Texas agency takes a huge hit from Enron's fall

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HOUSTON -- Sharon Lay's corporate agency, Alliance Worldwide, is coping with greatly diminished business from a high-profile client -- Enron.

How much lost business?

A spokeswoman for the Lay family put it this way: Enron spent $117 million on travel with the agency in 2001, and Alliance Worldwide received a 5% travel management fee. That translates to about $5.9 million.

Sharon Lay owns 50% of the company that was known until September as Travel Agency in the Park (TAP). She's the sister of Kenneth Lay, the former chief executive officer of Enron, which filed for bankruptcy on Dec. 2 in a now-infamous accounting scandal.

TAP was rebranded as Alliance Worldwide and continues to have a service agreement with Enron and its affiliated companies.

As Enron's lead agency since 1988, TAP and its successor, Alliance Worldwide, handled the bulk of Enron's travel business and operated a customer service office on Enron property. Enron, in turn, accounted for the bulk of the agency's business -- about 70% or 80%, according to one source.

TAP also became prominent in Houston social and business circles.

Although the Enron bubble has burst, Alliance Worldwide "is doing fine," the spokeswoman said.

The agency is projecting 2002 sales of $15 million from 40 "ongoing" corporate clients and three under contract, she said, adding that the company plans a "guerrilla-marketing campaign to call and see everyone."

It hasn't been an entirely smooth transition, though.

A CBS News report in early February cited allegedly "questionable financial dealings" between Enron and Sharon Lay's agency.

Enron made a $350,000 "utility payment" to the agency less than three weeks before its Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing, according to the published report.

And two days before the bankruptcy filing, according to the report, another $350,000 payment was authorized, but the check didn't clear.

The Lay family spokeswoman said the CBS report was "wrong," and she said the $350,000 payments were for travel management fees.

It is not clear how much Enron paid the agency earlier in 2001. The Enron financial statement that would have detailed the 2001 payments normally would have been filed this spring.

The timing of the two $350,000 payments could become an issue in the bankruptcy proceedings because relatives or friends of company officials can't be given preferential treatment as creditors.

An Enron spokesman declined to return phone calls about the $350,000 payments but did phone earlier to cite disclosures in corporate financial reports about Sharon Lay's relationship to her brother and payments to TAP.

Founded in 1983, TAP began doing business for Enron's operating companies in 1985 and "won the Enron Corp. contract in competitive bidding in 1988," the Lay family spokeswoman said.

The AFL-CIO, which represents some Enron employees, cited the Enron-TAP relationship as a conflict of interest at a meeting of Enron's board of directors in 1997, said AFL-CIO research analyst Dieter Waizenegger.

"It smelled weird, of favoritism," he said.

Whether it was a conflict or not, there certainly was a close relationship between Enron and its corporate travel agency. TAP employees, for instance, were eligible to join the Enron Federal Credit Union.

Today, four months after Enron's fall, Alliance Worldwide is "highly optimistic" about its future, the Lay family spokeswoman said.

Although it had to cut staff, Alliance Worldwide is emphasizing its customer service and technology, which is comparable to "mega-agencies," the spokeswoman said.

She noted that the company's Web site, at www.allianceworldwide.com, features online booking for groups and meetings, e-ticket tracking and itinerary services.

As Alliance Worldwide tries to regain some traction, the Houston economy still is adjusting to the ripple effects of the Enron bankruptcy.

Houston hotels, for example, can expect a decline in occupancy of 2% to 4% this year because of Enron's collapse, according to HVS International, a lodging industry tracking firm.

Still, a spokeswoman for American Express Travel said its agencies report that business in and out of Houston remains "good overall" because of the city's diversified economy.

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