Showing posts with label Charity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charity. Show all posts

Sunday, 22 May 2022

Gary Barlow will play two charity gigs onboard P&O Cruises’ Iona later this year

Gary Barlow will play two charity gigs onboard P&O Cruises’ Iona later this year

The singer is the music director of Iona's 710 Club


Barlow will appear on P&O’s Spain and Portugal cruise departing Southampton on 29 October and its Spain, Portugal and Canary Islands sailing, also departing Southampton, on 12 November.

 

All proceeds from ticket sales for the shows will be donated to Child Bereavement UK and the Teenage Cancer Trust. 

 

Barlow is a P&O Cruises brand ambassador and the music director of Iona’s 710 Club.

“One thing I love is making memories," said Barlow. "I think music does that extremely well. I look forward to joining guests onboard Iona later this year to create some truly special holiday memories.”

 

P&O Cruises president Paul Ludlow added: “It is a real delight to welcome Gary back on Iona for what will be extraordinary performances.

 

"His love of music which has taken him on so many journeys and adventures will provide guests on board with a unique night of world-class entertainment fused with an amazing travel experience.”

Monday, 28 September 2015

Carnival’s Fathom brand melds cruise, charity for new kind of vacation fun

Carnival’s Fathom brand melds cruise, charity for new kind of vacation fun

Distributing ceramic water filters is one job passengers will do along with local residents on a Fathom cruise in the Dominican Republic. Fathom President Tara Russell is at far left.

AMBER COVE, Dominican Republic —When Carnival Corp.’s new Fathom brand docks for the first time here next April, guests will emerge onto the pier of the newest port in the Caribbean. Everything about it will say vacation, from the duty-free store at the foot of the pier, to the shopping village full of souvenirs, to the thatched-roof cabanas sitting Polynesian-style on platforms over the water.
But Fathom travelers will be on a decidedly nontraditional vacation. Instead of choosing which beach to visit, they’ll be surveying options for how they can help the residents on the north coast of this country, where the per-capita income is about $11,680 a year. Many homes in the countryside lack electricity or running water. Wood fires are common for cooking.
Fathom is not a conventional travel product, especially in the fun-and-sun cruise sector. But the brand’s managers hope to make the case that combining travel and social responsibility can be its own kind of fun.
“It’s a meshing of what in many households would be two different spheres of their lives,” said David Drier, Fathom’s vice president of sales and former CEO at Clipper Cruise Line.
Drier said a simple way of thinking about Fathom is that people budget different time and money for travel and charity each year. “Now, we’re melding those two buckets together.”
Drier and his sales team have a bit more than six months to fill Fathom’s 710-passenger ship, which will alternate between weekly visits to this port and a second itinerary in Cuba.
Meanwhile, several agents have reached out with interested clients, including Barbara Silver, manager of OmniTours in Deerfield, Ill.So far, Drier has focused on explaining Fathom to major consortia such as Signature Travel Network and Ensemble Travel Group; the latter recently named Fathom a preferred supplier.
Silver said she is trying to book a Fathom trip for a group of about 40 in a central Florida retirement community in the fall of 2016. The group leader is in her early 80s, Silver said, and honeymooned in Cuba.
“She’s very anxious to go back there and visit and bring her travelers with her,” Silver said.
Cuba is the more expensive of the two itineraries, with prices beginning at $1,800 per person for an inside cabin. Comparable cabins on Dominican itineraries are $974.
Nevertheless, Cuba seems to be outselling the Dominican Republic early on, even though Fathom’s program there is less developed. Fathom’s president, Tara Russell, said that Cuba’s appeal is singular because of the decades-long travel ban for Americans.
“The object for travel is totally different” than in the Dominican Republic, she said, where the social impact work involved in a Fathom cruise has to be the primary selling point.
“The latent demand for the Dominican Republic is smaller,” she said. “There is less curiosity.”
In the D.R., Fathom passengers will spend three days docked at Amber Cove, the new $85 million port near Puerto Plata.  From there, they will fan out on buses to help Dominicans with a range of projects.
One impact activity takes place in Altamira, about 20 miles from port in the hills above Puerto Plata. There, Fathom passengers will help out at Chocal, a cooperative formed by 30 local women so that they wouldn’t have to move to bigger cities to find work and leave their families.
Chocal makes artisanal chocolate out of the cacao trees that thrive on the tropical island.
The U.S. Agency for International Development has loaned the money for equipment, but to pay the loans and hold down expenses, none of the cooperative members draws a salary.
“They can’t afford to hire more people now until they pay off their loans, so this volunteer program is just amazing,” said Caroline Bucher, a consultant for Fathom in the Dominican Republic.
At Chocal, some passengers will help separate cacao beans from their shells, a tedious process that can be only partially mechanized. Others will assist with cutting, folding and gluing wrappers to the finished chocolates or make fertilizer for a nursery that produces young cacao trees.
Elsewhere in the Puerto Plata region, Fathom cruisers will visit schools to help with English instruction.
A group of Fathom employees and journalists on a “sampler” tour at the Maria Isabel Meyreles school in Cupey sang a song in English with a class of about 30 students. Afterward, the volunteers helped the students do a worksheet that had them finish fill-in-the-blank questions about the English lyrics.
Sabina Rodriguez, a regional educational administrator, said foreign language skills in particular help Dominicans get jobs in the tourism sector.
On another day, Fathom passengers might find themselves at a factory helping to sift clay and mix materials for inexpensive ceramic water filters that can turn river water 99% pure. A lunch of traditional Dominican fare awaits after a morning’s work. The next day, they will help distribute the filters and hear stories about how better water access improves families and communities.
Russell said Fathom’s programs were developed with variety in mind so that travelers will get a different type of experience each day.
To help agents promote such a new and different product, Fathom is offering an across-the-board 15% commission through Oct. 15 for agencies that register as Fathom Founder’s Circle members.
In the Dominican, Fathom is also offering a 1-for-9 tour conductor credit during that time frame. For bookings of back-to-back cruises to Cuba and the Dominican Republic, Fathom is offering a 10% discount on the fare for each departure.

Tuesday, 25 March 2014

Charity aims to ‘double the hope and healing’ with ship

Charity aims to ‘double the hope and healing’ with ship

By Tom Stieghorst
*InsightHardly a week goes by without an announcement by someone in the cruise industry of a charitable endeavor or donation.

Recently I was at a lunch on a cruise ship at the Port of Miami, where Azamara Club Cruises presented a $4,000 check to the head of one of the big travel agency networks, who is trying to raise $125,000 for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society.

A week earlier, Carnival Corp. and the Carnival Foundation gave $200,000 to Create Common Good, an innovative job training program.

And millions have been raised across the industry this year for Typhoon Haiyan relief in the Philippines.
*TomStieghorst

One of the biggest cruise-connected projects I have heard of, however, is the push to build an entire ship for medical care and training in Africa.

Mercy Ships, a 35-year-old charity, is raising funds for its first purpose-built hospital ship. It announced a contract at Cruise Shipping Miami with the China Shipbuilding Industry Corp. for a 36,600-gross-ton ship to be delivered in mid-2017. Plans call for the ship to be built at the Tianjin Xinang Shipyard.

Donald Stephens, founder and president of Mercy Ships, wouldn’t reveal the exact budget, but said it is more than the $75 million spent to convert and retrofit a cargo ship or ferry, such as the Africa Mercy, the latest of four ships the organization has operated.

With a purpose-built ship, Stephens said his group can deliver more beds, more and better operating rooms and improved training for medical personnel in the African countries where it mainly operates.

“You can design the ship to the hospital, rather than design the hospital around the ship,” he said.

Mercy Ships is in what Stephens said is a “quiet phase” of fundraising, where it is pursuing big-money donors to build momentum. It will soon begin seeking smaller contributions from individuals, he said.

One big gift has come from bond king Bill Gross and his wife, Sue, who contributed $20 million to match a gift of identical size from an anonymous donor.

Gross is the founder of Pimco, which runs the largest bond fund in the U.S. and has $1.9 trillion of assets under management.

Among the services delivered by the existing ship is maxillofacial reconstruction and tumor removal surgery. A three-minute video of various deformities and defects treated by Mercy Ships makes a compelling case for the need for action.

“Our goal with this [ship] is to more than double the hope and healing through life-changing surgeries provided to those with little access to specialized health care,” Stephens said, “and to increase the partnership of training and educational support of health professionals within the developing nations our ships will continue to serve.”

Monday, 25 February 2013

Costa boss donates $1m to Concordia charity


Costa boss donates $1m to Concordia charity

Costa boss donates $1m to Concordia charity
The boss of Costa Concordia owner Costa Crociere is reported to have donated a quarter of his last pay package to charity.
Pier Luigi Foschi gave his $969,000 bonus for 2011-12 to the Costa Foundation, set up following the disaster last January in which 32 people died off the Italian island of Giglio.
He received a total of almost $4 million for the year to November 2012, a 16% drop on the previous year, the Sunday Times reported, quoting regulatory filings by Costa’s parent company Carnival Corporation.