Lee Hart

Lee Hart

Award- winning career communicator Lee Hart is founder and president of Brand Amp, helping companies propel their messages and achieve goals. Brand Amp is leading the charge on the geotourism frontier with Travel Green Colorado and The Center for Geotourism. Founding member organization, The Dangerous Collective.

The Citizen is happy to provide a forum for comments and discussion. Please respect and abide by the house rules: Keep it clean, keep it civil, keep it truthful, stay on topic, be responsible, share your knowledge, and please suggest removal of comments that violate these standards. Real names are appreciated, but not required.

7 responses to “City, lodgers brace for showdown over 2B”

  1. And there went the Salida Citizen’s objectivity. Self proclaimed fair and balanced comes to Salida. Sorry Lee, you have lost me on this one!

  2. There is a lot of misinformation being spread in Letters to the Editor at the Mountain Mail about the lodging occupation tax.

    Yes, mistakes were made in framing this ballot issue and in arriving at the current tax amount. It has not been the Council’s finest moment. It was and is a sincere effort to address a real need and tie it to an appropriate source of funding by those who use the Pool.

    What remains clear is that the Pool needs work, the tax was passed by the voters and it needs to be implemented. Yes it is a tax on the lodging occupation which innkeepers will need to add into their pricing as a cost of doing business. Will it stop people from staying in Salida inns? I doubt it.

    The voters of Salida are not likely to agree to a hike in property taxes to cover needed Pool repairs nor rush out to buy higher priced annual passes either.

    Let’s get beyond the rhetoric and start collecting what the voters approved. If Council can’t apply the new funds and get the Pool back in shape, then decide what do do at that point.

  3. Please note this article is flagged as “commentary” and as such includes the writer’s perspective.

  4. Neither the home page nor the article originally indicated that it was filed as “commentary”, so Don wouldn’t have known that we were treating it as such internally.

    We’ve changed the formatting on both the home page and the article page to include categories. Hopefully that will make things a little more clear.

  5. Sorry we are not getting past this.

    We will create a recall petition if the city passes the ordinance on second reading in fact it is ready.

    But if the city will abandon it and we find that it can actually be abandoned with out it being resurrected in the future save and except a vote then we will work with the City to create a more effective method of taxation.

    Sorry but process is important, principle is important and the end rarely justifies the means.

    Sorry to add to the rhetoric.

  6. Upon further reflection is it not interesting that Mr. Bergin states in his comment, “The voters of Salida are not likely to agree to a hike in property taxes to cover needed Pool repairs nor rush out to buy higher priced annual passes either”. But feels justified in support of either a tax on the visitor or a tax on the lodging businesses to pay for these expenses.

    He has framed clearly why at this point it is an issue that must be fought and will continue to motivate our efforts to start a recall petition. To get this issue off the books.

  7. An occupancy tax is hardly a new idea. It is one way towns (especially small/struggling towns) can generate the revenue they need in order to fund important programs which maintain a quality experience for visitors and locals alike. If my lodging property were in Salida I’d support an initiative that’s main goal was to improve the recreational and cultural resources of the town. I know that I paid a lodging tax in nearly every place I visited last summer. I can’t recall a single time it ever altered my travel plans or left me destitute on the side of the road. It’s unfortunate 2B has become such a fiasco.

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