The Scotsman

Tourism industry needs help

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It’s 20 years since I took over at the helm of Loch Ness by Jacobite, then known as Jacobite Cruises. I’ve always liked a challenge, I even qualified as a boat skipper before I took on the business. It is fair to say that there have been plenty of challenges along the way.

I am immensely proud of our achievemen­ts; growing passenger numbers to 325,000 a year, adding a retail offering in 2019 and a range of holiday cottages in 2021. But if you’d told me that after 20 years in business, I’d be facing my most challengin­g year yet, I simply wouldn’t have believed you.

Neverthele­ss, 2022 might not deliver the bounce back we have all been expecting and yet it comes after two years of a global pandemic where the industry has shown more resilience, determinat­ion and ingenuity than any of us probably thought possible. For those tourism businesses who successful­ly weathered that storm, we thought the worst was behind us – it seems we were wrong.

Businesses took on unpreceden­ted levels of debt during the pandemic with the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) estimating that businesses in Scotland borrowed three times more than they were given in grants. In the Highlands, businesses took out around £205m in government­backed loans. This now all needs to be paid back at a time when all other operating costs are spiralling, with the most significan­t being VAT, business rates and fuel.

The temporaril­y reduced rate for VAT in leisure and hospitalit­y was widely welcomed but as of April 1 VAT is back to 20 per cent. Firms across Scotland’s retail, hospitalit­y and leisure sectors were fully exempt from nondomesti­c rates for the financial year 2021/22.

With a fleet of four boats, the rising cost of fuel is beginning to have a significan­t impact on our operating costs. Although our newest boat was designed to have a lower fuel consumptio­n, we still rely on diesel to take thousands of passengers across Loch Ness each year. We have never set a minimum number of passengers to run our cruises but if operationa­l costs continue to rise, this is something we may need to consider.

Where does this leave us? Hospitalit­y businesses do not operate in isolation, we are part of the consumer economy and a barometer for consumer trends and spending. With the cost of living rising there will inevitably be less disposable income. Scotland has always had to prove it delivers value for money compared to other destinatio­ns so we could see the bubble burst in the staycation market.

I look to those in government to help ease the burden of the rising cost of living and consider extending support for businesses in tourism and hospitalit­y.

Freda Newton MBE, MD Jacobite Cruises

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