II
THE YEAR IN REVIEW
Several events over the past 18 months have had a
significant impact on the Public Service of Canada.
Constitutional Reform
The process of Constitutional reform dominated the Canadian scene and the Government's
agenda for the greater part of 1992. Extensive consultations and negotiations were carried
out in an effort to arrive at a constitutional package which both governments and citizens
could endorse. Those talks led to the Charlottetown Accord, which was ultimately rejected
in the October 26 referendum.
A major issue during this period of constitutional negotiations was the division of
responsibility for certain policy and program areas and how these program activities could
best be co-ordinated between the federal and provincial governments. Federal public
servants provided outstanding advice and support to the Government throughout this
intensive period. The results of their work remain important today as the federal and
provincial governments continue to collaborate on ways to improve the efficiency of
services provided by government to Canadians.
Restraint
After the referendum, attention focused again on the Canadian economy. As part of the
Government's strategy to control the deficit and ensure stronger economic growth, the
December 2, 1992 Economic Statement reduced operating costs for all departments by three
percent for the 1993-94 and 1994-95 fiscal years, and froze the salaries of public
servants for two years, through 1994-95.
The April 1993 Budget announced further restraints on expenditures for government
operations. Significant cuts to departmental operating budgets, including reserves for
contingencies and new initiatives, were announced for the duration of the fiscal
framework. These measures reflected the continuing need to reduce the cost of overheads
and to maximize the value of program spending.
As a result of the June 25 reorganization (see below), an additional $150 million was
cut from operating budgets. And in the February 1994 Budget, further reductions of $1.5
billion in operating budgets over the three fiscal years 1994-95 to 1996-97 were
announced.
This continuing program of restraint has a significant impact on government operations,
but it also has a direct effect on employees. In the February 1994 Budget, the Government
announced a two-year extension to the wage freeze and the suspension of pay increments 9 for the Public Service and other federal employees and
appointees. This means that the salaries of public servants will have been frozen for five
of the six years between 1991 and 1997.
In addition, performance pay for executives has been eliminated since 1991-92 and for
Deputy Ministers since 1990-91. Funding to provide for performance pay had originally been
taken out of the salary base for those employees. Its elimination has meant an actual
reduction in income for these more senior employees in the order of five percent per year
for average performers and progressively more for those with above-average performance.
This has had a particular impact on the very people to whom we are looking for leadership
in departments and agencies.
For unionized employees, the 1994 Budget also included a freeze on pay increments
through which employees have normally progressed within a particular salary range up to
the "job rate" for the position they hold. Here too, the financial impact on
individuals is significant.
Passage of Bill C-26: the Public Service Reform Act
A milestone in the renewal of the Public Service was reached when Bill C-26, the Public
Service Reform Act, was passed by Parliament in December 1992 and then proclaimed
into law on
April 1, 1993. This marked the first major overhaul of the legislation dealing with the
management of the Public Service in over a quarter of a century. The new legislative
framework provided a statutory footing for many of the changes in human resources and
administrative management envisioned in the Public Service 2000 White Paper.
The Act contains amendments to the Public Service Employment Act, the Public
Service Staff Relations Act, the Financial Administration Act and the Surplus
Crown Assets Act. It includes provisions in areas such as the deployment of employees,
10 authority to simplify the job classification system and
the streamlining of the staffing process. In addition, fair treatment of employees was
enhanced as a result of new provisions on employment equity, the end of probation on
appointments other than initial entry to the Public Service, and earlier union membership
for term employees.
For the most part, these measures already have produced tangible improvements in the
functioning of the personnel system. Deployment, for example, is working - jobs
can be filled more quickly; people can more easily move to pursue new opportunities; and
organizations can respond more effectively to organizational change.
One area, however, where we have not made the progress for which I had hoped is
classification. The direction set by the Public Service 2000 White Paper is the
right one, but greater effort is needed to bring the new, simplified system into being.
Until we have that simpler system, managers and employees alike will be frustrated by the
complexity and delay inherent in our current cumbersome structure of over 70 occupational
groups, with many levels within each group.
Government Reorganization
On June 25, 1993, Prime Minister Campbell took office and announced a major
reorganization of the government that, in one way or another, affected all departments in
the Public Service.
The reorganization created departments that were organized more on functional lines
than around particular client groups, and that brought together essential policy and
program tools in critical areas such as employment and income security. This consolidation
of functions was intended to internalize decisions that had previously required lengthy
interdepartmental consultation, thus giving individual Ministers clearer authority over
their areas of responsibility.11
The organizational changes announced in June included:
- an overall reduction in the number of departments from 32 to 23;
- the creation or redesign of eight departments;
- the merger or wind-up of 15 others.
All departments were asked to submit plans for administrative streamlining and for the
consolidation of regional management structures and operations.
The reorganization resulted in new departments with responsibility for important policy
areas that have a significant impact on Canadian society. They include, among others:
Human Resources Development
This new Department provides an integrated approach to Canadas investment in
people. It brings together under one portfolio programs supporting the income of Canadians
with employment and human resources programs linked to the requirements of the national
economy and labour market.
Industry
The Department of Industry provides broad policy leadership within government on
matters related to business and industrial development. It also plays a lead role in
improving Canadas scientific infrastructure and is a key portfolio for Canadian
competitiveness.
Canadian Heritage
This new Department was created to support and encourage a strong sense of Canadian
identity and heritage based on fundamental characteristics of Canada - bilingualism and
multiculturalism - and our diverse cultures and heritage.
Health
The new Department of Health was created to meet the fundamental policy and funding
challenges of maintaining a high-quality, affordable health system for Canadians.
Public Works and Government Services
This new Department provides common services to government in a more cost-effective
manner. It consolidates virtually all common services provided to federal departments and
agencies.
Central Agencies: Privy Council Office/Federal-Provincial Relations Office and
Treasury Board Secretariat/Office of the Comptroller General
Two significant changes affected the central management structures of government: the
first was the reintegration of the Federal-Provincial Relations Office into the Privy
Council Office, which consolidated support to the Prime Minister across the full range of
his responsibilities. The second was the integration of the Office of the Comptroller
General into the Treasury Board Secretariat. This preserved and strengthened the
comptrollership function within a streamlined budget office. Together, these changes
represent a significant streamlining of the institutional overhead of the Public Service
as a whole.
The reduction from 32 to 23 departments was accompanied by a corresponding reduction in
the number of Deputy Ministers and shortly thereafter a 17 percent reduction in the number
of Assistant Deputy Ministers from 319 to 266.
These personnel changes were carried out under my overall leadership, and in the case
of those at the ADM level, under the authority of the Public Service Commission. Decisions
on the reassignment of ADMs were taken on the basis that these senior officials are a
corporate resource whose talents should be developed and used in the broader interests of
the Public Service as a whole.
Reductions in personnel, at whatever level, are never easy to decide on and always
difficult for the people affected. In this case, decisions were made only after careful
consideration, by a committee of Deputy Ministers, of each affected individual and of the
present and future needs of the Public Service. Those decisions also reflected the
recognition that smaller government requires a smaller group of senior executives to
manage it.
Beyond the relatively small number of senior executives who were directly affected,
approximately 200 other executives in reorganized departments found their jobs affected.
Often this was because the same administrative functions from several departments were
being combined under the umbrella of a single new organization. Here again, the Public
Service Commission, working with the concerned Deputy Ministers, has been active in
facilitating the placement of affected employees in other departments.
In addition, many thousands of public servants whose jobs were not directly touched by
the reorganization were affected in other ways. For some, their Deputy or ADM changed; for
others, their branch or unit was moved to a new department or their supervisor was
reassigned. These changes were disruptive. They carry a cost in dollar terms, and in
dislocation and short-term organizational inefficiency, that can only be justified if
their longer-range purpose is a good one.
The structures of the Government of Canada before June 25 had grown and evolved in
response to the needs of the country in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s. Those structures also
reflected the fact that over the years Cabinet itself had grown to roughly 40 Ministers.
By contrast, the changes made in June reflected the realities of government in the 1990s -
a smaller Cabinet and a corresponding need for smaller, more efficient government; the
need for a more streamlined Cabinet system; the need for greater coherence in new policy
areas that cut across traditional organizational lines; and above all, the need to enhance
ministerial authority and control over the operations of government.
I believe the organizational changes of 1993 - made by one Government and accepted with
some adjustments by its successor - do represent a necessary and positive step
for the Government of Canada and for the Public Service. They have made policy and program
choices possible today that would have been much more difficult under previous structures.
As much as organizational changes can make a difference, the changes of June and November
1993 have better equipped Ministers and their officials to meet the important challenges
facing Canada today.
The Election of and Transition to a New Government
On October 25, Canadians elected a new Government. Just as on similar occasions in the
past, the Public Service showed its professionalism and competence in helping the new
administration to take office and to pursue the agenda on which it had been elected.
When the new Government took office on November 4, the Prime Minister announced further
changes to the structure of government, notably the creation of a new Department of
Citizenship and Immigration, and the reestablishment of the Department of the Solicitor
General. The Prime Minister also named a Minister, the Honourable Marcel Massé, with
specific responsibilities for Public Service renewal. This appointment was an important
signal of the Government's commitment to the Public Service as an institution, and to its
future effectiveness in serving the needs of the Government and of all Canadians.
Restructuring within Departments
To be successful, organizational change must be carried out in a manner that is at once
expeditious, orderly and responsible. This was the approach we took. A further premise of
the implementation process was that there would be no disruption in service to Canadians.
That commitment has been met by all departments concerned.
Implementation has been carried out on two fronts. In individual departments, the
process of restructuring 12 each affected organization
has been led by Deputies and their management teams. To oversee and direct the entire
implementation process, an Implementation Board was created, consisting of Deputy
Ministers from line departments and central agencies, under my chairmanship and with the
support of a small secretariat in the Privy Council Office. The Implementation Board was
responsible for ensuring that what had been decided and announced in June was implemented
properly and expeditiously so as to minimize the period of disruption and uncertainty for
employees and their clients.
To lend further expertise to the restructuring process, in September 1993, the Prime
Minister created a new Advisory Committee on Government Restructuring which now reports to
the Minister responsible for Public Service Renewal.
The Advisory Committee was asked to provide advice on the restructuring of government,
with a focus on the reduction of costs, increased effectiveness and enhanced service to
the Canadian public. It has met on roughly a monthly basis and has provided very useful
advice on a number of issues.
As originally conceived, the implementation of the reorganization and restructuring was
to follow a three-phase process:
Phase I: Administrative Consolidation
For the new departments, Phase I involved putting new structures and
management teams in place. For all departments, it meant preparing for
administrative consolidation and the streamlining of operations. Within a matter of weeks,
departmental structures and management teams were in place; by early fall, plans for the
consolidation of administrative functions were complete and by the time of the writing of
this Report they are largely in effect. The end of Phase I planning was marked by the
signing of performance agreements between myself and each Deputy Minister. These
agreements clearly spelled out performance expectations and anticipated savings.
Phases II and III: Operational Rationalization and Fundamental Reexamination of
Programs and Services
The ultimate objective of these two phases had been to create a more results- and
client-oriented Public Service by streamlining regional structures and applying new
information technologies to enhance service and reduce costs.
The arrival of the new Government brought an understandable pause in the process, as
Ministers took stock of their new portfolios, and the Government as a whole weighed
important decisions on the review of programs and federal-provincial roles.
The February 1994 Budget sets the framework within which departments have been directed
to review programs and to develop new and more cost-effective approaches to the delivery
of services. In this process, strategic investments in information technology will be
crucial to success. Already the Government has committed itself to $2 billion in
cost-avoidance savings over the coming five years through the application of information
technology and the modernization of internal systems.
In this context, the recent appointment of a Chief Informatics Officer (CIO) in the
Treasury Board Secretariat signals the Government's determination to provide leadership in
moving forward the application of information technology and better information management
across the Public Service. In March 1994, the President of the Treasury Board published
the Blueprint for Renewing Government Services Using Information Technology,
prepared by the Chief Informatics Officer for consultation both inside and outside
government.
Planned major initiatives under the leadership of the CIO include:
- locally shared support services;
- shared personnel, finance and materiel management systems;
- business processes re-engineering;
- government-wide systems infrastructure development.
Two further developments affecting individual employees deserve mention. First, in an
effort to ensure the successful placement of as many affected employees as possible, as of
July 21, 1993, strict controls were placed on external hiring into the Public Service. In
the context of the February 1994 Budget, those controls were extended indefinitely. As
noted above, another provision in the Budget, again aimed at preserving jobs in the face
of overall reductions in operating costs, was a further extension of the statutory wage
freeze until the end of fiscal year 1996-97.
____________________
9 |
Such increments are not and have not been
provided to executives and Deputy Ministers. |
10 |
"Deployment" is a term that refers
to the movement of employees, with their consent, from one job to another at the same
level and pay. Under the new Act, this can be done without recourse to a lengthy process
of competition. |
11 |
This, as it turned out, was very much
consistent with the views of the current Prime Minister regarding the role of Ministers. |
12 |
The term "reorganization" refers to
the exercise of changing the broad structure of the government, including changes to the
mandates of Ministers and the transfer of responsibility for major portions of the Public
Service from one Minister to another. The term ''restructuring" refers to
organizational change within departments, in this case as a consequence of the
June and November reorganizations. |
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