Kate Wilkinson
Adventure tourists are killing themselves for a good time
in New Zealand and the Government is looking at tougher
measures to tighten up safety in the industry and require
standards before such enterprises get off the ground.
During five years (July 1, 2004 to June 30, 2009) 39 people
died in what are recorded as workplace activities - however
the actual number is likely to be much higher as recreational
deaths were not included.
Adventure tourism includes anything from abseiling to water
skiing and is worth $3 billion to the economy.
Today Labour Minister Kate Wilkinson announced that the
Government would require adventure tourism businesses to be
registered - a key recommendation of a review of the sector
released today.
The review was sparked by the drowning of English tourist
Emily Jordan in 2008 while riverboarding in Central Otago's
Kawarau River.
Other tourists have been killed in recent years while
jetboating and quad biking and figures in today's report
showed over the five years seven people died while canyoning
- a sport where people slide down waterways, abseil and
rappel down waterfalls and leap into pools and a further five
died while diving.
Three people were killed while swimming with dolphins or
whales - one of several activities not governed by any
guidelines or standards.
The report said there were gaps in safety in the industry and
inconsistent information collected. Serious accidents were
under-reported and safety was managed inconsistently across
activities and government agencies.
There was also a reliance on recreational-focussed standards
and training - that was when staff were qualified at all. It
also said there were issues with using seasonal workers so it
was hard to retain knowledge, safety auditing needed to be
improved and businesses were not always required to tell
clients of risks involved.
The review recommended a package of measures be introduced to
stop people and New Zealand's reputation being harmed.
Mrs Wilkinson said it was "scary" that just about anyone
could set up an adventure tourism business without going
through any hoops and that would change with registration.
That would require businesses to have a strong risk
management plan and they would undergo safety audits.
About 1500 businesses would be affected, and some could be
closed down.
"To be honest if they are operating unsafely they should be
shut down until they can operate safely," Mrs Wilkinson said.
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