Annex A Departmental Overview
1. Mandate, Mission and Vision
The Queen’s Privy Council for Canada was established through
the Constitution Act, 1867 to advise and assist the Queen’s
representative, the Governor General. The Cabinet, which acts formally as the
Privy Council, carries out this role.
The Privy Council Office (PCO) also came into being at
Confederation. As the Prime Minister’s department, PCO provides non-partisan
advice on government policies and priorities, and on the Government’s
organization and its relations with Parliament, the provinces, and other
institutions. PCO also advises on the breakdown of responsibilities among
Ministers, appointments of Deputy Ministers, and on special matters, such as
national security. As well, PCO is the secretariat for the Cabinet and its
committees.
The Prime Minister’s Deputy Minister has carried the title
Clerk of the Privy Council since 1867. A second title, Secretary to Cabinet, was
added in 1940. Changes to the Public Service Employment Act in 1992
brought a third title, Head of the Public Service, and responsibility for
setting the strategic direction for the Public Service.
The Department’s Program, called the Privy Council Program,
comprises five business lines: Office of the Prime Minister, Ministers’
Offices, Privy Council Office, Commissions of Inquiry, Task Forces and Others,
and Corporate Services.
The Program provides for the operation and support of the
central decision-making mechanism of the Government of Canada.
The core component of the Privy Council Program is the Privy
Council Office business line whose mission statement follows:
Our Mission
To serve Canada and Canadians by providing the best non-partisan advice and
support to the Prime Minister and Cabinet.
Our Values
We recognize the special need of the Prime Minister for timely advice and
support. We dedicate ourselves to our work and to the effective functioning of
government. We believe that integrity, judgement and discretion are essential
to achieving our mission. We believe that people are the strength of PCO.
2. Departmental Organization
The Privy Council Program operates
in a complex, multi-level environment and is carried out primarily in Ottawa. An
exception is the work of the Commissions of Inquiry and Task Forces, which may
operate across Canada, as required.
In 2001-2002, the Privy Council
Program consisted of five business lines. See Figure 1.
Figure 1: Program Structure
Business Line 1 – Office of the Prime
Minister
The objective of the Office of
the Prime Minister business line is to provide advice, information and
special services to support the Prime Minister as Head of Government and Chair
of Cabinet. This includes liaison with Ministers; issues management;
communications; planning and operations related to the international community;
and support for certain political responsibilities, including relations with the
Government caucus. The business line also includes costs of operating the
Official Residences of the Prime Minister. However, the National Capital
Commission is responsible to furnish, maintain, heat and keep in repair the
Prime Minister’s Official Residences. The office, comprised of exempt staff,
is under the direction of the Prime Minister’s Chief of Staff.
Figure 2: Office of the Prime
Minister Business Line Organization Chart
Business Line 2 – Ministers’
Offices
The objective of the Ministers’
Offices business line is to provide advice, information and support services
to the Deputy Prime Minister, the President of the Privy Council and Minister of
Intergovernmental Affairs, the Minister of State and Leader of the Government in
the House of Commons, and the Leader of the Government in the Senate.
The Ministers’ Offices business
line consists of the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister, which undertakes
specific functions delegated by the Prime Minister; the Office of the President
of the Queen’s Privy Council for Canada and Minister of Intergovernmental
Affairs, which oversees federal-provincial-territorial relations; the Office of
the Minister of State and Leader of the Government in the House of Commons,
which is responsible for the Government’s legislative program in the House of
Commons; and the Office of the Leader of the Government in the Senate, which
manages the Government's legislative program in the Senate. This business line
is also responsible for the payment of the salaries and allowances for
Secretaries of State and Ministers of State who assist Cabinet Ministers in
carrying out their responsibilities. The operating budgets for these Secretaries
of State and Ministers of State are reported by their respective departments. An
executive assistant to each Minister is responsible for managing each of the
above offices.
Figure 3: Ministers’ Offices
Business Line Organization Chart
Business Line 3 – Privy
Council Office
The objective of the Privy
Council Office business line is to support the Prime Minister and
Cabinet in the operation of the central policy decision-making process and to
provide advice and information to the Prime Minister in the discharge of his
responsibilities as Head of Government and Chair of Cabinet. This also includes
providing the necessary support to the four Ministers in the Privy Council
Program as well as the Minister designated as the Federal Interlocutor for
Métis and Non-Status Indians.
Fulfilling this objective involves
working with federal departments and agencies to provide the best non-partisan
advice and information. It also involves being attuned to the priorities of
Canadians to offer strategic advice in the best interests of the country. The
Privy Council Office works with provincial and territorial governments to
understand regional issues and must be knowledgeable about international
developments and their implications for Canada.
Another aspect of the
responsibility of the Privy Council Office business line is to ensure that the
Public Service as an institution has the capacity to serve Canadians and their
elected representatives in the years ahead. As the responsibilities of
government are redefined, the role of this business line is to advise the Prime
Minister and other Ministers on priorities for change to enable the Public
Service to adapt effectively.
As the secretariat to the Cabinet,
the role of the Privy Council Office business line is to provide policy
information and advice to the Prime Minister, to Cabinet, to four of the five
Cabinet committees, and to the Ad Hoc Committee on Public Security and
Anti-Terrorism. The Treasury Board is supported by the Treasury Board
Secretariat, a separate department of government. See Figure 4.
Figure 4: Cabinet Committees
The Privy Council Office business
line consists of the following branches: Intergovernmental Affairs, Security and
Intelligence, Operations, Plans and Consultation, Machinery of Government,
Foreign and Defence Policy, and finally, Management Priorities and Senior
Personnel. The Clerk of the Privy Council and Secretary to the Cabinet is
accountable for the management of this business line and reports directly to the
Prime Minister.
Figure 5: Privy Council Office
Business Line Organization Chart
Business Line 4 –
Commissions of Inquiry, Task Forces and Others
The objective of the Commissions
of Inquiry, Task Forces and Others business line is to gather
information and to report under specific terms of reference or to undertake
independent projects or studies.
During the 2001-2002 fiscal year,
this business line consisted of:
• Indian Specific Claims
Commission (www.indianclaims.ca);
• Policy Research
Initiative (www.policyresearch.gc.ca);
• Commission on the Future
of Health Care in Canada (www.healthcarecommission.ca); and
• Commission to Review
Allowances of Parliamentarians.
Each independent commission is
managed by one or more commissioners. The Policy Research Initiative is headed
by an Executive Director.
Business Line 5 –
Corporate Services
The objective of the Corporate
Services business line is to provide cost efficient and effective
financial, administrative, information and personnel services in support of
departmental operations and systems.
This includes common and
specialized services. Common services are provided to the other business lines.
They include managing financial, administrative, information, informatics,
technical and human resources services as well as coordinating responses to
requests for access to information under the Access to Information Act
and the Privacy Act.
Specialized services include
operating the Prime Minister’s switchboard, managing a correspondence unit
responsible for non-political, non-personal mail addressed to the Prime Minister
and Ministers in his portfolio, and providing technical support for the Prime
Minister’s tours.
As well, this business line
provides certain administrative services to commissions of inquiry, task forces
and other independent entities.
The Corporate Services business
line consists of Administration, Financial Services, Informatics and Technical
Services, Corporate Information Services, Human Resources, and Access to
Information and Privacy. The Assistant Deputy Minister of Corporate Services
manages this business line.
Figure 6: Corporate Services
Business Line Organization Chart
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