HL Deb 27 February 1986 vol 471 c1225WA
Lord Ponsonby of Shulbrede

asked Her Majesty's Government:

Whether they have any plans to restructure tourist boards.

The Secretary of State for Employment (Lord Young of Graffham)

In its report on tourism, published on 15th January, the Select Committee on Trade and Industry recommended that the British Tourist Authority, the English Tourist Board, the Scottish Tourist Board and the Wales Tourist Board should be abolished, that the status of the Northern Ireland Tourist Board should be down-graded, and that responsibility for the development of tourism, both domestically and overseas, should pass to a new statutory body called the British Tourist Board, supported by a statutory regional structure.

The Government will be making a formal response to the Select Committee's report, which contains a wide range of other recommendations about the promotion of tourism, in due course. However, the Government are aware of the damaging effect of uncertainty on the existing tourist boards, which have already undergone considerable reorganisation in recent years, as well as on the industry which engages in joint promotional work with them.

I have therefore consulted my right honourable friends the Secretaries of State for Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland about the Select Committee's proposals for an alternative to current statutory arrangements. We have concluded that, in the interests of the effective promotion of tourism within the United Kingdom, we should maintain the existing structure of the statutory tourist boards and ministerial responsibility for them and concentrate on continuing to improve the liaison and co-operation between the boards.