V
Strengthening Policy Capacity
Last year's report noted the need to pay greater attention to
longer-term and strategic policy development and to horizontal
and crosscutting policy issues. It also noted the need for every
department to replenish its policy capacity in order to be in a
position to provide the government with broad policy options in
every field. These priorities remain as valid today as they did
last year.
Challenges to improved policy development
It is important to have a strong and vibrant
policy capacity in the Public Service |
Providing high quality policy advice to
ministers and the government will always be a key role for the
Public Service of Canada. The Task Force on Managing Horizontal
Policy Issues, a 1996 task force of deputy ministers, noted:
"Policy making is central to what governments are about, and
it is the policy development function of government that most
distinguishes it from private sector organizations." It is,
therefore, important to have a strong and vibrant policy capacity
in the Public Service.
Over the past two years, through two deputy ministerial task
forces -- the Task Force on Strengthening Our Policy Capacity and
the Task Force on Managing Horizontal Policy Issues -- we have
examined the policy advisory role of the Public Service of Canada
and identified ways to improve the policy development capacity of
the Public Service. Through these task forces, we learned the
following:
- The key to good policy is sustained demand. Good
policy development is an ongoing process, requiring
strong, consistent leadership and support.
- There is a need to build a strong policy community
among departments -- a community of policy managers who
can share best practices and address common problems
concerning policy management and methods.
- The multifaceted nature and rapid pace of change trigger
a heightened need for long-term, reflective policy
planning that ascertains how change will affect
Canada's future. Policy-makers must not get caught up in
short-term, reactive, crisis-oriented policy development.
- Many of today's principal public policy issues are
horizontal in nature. Horizontality requires corporate
rather than departmental action, a characteristic
which is placing new demands on traditional Public
Service decision-making structures and culture. The
Public Service must expand its knowledge base and
increase inter-organizational collaboration to tackle the
growing number of crosscutting policy issues that defy
the authority and expertise of any single department or
even, in a globalized world, any single government.
- In today's world, a more integrated and collaborative
approach to policy development is required. The
policy capacity of the Public Service must be
strengthened so that the Public Service views policy
development as more inclusive and approaches it in a more
inclusive manner. The Public Service must promote the
involvement of citizens in the public policy debate in
order to meet their growing demands for greater access to
information and greater participation in decision making.
Citizens want their voices to be heard.
Making progress
The work of the two task forces mentioned earlier and their
key findings are now being discussed in all departments. Their
recommendations will serve to guide departments and central
agencies as they strengthen the policy capacity of the Government
of Canada.
A culture shift and strong leadership are needed
to reinforce the importance of co-ordination and collaboration |
Horizontal, Open and Inclusive
Policy Development: The most critical elements in improving
horizontal policy development and making the process more open
and inclusive are a culture shift and strong leadership to
reinforce the importance of co-ordination and collaboration
across departments, and the involvement of citizens, stakeholders
and others in the policy development process. Sustained
commitment will be required across government.
In many sectors, departments are working more closely together
to address crosscutting policy issues and to open up the policy
development process. For example, the deputy ministerial
Committee on International Affairs provides a forum for dealing
with foreign policy issues and their domestic implications. The
deputy ministerial Justice and Legal Affairs Committee is a key
mechanism for the development of long-term multidisciplinary
policies in the area of social justice.
Focus on the Long Term: For policy development and
decision making to be effective, it is critical to ensure that
the Government of Canada has the capacity to identify and address
long-term policy issues and pressure points, and that it has the
information and analysis to take account of future trends in
dealing with current policy issues.
A project called "Canada 2005" has been
launched to identify and analyze the major forces that will affect Canada
in the next decade |
To meet these objectives, a project
called "Canada 2005" has been launched to identify and
analyze the major forces that will affect Canada in the next
decade. As part of this initiative, an interdepartmental
committee of assistant deputy ministers is undertaking integrated
research to provide an overview of the pressure points on
Canadian society and to propose a research agenda and work
program to fill possible gaps in our information base. This will
become a permanent process to help achieve the ongoing
integration of research throughout the government.
Other elements of the Canada 2005 project include creating
opportunities for deputy ministers to hold informal discussions
on key issues with experts from the academic and business
communities.
Building a policy community: Over the past year, an
interdepartmental umbrella group of policy assistant deputy
ministers has been established to address shared problems of
policy management, methods and best practices in policy work. Two
areas of early study for this group are personnel management of
the policy community and relations with the external research
community. Over time, this umbrella group of ADMs will serve to
forge a stronger sense of community among those involved in
policy work and thus improve the policy-making process.
Improving the Policy Development Process: As noted in
last year's report, Cabinet's strategic focus was reinforced by
the introduction of an annual strategic planning cycle. This has
contributed to the development of a sustained demand for
long-term, strategic policy advice from the Public Service.
Cabinet's strategic planning cycle has been
extended to the senior ranks of the Public Service |
Over the past year, Cabinet's strategic
planning cycle has been extended to the senior ranks of the
Public Service. At the core of this process is an annual cycle of
three deputy ministerial retreats. These are linked to the
Cabinet planning process and focus primarily on implementing the
government's comprehensive policy and management agenda. The work
of the retreats is supported by permanent deputy ministerial
committees which focus on the management of key operational and
policy files.
Among the highlights of deputy ministerial deliberations over
the past year has been the creation of a series of ad hoc groups
that have supplemented the permanent committees by dealing with
specific, issue-driven items. These temporary groups have taken
the form of deputy ministerial task forces examining a number of
challenges associated with the policy agenda and modernizing the
Public Service. They were established to look at issues in
greater depth than is possible at a single retreat or biweekly
meeting. Over the past year, separate task forces have addressed
the future of the Public Service, service delivery models,
federal presence, federal presence abroad, overhead services,
values and ethics, policy planning, and horizontal policy issues.
The newly devised ADM Forum also gives ADMs the opportunity
for more broadly based corporate involvement. It affords them the
opportunity to contribute their views on the principal policy and
management files of the day and, at the same time, forges a sense
of community and common purpose. The ADM Forum consists of an
annual cycle of three meetings. The meetings allow ADMs to
examine in depth issues of a corporate nature which they have
identified as of interest to the community.
The Association of Professional Executives of the Public
Service of Canada (APEX) also helps, through its annual meetings
and other forums, to inform and engage a diverse group of
executives.
There is a need to extend the strategic planning
framework to all levels of the Public Service |
Over the next year, there is a need to
extend the strategic planning framework beyond DMs and ADMs to
all levels of the Public Service. Including individual public
servants in regular deliberations on the increasing number of
horizontal issues can only serve to strengthen strategic,
integrated, and collaborative approaches to Public Service
management. We need to find vehicles to engage the federal
regional councils more directly in the policy development process
and to reach downward in departments.
Moving forward
As with service delivery, one of the main challenges to
overcome in strengthening the policy capacity of the Public
Service is the vertical stovepipes that divide government
activities into somewhat artificial domains. While departments
are structured so that there is a close fit between the
departmental mandate and the main issues facing the government,
many policy issues cannot be easily compartmentalized along
institutional lines. As noted by the Task Force on Values and
Ethics: "Ultimately a truly integrated and horizontal form
of service delivery may also lead back, indirectly, to an
integrated and horizontal approach to policy. For there is only
so much that can be done at the front line if the policies
themselves do not work together."
Public servants will have to rethink how they
conceive and develop policy proposals |
Public servants will have to rethink how
they conceive and develop policy proposals. They will need to
focus on their collective responsibility to serve the broader
public interest and to work across institutional lines to develop
the best possible policy. They must strike a balance in
fulfilling both their individual accountabilities to their
clients and stakeholders and at the same time their collective
responsibilities to the broader public interest.
There again, this will require a culture change.
- It requires public servants to recognize the
interdependence of policy issues and to work
co-operatively across departmental lines to develop
stronger, more integrated policy responses.
- It requires more open, participatory and transparent
decision making. Citizens want a greater say in
policy making. To respond to the increasing expectation
among Canadians that they will be involved in policies
and programs that affect their interests, it is incumbent
on the Public Service to expand the avenues for open and
inclusive policy development.
- It requires a collegial policy community working in partnership
with other levels of government on policy issues that
cross jurisdictional boundaries.
- As issues become more complex, it becomes more important
than ever to nurture and mobilize the policy capacity
of the broader community -- think tanks, stakeholder
groups, and the academic community -- both to fill
research gaps and to validate policy direction.
- It requires sustained leadership that is
committed to investing in long-term policy research and
development and prepared to signal that co-operation,
collegiality and collaboration are priorities in policy
development.
- We need a "whole-of-government" approach
to policy development which looks outward to the public
interest -- where departments bring government-wide
objectives into their policy development processes and
integrate departmental and corporate objectives.
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