To print this page properly - use Print icon located on the page.
Please note that JavaScript has to be enabled.

News


<< first  < prev   1   2   next >  last >> 
  • 03-Aug-10 09:35 | anonymous
    July 22, 2010

    Washington, DC - Based on a landmark analysis of 25 recent natural and manmade disasters, Oxford Economics today projected that the effects of the BP oil spill on travel to the Gulf Coast are likely to last up to three years and cost the region $22.7 billion. An aggressive and comprehensive $500 million effort to attract visitors to the Gulf Coast could reduce the total economic impact by $7.5 billion.

    "History and current trends indicate a potential $22.7 billion economic loss to the travel economies of the Gulf Coast states over the next three years," said Adam Sacks, managing director of Oxford Economics USA. "One of the most cost-effective ways to mitigate these damages is to immediately fund strategic marketing to counter misperceptions and encourage travel to the region."

    "Travel is a perception business and the impact of disasters like the BP oil spill on the industry is actually predictable," said Roger Dow, president and CEO of the U.S. Travel Association. "We know from this research that the oil spill will have long-term effects on businesses and jobs in the Gulf Coast region unless we counteract the usual course of events with an unprecedented response."

    In an effort to save the coastal region's 400,000 travel industry jobs, the U.S. Travel Association complemented the release of the Oxford Economics study with a "Roadmap to Recovery," a 10-point plan for government to help communities in crisis by implementing specific action steps that inform public perceptions, incentivize travel to an affected area and make impacted businesses whole. Specific proposals for the federal government include:

    • Create a $500 million marketing program, funded by BP, to share accurate information on the oil spill and attract visitors to the region;
    • Develop a "one-stop shop" online portal where consumers can obtain up-to-the-minute information about which areas are safe and open for travel and business;
    • Provide tax deductions in a disaster-affected area to give travelers added incentive to travel to and do business in that region; and
    • Intervene to provide increased access to capital, low interest loans and tax incentives that allow businesses to remain open and retain employees.

    "We call on the federal government to immediately secure the $500 million necessary to operate an effective marketing program and prevent billions of dollars in economic harm to the Gulf Coast," said Dow. "It is not too late to save Gulf Coast jobs and keep attracting the visitors that can prevent further damage to these vital American communities."

    All materials related to this announcement are available online at www.ustravel.org. For an executive summary on the research and highlights from U.S. Travel's Roadmap to Recovery, please click here.

    Contact:
    Kristy Chandler 202-408-2172

  • 30-Jul-10 14:37 | anonymous

     

    From the Desk of Dawn Sweeney, president and CEO

    The long-term effects of the Gulf oil spill are only beginning to be fully understood, but we do know the damage to fisheries and tourism will impact America's restaurants.

    Our state restaurant association leaders are doing an outstanding job leading our members through the crisis. Carol Dover, Florida Restaurant and Lodging Association; Jim Funk, Louisiana Restaurant Association; Mike Cashion, Mississippi Hospitality and Restaurant Association; and Larry Fidel, Alabama Restaurant Association, joined us on a strategy call this week to ensure we are doing all we can to help affected members. The strategy group is discussing economic impact and communications campaigns to boost Gulf Coast tourism.

    Earlier this week, former NRA Chairman Ralph Brennan testified before a House Energy and Commerce subcommittee, along with a representative from the Gulf Coast Convention and Visitors Bureau and Keith Overton of Florida's TradeWinds Island Resorts.

    The crisis poses serious challenges for our members and our industry. The U.S. Travel Association recently released a study that shows the oil spill's impact on travel and tourism could last three years and cost as much as $22.7 billion in lost spending. The study suggests a significant marketing program could cut the economic damage by a third.

    The NRA will continue to work with our state partners and government agencies on the continuing crisis, and we will keep you apprised of new developments as they come.

     

  • 16-Jul-10 12:52 | anonymous

    July 16, 2010

     

    Ken Feinberg visited the Mississippi Coast Convention Center in Biloxi, and gave details to the community on the claims process and the transition phase between BP, the independent $20 billion program, and claimants.  Feinberg, who administered the 911 victim’s compensation fund, has designed and will administer the program that will disperse money for claims and clean up.  The only 2 claims that Feinberg will not handle are 1.) Government claims; and 2.) Moratorium rig worker claims.  Money for government claims will deduct from the $20 billion, but a separate $100 million has been set aside for moratorium rig workers.  If the $20 billion is insufficient, BP will continue to pay any financial obligations they may have, but the $100 million will not be supplemented. 

    Claims must be directly attributable to the oil spill to be paid, and anyone who can show legitimate proof that they have suffered will be considered.  Feinberg says, “You’re crazy NOT to file” because:

    • The program is voluntary and all personal information is confidential
    • If you can prove a hardship by using tax returns, p&l statements, general ledgers, lost contracts, check stubs, etc. then you will receive 6 months of lost compensation…NO OBLIGATION.  This will NOT impact your rights to be involved in litigation with BP. 
    • NOTE: It is best to be able to show the past 3 years of financial information especially if the business or income did not do well in 2009 due to the economy.
    • After the 6 months has passed, you may file another claim to determine present and future damage.  During the 6 months, Feinberg and his experts will determine how long the amount of time will be for “long term” compensation.  Once an amount of money has been set as the cost of your losses due to the impact of the oil spill and until the time when everything should be back to normal – then the claimant may either accept the payment and sign away any rights for future litigation with BP, or may refuse the check and decide whether or not to litigate.

    The Gulf Coast Claims Facility (Feinberg) will replace BP and the previous contracted claims processor.  The transition is already in progress, and anyone who has already filed a claim does not need to do so again.  The claimant must be a citizen of the United States or a legal worker to be able to file, and he/she will receive a 1099.  Within 3 to 4 weeks the claims facility will offer a lawyer for free to anyone who needs one regarding this matter.  Mental anguish & anxiety is not enough cause for a claim to be paid.  Anyone living 25 miles outside of the immediate Coast will have difficulty proving a loss.

  • 02-Jul-10 15:05 | anonymous
    The director who'll disperse $20 billion to victims of BP's oil spill warned Wednesday that companies hurt because tourists have stayed away from the Gulf region may not be eligible for reimbursement.

    Kenneth Feinberg, whom President Obama appointed to handle claims, told the House Small Business Committee in Washington that determining whether to pay businesses and individuals that didn't suffer direct damage is among the most difficult issues he faces.

    Indirect claims — such as those made by companies that lost revenue because wary tourists stayed home thinking a beach would be damaged — may not be "compensatory," he said.

    Feinberg, however, told committee members that the compensation fund would make initial payments equal to six months of reimbursement. Elected officials in the region have said month-to-month payments to small business are insufficient to help companies stay in business.

    Calculating the payments may be complicated as long as the leak continues, he said.

    "It sure would help if the oil would stop," Feinberg said in his first congressional testimony since being named to run the independent claims operation. "It's very hard to come up with lump-sum payments in total satisfaction of your loss when you don't know if the oil is going to continue to spread and reach your business."

    Tourism officials and those who make their living from tourism have complained that the spill is driving away visitors and costing businesses billions of dollars.

    Rep. Vern Buchanan, R-Fla., said tourists are staying away from beaches near Sarasota even though oil hasn't washed ashore.

    Feinberg acknowledged that businesses or property owners along the Gulf Coast may be harmed by public misperceptions of the spill, and a decision on resolving such claims remains to be made. But they may be left out.

    "Property value has diminished as a result of the spill," Feinberg said. "Let's assume that's right. That doesn't mean that every property is entitled to compensation."

    "It's a thorny issue," he told reporters after the hearing.

    After the Sept. 11 attacks, Feinberg said the victims' fund that he also administered established "small, geographic areas" near the World Trade Center within which individuals could be compensated for health ailments.

    Feinberg said his Gulf Coast claims facility may set zones of eligibility for certain claims when the damage suffered isn't physical.

    BP has said it has paid more than $128 million in claims as of the end of last week.

    © 2010 Bloomberg L.P. All Rights Reserved
  • 29-Jun-10 11:25 | anonymous

    Susan Spicer did not intend to be the face of the restaurant rebellion against BP over its role in the Gulf oil spill. But that’s what can happen when you file a lawsuit.

    Ms. Spicer, long a respected New Orleans chef, spent most of Monday huddled with her lawyers, trying to map out a strategy after word got out that she was suing BP and several other companies on behalf of Gulf restaurant owners and seafood suppliers.

    “I just hope that my motivations will not be misinterpreted,” she said from her restaurant Bayona in her first interview since the suit was filed Friday. “It’s more about solidarity in this region than about getting my piece of the pie. I can’t say I expect to see a dollar out of this thing. I am just angry.”

    Ms. Spicer’s attorney, Serena Pollack, filed the suit in New Orleans federal court late Friday asking that the court grant class-action status for restaurants and seafood sellers who have suffered in the wake of the April 20 drilling rig explosion in the Gulf of Mexico.

    The lawyers are arguing that Ms. Spicer and other chefs in Louisiana and the region have built a reputation and a business using fresh, local seafood that is specific to the Gulf of Mexico. Since the oil rig accident, that seafood has either become unavailable or significantly more expensive.

    In addition, customers are and will continue to be unwilling to pay higher prices or won’t want to eat what is available for fear of contamination from petroleum or the chemicals used to manage the spill, the suit said.
    Ms. Spicer decided to step forward not because her restaurant is about to go under but because other businesses are.

    “I really do believe there are people that are certainly more in need than Bayona will be,” she said, adding that there is plenty of good seafood coming from Lake Pontchartrain and unaffected parts of the shoreline.
    But some places are being hit harder than others, she said.

    “We are already seeing casualties right and left, human casualities, business casualties, cultural casualties,” she said.

    Ms. Spicer, whose company is the lead plaintiff, opened Bayona in 1990 and quickly established herself as a chef who respected the New Orleans culinary canon but was not going to be held hostage by it. At Bayona, she offers global food and serves ahi tuna and Pacific salmon. But her longtime signature dish is grilled Gulf shrimp and black bean cake, and she usually serves Gulf oysters, often stuffed with Italian sausage, spinach and fennel. Her recent cookbook, Crescent City Cooking, has dozens of recipes based on Gulf seafood.

    Earlier this month she opened Mondo, a casual, pan-cultural restaurant that is as likely to serve plantains as beignets. She has also recently gained some popular cultural currency, both as a Top Chef judge and as the inspiration for the chef in the HBO series Treme who struggles to hold onto her restaurant in the wake of Hurricane Katrina. Ms. Spicer is a culinary consultant for the show.

    Ms. Spicer said she was taken aback by the attention the suit is getting, particularly from bloggers and journalists who have argued that she doesn’t serve that much local seafood or that she is in it for the money.

    “I was a little blindsided by all of this,” she said. “But I think it needs to be done and I hope more people will join.”

    It’s not clear how wide-ranging support for the suit will be. Frank Brigtsen, who runs two restaurants, would not comment on the suit. Emeril Lagasse said he was not joining at this time.

    “We are continuing to closely monitor the situation and the oil leak’s impact on Emeril’s restaurant business,” Jeff Hinson, Mr. Lagasse’s public relations manager, wrote in an e-mail message to the Times.

    But the movement was getting some support from smaller businesses. Franky and Johnny’s, a neighborhood po’ boy and seafood restaurant, has signed on. And JoAnn Clevenger, who for nearly 30 years has run the Upperline Restaurant, plans to jump in, too.

    She wasn’t surprised larger restaurants weren’t.

    “Susan is an entrepreneurial chef. She is not big business like Emeril. For her and for other owner-operated businesses, what else are we going to do?” she said.

    After Hurricane Katrina, small business owners felt like they could pick up the pieces, rebuild and pitch in to help others. That’s not the case with the oil spill.

    “That can-do spirit has been quashed,” she said. “But what Susan is doing can give us that spirit back.”

    The suit is designed to include restaurant owners and retailers of seafood that is marketed and sold as local or from Louisiana or the Gulf of Mexico. That means the suit could extend to chefs and seafood shops in all five Gulf states, some of whom have already filed separate suits.

    The next step is a hearing scheduled for July 27, when a federal panel of judges meets in Boise, Idaho, to decide whether all the claims relating to the oil spill will be consolidated and put into the hands of a special master. The panel is also expected to decide where litigation about the oil spill will be held if it is consolidated.

    Plaintiffs are fighting to keep it from being consolidated in Houston, where many oil companies are headquartered.

    Kim Severson, "New York Times"

  • 15-Jun-10 11:10 | anonymous

    By Steven Hedlund, SeafoodSource editor www.seafoodsource.com
    15 June, 2010 - President Obama on Monday reassured the public that Gulf of Mexico seafood is safe to eat, emphasizing that his administration is ramping up its efforts to protect the U.S. seafood supply.

    “So, let me be clear: Seafood from the Gulf … is safe to eat,” said Obama during a stop in Theodore, Ala. “But we need to make sure that it stays that way.”

    Obama, who also visited Gulfport, Miss., said his administration, led by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, are taking a multi-pronged approach to protect the U.S. seafood supply, including precautionary fishing closures, increased seafood inspections and a reopening protocol.

    “That’s why, beyond closing off waters that have been or are likely to be exposed to oil, the FDA and NOAA are increasing inspections of seafood processors, strengthening surveillance programs and monitoring fish that are caught just outside of restricted areas. And we’re also coordinating our efforts with the states, which are implementing similar plans,” said Obama.

    “I had some of that seafood for lunch and it was delicious, he added. “But we want to make sure that the food industry down here as much as possible is getting the … the protection and the certification that they need to continue their businesses. So this is important for consumers who need to know that their food is safe, but it’s also important for the fishermen and processors, who need to be able to sell their products with confidence.”

    So far, NOAA and contracted fishing vessels have conducted 18 sampling missions in areas inside and outside the closed area, and 640 seafood samples are currently being tested for oil contamination — 118 samples at the National Seafood Inspection Laboratory in Pascagoula, Miss., and 416 samples at NOAA’s Seattle laboratory.

    The FDA has also set up a hotline, 1-888-INFO-FDA, for fishermen and consumers to report seafood safety issues.

    “FDA and NOAA are working together to ensure that seafood from the Gulf is not contaminated with oil,” said FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg. “It is important to coordinate seafood surveillance efforts on the water, at the docks and at seafood processors to ensure seafood in the market is safe to eat.”

    Additionally, the FDA issued a letter on Monday reiterating that seafood processors are required to implement a Hazard Analysis Critical Control Point (HACCP) plan when one or more food-safety hazards are reasonably likely to occur.

    “Environmental chemical contaminants, such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) from crude oil, in fish and shellfish pose a potential human health hazard. These contaminants may accumulate in fish and shellfish at levels that can cause illness,” said Michael Landa, acting director of the FDA’s Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition, in the letter.

  • 10-Jun-10 12:06 | anonymous
    The local chapter of the American Culinary Federation will hold its annual Culinary Classic on Sunday June 27th at the IP Casino Resort.  Visit our Sponsorships and Scholarships page for more details!
  • 20-May-10 16:10 | anonymous

     

    On Friday, Mike Cashion, Executive Director of the MHRA will be meeting with officials from BP in the hopes of securing a $2.6 million grant to fund a restaurant specific advertising campaign benefiting coast restaurants.

    The plan was created by Maris West Baker, one of the south's premier advertising agencies. It includes tv, print, web and viral marketing components targeting know feeder markets throughout the south.

  • 20-May-10 10:32 | anonymous
    Jackson, Mississippi (May 19, 2010) – The Mississippi Development Authority is preparing to launch a $15 million advertising campaign, coordinated with tourism and business officials across the three coastal counties, proving that Mississippi's Gulf Coast remains a hot-spot for dining, entertainment, outdoor fun and business gatherings. The $15 million was made available to the state by British Petroleum (BP).

    Under Governor Haley Barbour’s direction, MDA’s Tourism Division is developing a plan to work with coastal convention and visitors bureaus (CVBs) on messaging and to quickly put in place a campaign that will promote tourism to the Mississippi Gulf Coast as a whole. While all details are not yet in place, the state will be working with the local CVBs to ensure that advertising is placed in their target market areas to maximize impact and make the best use of these funds. Details will be made available as the plan is finalized.
     
    “While we continually monitor potential impacts the oil spill might have on tourism, it’s important to get the message out that our beaches remain open, our waterways are unrestricted and our restaurants and hotels are open and accepting patrons,” said Gray Swoope,
    MDA’s executive director. “The Mississippi Gulf Coast is open for business. This is the message that these funds will be used to communicate.”

    “We are moving forward very strategically with this endeavor. MDA will be working very closely with our industry partners on the Mississippi Gulf Coast and the Governor’s staff as we develop this plan. Despite a very challenging situation, we know that destination marketing works,” explained Mary Beth Wilkerson, director of MDA’s Tourism Division. “We are hopeful that an aggressive, integrated campaign will deliver an immediate return on investment.”

    Tourism information is available at www.VisitMississippi.org.

    ###

    About Mississippi Development Authority
    Mississippi Development Authority is the State of Mississippi’s lead economic and community development agency. Nearly 300 employees are engaged in providing services to businesses, communities and workers in the state. While the agency is best known for its efforts to recruit new businesses to Mississippi, the Authority provides services to promote tourism, help communities improve their quality of place, help existing employers identify and meet opportunities and challenges and help workers improve their skills – all with the goal of improving the quality of life and economic well-being of Mississippians. For more information, visit MDA’s website at www.mississippi.org.

    Contact: Sandy Bynum, Communications Bureau Manager, Tourism Division 601.359.3297
    sbynum@mississippi.org

    Jennifer Spann, Public Relations, Tourism Division 601.359.3297
    jspann@mississippi.org

  • 10-May-10 21:20 | anonymous
    May 1, 2010



    For its 28th year, Chefs of the Coast will bring two days of food‐filled fun to the Mississippi Coast Convention Center in Biloxi.

    Chefs of the Coast Food & Drink Extravaganza
    The time‐honored Chefs of the Coast Food & Drink Extravaganza will be held on Sunday, September 26, showcasing Mississippi Gulf Coast restaurants and drink establishments, displaying its Food As Art competition and offering top‐notch entertainment. Presented by the Gulf Coast Chapter of the Mississippi Hospitality and Restaurant Association (MHRA) as its annual fundraiser, Chefs of the Coast has been recognized by the Southeast Tourism Society as a Top 20 event and draws a strong crowd of attendees year after year. 

    Saturday Stockpot Cookoff
    To extend the Chefs of the Coast fun to families, and offer a little friendly cooking
    competition, the Saturday Stockpot Cook‐off, “Skinny Dippin’ Chicken,” will be held on
    September 25 at the convention center. Cooking teams are invited to bring their best
    chicken recipe and their stockpot to battle it out for bragging rights and cash prizes.
    Everyone is invited to sample the creations and enjoy the clean family fun.

    Buy tickets, sign up your cooking team today and find out more
    For more information on attending or participating in the 2010 Chefs of the Coast, go to www.ChefsoftheCoast.com. While there, vote for the 2010 Hottest Restaurant and Hottest Caterer, to be announced at the Food & Drink Extravaganza.

    Contact: Alicia Cool, Event Coordinator
    Imagine That
    228‐239‐3164

<< first  < prev   1   2   next >  last >> 
 




Presented by the Gulf Coast Chapter Mississippi Hospitality & Restaurant Association
Artwork provided by The Prime Time Agency
Copyright ©2010 | Website by Hink-Inc.

      Contact info@chefsofthecoast.com for more information