Traditionally, for years this period between Christmas and New Year the United Kingdom normally experiences the largest level of holiday bookings than at any other time annually. Not this year of course, with our tourism policymakers and planners left to contemplate, what, if anything they can do to bridge the enormous void of visitor arrivals.

It is an unprecedented situation and for those who stand on the side and criticize, proffering what they think could be done, are only frankly second guessing a clearly almost impossible and unpredictable scenario.

What I understand the current guardians of our industry are successfully doing is maintaining the highest possible destination visibility with initiatives like the Welcome Stamp, visits by travel writers, travel agents and the incredible centenarian, Captain Sir Tom Moore, all naturally under carefully managed pandemic compliant conditions.

While, it may seem very optimistic given the current circumstances, I am still going to have a wish list for 2021.

As we emerge from the pandemic, there will be opportunities and some of these may come from those airlines that have survived, downsized and retired their larger, less fuel efficient aircraft. New aircraft like the incredible Airbus A321XLR will come into service and enable long haul routes from various European cities to operate planes which carry around 200 passengers, economically on non-stop services to the Caribbean.

Routes like Dublin or Belfast to Barbados then become less of a risk and given a massive price advantage by not having APD (Advanced Passenger Duty) imposed on the fares, saving at least UK Pounds 80 per passenger in the case of Northern Ireland.

Locally, I believe that a great more could be done with developing smart partnerships between all sectors across tourism and those companies who supply them together with our seemingly reluctant banking sector. As one of the persons deeply involved in creating the first fully functional small hotel alliance, it has been hugely disappointing not to witness more co-operation in this sub-sector, by developing joint promotional initiatives and driving cost savings through collaboration.

And as the cruise industry finally resumes sailings from the Caribbean, perhaps not until the very latter part of 2021, let us look objectively at exactly where we can truly benefit from this sector and justify the investment we have already placed in it.

As always, my thoughts go out to all the dedicated tourism workers and managers that are still employed and have sacrificed their quality family time over this festive period, to give our cherished visitors that holiday of a lifetime.

 

258 responses to “Adrian Loveridge Column – Wish List for 2021”


  1. Baje

    Stop cursing enuff. Are you jealous she suck some white duck at a business meeting while you had to suck them in ur boot camp???

    Tell me why a successful business is feeding off the public trough during hard time for others

    What the difference in what you said you are doing and what you say the politicians in the 2×3 is doing?


  2. Baje

    Stop cursing enuff. Are you jealous she suck some white duck at a business meeting while you had to suck them in ur boot camp???

    Tell me why a successful business is feeding off the public trough during hard time for others

    What the difference in what you said you are doing and what you say the politicians in the 2×3 is doing?

    xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

    REALLY BLP GEORGIA YARDFOWL COMING TO SUPPORT YOUR FELLOW IDIOT.

    LIKE MOST COMPANIES IN THE USA MY BUSINESS HAS TAKEN ADVANTAGE OF FORGIVABLE PPP LOANS INITIALLY PUT IN PLACE BY THE US FEDERAL GOVERNMENT FOR BUSINESSES WITH LESS THAN 500 EMPLOYEES AND LATER EXPANDED TO INCLUDE LARGE CORPORATIONS.

    WHAT YOU SHOULD BE FOCUSING ON IS WHY YOUR BLP GOVERNMENT 2020 HAS ABANDONED THE BLACK BAJAN MASSES AND LOCAL BLACK BUSINESSES WHO ARE CATCHING HELL 9 MONTHS IN THE PANDEMIC INSTEAD OF FINING THEM AND LOCKING THEM UP.

    THANK GOD I AM AN AMERICAN CITIZEN WHO USE RESOURCES THAT ARE AVAILABLE AND DON’T LIVE ON THE 2 x 3 ISLAND WHO ONLY KNOWS HOW TO BEG, BORROW AND STEAL BUT NOT TO UPLIFT IT OWN BLACK MASSES.


  3. Go read!


  4. Our great government did a lot of things right in 2020. High praise for the art of government during the COVID19 crisis!

    However, here is my wish list for 2021:

    Transformation of royalty to a republic with Mia Mottley as president for life.
    Hero Monument for our Supreme Leader as well as for Lord Marshal Dale and General Bostic on the Heroes’ Square
    Postponement of the elections to 2030, because the result is already determined anyway
    Reduction of the state apparatus to 15,000 civil servants
    Discontinuation of unemployment benefits for COVID19 so that the population gets used to work again
    Adjustment of the wages of civil servants and employees to the sharply reduced economic power
    Reduction of civil servants’ pensions
    Reduction of income tax
    Abolition of business regulations and land tax
    Adjustment of the BBD to the USD (“improved peg”)

    Happy new year 2021!


  5. Why a successful business the doing x times better since COVID would have to take advantage of the government funds that were made available for companies that are struggling

    U ain’t no different from the politicians
    Just that them elected

    You is a blasted liar and now you taking advantage of the public purse ( or so you say) for person use when it should be there for those who really need it


  6. https://www.investopedia.com/your-guide-to-the-paycheck-protection-program-ppp-and-how-to-apply-4802195

    AGAIN I ASK – why would a company that (as reported) was doing so well during the covid period would want /apply for/ g get a PPP loan.

    Some jackass with 3 degrees got to be a liar/fraud.


  7. PPP Eligibility
    In addition to meeting the size requirement (500 or fewer employees for most companies), you must show that your business has been negatively impacted by the coronavirus. You will do this, in part, by certifying on your PPP application that current economic uncertainty makes the loan request necessary.2

    


  8. STAYCATION BOOST
    Hotels benefit as Bajans make up visitor shortfall
    By Gercine Carter gercinecarter@
    nationnews.com
    With occupancy levels severely depleted at the peak of the winter tourist season because of the COVID-19 pandemic, Barbadians appear to be filling the void with staycations.
    Some hotels are reporting that Barbadians have followed the Prime Minister’s suggestion to holiday at home and have been taking advantage of the special rates being offered to them, with many people opting for weekend stays.
    General manager of Radisson Aquatica, Gerry Lewis, told the Saturday Sun the resort at Aquatic Gap, Bay Street, St Michael, was heavily booked by Barbadians who opted to spend the New Year’s weekend at the hotel and take advantage of the festivities there.
    Lewis said the Barbadians making reservations had served to augment visitor numbers reduced due to the travel restrictions, flight limitations and the uncertainty in Barbados’ traditional tourism source markets. As a result, he said, it was difficult to forecast hotel occupancies for the rest of the 2020/2021 winter season.
    Still, he noted the hotel was likely to benefit from “significant late business” since potential guests were now making last-minute reservations as short as one week or a day before they planned to travel.
    Sunil Chatrani said his hotels – Yellow Bird and South Gap – in St Lawrence Gap, Christ Church, were enjoying “pretty good” occupancies of “about 80 per cent”. The two hotels, with a total number of about 50 rooms, are situated in the heart of the busiest tourism thoroughfare on the South Coast and are largely occupied by Barbadians.
    Chatrani said many of those guests would have been taking advantage of Old Year’s Night festivities by “staying in The Gap and partying”. But with Thursday’s midnight curfew imposed by Prime Minister Mia Amor Mottley, people had to rethink the partying, he said.
    Barbadian staycationers also outnumber tourists at Sugar Bay Hotel, in Hastings, Christ Church. General manager Morgan Seale reported “less than half of last year’s occupancy” at this time. The hotel scaled down plans for Old Year’s Night because of the midnight curfew. Seale also said Sugar Bay had not attracted more visitors despite reduced hotel rates.
    The 138-room hotel is sister to the 100-room Bougainvillea Beach Resort on Maxwell Coast Road, in the same parish, which Seale said was also not enjoying “very good occupancy”.
    The Crane Resort in St Philip, one of the larger hotels, has occupancy that owner Paul Doyle described as “not bad”, considering the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on tourism worldwide.

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