Hi IIBinit4fun! I'm the one who mentioned grounding the rebar - sorry for not responding sooner, was out of town a couple days and the last 24 hours I was taking delivery of our new hottub (finally!)
Here's the straight scoop on grounding rebar: First, I think most manufacturers recommend that metal re-inforcement in the slab (or any metal within 5' of the spa) be grounded back to the panel. I know for a fact that HotSpring states this is should be done and they provide a connection in the equip. area to ground it to.
Secondly, why? It has to do with how breakers work and why they trip. Any metal close to a 230 volt spa is a POTENTIAL conductor (particularly if in contact with the ground.) If the metal conductor does become energized, current will flow (through the ground, through you, etc.) If the energized conductor is grounded back to the panel the breaker will trip. It it is not grounded, the breaker will not sense the "ground fault" and may not trip. . .that means the juice continues to flow - not good if it flows through you.
Ok, so how can the rebar in concrete get energized? Most common (though it's rare) is due to a short - loose wire or water gets into the equip. area (water is a conductor.) In either case, if the crete is damp, the current may energize the rebar & slab. Step onto the damp concrete with wet feet and you may become very interested in whether or not the breaker will trip!
Is this scenario likely? NO. If it does happen will you care? Probably. So why would an electrician say this is not needed? Well, electricians are mere mortals and do make mistakes. Particularly "old school" who cut their teeth on knob & tube wiring which was an un-grounded system.
I can't tell you how many "bootleg grounds" I've corrected that were installed by "qualified electricians." (Bootleg ground means not running a third ground wire back to the panel. The logic is, the white wire goes to the same place at the panel so save wire by just running a white & black and then jumper the white/neutral to the grouning lug of the outlet or wall switch. . .It doesn't work and can cause "shocking" results.
Look, not trying to start an arguement, just trying to answer your question. The circumstances when you would need the rebar grounded are admittedly rare and may never come up. However, if you do your own slab prep, you are talking $2 worth of #8 solid copper grounding wire and a $2 connector (use an "acorn nut" to bond the wire to the rebar grid. . .just make good tight twists with the tie wire when you form the grid.) Pretty cheap insurance. . .I grounded mine.
sorry for the long answer, electrical stuff can be complicated - enjoy your tub!