GORV - Digital Magazine Issue #28 | Page 15

RV FEATURE Roy Whyss, owner of Queensland manufacturer Sunland Caravans said that he viewed the changes as a positive starting point “in helping to get rid of some of the confusion that manufacturers face due to the ambiguity of government regulations”. “I also believe that it will give some teeth to the authorities, which have previously been unable to take action against those few manufacturers who weren’t compliant,” he told GoRV. Shaun Noble, co-director of Victorian manufacturer Goldstream RV, agreed that the overhaul to the regulatory framework was positive for the public and for the industry. “THE RVSA WILL PUT THE SWORD TO A NUMBER OF SMALLER RV IMPORTERS.” “We as manufacturers have been waiting a long time for this to come,” Mr Noble said. “As to the effect it will have in practice, we will have to wait and see.” He said Goldstream had been briefed on the new regime several times and that compliance with the RVSA – inputing data online – didn’t seem “too complicated”. Dean Porter of Ezy-Trail, which imports its range of camper trailers and hybrid vans, predicted that the RVSA would put the sword to a number of smaller RV importers, especially since importers were not being given more time to comply with the system in the same way local manufacturers were. “We are well on the way to being compliant with the RVSA and when it kicks in in December, we’ll have everything in place,” he said. “But we are a large company with the resources to do it; the smaller companies out there are going to struggle.” Dean Porter of Ezy-Trail, the manufacturer/importer of this Parkes 15 hybrid, predicts smaller imports will struggle to be comply with the RVSA requirements before it kicks in. / 15