Florida’s approach to reopening is data driven: Lt. Gov. Jeanette Nuñez
Florida Lieutenant Gov. Jeanette Nuñez, (R), says Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’, (R), decisions to limit visitation to nursing homes and work with public health officials contributed to parts of the Sunshine State reopening on Monday.
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Florida has begun reopening for business, but this tourist mecca faces a grinding road to recovery.
The coronavirus pandemic has pummeled the economy of the Orlando metro area, where legions of theme-park attendants, waiters, maids and bellhops rely on the 75 million visitors a year who produce $75 billion in revenue. The tourists are gone, and the prospect of their return uncertain.
Simone Kuska, director of sales and marketing for the independent Florida Hotel and Conference Center, said the business is losing up to $1 million a month. No more than 35 of its 511 rooms have been occupied on a given day, she said, mostly with flight crews who have been shuttling largely empty planes to and from Orlando International Airport.
"I've been through 9/11, I've been through the recession in 2008, and this is definitely the worst I have seen," Ms. Kuska said. "Nothing will change for us until the parks are open."
DISNEY WORLD, UNION REACH CORONAVIRUS PROTECTIONS DEAL: REPORT
The Disney, Universal and SeaWorld theme parks haven't said when they will reopen and could be among the last businesses in the state to do so given the complexity of social distancing and cleaning. Universal's CityWalk, a dining and entertainment complex, partially opened Thursday, and the similar Disney Springs will begin a limited opening next week.
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