Tuesday, May 11, 2021
• Demand ‘surge’ sees applications double to 4k daily
• But technology must be ‘tweaked’ for the vaccinated
• ‘14-day from travel’ limit imposed as ‘frustration’ rises
By NEIL HARTNELL
Tribune Business Editor
nhartnell@tribunemedia.net
A Cabinet minister yesterday revealed it is “all hands on deck” to prevent “a surge” in visitor demand from “overwhelming” the Bahamas’ health travel visa website and deterring potential tourists.
Dionisio D’Aguilar, minister of tourism and aviation, told Tribune Business the website has to be “tweaked” after daily applications doubled to hit 4,000 following The Bahamas’ decision to eliminate border COVID-19 testing for fully vaccinated travellers.
Disclosing that this relaxation has effectively extended the vacation booking window, he explained that fully vaccinated travellers are seeking to obtain their approved health visa now for visits during the July to October period.
This contrasts sharply with the previous regime, as the requirement for all visitors to obtain a negative COVID-19 PCR test taken within five days of arriving in The Bahamas significantly narrowed the booking window to a matter of days.
Mr D’Aguilar said this switch, coupled with the demand increase, meant the government has had to “limit applications to within 14 days’ of travel” so that the system can better “digest” and process all the submissions it is receiving.
Admitting that the rapidly-evolving travel market changes were “greater than anticipated”, as increasing numbers of Americans become fully vaccinated against COVID-19, Mr D’Aguilar added that he and the Ministry of Tourism were also mindful of the need not to “unnecessarily frustrate” potential visitors and thus undermine The Bahamas’ tourism rebound.
“Only ten days into this new regime, we’re definitely getting a surge on our health travel visa site, but I think it is more because it was previously restricted to persons applying within five days of travel,” he told this newspaper.
“Now, by opening it up to vaccinated travellers, there’s been a surge in applications because people are saying they want to travel in July, they want to travel in August, but they want to apply now. We’re probably doing 3,000-4,000 applications a day, but not all for travel immediately.”
Revealing that the health travel visa website had been processing around 2,000 applications daily prior to May 1, which was when the government eliminated the PCR test requirement for fully vaccinated travellers, Mr D’Aguilar conceded: “We’re getting overwhelmed by persons applying for a vacation beyond the five days.
“There is some tweaking that we need to do. I guess we all thought that persons, when they were ready to travel, would upload their applications within five days of travel, not realising there would be a fairly large surge of people wanting to travel in June, July, August and September.
“To ensure the system does not get overwhelmed, we’re having to limit it to within 14 days of travel. We have to tweak our technology to allow for greater demand and applications for travel in July, while maintaining a response within 24 hours. It’s now overloading our phone lines,” the minister told Tribune Business.
“We now have to tweak it so that vaccinated persons get through the system pretty seamlessly. We have to get the demand into digestible components to process it, and roll-out the technology that can manage this. We had this tight system where we had persons applying within five days, and everyone who is vaccinated is now applying three, four and five weeks in advance.
“We have a hybrid system that right now is creating issues that we are trying to address. It’s a very fluid situation. We’re evolving. We don’t want to unnecessarily frustrate our customers. The website was designed to deal with testing in five days, and now it has morphed into a vaccinated environment.
“It’s a greater change than we anticipated, but we’re trying to adjust the website to take into consideration the new dynamics. We’re working at it assiduously right now. We’re all hands on deck trying to resolve it.”
Some observers may argue that, in a sense, this is a good problem for The Bahamas to have as it indicates that the removal of the COVID-19 PCR test requirement for fully vaccinated travellers appears to already be unleashing the pent-up demand that hotels and other tourism operators have been praying for.
However, Mr D’Aguilar’s fears that potential tourists may be deterred by these technical woes from coming to The Bahamas are not unfounded based on what two US visitors told this newspaper yesterday. Speaking on condition of anonymity, they warned that this nation will “lose a lot of people” unless it resolves the arduous wait they endured - and are still enduring - for approved health visas.
One said: “It’s not just me. I submitted my application on Friday at 11am in the morning, There was no response. I said it must be in process. I never heard anything, called at 10am on Saturday night and then it came through after one-and-a-half hours and a $125 phone bill.
“Now my friend from Florida, who has not been to The Bahamas in two years, submitted his health visa application on Friday morning and got no response. He’s been on hold since 11am today. He’s now number 84 in the queue and was number 124.”
Questioning why The Bahamas did not simply do away with the health travel visa, as well as the negative COVID-19 PCR test requirement, for vaccinated travellers, the source warned that such impediments could cause this nation to miss out on enjoying its share of pent-up global travel demand. “The process is broken. Do something or you’re going to lose a lot of people.”
The Florida friend, who works as a resort property management consultant, said he had been unable “to get hold of someone for two days” since submitting his health travel visa application on Friday. “I’d heard before that it was relatively easy; don’t worry, no problem,” they added. “I sent in the stuff, but can’t get through on those numbers.
“I called early today [yesterday] and was 124th in the queue. I said I can’t do that, and now I’m on hold at 75 or something. We’re supposed to be there on Wednesday [tomorrow], and it looks like we might have to postpone or cancel the trip if we cannot get the health visa. It’s pretty frustrating. It seems very hard to get over there [to The Bahamas].”
They said they spent an hour-and-a-half on Friday completing the application process, and obtaining a confirmation number that remains pending, but two of their travelling companions were unable to access it via their mobile phones.
“Now I’m like: ‘Hey, are we going’,” they said. “I’ll sit on the phone as long as it takes. I hate to cancel because I know we’ve been looking forward to this trip, but it’s going to be devastating for others. They’re going to give up. I’m super motivated. In the day, I used to travel to The Bahamas back and forth every month.
“But there are a lot of places closer and easier to travel to [for Americans]. They’ll say: ‘Forget it’. This frustration pushes persons in another direction. This summer is going to be crazy with people wanting to travel. We’re waiting for an absolute boom, and if we’re going to get it you guys should get it out of Miami. It’s a shame.
“We’re going to hang on the phone, but most people are not going to stay on the phone for three hours. They are not going to do it. It’s pretty crazy.”
Comments
ThisIsOurs says...
Sigh. This was touted as revolutionary technical advancement. And 4000 requests per day overwhelms the system??? Fine if you are a one man show but the entire govt 4000 requests is too much? How do we handle the world. Again we will not advance until the govt stops handing control to family and friends, stops being star eyed by "branding" and starts listening to people who know how. Just becsuse something is on a computer doesn't mean its a well defined system. Clearly.
Last week Renward said "WE" created a platform called "Sharepoint". Today they told us in transferring data from one system to the next they missed 1000 records. That's unacceptable. Why do they swallow these explanations??? Did they test the migration??? Run it and check to ensure that everything had transferred? Because any migration that misses 1000 records is a failure. Worse that it represents 10% of the cases. If you dont laugh youll cry.
Posted 11 May 2021, 3:03 p.m. Suggest removal
Clamshell says...
The minister seems to be saying that the problem is caused by tourists who are using a system that the tourists are required by the government to use to enter the Bahamas.
This is like saying the roads wear out because people keep driving on them.
Oh, well ... just a little “tweaking” should fix it. Uh-huh. Yes. A little “tweaking.”
Posted 11 May 2021, 4 p.m. Suggest removal
FreeportFreddy says...
Seriously...this is a matching exercise...info complete? Test uploaded and negative? Check...done...approved
They could hire high school students!!!
There should be 24 hour turnaround MAXIMUM
Posted 11 May 2021, 4:40 p.m. Suggest removal
DDK says...
Buncha dodos!! Talk the talk but can't walk the walk!! What else is new? Too much idiotic bureaucratic inefficiency. Don't they ever feel embarrassed?
Posted 11 May 2021, 4:58 p.m. Suggest removal
The_Oracle says...
Didn't they just "migrate" to a new covid testing platform between the first and second shots,
but can't migrate the data? Isn't that the meaning of migrate?
Now i see they've launched the website/platform to renew government issued permits/licenses, I wonder where that may migrate to?
Good ideas on occasion but absolutely zero implementation skills, over and over again.
Posted 11 May 2021, 5:14 p.m. Suggest removal
Clamshell says...
Meanwhile, fed-up tourists will migrate to T&C, the Dominican Republic and Cuba.
Posted 11 May 2021, 5:18 p.m. Suggest removal
C2B says...
Key West is awesome and so is south Florida. I tell everyone it's like The Bahamas but with North American service and quality.
Posted 11 May 2021, 10:50 p.m. Suggest removal
ThisIsOurs says...
the number of explanations DAguilar has come up with for this system's failing is amazing. At one point he was telling us about needing to add AI, then it was onto needing some new algorithm, then the entire system crashed because of something or the other. Its clear they gave the work to someone who doesnt know how, but is close enough to them to get an approval. They do this over and over again. 30 million spent on the govt platform years ago for the vendor to purchase a few servers and replicate one web template 500 times. And now the same people back again duplicating work (again), stretching work that could be completed in 6 months over projected 5 years of consultancy fees. Anyway *dis dere show*.
Posted 11 May 2021, 9:37 p.m. Suggest removal
tribanon says...
Next to Minnis himself, D'Aguilar has proven himself to be one of the worst elected officials our country has ever had and its due in great part to his complete lack of common sense.
Posted 11 May 2021, 5:49 p.m. Suggest removal
DDK says...
Don't forget Dames and Bannister🤣😂🤣
Posted 11 May 2021, 6:52 p.m. Suggest removal
SP says...
As usual, the Bahamas is doing what it has always done better than anyone....create bottle necks, and waste peoples time with bullshyt!
Throughout the pandemic, Mexico has remained one of the most popular travel destinations for Americans. According to flight-booking data from Skyscanner, at the heart of that interest is Cancún, which regularly ranks as a top destination. Its main airport, Cancún International, reported **more than 692,000 passenger arrivals in March - exceeding its usual March traffic by 5%.**
Meanwhile, coronavirus cases increased 65%. At this time, both the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the State Department continue to urge Americans not to visit Mexico for tourism.....Nobodies listening to them.
Posted 11 May 2021, 10:05 p.m. Suggest removal
C2B says...
There's useless, and then there is Bahamian Government useless. Totally different categories. These dimwits can't even organize an extortion effort with the Visas. Here is a tip: when you set up a 3rd party to help you graft fees from visitors, make sure they are good at graft/theft and have lots of experience.
Posted 11 May 2021, 10:47 p.m. Suggest removal
traveler says...
They are shocked that tourists would book an airline ticket for $700, hotels for $2k, request vacation time from work and then wouldn't want to wait until a few days before this nonrefundable trip to apply thru a website - they must be crazy. And when we don't get an answer to the Health Visa 2 days before our trip - we are out $4,000. No thanks. They obviously think everyone is simply traveling from Ft Lauderdale and only has an $80 boat trip on the line. The health visa also requires that people who have been vaccinated provide the lab name and phone number (mandatory fields in the application). The Government in charge of this site needs to educate themselves as to what happens in the US. People in Massachusetts actually can get vaccinated at the mall as a 'walk-in'. No lab name, no lab phone number to provide.
Posted 11 May 2021, 11:30 p.m. Suggest removal
Jetflt says...
For God's sake - instead of getting overwhelmed - simply require travelers to the Bahamas to produce a neg R-PCR test or vaccine record on arrival or they're not admitted. WHY is that so difficult for the Gov't to understand????????????
Posted 12 May 2021, 10:12 a.m. Suggest removal
tribanon says...
You're forgetting Dunce D'Aguilar has absolutely zero common sense.
Posted 12 May 2021, 11:55 a.m. Suggest removal
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