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| Sustainable Transport for Tourism Wales (STTW): 1996-2001 | |||||||
| Campaign Background and Key Achievements | |||||||
| Summary |
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Colin Speakman, the well-known and highly-acclaimed expert in transport
for leisure development, explains what today is all about and sets
the scene for a third phase of a campaign that has had extraordinary
success in getting its message across to visitors and operators alike.
Emphasis is placed on the 'quality' message and that in the face of
the urgency and size of the challenge, there should be no letting
up in getting this message across and in addressing the three key
issues at stake. In the slow process of achieving long-term shifts
in attitudes (amongst visitors and operators alike) to the use of
public transport for leisure, the demonstration of positive outputs
along the way and the need for effective monitoring and evaluation
is crucial to achieving ongoing support from funding bodies for the
creation of greater opportunity and choice. Mr Speakman's recognition
that the Sustainable Transport for Tourism Wales campaign has achieved
all this with impressive results, and is "living proof of what can
be done in Wales", is a tribute to all participants and a firm platform
from which to launch the next phase of the Campaign. |
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| Presenter:
Colin Speakman |
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Colin Speakman is Managing Director of Transport for Leisure and together
with co-writer Les Lumsdon produced the seminal Green Guide to Wales,
first published in 1991. His views have changed little since and he
continues to advocate sustainable tourism development based on a balanced
approach to commerce, culture and the environment. Sustainable tourism,
he says, is sensitive to the needs of the local economy, local communities
and the countryside. It embraces living traditions, festivals, events
and other community initiatives. It encourages visits to local craft
workshops, museums and bookshops; hospitality that provides a sense
of place, and exploration by public transport, bicycle and on foot.
It enables access to beautiful countryside, and the pursuit of wholesome
food and drink. Above all, Colin says, sustainable tourism enables
visitors and residents to interact in mutually-beneficial ways. The
local economy is strenghtened, local services are extended, and the
public transport infrastructure is improved. |
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| 1.
What Today is About |
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| Today
is about two things. First a recognition, a celebration, of the achievement
of Phase Two of the Sustainable Transport for Tourism Wales Campaign
1998-2001. Second is to look at ahead at what we hope will be the
start of Phase Three of the STTW Campaign 2002-2005. We will receive
presentations of five super, practical examples of schemes that have
benefited from STTW Campaign support. Not only will these inspire
us but I am sure that each of the examples will be looking not only
at what has been done during Phase Two but forward to the kind of
things that are likely to be developed during Phase Three. So in a
way the case studies will have in them key pointers as to the way
forward, and will illuminate our debate this afternoon. |
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| 2.
Differing Roles; Common Purpose |
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First my role. I am here not as the expert on The STTW Campaign -
there are several people in this room who know a lot more about what
has happened than I do, including Andy Shingler project co-ordinator
who has put a huge amount of expertise and energy in the Campaign,
and other key movers and shakers such as Terry Jackson - who might
be described as the "Godfather" of the Campaign - Jim Embrey, Leo
Markham and other members of the Campaign Management Panel. There's
also a tremendous amount of additional experience and expertise in
this room. The main purpose of today is to make best use of that expertise
in the time we have available. My role is as facilitator, to move
the debate along to try and keep everyone in order and ensure we finish
on time both to enjoy lunch and trains home. |
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| 3.
Sharing Ideas and Building Consensus |
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What today is really about is a sharing of ideas, and hopefully a
putting-together of some building bricks for the future, built on
the foundations of the first two phases of the Campaign. Today is
also about hearing from you. Discussion and debate, both formal and
informal, is going to be the main contribution you can make. The challenge
will be at around 3pm this afternoon to see if we have built sufficient
consensus to be able to launch a new Sustainable Transport for Tourism
Wales Forum. |
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| 4.
Campaign Background and Key Achievements |
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I have been asked, as a relative outsider, to say something about
what I see of the Campaign's background and key achievements. All
this is admirably set out in the Phase Two Campaign Report, which
I presume everyone in this room has already seen and read from cover
to cover. This is an impressive document and I would like to offer
my personal congratulations to Andy Shingler, the main author and
editor of what is a superbly written report. I can't speak, I regret
to say, for the quality of the Welsh prose, but the English has an
admirable clarity. It is a good read, has some impressive statistical
information, and it is also handsomely produced, with some delightful
illustrations and good design. Tourism South and West Wales, who have
also hosted the whole Campaign, must also be warmly congratulated.
It really is a lovely document to handle. |
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| 4.1
The 'Quality' Message |
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Presentation is actually very important. In a very real sense, to
quote the old phrase, the medium is the message. Transport for Tourism
is about quality. It is about giving people a good experience. It's
about offering the public something which is not just at least as
good as the motor car, but better in terms of quality provision and
customer care. This report gives decision makers exactly that message. |
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| 4.2
The Urgency of the Challenge |
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But let me offer a note of realism. Despite the many achievement of
the Campaign, we live in the dark ages in terms of sustainable transport
in the countryside, even within such a green country as Wales. The
overwhelming majority of leisure journeys to and within the Welsh
countryside, something like 85%, are made by car with all the problems
of visual pollution, air pollution, noise, congestion, danger, urbanisation,
and threat to health that implies. In many areas, including the three
National Parks, the percentage is over 90%. The remaining 15% is divided
into travel by walking, cycling, coaches, buses and trains. Public
transport, using scheduled buses and trains, equates to a mere 5-6%
of trips to the countryside or 2-3% in our National Parks. Does that
matter? Should we not resign ourselves to the fact that public transport
users are just an eccentric minority who don't count and, as tourism
providers, what really matters is that the overwhelming majority of
our customers (85+%) come by car? Indeed for a lot of people in the
tourism industry in Wales, as elsewhere in the UK, that is a self
evident truth and their promotional material will simply tell you
how to reach your accommodation or an attraction from the nearest
motorway interchange. There are many recent authoritative reports,
too numerous to name, from the National Assembly, the Countryside
Council from Wales, from local authorities, CPRW, RSPB and other bodies
which will explain why such an attitude is short sighted and discriminatory,
and why, as a society, good quality public transport access is vital
to the future well being of both the environment and communities of
Wales. |
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| 4.3
Three Major Issues |
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The arguments about the need to develop and promote sustainable transport
can be crystallised into three major issues: (1) Environmental - the
impact of the car on our historic towns and countryside, impacts on
air pollution, global warming, landscape. (2) Social - the need to
offer that significant proportion of the population of Wales - around
30% - equal access to our countryside, and historic towns and leisure
opportunities. (3) Economic - the whole, wide agenda of sustainable
transport and tourism and the spending powers of visitors, including
many overseas visitors, in rural communities. The central issue for
today is what effect, if any, has the Sustainable Transport for Tourism
Wales Phase 2 campaign had on any of these key issues. It is the third
of these, Economic, which has been the prime focus of the Campaign,
and this is entirely appropriate bearing in mind that the funding
of the Campaign from both Welsh and EU sources is clearly linked to
developing the Welsh economy. In looking at key achievement therefore,
economic benefit has been the main measurable output, though in fact
a prime objective of the Campaign is also to relieve "the road-borne
congestion that threatens to underline the very qualities of Wales
that visitors come here for in the first place." |
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| 4.4
Outputs |
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But what impressive measurable outputs there are. These are listed
on page 1 of the report within the Executive Summary. There were 29
individual campaigns supported by the Campaign, run by its match-funding
partners, and six strategic projects developing the provision and
usage of public transport access information for tourism. Of these
surely the crowning achievement was the launch of the Freedom of Wales
Flexipass, a range of multi-mode tickets offering a huge range of
travel opportunities by rail and bus throughout Wales linked to various
discount facilities. The really impressive statistic is the 18,000
passes sold since Flexipass's launch in 1999. 42% of these customers
would not have come to Wales without the Pass, which created at least
£300,000 additional tourist revenue into the local economy. |
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| 4.5
Monitoring and Evaluation |
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What is impressive about STTW - and a requirement of all their funding
projects is the careful monitoring of all projects. This has enabled
the Campaign to report that other STTW supported activities has generated
20,000 additional trips to Wales, more than £575,000 additional revenue
and between 21 and 31 fulltime jobs - all with a knock-on multiplier
effects within the economy. These are hard, measurable facts. What
is more difficult to assess is whether or not either the new visitors
generated or the switchers has had any impact in terms of reducing
the environmental impact of tourist traffic. |
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| 4.6 Long-Term Shift in Attitudes |
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I would argue that whilst even the impressive examples and figures
quoted in this document are probably doing little more than keeping
up, if that, with the annual increases in car usage within Wales,
what is really happening is the start of a long term shift in attitudes,
and eventually in behaviour which ultimately will make a real difference.
It is a slow process, and will not happen everywhere at the same speed
or in the same way. But what this report does demonstrate, through
some of the excellent case studies described here, is how change is
beginning to happen. |
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| 4.7
Creating Opportunity and Choice |
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The two key words are opportunity and choice. There is still an implicit
assumption than in ever more-prosperous Britain, sooner or later we
shall all own cars and use them on every possible occasion. That is
simply not true. Indeed if the recent news on the collapse of personal
pension finance is to be believed, we shall soon be an ageing population
with declining personal incomes for whom car ownership will become
an intolerable financial burden as our incomes decline and costs rise.
By creating the kind of high quality green networks that are described
in the Report, we are giving everyone, affluent and less affluent
alike, a real choice. As road congestion inevitably worsens, integrated
public transport networks, especially rail based networks than do
not require the use of ever more congested roads, will become a much
better, safer, and more enjoyable experience than the private car. |
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5. Third Phase of the Campaign |
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Of course as this report makes clear, there is still a long, long
way to go in the process of providing a high quality, well integrated
network to serve visitors to Wales, let alone the local population.
That's precisely why it is essential that we have a Third Phase of
the Campaign. But if devolution has proved anything, it is that Wales,
as a more autonomous nation, can be more innovative, more creative,
more radical than its more lethargic, Whitehall-dominated neighbour.
The STTW campaign is living proof of what can be done in Wales. |
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| The
achievement of long term goals of environmental sustainability is,
or should be, at the absolute centre of all our work in transport
and tourism within Wales. The fine Welsh poet and writer Gwynn ap
Gwilym wrote a moving introduction, in Welsh, to the book produced
by Les Lumsdon and myself in 1990: The Green Guide to Wales. | |||||||
| "One
of the tales of the Mabinogi, written around the twelfth century,
speaks of a magic mist descending on the countryside, and when the
mist had lifted all the people had vanished. It would seem that the
challenge facing us in the twenty-first century is to preserve our
environment whilst at the same time providing the means to sustain
our communities and our way of life." | |||||||
| That is exactly why we need the Sustainable Transport for Tourism Wales Campaign in 2002. | |||||||
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Public Transport Tourism
Mapping; Sian Thomas Mission Statement/Terms of Reference Phase 3; Draft Project Portfolio |
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