Remarks by Mr. Mel Cappe
to the
Arthur Kroeger College of Public Affairs
Leadership Forum Awards Dinner
February 6, 2002
Introduction
- Thank you very much. I am glad to be here this evening for such an
interesting and valuable event.
- I see that the organizers have a flair for strategic planning and have
carefully scripted this dinner:
- I have been carefully placed between the appetizers and the main course;
- Which says to me that we share a mutual interest in making my comments
succinct and to the point.
- When I was thinking about what I was going to say tonight, I was reminded
of one of my favourite philosophers – Yogi Berra – who said "the
future ain’t what it used to be" and "its tough to make
predictions - especially about the future".
- The thoughts of this great philosopher are particularly appropriate to the
theme of this conference, which is pursuing economic competitiveness and
social cohesion – essentially, having it both ways. I came across a
cartoon in the New Yorker recently that did a pretty good job of summing up
what it was like before this post-modern period. A man is sitting around
with a group of other wealthy men in an exclusive club when he turns to the
others and says, "Money doesn’t trickle down unless there’s a damn
leak".
- We are all post-modern now. We all agree with the hypothesis of having it
both ways, but what does it really mean and how do we achieve it.
- With that in mind, I have one key message tonight:
- We need to foster leadership across all sectors of society, private,
public and voluntary sectors, to improve Canada’s quality of life.
- This is a challenge, however, and one that was made clear in another New
Yorker cartoon. A wealthy man was sitting around his home watching the
business report and the stock market reports on his big screen TV with his
kids when all of a sudden the kids turn to the father and say, "Eight
years of unprecedented expansion, and yet the kid sector has failed to
participate".
- Well, the dinosaurs may be extinct, but remember, they lasted a very long
time.
- Being post-modern, we need to look into the production function of the
integration of economic and social issues.
- To make that point, I want to cover three main issues:
- The importance of leaders who see beyond traditional boundaries;
- The importance of the voluntary, private and public sectors to Canadian
society; and
- How the Government of Canada and our Public Service are building a
stronger relationship with Canada’s voluntary sector.
The Importance of Leadership
- When you look at the best of leadership in Canada’s three major sectors
today, you see that the boundaries are being challenged:
- Increasingly, corporations are expected to strive to exercise social
responsibility;
- As an aside, just recently, I was at the CSR Conference where Deputy
Ministers and Corporate Heads were each given 8 minutes to talk about what
they do. What struck me was that almost 20% of the corporate leaders spoke
about the volunteer work they personally do in their communities;
- And the voluntary sector is increasingly being recognized for its
important economic contribution, its key role in developing public policy
and its importance in creating a strong and healthy country;
- Indeed, on the day the Romanow interim report comes out, we see our
health system being viewed not only by Canadians, but by others, as well,
as a key element of our country’s competitive advantage.
- I know that for some of you, when you hear statistics you might be
reminded of that cartoon where a man is watching the news on TV and the
broadcaster announces, "Meaningful statistics were up one-point-five
percent this month over last month" but I do like statistics that
tell a story;
- The 2000 National Survey of Giving, Volunteering and Participating
revealed that almost 91% of the Canadian population made donations –
either in-kind or financial- during the year 2000 and almost 80% gave of
their time to assist others. Canadians gave almost $5 billion and
volunteered over 1 billion hours. That number of hours is the equivalent
of 549,000 full time jobs or roughly the equivalent of the labour force of
Manitoba;
- Earlier this week on the National, there was a long story on
volunteerism and how it was an integral element of the social safety net.
- Last year, during the International Year of Volunteers (IYV), I spoke to
the RCMP about IYV and was told that they could not do all that they do
without the help of the over 75,000 volunteers that they rely on;
- And I know that CCRA, CIDA, Health, HRDC and many other federal
departments could not get along without the voluntary sector organizations
who deliver many of their programs;
- This is not the thousand points of light idea of President George Bush.
This is really on-the-ground program delivery;
- From our earliest history, we have come together. Canada was built on
people and communities coming together to raise barns, to build shelter,
to conquer hard winters and to develop our communities. And we all know
that Canadians can be counted on to step up during times of crisis –
from floods, to ice storms, to the events of September 11th.
The real value that distinguishes Canada is our collective response;
- I’ve talked about the importance of leadership to a variety of public
service audiences:
- I’ve said to my government colleagues that we need to nurture
"les fonctionnaires sans frontières" officials who can see the
big picture beyond their own department or branch or job.
- And this is important for leaders in all sectors. We need "leaders
without limits".
- The kind of people who can "think big, think ahead and think
people":
- It means creative minds who are not afraid to have and share a vision
and who are able to adapt to changing worlds;
- It also means leaders who look for ways to work with others to achieve
more than any of them could individually;
- My experience is that people who are capable of seeing past their own
organizational and sector boundaries are usually people who are also good
at the other elements of leadership.
- I would be remiss in the AK School of Public Administration to not talk
about the context we face within the federal public service.
- Like all large organizations we face the pressure to do more things and to
do them better.
- We face issues with no simple answers:
- Such as addressing the impacts of globalization, so that Canada is well
positioned;
- Or the changed international security environment in the wake of
September 11th;
- Like many organizations, we face a massive generational shift in our
workforce:
- We are beginning to replace a generation that we hired in the 1960s and
early 70s who are coming closer to retirement.
- The Government needs to recruit and then retain, young people like many of
you here tonight, to become the kind of workplace that reflects Canada’s
diversity.
- The Government of Canada wants to be an employer of choice:
- That’s why we are promoting a leadership style that encourages both a
change in culture and a culture that encourages change.
- We want the best and the brightest to work in the Public Service of
Canada. If you are looking for a challenging career that will
stretch your abilities and constantly push you to be the best that you can
be, then I would urge you to consider a career in the Public Service
The Importance of Collaboration Among the Sectors
- My view on the question of the day is that in Canada social cohesion is a
competitive advantage.
- I won’t go through all the arguments made to support that view, since
I’m sure they’ve all been raised here today.
- As we develop our policies and as we design and deliver programs and
services to Canadians, we take as given, the need for collaboration
between a private sector, a voluntary sector and a public sector that are
vibrant, flexible, diverse, responsive and savvy;
- All three sectors must work together;
- An event like this is a good example of that interaction. Or one can
look at the make-up of the various selection committees and advisory
committees for the awards given out tonight to see the involvement of
companies such as Microsoft and EDS together with people from other
sectors to discuss issues and to share their different perspectives;
- The idea is to get the strongest mutual understanding and awareness;
- To get all the ideas and rationales and concerns on the table.
- We need to talk with each other, not just to each other to
build the constructive, continuous dialogue that will enable us to make
better decisions.
How the Government of Canada and Our Public Service Are Building a Stronger
Relationship with Canada’s Voluntary Sector
- The Government of Canada and the private sector have worked together in
one way or another for a long time:
- This reflects the private sector’s awareness of the impact of public
sector decisions on its interests and vice versa.
- Until recently, the relationship between the Government of Canada and the
voluntary sector has been largely service delivery based. It has been
primarily a series of relationships between individual government
departments and individual voluntary sector organizations.
- We know that voluntary sector organizations and stakeholder groups are the
building blocks of civil society and help to represent the views of citizens
in the public policy process. A challenge for us is to broaden and explore
new ways to consult and engage groups and individual citizens in the future.
Polls have shown that Canadians believe that citizens, better educated and
more informed than ever before and served by technology that is both
flattening and democratizing, must have a greater say in the public policy
process.
- At the same time, the Government recognizes that it must build a
"citizen focus" in all its activities, programs and services to
ensure that they resonate and are meaningful to all Canadians.
- The Government is committed to this and to strengthening the link with the
voluntary sector, as evident in the Accord between the Government of Canada
and the voluntary sector launched on December 5th of last year:
- The Prime Minister, in his message at the front of the Accord said AI
believe that this Accord is the blueprint for a strong and vibrant
relationship between the voluntary sector and the Government of Canada. As
such, it will show us how we can continue to work together to build a
better country";
- it identifies common values, principles and commitments that will shape
future practices.
- This Accord, itself, is the culmination of a lot of hard work and strong
leadership on the part of many voluntary sector members and government
members. Without the leadership qualities of Minister Robillard and that of
the original members of the Voluntary Sector Roundtable Panel on Governance
and Accountability such as Ed Broadbent our own Arthur Kroeger, this new
relationship would not have emerged.
- We have here, an example of 3 Canadians who each have successfully
demonstrated and provided leadership across the public, private and
voluntary sectors in their own way.
- The Accord challenges both sectors to change:
- The Government will need to take a closer look at how it carries out
policy dialogue, so that we are truly open to the voices of the voluntary
sector. We must also look at the impact of our policies, programs and
legislation on the voluntary sector;
- On the other hand, the sector needs to continue to find ways to let the
voices and views of all sector organizations be heard. It must identify
and bring to the attention of government, emerging issues in the sector.
- Some have asked why we need a signed Accord. Why can we not just agree
that we will treat each other better in the future? But as the great motion
picture producer and industry pioneer Samuel Goldwyn said, "a verbal
contract isn’t worth the paper it’s written on".
- This can, however, all be achieved:
- We can look ahead to a day when public sector leaders take voluntary
sector voices into account in policy and program development throughout
the government as a matter of course;
- When processes encourage and expect dialogue across sectors as
the accepted way of doing business;
- When leaders recognize the need to move between the public, private and
voluntary sectors, for their own career development and for the good of
their organizations.
- What will it take to achieve this new and more vibrant relationship?
- A lot of it will come down to the actions of "leaders without
limits".
Conclusion
- I know how important a good dinner is to active minds:
- And since there are so many active minds here, I am particularly
attentive to the hour;
- So let me conclude with a few thoughts.
- There is now an increasingly common awareness that a healthy Canada
depends on the best possible collaboration between all three sectors of
society. We need all sectors to be vibrant, strong and effective:
- To be more and more involved in contributing to the decision-making
processes;
- To address the major challenges facing all Canadians and that can help
to ensure that Canada’s values are reflected in world affairs.
- That underlines the importance of the message that I set out at the
beginning of these remarks:
- We need to foster leadership across all sectors of society to improve
Canada’s quality of life;
- That is leaders who find opportunities for collaboration with others;
- Leaders who can both articulate their vision and thoughtfully entertain
other perspectives.
- I salute the individuals and the organizations being honoured tonight for
the leadership, their contributions and for their commitment. They are
examples of leaders without limits.
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