Tourism in Connecticut

The fact is tourism is one of the very few areas of the Connecticut budget that generates net revenue for the State. Marketing dollars allocated to generate this revenue are an investment; an investment in Connecticut’s economy and jobs!

Tourism in Connecticut:

  • Generates $11.5 billion in total traveler and tourist spending[i]
  • Generates $1.15 billion in state and local tax revenue
  • Employs 110,775 people (6.5% of state total) in Connecticut
  • Each Connecticut household would pay $950 more in taxes without the tax revenue generated by the tourism industry[ii]
  • Casino gaming revenue supports vital state & local services[iii]
    • $377.8 million (FY09) – contributions to state general fund
    • $  93.0 million (FY09) – grants to all municipalities statewide

Jobs created by tourism are good jobs, solid jobs, jobs that are both skilled and unskilled, held by people of all ages and are often the 2nd job in a Connecticut family’s household, keeping that family whole and financially secure in tough times.  Tourism jobs are home grown and cannot be moved out of state.

Connecticut is very fortunate to have as integral parts of its tourism product a diversity of offerings. Our state boasts the best in arts, history, culture, lodging, attractions, dining, casinos and so much more.  Its advantageous location within two hours drive of major population centers, coupled with consumers’ needs to take more trips close to home, makes Connecticut an outstanding tourist destination.

Investing in tourism is investing in Connecticut’s economic future.  Tourism affects many vital segments of our economy such as transportation, economic and community development, agriculture and outdoor recreation.  Tourism is at the front door of our state’s economy.

It is targeted investment in tourism, however, that must happen in Connecticut by the State along side of private industry.  This targeted investment will have a defined return on investment (ROI) in job growth, additional money flowing into Connecticut’s economy by out of state visitors, state revenue increases, and preservation of the arts, culture and natural heritage of Connecticut that makes our state such a great place to live, work and play.

States, regions and cities around the country have recognized the direct relationship between a strong, growing tourism industry and a thriving overall economy.

Our New England neighbors, for example, are each investing millions each year marketing their states, many times targeting Connecticut residents to visit there.  All the while, Connecticut has allowed State support of the Statewide Marketing Fund to be reduced to $1.00 (one dollar) per year.  In FY ’10 and ‘11, Connecticut became the only state in America to have NO tourism marketing budget.  Colorado was the last state to try this by eliminating its tourism marketing function when, in 1993, it cut its marketing/promotion budget to zero. As a result, Colorado’s domestic market share plunged 30% within two years, representing a loss of over $1.4 billion in tourism revenue annually. Over time, the revenue loss increased to well over $2 billion yearly.  By the time funds were restored, it took some eight years to return to pre-1993 levels of visitor spending.[iv]

The next Governor of Connecticut must be the leader who saves our state from becoming the next Colorado mistake.  He must act now.

The next Governor of Connecticut must:

  • Understand the travel and tourism industry and the vital role it plays in the state’s economy;
  • Be involved and play an active role;
  • Commit to investing in travel and tourism marketing both statewide and regionally in a strategically organized structure where the State and regional tourism districts are partners, instead of competitors, for limited State resources;
  • Commit to investing in transportation options that support a vibrant Connecticut tourism economy.  We need to invest in better roads and bridges, expand rail service and focus increased attention on Bradley International Airport as a more competitive airline/travel hub for New England and alternative to New York City gateways.  Excellent transportation infrastructure is an important key for tourism investment paying significant dividends;
  • Propose a $15 million budget to market Connecticut tourism.  With over $1.15 billion being returned to state and local coffers each year as a result of the tourism industry, this investment is small compared to the return to Connecticut’s economy.  Explore ways to match these funds with non-government dollars;
  • Work with the Connecticut State Legislature to ensure adequate levels of funding for tourism.
  • Implementation:
  • Direct the Connecticut Commission on Culture & Tourism, the state’s tourism marketing agency, and the Regional Tourism Districts to develop through internal and external means and input a master plan to chart the course for marketing the state using the increased funds.  Additionally, the agency will examine its structure to determine how it can be strengthened both internally and externally;
  • As a part of the master plan, develop recommendations of how best to implement a public/private funding model for State government tourism marketing.  This type of model is used widely around the country, as well as privately in Connecticut, and can be an effective model for Connecticut;
  • Engage Regional Tourism Districts, and other key organizations as partners for marketing Connecticut;
  • Grow regional marketing funding as statewide marketing funding is bolstered.

Conclusion – Tourism in Connecticut:

  • Generates net revenue to the state’s economy;
  • Creates jobs – homegrown jobs that cannot be moved out of Connecticut;
  • Provides revenue for the State budget to help pay for other vital state social services which are non-revenue producing;
  • Works as a catalyst for economic and community development, agriculture growth, transportation improvements and preservation of the environment;
  • Creates a positive image and presents Connecticut as a great place to live, work and play.

Tourism is essential to Connecticut’s future.  It is an integral part of our economy and our everyday life touching every person in the state in some way.  Tourism and the revenue and jobs created because of it can, and will, help get Connecticut out of its budget deficit problems in the short term and help insure positive economic health in the future.

Tourism funding not only is the right thing to do, it is the smart thing to do.  The time is now!


[i] UCONN Center for Economic Analysis 2006 (includes direct, indirect & induced)

[ii] U.S. Travel Association, April 2010

[iii] Connecticut Office of Policy & Management

[iv] “The Rise & Fall of Colorado Tourism,” Longwoods International, 2009

DIRECTIONS-TO-GO MAKE EXPLORING EASY IN CONNECTICUT’S FAIRFIELD COUNTY

Connecticut’s Fairfield County is filled with autumn color and unexpected discoveries—if you know where to look.  New virtual tours on the region’s web site make sure that visitors know exactly where to go and how to find the best routes.  To make it even easier, three scenic routes with exact directions to each tour stop now can be e-mailed or down-loaded directly from the web site to computers or to an I-phone, I-pod or Blackberry, ready to take along on the road.

The recommended routes cover something for every interest–history, scenery, drives, and hikes, gardens and shopping. They can fill a full day or be divided into shorter segments. A sampling of the pleasures in store include:

Route One: Audubon, Architecture and Art

The towns and leafy residential back roads of Greenwich and Stamford are the destinations.  In Greenwich, stops vary from browsing the shops on Greenwich Avenue, known as Connecticut’s Rodeo Drive, to strolling the 285 wooded acres of the Audubon Greenwich.  The art and natural history exhibits at the Bruce Museum vie with the history of 17th century Putnam Cottage and the Bush Holley House, circa 1728.  Stamford offers the chance for cruises on Long Island Sound, prize antiquing, the modernistic architecture and stained glass of the famous “Fish Church,” the Stamford Museum and Nature Center with its picture-perfect Hecksher Farm and 80 acres of wooded nature trails, and the adjoining Bartlett Arboretum with another 91 acres to explore.  More scenery waits in a final back roads drive from Stamford to New Canaan and its nature center.

Route Two: Beaches, Birds And Beauty

Westport, Fairfield and Easton have many attractive stops.  Westport travels include a drive beside the Saugatuck River and stops at beaches on Long Island Sound, along with the Westport Arts Center, Historical Society and the formal and herb gardens at Gilbertie’s Herb Gardens.  Among the sights in historic Fairfield are the town green and its beautiful Colonials, the town museum and history center, the 18th century Ogden House, Walsh Art Gallery at Fairfield University, and the Connecticut Audubon and Birdcraft Museum, with a six- acre bird sanctuary.  Rural Easton leads to more historic homes, a school dating back to 1795 and drives along Route 59, a designated scenic road passing the sparkling Aspetuck Reservoir.  A portion of the Aspetuck Trail in Easton is open for hiking.

Route Three: Lighthouses, Oysters And Landscapes

Nautical Norwalk and Rowayton and wooded Weston and Wilton make up this tour. Norwalk, once known for its oysters, has newer lures such as the Stepping Stones Museum for Children, the Maritime Aquarium, cruises to Sheffield Island with its historic lighthouse for picnics and walks, the shops of SoNo (South Norwalk) and the buildings of the Mill Hill Historic District.  The riverside village of Rowayton with the look of a typical New England coastal town offers atmosphere, historic houses and an art center. Devil’s Den in Weston is Fairfield County’s largest nature preserve providing 21 miles of hiking trails through diverse habitats and the Great Ledge with spectacular views.  Weir Farm in Wilton, the summer home of the late impressionist painter J.Alden Weir is the only US National Park devoted to American painting, with a setting worthy of a painting.

For detailed routes and further information about the many attractions of Fairfield County, see www.visitwesternct.com.  For a free brochure contact the Western Connecticut Visitors Bureau, PO Box 968, Litchfield, CT 06759, (860) 567-4506.

THE BEST FOLIAGE TOWN IN NEW ENGLAND? YANKEE MAGAZINE PICKS KENT, CONNECTICUT

Kent, Connecticut has many claims to fame—two state parks, a 250-foot waterfall, rural beauty combined with sophisticated shops, galleries and museums.  But this fall there is new reason to boast.  Yankee Magazine has named this charming village in the Litchfield Hills of Western Connecticut the peak spot for leaf-peeping in all of New England.

In one day in Kent, says Yankee, you can drive through rolling hills beside a twisting river, stop for thick hot chocolate and an authentic Belgian pastry, hike the Appalachian trail, picnic with a panini by a waterfall, shop for Buddhas or modern art and bite into a crisp native Cortland apple, perhaps in the shade of a historic covered bridge.

This praise is no surprise to those who know Kent and its unique blend of attractions.  A newly published free color brochure with map will help newcomers find their way around.

Foliage watchers who like their leaves close-up on a hiking trail should head for Macedonia Brook State Park, where 2300 acres offer extensive leafy trails.  For views, the Blue Trail is hard to beat with its fantastic vistas of the Catskill and Taconic mountains.

In Kent Falls State Park you can admire the falls from the bottom or hike a quarter-mile up the hill and feel the mist on your face as the water cascades down 250 feet on its way to join the Housatonic River.

The Appalachian Trail runs through this area, and hikers who want scenery without stress will enjoy the Housatonic “river walk,” a peaceful stretch beside the river that is the longest essentially flat section along the entire trail.

For more worldly diversions, take a walk along Route 7, Kent’s Main Street, lined for miles with irresistible stops.  Five antiques shops beckon, including Pauline’s Place, known for its antique jewelry.  Among the many shops and galleries, Heron American Craft Gallery shows the best work of American craftsmen, Foreign Cargo offers unusual clothing, jewelry and art from Africa, Asia and the Pacific Islands and the Kent Art Association is just one of five fine art galleries in town.

Take out the camera for Bulls’ Bridge, one of three remaining covered bridges in Connecticut dating from the 19th century.  George Washington crossed the Housatonic River near the site of the present bridge in 1781.

Just north of town is the Sloane-Stanley Museum.  Eric Sloane (1905-1985) was a prolific artist, author and illustrator and an avid collector of Americana. The museum includes the artist’s studio, examples of his art and his extensive collection of early American handmade tools, beautiful objects of wood that are virtual works of art.  On the property are the remains of the Kent Iron Furnace and a diorama explaining the once-booming local iron industry.  Next-door is the Connecticut Antique Machinery Association Museum, a unique display of steam and gas tractors, a working narrow gauge railroad, an industrial hall with working steam engines and mining exhibit building.

When hunger pangs strike in Kent, the Panini Café is the place for a tasty picnic sandwich, and for a treat Belgique Patisserie and Chocolatier, a Belgian-owned shop in a Victorian Carriage house, features exquisite European desserts, handmade ice cream and sorbets and rich Belgian chocolate made on site. Belgique vies with the Kent coffee and Chocolate Company for the title of “best hot chocolate in Connecticut.”  For dinner, the Fife & Drum is a long time favorite for continental dinners with nightly music, Bull’s Bridge Inn has a choice of fine dining or pub fare, and Doc’s Trattoria serves excellent Italian fare and has a pleasant patio for fine fall days.

For a copy of the new free guide and map of Kent and a free copy of UNWIND, a 112-page color guide to lodging and dining and other regional attractions in all of the Litchfield Hills contact the Western Connecticut Visitors Bureau, PO Box 968, Litchfield, CT 06759, (860) 567-4506, http://www.litchfieldhills.com.

Amazing Mazes Beckon Autumn Visitors to Connecticut’s Litchfield Hills and Fairfield County

The mazes are amazing. Imagine acres of tall corn cut into twisting paths in whimsical shapes from crossword puzzles to bumblebees. Finding your way amidst these mazes of maize is a fun-filled adventure for all ages at four beautiful family farms in western Connecticut. Located in Litchfield and Fairfield Counties, the farms also offer hayrides, animals for petting, and apples and pumpkins ripe for picking to make for a perfect fall weekend outing.

Ellsworth Hill Farm in Sharon may take the prize for originality this season with a crossword puzzle maze covering four acres. Pick-your-own apples is another favorite activity at this berry farm and orchard. On hayrides at Ellsworth Hill “Farmer Mike” shows off the glowing foliage-covered hills of northwestern Connecticut and tells about the fruit varieties he grows on the farm.

One of the most elaborate maze designs is the bumblebee at Plaskos Farm in Trumbull. Plaskos is known for the imaginative designs cut each year through four acres of ten-foot-high corn. Crazy Cows, Spider Webs, and Lady Liberty are among the past creations. The twisty mazes provide some 15 miles of trails, but frequent escape hatches mean everyone can choose their own distance. Once again, hayrides are a scenic way to the fields.

Littlest guests will find a new treat this year at March Farm in Bethlehem, where a new Sunflower Maze designed for children is ready for action along with the traditional five-acre corn maze. This year’s main maze theme is designed to teach the value of composting. Along with the chance to pick your own apples, treats at this family-friendly farm include hayrides, and an animal farm where pygmy goats, lambs and llamas can be visited. An expanded Hayloft Playscape invites youngsters to enjoy a mini-hay loft, school and farmhouse, slides, a climbing wall and a tractor-themed sand play area.

Families also enjoy the six-acre corn maze in a unique triangle shape and the four-acre pumpkin patch awaiting visitors to Castle Hill Farm in Newtown. As an added treat, hayrides at Castle Hill bring visitors through a stream to the corn and pumpkin fields. Farm animals for petting and pony rides provide more treats for youngsters.

All of the mazes are open weekends through October, some into November. For exact hours and admission fees, check with each farm listed below or contact the Western Connecticut Visitors Bureau, PO Box 968, Litchfield, CT 06759, (860) 567-4506, http://www.visitwesternct.com.

Information:
Castle Hill Farm 40 Sugar Lane, Newtown, 203-426-5487, http://www.castlehillfarm.biz
Ellsworth Hill Farm, 461 Cornwall Bridge Road (Route 4), Sharon, http://www.ellsworthfarm.com
March Farm, 160 Munger Lane, Bethlehem, 203-266-7721, http://www.marchfarms.com
Plaskos Farm, 670 Daniels Farm Road, Trumbull, 203-268-2716, http://www.plaskosfarm.com

Hills, Fall Foliage, and Family Fun in Litchfield Hills Connecticut