Minister of Tourism, Edmund Bartlett (centre) shares lens time with Christopher Saunders, Deputy Premier and Minister of Finance & Economic Development and Minister of Border Control & Labour for the Cayman Islands (left) and Minister of Tourism & Transport for the Cayman Islands, Kenneth Bryan, following talks on how Jamaica and the British territory can collaborate on tourism, at the Jamaica Tourist Board on Wednesday, August 10.
KINGSTON, Jamaica--Jamaica and the Cayman Islands have initiated discussions to facilitate collaboration on tourism, in order to leverage the strong historical ties and synergies between both nations to boost their tourism sectors, according to a press release from Jamaica’s Ministry of Tourism. Among the areas being examined for cooperation are multi-destination tourism, airlift, enhancing border protocols, rationalising airspace as well as resilience building.
Minister of Tourism, Edmund Bartlett made the disclosure during a meeting on Wednesday, August 10, with members of a special delegation from the Cayman Islands, led by Christopher Saunders, Deputy Premier and Minister of Finance & Economic Development and of Border Control & Labour, and Kenneth Bryan, Minister of Tourism & Transport.
Minister Bartlett revealed that special focus will be placed on multi-destination tourism, adding that he will be meeting with key players in the industry in Cayman next month.
He said he believes “the meeting in Cayman with the International Air Transport Association (IATA) in September, could be the steppingstone for coalescing our position on elements of multi-destination tourism,” noting also that he would be “more so looking at airlift and airline collaboration.”
In the same breath, Minister Bartlett said he is “ready to work with Cayman to sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Cayman Islands in relation to multi-destination tourism,” adding that “Jamaica has already signed four similar agreements with Cuba, [the – Ed.] Dominican Republic, Mexico and Panama.”
He explained that in developing the framework, the Ministry of Tourism is seeking to “include The Bahamas, [the] Turks and Caicos [Islands] and Belize, from this side of the Caribbean.”
Meanwhile, Bartlett has made a call for players in the private sector to develop a special tourism package with an attractive price, that can be presented to the market to promote multi-destination tourism and enhance the regional tourism product. He said the issue will be further explored at the next meeting of the Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Association (CHTA) in October this year.
The CHTA will host the 40th edition of its flagship trade event Caribbean Travel Marketplace in San Juan, Puerto Rico, from October 3 to 5.
In describing the concept of a possible package, Bartlett explained that: “If you buy a trip to Jamaica for US $50, that $50 takes you into Cayman and into Trinidad,” adding, however, that “that in itself would be an interesting and challenging task, because we would then have to look at price differentiation in relation to what the product offering is.” Such packages, he believes, will help to fuel the development of multi-destination tourism across the region, adding that it is “not beyond us.”