Section 7 · Business Plan
Regulatory, Legal & Compliance
The regulatory framework, the licensing and permit strategy, the insurance programme and the B-BBEE strategy.
7.1 Regulatory Framework
NRMS operates within a multi-layered regulatory environment. National
legislation governs vehicle and driver licensing, occupational health
and safety, company law, tax and labour relations. Provincial
legislation governs operator permits. Municipal bylaws regulate incident
scene access and storage tariffs. An effective compliance strategy
requires visibility of each of these layers and dedicated ownership of
compliance at executive level.
| Level | Key Legislation / Authority | NRMS Compliance Actions |
|---|---|---|
| Corporate | Companies Act 71 of 2008; CIPC registration; SARS; B-BBEE Commission | Full company registration, tax clearance, annual B-BBEE verification |
| Vehicle | National Road Traffic Act 93 of 1996; eNaTIS | All trucks registered & roadworthy certificates current |
| Driver | Professional Driving Permit (PrDP); Heavy vehicle licensing (code C / EC) | All drivers PrDP-certified; annual medical |
| Operator | Provincial Road Traffic Act; tow-truck operator permit | Permits issued per province of operation |
| Operational | OHS Act 85 of 1993; Compensation for Occupational Injuries Act | Safety policy, PPE, annual OHSA audit |
| Labour | Basic Conditions of Employment Act; LRA; Sectoral Determination 9 | Drivers employed under BCEA-compliant contracts |
| Consumer | Consumer Protection Act 68 of 2008; ICASA for communications | Transparent pricing; complaints redress |
| Data | Protection of Personal Information Act (POPIA) | Appointed Information Officer, data processing register |
| Industry | UTASA Code of Conduct (voluntary) | Full adoption of UTASA code from Day 1 |
7.2 Licensing & Permit Strategy
Provincial tow-truck operator permits are issued per vehicle and
typically valid for 12 months. Each permit requires the operator to be
registered with the relevant provincial transport department, carry
required insurance (public liability, goods-in-transit, passenger
liability), and demonstrate compliance with vehicle and driver
requirements. NRMS will engage a specialist licensing firm as an ongoing
retainer to manage permit renewals and monitor regulatory changes.
7.3 Insurance Programme
A comprehensive insurance programme protects NRMS’s assets and
revenue, and is a non-negotiable requirement for insurer panel inclusion
and municipal tenders. The programme is reviewed annually with the
Company’s insurance broker (appointed at financial close).
| Cover | Type | Indicative Sum Insured | Annual Premium (Y1) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Asset (fleet) | Comprehensive motor | R25m (replacement value) | R850,000 |
| Public liability | R20m per event | R20m | R180,000 |
| Goods in transit | Per recovered vehicle | R1.5m per event | R220,000 |
| Professional indemnity | Claims-made | R10m | R90,000 |
| Cyber liability | First-party & third-party | R5m | R70,000 |
| Business interruption | 12 months indemnity period | R15m | R140,000 |
| Directors & officers | Claims-made | R10m | R120,000 |
| Total annual premium (Year 1) | R1,670,000 |
7.4 B-BBEE Strategy
South Africa’s B-BBEE regulatory regime is a material consideration
for any operator seeking to do business with insurers, listed corporates
and government. NRMS is structured from inception to achieve a B-BBEE
Level 2 status. The ownership structure will include a minimum 30% Black
ownership, with black women representing at least 10%. Beyond ownership,
NRMS’s B-BBEE scorecard is supported by (i) a dedicated skills
development plan targeting HDI driver and controller training, (ii)
enterprise development support to black-owned maintenance
sub-contractors, and (iii) socio-economic development contributions to
road-safety NGOs.
Confidential — this business plan is provided to prospective investors and lenders for evaluation purposes only and may not be reproduced or distributed without the written consent of National Recovery & Mobility Services (NRMS).