• Home
  • Post a press-release
  • Visibility packages
  • Subscribe email updates
  • Event Calendar
  • Contact

For Immediate Release | Official News Wire for the Travel Industry

Where press releases are breaking news

  • Home
  • Post a press-release
  • Visibility packages
  • Subscribe email updates
  • Event Calendar
  • Contact

Seychelles recognized as world’s Most Beautiful Island at GQ Travel Awards Russia

March 29, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

Destination Seychelles was cited as “The Most Beautiful Island” in the world after walking away with the title at the GQ Travel Awards, a ceremony that took place on March 15, 2019, at the Metropol Hotel, in Moscow, Russia.

The GQ Travel Awards ceremony recognizes the leading companies, hotels, and destinations from the elite travel industry. The winners in the 17 different categories including Seychelles were chosen by GQ readers who voted online on the magazine’s website.

The island destination was presented with the award during a ceremony attended by some 250 prominent guests including industry professionals, representatives of host countries, Russian celebrities, and famous travelers, and was followed by a gala dinner.

Ms. Diana Sarkisyan, PR & Marketing representative from the Seychelles Tourism Board (STB) for the Russian and CIS region, accepted the award on behalf of Seychelles.

Seychelles remains a high-end destination, popular among Russian visitors for its sandy white beaches, warm turquoise waters, and diverse unique flora and fauna. Various beaches such as Anse Lazio on Praslin have been seen as being among some of the most beautiful in the world.

The island nation is one of the world’s leading actors when it comes to sustainable tourism and sustainable development, a concept to which the Russian visitors are very responsive.

Speaking about the latest recognition received by the destination at the GQ Travel Awards, Mrs. Sherin Francis, STB Chief Executive, mentioned that it is an honor for the destination to have been voted by the readers of GQ magazine.

“It is such a privilege to feature as the most beautiful island; as a destination, we are conscious of our inestimable resources, and we strive to demarcate ourselves by our uniqueness, and it is rewarding to see that our efforts have not gone unnoticed,” said Mrs. Francis.

The STB Chief Executive further stated that the achievement is the result of hard work and congratulated the various partners for their constant support towards building the destination’s reputation.

GQ is a men’s magazine offering analytics and current reports of international quality with the latest men’s fashion and style news. It is the number one magazine for male visitors of luxury department stores.

GQ’s regular authors are the best of the best in their industry, from both Russia and abroad, and has a close access to celebrities unlike any other Russian magazine in its niche. It is an unrivaled guidance and companion for a successful man.

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: amp, and, anse lazio, award, Awards, beaches, beautiful, best, board, Breaking Travel News, building, celebrities, ceremony, chief, chief executive, chosen, CIS, cited, close, companies, companion, concept, countries, current, department, Destination, destination Seychelles, Destinations, development, Diana, different, Dinner, efforts, elite, end, executive, famous, Fashion, Feature, flora and fauna, Francis, gala, gala dinner, GQ, GQ Magazine, GQ Travel Awards, guests, guidance, high, high-end, honor, host, hotel, Hotels, in, including, Industry, International, island, IT, LATEST, lazio, leading, Luxury, magazine, Male, man, march, Marketing, men, Moscow, most, most beautiful, Mrs, Ms, nation, News, News articles, Niche, number, number one, offering, online, partners, Place, popular, PR, Praslin, professionals, quality, readers, received, recognition, region, regular, remains, reports, representative, reputation, resources, Russia, Russian, Russian visitors, s, said, sandy, see, Seychelles, Seychelles tourism, Seychelles Tourism Board, Seychelles travel news, stated, STB, STB Chief Executive, stores, Style, successful, support, sustainable, sustainable development, sustainable tourism, The Island, The Seychelles, The World, title, to, tourism, tourism board, Travel, Travel & Tourism Organizations News, Travel Award News, travel awards, Travel Destination News, Travel Industry, travelers, Travelwire News, unique, visitors, voted, walking, waters, We, website, were, white, WHO, winners, work, World, worlds

Marriott International and Dur Hospitality open new Riyadh hotel properties

March 29, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

Marriott International and Dur Hospitality today announced the opening of Riyadh Marriott Hotel Diplomatic Quarter and Marriott Executive Apartments Riyadh, Diplomatic Quarter in Saudi Arabia. The complex is located 30 minutes from King Khalid International Airport.

Meeting high standards for energy and environmental (LEED) Gold Certification requirements, the hotel site creates a protected micro-climate and maximizes on environmental impacts. By amplifying useful daylight via a complex reflection processes, the hotel can decrease its illumination needs during the day. Plentiful shaded areas and the building’s structure allow for natural ventilation, reducing the need for air conditioning and additional cooling.

The opening of Riyadh Marriott Hotel Diplomatic Quarter and Marriott Executive Apartments Riyadh, Diplomatic Quarter marks the fifth collaboration between Marriott International and Dur Hospitality following Riyadh Marriott Airport, Marriott Executive Apartments Riyadh Convention Center, Courtyard by Marriott Riyadh Diplomatic Quarter and Riyadh Marriott Hotel – the Marriott Hotels first property in the Middle East.

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: and, announced, apartments, arabia, areas, Breaking Travel News, building, center, certification, climate, collaboration, complex, convention, Convention Center, Courtyard, Courtyard by Marriott, day, decrease, diplomatic, Dur Hospitality, East, energy, environmental, environmental impacts, executive, first, following, gold, high, hospitality, Hospitality News, hotel, Hotel Travel News, Hotels, impacts, in, International, International Airport, king, LEED, marks, Marriott, Marriott Executive Apartments Riyadh Convention Center, Marriott Hotel, Marriott hotels, Marriott International, Marriott Riyadh, meeting, Middle, Middle East, minutes, natural, need, needs, New, News articles, open, opening, processes, properties, property, protected, quarter, Reflection, requirements, Riyadh, Riyadh hotel, Riyadh Marriott, Riyadh Marriott Hotel Diplomatic Quarter, s, Saudi, Saudi Arabia travel news, Saudi Arabia. (, site, standards, structure, today, Travel Destination News, Travelwire News

United: Top-ranked LGBTQ airline

March 29, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

United Airlines today announced that for the eighth consecutive year, it has received a perfect score of 100 percent on the 2019 Corporate Equality Index (CEI), a premier benchmarking survey and report on corporate policies and practices related to LGBTQ workplace equality, administered by the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) Foundation.

“United is proud to receive this recognition as it speaks to our focus on building a more inclusive and caring workplace and customer experience,” said Human Resources and Labor Relations Executive Vice President Kate Gebo. “We believe that advocating for inclusion is at the heart of connecting people and uniting the world, and United is determined to continue working with organizations such as the Human Rights Campaign to help champion LGBTQ inclusion.”

“The top-scoring companies on this year’s CEI are not only establishing policies that affirm and include employees here in the United States, they are applying these policies to their global operations and impacting millions of people beyond our shores,” said HRC President Chad Griffin.

The 2019 CEI evaluates LGBTQ-related policies and practices including non-discrimination workplace protections, domestic partner benefits, transgender-inclusive health care benefits, competency programs and public engagement with the LGBTQ community. United’s efforts in satisfying all of the CEI’s criteria results in a 100 percent score and the designation as a Best Place to Work for LGBTQ Equality.

United has worked with the Human Rights Campaign on its training initiatives including teaching employees about preferred pronouns and the persistence of gender norms and other steps to make United an inclusive space for both customers and employees. The airline’s latest efforts include developing comprehensive training modules and exercises to continue employee education on how to be a better ally in both the workplace and to customers. Over the past year, United has also opened more LGBTQ Business Resource Groups across the country, reaching more employees.

This recognition follows the airline’s recent announcement that United became the first U.S. airline to offer non-binary gender options throughout all booking channels in addition to providing the option to select the title “Mx.” during booking and in a MileagePlus customer profile. United customers and employees have the option to identify themselves as M(male), F(female), U(undisclosed) or X(unspecified), corresponding with what is indicated on their passports or identification.

Alongside partner organizations, customers and employees, United will continue working to build the world’s most inclusive airline. For more information on United’s commitment to diversity and inclusion, click here.

Every customer. Every flight. Every day.

In 2019, United is focusing more than ever on its commitment to its customers, looking at every aspect of its business to ensure that the carrier keeps customers’ best interests at the heart of its service. In addition to today’s announcement, United recently released a re-imagined version of the most downloaded app in the airline industry and made DIRECTV free for every passenger on 211 aircraft, offering more than 100 channels on seat back monitors on more than 30,000 seats. The multimillion-dollar investment in improving inflight entertainment options will benefit the more than 29 million people expected to fly United’s DIRECTV-enabled planes this year.

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: and, announced, announcement, App, applying, Aviation News, aviation-website, benefit, benefits, best, better, Booking, Breaking Travel News, build, building, Business, campaign, carrier, CEI, Chad, champion, channels, Click, commitment, community, companies, connecting, continue, corporate, country, criteria, customer, Customer Experience, customers, day, DIRECTV, discrimination, diversity, dollar, domestic, Education, efforts, employee, employees, engagement, entertainment, Equality, Equality Index, executive, Executive Vice President, expected, experience, female, first, flight, fly by, foundation, free, Gender, Global, global operations, groups, HEALTH, health care, heart, help, Human, human resources, human rights, Human Rights Campaign, in, including, inclusive, index, Industry, inflight, inflight entertainment, information, initiatives, Investment, IT, labor, LATEST, LGBTQ, looking, M, Make, Male, MileagePlus, million, million people, millions, most, multimillion, News articles, Non, offer, offering, only, opened, operations, option, options, organizations, over, partner, passenger, passports, past, People, percent, Place, planes, policies, practices, Preferred, premier, president, Profile, programs, proud, public, ranked, receive, received, recent, recognition, related, relations, released, report, resource, resources, results, rights, s, said, scoring, seat, seats, service, space, states, survey, teaching, the United States, The World, title, to, TO BE, today, top, training, Transgender, Transportation News, Travelwire News, United, United Airlines, United customers, United States, vice president, We, work, worked, working, World, x, year

Crime is out of control and rampant in Waikiki: Let’s make it unwelcoming for homeless

March 28, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

The perception is that crime is out of control and rampant in Waikiki. We want to make Waikiki unwelcome and uncomfortable for homeless people.

Crime is not out of control, according to Susan Ballard, Chief Honolulu Police Department.”Waikiki is a safe location for visitors and residents.”

However, the police chief together with Jerry Dolak, president of the Hawaii Hotel Visitors Industry Security Association wants to make sure Waikiki is an unwelcoming and uncomfortable place for the homeless to hang out.

Today the Hawaii Lodging and Tourism Association Security Conference at the Hawaii Prince Hotel in Honolulu brought security experts and leaders of the Waikiki hotel business together.

“Our Competitive edge is safety and security. One incident can change this,” said Mufi Hannemann, Hawaii Lodging & Tourism Association, President & CEO.

The Honolulu Police Department is training officers in communication, conflict resolution, and re-de-escalation. Crisis intervention training (CIT) of the Honolulu Police Department (HPD) officers is to identify individuals in crisis or living with mental disabilities, like many within the homeless community.

The HPD emphasizes building relationships with the community and businesses. They encourage officers to get out of their cars and talk to the community and businesses to facilitate open communication and relationships, this can reduce crimes.

There are groups, not gangs in Waikiki. There is no organized crime, however, there are delinquent juvenile groups from other parts of Oahu.

Most of the discussion this morning was about the homeless problem. Lack of mental health care, the attractiveness to receive handouts the State of Hawaii doesn’t have but most homeless people on the Island of Oahu love is in Waikiki. Tourists do not want to see them, but many feel sorry, but businesses see them as a pest.

Bob Finley, chair of the Waikiki Neighborhood Board felt the hotels are trespassing  “them” and now “they” are on our doorstep at residential condominiums buildings.

Police officers explained how a homeless person could effectively have trespassed, so HPT could arrest such a violator. A member of the audience suggested for the courts to trespass any homeless convicted of such a crime to be no longer allowed in Waikiki altogether. This would slowly clean and isolate the 2-mile long tourist center from those that have no home to go home to.

Justin Philipps, the Homeless Outreach Manager of the Institute for Human Services explained the success of a program to provide transportation for homeless people to leave the State. He explained the homeless person has to pay half of the airline ticket, and we provide the other half.

Jessica Lani Rich, president, Visitor Aloha Society documented two cases where homeless with mental conditions attack tourists, in one case almost killed a visitor who came to attend a wedding and instead ended up in a hospital and is now disabled for the rest of her life.

“Tourism is everyone’s business in this State, even if you don’t live in Waikiki or work directly in this business.”, said Juergen Steinmetz, a long time resident of Hawaii and CEO of the eTN Corporation. “Chasing homeless people from one street to another, not forcing seriously mentally ill people to get treatment is putting our economy and our visitors at risk.

“The State has to find the money needed to help a homeless person and provide a chance to enter society. Tourism stakeholders must push legislators to provide the money and methods to help resolve this issue once and for all. The tourist industry should use its power and profits to push the State to act effectively. Someone has to take ownership of the problem, and it cannot be only well-meaning charities, churches, and other nonprofit organizations.”

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: amp, and, arrest, association, attack, attend, audience, board, Breaking Travel News, building, buildings, Business, businesses, cars, case, center, CEO, chair, Chance, change, chief, churches, clean up, Communication, community, competitive, conditions, conference, conflict, control, Corporate News, Corporation, courts, crime, crimes, Crisis, delinquent, department, directly, disabilities, disabled, discussion, documented, Economy, Edge, eTN, even, experts, explained, Feature, find, gangs, GO!, groups, half, Hawaii, Hawaii Travel News, HEALTH, health care, help, HITA, home, homeless, Honolulu, Honolulu Police, Honolulu Police Department, hospital, Hospitality News, hotel, Hotel Travel News, Hotels, HPD, HPT, Human, Human Rights news, in, incident, Industry, Instead, Institute, intervention, island, IT, Juergen, Justin, Kamaainas, killed, lack, leaders, leave, legislators, Let, life, like, live, Living, location, lodging, love, Make, manager, meaning, member, mental health, money, most, needed, neighborhood, News articles, Oahu, officers, only, open, organizations, organized crime, out, ownership, pay, People, perception, Place, police, Police Department, power, president, Prince, problem, profits, program, push, putting, receive, reduce, residential, residents, resolution, resolve, rich, Risk, s, safe, Safety, safety and security, said, Security, see, services, society, stakeholders, State, Steinmetz, Street, success, suggested, talk, The Island, ticket, time, to, TO BE, today, tourism, tourism association, tourism stakeholders, tourist, tourist center, tourist industry, tourists, training, Transportation, Travelwire News, treatment, trespassing, unwelcoming, up, use, visitor, visitors, Waikiki, We, Wedding, WHO, work

Aviation Safety: Fatigue management

March 28, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

In aviation operations, managing fatigue is important because it diminishes an individual’s ability to perform almost all operational tasks. This clearly has implications for operational efficiency, but in situations where individuals are undertaking safety-critical activities, fatigue-effected performance can also have consequences for safety outcomes. Fatigue is a natural consequence of human physiology.

Because fatigue is affected by all waking activities (not only work demands), fatigue management has to be a shared responsibility between the State, service providers and individuals.

A brief history of flight and/or duty limitations

For most workers, hours of work are part of the working conditions and remuneration packages established through industrial agreements or social legislation. They are not necessarily established from a safety perspective.

However, the need to limit pilots’ flight and duty hours for the purpose of flight safety was recognized in ICAO Standards and Recommended Practices (SARPs) in the first edition of Annex 6 published in 1949.  At that time, ICAO SARPs required the operator to be responsible for establishing flight time limits that ensured that “fatigue, either occurring in a flight or successive flights or accumulating over a period of time, did not endanger the safety of a flight”. These limits had to be approved by the State.

By 1995, ICAO SARPs required States to establish flight time, flight duty periods and rest periods for international flight and cabin crew. The onus was on the State to identify “informed boundaries” that aimed to address the general fatigue risk for flight operations nationally. At no time have ICAO SARPs identified actual flight and duty hours because it had proven impossible to identify global limits that adequately addressed operational contexts in different regions.While ICAO SARPs apply only to international operations, many States also chose to establish similar flight and duty time limitations for domestic operations. States generally used the same flight and duty limits for helicopter crew as for airline crew.

The fallacy of flight and/or duty limitations is that staying within them means that operations are always safe. Buying into this fallacy suggests that scheduling to the limits is enough to manage fatigue-related risks. However, more recent SARP amendments related to prescriptive limits have highlighted the responsibilities of the operator to manage their particular fatigue-related risks within the limits using their SMS processes.

And then there was FRMS….

Fatigue Risk Management Systems (FRMS) represent an opportunity for operators to use their resources more efficiently and increase operational flexibility outside the prescriptive limits, whilst maintaining or even improving safety. In implementing an FRMS, the onus shifts to the operator to prove to the State that what they propose to do and how they continue to operate under an FRMS, is safe.

In 2011, SARPs enabling FRMS as an alternative means of compliance to prescriptive limitations were developed for aeroplane flight and cabin crew (Annex 6, Part I).  At the time of development, it was necessary to address concerns that airline operators would take this as an opportunity to schedule purely for economic benefits at the cost of safety. Therefore, while often referred to as “performance-based” approach, the FRMS SARPs are nevertheless very prescriptive about the necessary elements of an FRMS and require the explicit approval of an operator’s FRMS by the State.

Since then, similar FRMS SARPs were made applicable for helicopter flight and cabin crew in 2018 (Annex 6, Part III, Section II).

But what about air traffic controllers?

Despite their obvious impact on flight safety outcomes, ICAO SARPs have never required the hours of work to be limited for air traffic controllers even though some States have had hours of duty limitations for air traffic controllers for many years. This is about to change. Amendments to Annex 11, becoming applicable in 2020, will require that ICAO States establish duty limits and specify certain scheduling practices for air traffic controllers. As for international airline and helicopter operations, States will have the option of establishing FRMS regulations for air traffic service providers.

Fatigue Management SARPs today

Today, ICAO’s fatigue management SARPs support both prescriptive and FRMS approaches for managing fatigue such that:

  • Both approaches are based on scientific principles, knowledge and operational experience that take into account:
    • the need for adequate sleep (not just resting while awake) to restore and maintain all aspects of waking function (including alertness, physical and mental performance, and mood);
    • the circadian rhythms that drive changes in the ability to perform mental and physical work, and in sleep propensity (the ability to fall asleep and stay asleep), across the 24h day;
    • interactions between fatigue and workload in their effects on physical and mental performance; and
    • the operational context and the safety risk that a fatigue-impaired individual represents in that context.
  • States continue to be obliged to have flight and duty time limitations but are under no obligation to establish FRMS regulations. Where FRMS regulations are established, the operator/service provider, can manage none, some or all of its operations under an FRMS, once approved to do so.
  • Prescriptive fatigue management regulations now provide the baseline, in terms of safety equivalence, from which an FRMS is assessed.

In practice…

In Airlines:  The Fatigue Management amendments to the Annex 6, Part I, in 2011 led many States  to reviewing their prescriptive limitation regulations for pilots based on scientific principles and knowledge (refer text box) and identifying further requirements for operators to manage their fatigue-related risks within the prescribed limits.  Fewer States have reviewed their prescriptive limitation regulations for cabin crew.

In every case, despite a refocus on providing adequate opportunities for sleep and recovery, altering existing flight and duty limitations remains a very sensitive and difficult task because it impacts income and work conditions as well as the constraints of pre-existing employment agreements. It is made even more challenging for States whose flight and duty time limitations are legislated.

Where States have reviewed their prescribed flight and duty limits, the increased awareness of the relationship between sleep and performance has served to highlight the responsibilities of the individual crew member and the airline to manage fatigue, and in some cases have resulted in the prescribed limits sitting alongside a set of regulations  that make these responsibilities more explicit, e.g. the FAA’s Fatigue Risk Management Program, EASA’s Fatigue Management requirements, CASA’s Fatigue Management requirements and CAA South Africa’s Fatigue Management Program.

The scientific principles of fatigue management

 

  1. Periods of wake need to be limited.  Getting enough sleep (both quantity and quality) on a regular basis is essential for restoring the brain and body.
  2. Reducing the amount or the quality of sleep, even for a single night, decreases the ability to function and increases sleepiness the next day.
  3. The circadian body-clock affects the timing and quality of sleep and produces daily highs and lows in performance on various tasks.
  4. Workload can contribute to an individual’s level of fatigue.  Low workload may unmask physiological sleepiness while high workload may exceed the capacity of a fatigued individual.

Many States have established, or plan to establish, FRMS regulations, often at the encouragement of their airlines. The FRMS challenge for States continues to be whether they have the resources to provide the necessary oversight from a scientific and performance-based perspective, particularly when the same regulations usually apply to a variety of domestic flight operations. While FRMS requirements are onerous and time-consuming, the few airlines who have so far managed to get FRMS approval for particular routes have found the operational flexibility gained to be worth the effort.

General scheduling principles

 

  1. The perfect schedule for the human body is daytime duties with unrestricted sleep at night. Anything else is a compromise.
  2. The circadian body clock does not adapt fully to altered schedules such as night work.
  3. Whenever a duty period overlaps a crew member’s usual sleep time, it can be expected to restrict sleep. Examples include early duty start times, late duty end times, and night work.
  4. The more that a duty period overlaps a crew member’s usual sleep time, the less sleep the crew member is likely to obtain. Working right through the usual nighttime sleep period is the worst case scenario.
  5. Night duty also requires working through the time in the circadian body clock cycle when self-rated fatigue and mood are worst and additional effort is required to maintain alertness and performance.
  6. The longer a crew member is awake, the worse their alertness and performance become.
  7. Across consecutive duties with restricted sleep, crew members will accumulate a sleep debt and fatigue-related impairment will increase.
  8. To recover from sleep debt, crew members need a minimum of two full nights of sleep in a row. The frequency of recovery breaks should be related to the rate of accumulation of sleep debt.
  9. Keep short notice changes to a minimum, especially where they infringe or overlap the  Window of Circadian Low (WOCL).
  10. Duty periods associated with high workload (such as multiple, challenging landings and in marginal weather conditions) may need to be shortened and extensions avoided where at all possible.

In Helicopter Operations:  For some States, the recent amendments to Annex 6, Part II (Section II) have highlighted the need to establish flight and duty time limits for helicopter crew members that better relate to the context of helicopter operations, rather than using the same limits as for airline pilots. Within those limits, the helicopter operator is expected to build crew schedules that use both fatigue science and operational knowledge and experience.

A new fatigue management guide for helicopter operators, currently under development in ICAO, identifies general scheduling principles based on fatigue science to guide helicopter operators in building “fatigue-aware” schedules that offer optimum opportunities for sleep and recovery (refer text box).

The particular challenge in helicopter operations, however, is that so many helicopter operations are unscheduled. While some helicopter operators will be able to operate within prescribed limits and effectively manage fatigue risks using an SMS, many types of helicopter operations, such as those that require unscheduled, immediate responses, possibly in high-risk settings, will benefit from the operational flexibility and safety gains of an FRMS.

In Air Traffic Control Services: Next year, States are expected to have established prescriptive work hour limits for air traffic controllers, while FRMS regulations remain optional and can be established at any time. However, the nature of the relationship between the Air Navigation Services Provider (ANSP) and the State will influence how the implementation of fatigue management regulations will unfold. In most cases, the State provides oversight of only one ANSP and although there is a current trend for privatisation, many of the ANSPs are fully or partially owned by the State.

In an industry sector that is often largely self-regulated, the distinction between a prescriptive fatigue management approach and FRMS may become blurred. However, a refocus on safety and not only organisational expediency or personal preference is likely to have substantial effects on the way controllers’ work schedules are built in ANSPs across the world. This is a “watch this space”.

Fatigue Management Guidance for ICAO States

The Manual for the Oversight of Fatigue Management Approaches (Doc 9966) received another update this year – Version 2 (Revised) – and an unedited version (in English only) will shortly replace the current manual available for download here. On this website you can also find the following:

  • Fatigue Management Guide for Airline Operators (2nd Edition, 2015)
  • Fatigue Management Guide for General Aviation Operators of Large and Turboject Aeroplane (1st Edition, 2016)
  • Fatigue Management Guide for Air Traffic Service Providers (1st Edition, 2016)
  • The Fatigue Management Guide for Helicopter Operators (1st Edition) is expected to be available later this year.

The Fatigue Management Guide for Helicopter Operators (1st Edition) is expected to be available later this year.

The author, Dr. Michelle Millar, is the Technical Officer (Human Factors) and the NGAP Program Manager at ICAO. She heads the ICAO FRMS Task Force and has been involved in the development of ICAO fatigue management provisions since 2009. Her academic background is in sleep, fatigue and performance.

 

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: and, Annex, ANSP, apply, approval, approved, asleep, author, aviation, Aviation News, aviation safety, aviation-website, Aware, Awareness, based, benefit, benefits, better, body, Box, Breaking Travel News, breaks, brief, build, building, built, buying, CAA, cabin, cabin crew, capacity, case, challenge, change, changes, Compliance, compromise, concerns, conditions, continue, continues, control, controllers, cost, crew, crew member, crew members, critical, current, currently, daily, day, debt, demands, development, different, domestic, domestic operations, download, Dr, drive, duty, duty limits, early, EASA, economic, edition, effects, efficiency, effort, elements, employment, end, English, essential, establish, even, existing, expected, experience, FAA, factors, fall, far, fatigue, Fatigue Risk Management Program, Fatigue Science, fatigued, fewer, find, first, flight, flight operations, flight safety, flights, following, force, found, frequency, FRMS, FRMS SARP, full, function, G, gains, general, getting, Global, guidance, guide, Heads, helicopter, high, highlight, history, hours, Human, ICAO, II, impact, impacts, implementation, important, in, including, income, increase, increased, increases, individual, industrial, Industry, influence, International, international airline, IT, just, keep, knowledge, landings, late, later, LED, legislation, less, limit, Limited, limits, low, maintain, Make, Manage, management, Management Guide, manager, Managing, May, member, members, Michelle, most, nationally, natural, nature, navigation, nbsp, need, New, News articles, night, nights, notice, obligation, offer, officer, only, operate, operational, operations, operator, operators, opportunity, option, outside, over, oversight, packages, particularly, perform, performance, period, personal, physical, pilots, plan, practices, Pre, principles, privatisation, processes, program, propose, provides, published, purpose, quality, quantity, rate, received, recent, recover, recovery, regions, regular, regulations, relate, related, Relationship, remains, represents, require, requirements, resources, responsibility, responsible, restore, resulted, right, Risk, risk management, risks, routes, row, s, safe, Safety, SARP, SARPS, schedule, science, sector, service, service providers, services, short, single, sleep, SMS, social, South, South Africa, space, standards, start, State, states, stay, support, task, task force, Technical, terms, text, the crew, The World, through, time, times, timing, to, TO BE, TO DO, today, traffic, traffic controllers, Transportation News, Travelwire News, trend, update, use, used, using, usual, variety, way, weather, weather conditions, website, were, WHO, work, workers, working, World, worst, worth, year, years

Jetwing Ayurveda Pavilions: A paragon of wellness and vitality

March 28, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

The ancient art and science of Ayurveda was developed thousands of years ago in the Indian Subcontinent and is believed to be one of the world’s oldest and most effective healing systems. Ayurveda is rooted in the belief that health and wellness depend on a harmonious balance of body, mind and soul and today this age-old practice has gained popularity across the world for the impact that it has on overall wellbeing. Whether you’re looking to cure or ease a long-standing ailment or nagging discomfort, Ayurveda uses a mix of therapies featuring natural minerals, metals and herbal blends to get to the root cause of your health issues, helping you to find relief, new-found energy and vitality from within.  Whether you’re balancing the demands of a fast-paced life, a challenging career or multiple responsibilities, you can now opt to embark on a journey of wellness at Jetwing Ayurveda Pavilions, where you can experience a diverse range of healing solutions first-hand, in a peaceful and soothing setting.

Revitalizing treatments for many ailments: Over the centuries, Ayurvedic medicine has adopted therapies and solutions for an endless range of conditions. It has been used to help a variety of illnesses and ailments ranging from digestive problems, to hair loss, to gastric issues, mental stress, weight related issues, skin problems and insomnia and even arthritis. The powerful release of toxins from the body that Ayurveda facilitates helps to restore the body’s internal balance and provides relief, a boost in immunity and energy and promotes overall health and well-being.

Tailor-made treatments and therapies: Ayurveda does not follow a “one size fits all” approach, and at Jetwing Ayurveda Pavilions, each treatment is carefully curated to heal, rejuvenate and restore an individual based on their unique requirements. Some of the most popular treatments provided at the hotel include the Panchakarma programme, which is 10-30 days long and is carefully personalized to one’s specific health needs. The primary focus of the programme is to purify and detox the body using five different therapy options. For a shorter, intense programme Purva Karma provides a variety of treatments that use a wide range of natural oils and herbal pastes to ease stress and anxiety and revitalize the skin and body.

The hotel also offers natural wellness and full-board programmes for guests who seek deeper and more intense healing therapies over longer periods of time. Whether you’re pressed for time and just have a few days to spend, or you have an entire month that you can dedicate to a holistic getaway, each treatment can be designed around your specific needs.

Additional benefits that promote holistic well-being: In addition to its broad portfolio of traditional Ayurvedic treatments and therapies, Jetwing Ayurveda Pavilions also offers guests the opportunity to take part in a variety of complementary activities. Ease your mind with yoga and meditation between treatments or participate in a music therapy or aquatic exercise session to give your senses a gentle boost.

A hotel that’s fully geared for wellness: Located a short drive away from the airport, Jetwing Ayurveda Pavilions is a tranquil hideaway that tunes out the hubbub of city life. Stepping in through the doors of this getaway, you will be transported to a truly picturesque and tranquil setting that is rich in nature and filled with soothing spaces. Inspired by the warmth and rustic charm of a Sri Lankan village and drawing further inspiration from nature and the ancient heritage of Ayurveda itself, the hotel has been designed to serve as the ultimate getaway that offers peace, serenity, a calm base and the ultimate location to embark on your holistic holiday.

Home to the island’s top doctors and therapists: Each and every treatment at the hotel is carried out by the finest team of Ayurveda experts comprising twelve professional therapists, under the purview of four experienced doctors, each of whom hold a Bachelor of Ayurveda Medicine and Surgery (B.A.M.S.) degree. Prior to each therapy or treatment process, one of the resident doctors will conduct a careful assessment of your current health and find any issues and concerns that need to be addressed. Your doctor will carefully look at your vatha, pitha and kapha – the three doshas (life forces) that are believed to be a part of every human being. Factoring in these findings with the duration of your stay, customized therapies and sessions will be mapped out to detoxify your entire body and mind and improve your health and wellness.

 

Mastering the art of an age-old healing tradition: Commenting on Jetwing Ayurveda Pavilions and the unique wellness experience that it offers, Dr. Dinesh Edirisinghe – Head of Ayurveda, Jetwing stated: “Ayurveda, which means ‘life-knowledge’ in Sanskrit, is a collection of ancient healing practices that is believed to have been passed down from deities to sages, and then to humans. These therapies are an integral part of Sri Lanka’s cultural and medicinal heritage, and for most, it is still the first choice of treatment for many ailments and illnesses. At Jetwing Ayurveda Pavilions, we employ these age-old healing traditions which have been perfected for centuries, to fight disease and promote wellness and good health. Our team of trained specialists are experts at identifying and treating underlying health conditions and restoring the optimal balance of mind, body and spirit.”

Family owned and in the tourism industry for the past 46 years, Jetwing Hotels has surpassed expectation at every aspect. Building on their foundation of being passionate, as well as the experience of true, traditional Sri Lankan hospitality, constantly pioneering discoveries captures the essence of the brand. Such a strong statement and direction have enabled Jetwing Hotels to imagine, create and manage marvels and masterpieces, where distinctive design and elegant comfort complement each other and the environment. In line with the Jetwing Hotels Sustainable Strategy, across all properties sustainable and responsible practices are given precedence with resource efficiency, community upliftment and education, and awareness being some of our key focus areas.

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: ancient, and, areas, art, assessment, Awareness, Ayurveda, Ayurvedic, Ayurvedic treatments, B, B.A., Bachelor, balance, base, based, benefits, board, body, boost, brand, Breaking Travel News, building, calm, Career, Cause, charm, choice, city, collection, comfort, community, concerns, conditions, create, cultural, Cultural Travel News, cure, current, Days, deities, demands, design, designed, different, direction, disease, doctor, doctors, down, Dr, drive, ease, Education, efficiency, elegant, energy, environment, even, exercise, experience, experienced, experts, Family, featuring, fight, find, findings, first, First-hand, follow, Forces, found, foundation, full, getaway, good, guests, hand, head, healing, HEALTH, health and wellness, help, Helping, helps, heritage, holiday, holistic, home, hospitality, Hospitality News, hotel, Hotel Travel News, Hotels, Human, Imagine, immunity, impact, improve, in, Indian, individual, Industry, inspiration, inspired, island, issues, IT, jetwing, Jetwing Ayurveda Pavilions, jetwing hotels, journey, just, knowledge, Lanka, Lankan, life, line, location, looking, loss, M, Manage, masterpieces, mind, month, most, most popular, music, natural, nature, nbsp, need, needs, New, News articles, offers, opportunity, options, out, over, participate, passed, past, pavilions, peace, peaceful, pioneering, popular, popularity, portfolio, practices, problems, professional, Programme, promote, promotes, properties, provides, range, ranging, rejuvenate, related, release, relief, requirements, resource, responsible, restore, revitalize, rich, rustic, s, science, seek, serve, sessions, setting, short, shorter, Size, solutions, Soul, spaces, specialists, Spirit, Sri Lanka, Sri Lanka travel news, Sri Lankan, standing, stated, statement, stay, strategy, stress, strong, sustainable, tailor-made, team, The Island, The World, therapy, thousands, through, time, to, TO BE, today, top, tourism, Tourism Industry, tradition, traditional, traditions, Travel Destination News, Travelwire News, treatment, treatments, unique, use, used, using, variety, village, We, weight, wellness, WHO, World, years, yoga

What is the discussion at the UNWTO / ICAO Ministerial Conference on Tourism and Air Transport?

March 28, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

A Panel discussion is ongoing and a packed program are planned today for delegates in Sai Island, Cabo Verde attending the First UNWTO/ ICAO Ministerial Conference Tourism and Air Transport.

Air Transport and Tourism Policies: Regulatory convergence to maximize and balance their benefits

Air Transport and tourism depend heavily on each other and are essential engines of trade and economic growth for both developed and developing countries.

Despite the synergies, there can be conflicts between aviation and tourism policies due to the difficulties of States in balancing the interests of their airlines and the optimum development of their tourism industries. Separate sectorial policies result in a fundamental disconnect, which constitutes a severe deterrent towards the development of both sectors. How do we enhance policy coherence between the two sectors, harmonize the regulatory frameworks, and prevent separate sectoral policies? How can we strike a balance to maximize the overall benefits of tourism and air transport in the national economy?

What is the current status of Africa’s regulatory framework and what is its impact on tourism and air transport (the Lomé Declaration and the related Action plans both for Air Transport and for Tourism?

How can Africa benefit from and implement the joint UNWTO and ICAO Medellín Statement on Tourism and Air Transport for Development? How can the African Governments promote cooperation and compatible decision-making among transport and tourism authorities and other ministries in charge of related portfolios, including finance, economic planning, energy, environment and trade?

What are the challenges encountered by tourism stakeholders in reflecting tourism business interests in national and regional air transport policies?

Connectivity and Seamless Travel: Best practices to serve tourists and passengers

Aviation and tourism are a customer-focused economic sector.

While there is no single definition of air connectivity, it can be viewed as the ability of a network to move passengers involving the minimum of transit points, which makes the trip as short as possible with optimal passenger satisfaction at the minimum price possible. The realization of seamless travel can improve overall travel experience, which in turn fuels tourism demand.

With the recent launching of the Single Africa Air Transport Market (SAATM), open skies over Africa may soon be a reality, building the necessary regulatory framework to increase international intra-Africa travel.

How do we optimize the flow of passenger traffic through the air transport system? How can we generate sufficient demand for direct air services between African sub-regions, especially between the East-West coasts?

How well do current air service agreements (ASAs) contribute to connectivity and what are the prospects of air transport liberalization? What constitute the bottlenecks and slowdowns of seamless travel in the air transport system? What regulatory schemes can be used or developed to assure essential air services to Least Developed Countries (LDCs), Landlocked Developing Countries (LLDCs) and Small Island Developing States (SIDS)?

What are the existing best practices and how could they be extended and adapted to other regions? What are the factors influencing airline choices for different market segments (the intercultural dimension)?

Funding and Financing for Development: Pragmatic measures to build a transparent, stable and predictable investment climate

Infrastructure deficiencies in the aviation and tourism sectors have long been an issue in Africa. While plans are in place to develop and modernize aviation infrastructure, relief is years away at best.

In the meantime, there will be lost opportunities for creating jobs and spurring economic growth. Another issue is the proliferation of taxes on tourism and air transport despite the fact that the industry recovers a vast majority of its own infrastructure costs through payments of user charges, rather than being financed through taxation.

Revenue raised by taxes can often be outweighed by the relinquished economic benefits as a result of dampened demand for air travel.

This Session will focus on

a) the creation of good governance and enabling the environment to build business confidence and encourage investments, and

b) the consolidation of planning and development efforts for aviation and tourism infrastructure in multi-modal and urban planning initiatives. What are the challenges of financing development projects related to the tourism and air transport sectors, particularly in LDCs, LLDCs, and SIDS?

What are the success stories in financing tourism and air transport projects? How do consumers perceive taxes, charges, and others levies and how to ensure transparency of taxes and charges to passengers and tourists?

Why is the limited volume of international public finance and assistance for development currently available for aviation and tourism infrastructure projects?

Travel Facilitation: Advancing visa facilitation in supporting economic growth 

Travel facilitation aims at maximizing the efficiency of border clearance formalities while achieving and maintaining high-quality security and effective law enforcement. Allowing passengers/tourists to cross international borders safely and efficiently contributes significantly to stimulating demand, enhancing the competitiveness of States, creating jobs and fostering international understanding.

In spite of the great strides made in recent decades in facilitating tourist travel in Africa, there is still room for considerable progress. For example, electronic visa processes and delivery could make travel more accessible, convenient, and more efficient without a diminution of national security.

States should also look into increasing cooperation on bilateral, regional and international travel facilitation regimes. How can new technologies be used to make travel more accessible, convenient and efficient? How to define and implement policies which facilitate international travel and tourism while ensuring the security and integrity of traveler identification and border controls?

How well do e-passports, e-visas and other documentation deal with emergent threats to security? How could the African States learn from other effective best practices?

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: and, assistance, assure, authorities, aviation, B, balance, benefit, benefits, best, best practices, bilateral, border, Borders, Breaking Travel News, build, building, Business, business interests, Cabo Verde travel news, challenges, charge, charges, choices, clearance, climate, coasts, competitiveness, conference, confidence, Conflicts, connectivity, consolidation, consumers, contributes, controls, convenient, cooperation, costs, countries, creation, current, currently, customer, day, deal, decades, decision, declaration, delegates, delivery, demand, developing countries, development, different, difficulties, dimension, direct, disconnect, discussion, due, East, economic, economic growth, Economy, efficiency, efforts, electronic, energy, enforcement, engines, enhancing, ensuring, environment, essential, existing, experience, factors, Feature, Finance, financing, first, framework, fuels, funding, good, Government Affairs, governments, Growth, high, ICAO, impact, impact on tourism, improve, in, including, increase, increasing, Industries, Industry, infrastructure, initiatives, International, international travel, Investment, investments, involving, island, IT, Jobs, joint, landlocked, launching, law, law enforcement, learn, least developed countries, liberalization, Limited, lost, Make, Market, market segments, May, measures, ministerial, ministries, modernize, move, national, national economy, nbsp, network, New, ongoing, open, Open Skies, over, packed, panel, particularly, passenger, passenger traffic, passengers, passports, payments, Place, planned, planning, plans, points, policies, policy, practices, price, processes, program, progress, projects, promote, Prospects, public, quality, raised, reality, recent, regional, regions, regulatory, regulatory framework, related, relief, Revenue, room, s, Santa, Santa Maria, satisfaction, seamless, seamless travel, sector, sectors, Security, segments, serve, service, services, severe, short, sids, significantly, single, skies, small, small island developing states, soon, stakeholders, statement, states, status, stories, strike, Sub, success, sufficient, supporting, synergies, system, taxation, taxes, The National, threats, through, to, today, tourism, tourism authorities, tourism business, tourism demand, tourism industries, tourism infrastructure, Tourism Investment News, tourism stakeholders, tourist, tourists, Trade, traffic, transparency, transparent, transport, Transport and Tourism, Travel, travel and tourism, travel experience, Traveler, Traveller, Travelwire News, trip, turn, UNWTO, urban, used, visa, visas, We, West, Why, years

About the African Tourism Board: Top important according to an African American Tourism Expert

March 28, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

Drew Barrett, a Chicago based African American tourism expert and consultant, thinks the newly founded African Tourism Board(ATB) is very important and potentially valuable to the nations of Sub-Saharan Africa.

ATB will celebrate its official launch on April 11 during the World Travel Market in Cape Town and has moved to a world of attention. ( www.

The nations of Sub-Saharan Africa are very hungry for and in need of growth of their inbound international tourism business. Most, however, have a steep learning curve, over which they must overcome to achieve any measurable incremental results. Most are steeped in best practices of a bygone error of global tourism marketing if they are doing anything at all. Most are not.

Nations like Kenya, Tanzania, South Africa have significant global brand equity for leisure tourism. Others like Ethiopia, Nigeria, Ghana and again South Africa; are a compelling destination for business tourism. Yet on the extreme opposite end of the attractiveness spectrum others, due to conflict and a total lack of internal security are not in the running.

All nations of Sub-Saharan Africa with any viable tourism product are seeking to up their game, but have to reconcile a penchant, if not add to investing, and in many cases, mis-investing in energy, data +telecommunicationss, and transportation infrastructure to achieve modern global standards. They are missing there real opportunity.

The most readily available economic growth engine for all nations of Sub-Saharan Africa is their adventure, art, community, cultural, ecological (flora + fauna) and handicraft tourism products; in which they should invest in both development and marketing. The immense profit potential of such well planned and implemented investments, will return profits; which will pay for everything else.

I have two Sub-Saharan African nations, Kenya and South Africa, digress from World Class Tourism Marketers, not having a clue as to what to do; because they forsake a focus on their indigenous roots, attempting to promote being global business meeting and conference destinations; a playing field on which they cannot compete, for so many reasons.

I have just last week, submitted a comprehensive, preliminary strategic tactical concept proposal to a Northwestern Sub Saharan nation. I had developed similar proposals for three other nations. In each case, I have been working with someone who has strong connections to government decision makers; but not with any preconceived disposition toward action. In the most recent case, my contact is a division of the Ministry of Tourism.

Nigeria, a few years ago, invested in the development of a Culture and Music festival which it could market globally. The problem with some post colonial nations is, they are addicted to seeking the help of postcolonial consultant intermediaries of European and North American multinationals, for expertise. The problem is those consultants do not have the expertise necessary to enable the success of such an undertaking.

The consensus is to invest in building grand hotels, great roads, and transportation; and tourists will come. Wrong, they just end up with choking foreign debt and no tourist.

Again, the African Tourism Board, can be the way forward for the Nations of Sub Saharan Africa to be able to monetize their most readily available natural resource, as previously stated.

African Tourism Board brings to those nations both internal and external subject matter experts, professional practitioners, industry resources and massive implementation capabilities; in a unified platform which can teach the leadership of the nations of Sub Saharan Africa how to successfully market their destinations and tourism assets, to the billions of ready, willing and able international tourist.

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: and, April, art, assets, ATB, based, best, best practices, billions, board, brand, Breaking Travel News, building, Business, business tourism, Cape, Cape Town, case, celebrate, Chicago, class, colonial, come, community, compelling, concept, conference, conflict, connections, consultant, contact, cultural, culture, Data, debt, decision, Destination, Destinations, development, Division, doing, due, ecological, economic, economic growth, end, energy, engine, equity, Ethiopia, European, expert, expertise, experts, External, extreme, Festival, foreign, Forward, game, Ghana, Global, global business, global tourism, globally, government, Grand, Growth, help, Hotels, hungry, implementation, important, in, inbound, indigenous, Industry, infrastructure, International, international tourism, invest, invested, Investing, investments, IT, just, Kenya, lack, last, launch, leadership, learning, Leisure, leisure tourism, like, Market, Marketing, massive, matter, meeting, ministry, Ministry of Tourism, missing, modern, most, moved, music, Music Festival, nation, nations, natural, need, newly, News articles, Nigeria, North, North American, official, opportunity, over, pay, People in Travel, planned, platform, POST, potential, practices, problem, product, products, professional, profit, profits, promote, proposal, proposals, ready, real, recent, resource, resources, Responsible Tourism News, results, return, Roads, roots, running, Security, significant, South, South Africa, South Africa travel news, standards, stated, strategic, strong, Sub, sub-Saharan, Sub-Saharan Africa, success, Tanzania, The Ministry, The World, to, TO BE, TO DO, top, total, tourism, tourism assets, tourism board, tourism business, Tourism Investment News, tourism marketing, tourism product, tourist, tourists, town, Transportation, Travel, Travel Destination News, travel market, Travelwire News, up, way, week, WHO, working, World, world travel, World Travel market, wrong, years

Jetwing Ayurveda Pavilions – a paragon of wellness and vitality

March 28, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

The ancient art and science of Ayurveda was developed thousands of years ago in the Indian Subcontinent and is believed to be one of the world’s oldest and most effective healing systems. Ayurveda is rooted in the belief that health and wellness depend on a harmonious balance of body, mind and soul and today this age-old practice has gained popularity across the world for the impact that it has on overall wellbeing. Whether you’re looking to cure or ease a long-standing ailment or nagging discomfort, Ayurveda uses a mix of therapies featuring natural minerals, metals and herbal blends to get to the root cause of your health issues, helping you to find relief, new-found energy and vitality from within.  Whether you’re balancing the demands of a fast-paced life, a challenging career or multiple responsibilities, you can now opt to embark on a journey of wellness at Jetwing Ayurveda Pavilions, where you can experience a diverse range of healing solutions first-hand, in a peaceful and soothing setting.

Revitalizing treatments for many ailments: Over the centuries, Ayurvedic medicine has adopted therapies and solutions for an endless range of conditions. It has been used to help a variety of illnesses and ailments ranging from digestive problems, to hair loss, to gastric issues, mental stress, weight related issues, skin problems and insomnia and even arthritis. The powerful release of toxins from the body that Ayurveda facilitates helps to restore the body’s internal balance and provides relief, a boost in immunity and energy and promotes overall health and well-being.

Tailor-made treatments and therapies: Ayurveda does not follow a “one size fits all” approach, and at Jetwing Ayurveda Pavilions, each treatment is carefully curated to heal, rejuvenate and restore an individual based on their unique requirements. Some of the most popular treatments provided at the hotel include the Panchakarma programme, which is 10-30 days long and is carefully personalized to one’s specific health needs. The primary focus of the programme is to purify and detox the body using five different therapy options. For a shorter, intense programme Purva Karma provides a variety of treatments that use a wide range of natural oils and herbal pastes to ease stress and anxiety and revitalize the skin and body.

The hotel also offers natural wellness and full-board programmes for guests who seek deeper and more intense healing therapies over longer periods of time. Whether you’re pressed for time and just have a few days to spend, or you have an entire month that you can dedicate to a holistic getaway, each treatment can be designed around your specific needs.

Additional benefits that promote holistic well-being: In addition to its broad portfolio of traditional Ayurvedic treatments and therapies, Jetwing Ayurveda Pavilions also offers guests the opportunity to take part in a variety of complementary activities. Ease your mind with yoga and meditation between treatments or participate in a music therapy or aquatic exercise session to give your senses a gentle boost.

A hotel that’s fully geared for wellness: Located a short drive away from the airport, Jetwing Ayurveda Pavilions is a tranquil hideaway that tunes out the hubbub of city life. Stepping in through the doors of this getaway, you will be transported to a truly picturesque and tranquil setting that is rich in nature and filled with soothing spaces. Inspired by the warmth and rustic charm of a Sri Lankan village and drawing further inspiration from nature and the ancient heritage of Ayurveda itself, the hotel has been designed to serve as the ultimate getaway that offers peace, serenity, a calm base and the ultimate location to embark on your holistic holiday.

Home to the island’s top doctors and therapists: Each and every treatment at the hotel is carried out by the finest team of Ayurveda experts comprising twelve professional therapists, under the purview of four experienced doctors, each of whom hold a Bachelor of Ayurveda Medicine and Surgery (B.A.M.S.) degree. Prior to each therapy or treatment process, one of the resident doctors will conduct a careful assessment of your current health and find any issues and concerns that need to be addressed. Your doctor will carefully look at your vatha, pitha and kapha – the three doshas (life forces) that are believed to be a part of every human being. Factoring in these findings with the duration of your stay, customized therapies and sessions will be mapped out to detoxify your entire body and mind and improve your health and wellness.

Mastering the art of an age-old healing tradition: Commenting on Jetwing Ayurveda Pavilions and the unique wellness experience that it offers, Dr. Dinesh Edirisinghe – Head of Ayurveda, Jetwing stated: “Ayurveda, which means ‘life-knowledge’ in Sanskrit, is a collection of ancient healing practices that is believed to have been passed down from deities to sages, and then to humans. These therapies are an integral part of Sri Lanka’s cultural and medicinal heritage, and for most, it is still the first choice of treatment for many ailments and illnesses. At Jetwing Ayurveda Pavilions, we employ these age-old healing traditions which have been perfected for centuries, to fight disease and promote wellness and good health. Our team of trained specialists are experts at identifying and treating underlying health conditions and restoring the optimal balance of mind, body and spirit.”

Family owned and in the tourism industry for the past 46 years, Jetwing Hotels has surpassed expectation at every aspect. Building on their foundation of being passionate, as well as the experience of true, traditional Sri Lankan hospitality, constantly pioneering discoveries captures the essence of the brand. Such a strong statement and direction have enabled Jetwing Hotels to imagine, create and manage marvels and masterpieces, where distinctive design and elegant comfort complement each other and the environment. In line with the Jetwing Hotels Sustainable Strategy, across all properties sustainable and responsible practices are given precedence with resource efficiency, community upliftment and education, and awareness being some of our key focus areas.

SOURCE: jetwinghotels.com

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: ancient, and, areas, art, assessment, Awareness, Ayurveda, Ayurvedic, Ayurvedic treatments, B, B.A., Bachelor, balance, base, based, benefits, board, body, boost, brand, Breaking Travel News, building, calm, Career, Cause, charm, choice, city, collection, comfort, community, concerns, conditions, create, cultural, Cultural Travel News, cure, current, Days, deities, demands, design, designed, different, direction, disease, doctor, doctors, down, Dr, drive, ease, Education, efficiency, elegant, energy, environment, even, exercise, experience, experienced, experts, Family, featuring, fight, find, findings, first, First-hand, follow, For immediate Release, Forces, found, foundation, full, getaway, good, guests, hand, head, healing, HEALTH, health and wellness, help, Helping, helps, heritage, holiday, holistic, home, hospitality, Hospitality News, hotel, Hotel Travel News, Hotels, Human, Imagine, immunity, impact, improve, in, Indian, individual, Industry, inspiration, inspired, island, issues, IT, jetwing, Jetwing Ayurveda Pavilions, jetwing hotels, journey, just, knowledge, Lanka, Lankan, life, line, location, looking, loss, M, Manage, masterpieces, meetings.travel, MICE Industry News, mind, month, most, most popular, music, natural, nature, need, needs, New, offers, opportunity, options, out, over, participate, passed, past, pavilions, peace, peaceful, pioneering, popular, popularity, portfolio, practices, problems, professional, Programme, promote, promotes, properties, range, ranging, rejuvenate, related, release, relief, requirements, Resort News, resource, responsible, restore, revitalize, rich, rustic, s, science, seek, serve, sessions, setting, short, shorter, Size, solutions, Soul, Source, spaces, specialists, Spirit, Sri Lanka, Sri Lanka travel news, Sri Lankan, standing, stated, statement, stay, strategy, stress, strong, sustainable, tailor-made, team, The Island, The World, therapy, thousands, through, time, to, TO BE, today, top, tourism, Tourism Industry, tradition, traditional, traditions, Travelwire News, treatment, treatments, unique, use, used, using, variety, village, We, weight, wellness, WHO, World, years, yoga

Ontario tourism sector set for Rural Tourism Symposium

March 28, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

Tourism industry professionals from across Ontario will gather at Lang Pioneer Village in Keene this April for the second annual Rural Tourism Symposium. The one-day conference, with the theme “Redefining Success”, takes place 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Thursday, April 11, at the Peterborough County Agriculture Heritage Building at Lang Pioneer Village.

More than three million visitors visit Peterborough & the Kawarthas every year, including rural destinations such as Stoney Lake. Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development is hosting tourism industry professionals from across Ontario on April 11, 2019 for the second annual Rural Tourism Symposium in Keene.

Hosted by Peterborough & the Kawarthas Economic Development (PKED) in partnership with Chatham-Kent Tourism, the event is also supported by Grey County Tourism, Simcoe County Tourism, Headwaters Tourism, Kawartha Lakes Tourism, and Kawarthas-Northumberland (Regional Tourism Organization 8).

There’s no question that tourism is an important economic driver in Ontario, particularly for rural communities. According to PKED’s director of tourism and communications Tracie Bertrand, Peterborough & the Kawarthas alone draws around three million visitors every year who contribute approximately $300 million to the local economy.

“Part of our region’s competitive edge is that we offer the best of vibrant city, complemented by rolling hills of farmland and famed Ontario cottage country,” Bertrand says. “There are more than a thousand tourism businesses located in our region, ranging from retail to restaurants and from accommodations to attractions.”

But the April 11 symposium is not just limited to Peterborough & the Kawarthas: it’s been specifically designed to raise the profile of tourism in rural Ontario, and will attract rural tourism stakeholders, destination marketing organizations, and tourism businesses from across the province.

“We’re hoping this event sparks conversation and builds momentum for rural tourism in the province of Ontario,” Bertrand explains. “Industry professionals, both locally and from away, will gain insight from our expert speakers to leverage efforts at the provincial and national level, capitalize on opportunities, and create partnerships for success.”

The symposium begins with a keynote presentation entitled “Leverage Your Reach with Destination Ontario” by Lisa LaVecchia, president and CEO of Destination Ontario.

Legally known as the Ontario Tourism Marketing Partnership Corporation, Destination Ontario is an agency of the Government of Ontario that markets the province as a preferred four-season tourist destination in a globally competitive tourism market. Under LaVecchia’s leadership, Destination Ontario has produced innovative and award-winning brand campaigns, including the ‘Epic Is ON’ campaign for the Pan Am/Parapan Am Games and the ‘Where Am I?’ campaign.

The symposium also includes:

A presentation by Beth Potter, president and CEO of the Tourism Industry Association of Ontario, entitled “Stronger Together. Presenting a United Front for Rural Tourism” on how tourism industry professionals can collaborate with the association to achieve success.

An “Agritourism Farm Table Chat” led by the Culinary Tourism Alliance’s director of food tourism innovation Trevor Benson who, along with special guests, will discuss how to build bridges between the agriculture and tourism industries.

A presentation by Jewel Cunningham, director of Ontario Waterways with Parks Canada, called “Partnering for Success”. Cunningham will describe how partnerships can create exceptional visitor experiences and powerful economic impact in even the smallest of communities.

A presentation entitled “Showcasing Rural Ontario to National & International Visitors” by David Robinson of Destination Canada (formerly the Canadian Tourism Commission), a federal crown corporation that helps the Canadian tourism industry reach international markets. Robinson will explain how Canada measures up as a competitive hot spot for international travelers.

Finally, the symposium is also a stop on Canada’s national series of Tourism Town Halls, a partnership between the Tourism Industry Association of Canada, Destination Canada, and local industry partners. The Tourism Town Halls provide an opportunity for small and medium-sized tourism businesses across Canada to better understand efforts being made on national tourism issues.

“This tourism town hall will be especially important given the announcement of last week’s federal budget and the importance it placed on tourism as a high-growth sector,” Bertrand says.

The Tourism Town Hall includes a panel discussion with representatives from Destination Canada, the Indigenous Tourism Association of Canada, Tourism Industry Association of Ontario, and Peterborough & the Kawarthas Tourism, moderated by Michele Harris, director of economic and community development with the Municipality of Grey Highlands.

Reducing the negative impact on the environment is an important element of tourism, particularly in rural destinations, so sustainability is a focus of this year’s symposium. Rather than having print materials available at the symposium, information will be delivered digitally through a downloadable app. Waste, especially food waste, will be limited throughout the day and attendees will be encouraged to bring reusable water bottles and their own notepads or devices for making notes.

“We are excited to welcome tourism stakeholders from across the province and show them how we are redefining success in tourism in our communities,” Bertrand says. “We are equally excited to have our tourism operators come out and celebrate what makes our industry unique, right here in our own backyard at the Agriculture Heritage Building at Lang Pioneer Village.”

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: amp, and, announcement, annual, App, April, association, attendees, attract, attractions, award, award-winning, best, better, brand, Breaking Travel News, bridges, budget, build, building, businesses, campaign, campaigns, Canada, Canada Travel News, Canadian, Canadian tourism, Canadian Tourism Commission, capitalize, celebrate, CEO, city, come, commission, communications, communities, community, competitive, conference, Corporation, country, County, create, crown, culinary, day, delivered, designed, Destination, Destination marketing, Destination Marketing Organizations, Destination Ontario, Destinations, development, devices, director, director of tourism, Discuss, discussion, driver, economic, economic development, economic impact, Economy, Edge, efforts, Element, encouraged, environment, Epic, even, event, experiences, expert, federal, food, food tourism, games, globally, government, Growth, guests, Hall, helps, heritage, high, Hills, hosting, Hot, hot spot, impact, importance, important, in, includes, including, indigenous, indigenous tourism, Industries, Industry, information, innovation, innovative, insight, International, international markets, international travelers, international visitors, issues, IT, just, Kent, keynote, last, leadership, LED, Limited, local, locally, M, Market, Marketing, marketing partnership, markets, materials, measures, Medium, meetings.travel, MICE Industry News, million, million visitors, momentum, national, national tourism, negative, negative impact, News articles, notes, offer, Ontario, Ontario Tourism, operators, opportunity, organization, organizations, out, Pan AM, panel, parks, particularly, partners, partnership, partnerships, pioneer, Place, Preferred, presentation, presenting, president, president and CEO, professionals, Profile, province, raise, ranging, region, regional, Regional tourism, Regional Tourism Organization, restaurants, retail, right, rural, rural tourism, s, says, season, second, sector, series, show, showcasing, small, speakers, Special, stakeholders, stop, stronger, success, Sustainability, symposium, theme, thousand, through, to, tourism, tourism association, tourism businesses, tourism industries, Tourism Industry, Tourism Industry Association of Canada, tourism innovation, Tourism Market, tourism marketing, tourism operators, tourism sector, tourism stakeholders, tourist, tourist destination, town, Travel & Tourism Organizations News, Travel Destination News, travelers, Travelwire News, unique, United, up, village, visit, visitor, visitors, waste, water, waterways, We, week, welcome, WHO, year

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • Next Page »

Search




Recent Articles

  • What’s New in The Bahamas in July 
  • Seychelles closes the second quarter of 2022 with several activities in Switzerland
  • Jordan to host 1st edition of City Talk Gathering next October
  • IMEX America opens registration and focuses education program on ‘Pathways to Clarity’
  • Bahamasair Relaunches Nonstop Service from Orlando to Grand Bahama Island
  • Milestone moment: IMEX America honored at AEO Awards
  • Tourism businesses broaden their knowledge of growing online platform, ParrAPI
  • Overseas mission successful in reconnecting with over 100 trade partners
  • TUI invests in Jamaica with educational program and increased airlift
  • Looking for Remote Hiking Adventures? Songtsam Offers Hikers Opportunities to Discover the Natural Wonders of Tibet & Yunnan

Copyright © 2022 · Metro Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in