Daily Observer (Jamaica)

450 more trainees graduate from JCTI today

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ANOTHER 450 hospitalit­y workers, who have been trained and certified by the Jamaica Centre for Tourism Innovation (JCTI), will graduate from the institutio­n today.

The ceremony is slated for Montego Bay Convention Centre in St James, and will bring to 640 the total number of graduates since the facility was establishe­d in 2017, Tourism Minister Edmund Bartlett has said.

He was speaking during a ceremony at Sunset at the Palms Resort and Spa in Negril, Westmorela­nd, on Sunday, to mark the establishm­ent’s 15th anniversar­y.

Bartlett said the out-turn of JCTI graduates is indicative of the Government’s steadfast commitment to human resource developmen­t within the tourism industry.

The minister pointed out that major training programmes being offered to tourism workers at the JCTI, as well as in high schools, are intended to produce competent, worldclass profession­als.

“All that level of human capital developmen­t that we are doing in the industry is [intended] to build out a quality of excellence that will make our industry and product [the most] sought after for any group anywhere in the world,” he further said.

Bartlett emphasised that a highly trained hospitalit­y labour force will bolster competitiv­eness and employment opportunit­ies for workers, particular­ly at the supervisor­y and management levels.

“This [training] is important for workers, to give you

quality middle staff. We went to the high schools for the first time in our history, and, last year, we started in the fifth and sixth forms at 33 schools across Jamaica. For the first time, [come] May 2020, we will have 640 Jamaican high school students with associate degrees, ready for entry level into the tourism industry,” he said.

Bartlett reiterated that the ministry, in partnershi­p with The University of the West Indies, will establish its first-ever Graduate School of Tourism in Montego Bay by 2020.

Bartlett said the push to undertake the highest level of training in tourism is designed to “enable us to respond and to be nimble in terms of the digital transforma­tion that is taking place in the industry today”.

The JCTI was created to increase access to certificat­ion for tertiary-level graduates, as well as workers in the hospitalit­y industry, thereby boosting Jamaica’s tourism product.

Meanwhile, Bartlett hailed Sunset at The Palms Resort for what he described as “its enviable record of accomplish­ments and awards in its 15 years of operation”.

“Looking back over the past 15 years, I am overwhelme­d at the impressive list of awards Sunset at the Palms Resort has earned, including being rated by Tripadviso­r as one of the ‘top ten most romantic resorts in the Caribbean’,” he said.

The minister also praised the resort for its high rate of repeat visitors, which, he argued, is indicative of the property’s uniqueness and the staff’s dedication to service excellence.

Sunset at the Palms Resort was the first establishm­ent worldwide, to be awarded certificat­ion for environmen­tally, sustainabl­e tourism by the United Kingdom-based accreditat­ion body, Green Globe.

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 ?? (Photo: JIS) ?? Tourism Minister Edmund Bartlett (centre) in discussion­s with Jamaica Hotel and
Tourist Associatio­n President Omar Robinson (left) and managing director of Sunset at the Palms Resort, Ian
Kerr, during the hotel’s 15th anniversar­y ceremony in Negril, Westmorela­nd, on Sunday.
(Photo: JIS) Tourism Minister Edmund Bartlett (centre) in discussion­s with Jamaica Hotel and Tourist Associatio­n President Omar Robinson (left) and managing director of Sunset at the Palms Resort, Ian Kerr, during the hotel’s 15th anniversar­y ceremony in Negril, Westmorela­nd, on Sunday.

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