Worcester is not a tourist destination. My first job out of grad school in the mid-1980s was at Clark University, so I know the town. It has no notable colonial buildings and even then was a dismal post-industrial wasteland. Since then, the tech boom moved from Route 128 half-way between Worcester and Boston to the West Coast without ever lifting Worcester's economy, its shopping mall died, it's had lots of opioid deaths, and an increasing homeless population. Even the two years I lived there Worcester had one of the worst problems with homelessness, being the only city in the top ten in terms of percentage of population homeless that did not have rent controls (it's problem was old housing stock with lead paint which is, rightly, illegal to rent to families with children).
Actually, getting a lot of trannies to move there might be a boon to Worcester's economy. Since post-operative trannies are sterile, no problem with them renting the old housing stock, and if the city is that enthusiastic about their presence, they will be able to compete successfully for whatever jobs are still there. They can start businesses that appeal to other trannies if they can't find work in existing businesses.