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Tour and Coach Industry in imminent danger of collapse – Bus and Coach

The Labour government recently provided clarity on border openings, with plans to open New Zealand’s domestic borders in December, then international borders in early 2022.

With this clarity, many, including Labour, hope that the challenges businesses have experienced over the past 18 months will just disappear.

For some they will, but not for all. In fact, the challenges facing tour and coach bus operators will just get worse.

For a sector that previously carried more than two million passengers a year – as of December 2021, a third of all tour and coach operators have closed shop forever.

The industry expects that by October 2022, 70-80 per cent of tour and coach operators will fold.

"The businesses that have closed so far have been a trickle. It is nothing compared with what we are seeing on the horizon. Tour and charter operators are in serious trouble," says Ramash Swamy from Yello Cabs in Wanaka.

These operators are a vital connector to tourist destinations all over New Zealand. The institutional knowledge lost with those leaving the industry is immeasurable.

International and domestic tourists will need to find alternative ways to travel the country. This could include private rental cars, which would mean significantly more vehicles on New Zealand’s roads.

More vehicles mean more emissions. More vehicles mean more congestion. More vehicles also mean, unfortunately, more road deaths.

However, the rental vehicle sector is struggling too. It has also had very little support. The rental fleet is currently 50 per cent below capacity nationwide.

"Whilst the destruction of the tour and coach industry appears to fit in with Minister Nash’s future vision for high-value New Zealand tourism, the Bus and Coach Association believes it is extremely damaging to New Zealand’s international reputation. It is also a massive kick in the teeth for New Zealand small businesses that have been fundamental to the development of New Zealand’s transport and tourism infrastructure. They contributed significantly to our economy for years when the going was good. Only to be hung out to dry at the first sign of trouble," says Ben McFadgen, CEO of the Bus and Coach Association.

New Zealand tour and charter operators have just barely survived the past 18-months with no international tourism, and extremely restricted to zero domestic tour and charter services, particularly over the past four months. Their income is less than 10 per cent of income received pre- COVID-19.

"With New Zealand now ‘back in business’ there are no longer wage subsidies available for struggling businesses, yet operators are being expected to have their capital-intensive operations back up and running at a time when there will be no work until at least the end of January! Over the summer season, there are no school or university charters, no corporate charters, and no sports charters."

"This means no income," says Brent Early from Leopard Coachlines.

The Department of Conservation has also reinstituted charging for the use of its facilities to operators from January 1, 2022; hitting operators right when they are struggling to get back up and running.

International tourism is not the reason New Zealand has COVID. It is a victim of COVID. On behalf of New Zealand’s tour and coach industry, the BCA calls for: 

  1. Core financial support if New Zealand’s international borders are not fully opened without need for quarantine, (despite New Zealand being almost 90 per cent vaccinated).
  2. If the Labour Government won’t support struggling businesses – open the border fully, so that businesses can function.
  3. If Labour won’t directly support the sector and won’t open the borders then the sector must be assisted via a government loan scheme, to help ease the pain.
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