are equally busy over the Memorial Day weekend,
said Afsaneh Torres, sales and marketing director for the Radisson
Hotel Newport Beach. Though her hotel was sold out for a youth
convention over the weekend, she said the holiday can be slow for
hotels around John Wayne Airport.
“The trend is we die down,” she said.
During the summer, the Radisson attracts a greater number of
family vacationers as opposed to business travelers than the rest of
the year. Like hotels in the airport area, Costa Mesa hotels tend to
draw more business travelers than vacationers. Jennifer Pease,
director of room operations at the Costa Mesa Marriott, said leisure
travelers do stay at her hotel on weekends, and those numbers usually
pick up in the summer.
“The business traveler leaves on a Thursday or Friday morning and
the weekender comes in,” Pease said.
Unlike Newport Beach, Costa Mesa’s bed taxes tend to come in at an
even pace throughout the year, without a summer peak, Costa Mesa
finance director Marc Puckett said. Costa Mesa is projected to
collect $4.9 million in bed taxes over the next fiscal year, which
translates to about $410,000 per month.
In Costa Mesa, travel patterns tend to mirror the business cycle
more than the seasons, Puckett said. This year, he said bed tax
revenues appear to be recovering from the travel dip that occurred in
the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks.
As the travel season gets into gear and shoppers prowl stores in
search of holiday bargains, Marcheano hopes people remember the
soldiers whose sacrifices Memorial Day was designed to commemorate.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.