
Phoenix Resorts: 2009 called 'the worst' for Valley hotels
• AZcentral.com"For the lodging business, 2009 was the worst downturn in our lifetimes," Frits van Paasschen, chief executive officer of lodging giant Starwood Hotels and Resorts, said last week.
Why would a hotel want to open upduring these harsh business climates...perhaps because the taxpayer's are subsidizing them to open up:
In December 2009, news reports stated that the City was offering a sizeable tax break to the Wyndham Hotel through a sales-lease back arrangement. Concerned that unconstitutional tax breaks could be given to the hotel, the Goldwater Institute requested public records to see the development agreement and other related public documents on January 5, 2010. The City refused, saying no documents would be made public until a development agreement has been signed.
"The City of Phoenix admitted in court that it has documents that it can turn over to the public now, and that it is willing to do that," said Carrie Ann Sitren, an attorney with the Goldwater Institute's Scharf-Norton Center for Constitutional Litigation. "It is disappointing that it took a lawsuit and the Court's valuable time to have them comply."
The City said it was concerned some of the documents could affect its negotiations with the Wyndham Hotel. Because of this, Judge Mangum decided the City must turn those specific documents over to him for a private inspection. Judge Mangum will then decide if those particular documents should be released to the public.