The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Travel app shuts down over regulator concerns

- BY ALEKSANDRA SAGAN

A new website that lets travellers bypass travel agents and pocket commission­s has ceased operations in Ontario after the province’s travel regulator claimed the site violates provincial laws.

The dispute is the latest in a consistent pattern of regulatory pushback against online businesses disrupting industries that have been slow to modernize.

“We see this type of thing happening everywhere,” said Jochem Wijnands, TRVL’s founder, pointing to struggles other online platforms, like Airbnb and Uber, have faced for giving amateurs access to previously off-limits worlds.

“The legacy profession­s hide behind certain rules that they think will give them protection.”

The Dutch entreprene­ur who also created an app that later became Apple News, launched TRVL this June. Users sign up to become so-called TRVL agents and earn up to 10 per cent commission­s on hotels booked by themselves, friends and family. They can also share a link to their site with followers looking for recommenda­tions - making it particular­ly useful to travel bloggers and social media influencer­s.

Unlike other online booking sites like Booking.com and Hotels.com, where commission­s are built in to the price, he said, TRVL allows its agents to pocket most of that commission - save a cut that the company keeps.

Shortly after TRVL launched, the Travel Industry Council of Ontario sent Wijnands a letter, saying his unregister­ed company had staff consulting on travel, in contravent­ion of the province’s Travel Industry Act.

“Anybody who is selling travel in the province ... must be employed by or otherwise aligned with a registered travel agency in the province of Ontario,” Richard Smart, TICO’s president said in an interview.

After some back-and-forth correspond­ence, TICO offered a solution: register with the council through a process that requires an annual fee and setting up a branch office in the province, or stop providing access to the service in Ontario.

Smart said the process allows the regulator to protect consumers by making sure they receive accurate informatio­n when booking online, such as passport and visa requiremen­ts, and ensuring its roughly 2,400 agents all follow the same rules.

Wijnands steadfastl­y disagrees with TICO’s assessment, arguing the platform’s users aren’t travel agents; the site’s users don’t handle money, he said, but rather use the online advertisin­g platform to make bookings with service providers.

The regulator, he said, is protecting registered travel agents rather than savvy consumers, who don’t need someone to remind them to bring a passport.

Still, he agreed to pull out of Ontario, saying the growing business can’t afford to be destructiv­e at the moment. He believes the company can reposition itself to clarify any confusion, though Ontario’s governing body is the only complainan­t to date.

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