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1614-11 Various Miami Beach /- . i THE MIAMI HERALD Copyright (c) 1987, The Miami Herald DATE: Thursday, September 10, 1987 EDITION: FINAL SECTION: NEIGHBORS MB PAGE: 3 LENGTH: 51 lines SOURCE/CREDIT LINE: STEPHEN SMITH Herald Staff Writer SUMMER IS HOT FOR MANY BEACH HOTELS A tourism quiz, true or false: When summer arrives in Miami Beach, the tourists don't, leaving hotels with dust, rental cars with rust and a city gone bust. False. Or, in the favorite languages of Beach hotel owners and rental car managers, falsch, faux and falso. Tourists from West Germany and France and Latin America visited in the summer season just ended Monday, filling rooms, renting cars and helping fuel a 16.3 percent increase in resort tax collections through July. To speak of one season, from Thanksgiving to Easter, is wrong, said the people who rent out the hotel rooms and the cars on the Beach. Their season is now 12 months. That means jobs year-round for the hotel help and a bonanza in resort taxes -- not to mention the ever-important smiling hotel manager. "There is no place else in the world where you can get a resort hotel room for $26, $28, $30 a night," said Mark Gardner, manager of the Sagamore Hotel, 1671 Collins Ave., where the charge averages $32 a night during the summer. "For $32 a night, you can't go wrong. You throw four people in a room, it comes to $8 a night. How can you go wrong for $8 a night?" Gardner t this answer to that question: During July, an average of67; ercent of the Sagamore's 129 rooms were'taJen. In August, about 88 percent d guests. The Sagamore's trade came mainly from Latin America. So, too, at Doral-on-the-Ocean, especially during July, when 87 percent of the rooms were occupied. That is about the same rate as during the winter season. The language there was Portuguese, as in Brazil. "Basically, during the whole month of July, they took over the Doral, " said Jeff Abbaticchio, public relations director of Dorals of Florida. In July, about $247,900 in resort tax money was collected in Miami Beach. That came from hotels and restaurants and other entertainment outposts. Same month, year before, about $216,200 was collected. That amounts to a 14.7 percent increase from July 1986 to July '87. It wasn't a robust summer for everyone. Gerry Sanchez said his three Ocean Drive hotels, the Waldorf Towers, Edison and Breakwater, had a flat summer, about 43 percent full. Because all three are recently renovated inns, he said, they don't benefit from the years of marketing enjoyed by established hotels such as the Fontainebleau Hilton, \\ which showed a 15 percent increase in room rentals over summer '86. Forget the summer, Sanchez said. He said he'd just signed a contract with French and English travel operators booking 100 of his rooms every day for a year starting Nov. 1. "We're going to be kicking people out of the rooms," Sanchez said. "Only if they know me will they be able to get a room." TAG: 8703090354