Travel Oregon promotes Oregon tourism. (Photo by Leslie Kehmeier via Oregon Journalism Project)

After some much needed sunlight on its operations, Travel Oregon is looking for a new chief executive — at a significantly lower salary.

Not long into a meeting last September of the Oregon House Committee on Economic Development, its chairman quoted from an OJP investigation about dysfunction at state-funded Travel Oregon and the oversized salary of its longtime executive director. 

Then Rep. Daniel Nguyen (D-Lake Oswego) looked at the man sitting steps away at the witness table, Todd Davidson, the executive director whose base salary was more than $365,000 the year before. 

“How do you justify paying that salary?” 

Offering an answer from the witness table was Scott Youngblood, an eight-year veteran of Travel Oregon’s oversight commission. He suggested that Davidson, who had announced he would leave the agency this summer, wasn’t overpaid. Rather, he was the “Michael Jordan” of travel marketing. 

“Scrutiny, it’s coming,” Nguyen would go on to say about the 70-employee, $45 million a year agency. “That is what the public is asking for.”   

Travel Oregon’s board of commissioners apparently listened to the concerns Nguyen and other lawmakers expressed after OJP reported that employees said the agency had a toxic work culture and delayed sending out $9 million in small grants for a year. In a unanimous vote last month,  the nine commissioners approved a salary range of $235,000 to $255,000 for Davidson’s eventual replacement, far less than Davidson’s compensation and an amount more in line with directors of vastly larger business-aligned state agencies such as Business Oregon and the Department of Agriculture. 

OJP’s investigation “helped spur conversations about Travel Oregon’s work in my committee, among others in the Capitol, and at the kitchen tables of Oregon families,” Nguyen said by email Monday.  

Travel Oregon, also known as the Oregon Tourism Commission, is funded by a statewide 1.5% tax on hotel stays. The governor appoints the nine members of its board to oversee an agency that spends about $45 million a year to promote Oregon tourism.  

The issue of Davidson’s compensation has come up before. In 2020, the Secretary of State’s Office released an audit that focused on his high salary and those of his key staff. But nothing changed. 

Today, the commissioners say they are looking for “a reset” at a time when international travel to Oregon is down and Portland-area tourism hasn’t fully recovered from business losses from the civic unrest after a Minneapolis policeman murdered George Floyd. 

Candidates have until March 30 to apply for the top job promoting Oregon’s $14 billion-a-year tourism industry.  

Nguyen and members of the Economic Development Committee will hear Wednesday from Greg Willitts, chair of Travel Oregon’s board of commissioners and president of FivePine Lodge and Spa in Sisters. 

“Travel Oregon is funded largely through tax dollars,” Nguyen said Monday, “and we expect results, transparency, and accountability from their operations.” 


Oregon Journalism Project

This story was produced by the Oregon Journalism Project, a nonprofit investigative newsroom for the state of Oregon. OJP seeks to inform, engage and empower Oregonians with investigative and watchdog reporting that makes a significant impact at the state and local levels. Its stories appear in partner newspapers across the state. Learn more at oregonjournalismproject.org.

James Neff has served for more than two decades as Investigations Editor for both The Philadelphia Inquirer and The Seattle Times. He's directed and edited seven Pulitzer Prize finalists and three Pulitzer winners.
After graduating from the University of Notre Dame and earning his master's from the University of Texas at Austin, Jim worked as a staff reporter at the Austin American-Statesman and his hometown paper, the Cleveland Plain Dealer. He went on to serve as the Willard M. Kiplinger Chair in Public Affairs Reporting at the Ohio State University.
Jim served on Investigative Reporters & Editor's board of directors for a decade, including a term as its president. He currently serves on the board of Reporters' Committee for Freedom of the Press.
He's written five non-fiction books, and is a co-founder of Spotlight PA, Pennsylvania's statewide nonprofit investigative newsroom that is one of the models for OJP. For years, he and his wife have spent part of their summers near Sisters.