Current:Home > ScamsAcapulco races to restart its tourism engine after Hurricane Otis devastates its hotels, restaurants -Streamline Finance
Acapulco races to restart its tourism engine after Hurricane Otis devastates its hotels, restaurants
NovaQuant Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-10 05:47:38
ACAPULCO, Mexico (AP) — The keyboard and drums from a musical show thump just yards from a mountain of storm debris and fractured hotels left by Hurricane Otis three weeks ago. On the northern end of Acapulco Bay, hairdressers and masseuses sweep branches from a beach.
Across the Pacific resort of Acapulco, residents work with a singular purpose: restart the tourism engine of this city of 1 million people as soon as possible.
“If there’s no tourism, nothing happens,” said Juan Carlos Díaz, a 59-year-old laborer waiting for food distributed by soldiers. “It’s like a little chain, it generates (money) for everyone.”
Otis, a Category 5 hurricane that smacked Acapulco on Oct. 25, damaged 80% of its hotels and 95% of its business, as well as leaving at least 48 people dead, 26 missing and impacting about 250,000 families, according to government data. Residents are striving to ensure the devastation is not a knockout blow to the once-legendary resort.
Since Acapulco’s golden era during the latter half of the 20th century – when Jackie and John F. Kennedy honeymooned here and Elvis Presley and other stars visited – the rise of other destinations like Cancun combined with organized crime to drive away international visitors.
But the city still had a devoted following of Mexican tourists who came for its beaches and nightlife. It had been hosting sporting events and major business gatherings, including an international mining conference that was in town when Otis hit. The resort boasted 20,000 hotel rooms, 377 hotels and a bevy of other vacation accommodations.
President Andrés Manuel López Obrador has promised that Acapulco will be ready to receive visitors this holiday season, if in reduced numbers , but not everyone believes it. Most think it will take the city a year or two to come back from Otis’ devastation.
Yair Guevara, head waiter at the Dreams hotel, one of the tall towers hollowed out by Otis’ 165 mph winds, showed up for work the day after the storm and began coordinating cleaning shifts for 20 workers. During those early days they were paid in food and basic necessities, he said.
On a recent morning, about 30 members of a collective of masseuses and hairdressers unearthed pieces of wrecked boats as they cleaned a beach on northern Acapulco Bay.
“We want the tourists to come soon,” Linda Vidal said, explaining why they were sweeping the beach.
The famous La Quebrada cliff divers who have left tourists breathless for decades have been cleaning the ocean floor of debris in the area where they end their more than 100-foot swan dives into the Pacific.
“There was a lot of debris, glass and metal,” said Eligio Álvarez, who at 50 years old still launches himself into the roiling water. He and others are rushing to set up virtual shows like they did during the pandemic to earn money until the tourists can return. Getting steady internet restored is their current obstacle.
Jesús Zamora, a member of the state tourism council in Guerrero, where Acapulco is located, rebuilt part of his restaurant with fallen limbs and in four days had a section of it reopened.
Last weekend, he hosted dozens of diners, among them officials who were taking a census of the damage to the tourism sector. Zamora and others still don’t know how much aid that census will bring them or when it will come.
“We’re just hoping” that it comes, he said.
López Obrador has met multiple times with business leaders from Acapulco’s tourism sector. While they’ve kept their comments discreet, they believe the support offered so far – loans and tax extensions – are positive but insufficient.
The president has prioritized direct aid to the poorest families, though much of that assistance too has not yet materialized.
At the Flamingos Hotel – once host to Hollywood legends John Wayne, Errol Flynn and Cary Grant – a handful of the owners’ friends recently were picking up branches and debris around the place where the most famous Tarzan, Johnny Weissmuller, spent the last years of his life. The lush trees, including a century-old ceiba, are stripped of their branches.
Diana Santiago, the owner’s daughter, thinks rebuilding the pink hotel’s spartan 40 rooms will be slow because they don’t yet know where the money will come from.
“We are going to open an account (for donations) to survive these months,” Santiago said. They also plan to fall back on a survival strategy from the pandemic: selling take-out food until they can reopen the restaurant with its spectacular views. The hotel rooms will come last.
The big hotel chains also doubt they will be able to open as soon as López Obrador would like even though they swarm with workers, many who have arrived from out of state.
And even though the president has assured people that the Mexican Open tennis tournament – Acapulco’s most emblematic sporting event -- will continue its uninterrupted run since 2001 in February with champions like Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic, the organizers have yet to confirm that.
The Princess hotel, the enormous glass and balconied pyramid where the tennis players stay, has not said when it will reopen. Otis left it in skeletal form.
The government declared an end to the emergency in Acapulco last week, but many in the city still lack the basic necessities and mountains of garbage and debris continue to clog streets.
Gregorio García, a cab driver who was back to work after the storm as soon as he could patch a tire and find gasoline, conceded there are residents who complain that the tourism sector is prioritized in recovery efforts. He still doesn’t have electricity or water at home, but he doesn’t agree with the complaints.
“If there aren’t tourists there’s nothing,” he said.
__
AP writers Mark Stevenson and Carlos Rodríguez in Mexico City contributed to this report.
veryGood! (1668)
Related
- How to watch the 'Blue Bloods' Season 14 finale: Final episode premiere date, cast
- Boy is rescued after sand collapses on him at Michigan dune
- King and queen of the Netherlands pay tribute to MLK during visit to Atlanta
- YouTuber Myka Stauffer Said Her Child Was Not Returnable Before Rehoming Controversy
- New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
- Reverend James Lawson, civil rights activist and nonviolent protest pioneer dies at 95
- D-Day: Eisenhower and the paratroopers who were key to success
- Number of suspects facing charges grows in Savannah square shootout that injured 11
- North Carolina trustees approve Bill Belichick’s deal ahead of introductory news conference
- Dan Hurley staying at Connecticut after meeting with Los Angeles Lakers about move to NBA
Ranking
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Watching you: Connected cars can tell when you’re speeding, braking hard—even having sex
- YouTuber Myka Stauffer Said Her Child Was Not Returnable Before Rehoming Controversy
- Key witness who says he bribed Bob Menendez continues testifying in New Jersey senator's trial
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- FDA warns microdose chocolate may lead to seizures
- Jennifer Hudson gives update on romance with Common: 'Everything is wonderful'
- Naomi Biden testifies in father Hunter Biden's gun trial | The Excerpt
Recommendation
Most popular books of the week: See what topped USA TODAY's bestselling books list
10 members of NC State’s 1983 national champions sue NCAA over name, image and likeness compensation
Florida man pleads not guilty to kidnapping his estranged wife from her apartment in Spain
4 Iowa instructors teaching at a Chinese university were attacked at a park
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Horoscopes Today, June 8, 2024
How Jason Kelce's Family Has Been Affected by Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s “Crazy” Fame
Howard University cuts ties with Sean Diddy Combs after assault video