AHLA: 2021 U.S. hotel jobs expected to be down 20% from 2019 levels

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The top five states with the most expected job losses are California, Florida, New York, Nevada and Hawaii, which account for about 8% of the total.
The top five states with the most expected job losses are California, Florida, New York, Nevada and Hawaii, which account for about 8% of the total. Photo Credit: David Tadevosian/Shutterstock.com

In a new report released this week by the American Hotel & Lodging Association, the U.S. hotel industry is expected to reach 1,863,026 jobs in 2021, which represents a more than 20% loss compared with the number of total hotel jobs in 2019, which were 2,341,271.

These numbers are direct hotel property jobs and do not include job losses from other industries supported by the hotel industry, according to the report, which was sourced by Oxford Economics.

The report lists job totals for each of the 50 U.S. states plus Washington, D.C., for 2019, 2020 and 2021. The top five states with the most expected job losses compared with 2019 totals are, in order, California, Florida, New York, Nevada and Hawaii. These five states account for about 8% of the total expected losses compared with 2019 totals. 

Demonstrating the extent of the job losses in California, the state's projected decrease of 67,169 jobs represents more than 27,600 more lost jobs compared with No. 2 Florida's expected decrease of 39,560 jobs.

The report comes less than a week after U.S. Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) and U.S. Rep. Charlie Crist (D-Fla.) introduced the Save Hotel Jobs Act to the U.S. Congress. The bill calls for targeted federal relief to the hotel industry workforce, including up to three months of full payroll support, according to AHLA. AHLA and the hospitality union Unite Here joined forces to support the bill.

"While many other hard-hit industries have received targeted federal relief, the hotel industry has not," said AHLA president and CEO Chip Rogers in a statement. "We need Congress to pass the Save Hotel Jobs Act to help hotels retain and rehire employees until travel demand, especially business travel, begins to come back."

Source: Business Travel News

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