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Indiana State Police will Conduct Sobriety Checkpoint this Weekend

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ISP Indiana State Police, Vanderburgh County Sheriff’s Office and Evansville Police will be conducting a sobriety checkpoint in Vanderburgh County sometime this upcoming weekend. The exact location, date and time will not be released. Motorists that are not impaired can expect only short delays of 2-3 minutes while passing through the checkpoint. 
Troopers encourage all motorists to call 911 or the closest Indiana State Police Post when they observe another motorist that may be impaired. Be prepared to give a description of the vehicle, location and direction of travel.

The Indiana State Police are committed to traffic safety and will continue to conduct saturation patrols and sobriety checkpoints to apprehend impaired drivers and to deter others from drinking and driving.

WIN YOUR BENEFITS !

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angelaallenWin Your Benefits! How to Win – and Hang ON to – Your SSI and Social Security Disability Payments!
By Angela Allen

IdeAbility, Inc., and
Nationwide Disability Claim Services
640 S. Hebron Ave., Evansville IN 47714
angela@winyourbenefits.com

FIRST:

Thank you for reading this book! I’m a former claims representative and I strongly hope that this book helps you.

First, a few notes on what this book does and doesn’t do: it does not guarantee that you will win your claim. It also doesn’t disclose confidential information. It’s not meant to replace talking with someone who works for the Social Security Administration. If you call someone at your friendly local field office or one of the 800-number call centers, be sure to make your list of questions in advance. And if you can, read this book first. It’s always a very good thing to get a little more background. Much of the information in this book is available at thewww.SocialSecurity.gov Web site. That’s an enormous – and very educational – Web site. This book has boiled down the information that you need to have handy. One more thing, this book also does not give legal advice nor does it take the place of legal advice. This book does, however, cover a lot! You might be overwhelmed. Go slowly. I would rather give you too much than short-change you! If there are any items needing correction, be sure to go to the book’s companion Web site: www.WinYourBenefits.com ! I’ll get any changes or corrections that might be needed done quickly and listed there.

About me:

Hi. I’m Angela. I worked for the agency for eight years. Helping people with their claims and their questions became a passion and a privilege for me. I am the daughter of a 100% disabled Army veteran, a step-daughter of a WWII Navy veteran, the niece of a former Air Force “Flying Tiger,” and the daughter of an amazing, vital woman who had more creativity, beauty, and energy than Carters had “Little Pills!” I’m also a college graduate with two master’s degrees (Masters of Arts in Liberal Studies and Masters in Public Administration, both from the University of Southern Indiana). I’m a member of two unions – AFGE and SAG/AFTRA (probably not AFGE any longer, though, since leaving the agency). I’m divorced with no children – but have my silly pets: two oversized German-Shepherd mixes and three very entertaining cats. I also have three sisters (Linda, Mary and Charmi), a brother (Mike), nephews (Greg and Josh), and two great-nieces and two great-nephews.

Before my eight years working as a Social Security claims rep, my life’s main work had still been very public-oriented: I was a broadcaster. I worked at radio stations in Nashville, Tucson, Tulsa, Phoenix, New Orleans, Los Angeles and Evansville, Indiana (where I grew up). I was nominated Billboard Major Market Air Personality of the Year 1987 when I worked in Phoenix at KOOL-FM. It made my folks very proud. I lost, though (to Rick Dees).

The book you are reading is about a subject is very near and dear to my heart. It is my passion. I have seen it make a tremendous difference. As my fantastic boss in New Mexico said, “When people come to this office, we are often their last hope. Let’s solve their problem.”

I am now a non-attorney representative, what they call “EDPNA.” I represent people with their claims and appeals before Social Security. This is my calling. It is my hope to be able to really help now, and I think I can. I think I can help more now than I could before I left the agency. And I do love the agency. I miss it and the people I worked with.

Chapter 1 : The Claimant

Disability can result from almost any given situation. A disabling condition can happen suddenly or develop over time. You could experience a sudden, disabling accident. If you are a working adult, where it happened can be key. It may or may not have been on the job. Or perhaps your disabling condition developed slowly over a period of time—so slowly, and over such a long time span, that you did not even notice its impact on your ability to work until fairly recently.

Children with Disabilities

What if you are the parent of a child who is disabled? Or whose development is being delayed by a disability? What if your child experiences the sudden onset of a disabling condition from an accident? Or, what if the child has had a disabling condition since birth?

In 1990, the laws covering disabled children were changed (“Zebley ” cases). Conditions that couldn’t “be seen” or otherwise weren’t plainly evident, started to get long-overdue attention, and children’s disabilities began to be determined on a “non-adult” scale (as in, not work-related). Before that time, children’s disabilities that tended to be physical and keenly evident (profound mental delay or cerebral palsy, for example) formed the bulk of cases. After 1990, conditions that weren’t so easy to see (but probably very visible to any parent) began getting their due. These conditions include attention deficit disorder (ADD), attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and others.

Please Note: If your child receives a Social Security payment from a retired, disabled or deceased parent’s work record, this is an auxiliarybenefit to the child, not a payment because the child is disabled. Please remember to apply for SSI for that child upon his or her reaching eighteen (and ideally, the month right after turning eighteen).

(Side note: At that point, if the child has a parent who receives Social Security retirement or disability payments (or if the child has a deceased parent who was covered for Social Security), there is another application that needs to be taken –it is called CDBD/CDBR –disabled adult child (or “DAC”). More on that later.)

If the child already receives SSI, when the child turns eighteen there will be something called the “Age 18 continuing disability review” (covered later in this book). As a legal minor, the child’s disabling condition was based on factors that included a comparison made between how the child “functions” and the “functioning” of other children who are the same general age. However, upon turning eighteen, adultdisability criteria are used. The disabling condition decision is then based in part on adult vocational considerations.

Adults with Disabilities

As a working adult, you probably have Social Security disability coverage (“insured status”), if, generally speaking, you have earned a certain amount for at least five out of the last ten years (a good, but rough, estimate right now: around $4800 per year – but make certain by going to the agency’s Web site and search on “quarters of coverage”). Also, while you’re there, create your own “My SSA” account! It’s free, and you can see immediately what’s going on with your work and earnings record. Plus, you’ll get an idea of your early and full retirement benefits (and also if you delay retirement), and you’ll see what you might receive if you were to become disabled. Keep track of your username and password, by the way, and remember that you’ll need to change your password every three months or so. One more thing – it absolutely MUST be YOU creating your account:

  • I understand that I may use this service only to access my personal information. Even with a person’s written consent, I understand that I cannot use this online service to access the records of a person:
    • With whom I have a business relationship; or
    • For whom I am an appointed representative.
  • I understand that this computer program contains U.S. Government information.
  • I consent to the monitoring and recording of my use of this program to ensure its appropriate use.
  • I understand that it is a federal crime to:
    • Give false or misleading statements to obtain information in Social Security records; or
    • Deceive the Social Security Administration of an individual’s identity.
  • I understand that unauthorized use of this service is a misrepresentation of my identity to the federal government and could subject me to criminal or civil penalties, or both.
  • I understand that Social Security may stop me from using these services online if it finds or suspects misuse.
  • I assume responsibility for the disclosure of my personal information if the computer or other device that I am using to access the MySocialSecurity application does not adequately safeguard my information. I also understand that Social Security is not responsible for the disclosure of my information due to my negligence or for the wrongful acts of others.

 

So, YIKES! Make sure it’s YOU clicking that mouse!!

Back to the story, now.

If you sustain an injury at work, generally speaking, you’re often able to get workers’ compensation . I f you weren’t injured at work, then maybe you have been enduring an ongoing, steadily (and slowly) deteriorating disabling condition (degenerative disc disease, for example). Or, it could be that you have experienced a “traumatic onset” of a condition that caused you to become disabled. Traumatic onsets are types of events that might involve a misstep, a vehicle, some kind of work-related/ industrial machinery, or some other kind of injury-causing circumstance. However it might have happened, the result could be a disabling condition that prevents work. So: if you find yourself in situations like these, you may find yourself considering filing an application for disability benefits.

If you are expected to heal in less than a year, you generally are not considered disabled. Keep in mind that any additional secondary effects from that injury that could take time to develop. It’s very important for your doctor to keep on top of that. You can help out by keeping a kind of “disability journal” of your experiences (physical problems, changes in activities, doctor/hospital visits, new issues, etc.). If you try to go back to work and it doesn’t work out, that might be designated as an “unsuccessful work attempt.” This might bolster your argument that your condition could last longer than 12-months.

Keep in mind that if you do receive workers’ compensation and file and win Social Security Disability benefits, if there are any past-due benefits (“back pay”), workers’ compensation payments may very well soak up a significant portion of the Social Security back pay (workers’ compensation is also a disability benefit and is subject to that process called “offset” that recoups some of the payments made to the worker).

What if you’ve never worked? That’s the cue for SSI to come into play. It is not based on your work history like Social Security disability requirements are (it is needs-based – more on that to come). You might not have worked, and now you have a disabling condition (or, perhaps you could not work because of your health issues). If you were a stay-at-home spouse and have/had a spouse who works, you probably (hopefully) have some kind of safety net with the health benefits your husband or wife receives from employment.

If you have never worked or haven’t worked lately, you might not be able to receive Social Security disability payments (you might not “covered” for Social Security disability – more on that shortly). If that is the case, you will probably be an “SSI-only” applicant.

First, you can apply. Absolutely, PERIOD, you have the right to apply! However, certain things may cause you to be “ineligible” for any benefit payable and it will prevent your application from moving forward to the disability examiners.

For example: if you are married to someone who works, if their income is fairly low, yes: your application could move forward (all other things remaining the same). Keep in mind though – you may not be eligible for SSI if your spouse’s earnings are too high and you have no minor children (belonging to you or your spouse) in the household. With high spousal earnings and no minor children in the house, you may be over the income limit.

Another thing that can knock you out of contention for your application moving forward is if you and your spouse are “over the resource limit” – for SSI, the couples’ resource limit is $3000 (this is covered elsewhere in the book). For single individuals, the resource limit is $2000. It is different with respect to children (again this is covered elsewhere in the book).

But – if you are over the income limit OR over the resource limit, your application is not eligible to move forward in the disability decision-making process (because there would be nothing to pay you).

As mentioned above, SSI is a “needs-based” benefit. SSI doesn’t depend on your work history – it depends on household (yours and/or your spouse’s) income, your living arrangements and things you and your spouse own (“resources”).

If your spouse’s earnings are lower and you are low-resource, and if you are over 65, blind or if you feel you are disabled, do file for SSI. Make that appointment or call or visit a field office – get your appointment set ASAP. Or, call or visit an attorney or non-attorney representative as soon as possible (the sooner the better, for SSI “filing month” reasons).

Also: if you have not seen a doctor recently, it’s likely that the disability examiners will send you a letter that tells you about an appointment you’ll be having with a healthcare provider (a “consultative exam”). Keep this appointment! If you can’t keep it, call the number on the letter as soon as you can to reschedule. And when the time for the appointment arrives, be sure to take copies of any and all documents with you that might help the healthcare provider understand more about your disabling condition!

 

Frog Follies Car Show

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Beginning on Thursday of this week, the largest annual leisure travel group will arrive in Evansville in attractive, shiny cars to enjoy a weekend of camaraderie as they share their love for classic cars.  As most have for the last 38 years, they will gather at the Vanderburgh 4-H Center where over 4,000 cars are expected at the Frog Follies Car Show sponsored by the E’ville Iron Street Rods Car Club. The Frog Follies Car Show begins Friday, August 23 through Sunday, August 25. Gates open at 8AM daily and admission is $5 per adult (children under 12 are free). Spectators are encouraged to attend to enjoy the cars, the people, the vendors and the activities that are scheduled throughout the weekend.

Utility complies with federal mandate, approves rate ordinance

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Rate increases will fund sewer improvements and affect all customers

GetAttachment-4.aspx The Evansville Water & Sewer Utility (EWSU) Board has taken action to comply with the federal consent decree and is requesting City Council’s approval of sewer rate increases for 2014, 2015 and 2016 to help fund much-needed, mandatory upgrades to Evansville’s sewer system. Today, the Utility Board approved the sewer rate ordinance, which will now go to City Council for a reading on Aug. 26 and a vote on Sept. 23.

Rate increases would affect all EWSU customers – residential, commercial and industrial – although specific impacts vary by meter size and class of user. If approved, an average residential customer using 4,000 gallons per month can expect increases of 32 percent in 2014, 8 percent in 2015 and 18 percent in 2016.

Why a rate increase is needed now

EWSU and the City of Evansville must proceed with operational improvements specified in the consent decree and implement a 28-year, $540 million program – known as Renew Evansville – to address combined sewer overflows and other issues stemming from an aging sewer system. The City submitted the Integrated Overflow Control Plan to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on May 31, 2013, and is awaiting the agency’s feedback and/or approval. Evansville faces fines and penalties for each day it does not meet the terms of the consent decree, the legally binding agreement with EPA, the U.S. Department of Justice and Indiana Department of Environmental Management.

How rate increases impact residential customers

Based on an average monthly residential usage of 4,000 gallons of water per month, a customer inside the City can expect their bill to increase from $27.12 in 2013 to $35.83 in 2014, $38.74 in 2015 and $45.72 in 2016. Similarly, outside city rates will increase from $36.60 in 2013 to $48.37, $52.24 and $61.66, respectively.

Financing needed for mandated improvements

Revenue generated from rate increases will finance improvements mandated by state and federal regulators. Through 2016, $120 million is needed to fund projects that include:

• $61.5 million for Renew Evansville, the long-term control plan to significantly upgrade

Evansville’s sewer system and reduce combined sewer overflows and water pollution in our waterways. This will be the City’s largest capital improvement project to-date.

• $52.2 million for increased inspection, maintenance, repairs and “end of life” capital

projects.

• $6.6 million for the final phase of the Cass Avenue sewer separation project to eliminate southeast side flooding.

“Historically, Evansville has underinvested in our sewer system, and through government-mandated inspections, we are seeing significant deficiencies in our sewer system daily,” said Allen Mounts, director of EWSU. “The Utility needs additional resources, including capital funding and manpower, to address the growing number of work orders to repair our sewer lines and comply with state and federal demands. We realize any increase in utility rates will impact our customers, but we feel these rates have been thoughtfully constructed. And, they are still lower than many of our neighboring communities.”

Mounts added, “Without a rate increase there would be insufficient capital money, and the City would begin missing deadlines on the mandated long-term control projects, which could result in major fines and other consequences.”

EWSU serves approximately 60,000 customers and operates and maintains more than 800 miles of combined and separated sanitary sewer pipes that collect and transport millions of gallons of wastewater each day. More information about the Utility and Renew Evansville is available at www.ewsu.com and www.RenewEvansville.com.

Redevelopment Commission Approves Downtown Hotel Project

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Public meetings announced for month of August to share details

Members of the Evansville Redevelopment Commission (ERC) voted today to adopt a resolution approving a project development agreement with developer HCW of Branson, MO, for the Downtown Convention Hotel Project. The vote took place at a special ERC meeting.

Evansville Mayor Lloyd Winnecke said he is very pleased with the ERC’s action. He called today’s vote “a critical step” that clears the way for an ordinance approving funding for the project to be presented at the Evansville City Council meeting for first reading Monday, August 12, at 5:30 p.m.

The total cost of the project is $74 Million. The City would contribute $20 million toward the hotel and $17.5 million toward ancillary components, such as Sky bridges, Parking Garage, Retail Building, infrastructure and streetscape improvements and renovations to The Centre. Mayor Winnecke said he is confident the County will be contributing to the project.

The project is projected to create 831 jobs during construction and 235 permanent onsite jobs when the hotel and retail complex opens. The public investment will not impact property taxes and instead will be paid for using a combination of revenues from the Downtown TIF, Food and Beverage Tax, Innkeepers Tax and Riverboat Gaming. HCW will not receive tax abatement.

A series of public meetings have been scheduled throughout the city at various times and days to give the community an opportunity to hear details of the Downtown Hotel Project and ask questions. Mayor Winnecke plans to seek final approval of the deal at the September 9 City Council meeting and break ground on the project by late 2013.

Fort Wayne Sentinal Editorial: “It’s doubtful that Evansville will find its answer with a new hotel”

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Excerpts from the August 7th, 2013 Editorial in the Fort Wayne Sentinal:

“Evansville is in the middle of a downtown revitalization effort. Groundbreaking on a new $74 million hotel next to the convention center could be just months away. A city councilman says it is hoped the hotel will breathe new life into the center and “the businesses that are trying to sustain themselves in the downtown area” so the city is picking up $37.5 million of the tab.

Boy, that sounds awfully familiar, doesn’t it? What other city do we know that is hoping to find the right answer to downtown turnaround?”

“Will the Evansville hotel be a magic bullet for its downtown? We simply can’t know that. Sometimes something works, like the wonderful Circle Center Mall and surrounding businesses in downtown Indianapolis. A similar project at the old Union Station was an initial success but ultimately flopped.
And how many studies did we do of downtown Fort Wayne that recommended a “right” answer? How many false starts did we have?”

“It’s doubtful that Evansville will find its answer with a new hotel, but until leaders there understand that, they’ll be looking in the wrong places. Studies can’t really get anything done. The best they can do is pave the way for people with good ideas willing to take risks. The best the rest of us can do is encourage those people and try to recognize the worthiness of a good idea when we see one.”

Cut and paste to your browser read full story:

http://www.news-sentinel.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20130807/EDITORIAL/130809772/0/SEARCH

Water Rates Rise as City takes First Baby Steps Toward EPA Compliance

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EVANSVILLE, Ind. – The Evansville Water & Sewer Utility (EWSU) Board has taken action to comply with the federal consent decree and is requesting City Council’s approval of sewer rate increases for 2014, 2015 and 2016 to help fund much-needed, mandatory upgrades to Evansville’s sewer system. Today, the Utility Board approved the sewer rate ordinance, which will now go to City Council for a reading on Aug. 26 and a vote on Sept. 23.

Rate increases would affect all EWSU customers – residential, commercial and industrial – although specific impacts vary by meter size and class of user. If approved, an average residential customer using 4,000 gallons per month can expect increases of 32 percent in 2014, 8 percent in 2015 and 18 percent in 2016.
Why a rate increase is needed now

EWSU and the City of Evansville must proceed with operational improvements specified in the consent decree and implement a 28-year, $540 million program – known as Renew Evansville – to address combined sewer overflows and other issues stemming from an aging sewer system. The City submitted the Integrated Overflow Control Plan to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) on May 31, 2013, and is awaiting the agency’s feedback and/or approval. Evansville faces fines and penalties for each day it does not meet the terms of the consent decree, the legally binding agreement with EPA, the U.S. Department of Justice and Indiana Department of Environmental Management.

How rate increases impact residential customers

Based on an average monthly residential usage of 4,000 gallons of water per month, a customer inside the City can expect their bill to increase from $27.12 in 2013 to $35.83 in 2014, $38.74 in 2015 and $45.72 in 2016. Similarly, outside city rates will increase from $36.60 in 2013 to $48.37, $52.24 and $61.66, respectively.
Financing needed for mandated improvements

Revenue generated from rate increases will finance improvements mandated by state and federal regulators. Through 2016, $120 million is needed to fund projects that include:
• $61.5 million for Renew Evansville, the long-term control plan to significantly upgrade Evansville’s sewer system and reduce combined sewer overflows and water pollution in our waterways. This will be the City’s largest capital improvement project to-date.
• $52.2 million for increased inspection, maintenance, repairs and “end of life” capital projects.
• $6.6 million for the final phase of the Cass Avenue sewer separation project to eliminate southeast side flooding.
“Historically, Evansville has underinvested in our sewer system, and through government-mandated inspections, we are seeing significant deficiencies in our sewer system daily,” said Allen Mounts, director of EWSU. “The Utility needs additional resources, including capital funding and manpower, to address the growing number of work orders to repair our sewer lines and comply with state and federal demands. We realize any increase in utility rates will impact our customers, but we feel these rates have been thoughtfully constructed. And, they are still lower than many of our neighboring communities.”

Mounts added, “Without a rate increase there would be insufficient capital money, and the City would begin missing deadlines on the mandated long-term control projects, which could result in major fines and other consequences.”

EWSU serves approximately 60,000 customers and operates and maintains more than 800 miles of combined and separated sanitary sewer pipes that collect and transport millions of gallons of wastewater each day. More information about the Utility and Renew Evansville is available at www.ewsu.com and www.RenewEvansville.com.

Cities keep squandering money on hotels and meeting facilities

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$37.5 Million on fire
$37.5 Million on fire

By Steven Malanga

For two decades, American cities have used public dollars to build convention center space—far more than demand warranted. The result has been a gigantic nationwide surplus of empty meeting facilities, struggling convention centers, and vacant hotel rooms (see “The Convention Center Shell Game,” Spring 2004). Given the glut, you’d think that cities would stop. Instead, many are spending hundreds of millions of dollars to expand convention centers and open yet more dazzling hotels, arguing that whatever convention business remains will flow to the places with the fanciest amenities. If this dubious rationale proves wrong and the facilities fail—it’s telling that the private sector won’t build them on its own—taxpayers will wind up on the hook, as usual.

The convention business has been waning for years. Back in 2007, before the current economic slowdown, a report from Destination Marketing Association International was already calling it a “buyer’s market.” It has only worsened since. In 2010, conventions and meetings drew just 86 million attendees, down from 126 million ten years earlier. Meantime, available convention space has steadily increased to 70 million square feet, up from 40 million 20 years ago.

Boston exemplifies double-down madness. The city shelled out $230 million to renovate its convention center in the late 1980s. After the makeover produced virtually no economic bounce, Boston concluded that it needed a new $800 million center, projecting that it would help the city rent some 670,000 extra hotel rooms a year by 2009. The new center, which opened in 2004, fell far short of expectations: the actual number of room rentals that it generated in 2009 was slightly more than 300,000. Now Boston tourism officials are proposing to spend $2 billion to double the center’s size and add a convention hotel, to boot. The officials optimistically predict that the expanded facilities would inject $222 million annually into the local economy, including an extra 140,000 room rentals a year. Despite these bullish projections, officials claim that the hotel needs $200 million in subsidies.

Boston is far from alone. Hoping to help its limping convention center, Baltimore paid $300 million to build a city-owned convention hotel, which opened in 2008. The hotel lost $11 million last year and has barely been able to pay its employees or its debt service. Yet Baltimore is now considering a massive $900 million public-private expansion that would add a downtown arena, another convention hotel, and 400,000 feet of new convention space. The projected cost in public money: $400 million.

Convention-hotel mania has swept Texas, too. Dallas just opened a convention hotel financed with $388 million in Build America Bonds, and Arlington and nearby Irving are both proposing new hotels to boost tourism. These facilities will compete with alternatives in places like Austin, which opened a massive 800-room convention hotel in 2003 after a study predicted that it would generate more than 300,000 room rentals annually for the city. But Austin has yet to exceed 200,000 per year.

Perhaps recognizing this weak economic record, convention and tourism officials have been changing their sales pitch. Convention and meeting centers shouldn’t be judged, they now say, by how much business they bring to local hotels, restaurants, and local attractions. Instead, we should see them as helping to establish a tourism brand for their cities. The director of Boston’s convention center, for instance, boasts that it brings the city “tourism impacts”—purportedly an economic value beyond whatever dollars the convention industry manages to attract.
The main value of such nebulous concepts seems to be to obscure the failure of publicly sponsored facilities to live up to exaggerated projections. As far as city officials are concerned, that failure is nothing that hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars can’t fix.

Source: California Political Review

Is It Time to Stop Building Convention Centers? from Atlantic Cities

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Atlantic Cities covered this problem last year, in an article titled: Is It Time to Stop Building Convention Centers?

The highlights:

“Over the last 20 years, convention space in the United States has increased by 50 percent; since 2005, 44 new convention spaces have been planned or constructed in this country alone. That boom hasn’t come cheap. In the last ten years, spending on convention centers has doubled to $2.4 billion annually, much of it from public coffers.”

“But there’s a problem with this building bonanza, and it’s a doozy: There aren’t really enough conventions to go around. The actual number of conventions hosted in the U.S. has fallen over the last decade. Attendance at the 200 largest conventions peaked at about 5 million in the mid-1990s and has fallen steadily since then.”

“”So many were saying, ‘all you have to do is get one percent of the national market and you’ll do just fine,'” he says. “Three hundred cities bought the same logic.””

It seems like investing in a convention hotel would result in losing more money faster.

And from a discussion on a Minneapolis scheme to subsidize a 1,000 room convention hotel:

The fact that the massive subsidy in the convention center hasn’t come close to paying for itself should be enough to say no to subsidies. If a hotel like this costs $125M in subsidies (41% of the total construction costs), one would assume it would bring in a heck of a lot in local economic impact, right? If bonded, that’s $7.16M per year over 30 years for the state/city. To recoup that investment in sales tax (just break even), that’s convention guests spending $92M per year on food, shows, etc (assuming the current Minneapolis/Hennepin/MN sales tax rate of 7.775%). If you assumed that hotel was full with 1,000 people every day of the year (and that other hotels in the area maintained their demand as well), they would need to spend $252 a day on food and other taxable items for the public to recoup their investment. Good luck.

http://www.theatlanticcities.com/politics/2012/06/stop-building-convention-centers/2210/