Tag Archives: Tourism

Tourism Insert August 1949

I am in love with this busy map from a special tourism section in the August 13, 1949 edition of the Charlottetown Guardian. It reminds me of picture books I had as a child, lots of busy vignettes, new details emerging with every viewing. And Vikings speeding towards PEI!

I can’t read the signature at the lower right, but it could be the work of the Guardian’s cartoonist at that time, Vic Runtz, who did sign some of the lovely drawings included in the rest of the special section. Catherine Hennessey wrote a beautiful tribute to him upon his death in 2001. He was a very fine editorial cartoonist and I hope his work has been or will be exhibited on PEI.

Vic Runtz editorial cartoon August 13, 1949 Charlottetown Guardian, including his signature cat wearing a bowtie, possibly to give some balance to the rah-rah tourism insert.
Vic Runtz editorial cartoon in the June 21,1949 Charlottetown Guardian reacting to promises being made in that year’s Canadian federal election, promises still being made (and broken) today.

Tourism 2050

Just listened to a long discussion on local radio about the staffing challenges some tourism operators on PEI are facing this summer, which are serious for businesses small and large. They touched on lack of transportation, affordable housing, having to be more flexible with lengths of shifts and contracts, and affordable and accessible child care as some of the reasons they have difficulty attracting staff for service jobs.

While this discussion was specifically about labour stresses, I think we would do well to talk more about how the climate crisis is going to change the tourism industry, which is a major economic driver on PEI. I wonder how long tourism will remain a viable business in light of drastically increased fuel prices and the climate crisis. It’s not even officially summer yet, and already over 100 million US citizens were told to stay indoors this week because of extreme heat, and that’s just the most startling of many similar articles I read this week about extreme weather.

How long will it be seen as ethical to encourage people to jet somewhere for a winter break in the sun, or a week on PEI’s sandy beaches? Will tourism become limited to where you can drive in an electric vehicle or on public transport and not round-the-world excursions?

Our ability to imagine and plan for the future is one thing that seems to set humans apart from other animals, but as a society we don’t seem to have changed much about how we balance what we do today against how it will affect the future. I don’t see much change yet, and the clock is ticking.

Our house is still on fire, and we are toasting marshmallows on the flames.