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‘Lodge cards remain optional’ – Treasury

12 Jul 2019 - by Sarah Robertson
Comments | 0

NATIONAL Treasury said last

week that it would not make

an official announcement

relating to lodge cards

becoming the mandatory

method of payment for

government travel accounts.

At the GBTA Conference

late last year, Phale Naake,

then deputy director of

strategic procurement at

National Treasury, said lodge

cards would soon become

the mandatory method of

payment for government

travel accounts. At the

time, canvassed TMCs

were in favour of this,

saying they would receive

payment immediately rather

than having to wait for

government accounts to be

paid.

Six months later, TNW

followed up with Treasury.

“Although lodge cards

are the preferred method

of payment for travel

transactions, they will

always be optional and

at the discretion of the

respective department’s

accounting officers.

National Treasury has not,

and will not make an official

announcement and the

status quo remains,” said a

spokesperson for National

Treasury.

Relating to TMCs reporting

a recent slowdown in

government payments, the

spokesperson said legislation

required accounting officers

to pay within 30 days but

suggested that specific

queries should be directed

to the respective account

officers of the implicated

owing institutions.

Gerrit Davids, lead adviser

of Taranis Co Advisory,

legal advisers, said he had

been attempting to assist

government suppliers,

including TMCs, to enact the

30-day regulation. However,

when emails are sent

to the relevant National

Treasury address, messages

are returned in error. He has

frequently phoned Treasury

to follow up but reception

refuses to put him through

to the relevant people and

instead insists that the

email address is correct.

Subsequent to this, a

spokesperson from Treasury

told TNW that the function

had been taken over by the

Department of Planning,

Monitoring and Evaluation

and the correct address to

use was 30daypayment@

dpme.gov.za. Gerrit told TNW

that this information had

not been provided to him on

his numerous attempts to

contact Treasury.

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