In the Amusement Industry thread I posted Marc Swanson said it worked take 2-4 weeks to ramp up to get Seaworld ready to open. I'd assume about the same for BGW.
My point is, this wonderful leadership we have is holding us back. We cant even go out on our local beaches without being harrassed by the police because they are closed. Theres no end in sight for Virginia to be moving toward opening places like BGW.I’m not sure what your point is?
Meanwhile, I have heard that BGW is actively installing new measures into the park. Things like plexiglass barriers and such.
But who's installing the new barriers? I thought that their maintenance team is still on furlough unless of course some were recalled recently.
Yet here in Virginia we still cant sit on a beach....I dont see BGW opening anytime soon yet the Florida parks will be sucking in the tourists from all over the country.
While you have good points our economy does rely on those tourists. Local governments budgets are already devastated, so it is important to find balance between health and economy. It's scary to think about the lasting effects of all of this.
State and local governments budgets are shot for about 3-4 years. My guess would mean the county/state backed programs such as infrastructure will be more in 'repair what we have mode' rather than expand. So something like the I-64 project might either slow to a minimal expansion, or just wrap up where they are until funding is back.
Legit question - are you referring to the new HRBT expansion or the ongoing road widening through Richmond?
My understanding is that both sets of projects have already been funded to some extent, so work can still continue for awhile.
However, to your point about tourism - local infrastructure not tied to federal funding/grants is definitely affected by the setbacks.
The span from RVA -> The Triangle. There's no chance it's 100% funded. So either take the remainder funding and try to finish up the project to where it was build to this point and make it look good or slow the pace of the construction by cutting staff, extending deadlines, and work only at one end. The reason you slow down is the funding might last 13 months at the current pace but the project is slated to go another 36. Without knowing when your funding will roll in again you run the risk of running out of money without finishing.
Also - local infrastructure tied to federal funding/grants is definitely affected right now. There isn't as much money to go around, so unless you already had it, you likely aren't getting it unless it's something major like a broken main line or a massive sink hole in a road.
I've had to make that call before. It's not fun. I literally lost sleep for about 2 weeks.
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