By PAUL HAMMEL
Nebraska Examiner
LINCOLN — Nebraska got a lot of publicity after it unveiled an edgy state tourism slogan in 2018: “Honestly, it’s not for everyone.”
But a state senator proposed Thursday that more unified messaging might be accomplished if the state’s economic development director and the Nebraska Chamber of Commerce were more involved.
After all, the pitch made by the Nebraska Department of Economic Development to recruit workers to the state — “The Good Life is Calling” — is a tad different.
State Sen. Mike McDonnell of Omaha originally proposed in his Legislative Bill 624 that the State Tourism Commission would end its run as an independent entity and return to being a division of DED, as it was prior to 2013.
Original proposal ‘not for everyone’
But, McDonnell joked, his initial proposal “was not for everyone.”
Under a compromise amendment he offered Thursday, the commission would remain independent, but its board of directors would be revamped, with the state DED director joining the 12-member board, as well as a representative of the state chamber.
That, McDonnell said, would lead to more unified messaging in future campaigns to draw tourists and new residents.
“Singing from the same sheet of music,” is how Gordon Sen. Tom Brewer described it during a hearing on the bill.
Representatives of the state’s lodging and travel associations testified in favor of the amended proposal.
They were the groups that had sought an independent tourism commission a decade ago, arguing that tourism promotion would become a higher priority for the state if it wasn’t a part of a larger state agency.
Slogan makes a ‘mockery’ of state
During a legislative hearing Tuesday on DED’s budget request, senators on the Appropriations Committee quizzed DED Director Tony Goins about the alignment of the “Good Life is Calling” campaign with the “It’s not for everyone” tourism slogan.
“It’s not good when we have two different messages out there,” said Omaha Sen. Tony Vargas.
Goins said he didn’t disagree.
“As an agency, we don’t feel we should be made a mockery of,” he said, noting that the slogan was coined by an advertising firm out of Colorado.
The Legislature’s Government, Military and Veterans Affairs Committee took no action on the bill after a public hearing Thursday.