Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Good For The Rancher: Part 2



From the LVRJ: There’s something about a rocky old country road that doesn’t make good neighbors, especially if it runs straight into the Grand Canyon’s famous glass overlook in Arizona, the Skywalk.
Ever since a lone rancher, Nigel Turner, started charging tour buses $500 apiece to drive through a portion of his dude ranch to get to the Skywalk, a Las Vegas-based company that caters to Asian tourists has suffered the consequences.
As many as seven tour buses are sitting empty in the parking lot of Chinese Host Inc., which has lost as much as $1,100 per day, company President David Huang said Wednesday.
“It’s the uncertainty that’s killing us. The phones are ringing off the hooks, and nobody knows when we’re going to be able to get to the Grand Canyon,” said Huang, who has operated the tour company since 1999 and considers this latest glitch among the most unusual.
“We’re talking about customers who’ve come as far as China and Thailand. They’ve planned their entire trips around visiting one of the wonders of the world, only to be turned back by security guards.
“It’s just not right. The tourists should be protected. They shouldn’t have this sort of bad experience.”
Turner, whose ranch property sits on a portion of Diamond Bar Road off U.S. Highway 93, the major road that leads to the Skywalk, was arrested Tuesday and incarcerated in Kingman on allegations that he threatened and intimidated a foreman at the construction site where a bypass is being built around Turner’s property, according to Mohave County Sheriff Tom Sheahan.....
After Turner was released from jail Wednesday, he shut off his property to the public indefinitely, leading to a spirited news conference by the Chinese tourism company with the Hualapai tribe, which operates the Skywalk, about 120 miles east of Las Vegas.
Holding up signs that said, “Do not pay the toll!” and “Highway robbery!” and “We already paid you $750,000,” tribal members said they were losing hundreds, if not thousands, of dollars each day that Turner’s blockade remains.
The makeshift blockade is an assortment of construction cones and enforced by a 24-hour armed security detail.
“We’re asking the federal government to step up and help us out by opening up the road for the thousands of visitors and tourists who depend upon it,” said tribal Chairwoman Sherry Counts, who since the blockade has written U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval and other state and federal officials for help.
Since Turner started charging a fee through his property, the tourism industry has been “incredibly inconvenienced,” Counts said.
She said what once was a fairly simple nine-mile jaunt to the Skywalk has turned into an expensive, or even impossible, chore of getting there.
“I’ve never heard of one man shutting down an entire county road,” said Dave Cieslak, a spokesman for the tribe. “He should take his anger out in the courts, not on the tourists.”  http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/nevada-and-west/skywalk-road-closure-brings-complaint-las-vegas-tourism-bus-company
Hey, Chinese business people, when you play with the devils/Indians, you are going to get burned.  The property owner has every right to charge whatever he wants and if doesn't want to allow people, so be it and let the Indians figure out the solution.

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