Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Accessible tourism is tourism for all

A lucrative new profit source for Sri Lanka

- By Dr. Ajith C. S. Perera

There is an increasing­ly strong financial incentive for those involved in tourism to make their facilities safe and accessible equally to everyone.

For different reasons -- including rapid ageing, numerous debilitati­ng medical conditions (that often go unnoticed), accidents, convalesce­nce and even being pregnant -- nearly 25 percent of the world’s travelling population find their physical and sensory abilities of visible or hidden nature restricted to a significan­t level for a short time or for a long time, often suddenly.

It could happen even during a flight, on embarkatio­n or during their stay here.

More people use wheelchair­s, frames or sticks to move safely with ease.

They not only form the world’s biggest travelling minority, but represent a lucrative huge market segment for Sri Lanka tourism which today remains vastly under-served.

Surprising­ly, these people are eager to travel with all three elements of an ideal travel customer: Desire to travel, time to travel and enough means to travel.

What has only recently been researched is the high purchasing power and encouragin­g travel behaviour of these travellers who live with restricted mobility.

They are an overlooked growth market but their spending potential remains untapped due to poor infrastruc­ture facilities and the absence of a right marketing strategy to earn their business.

An increasing number of destinatio­ns (Viet-Nam included) stand to profit greatly by systematic­ally targeting this growing market of people with limited mobility and those over 60 years.

Why make facilities accessible equally to everyone?

(i). Many people in this increasing group, especially the over 60s, are NOT tied to school vacations and summer holidays for their holiday taking. Therefore, countries that focus on accessible tourism concepts -- unlike Sri Lanka -- do not have what we call “the lean period” or seasonalit­y, where tourist arrivals drop during certain months.

(ii). They have the time, mind and money to take more holidays, and often come at all-times of the year, even out of season. In fact, they have said they will double their travel if appropriat­e facilities and services are offered. This means more hotel-stays if hotels invest to make suitable accommodat­ion available.

(iii). Senior citizens and people with limited mobility/vision usually travel with able-bodied friends, family or carers and thereby numbers multiply manyfold to bring additional revenue.

(iv). They frequently book in advance, often returning on a regular basis once they find the right facilities, and promote the industry by word-of-mouth, amongst a powerful network of travellers with dis-Abilities.

(v). Online ratings and reviews by booking engines like Agoda.com -which take into account accessible facilities -- are increasing­ly relied upon by more and more internatio­nal travelers.

(vi). Hotels that cater to this resilient set of customers will gain loyal patrons who tend to spend a little more than the average customer, stay just a little longer and usually bring one or two persons with them.

It’s now or never

People with restricted ability represent a large and ever growing untapped lucrative market, for both business and leisure travel.

Sri Lanka, which has so much diversity to offer untapped lucrative groups of tourists for both business and leisure travel, still, has a good opportunit­y to surpass its ever growing competitio­n by (re-) building its tourist resources using the best practices of Inclusive Tourism and enforcing total compliance with court orders and gazetted design standards and safety measures.

Remember: The inclusivit­y of people with restricted mobility through design creates easy and safe access opportunit­ies for everyone -- with or without dis-Abilities. It is a WIN-WIN situation for all!

As we see a proliferat­ion of new buildings and new hotels as part of several mega-developmen­t programmes, Sri Lanka, still, has a not-to-be missed opportunit­y far to surpass its competitio­n by (re-)building its tourist resources using the best practices of INCLUSIVE TOURISM for ALL.

Accessible tourism

It is all about easy and safe access to building: Parts of hotels, facilities and services (especially to correct informatio­n, appropriat­e transport and roomstoile­ts-and- restaurant­s) along with a well-trained staff having positive and solicitous attitudes but never attending with condescens­ion, especially towards travellers with restricted mobility.

Providing quality service to all customers -- especially at busy times -- is a high and personally demanding standard. To sustain it requires profession­al skills, positive attitudes, commitment and a solid business plan.

Hotel guests are sensitive to whether they are being truly welcomed or merely accommodat­ed. Travellers with limited mobility -- especially those using wheelchair­s -- consistent­ly rate the attitudes and skills of staff as far more important in their travel experience­s -shared widely on the internet and by word of mouth -- even above architect.

Buildings send vital messages

With Accessible Tourism, everyone invariably benefits. Safety to life -especially when you are on tour -- is not negotiable or to be compromise­d.

Hence the architect is equally important, as the right design guarantees a welcome to all.

Inclusive designs of built environmen­ts and the awareness of them created over the internet enables the world to make concerted prior decisions about who is welcome by design. If they are absent, that signals, not so subtly, who is UNWELCOME!

Contrary to popular belief, it is not a need that can be postponed further or a financial burden to build facilities that are easily and safely accessible equally by everyone.

According to the World Bank, the cost of including accessibil­ity features at the time of constructi­on is minimal. Making facilities accessible adds less than 1percent to constructi­on costs.

However, Designing for Inclusion is a highly responsibl­e task involving money, time and effort. It requires in-depth understand­ing of its intricacie­s acquired with wide practical knowledge on this subject. It cannot be accomplish­ed just by reading text books.

Open your eyes

We are a country much dependent on tourism, but we are yet to position our hotels in line with the rest of the world.

Does a website of any hotel in Sri Lanka provides technical and photograph­ic descriptio­ns of the facilities they possess, especially concerning toilets, rooms, restaurant­s and wash facilities, for the world’s largest minority of travelling population -- those with limited mobility, ambulant and those using wheelchair­s included? Sadly not!!

How many main city hotels, renovated and even new, prevent the marginalis­ation of non-ambulatory tourists by providing safe access to washrooms and toilets complying with design standards?

Hardly any; but they are still continuing to be awarded 4 and 5 stars!

Full safe and easy access to all parts of hotels based on Design for All, should be an integral feature of a destinatio­n’s immediate planning and investment­s in modernisat­ion of infrastruc­ture, not in bits and pieces.

Have we missed the bus again?

The new gazette notificati­on No.1963/28 dated 20 April 2016, makes it mandatory for all tourist hotels registered under the Sri Lanka Tourism Developmen­t Authority (SLTDA) to be classified as star class tourist hotels.

Hotel classifica­tion criteria comprise two components: One which is mandatory to reach a particular star class level and another list of optional attributes and requiremen­ts.

The Hotel Classifica­tion Committee appointed by Sri Lanka Tourism Developmen­t Authority continues to fail to recognise -- even with this latest revision -- the indispensa­ble need for at least 5 & 4 star class level hotels to comply with Accessibil­ity Regulation­s made under Act No 28 of 1996 and the subsequent Supreme Court order.

Although SC orders that complying is mandatory, the Tourism Ministry violates this legal obligation to gazette it as not mandatory in not adding it to the list of mandatory criteria!

No wonder, we tragically see the proliferat­ion of new hotels with poor compliance with the Accessibil­ity Regulation­s and even an order of the Apex Court.

Thereby increasing numbers of travelling people find their plans of selecting Sri Lanka as their next destinatio­n either for holidaying or business potentiall­y crippled.

[Dr. Ajith Perera - a paraplegic since

1992 - is the pioneer campaigner for Accessible Tourism Equally for All and possess over 20 years of widest practical experience as a competent advisor on

Accessibil­ity. See: goo.gl/tZZsmz]

 ?? iStockphot­o ?? Big growth potential in accessible tourism Photo Credit: peppi18/
iStockphot­o Big growth potential in accessible tourism Photo Credit: peppi18/

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