Tag Archive for the 'tourism' Tag

President Obama Speaks About Tourism and Parks

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President Obama Announces Actions to Increase Travel & Tourism

President Barack Obama today will sign an Executive Order and announce new initiatives aimed at increasing travel and tourism in the United States.  The Executive Order charges several agencies to take part in efforts to increase travel and tourism in the United States:

  • The Secretaries of Commerce and the Interior will be charged with:
    • Co-leading an interagency task force to develop recommendations for a National Travel & Tourism Strategy to promote domestic and international travel opportunities throughout the United States, thereby expanding job creation. This Task Force will coordinate with the Corporation for Travel Promotion (currently doing business as BrandUSA), a non-profit corporation established by Congress through the Travel Promotion Act of 2009 to promote travel to the United States, and the Tourism Policy Council to ensure private sector participation and cross-agency coordination.
    • A particular focus of the Task Force will be on strategies for increasing tourism and recreation jobs by promoting visits to our national treasures. The Department of the Interior manages iconic destinations in our national parks, wildlife refuges, cultural and historic sites, monuments and other public lands that attract travelers from around the country and the globe. In 2010, more than 400 million visits were made by American and international travelers to these lands, contributing nearly $50 billion in economic activity and 400,000 jobs. Eco-tourism and outdoor recreation also have an outsize impact on rural economies, particularly in Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Nevada, North Carolina, Oregon, Utah and Wyoming.
    • The Department of State and the Department of Homeland Security will be charged with:
      • Increasing non-immigrant visa processing capacity in China and Brazil by 40% in 2012.
      • Ensuring that 80% of non-immigrant visa applicants are interviewed within three weeks of receipt of application.
      • Increasing efforts to expand the Visa Waiver Program and travel by nationals eligible to participate in the Visa Waiver Program, and expanding reciprocal trusted travel programs for expedited travel (such as the Global Entry program).
      • The Department of Commerce will be charged with:
        • Establishing and maintaining a publicly available website with key information and statistics from across the Federal Government to assist industry and travelers in understanding visa processes in key travel and tourism markets, and entry times into the United States.

Additional initiatives announced today include:

  • New Pilot Program and Rule Change for Visa Processing in China and Brazil:
    • Today, the Departments of State and Homeland Security announced a pilot program to simplify and speed up the non-immigrant visa process for certain applicants, including the ability to waive interviews for some very low-risk applicants, such as individuals from any country renewing non-immigrant visas, or, in Brazil, younger or older first-time applicants. Link to fact sheet HERE for more information.
    • Final Rule to Expand and Make the Global Entry Program Permanent:
      • Global Entry is a program within the Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Customs and Border Protection that was created as a pilot in 2008 to facilitate expedited clearance for pre-approved, low-risk travelers upon arrival in the United States. Through a final rule, the Administration will expand and make the Global Entry program permanent. Due in part to innovative public-private partnerships, the Global Entry program now has more than 246,000 members, more than one million trusted travelers have Global Entry benefits, and efforts are underway to expand enrollment even further. There are currently 131 Global Entry kiosks at 20 airports and since launching, members have used Global Entry kiosks over 1.7 million times, saving CBP officers over 36,450 inspection hours—staff hours that CBP has then re-allocated to expedite regular passenger queues. This final rule will allow the program to be expanded to an additional 4 airports in Minneapolis, Charlotte, Denver and Phoenix, making the Global Entry program and expedited clearance available in airports that service approximately 97% of international travelers.
      • Appoint new members to the U.S. Travel and Tourism Advisory Board:
        • A new membership of 32 private sector CEOs have been appointed by Commerce Secretary Bryson to serve on the U.S. Travel and Tourism Advisory Board. The Advisory Board will build upon the work undertaken by the past Board addressing travel facilitation, visa policy, improving the international travel entry experience, aviation security, energy security, crisis communications and research and data, among other issues. This Board consists of corporate executives across the nation, representing all aspects of the travel and tourism industry, who are appointed to a two-year term to advise the Secretary of Commerce on policies affecting the travel and tourism industry. See the full list of new members HERE.
        • Nomination of Taiwan to Visa Waiver Program:
          • Currently, more than 60% of international tourists do not require a U.S. visa, in most cases because they travel under the Visa Waiver Program.  The Secretary of State has formally requested that the Secretary of Homeland Security consider Taiwan for the Visa Waiver Program. Over the past year, Taiwan has undertaken significant efforts to improve its law enforcement and document security standards to meet the strict requirements for Visa Waiver Program eligibility. Under the Visa Waiver Program, participating nationals can travel to the United States for tourism or business for stays of 90 days or less without obtaining a visa. The program was established to promote travel and tourism with our foreign partners, stimulate the tourism industry, and permit the Department of State to focus consular resources in other areas. Since November 2008, the Department of Homeland Security has added nine countries to the Visa Waiver Program, bringing the program total to 36 countries.

 

Marketing Cultural & Heritage Tourism

The U.S. Cultural & Heritage Tourism Marketing Council, Shop America Alliance and Museum Store Association release a new guide to “Marketing Cultural & Heritage Tourism” on Aug. 1.

Written by Rosemary McCormick, the guide provides invaluable insights into connecting to the global tourism market, increasing visitation and retail sales in museum stores, partnership strategies, research data and new perspectives on the “drive market,” which comprises 85% of U.S. travelers.

For those near any national park that focuses on cultural or heritage tourism, this is a must read.  Copies of the 150-page guide can be purchased online at www.museumstoreassociation.org for $39.95.

Will the Japan Quake and Tsunami Affect Park Visits?

Hawaii Volcanoes National Park

How the Sendai earthquake and tsunami may effect tourism to the national parks is on the minds of many national park destinations, considering the importance of Japanese travel to U.S. tourism.

As the 4th largest source of foreign tourism to the U.S., Japan sends many travelers to national parks and their destinations.  Last year, Hawaii was the single-most popular U.S. destination for Japanese travelers, attracting 1.2 million, followed by California (462,000) and then New York City (220,000), according to U.S. Department of Commerce figures.  Many Japanese visitors travel to national parks in each of those states, as well as to units throughout the National Park System.

In 2010, there were positive signs that tourism to the U.S. from Japan was turning around a decade-long downturn.  Arrivals grew 16%, according to the U.S. Office of Tourism Industries.  Though this year, there were signs that the Japanese economy was depressing overseas travel.  Then, with the Sendai earthquake, travel from Japan dropped precipitously.  David Uchiyama of the Hawaiian Tourism Authority is reported by MarketWatch to say that, year-to-year, Japanese visitation following the earthquake fell off 17 to 19%.

However, if past disasters are any guide, that decline need not be long-lasting.  In the month following the 1995 Kobe earthquake, Hawaii experienced a 12.4% drop in travel from Japan, but by the end of the year, tourism had rebounded, according to the MarketWatch report.  In 2003, the SARS scare had a longer-lasting (three months) and more severe (over 36% decline) effect upon Japanese trips to Hawaii, but by year’s end tourism from Japan was down only 9.6%.  Therefore, Japanese tourism can be resilient following a major disaster.

There is little doubt that Japanese tourism to national parks will decline profoundly in the near-term, but how long this continues depends on whether additional mishaps occur, how Japan restores normalcy to daily life and how quickly the Japanese economy recovers.

During a crisis, it feels as if the crisis will never end, but even the impact on tourism from major disasters, such as the Sendai earthquake and tsunami, subside over time.