73°F
weather icon Clear

Convention officials face challenge in 2018 fiscal budget

Updated May 9, 2017 - 5:06 pm

The Las Vegas Convention and Visitors board of directors on Tuesday got its first look at the 2018 fiscal year budget — a financial plan expected to include record room tax revenue.

However, officials face the challenge of setting aside a generous portion for the $1.4 billion expansion and improvement to the Convention Center.

LVCVA financial experts unveiled a plan to spend $367 million, setting aside $251.1 million for operations and more than $113 million to begin paying for the upgrade that is expected to begin next year after a series of planning approvals next month.

Chief financial officer Rana Lacer and Ed Finger, senior vice president of finance, spent an hour taking board members through the spending plan.

The LVCVA, whose primary source of revenue is a 14.5 percent tax on hotel rooms, expects to receive $294.5 million from that source. A combination of a 0.5 percentage-point increase in the room tax, a projected 6.5 percent increase in the average daily room rate and a 0.9 percentage-point increase in the occupancy rate to 86.6 percent are expected to contribute to higher levels of revenue.

Lacer assured board members that the financial plan covering bond payments and debt service for the Convention Center project is conservative and gives the agency breathing room in the event of a downturn in the economy. Should room-tax revenue fall short of meeting debt responsibilities, reserve funds would be tapped and the county’s general obligation bond pledges would be called upon to make payments.

No votes were taken Tuesday. The board plans a public hearing and vote on the budget on May 18. That vote will set the stage for consideration of a construction plan for the big Convention Center project in June. Two advisory groups — the seven-member Las Vegas Convention Center District committee and a separate seven-member Oversight Panel for Convention Facilities in Clark County — will weigh in with recommendations before the LVCVA board sees it June 13.

The LVCVA’s operational budget includes a 5 percent increase to its advertising budget to $101.3 million, a 0.6 percent decrease in its special-events budget to $14.2 million, and a 13.3 percent decrease in marketing expenses to $42.8 million.

LVCVA officials say its advertising generates $17 in revenue for the city for every dollar spent.

The general governance budget would increase 3.2 percent to $24.1 million with the number of full-time agency employees increasing from 541 to 545.

Contact Richard N. Velotta at rvelotta@reviewjournal.com or 702-477-3893. Follow @RickVelotta on Twitter.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
48-hour strike planned at off-Strip resort

Roughly 700 hospitality workers at an off-Strip casino plan to walk off the job for two days after lengthy contract negotiations continue, union officials said Wednesday.

 
Fontainebleau adds summer parking perk

The hotel-casino on the north Las Vegas Strip says the new promotion is meant to make the property more accessible.