City Councilor Sean Curran
Reminder Publishing file photo
SPRINGFIELD — One Springfield councilor believes Massachusetts and Connecticut should work together to “crystallize economic development initiatives” between the two states.
At Large City Councilor Sean Curran recently sent a letter to Gov. Maura Healey asking her office to consider forming a tourism task force with Connecticut that helps promote, coordinate and highlight tourism between Springfield, Western Massachusetts and the Connecticut River Valley.
“Staffed with tourism, business and marketing leaders, a joint tourism task force could come up with clever and sophisticated ways to market both states,” said Curran, who chairs the council’s Committee on Economic Development.
Curran’s idea spawned from a sign that Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont placed on Interstate 91 last September that proclaimed Connecticut to be the “Basketball Capital of the World.” Although people in both states are proud of the University of Connecticut’s success in basketball, Curran believed that the sign was a shot at Springfield.
In an interview, he shared that a tourism task force could find a way to simultaneously promote the University of Connecticut’s national success and the Basketball Hall of Fame without saying one is better than the other.
He believes that taking the sign down is a good first step to helping each other out.
“Why can’t we promote both,” Curran said. “That way, basketball junkies can visit the Storrs’ campus and also come to Springfield.”
Both states also have commonalities when it comes to economic development, according to Curran. He pointed to the fact that each has chambers of commerce, economic development councils and marketing professionals that can come together and see how to promote tourism in the area.
“Why can’t we get the people who are on the ground doing this come together and say, ‘hey listen, what are we doing to promote the Connecticut River Valley,’ rather than fight each other for tourism dollars,” Curran said.
Reminder Publishing reached out to Healey’s office for comment on Curran’s proposal, but did not hear back as of press time.
Massachusetts currently has an Office of Travel Tourism that promotes the state as a “year-round leisure and business travel destination.”
According to a recent economic impact report released by MOTT in August, the state of Massachusetts generated $2.3 billion in state and local tax revenue in 2024, thanks to direct spending from 52.6 million domestic and international travelers. The revenue supported 155,808 jobs across the state, according to MOTT.
Curran sent his letter a few days before the Basketball Hall of Fame enshrinement ceremony and nine days before the Big E opened in West Springfield. He noted that thousands of people travel to Western Mass. for these events and argued that a joint tourism task force would help make the most of these opportunities.
“Tourism dollars equal jobs,” Curran said. “People’s jobs are on the line … that’s why I think both states need to have better communication.”