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Mayor Giuliani at Ceremony


New York Voted "World's Best" City

By Mayor Rudy Giuliani

Earlier this month, New York received Travel + Leisure magazine's prestigious World's Best Award, honoring our City as the best place to visit in the United States and Canada. The rebirth of New York as the number one city to visit was acknowledged in a survey conducted by the country's leading travel magazine, which has a circulation of nearly one million readers. This is just the latest sign of our City's remarkable resurgence.

In 1991, New York City received 22 million visitors. Last year, more than 37 million people made their way to the Capital of the World - marking the sixth consecutive year our City has seen record tourism. As the visitors continue to pour into New York, so do the awards and honors. Our City has been bestowed with such diverse titles as "The Number One Place for Business in North America" by Fortune magazine, "The Best Sports City" by The Sporting News, and the city with the "Best Food" by both Travel + Leisure and a CNN/USA Today poll. In addition, Zagat's restaurant guide company recently also ranked New York as the best city in the country to visit. For the first time since the Zagat's survey began in 1987, travel agents and travelers alike agree that New York is the premier destination in the United States.

Our City's renewed reputation for excellence is built upon the dramatic progress we've made in improving the quality of life for all New Yorkers. This, along with the City's unprecedented drop in crime (earning us yet another title as "The Safest Large City in America"), is essential to understanding why so many more people have been drawn to our museums, theaters, historic sites, parks, stadiums, restaurants, stores, and hotels.

The way to further promote our thriving tourism industry is to continue to expand upon the quality of life measures that have already proven so successful. For example, the revived Times Square is again earning its title as the Crossroads of the World through the constant flow of tourists and New Yorkers alike. Because of this renewed activity, we need to take proactive steps to help ensure the safety of pedestrians and motorists in the area. That is why the Department of Transportation, in coordination with the Department of City Planning, has begun the second phase of a major traffic-calming plan for Times Square. The plan consists of widening sidewalks, installing planters and pavement markings to further separate pedestrians from vehicular traffic, and other initiatives aimed at improving safety and maneuverability in and around one of our most renowned and revitalized tourist attractions.

Our booming tourism industry has been a major catalyst in producing a record number of jobs and moving a record number of people from welfare to work. It has also supported the City's dramatic economic resurgence. In order to remain the "World's Best," we must constantly seek to build upon the improvements that have helped elevate us to the top.