Vince Farrugia, European Economic and Social Committee (EESC) Maltese Employers representative, has this week participated in the EESC Plenary Session where two important papers for which he was Rapporteur were adopted as EESC papers.
The first Report on e-procurement based on the European Commission (EC) consultation taking the form of a Green Paper which seeks the views of interested parties on how the EU can help Member States to speed up and facilitate the procurement process. E-procurement refers to the use of electronic communication and transaction processing by government institutions and other public sector organisations when buying supplies and services or tendering public works.
In his paper Mr Farrugia makes a number of conclusions and recommendations to the EC. Implementation of an inter-European e-procurement framework is a cornerstone for the proper functioning of commerce within the internal market given the importance of public procurement vis-à-vis the GDP of each Member State.
The approach whereby every Member State adopted its own time-frame vis-à-vis e-procurement implementation failed to meet the desired results and instead led to further distancing from the desired objective of an agreed unified system. It is now of paramount importance for the EC to adopt strong and effective leadership to achieve an integrated, inter-operable, and business/technology standardised e-procurement framework across Member States. This would ensure that while no activity by any individual Member State is affected that further endangers the achievement of the desirable target, action is actually implemented that furthers the implementation process over an agreed time-frame of an approved cohesion approach.
All calls for public procurement in Member States – below as well as above the threshold – are published in the portal of the national contracting authority. SMEs would be assisted either through direct capacity building initiatives, setting up of e‑procurement Facilitating Support Centres by national, regional contracting authorities or constituted bodies representing SMEs through national and EU financing – to ensure that SMEs and micro-enterprises embrace and leverage e‑procurement.
Following unanimous approval by the section this paper yesterday achieved formal approval when it went straight to the vote.
The second paper adopted concerned the EC Communication which outlines the most serious tax problems that EU citizens face in cross-border situations and announces plans for solutions. When individuals move or work or invest abroad, they can encounter double taxation and other difficulties such as in claiming tax refunds and in obtaining information on foreign tax rules.
In the paper the EESC makes a number of important recommendations:

GRTU is one National Organization that does its utmost to safeguard the environment. GRTU strives to educate its own members to look forward to a future where we as a country are on the forefront of environmental protection. It is easy for arm-chair critics to discuss and condemn. It is however much harder to organize and implement. When the Packaging Waste issue arose many wrote and proposed. But it was GRTU that organized its members to set up their own National Compliance Scheme and handle members' packaging waste.
Green mt has presented awards in respect to recycling collections from Sliema Schools organised by the Sliema Local Council. Schools in Sliema from Mid March to end May 2011 made sure that their students separated waste , and material fractions from the said Schools were recovered and weighed by Green mt contractors.
Green Paper on expanding the use of e-Procurement in the EU –
Is it viable? That is the big question that the EU Evaluators will be asking in the coming few weeks. Many speak and pronounce. It is all nicely said. Air Malta is vital for us as an Island State. If we really are to enjoy our freedom of movement as Europeans within the Union. Air Malta is essential for us. Air Malta is essential for our Tourism, for our Financial Services, for our Commerce, for our Industry, for our Services: all major contributors to Malta's GDP.
Xavier's last message: "As I am leaving Euro Commerce, I would like to warmly thank you for the dedicated support you gave me as CEO of Euro Commerce over the past 10 years.Over the last 10 years, we have managed at Euro Commerce to meet most of the objectives that were set for us. The image of Euro Commerce has greatly improved and it is a fact that Euro Commerce is nowadays regularly consulted by EU Institutions as the voice of commerce on a wide range of issues affecting the sector.
Parliamentary Secretaries Jason Azzopardi and Mario De Marco should have never imposed on retailers what for GRTU is unacceptable: penalties and threats of loss of business license, not for any illicit trading (the country is full of it!) but for servicing customers at an hour when most people are out relaxing after a day's work.
GRTU Malta Chamber of SMEs warmly welcomes Arriva. We wish Arriva all the very best. GRTU has from the very beginning of the whole Public Transport Reform Programme been grossly enthusiastic and we have consistently given our support to Minister Austin Gatt the man behind the Reform. Indeed probably if it weren't for Austin Gatt we would not have believed that this B-Day would ever come. Austin Gatt is a mover. We felt from close range his enthusiasm for this project. This is a project which is the life-blood for all retailers in major commercial sectors and GRTU could not stay on the way-side.
