News

CENTRAL EUROPE RAVAGED BY FLOODING – WORST YET TO COME

The worst flooding in years moved Tuesday across a broad swath of Central Europe, taking lives and destroying homes. Heavy flooding has affected a large part of the region in recent days, including the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Romania, and Austria. Other places braced for the worst yet to come, including two Central European gems: Budapest, the Hungarian capital on the Danube River, and Wroclaw, a city in southwestern Poland on the Oder River, which boasts a Gothic cathedral and other historic landmarks.

RABAT PUTTING ON THE RITZ: Hotel brand marks Morocco milestone

The Ritz-Carlton has opened its newest hotel, the Ritz-Carlton Rabat, Dar Es Salam, a palatial oasis located a few minutes from the historic centre of Morocco’s capital, and set within 440 hectares of forest and lush gardens adjacent to Royal Golf Dar Es Salam.

BEAR NAKED: Churchill looks to a future with no polar bears

When polar bears started coming to Churchill, tourists did too. And then suddenly, polar bears began to appear everywhere – from artwork to cushion covers and even on beer cans – as residents of this remote Manitoba town on Hudson Bay embraced their title as polar bear capital of the world.

MONGOLIA’S NEW KHAN-DO ATTITUDE

With its reindeer sleigh rides, camel racing and stunning landscapes with room to roam – not to mention status as the legendary land of Genghis Khan – Mongolia has launched a new tourism campaign it hopes will woo visitors who are truly looking to get away from it all.

EXPLORA JOURNEYS WELCOMES NEW PRESIDENT

Anna Nash has joined Explora Journeys as President of the luxury lifestyle ocean travel brand of the MSC Group reporting directly to Pierfrancesco Vago, Executive Chairman, MSC Group’s Cruise Division.

UNDER PRESSURE: Why Air Canada pilots made ‘unheard of’ gains

Politics, public opinion, and salary hikes south of the border helped push Air Canada toward a deal that secures major wage gains for pilots, experts say. The tentative agreement includes an “unheard of” 42 percent wage hike over four years, according to one source who was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter.

CHECKING OUT: Nexion’s Mike Foster calls it a career

Mike Foster, a tireless advocate for travel advisors in this country who built one of Southern Ontario’s largest agencies, says he is retiring, including stepping down at the end of the year from his position as President of Nexion Travel Group-Canada.

VISIT ORLANDO BRINGS SUNSHINE TO OTTAWA, MONTREAL

Visit Orlando, along with its theme parks, attractions, hotels and transportation partners, will bring the Orlando Canadian Sunshine Tour to Ottawa (Oct. 9) and Montreal (Oct. 10) this fall.  

GERMANY EXPANDS BORDER CHECKS

Germany on Monday began random checks at its borders with five Western European nations as it seeks to crack down on irregular migration, expanding a system of mobile border controls that are already in place at four other borders. However, a return to a past system with closed borders and mandatory border checks for every person crossing the border is not in the cards.

FOR WHOM THE BELLS TOLL: Notre Dame Paris readies for re-opening

Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris is getting its bells back, just in time for the medieval landmark’s reopening following a devastating 2019 fire. A convoy of trucks bearing eight restored bells – the heaviest of which weighs more than four tons – pulled into the huge worksite surrounding the monument late last week on an island in the Seine River.

RELIEF AS AIR CANADA SHUTDOWN AVOIDED

Travellers, business groups and politicians – and the travel industry! – are feeling relief after Air Canada and the union representing thousands of its pilots negotiated a new labour deal and averted a disruptive, countrywide shutdown. The airline announced shortly after midnight Sunday that it had reached a tentative, four-year collective agreement with the Air Line Pilots Association. 

SHANGHAI SHUTDOWN: Typhoon hits Chinese city

Shanghai’s airports were cancelling hundreds of flights as Typhoon Bebinca made landfall in the early hours of Monday morning. The strongest typhoon to hit Shanghai since at least 1949 flooded roads with water and broken tree branches, knocked out power to some homes as it swept over the financial hub Monday.

TRANSAT SEES ‘STABILITY’ AHEAD

Despite losing nearly $40 million in its third quarter ending July 31, Transat AT CEO Annick Guérard says the company is moving away from its disruptions earlier in the year with flight attendants labour negotiations, and that next year will be more “stable” than 2024.

ACTA CELEBRATES EXCELLENCE IN TRAVEL

ACTA held its Eastern Canada regional summit in Toronto last week. And besides a full slate of news, education and a Grand Trade show, the association celebrated excellence and innovation, and outstanding achievements and remarkable contributions in the Canadian travel industry, with a number of member awards. They included the well-known Louise Gardner of Kitchener, Ont. for her advocacy (banner photo, centre).

ROUND-UP: Sept. 9-13, 2024

Despite the focus on Air Canada and its pilots, the rest of the travel world continued to turn last week, and we offer a synopsis of news from the realms of hotels and resorts, cruising, events, FAMs, destinations and much more.

‘HAVOC AND STRESS’ AS CLOCK TICKS ON AIR CANADA STRIKE

Air Canada and business leaders – including the Canadian Association of Travel Agencies and Travel Agents (ACTA) – are asking Ottawa to be ready to intervene in labour talks with its pilots as time is running out before a potential shutdown. But so far, the government has said the two sides need to work things out. 

THE WORLD ACCORDING TO ACTA: Lively Summit series kicks off in Toronto

The Association of Canadian Travel Agencies and Travel Advisors (ACTA) kicked off its fall Summit series with a full day session in Toronto Thursday, with more than 700 attendees on hand to get the latest industry trends and association news, engage in professional development, connect with peers and industry executives, and meet key suppliers at an extensive trade show, which included the largest delegation ever from Brand USA.

WHICH U.S. AIRLINE MISHANDLES THE MOST LUGGAGE?

Everyone’s worst travel nightmare is arriving at destination only to find their baggage didn’t travel with them. In the US alone, over 7 million pieces of luggage were reported as mishandled from 2021 to 2024, with American Airlines being the company with the most luggage mishandled.  

CANADA’S 30 BEST NEW RESTAURANTS

Air Canada has revealed the 30 nominees for Air Canada’s Best New Restaurants 2024 rankings, which has been celebrating the country’s distinct culinary scene since 2022. The Top 10 restaurant finalists will be announced on Nov. 4, 2024

ON THE ROAD AGAIN: Business travel recovery gaining momentum

Global companies plan spend more in the coming year on business travel than in recent years, according to Flight Centre Travel Group (FCTG)’ first-ever ‘State of the Market’ report, which reveals insights from a global survey designed to uncover the latest insights and trends driving the behaviours and preferences of today’s business traveller and shaping the future of the industry.

WERE THE OLYMPICS A SUCCESS FOR FRENCH TOURISM?: It depends on who you ask

A surge of tourists for the Paris Olympics (including Paralympics) this summer has put France on the path to achieving record tourist numbers in 2024. According to government data released last week, some 1.7 million international visitors came during the Olympic period, up 13% compared with the previous year, and another 1.4 million French tourists visited the capital, up 26%. In addition, the Olympics drew millions more visitors who travelled to Paris for the day.

VIENNA VIEW: Austrian city a ‘powerhouse’ of arts and culture

Vienna, home of Johann Strauss, whose 200th birthday is being celebrated in 2025, serenaded the Canadian trade with news from the Austrian capital on Tuesday in Toronto. Accompanied by a classical music duo, and colourful montage artist, the city tourist board’s market manager for Canada Elke Bachner said Canadian visits to the city are surging, not least due to ample lift from Air Canada’s courtesy of its year-round direct flights from Toronto and Montreal.

CHEERS TO 30 YEARS: Maureen Barnes-Smith marks milestone with Sandals

Maureen Barnes-Smith, the face of Sandals/Beaches resorts in Canada, is marking a career milestone – 30 years with the company’s affiliate Unique Vacations Canada Inc. Now VP Sales & Marketing, Canada, the affable Smith joined the UVC team in September 1994 as the first office manager in the Canadian office.

A RIU ‘REVOLUTION’ IN PUNTA CANA

RIU Hotels & Resorts has announced the reopening of the Riu Palace Bavaro, in Punta Cana, after what it says is nothing less than a “watershed refurbishment” in terms of what the chain offers in the destination and around the world.

WORKERS PROTEST GROUNDS PLANES IN KENYA

Hundreds of workers at Kenya’s main international airport in Nairobi demonstrated on Wednesday against a planned deal between the government and a foreign investor. Planes have remained grounded, with hundreds of passengers stranded at the airport.

‘WE JUST HIT SOMETHING ON THE RUNWAY’:  Two Delta planes collide in Atlanta

Two Delta Air Lines planes collided on a taxiway at Atlanta’s airport Tuesday morning, with a larger plane knocking over the tail of a smaller regional jet. The airline said the wing of a Delta Airbus A350 jet that was bound for Tokyo hit the tail of a smaller Bombardier CRJ-900 that was on an adjacent taxiway. The smaller plane, operated by Delta subsidiary Endeavor Air, was preparing to take off for Lafayette, Louisiana.

IN THE EYE OF THE STORM: Louisiana braces for Francine

Louisiana is bracing for Francine today (Wednesday), a storm that was expected to achieve hurricane status overnight before barreling into a coastline that has yet to fully recover since hurricanes Laura and Delta decimated Lake Charles in 2020, followed a year later by Hurricane Ida.

Scroll to Top