TCF facing axe as reform looms

TCF facing axe as reform looms
By admin


The Travel Compensation Fund is set to be axed after government ministers agreed to adopt a new structure of consumer protection.

A draft transition blueprint will now be released for public consultation with a final plan to be agreed at December’s meeting of consumer affairs ministers in Sydney.

A communiqu√© issued by ministers after a meeting in Adelaide today said the TCF has played an important role in protecting consumers. But “fundamental changes in the market” and stronger legislative protections under Australian Consumer Law have rendered the TCF outdated.

“Ministers agreed that the TCF could not continue to be the primary vehicle for consumer protection in the travel market,” it said. “In particular only about a third of affected consumers have any redress under the scheme and more money is being spent on the administration of the scheme than is being paid out to consumers.”

The current system is a “significant regulatory burden with declining benefit”, ministers said.

They also noted that “larger jurisdictions” indicated they would leave the TCF in the absence of an agreed transition plan.

“This may mean the TCF may be no longer viable,” the communiqu√© said.

Officials have drafted a plan of transition that will be subject to consultation with interested parties ahead of a final plan to be agreed at the end of the year.

Email the Travel Weekly team at traveldesk@travelweekly.com.au

Latest News

  • Luxury

COMO launches new family-sized farmhouse in the heart of Tuscany

COMO Hotels and Resorts has launched its new farmhouse apartments in the heart of Tuscany, just in time for Australians to escape our wet winter. And it’s also an ideal time for Aussies of Italian ancestry to explore their home country as 2024 has been declared the year of Roots and Heritage Tourism by the […]

  • Destinations
  • News

New Caledonia in lockdown and airport closed after violent riots rock Noumea

New Caledonia officials have announced a 6pm-6am curfew, a liquor ban and have closed the country’s main airport after overnight riots in which vehicles were torched and roads blocked in the wake of proposed constitutional reforms. Australian Government website Smartraveller has issued an alert informing visitors to exercise a high degree of caution in metropolitan […]