Port of Charlottetown now requires training for tour operators - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 04:58 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

Port of Charlottetown now requires training for tour operators

The Port of Charlottetown now requires private tour operators who serve cruise ship passengers to have special certification.

'We want to make sure that the ones that are doing independent tours are still getting a quality product'

Cruise ship passengers arriving in Charlottetown will now have certified private tour guides. (submitted by Port Charlottetown)

The Port of Charlottetown now requires private tour operators who serve cruise ship passengers to have special certification.

Port officials saythe training ensures a quality standard of service andapplies to anyone who is taking cruise ship passengers on tours, with the exception of taxi drivers.

Port Charlottetown businessdevelopment manager CorrynClemence said the new certification requirement came into effect for this cruise ship season.

"We did a bit of research, I guess, over the last couple of years and decided that we wanted to implement a certification program for the private tour operators on the Island. Last year we notified them all and they had the past year to get the training through the Tourism Industry Association of P.E.I. or throughAquila, which is a Saint John company," Clemence said.

"I guess from our perspective we wanted to make sure we had a certain standard that the private tour operators would be operating by. We know that the pre-booked shore excursions that are contracted through the cruise lines, they have their own standards in place and we just wanted to make sure that we had standards for quality."

Ensuring 'a quality product'

Corryn Clemence, the business development manager for Port Charlottetown, says the training will ensure a quality standard for passengers arriving in the city. (CBC)

The training covers things like presentation, passenger psychology, tour planning, managing difficult situations and handling emergencies.

Clemence saidso far about 25 people have taken the certification training.

There is a cost associated with it, but Clemence saidmanywho have taken it feel it's valuable.

She notedoperators can use the certification to help promote their businesses and there is an obvious benefit to the passengers.

"We want to make sure that the ones that are doing independent tours are still getting a quality product and leaving happy."