Adventure tourism operators contribute to safety plans
Adventure tourism operators contribute to safety plans
Adventure tourism and outdoor commercial activity
operators are being
invited to contribute to new
guidelines to help improve safety across
the sector.
The Tourism Industry Association New Zealand (TIA) and
Outdoors New
Zealand (ONZ) are holding a series of
workshops around the country to
get operator feedback on
what they want to see included in a new generic guide to
operational safety practices.
The guide is one of the
recommendations from the government-led review
of safety
in the adventure tourism and outdoor commercial sectors.
TIA
and ONZ have been jointly charged with a range of
actions, including
developing the generic guide which
will aim to provide clear and
succinct safety guidance
for adventure and outdoor operators.
It is likely to cover
a range of subjects, including crisis planning,
staff
rostering, planning for audits, developing safety
operating
procedures, communications and legislative
obligations. While it would
be aimed primarily at
commercial activity operators who are not
regulated by
the Civil Aviation Authority or Maritime New Zealand,
it
will also be a valuable resource for all organisations
operating in the
outdoors, both commercial and
non-commercial.
TIA Advocacy Manager Geoff Ensor says that
it became clear during the
adventure tourism review that
operators would value clear and simple
guidance on safety
management, over and above that provided by the
Health
and Safety in Employment Act.
"The review found that
operators were highly safety conscious, but many
had to
develop their own safety practices as limited information
was
available that met the specific needs of adventure
tourism. TIA and ONZ
see the development of this new
generic guide as a way to make our
adventure and
commercial outdoor sectors even better at providing
high
quality experiences to our clients," Mr Ensor
says.
"Through the workshops, we want to hear to hear what
sort of information
operators believe should be
included."
The workshop series begins in Wanaka and
Queenstown today (27 April) and
continues in Te Anau and
Invercargill tomorrow and Friday
respectively.
ends