Yorkshire Post

‘ When we come out of this, the tourism product will be stronger’

North Yorkshire’ s market towns are at the heart of tourism chief David Shields’ recovery plan, with locals discoverin­g what’ s on their door step and more visitors likely to visit thanks to All Creatures Great and Small. Geraldine Scott reports.

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“LIKE ALL good Yorkshirem­en, we always end up coming back to Yorkshire,” jokes David Shields while in the market town of Stokesley on a busy day of rushing between meetings.

It is a key time for tourism businesses in North Yorkshire and the rest of the country.

Mr Shields, who has held a number of regional and national tourism roles, has been made the business and economy tourism advisor at Hambleton District Council, just as the sector scrambles to salvage what it can in the fall- out from the coronaviru­s pandemic.

More than £ 22bn could be lost in tourism nationally due to the wipe- out in internatio­nal travel caused by the pandemic, according to the World Travel and Tourism Council ( WTTC).

And almost three million jobs in the UK that rely on, or are supported by, the travel and tourism industry could be lost in the worst- case scenario.

But Mr Shields is adamant that there are green shoots of recovery in North Yorkshire as businesses have turned to increasing collaborat­ion.

And market towns such as Stokesley are exactly the type of location the 63- year- old tourism expert has placed at the centre of his plan to reinvigora­te the sector as interest in staycation­s soars.

“It’s not quite the same as coronaviru­s, but we’ve seen this before with foot and mouth in 2001,” says Mr Shields, who has decades of experience working in the sector.

“It decimated various parts of the country, and the visitor economy. And again, people are recognisin­g the importance of the visitor economy, especially to rural areas.”

Mr Shields was most recently area director for North Yorkshire at Welcome to Yorkshire – which he says there is “definitely a need for” amid cashflow issues at the organisati­on.

Before that, he held a variety of tourism posts across Yorkshire and nationally, including at Kelburn Castle, on the West Coast of Scotland and the seat of the Earls of Glasgow.

“They were actually one of the oldest families in Scotland, they were originally the de Boyvilles from Caen in Normandy and they all came over with William the Conqueror,” he says.

But their heavy involvemen­t in tourism in the area meant that when Mr Shields started looking for other jobs, competitor­s were reticent to poach him, causing him to return to God’s Own Country.

Taking up the role of tourism officer at Hambleton in 1999, he helped open the World of James

Herriot, in Thirsk, now thrust into the spotlight in All Creatures Great And Small, Channel 5’ s television reboot on the life of Mr Herriot, the pen- name given to the real- life vet Alf Wight who worked in Yorkshire from the 1940s onwards.

“The positive response that has got, that can be beneficial,” Mr Shields says. “It is filmed in the Yorkshire Dales, so businesses will benefit there. But I think also from a Hambleton perspectiv­e, we’re going to really maximise the opportunit­ies because, of course, Hambleton technicall­y is the real Herriot country. The stories that

Alf Wight wrote about the farming community are around Northaller­ton, that’s where the stories come from.”

But Mr Shields, who lives in the village of Topcliffe with his partner Irene, says he is under no illusions about the proverbial mountain which he has to climb to help the beleaguere­d industry.

His job is to aid the district so it is in the best shape possible to recover, as well as making sure people living close by also enjoy what is on their doorstep.

“It’s identifyin­g the unique selling points ( of Hambleton) as well as the market towns, and how we can help raise that profile,” he said. “It is especially important to give residents and locals at this present time that sort of reassuranc­e that you can come out.”

In Easingwold, staff at the Tourist Informatio­n Centre have produced books for those wanting to find out what they could do without travelling far.

“They’ve said since they reopened after the lockdown, the number of people who have come, locals, to find out what they can do, and they’ve said ‘ oh we didn’t know there was that local walk’, they’ve gone for a walk, come back into the town, and they’ve got a really great coffee culture in Easingwold where people can have a coffee or cake. But it’s building the confidence and also supporting the local economy and looking at all the other market towns as well to develop that local offer, as well as the visitor offer.”

However, there can be no doubt that the national lockdown stemming from coronaviru­s has had a huge impact on businesses.

Mr Shields says: “We had the lockdown around a key period for tourism businesses which is Easter – if you have a good Easter, it sets you up for the rest of the year.

“But if you have a bad Easter, you’re near enough playing catch up for the rest of the year.”

He adds: “I think the feeling is, there’s a positivity out there at present, people are venturing out. I just fear that some businesses, because they’ve lost so much of the season, will struggle to get through the winter.”

On the other hand, he says, innovation in technology and working together had been one of the positives to come out of the pandemic, and businesses will benefit from adapting.

Mr Shields says: “When we come out of this, the tourism product in North Yorkshire will be even stronger.”

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