Circular No.: 1995-3
Date: July 13, 1995
To: Deputy heads of departments and heads of agencies
Subject: Reduction of administrative overhead and paper burden related to Treasury Board submissions
This circular outlines new initiatives to improve management and accountability by decreasing the administrative overhead and
paper burden of departments, including a reduction in minor and technical submissions to the Treasury Board.
The changes announced in this circular reflect the ongoing commitment of the Treasury Board and its Secretariat to reducing
overhead and paper burden. The Secretariat is working to make sure that policies take into account the potential savings in
removing unneeded controls. It recognizes that, in addition to savings, better service can result from giving departmental
management more flexibility. The Board will introduce more changes like those in this circular as its policy review
progresses.
It applies to all departments as defined in the Financial Administration Act, Section 2: (a), (b), and (d) and to the
National Capital Commission regarding items 2(iii) and (iv) in the appendix to this circular.
These changes are effective June 8, 1995.
The details appear in an appendix to this circular.
These policy changes and new authorities will be incorporated into the appropriate volume of the Manual.
Please direct requests for more information or clarification about the topics in this circular to the following organizations
of the Treasury Board Secretariat:
- on contracting and government contracts
policy and regulations to the Contracting Management Group, Financial and Information Management Branch, (FIMB);
- on capital projects and major Crown projects to the Projects, Procurement and Risk Management Group, FIMB;
- on cash management to the Financial Management Policy Division, FIMB;
- on blanket authorities for the approval of pension benefits and on the Public Service Employment Act to the Human Resources Branch;
- on materiel management, real property,
grants, contributions and other transfer payments, non-controversial items in a Supplementary Estimates submission, handling of
Orders in Council, the remission of taxes and penalties, the Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Act, Vote 5 paylist
shortfalls, and Treasury Board policy rationalization to your department's program analyst in the Program Branch; and
- on the Treasury Board Secretariat's
strategic policy and program monitoring system to the Evaluation, Audit, and Review Group, FIMB.
R. J. Giroux
Secretary of the Treasury Board and Comptroller General of Canada
Attachment Lists: T004,T005,T006,T007,T008,T009,T010,T011,T012,T013,T022,T023,T024,T161, TBO5, TBO6, TBO7, TB10
This appendix provides a description of the changes effective June 8, 1995.
1. Policy amendments
The Board approved the following nine policy amendments.
- It raised
contracting thresholds in three departments, the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), National Film Board
(NFB), and Revenue Canada, to signal that the government supports more open competition.
- CIDA: for competitive aid contracts: "entry into" from $4 million to
$10 million, and "amendments to" from $2 million to $5 million.
- for contracts for producer services in making films from $100,000 for "entry into" and
$25,000 for "amendments to" to $250,000 for "entry into and amendments to" combined.
- for competitive contracts for printing using the Open Bidding Service for
"printing": "entry into" from $400,000 to $1 million, and "amendments to" from $200,000 to
$500,000.
It increased departmental approval authorities for capital projects below an appropriate limit.
This removes the requirement for
departments to seek Treasury Board authority, except when the Board specifically requests them to do so for capital projects below
an appropriate limit. For departments with separate capital votes, this should generally be around $20 million or
10 per cent of their capital budget, whichever is smaller; for departments that do not have separate capital votes, the
threshold would be $3 million.
The Board will examine authorities
department by department at the first opportunity with a view to approving a long-term capital plan or reviewing a Business Plan.
To give the
Treasury Board the opportunity to request submissions below these levels, departments must briefly describe prospective capital
projects costing above an appropriate floor (i.e., generally $2 to 5 million for departments with capital votes and
$1 million for others) in an annex to their Business Plans. Based on this information, the Secretariat will recommend
to the Board which, if any, projects require a submission seeking preliminary, or some other form, of approval. The
following criteria will have major influences on the Secretariat's recommendations: whether a department has a sufficiently viable
and accurate long-term capital plan; whether it has an appropriate internal approval process; and whether the project entails
significant government-wide risks or touched on the interests of other departments.
If a department
did not identify a prospective project in its Business Plan and the project cannot wait until the next Plan, it must ask the
Secretariat to determine whether a submission is required.
- It has delegated authority to the
appropriate ministers to approve certain technical changes and exceptions to the terms and conditions governing grants,
contributions, and other transfer payments.
- Authority to amend terms and conditions previously approved by the Treasury Board except for:
- the program objectives of the grant(s) or contribution(s);
- the identification of the recipient or definition of the class of eligible recipients;
- basic financial parameters (e.g., the total amount payable under a class of contributions if applicable or the total amount payable annually if applicable);
- the maximum amount payable to any recipient;
- all conditions under which a contribution is repayable; and
- any conditions that the Treasury Board specifies may not be changed without its approval.
- Authority to extend the applicability of terms and conditions for up to one year as long as the fiscal
consequences stay within the department (i.e., no adjustments to reference levels required).
- All amendments to terms and conditions made under authorities delegated to the appropriate ministers must
be consistent with government and Treasury Board policies.
- Authority to approve exceptions to the maximum amount payable to any recipient up to 25 per cent in excess of
the maximum amount approved by the Treasury Board as long as any such exceptions are consistent with government policies and
Cabinet policy decisions and the fiscal implications stay within the department.
- Departments must: consult the Secretariat about whether Treasury Board approval is needed before
implementing changes under these delegations; and inform the Secretariat in writing of any amendments or exceptions approved under
these provisions within one month after the appropriate minister has approved them.
- Departments may seek approval for
Vote 5 paylist shortfalls by a letter from their senior financial officer to the director of the Estimates Division of the
Treasury Board Secretariat, which would then seek approval annually from the Treasury Board through an aide-mémoire.
- Departments may include
non-controversial technical items (e.g., year-end vote transfers, increases in appropriations required solely to comply with the
policy on accounting for non-monetary transactions ) in a Supplementary Estimates submission without the Board's prior
authorization if a Secretariat official at the director level or above has agreed to it beforehand.
- The Treasury Board Secretariat must
ensure that current procedures in the Treasury Board Submissions Guide (part of the Treasury Board Manual) for handling
Orders in Council authorizing federal-provincial agreements are carried out in order to limit the Board's involvement to
substantive issues or to where it has to make recommendations before the Order may go to the Privy Council Office.
- The Board amended its Materiel Management Policy as follows.
- It amended the policy statement to include the following:
"Departments provide employees with materiel required to carry out their work in an efficient, economic, productive, and safe manner."
- It amended the policy requirements to include the following:
"Automated information systems and supporting technology must be used to manage materiel resources and materiel management
functions when investments are cost-effective and can improve the materiel management function.
The full cost of inventories (purchasing and holding costs) must be visible and distributed to the end-user.
Furniture, materiel, and equipment must be provided to employees in an equitable manner consistent with the services being
provided."
- It directed the Treasury Board Secretariat to ensure, as
specified in the policy, that progress reports on major Crown projects are submitted only at key events or milestones.
- The annual submission of the cash management report by Treasury Board Secretariat is
discontinued, and correspondingly, departments are no longer required to submit cash management information annually to Treasury
Board for that purpose.
2. Legislative and regulatory amendments
The Treasury Board invites the appropriate ministers, if the opportunity presents itself, to put forward the following
legislative and regulatory amendments.
- Change sections 23 (1) and 23 (2) of the Financial
Administration Act (FAA) dealing with the remission of taxes and penalties as follows:
- amend section 23, as appropriate, to remove the requirement for the Treasury Board to recommend the
approval of Orders in Council authorizing the remission of premium payments into the Unemployment Insurance Account, the Canada
Pension Plan, or any similar government program; and
- introduce, pending an opportunity to amend the Act, streamlined procedures for seeking the Board's approval of
these Orders in Council -- specifically, to process these submissions in the routine way (i.e., only the front page of the
submission and the Order itself would be included in ministers' books; there would be no précis) and that departments use a very
brief form for these submissions.
- Change the Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Act to remove anachronistic requirements for the
Board's approval of threshold limits as follows:
- amend section 9 to remove the requirement for the Treasury
Board to approve any project or scheme under the Act involving an expenditure of more than $15,000 in any fiscal year by deleting
the sub-section that reads "No single project or scheme under sub-section (1) involving an expenditure in excess of
fifteen thousand dollars in any fiscal year shall be undertaken without the consent of the Treasury Board."
- Amend the National Capital Act and Government Contracts Regulations to give the NCC comparable flexibility to other Crown corporations.
Alternative 1: Introduce legislative change and a consequential amendment to the Government Contracts Regulations as follows:
- eliminate subsection 15(3) of the National Capital Act (NCA) and make a consequential amendment to the Regulations (i.e., remove the NCC from the definition of
"contracting authority" on page B-3). As a result the NCC would no longer be subject to the Regulations and would
not have to seek the Board's approval to enter into, or amend, any of its contracts.
Alternative 2: Introduce new regulations under the NCA and FAA and a consequential amendment to the Government Contracts Regulations as follows:
- introduce regulations under subsections 15(3) of the National Capital Act and 41(1) of the FAA with a consequential amendment to the Regulations
(i.e., remove the NCC from the definition of "contracting authority"). As a result the NCC would be subject to its own contracts regulations.
- Amend the National Capital Act (Real Property) to give
the NCC the latitude to enter into real property transactions without the approval of the Governor in Council as follows:
- amend section 15 to eliminate the requirement for Governor-in-Council approval of real property transactions and to delegate to the Treasury Board the power to
establish thresholds beyond which transactions would require the Board's approval.
- Amend section 46 of the Public Service Employment Act
(PSEA) to allow the Public Service Commission to authorize persons to administer oaths and to take and receive affidavits,
declarations, and solemn affirmations for any purposes of the PSEA or regulations made under it:
- Amend the Harbours Commissions Act (Real Property) to give the Minister of Transport the authority
to approve all land leases as follows:
Amend section 15 (2) to remove
the requirement to seek Governor in Council authority to lease land for a term of more than 25 years.
An amended section 15 would delete sub-section (2)(b) and amend sub-section (a) to provide the Minister of Transport with the
authority to approve all leases.
- Amend section 27 (1) of the Public Harbours and
Ports Facilities Act (Real Property) to remove the requirement for the department to seek the authority of the Governor in
Council to lease land for a term of more than 25 years.
3. Blanket authorities for approving pension benefits
The Board has granted the following blanket approvals under the Public Service Superannuation Act:
- payment of pension benefits in misconduct cases;
- validating elections for prior pensionable service; and
- authorizing the President of the Treasury Board to enter into reciprocal pension transfer agreements.
Contentious or unusual situations will continue to be referred to the
Board to prevent an individual's rights from being prejudiced.
4. Policy rationalization
The Board has approved the continuation of the review of its policy instruments to ensure that they focus on results, give
departments more flexibility, and clarify the scope of the Board's accountability.
The initial review has resulted in the cancellation of the following:
- the Furniture and Furnishings Policy;
- the Works of Art Policy; and
- the directive on Increased Ministerial Authority and Accountability (IMAA).
5. The Treasury Board Secretariat's strategic policy and program monitoring system
The Board approved the following three elements of the system:
- a proactive risk-based monitoring capacity in individual
policy areas to ascertain whether the policy is the most cost-effective instrument for achieving favourable results, and to
determine the extent to which those results are achieved;
- an evaluation, audit, and review function that analyses the
effectiveness of high-risk, strategically important programs and that ascertains the effectiveness of existing monitoring systems;
and
- government-wide studies, when necessary, to examine urgent government priorities such as the issue of year-end spending.
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