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          Business View Caribbean
        
        
          and profitability of the industry, and recognizing that
        
        
          it’s the primary employment generator of tax revenue
        
        
          for the region. That’s not necessarily acknowledged
        
        
          in practice by many governments in the region, and
        
        
          we’ve worked hard with our counterpart organization,
        
        
          the Caribbean Tourism Organization, which represents
        
        
          government interests in the tourism industry, to pro-
        
        
          vide information and facts about its economic impact.
        
        
          We’ve worked closely with the World Travel and Tour-
        
        
          ism Council and groups like Oxford Economics to gar-
        
        
          ner and support the development of the necessary re-
        
        
          search to show the broad economic impact of tourism
        
        
          in our various jurisdictions in the Caribbean. That’s
        
        
          been absolutely necessary because we’re faced con-
        
        
          stantly with issues of high taxation and high costs of
        
        
          doing business in the Caribbean, which have corre-
        
        
          sponding effects on our rates and our profitability. We
        
        
          have to be on top of that all of the time and work hard
        
        
          to make sure governments are aware of how policies
        
        
          and regulatory matters affect our industry. So, advo-
        
        
          cacy plays a very key role in everything that we do. We
        
        
          operate under seven guiding strategy objectives and
        
        
          right in there is advocacy and representation.”
        
        
          You also mentioned research and the dissemination
        
        
          of information as part of the Association’s mission.
        
        
          Any recent initiatives in that area?
        
        
          “We’ve done research and position papers on the lift-
        
        
          ing of the U.S. embargo on Cuba and offered some
        
        
          positive and constructive ways in which individual ju-
        
        
          risdictions in the region can address the impending
        
        
          changes. We’re finalizing an advocacy paper, right now,
        
        
          on the sharing economy – groups like Uber and AirBnB
        
        
          - and how they may be effectively integrated into the
        
        
          industry with standards, regulations, and some fair
        
        
          play on taxation, to not only protect the reputation of
        
        
          the industry, but also to help to develop that subsector
        
        
          of the accommodations sector, as well.
        
        
          The Zika virus has been in the news lately and it’s
        
        
          realistic to think that it will have an impact on travel
        
        
          and tourism in the region. How has the Association
        
        
          responded?
        
        
          We’ve been working for the past four weeks on the
        
        
          
            Caribbean National Team - WINNER – Bahamas (left to right):In photo: Emil Lee, CHTA President;
          
        
        
          
            Frank Comito, CHTA CEO; Team Bahamas (Jamal Small, Charon McKenzie, Sheldon Tracey Sweeting,
          
        
        
          
            Richmond Fowler II, Marv Cunningham, Crystal Morley); Peter Olsacher, Judge.
          
        
        
          
            Chef of the Year - WINNER Puerto Rico (left to rig
          
        
        
          
            dent; Jonathan Hernandez, Team Puerto Rico, 2
          
        
        
          
            Judge.