EUFA calls on Minister to Suspend Donal Curtin
EUFA calls on Minister to Suspend Donal Curtin
EUFA are calling on Hon Simon Power, as Minister of Justice and Commerce, to suspend Commissioner Donal Curtin from all duties within the Commerce Commission. It is one year since the Minister accepted Mr Curtin’s resignation as Deputy Chair at the Commission, then stating that he “considers that Mr Curtin’s offer, in the public interest, is an appropriate resolution ....”
Investors believed that Mr Power did not take the issue of “public interest” seriously enough at that point. They are also nervous today as to why now and are asking what has prompted this latest development.
However Investors who have called EUFA today seem pleased that finally the Commission acknowledges, by way of the public announcement, that there are issues surroundings Mr Curtin's role.
Proceedings have been filed in the Auckland High Court,
against Commissioner Donal Curtin. The legal actions relate
to Mr Curtin’s former role as a consultant to Vestar
Financial Services.
EUFAs correspondence with
Government, the Commission and other bodies dates back to
July 2008 where urgent action was sought over Mr Curtins
position with the Commission. Twenty months on the
Commission has quietly made a statement out of the blue
that;
“Mr Curtin has been allocated to tasks that do
not involve him in decision-making related to enforcement
actions under either the Fair Trading Act or Credit
Contracts and Consumer Finance Act.”
They also
state;
“Other steps are being taken to ensure that
conflicts of interest will not arise”
The Commissions
failure to act in a timely fashion is negligent, as little
has changed since Mr Curtin resigned in March 2009 as Deputy
Chair of the Commission. Investors will be asking what
prompted this announcement now rather than last March.
Coordinator of EUFA Suzanne Edmonds stated today;
“It is unacceptable to take this amount of time and it is
viewed as a deliberate attempt to stymie procedures and run
out the statute of limitations, preventing further
action.”
The Commission is failing in its duty when it fails to provide adequate protection to the public.
ENDS