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Is the national travel policy legal?

22 Aug 2018 - by Savannah Freemantle
Comments | 0

THE national travel policy

framework introduced by

Treasury last year may be illegal

as it has not yet been tested in

court.

This is according to Gerrit Davids,

lead adviser at TaranisCo Advisory.

The new regulations did away with

all TMC commissions and override

agreements, stating that TMCs

can only earn a management fee

and that any commissions that

might be paid are to be reimbursed

to government. According to the

policy, TMCs managing government

travel and events are to report

back to Treasury quarterly on all

commissions earned, to ensure

compliance.

At the time, TMCs expressed

concern about how the loss in

revenue would impact their bottom

line and affect their ability to offer

competitive prices.

Gerrit suggests that the trade may

be able to challenge the legality of

the policy.

He explained to TNW that a policy

was not considered legal until it

had been tested in court and a

judge had ruled that the policy was

constitutional.

He said that while Parliament had

ruled that Treasury may issue a

national travel policy, the policy still

needed to be tested against the

Constitution. A judge would only be

able to rule on the legality of the

policy if a TMC (or member of the

public) took government to court to

test the policy.

“It is important that this policy is

reviewed by a judge and a ruling is

made, instead of the policy being

accepted and enforced on merit.”

Gerrit also suggested that

government’s stipulation in travel

tenders that TMCs must be Asata

members in order to qualify for

the tender process could be

problematic. Section 2.1.7 of the

Constitution states that all tenders

must be fair, equitable, competitive,

transparent and cost-effective.

According to Gerrit, should a

TMC that is not an Asata member

challenge its exclusion from the

tender in court, the judge might

find that this requirement is in

contravention of the Constitution

and award the TMC the right to

apply for the tender.

Gerrit said he was concerned

that, instead of challenging the

policy in court, TMCs might be

driven to illegal behaviour in order

to protect their revenue by claiming

commission from suppliers.

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