Last year's report noted that one of the three key priorities for the Public Service of Canada would be to modernize service delivery. This would require delivering programs and services from the citizen's perspective and exploring new organizational models, including partnerships with other levels of government and other sectors.
Making progress
Innovations are taking place at all levels; there are many champions of public sector reform |
Public servants have shown themselves
ready to meet citizens' expectations for improved service
delivery and are responding with imaginative and innovative
solutions. In every government, in many organizations and in all
regions of the country, they are making progress in modernizing
work methods, service provision, and the development of
partnerships. Innovations are taking place at all levels; there
are many champions of public sector reform.
While there is still a long way to go, it is important to recognize the progress that is being made and to learn from these innovations. The following is not intended to present all of the examples of reform, but to put forward promising avenues to improved service delivery:
1. Single-window services are being established to better serve a range of client needs by delivering a variety of services from the same location.
2. Horizontal integration brings together the activities of two or more federal government departments to improve service to citizens and reduce cost to taxpayers and users.
3. Vertical integration brings together the activities of two or more levels of government to improve service to citizens and reduce cost to taxpayers.
4. Opportunities are being created for citizens to have a greater say in the delivery of programs which affect them, in return for increased responsibility.
5. Technology is being used to better serve citizens. This will free up people to work with clients who have more complex issues to resolve.
6. Information technology is being used to reach out and better inform Canadians about government services.
7. Internal service delivery initiatives are improving service to our internal clients.
These examples have many common features. They are all public sector models. They are fulfilling a public sector mandate in accordance with public sector values and using public sector management practices. They are respecting the fundamental principles of responsible government and ministerial accountability. They are reaffirming the commitment to service. They are signalling that service can be improved by an integrated approach among departments and among governments. They are making use of new technologies.
Commitment to quality service
It is clear that the commitment to quality service is a fundamental responsibility of the public sector that is here to stay -- with each improvement that is made, public servants are regaining enthusiasm and pride in their work. Though there remains an impatience on the part of Canadians for better quality service from all levels of government, the recognition by the Public Service itself that service delivery must continuously be improved and the many examples of improvements that are being made bode well for the future.
The public sector serves citizens rather than customers |
The public sector serves citizens rather than customers. It is an important distinction. Customers in the private marketplace seek to maximize their individual advantage. If customers are not satisfied with a transaction, they are free to abandon their relationship with the provider at will. Citizens in a democracy are equal bearers of rights and duties in a community setting. That is, citizenship is not purely individual but rather derives from membership in a wider community of purpose, the democratic community to whose larger interests the Public Service is dedicated. A citizen is expected to work in concert with others, through democratic means, to alter an unsatisfactory situation.
Public servants want to meet citizens' expectations and are ready to remove barriers to more effective service delivery |
Though service delivery in the public
sector is and will remain different from that in the private
sector, the public sector is, nevertheless, equally committed to
service quality and value for money. Public servants want to meet
citizens' expectations and are ready to remove barriers to more
effective service delivery, but it must be done in a manner that
is true to the roles and values of the public sector.
Moving forward
Through the Task Force on Service Delivery Models, a 1996 task force of deputy ministers, we have analyzed some of the barriers to more effective service delivery to citizens; and we have looked at best practices within Canada at the federal, provincial and municipal levels, as well as internationally.
Ministers have a collective responsibility through Cabinet. They also have individual accountabilities that push in the opposite direction. We have discovered that one of the principal difficulties to be overcome is the vertical stovepipes that divide government activities into separate domains of service delivery that do not reflect the interconnectedness of the real world. Pursuit of the public interest requires that ministers and officials rise above individual mandates and act together to meet the needs of citizens.
More often than not, the barriers to integrated service delivery are self-imposed |
More often than not, however, the
barriers to integrated service delivery are self-imposed. They
result from bureaucratic rules and red tape, the protection of
turf and a fear of change. When these self-imposed barriers are
addressed, we are limited, more often than not, only by our
imaginations.
The Task Force on Values and Ethics, a 1996 task force of deputy ministers, noted: "Truly integrated delivery will require an altogether new order of integrative competence at the front line of service delivery, and an altogether new mindset behind it, one that is truly capable of visioning government from the perspective of the citizen, and reconceiving the way we do things to meet the needs of real people."
We will learn from each other |
There is no master plan -- nor can there be. Everyone must join in and make a contribution. We will learn from each other. In so doing, we will discover new ways of modernizing the public sector and the Canadian federation at the same time.
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