Banker & Tradesman file photo

The Boston Harbor Hotel will close indefinitely beginning Saturday as the hospitality industry absorbs the initial brunt of the coronavirus’ impact on real estate.

“There is no perfect solution in a time like this. We are dedicated to doing everything we can to help our employees and our communities,” the hotel said in a statement provided to Channel 25.

The hotel previously advised patrons that it had stepped-up cleaning and sanitizing in all areas and briefing employees daily on best practices.

The landmark property on Rowes Wharf is owned by Morgan Stanley and managed by Boston-based Pyramid Hotel Group.

The decision follows the closure of the Marriott Long Wharf hotel, which was the site of Biogen Corp.’s late February corporate conference which has been linked to more than 100 coronavirus cases in Massachusetts.

In Massachusetts alone, where the first COVID-19 case was announced on Feb. 1 and the number of total cases has rapidly increased since then, 17,847 direct hotel-related jobs and 66,799 jobs that support hotels have been cut due to the outbreak, according to the Massachusetts Lodging Association.

The association compiled first-hand accounts from nine hotel owners in the state to submit to Congress urging aid for an industry facing significant strain. Most said they worry about paying bills and have seen business evaporate in recent weeks.

Doug Koenig, a manager at the Hilton Boston Back Bay, said occupancy rates at his hotel have dropped to as low as 5 percent in remarks circulated by the association. Lexington hotel owner Dominique Marty said she had to cut worker hours by almost 90 percent. Kristin Scott, a North Chelmsford area sales manager for Remington Hotels, warned that the financial ramifications “will be devastating for many families and individuals.”

“We are losing business FAST,” Sturbridge hotelier Jaimin Patel wrote in his commentary. “We need [government] relief soon. The bleeding isn’t stopping. Please help us, so we can retain our staff. Times are hard.”

Hotel CEOs met with Vice President Mike Pence on Tuesday to seek federal assistance, after which the American Hotel and Lodging Association estimated 4 million total jobs nationwide have been or are on the verge of being cut, a “catastrophic” toll.

On Wednesday, Gov. Charlie Baker announced that small restaurant and hospitality businesses in Massachusetts – defined as those that paid less than $150,000 in sales plus meals taxes or sales plus room occupancy taxes in 2019 – would not have to pay March, April and May taxes until June as a short-term relief.

The State House News Service contributed reporting.

Boston Harbor Hotel Closing Saturday

by Steve Adams time to read: 2 min
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