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A Cronkite News Service Weekend Special

With spring break at hand, Rocky Point addresses safety concerns

NOTE: This story moved Wednesday, March 4. We recommend it for weekend use. The N in Penasco and Canez (18th graf) takes a tilde.

With BC-CNS-Rocky Point-Box

Photos Available (thumbnails, captions below)

By DANIEL NEWHAUSER
Cronkite News Service

PUERTO PENASCO, Mexico _ State Department travel advisories and news reports about drug violence seemed a world away as Meghan Felts sipped a Bloody Mary and joined two girlfriends sunning themselves on a restaurant patio overlooking the Sea of Cortez.

Her husband was nervous when she and seven girlfriends decided to rent a beach house here, she said, but the only crisis to this point had been a fire on the stove.

“Nobody wanted us to come, but we haven’t run into any issues at all,” said Felts, a Flagstaff resident who works as a nurse.

Across the bay from where Felts and her friends strolled among mariachis, shrimp peddlers and children hawking chewing gum, University of Arizona graduate student Kristen Yaffe read a book on a beach lined with motor homes.

“My boyfriend has friends that come back and forth all the time,” she said. “I don’t think it’s enough of a risk to stay away.”

That’s music to Arturo Rodriguez’s ears. As president of the Chamber of Commerce in Puerto Penasco, better known to many Arizonans as Rocky Point, he’s eager to tell everyone he can that this tourist haven is safe and open for business.

With spring break at hand, it’s a bad time for Rocky Point to face an image problem, especially in Arizona, where a large majority of the area’s tourists come from.

“The warnings are OK for certain cities, but the warnings are not valid for Puerto Penasco,” said Rodriguez in Spanish. “Puerto Penasco is doing what it can for people to know it is a safe, calm city.”

A U.S. State Department travel advisory urges Americans to exercise caution because of violence among rival drug cartels and Mexican security services. It cites homicides, robberies, petty thefts, carjackings and public shootouts as cartels war over drug-trafficking routes on the Mexico-U.S. border.

Arizona’s universities took note of the warnings and sent e-mails to students cautioning them to heed the State Department’s advice when making spring break plans.

Rene Barranco, captain of the Puerto Penasco Police Department, is quick to note that the travel advisory highlighted Nogales, Ciudad Juarez and Tijuana, not his community.

“In Puerto Penasco, there’s no violence against tourism,” he said in Spanish. “We do different operations to bring safety to all visitors.”

That’s evident in soldiers armed with semi-automatic weapons traversing Puerto Penasco’s dusty streets. Barranco said it’s part of the cooperation among federal, state and local authorities intended to keep tourists coming.

Rodriguez, the Chamber of Commerce president, said these steps are important because tourism is second only to fishing as the top industry here.

“There were a lot of cancellations but we hope that people close by, especially in Arizona, come here for spring break,” Rodriguez said. “If tourism doesn’t come, we’re going to be even harder hit by the economic crisis.”

Alvito Robinson, a Tempe resident who has been fishing in Rocky Point long enough to become friends with a few business owners, said it isn’t fair to lump this community together with border cities experiencing drug violence.

“They depend on people coming down here and spending all the American dollars so they can survive,” he said. “They’ve got kids to feed down here.”

Roman “Jerry” Canez, who recently opened a seafood restaurant called Jerry’s, said he wants his first spring break to be a strong one.

“We are a team, all Rocky Point, and the people not coming is bad for everything,” he said. “All businesses would suffer.”

Jose Luis Gonzalez, a shrimp peddler, said the recession has already hit tourism hard because Americans have less disposable income to spend in Mexico. A decline in tourists fueled by fear would be devastating, he said.

“We’re hoping for a decent spring break, something to get us by,” he said. “We’ll see by the volume of kids that we get this year whether all the stuff that the deans, I imagine, told college students is going to take effect.”

In his experience, however, a bit of perceived danger rarely keeps college students from doing anything. It may even help, Gonzalez said.

“Kids are kids, and basically what administration and parents tell them, they do the opposite,” he said. “We’re counting on that.”

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PHOTOS: Click thumbnails to see full-resolution images and download; caption information is in the file under File>File Info.

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CAPTION FOR BC-CNS-ROCKY POINT: Nikki Groff (left) of Flagstaff, Meghan Felts of Flagstaff and Cory Workman of Phoenix visit a restaurant March 2, 2009, in Puerto Penasco, Mexico. Business leaders worry that concerns about drug violence in Mexico’s border communities will cut down on tourism during spring break. (Cronkite News Service Photo/Daniel Newhauser)

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CAPTION FOR BC-CNS-ROCKY POINT: Alvito Robinson of Tempe said he’s been coming down to Rocky Point for years to fish, boat, camp and ride his ATV. He has friends who run businesses in the city and thinks the U.S. government’s warnings about drug violence will hurt them. (Cronkite News Service Photo/Daniel Newhauser)

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CAPTION FOR BC-CNS-ROCKY POINT:  Arturo Rodriguez, president of the Puerto Penasco Chamber of Commerce, is eager to tell anyone who will listen that his community is safe for tourists. Business owners in the seaside community worry that U.S. government warnings about drug violence in Mexico’s border towns will hurt tourism during spring break. (Cronkite News Service Photo/Daniel Newhauser)

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CAPTION FOR BC-CNS-ROCKY POINT: Shops line a street in Puerto Penasco, Mexico, a seaside community popular with Arizonans. Business owners worry that U.S. government warnings about drug violence in Mexico will hurt tourism during spring break. (Cronkite News Service Photo/Daniel Newhauser)

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CAPTION FOR BC-CNS-ROCKY POINT: A truck carrying soldiers patrols a street in Puerto Penasco, Mexico. Officials say cooperation between federal, state and local authorities is intended to help keep tourists coming to the seaside community despite U.S. warnings about drug violence in Mexico. (Cronkite News Service Photo/Daniel Newhauser)

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CAPTION FOR BC-CNS-ROCKY POINT: Jose Luis Gonzalez sells fish at the old port in Puerto Penasco, Mexico. He said cartels have no interest in the city because it’s too far removed from the larger cities. Business owners in the seaside community are worried that U.S. warnings about drug violence will keep tourists away during spring break. (Cronkite News Service Photo/Daniel Newhauser)

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CAPTION FOR BC-CNS-ROCKY POINT: Rene Barranco, captain of the Puerto Penasco Police Department, said violence against tourists in his city is virtually nonexistant. Business owners in the seaside community worry that U.S. warnings about drug violence will hurt tourism during spring break. (Cronkite News Service Photo/Daniel Newhauser)

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CAPTION FOR BC-CNS-ROCKY POINT: Recreational vehicles line up at a beach in Puerto Penasco, Mexico. Business owners in the seaside community worry that U.S. warnings about drug violence in Mexico will hurt tourism during spring break. (Cronkite News Service/Daniel Newhauser)