Tennessee: 2020 tourism decline not as bad as nation's rate

Paddlers and rafts line the pool above the put-in on the Ocoee River.  Tennessee Governor Bill Lee visited the Ocoee River, on June 4, 2021, to celebrate the impact of tourism and also in celebration of the state's 225th birthday. / Staff Photo by Robin Rudd
Paddlers and rafts line the pool above the put-in on the Ocoee River. Tennessee Governor Bill Lee visited the Ocoee River, on June 4, 2021, to celebrate the impact of tourism and also in celebration of the state's 225th birthday. / Staff Photo by Robin Rudd

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- Tennessee officials say the state saw a lower rate of decline in tourism spending than the country as a whole in 2020 amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Tennessee Department of Tourist Development says the state had $16.8 billion in domestic and international travel spending last year in a report from the U.S. Travel Association and Tourism Economics.

That's a 31.6% decline from the previous year, compared with a 42% drop for the nation at large.

The numbers coincide with efforts from Republican Gov. Bill Lee's administration to drum up tourism amid the pandemic.

The approach has also drawn critics who think the state isn't doing enough to fight the pandemic.

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