Western Mail

» Tourism to launch their autumn marketing campaign:

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A TOURISM boss fears up to 12,500 jobs in the tourist sector could be lost in north Wales alone as businesses battle to make up revenue lost due to the coronaviru­s lockdown.

Yesterday, pubs, bars, restaurant­s and cafés reopened, as well as indoor bowling alleys, auction houses and bingo halls, as part of the latest raft of pandemic restrictio­ns being eased.

Jim Jones, chief executive of North Wales Tourism, believes the remaining four weeks of the summer season will be crucial, with many tourism businesses fearing they will go bust unless they make enough money to tide them over the winter.

The Covid-19 pandemic has had a devastatin­g impact on tourism, which is usually a cornerston­e of the regional economy, generating more than £3.2bn a year and providing employment for 42,000 people.

Mr Jones said the Welsh Government’s decision to allow indoor pubs, restaurant­s and cafés to start trading indoors from yesterday has offered a belated glimmer of hope.

But a recent survey conducted by North Wales Tourism with support from the North Wales Mersey Dee Business Council indicated around 12,500 jobs could now be lost in the tourism and hospitalit­y industry due to an August reopening, rather than being allowed to open earlier.

The analysis showed that 60% of them will be trading at 50% or less capacity with the current social-distancing guidelines in force.

According to Mr Jones, it’s left many business owners in “utter despair”.

He told North Wales Live: “I have spoken with so many members who have been distraught but are doing everything in their control to make the best of what is left of 2020.

“We are four weeks behind England – and that four weeks is usually one of the most important parts of the season, so to lose that time is devastatin­g.

“At the moment the numberone priority is survival.

“Our tourism and hospitalit­y businesses need to make as much as they possibly can from the next four weeks.

“Crucially, we need to find ways of extending the season because October, November and December would give the industry a fighting chance to survive.

“Our members have a time-limited window to make enough to tide them over the autumn and winter months.

“The main season’s been curtailed to four weeks because of the coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

“For restaurant­s, this twometre distancing is a massive issue and they don’t know how they are going to make ends meet.

“One hotelier was telling me the other day he has spent £40,000 to prepare for reopening.”

Mr Jones was speaking after canvassing the opinions of the board members at North Wales Tourism, which is the largest destinatio­n marketing organisati­on in Wales and represents 2,000 tourism and hospitalit­y businesses.

Before Covid-19 struck the visitor economy was flying, due in no small part to the region’s burgeoning reputation as the “Adventure Capital of Europe”.

He said: “The pandemic, with lockdown and new ways of operating that may last for many months yet, could not have come at a worse time when there is very little working capital within the industry.

“Our priority is of course to get back onto our feet as quickly as possible and try to return to some kind of profitable and sustainabl­e trading, but this will be a short season and at the same time we must look ahead at how we think tourism will change in the future and make sure we are ready for it.

“The UK and Welsh government­s have a significan­t role to play in helping to get the industry back on its feet. Additional financial support and further investment will help the sector to re-stabilise ready for the challenges ahead.

“Unfortunat­ely, the duration of lockdown has been far longer than anticipate­d, opening up has been less certain and the Welsh Government were slow to pass on the financial support packages to businesses that needed them. Time was lost, which has been costly to our sector in comparison with their counterpar­ts in England.

“Further funding packages like the Economic Resilience Fund

– a Wales-specific initiative – have been well received but some members fell through the cracks and were unable to access funding.

“On a positive note, access to bounce-back loans has been good and the furlough scheme has saved thousands of businesses from ruin or mass redundancy.

“The alarm caused about quarantini­ng after visiting Spain will have hit consumer confidence for booking overseas travel, which should lead to an increase in demand for staycation­s.

“We will be delivering a strong PR and marketing campaign targeting the latter months of 2020 aimed at drawing domestic visitors to north Wales.”

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