• 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

Beach Vacation: What you do if a shark is about to attack?

April 24, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

Shark and humans

Shark attack! The United States is the most dangerous country in the world when it comes to bloody encounters between people and sharks. It’s especially true in regions where tourism is big business.

In Hawaii, children are always taught two things about the ocean and sharks.
Today a 65-year-old visitor vacationing on the Island of Hawaii was bitten on her right inner upper thigh by a shark.  The bite mark was approximately 12 inches in diameter.

She was around several hundred yards offshore and brought in prone on a kayak via bystanders and does not remember events prior to being bitten. The victim was transported in stable condition to the hospital. A helicopter conducted a shoreline check within an hour of the incident, surveying several miles of ocean and along the coastline with no shark sightings.

What children are always taught in Hawaii about the ocean and sharks is to never turn your back on the ocean because then you won’t be aware of wave swells or anything heading in your direction. They are also taught to never go in the ocean alone. You never know when you will need someone’s help or you will need to help someone in distress.

When you enter the ocean, you are going into the domain of many aquatic animals, the scariest of which is the shark. Are there ways to avoid being attacked by a shark? Here, knowledge is definitely power.

If you see a shark and it is behaving aggressively, the best thing you can do is remain calm and as motionless as possible. While it may be hard not to panic, by not thrashing the water or screaming, this will likely be the biggest factor in whether or not you may be bitten.

Don’t attract attention to yourself by wearing jewelry that shines and reflects light. It can cause sharks to mistake you for a fish in murky water.

If you see a bait ball, get out! A bait ball is when small fish swarm in a tightly packed spherical formation and is a last-ditch defensive measure when they are threatened by predators – as in sharks.

Before you even go in the water, if you see animal remains on the beach, like dead seals, fish, or whales, there are more likely to be sharks in the water.

Although a shark will be in the water at all times, they mostly hunt at dawn, dusk, and at night because the low light makes it harder for prey to see them coming, and many fish are most active at dusk. Plan your ocean activities accordingly.

Be vigilant around areas with a steep drop-off, because certain species like the great white shark will use the deep water to ambush potential prey.

If despite all your best efforts to avoid a shark, an attack occurs, punch the shark in the nose or eyes, and use anything you have (surfboard, dive tank, etc.) to put it between the shark and yourself.

Immediately seek help from others. If no one is around, use your shirt, wetsuit, surf leash, or anything long enough to tie a tourniquet above the wound on yourself or the person attacked. If the incident occurs while surfing, put the person on a board.

Stay in a group as this will deter sharks from investigating further.

When you get to the beach, keep the legs elevated by pointing the attacked person’s head toward the water as the shore slopes down into the ocean.

Apply pressure directly to the wound with a towel or shirt until emergency responders arrive.

And in the ultimate prevention, first aid and CPR classes are extremely valuable for unexpected situations like a shark attack. Preparation is key and will increase your confidence in the ocean and in life.

Here is a story on the Great White Shark Attack in Australia.



Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: and, animals, apply, areas, attack, attacked, attract, Australia, avoid, Aware, Bay, beach, best, big, Big Island, biggest, BITE, bloody, board, Breaking Travel News, Business, calm, Cause, check, children, classes, coast, coastline, coming, confidence, country, dangerous, dead, deter, direction, directly, distress, ditch, dive, domain, down, drop, efforts, emergency, encounters, etc, even, Events, factor, Feature, female, find, first, FISH, GO!, great white shark, Group, Hard, Hawaii, Hawaii relevant global news, Hawaii Travel News, Hawaii visitors tips, head, helicopter, help, hospital, Hour, hundred, hunt, immediately, in, incident, increase, Inner, island, IT, jewelry, kayak, keep, key, knowledge, last, life, light, like, likely, low, May, measure, miles, mistake, most, murky, need, News articles, night, ocean, offshore, out, packed, panic, People, People in Travel, plan, potential, power, pressure, prevented, prevention, regions, remains, right, s, scariest, scene, seals, see, seek, shark, shark attack, sharks, slopes, small, species, stable, states, stay, story, surf, surfing, The Island, the United States, The World, things, threatened, TIE, times, to, TO BE, today, tourism, tourists, Travel Destination News, Travel Disaster & Emergency News, Travelwire News, turn, United, United States, use, vacation, victim, vigilant, visitor, water, wave, ways, whales, white, WHO, won, World, year

US airlines wrongfully reject over 25% of their passengers’ compensation claims

April 16, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

Consumer rights advocacy group released the results of a new study showing that United States airlines wrongfully reject more than 25% of compensation claims, indicating that more than one in five travelers are being denied up to $700 they are owed by Delta Air Lines, United Airlines, and American Airlines following flight disruptions.

Each year, more and more travelers flying out of the U.S. are eligible to claim compensation under European law EC 261 which covers travelers on European flights. AirHelp found more than 25% of valid claims filed against U.S. airlines for disrupted flights in 2016, 2017 and 2018 were turned away on wrongful grounds by airlines trying to avoid their obligation to travelers.

The travel experience is continuously getting worse due to overtourism. In the U.S., 407,000 travelers are eligible to claim compensation under EC 261 following flight delays and cancellations experienced last year, up from 370,000 the previous year. During the first three months of 2019, more than 75,000 passengers experienced disruptions due to the fault of the airlines that have made them eligible for compensation.

This trend is a small part of the larger issue of airlines mistreating passengers. A survey of travelers found 75% of U.S. travelers feel uninformed about their air passenger rights, and less than 25% of travelers who were on a disrupted flight actually file a claim, despite airlines being required by law to inform passengers of their rights.

How the U.S. Airlines Stack Up

Of the U.S. airlines, Delta Air Lines wrongfully rejects the most claims at a rate of one in three. United Airlines wrongfully rejects nearly one in four claims, and American Airlines rejects one in every five. According to an annual ranking of global airlines and airports, U.S. airlines’ unsurprisingly perform poorly, with each major carrier earning less than seven out of 10 for quality of service.

The most popular U.S. airlines ranked on wrongfully rejected claims rate

United States ranking Global ranking for wrongfully rejected claims rate

Airline Wrongfully rejected claim rate

1 32 Delta Air Lines 32%
2 42 United Airlines 23%
3 44 American Airlines 22%

Data from January 1, 2016 to December 31, 2018

“The bleak picture in the U.S. is just the tip of the iceberg. The volume of legitimate passenger claims being wrongfully rejected by airlines is appalling. Flight delays and cancellations are increasingly heaping chaos on passengers, and travelers are forced to fight airlines for compensation they’re rightfully owed,” says Henrik Zillmer, CEO of AirHelp. “It’s all very well for airlines to say they will compensate passengers who make their claim directly. The reality is that thousands of passengers are continuing to face an impossible struggle to claim the money they’re entitled to. If they are embroiled in a legal battle with an airline, passengers may face costs to hire a lawyer to push through their claim, which can make fighting for compensation virtually impossible.”

U.S. Passenger Rights

U.S. passengers are protected under EC 261 for flights to the EU on an EU airline, and any flight departing from the EU. Cancelled flights, delays of more than three hours, and incidents of denied boarding are covered under EC 261, as long as the disruption was not caused by extraordinary circumstances such as weather, sabotage or political unrest. Eligible passengers may be entitled to financial compensation of up to $700 per person, and can file claims up to three years after the incident occurs.

Travelers have fewer protections on domestic U.S. flights, but can claim up to $1,350 in compensation for denied boarding due to overbooking, depending on the value of the ticket fare and ultimate delay in arrival to their final destination

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: American Travel News, and, annual, arrival, Aviation News, aviation-website, avoid, battle, bleak, boarding, Breaking Travel News, cancellations, cancelled, cancelled flights, carrier, CEO, chaos, claim, claims, compensation, compensation claims, costs, Data, December, delay, delays, Delta, Delta Air Lines, denied, departing, Destination, directly, disrupted, disruption, disruptions, domestic, due, EC, EU, European, European flights, experience, experienced, Extraordinary, face, fault, Feature, fewer, fight, fighting, file, financial, financial compensation, first, flight, flight delays, flights, Flying, following, forced, found, free, getting, Global, global airlines, global ranking, grounds, Group, hire, hours, iceberg, in, incident, incidents, International Travel News, IT, January, just, last, law, legal, less, lines, major, Make, May, money, months, more travelers, most, most popular, nearly, New, new study, News articles, obligation, one in five, out, over, overbooking, passenger, passenger rights, passengers, perform, picture, political, political unrest, popular, protected, push, quality, quality of service, ranked, ranking, rate, reality, reject, rejected, released, results, rights, s, says, service, seven, showing, small, states, struggle, study, survey, thousands, through, ticket, Tip, to, tourism, Transportation News, Travel, travel experience, travelers, Travelwire News, trend, trying, turned away, U.S. airlines, U.S. passengers, U.S. travelers, United, United Airlines, United States, United States airlines, unrest, up, US, US airlines, value, weather, were, WHO, World News, year, years

Notre Dame cathedral inferno: Paris iconic tourist attraction on fire

April 15, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

Smoke and fire is seen leaping from the top of Notre Dame, the iconic Paris cathedral. Videos shot by people show the blaze engulfing the spire between its bell towers.

The fire broke out in the cathedral on Monday afternoon, a Paris fire department confirmed, adding that a major operation to tackle the fire is underway.

The causes of the incident remain unknown so far.

The Medieval cathedral is one of the main attractions of the French capital, seeing 12 million tourists a year.

The incident took place as the jewel of the Gothic architecture was undergoing a major overhaul costing € 11 million ($ 12.43 million), with the renovation works being expected to be finished around 2022.

Last week, 16 bronze statues representing 12 apostles and four evangelists from the New Testament were lifted off the spire of the cathedral by crane. Some scaffolding can now be seen close to the flames leaping out near the cathedral’s spire.

The spire itself was made of wood and covered with lead has long been in a bad shape as the elements of the construction dating back to the mid-nineteenth century have been damaged by weather, pollution and time.

The cathedral was being built from 13th to 15th century.

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: and, Architecture, attraction, attractions, Bell, Breaking Travel News, built, capital, causes, Century, close, confirmed, construction, costing, crane, department, elements, expected, far, Feature, fire, France Travel News, free, French, Hospitality News, iconic, in, incident, International Travel News, last, lead, lifted, Main, major, Medieval, million, million tourists, New, News articles, Notre Dame, operation, out, overhaul, Paris, People, Place, pollution, renovation, representing, s, seeing, shot, show, smoke, spire, statues, time, to, TO BE, top, tourism, tourist, tourist attraction, tourists, Travel Destination News, Travel Disaster & Emergency News, Travelwire News, underway, unknown, videos, weather, week, were, works, World News, year

American Airlines to keep its Boeing 737 MAX jets grounded until August

April 14, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

American Airlines has chosen to keep its fleet of Boeing 737 MAX grounded until at least August 19, even if it means canceling 115 flights a day in summer season, as probes into the troubled jet continue and new sales have frozen.

The company, which owns 24 of the embattled jets that were involved in two recent deadly crashes, announced the decision in a letter to employees and customers. AA wants to ensure reliability “for the peak travel season and provide confidence to our customers and team members when it comes to their travel plans,” Chief Executive Doug Parker and President Robert Isom wrote.

The 737 MAX 8 airliners were grounded worldwide after a fatal crash of an Ethiopian Airlines flight, which killed 157 people on board. The incident came months after a crash of the same model operated by Lion Air was apparently linked to the same faulty flight control system.

Parker and Isom have at the same time expressed confidence in Boeing’s ability to fix the problem through software updates and changes to pilot training procedures. The US airline has 24 MAX planes in its fleet and is expected to get 16 more delivered this year. The grounding has already resulted in the cancelation of about 90 flights per day through early June, and the extension may put a strain on American’s ability to meet demand for seats during upcoming peak travel season. As many as 115 daily flights will have to be canceled in August, according to the letter.

The crashes have left Boeing open to criticism over the way it certified the fast-selling model, conducting some of the tests in-house with the permission of the Federal Aviation Authority. Critics say the producer cut corners to fast-track the new model to the market, compromising flight safety as a result.

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: American Travel News, and, announced, August, authority, aviation, Aviation Authority, Aviation News, aviation-website, board, Boeing, Boeing 737, Breaking Travel News, canceled, canceling, certified, changes, chief, chief executive, chosen, company, confidence, continue, control, Corporate News, crash, crashes, criticism, critics, customers, cut, daily, daily flights, day, deadly, decision, delivered, demand, early, employees, Ethiopian, Ethiopian Airlines, Ethiopian Airlines Flight, even, executive, expected, extension, fatal, faulty, Feature, federal, fix, fleet, flight, flight safety, flights, free, frozen, grounded, grounding, house, in, incident, IT, jet, jets, June, keep, killed, letter, linked, lion, Lion Air, Market, MAX, MAX planes, May, meet, members, model, months, New, new Sales, News articles, on board, open, operated, over, peak, People, permission, pilot training, planes, plans, president, problem, procedures, recent, resulted, Robert, s, Safety, Sales, season, seats, selling, Software, summer, summer season, system, team, tests, through, time, to, TO BE, tourism, training, Transportation News, Travel, Travel Disaster & Emergency News, travel plans, travel season, Travel Technology News, Travelwire News, updates, US, US airline, way, were, worldwide, wrote, year

Melbourne Gay Night Club shooting kills one, injures three

April 14, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

Melbourne and locals alike find Love Machine nightclub in Prahran to be a popular part of  Melbourne R&B and house music over 3 floors. This flashy gay and mixed nightclub with a funky, contemporary setup and 2 bars is popular with a mixed/gay crowd. Love Machine hosts ‘Gossip Sundays’, featuring talented DJ’s, dancers and shows

A security guard is dead and three others were seriously injured after a gunman fired indiscriminately into a group of people outside this busy Melbourne nightclub Sunday night.

Aaron Khalid Osmani, 37, from Narre Warren South was rushed to hospital after the drive-by shooting outside the Love Machine nightclub in Prahran on Sunday morning.

Three security guards and one patron were shot in the incident, which occurred just after 3am outside the nightclub on Little Chapel Street and Malvern Road.

Osmani was rushed to a hospital in a critical condition. He died later in hospital. A 28-year-old is still is fighting for life at The Alfred hospital. Two others, aged 50 and 29, sustained non-life threatening injuries.

A stolen black Porsche Cayenne used in the shooting was later found burnt out in Wollert in the city’s north.

One person injured in the shooting ran around the corner into Chapel Street.

Police are yet to talk to the victims in full detail due to their injuries. They are still confirming whether the person found on Chapel Street was one of the four injured or if there is a fifth person who was shot.

Blood could be seen on the footpath more than 100 metres from the nightclub. Clothes and bullet casings were also scattered on the ground.

Homicide Detective Inspector Andy Stamper said it was too early to say whether it was a targeted or random shooting. No arrests have been made.

Chapel Street is home to a number of popular nightclubs and the shooting on Sunday occurred while many people were still out.

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: amp, and, arrests, Australia travel news, B, bars, black, Breaking Travel News, busy, Chapel, city, club, corner, Corporate News, critical, dead, died, DJ, drive, due, early, featuring, fighting, find, fired, found, full, gay, ground, Group, Guard, guards, gunman, home, homicide, hospital, hosts, house, in, incident, injured, injuries, inspector, IT, just, kills, later, LGBTQ, life, Little Chapel Street, locals, love, Machine, Melbourne, music, News articles, night, night club, nightclub, nightclubs, Non, North, number, out, outside, over, patron, People, police, popular, Prahran, road, s, said, Security, security guards, shooting, shot, shows, South, stolen, Street, Sundays, talk, to, TO BE, tourism, Travel Destination News, Travelwire News, used, victims, were, WHO, year

African Game Rangers: Key conservation tourism partners in stress

April 6, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

Wildlife is the leading tourist attraction and source of tourist revenue in Africa other than rich historical and cultural heritage the continent has been endowed with.

Wildlife photographic safaris attract millions of tourists from Europe, America and Asia to visit this continent to spend their holidays in wildlife protected areas.

Despite its rich wildlife resources, Africa is still facing poaching problems which had so far, frustrated conservation of wildlife despite the efforts on place to arrest the situation. African governments in collaboration with global wildlife and nature conservation organizations are now working together to save the African wildlife from extinction, mostly the endangered species.

Wildlife rangers in Africa are the number one conservation partners who had committed their lives to protect the wild creatures from human miseries, but working at risk from humans and the wild animals which they had committed to protect.

The rangers are facing numerous psychological pressures leading to potentially serious mental health implications. They are frequently subjected to violent confrontations inside and outside their work.

Many rangers see their families as little as once a year, causing immense stress to personal relationships and the mental strain.

In Tanzania, for example, a community leader was killed by a suspected poacher in an attempt to prevent poaching in the Tarangire National Park, the famous wildlife tourist park in northern Tanzania.

The village leader Mr. Faustine Sanka had his head cut off by a suspected poacher who, disastrously ended the life of the community leader near the park in February this year.

Police said that the brutal killing of the village chairman, Mr. Faustine Sanka was done just to frustrate anti-poaching in Tarangire National Park which is rich in elephants and other big African mammals.

The suspected poachers killed the village leader by cutting off his head using a sharp instrument. After killing him, his body was wrapped in a plastic bag and his motorbike he was riding was left there, police officers said.

Early in April last year, suspected member of an armed militia gunned down five wildlife rangers and the driver in Virunga National Park in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

It was the worst attack in Virunga’s bloody history, and the latest in a long line of tragic incidents in which rangers have lost their lives defending the planet’s natural heritage, conservation media reports said.

Despite a growing awareness of the vulnerability of many of the world’s most beloved and charismatic species such as elephants and rhinos, there is little awareness and virtually no research into the stress and possible mental health implications for those tasked with defending them, conservationists said.

“We have got to take care of the people that make a difference,” said Johan Jooste, head of anti-poaching forces at South Africa National Parks (SANParks).

In real fact, more research has been conducted on post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among elephants following a poaching incident than on the rangers protecting them as well.

Wildlife conservation experts further said that 82 percent of rangers in Africa had faced a life-threatening situation in the line of duty.

They described challenging working conditions, community ostracism, isolation from family, poor equipment and inadequate training for many ranger, low pay and little respect as other life threats facing African rangers.

The Thin Greenline Foundation, a Melbourne-based organization dedicated to supporting rangers, has been compiling data on ranger deaths on the job for the last 10 years.

Between 50 and 70 percent of the recorded wildlife ranger deaths in Africa and other wildlife rich continents are carried by poachers. The rest percent of such deaths are due to the challenging conditions rangers face every day, such as working alongside dangerous animals and in perilous environments.

“I can categorically tell you about the 100 to 120 ranger deaths we know of each year,” said Sean Willmore, founder of the Thin Green Line Foundation and president of the International Ranger Federation, a non-profit organization overseeing 90 ranger associations worldwide.

Willmore believes that the true global figure could be much higher, since the organization lacks data from a number of countries in Asia and the Middle East.

Rangers in Tanzania and rest of East Africa are facing the same, life threatening situations while on duty in protecting the wildlife, mostly in national parks, game reserves and forest conserved areas.

Selous Game Reserve, Africa’s largest wildlife protected area has not been spared from such ugly incidents facing the rangers. They work in harsh conditions, traversing hundreds of kilometers on patrol to protect the wildlife, mostly elephants.

Full with stress and psychological problems, the rangers conduct their duties with full commitment to ensure the survival of wildlife in Tanzania and Africa.

In Selous Game Reserve, rangers live far away from their families; succumb to life risks including attacks by wildlife and poachers from neighboring villages, mostly those killing the wild animals for bush meat.

Communities neighboring this park (Selous) have no other source of protein more than bush meat. There is no livestock, poultry and fishing in this part of Africa, a situation which drives villagers to hunt for bush meat.

Rangers in this park as well, suffer from psychological stress from work. Most of them have left their families in towns or other localities in Tanzania to protect the wildlife in the Selous Game Reserve.

“We have our children living alone. I don’t know if my children are doing well in school or not. Sometimes we don’t communicate with our families far away taking into account that no communication services available in this area”, a ranger told eTN.

Mobile phone communication, now the leading source of inter-personal contact in Tanzania, is no longer available in some areas of the Selous Game Reserve due to geographical locations.

“Every everyone is like an enemy here. Local communities are looking for game meat, poachers are looking for trophies for business, the government is looking for revenue, tourists are looking for protection against robbers and all like that. This burden is our backs,” the ranger told eTN.

Politicians and wildlife managers are driving posh cars in big cities enjoying high class lifestyles, banking on hardships the rangers are currently facing.

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: and, animals, Anti-poaching, April, area, areas, arrest, Asia, associations, attack, attacks, attempt, attract, attraction, Awareness, bag, based, big, bloody, body, Breaking Travel News, Burden, bush, Business, cars, Chairman, children, cities, class, collaboration, commitment, Communication, communities, community, conditions, Congo, conservation, conservationists, contact, continent, countries, cultural, cultural heritage, currently, cut, cut off, cutting, dangerous, Data, day, deaths, defending, Democratic, Democratic Republic of Congo, doing, down, driver, driving, due, duty, early, East, East Africa, efforts, elephants, endangered, endangered species, equipment, eTN, Europe, experts, face, families, Family, famous, far, federation, fishing, following, Forces, forest, foundation, founder, full, game, game reserve, Global, Got, government, governments, green, Growing, harsh, head, head cut off, HEALTH, heritage, high, higher, historical, history, holidays, Human, hunt, in, In February, incident, incidents, including, inside, Inter, International, isolation, IT, job, just, key, killed, killing, kilometers, largest, last, LATEST, leader, leading, life, like, line, live, Livestock, Living, local, locations, looking, lost, low, Make, managers, meat, media, media reports, Melbourne, member, mental health, Middle, Middle East, militia, millions, mobile, mobile phone, most, motorbike, Mr, national, national park, national parks, natural, nature, neighboring, News articles, Non, Northern, number, number one, numerous, officers, organization, organizations, outside, park, parks, partners, pay, People, percent, personal, phone, Place, planet, plastic, poachers, poaching, police, politicians, poor, POST, president, problems, profit, protect, protected, protected areas, protecting, protection, Ranger, rangers, real, recorded, relationships, reports, republic, Republic of Congo, research, reserve, reserves, resources, respect, Revenue, rhinos, rich, Risk, risks, s, safaris, said, save, school, see, selous, Selous Game Reserve, serious, services, situation, Source, South, South Africa, spared, species, stress, suffer, supporting, survival, taking, Tanzania, Tanzania travel news, Tarangire, Tarangire National Park, The World, threats, to, told, tourism, tourism partners, tourist, tourist attraction, tourist park, tourist revenue, tourists, towns, Tragic, training, Travel Destination News, Travelwire News, ugly, using, village, villagers, villages, violent, virunga, Virunga National Park, visit, We, WHO, wild, wild animals, wildlife, wildlife conservation, wildlife rangers, work, working, World, worldwide, worst, year, years

Developing safety and security for children during travel

April 2, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

Safety and security are always a concern of the travel industry, no matter who the traveler might be. A major issue when dealing with children is their safety and security. In the case of young travelers, the situation becomes even more difficult and emotional. There are many reasons for this heightened need for safety and security.  Among these are:

1)   Children are perceived to be more vulnerable

2)    Most people tend to be highly protective of children

3)    The legal ramifications of injury to a child may be even more severe

4)    Children evoke emotional reactions, and these emotions may crowd out rational thinking

Child safety and security tends to become the responsibility of three groupings:

1)   The child or young adult

2)   The parent of guardian of the child

3)   The host institution

The following is a partial list of precautions that all of us need to take when dealing with the child segment of the travel market. To help provide a safer ambiance for family vacations, consider some of the following.

Just as in the case of marketing efforts, tourism security efforts need to segment the market into at least four age brackets. Some suggested brackets might be: (1) new borns-2 years, (2) 3-7 years, (3) 7-12 years, and (4) teenagers until the legal age of 18. The essential issue is to realize that while both a 17 year old and a 2 year old are legally both minors, from a safety, security, and sociological standard, they operate in a very different ways and require very different guidelines. To help maintain these various groups safe and sound Tourism Tidbits offers the following suggestions. It should be noted that these are only a few suggestions of the many that are needed, and final decisions should be made by an onsite professional.

– Keep video cameras going. In case a child is lost (or Heaven forbid kidnapped), a video camera may be an excellent tool in locating the child.

– In places where adults and children mix, consider the use of ID bracelets being offered at the time of ticket purchase. You can use the ID bracelet either as a check-in/check-out device or give them away as a souvenir. In either case, should the child be lost, the security agent will have a name and phone number to call.  It is a good idea to place both the local and home number on the bracelet.

– In areas that have special young people’s sections, make sure that it is only children who enter. Adults should not be allowed into a children’s section. If an adult is needed there in case of an emergency, he/she should only be allowed to enter accompanied by a trained security agent.

– Develop policies on older children or unaccompanied minors. Younger children may be less of a problem than older children (12-17 years of age). These are guests who are legally still minors but can often do a great deal of damage or may demand that they be treated as adults even though such treatment is against the law. Make sure that all personnel are familiar with your business regarding minors’ safety and behavior of and with minors. Employees need to know:

–      policies and laws that specifically deal with people under the legal age of maturity

–      how to handle an angry or non-compliant minor

–      how to handle someone who may be making a scene

–      -when to actively intervene or call for additional help

–      how to check IDs without offense – a person’s ID is checked and questioned as to the whereabouts of his/her parents

In the hour before closing, it is very important to make sure that unsupervised young people are accounted for. In cases where the young person falsely believes that he/she is grown-up, ask for both a driver’s license and a social security number.

– Be aware of child abandonment/abuse. A form of child abuse is abandonment of a child. Train personnel to be on the lookout for all forms of child abuse. For example, if an adult is hanging around other people’s children asking for that person’s ID, turn security cameras on the person and attempt to get the license number of the vehicle being driven. The more information you have, the easier it will be for the police to act should there be a problem. Do not assume that a child abuser will return the next day. It may be weeks or months, or never, until that person returns.

– Develop cooperative information centers. Work with local police departments, hotel associations, and other attractions so that information can be passed between security departments rapidly and easily.  Remember people judge a locale on just one negative incident. When something goes wrong in one place, it can affect the entire local tourism community.

– Be careful of safety concerns.  Do a safety analysis; look for and correct such things as: glass doors against which inadvertently a child may run into, issues of food safety, or balconies over which a child may climb and jump.

Dr. Peter Tarlow is part of the Safer Travel Program by eTN. More information
www.safertravel.com 

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: and, angry, areas, associations, attempt, attractions, Aware, behavior, Breaking Travel News, Business, camera, cameras, case, Centers, check, check-in, Child, child abuse, Child safety, children, childrens, climb, closing, community, compliant, concern, concerns, cooperative, damage, day, deal, decisions, demand, different, Dr, Dr. Peter Tarlow, driver, easier, efforts, emergency, employees, essential, eTN, even, Excellent, Family, family vacations, Feature, following, food, food safety, form, forms, glass, good, groups, guests, guidelines, heaven, help, home, host, hotel, Hotel Associations, ID, IDs, important, in, incident, Industry, information, injury, institution, International Travel News, issues, IT, judge, jump, just, keep, kidnapped, law, laws, legal, less, license, list, local, Lookout, lost, maintain, major, Make, Market, Marketing, matter, May, Minor, months, most, name, need, needed, negative, New, News articles, Non, number, offers, only, operate, out, over, parents, passed, People, personnel, phone, Place, places, police, policies, precautions, problem, professional, program, purchase, require, responsibility, return, returns, s, safe, Safety, safety and security, safety concerns, scene, Security, severe, situation, social, sound, souvenir, Special, standard, suggested, suggestions, Tarlow, things, ticket, Tidbits, time, to, TO BE, tool, tourism, tourism security, Tourism Tidbits, train, Travel, Travel & Tourism Organizations News, Travel Industry, travel market, travel program, Traveler, travelers, Travelwire News, treatment, turn, up, US, use, vacations, Vehicle, video, vulnerable, ways, weeks, WHO, work, wrong, year, years, young, young travelers

Korean Air: No more peanuts

April 1, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

Korean Air has made the decision to remove peanuts from its food offerings after the recent incident involving 2 teenagers who were taken off their flight from flight KE621 to Manila from Incheon Airport because of a peanut allergy.

Korean Air has taken this action to ensure the health and safety of passengers who are allergic to peanuts. As a first step, the airline has replaced its honey-roasted peanut products with other snacks, such as crackers.

In addition, within the next few weeks, Korean Air will remove food containing peanut ingredients from in-flight meals.

The airline is determined to provide a safe environment for all passengers and prevent any similar cases in the future.

“The decision to stop peanut products and peanut ingredients is the minimum safety measure for peanut-allergy passengers,” a Korean Air spokesperson said.

Peanut allergies are emerging as a critical issue in the aviation industry, and a number of major global carriers have stopped offering in-flight peanut products.

More information and travel tips are available on Korean Air’s homepage for passengers with a peanut allergy.

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: and, aviation, aviation industry, Aviation News, aviation-website, Breaking Travel News, carriers, critical, decision, emerging, environment, first, flight, food, Food Travel News, future, Global, HEALTH, in, in-flight, in-flight meals, Incheon, Incheon Airport, incident, Industry, inflight, information, involving, KE, Korean, Korean Air, major, Manila, meals, measure, News articles, North Korea travel news, number, offering, offerings, passengers, peanuts, peanuts Korean, peanuts Korean Air, products, recent, remove, s, safe, Safety, safety of passengers, said, snacks, stop, stopped, Tips, to, Transportation News, Travel, Travel Destination News, travel tips, Travelwire News, weeks, were, WHO

Shot on Oahu: Visitors Aloha Society of Hawaii helps tourist to return to California

April 1, 2019 by Forimmediaterelease

A Hawaii Vacation was cut short for a 34-year-old visitor from California. She was visiting  Oahu’s Northshore and was shot while driving on Kamehameha Highway at Kamananui Road close to the Dole Plantation just before 6 am.

The tourist was driving a rental car and was taken to Wahiawa General Hospital but stable. She was later on released from the hospital and remained in a state of shock.The woman was with her husband, who was uninjured in the shooting

With the help of the Hawaii Visitors Aloha Society of Hawaii, the couple was put on a flight back to California, cutting their vacation short.

The shooter appeared to have killed himself. Police did not release any details on the incident.

Not all the info on this story is out, as to how and what started this.

Just last week Susan Ballard, Chief of the Honolulu Police Department said Hawaii is safe for visitors.

 

 

Travel News | eTurboNews

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook

Filed Under: Press Release Tagged With: and, Breaking Travel News, California, car, chief, close, couple, cut, cutting, department, driving, flight, general, Hawaii, Hawaii Travel News, Hawaii Vacation, hawaii visitors, help, helps, highway, Honolulu, Honolulu Police, Honolulu Police Department, hospital, husband, in, incident, just, killed, last, later, nbsp, News articles, Oahu, out, plantation, police, Police Department, release, released, remained, rental, return, road, s, safe, said, shock, shooting, short, shot, society, State, story, to, tourist, Travel Destination News, Travelwire News, vacation, visiting, visitor, visitors, week, WHO, woman, 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

  • 1
  • 2
  • Next Page »

Search




Recent Articles

  • Sandals Resorts Foundation Empowers Caribbean Youth
  • Minister Bartlett Welcomes Return of Reggae Sumfest 
  • Partners from Turin Win Experiences in Seychelles in an Italian Trade Event
  • Western Air Makes Inaugural Flight Between Nassau and Fort Lauderdale
  • A Sea of Flowers Meet Snow-Capped Mountains
  • The Bahamas Joins CARICOM Member States for Agri-investment Forum and Expo
  • IMEX in Frankfurt returns May 31 – June 2
  • Tourism Seychelles Tells its Travels Tales at the 2022 ATM in Dubai
  • CEO Schulte’s Speech for Fraport AGM Published in Advance
  • Preparations for World Free Zones Conference in High Gear – Bartlett

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