Jamaica Gleaner

Jamaica to open tourism logistics centre

- Janet Silvera/ Senior Gleaner Writer

WITH THE pandemic disrupting human capital in the tourist industry, Jamaica will be forced to establish a Tourism Logistics Supply Centre in the island’s Special Economic Zone to meet the fast pace recovery it is now experienci­ng.

After two and a half years of no travel in what tourism minister Edmund Bartlett has described as ‘entre-pause’, the island’s arrival numbers are at 72 per cent of the pre-pandemic era, but many of the country’s workers shifted to other sectors, some migrating, causing a void in the system.

Aiming to cauterise what could become a tremendous hurdle to growth, Bartlett told hotel managers, sales directors and attraction operators at 3D a Gynaecolog­y Jamaica Tourist Limited Board Public Relations Update Session at the Montego Bay Convention Centre on Wednesday that recovery was now a challenge.

He said the new demographi­c,‘ Generation COVID’, was now emerging, and is going to be defined in a different way, one that requires a response to passions that ANTIGEN what they were accustomed to before.

“Our destinatio­n has to respond to that quickly, or we lose the opportunit­y and the choices,” he admitted to the large group of stakeholde­rs who are facing the challenges head-on.

“The establishm­ent of a Tourism Logistics Supply Centre, through our special economic zone, will allow us the opportunit­ies for these supplies that are required, which will be available to us here in Jamaica, then to the rest of the region.”

Bartlett said he is putting in place the ability to respond quickly to the huge recovery that is coming, because that rate of recovery will appear by 2023 to 2024, and Jamaica will be back and beyond, but, where the supplies are to be had, is not immediatel­y visible.

Acknowledg­ing that the country may not get back 100 per cent of the workers it desires, Bartlett noted that encouragem­ent may inspire them to return to the industry. Pointing out that the world has never had this before, neither has tourism, he is urging all stakeholde­rs to band together and make this happen, so they and the country can thrive.

With eyes set on growth, the tourism minister promised that growth will include not only human capital, but social developmen­t in the community space, growth in terms of accommodat­ion and room inventory, and improvemen­t in experienti­al products, strengthen­ing of relationsh­ips and new stories to tell.

“We are recovering with an expectatio­n from our guests of having the same level, if not higher levels of experience­s, when the capacity to do so is being affected by the disruption­s. So the response has to be to ramp up quickly the capacity to develop the supply capabiliti­es, which in our case is the establishm­ent of the centre,”he told The Gleaner after his presentati­on.

Hoping to propose this idea at the upcoming World Free Zones Conference, which is being staged June 13-17 at the 20, Montego 2021 Bay Convention Centre, Bartlett said the tourism logistics facilities, once built in the zones, can enable supply TURN-AROUND of production TIME FOR goods, to be available to Jamaica and the rest of the region.

“That way we will be building a new income stream and new (US$) skill set for our people. They can now be part of tourism, not just by working in a hotel or in an attraction, but in a logistics centre.”

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