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"Bitter cup for some airport shops"


 
Friday, August 11, 2006

Bitter cup for some airport shops
Thwarted terror attack brings about ban on liquids, gels
By Ameera Butt 
The Denver (CO) Post


Restaurants and gift shops at Denver International Airport reported mixed
results Thursday after increased security restrictions created passenger
logjams and questions arose about what type of items stores could sell. 

Some concessionaires reported higher-than-usual sales as customers who
arrived early passed the time by shopping and eating. 

Others closed their doors because many items they sell could no longer be
carried aboard. 

A thwarted plot to bomb airplanes with liquid explosives led to restrictions
Thursday on what could be carried on planes. 

Mike Dunkle, general manager of Liberty Duty Free on Concourse A, closed his
outlet because customers were barred from bringing alcohol or perfume on
flights. 

At News Travels, which Dunkle also manages, Visine and other liquid
medicines were removed from store shelves. 

"We did this voluntarily," Dunkle said. "We are trying to help as much as we
can for security reasons." 

Other retailers continued to sell banned items. Some said sales spiked as
passengers arriving from other airports snapped up hair spray, hand
sanitizer, water and other products they were forced to dump before passing
through security. 

David Mosteller of Skyport Cos., a concession-management company, said he
was uncertain whether concessionaires would be allowed to continue selling
prohibited items. 

"We haven't changed anything as of today," said Mostel ler. "They're saying
right now we might be pulling all bottled beverages off the counter. They're
not sure." 

Airport restaurants benefited as travelers arrived early in anticipation of
long security lines. 

"We've been busier than usual," said Marco Castro, manager of Villa Pizza on
Concourse C. 

Food and beverage sales at his location were up about 25 percent. 

Beverage sales were a third higher than a normal day at the Pizza Hut/KFC on
Concourse A, manager Isabel Mercado said. 

But Paul Ayala, manager of Seattle's Best Coffee in the terminal, said
business was slow compared with a typical Thursday because travelers were
barred from taking drinks through security.

"We are hoping it will be back to normal by tomorrow," he said. 

An industry expert said it is too early to determine whether retailers would
suffer in the long term. If the carry-on restrictions continue, "retailers
in airports will find a sizable reduction in sales," said Paul Rich, a
principal and business adviser with the business consulting group of
Rothstein Kass in New York. 

He predicted that duty-free stores would likely be the hardest hit, followed
by gift and notion shops that stock items such as toothpaste and hair gel. 

Restaurants, however, could benefit if longer wait times continue to force
people to spend more time in airports, he said. 

Mosteller said he hoped Thursday's events wouldn't dampen air-travel
numbers. 

"Our only customer is the employee at DIA and the traveler," he said. "We
live and breathe per the traffic volumes."

Attached Photos:

Tigist Mamo works the counter at Seattle's Best Coffee at DIA on Thursday,
near a sign announcing that patrons would not be able to take beverages onto
planes. Some stores reported increased sales because passengers were in the
airport longer.

An employee of a Body Shop at DIA peers through its closed gates Thursday.
Its products weren't allowed in carry-ons.

20060811_030213_bz11retail1.jpg

retail2.jpg


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