{"change_dates":[],"dossier":{"amendments":[],"changes":{"2014-11-10T02:04:16":[{"data":[{"body":"EC","commission":[{"Commissioner":"GRYBAUSKAIT\u0116 Dalia","DG":{"title":"Budget","url":"http://ec.europa.eu/dgs/budget/"}}],"date":"2005-07-04T00:00:00","docs":[{"celexid":"CELEX:52005PC0181:EN","text":["
PURPOSE : to amendRegulation 1605/2002/EC on the Financial Regulation applicable to\n the general budget of the European Communities, and present a report on the\n application of the provisions of the new Financial Regulation.
PROPOSED ACT :\n Council Regulation.
CONTENT : the Financial Regulation ('FR')\n was adopted in June 2002.In December 2002 the Commission adopted the\n Implementing Rules ('IR') of the recast FR after extensive consultation of\n the
institutions. Both these regulations, which apply to all\n institutions, entered into force on 1 January 2003. The FR is subject to\n review every three years, or whenever it proves necessary to do so. At the\n time of the adoption of the new FR in 2002, the Commission undertook to make\n a report by 1 January 2006 on the application of the provisions of the new FR\n and, in particular, on the discontinuation of centralised ex ante controls,\n and, if necessary, to submit appropriate proposals to the Council. This\n report is annexed to the document.
The main objective of the Commission’s review are to improve efficiency\n and transparencyin the operation of the rules, simplification of the\n procedural and documentation requirements for grants and contracts, and\n clarification of the rules governing methods of management.
The document describes the methods and criteria used by the\n Commission in its review. It makes it clear that legislative changes should\n be reserved for those problems where there is no alternative. Wherever\n possible, other solutions, such as interpretative notes or administrative\n measures, should be used.
The main amendments proposed are as follows:
Budgetary principles:
- regarding the principle of unity of the budget, the rule\n governing interest generated by pre-financing is simplified. The current rule\n is that pre-financing, and interest generated by it, belongs to the\n Community, and that interest must be recovered, at least annually. The\n existing scope of this rule is limited to grants subject to centralised\n management by the Commission services. This places a disproportionate burden\n on those programmes where in-house administrative resources are required to\n administer recovery orders. It is therefore proposed to allow for the amount\n of interest to be set off against the final payment to the beneficiary. This\n maintains the principles of Community ownership of prefinancing and\n accounting for the interest generated. The limits on the scope of application\n of the general rule should be incorporated in the FR instead of the IR.
- with regard to the principle of annuality, certain changes are\n made: the carry-overof non-differentiated appropriations will\n exceptionally be permitted in the case of expenditure on direct payments to\n farmers. Commitment of expenditure in advance, from 15 December of year n-1,\n will be exceptionally authorised for crisis management aid and humanitarian\n aid as referred to in Art. 110 FR. In addition, restrictions on the maximum\n threshold for advance commitmentsagainst the current\n \"EAGGF/Guarantee\" (from 15 November of year n-1) to cover routine\n management expenditure (charged to the budget of the year n) will be removed.\n Under the new European Agricultural Guarantee Fund, payment requests will be\n concentrated overwhelmingly at the beginning of the budget year n.\n Non-differentiated appropriations for veterinary measures, charged against\n the current \"EAGGF/Guarantee\" will be converted into differentiated\n appropriations, more suited to the multi-annual nature of the expenditure.
- Regarding the principle of universality, two items are added to\n the list of assigned revenue (Art.18):
the possibility for Member States to make ad hoc contributions for\n external relations programmes; and
proceeds from the sale of vehicles, equipment, installations, etc.
- At present, the Commission must be authorised by the budgetary\n authority before accepting any donations. To avoid unnecessary and cumbersome\n procedures, it would be useful to limit the requirement for authorisation to\n donations which involve significant charges.
- In relation to the principle of specification of the budget, the\n rules governing transfers of appropriations are simplified where they have\n proven cumbersome or unclear: this applies to “Notification procedure\"\n in Articles 22 and 23. Also, for reasons of efficiency, the Commission is\n allowed to decide autonomously on transfers from the reserve where no basic\n act exists for the
action concerned when the budget is established but is adopted\n during the year. Rules on transfers of administrative appropriations are adapted\n to the new Activity-Based Budgeting (ABB) structure.
Methods of management (Arts 53-57)
- The limitation of shared management to EAGFF and Structural\n funds is removed, to reflect current practice based on existing regulations\n as well as proposals for future basic acts after 2006.
- For joint management with international organisations, the\n definition and requirements need to be clarified and need to be completed in\n line with operational needs.
- The conditions and criteria for using national public-sector\n bodies (\"national agencies\") are simplified in order to facilitate\n their use, and the scope of the provision is extended to international public\n bodies.
- The specific case of special advisers/heads of mission appointed\n by the Council to manage certain actions in common foreign and security\n policy (CFSP) is included as a special case of indirect centralised\n management.
- The prohibition on delegating budget implementation tasks to private\n bodies is modified, since experience has proved the terms of this prohibition\n to be unnecessarily strict.
- Finally, taking account of the need for a common control\n framework, controls carried out by the Commission on decentralised or\n indirect centralised management, and where appropriate in shared management,\n are reinforced, particularly by adding provisions concerning the Member\n States’ responsibilities under shared management.
Financial Actors
The relationship between the Commission's internal auditor and the\n agencies (FR) is adjusted (Art. 185 FR). The latter will have their own\n internal audit function reporting to their own management boards, whereas the\n Commission's internal auditor reports to the College on the procedures and\n systems of the Commission. As regards the Accounting Officer, his/her\n responsibility for certifying the accounts, on the basis of the financial\n information supplied to him/her by the authorising officers, is clarified.
Recovery of amounts receivable (Arts. 72-73b)
The rules on recovery of amounts receivable should be clarified\n and strengthened.
- Enforced recovery is assisted by ensuring that the Community's\n claims also benefit from the instruments adopted under the Treaty provisions\n on judicial cooperation in civil law matters having cross-border\n implications.
- Recoveries should be treated by the Member States in the same\n way as they treat their own fiscal claims within their jurisdiction and\n should enjoy the same privileges.
- The practical experience of the Commission services shows that,\n unlike state authorities in many national jurisdictions, the Community is not\n subject to a period of limitation under which financial claims extinguish after\n a certain period of time. The introduction of such a period of limitation corresponds\n to the principles of sound financial management and of equal treatment of\n operators. The same period of limitation of five years is already provided\n for fines and periodic penalty payments by the Council Regulation on the\n implementation of the rules on competition.
Public procurement and contracts
One of the main objectives, and achievements, of the FR adopted in\n 2002 was to transpose the EC Public Procurement Directives so that the\n Community institutions would apply the same standards as the Member States.\n Given the adoption of the new EC Public Procurement Directive in 2004, some\n further amendments to the FR are necessary:
- Including the possibility of declaring procurement to be secret.
- Distinguishing between the most serious grounds for exclusion and\n other grounds which involve a lower level of financial risk : the most\n serious grounds for exclusion should be obligatory, while the rest should be\n applied as necessary, on the basis of a risk assessment by the contracting\n authority.
Experience has proved the following amendments to be necessary:
- Possibility of sharing a common database of those candidates or\n tenderers in situations of exclusion;
- Extension of simplified rules to govern the awarding contracts\n to external experts for evaluation and technical assistance (Arts 91, 97 FR).
- Clarification of the obligations of the institutions to suspend\n a procurement procedure or a contract in cases of fraud, etc.
Grants
Simplification of the rules is needed:\n requirements for checks and guarantees need to be better adjusted to the\n financial risks involved.
- The scope of the title on grants is clarified (Art.108 FR) in\n particular as regards financing related to loan activities and shareholdings.
- As for the public procurement, it is necessary to add the principle\n of proportionality.
- The scope of the non-profit rule is clarified and its\n articulation between FR and IR.
- In certain situations, the nature of the action leaves no choice\n in the selection of beneficiaries. This category is therefore added in\n Article 110 FR.
- The same action should not give rise to more than one grant to\n any one beneficiary. However, some basic acts permit Community funding to be\n combined since it is considered useful for example for the structural funds\n to be complemented by interventions from other programmes (e.g. TENs). It is\n also made clear that the same costs can never be financed twice (Art. 111\n FR).
- Where grants are given for running costs, the rule that the\n necessary agreement may not be signed more than four months after the start\n of the beneficiary's financial year has proved unnecessarily rigid. Since\n there are strict rules on retrospective funding, this deadline may safely be\n fixed at six months.
- The use of flat-rate payments is authorised at the level of the\n FR along with the more traditional method of reimbursing pro rata costs\n actually incurred (new Art. 113a).
- Certain restrictions on the eligibility of beneficiaries are\n removed (Art. 114 FR) in order to allow for grants to physical persons and\n certain types of association without legal personality.
- The rules on exclusion from grant procedures include the same\n distinction as that for procurement in relation to the level of seriousness\n (Art. 114 FR).
- The case in which the implementation of an action needs to give\n a financial support to third parties is expressly provided for.
Specific policy sectors in Part Two of the FR
- Title I: agriculture. Some changes have already been referred to\n above under the budgetary priciples section. In addition, the proposal\n provides that provisional commitments can be made later than the normal\n two-month deadline after receipt of the Member States' statements of\n expenditure in cases where a decision on a transfer of appropriations is\n expected. And Art. 153 FR concerning transfers is inaccurate: reference\n should be made only to the notification procedure in Art. 23.
- Title II: structural funds. Terminology is adjusted to refer\n specifically to the structural funds, cohesion fund, fisheries funds and\n rural development fund. Furthermore, in the new basic acts proposed by the\n Commission for structural actions post-2006 the rule on the automatic\n decommitment of appropriations is suspended in cases of force majeureseriously\n disrupting the implementation of the actions. The making available again of\n appropriations is therefore no longer necessary in this case. The Commission,\n however, considers it justified to keep the case of \"manifest\n error\" attributable to itself (Art. 157). This will allow commitment\n appropriations to be found without disrupting the overall programming of\n appropriations for the seven-year period.
- Title III: Research
Exceptionally, it should be possible to make decommitted\n commitment appropriations available again in the case of the framework\n research programme, under strictly defined conditions; this will enable\n decommitted appropriations earmarked for projects which were not implemented\n totally or partially to be re-used for alternative projects of sufficient\n quality.
Offices
The\n inter-institutional European Offices are authorised to act as delegated\n authorising officers for appropriations corresponding to the budget of other\n institutions.
\nThe committee adopted the report by Ingeborg GRÄSSLE (
To simplify procedures, MEPs said that the required effort\n and work to be put into checking should be proportionate to the amounts and\n risks involved. Procurement procedures should in principle be\n interinstitutional. A central standardisation service should be set up, with\n uniform application forms and a database for the notification of\n participants, to provide information and advice to applicants. Provision\n should be made for setting up a speedy review procedure for grants, in\n accordance with the obligations which also apply to the Member States.
Authorising officers should assist applicants for grants\n with the procedure, especially if they are inexperienced. To avoid\n duplication of grants, any applicant must immediately inform the authorising\n officers of any multiple applications and multiple grants for the project.\n Any reductions must be proportionate to the error objected to. If the\n preconditions for a subsidised project change (e.g. if one or more\n co-financers withdraw through no fault of the beneficiary), this should not\n automatically lead to a cut in the EU's financial contribution, which could\n have undesirable effects such as the closure of the project.
Lastly, the committee said that annual programmes for grants\n (with the exception of crisis management aid and\n humanitarian aid operations) should be published as early as possible, i.e.\n by 15 March. All grants awarded in the course of a financial year should be\n published annually, and the Commission should report to Parliament on the\n number of applicants, the number and percentage of successful applicants per\n call for proposals and per subsidising agency, the mean duration of the\n procedure and the mean period until the final assessment and final payment.
\n
The European\n Parliament adopted a resolution drafted by Ingeborg GRÄSSLE (EPP-ED, DE) and made several amendments to the Commission’s proposal. (Please see the\n summary of 06/03/2006.)
In addition,\n Parliament stated that supply and service contract award procedures must be\n streamlined and brought more into line with the needs of tenderers. In this\n connection, attention should be paid in particular to ensuring that the\n principle of proportionality also extends to documentation efforts. Framework\n contracts should be reflected in the Financial Regulation. Competition should\n not be constrained as a result of unnecessarily long contractual ties in\n framework contracts, and small and medium-sized undertakings should not be\n effectively debarred right from the outset, because of their size, from\n contract award procedures. Furthermore:
- The\n exclusion of tenderers should be subject to the principle of proportionality.\n The exclusion period should be limited to no more than 10 years so as to\n prevent disproportionate penalties. Exclusions for more than five years\n should take place only on the basis of an unappealable judgment.
- The\n requirement to provide supporting documents should be confined to what is\n necessary. The documentation effort required should be based, inter alia, on\n the value of the contract concerned. The obligation for grant beneficiaries\n to provide supporting documents and the penalties to which they are subject\n should at all times be proportionate to the risk involved.
- To preserve\n the institutions' reputation for administrative fairness and propriety,\n Community servants involved in grant procedures should always notify their\n superiors accordingly so as to rule out any conflict of interest.
- Tenderers\n who have been passed over should have effective legal safeguards, which the\n Member States are also required to provide. To that end, independent vetting\n bodies should be set up which can verify award procedures quickly, without\n disproportionate effort, and provide effective legal protection.
- Protecting\n the Union's financial interests must not demand too much of contractors. The\n provision of security by contractors should therefore be restricted to instances\n where this is justified and must not go beyond the purpose of providing the\n security.
- To enhance\n information for applicants, a joint service should be set up to deal with\n standardising applications for similar types of funding, providing applicants\n with information, and benchmarking for awarding funding. The joint service\n shall have the task of providing information and advice to applicants. In\n particular, this service shall: lay down joint standards for application\n forms for similar grants and monitor the size and readability of the\n application forms; supply information to potential applicants (in particular\n by means of seminars and the provision of handbooks), and maintain a database\n with the help of which the Commission can notify applicants.
- With regard\n to the liability of the authorising officer to pay compensation, in keeping\n with the principle of proportionality, the level of liability of the\n authorising officer shall be assessed primarily on the basis of the degree of\n misconduct. If the authorising officer acts negligently, the liability shall\n be restricted to a maximum of 12 months salary. If the authorising officer\n acts intentionally or deliberately, he shall be liable for the entire loss\n suffered.
- The duration\n of the framework contract for the provision of services may not exceed 24\n months, although tacit extension for a period of up to 24 months shall be\n admissible. Provision may be made for partial termination, provided that this\n is consistent with the purpose of the contract.
- With regard\n to operating grants, the following, in particular, may be claimed as costs\n eligible for financing: the costs of a bank guarantee or comparable surety to\n be lodged by the beneficiary of the grant; the amounts of turnover tax which\n the beneficiary of the grant cannot claim as a deduction of input tax; the\n costs of an external audit; administrative expenditure and staff and\n equipment costs;
\n depreciation.
- Finally,\n Parliament specified that the award procedure shall be divided into several\n procedural stages, the first of which shall comprise solely an approximate\n evaluation of the permissible applications submitted. If an application has\n already no prospect of success after this stage of the procedure, the\n applicant shall be informed accordingly. Each subsequent stage of the\n procedure must be clearly distinct from the previous one, particularly as\n regards the quantity and substance of the evidence to be submitted by the\n applicant. If evidence is required from an applicant, it may be required only\n once in the course of the procedure. Data which have been obtained shall be\n stored in a database. Efforts shall be made to complete the procedure\n speedily. The authorising officer shall, throughout the procedure, take\n particular care to ensure that the effort required of an applicant for\n purposes of publication, documentation and the provision of other compulsory\n evidence pertaining to a grant is not disproportionate to the value of the\n grant to be awarded.
\nThe Commission\n presents a modified proposal for revising the Financial Regulation,\n incorporating to a large extent the opinions of the other institutions and\n taking account of the concerns expressed by the representatives of civil\n society. This modified proposal should help to build inter-institutional\n consensus by accepting the most important requests of the institution and\n reducing the areas of disagreement, notably between Council and Parliament.\n The amendments proposed by the Commission do not change the basic structure\n of the Commission’s initial proposal and its key elements. They preserve the\n “acquis” of the financial reform, and strike a better balance between the\n protection of the financial interests and the proportionality of\n administrative costs and user-friendly procedures. The\n Commission’s amendments must be adopted by unanimity in the Council after a\n conciliation procedure with the European Parliament. The Commission will then\n decide on the necessary amendments to the Implementing Rules, which further\n specify the provisions of the Financial Regulation.
The main\n changes basically aim to do the following:
Simplification\n of access to EU funds:
- In light of\n the principle of proportionality, which is now clearly mentioned, paperwork\n for Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs), schools, universities, development\n agencies and small municipalities will be reduced. These are the usual\n beneficiaries of small grants and contracts – for them access to EU funding\n will be easier;
- various\n obligations such as the supply of evidence of clean financial health, clean\n criminal or professional records, or guarantees for up-front payments will be\n adjusted so as to be ‘appropriate and proportionate’.
Flexible\n and effective management mechanisms:
- EU institutions and Member States will be able to publish joint\n calls for tender when this is more appropriate;
- it will be\n easier for the European Commission to delegate tasks to the European\n Investment Bank and the European Investment Fund to benefit from their\n expertise;
- for actions\n involving many beneficiaries, such as exchange grants for students, deadlines\n will be shortened by allowing the Commission to simply notify the beneficiary\n of the award without signing a formal agreement;
- in end-of-year\n humanitarian or crisis management situations, the Commission will be able to\n react immediately and commit funds foreseen for the following year;
- similarly,\n legal constraints before the launch of pilot and preparatory actions in the\n field of the Common Foreign and Security Policy will be adjusted to increase\n responsiveness;
- finally, a\n possibility to delegate the management of the funds to duly recognized\n national organisations will be given to third countries receiving EU aid.
Tighter\n controls and transparency: the new proposals include an explicit reference to the principle of\n effective and efficient internal control, to which all EU institutions and\n Member States will adhere.
- levels of\n risk on the legality and regularity of financial transactions and related\n control measures will have to be fixed before launching new policies;
- in addition,\n control resources will be improved as the Commission and Member States will\n cooperate and exchange information on their audits and controls;
- the obligation\n to publish annually the list of all beneficiaries of EU funds will be\n extended to those policies managed by the Commission in partnership with\n Member States (agricultural policy, structural funds, etc.);
- for the\n purpose of better protection of the EU’s financial interests, the\n Commission’s system of identification of beneficiaries of grants and\n contracts with a proven record of professional malpractice or fraud will be\n extended to Member States managing the EU budget. This will ensure consistent\n exclusion from further EU funding for these beneficiaries.
\nThe European\n Parliament adopted a resolution drafted by Ingeborg GRÄSSLE (EPP-ED, DE) and approved the Commission proposal as amended. (Please see the summary of\n 15/03/2006.)
\nIn response to\n an initiative from the European Parliament, the Council reaffirmed the\n importance of finalising the Financial Regulation in good time. The Council\n also restated its intention to do its utmost to carry out the revision of the\n Financial Regulation in accordance with the conciliation procedure.
\nThe European\n Parliament adopted a resolution on the Financial Regulation applicable to the\n general budget of the European Communities.
The Parliament\n notes that the Commission has altered its proposal pursuant to Article 250(2)\n of the EC Treaty and, in particular, that the principle of proportionality,\n the demand for more transparency, the excluded-participants database and the\n Member States\" annual reports have been incorporated, as called for by\n Parliament in its amendments adopted on 15 March 2006.
The MEPs welcome\n the incorporation of the principle of effective and efficient internal\n control, including a tolerable level of risk. They approve the modified\n Commission proposal of 18 May 2006 in so far as it takes account of\n Parliament's amendments, without prejudice, however, to its position of 15\n March 2006 and 6 July 2006, which still applies unreservedly.
\nThe committee adopted the report by Ingeborg GRÄßLE\n (EPP-ED, DE) on the joint guideline adopted by the Council with a view to adopting\n a Council regulation amending the 2002 Financial Regulation applicable to the\n general budget of the European Communities. The committee accepted the\n conclusions of the conciliation meeting with the Council on 21 November 2006\n and declared the conciliation procedure closed.
\n
The European Parliament adopted a resolution drafted by Ingeborg GRASSLE (EPP-ED, DE) accepting the conclusions of the budgetary conciliation meeting with the Council on 21 November 2006 and declaring the budgetary conciliation procedure closed.
\nPURPOSE: to amend Regulation 1605/2002/EC on the Financial\n Regulation applicable to the general budget of the European Communities in\n order to reinforce the transparency of Community funds.
LEGISLATIVE\n ACT: Council Regulation 1995/2006/EC amending Regulation (EC/Euratom)\n 1605/2002/EC on the Financial Regulation applicable to the general budget of\n the European Communities.
CONTENT: The Council, following a successful\n conciliation with the European Parliament, adopted a Regulation amending\n Regulation 1605/2002 (the \"financial regulation\") on the rules\n applicable to managing the EU's general budget.
The main objectives of the revised financial regulation\n are:
- \n to improve efficiency and\n transparency concerning the rules’ operation, in particular as regards clarification\n of their interpretation and application;
- \n simplification of\n procedural and documentation requirements for contracts and grants,\n especially for those of low value, and ensuring that requirements are\n proportionate to the costs and risks involved;
- \n simplification of\n requirements for the prior verification of grants, and for financial and\n legal guarantees, ensuring that requirements, and the administrative burdens\n they place on beneficiaries, are proportionate to the costs and risks\n involved;
- \n clarification and\n streamlining of the rules governing methods of management.
The financial\n regulation is subject to review every three years, or whenever it proves\n necessary to do so.
ENTRY INTO\n FORCE: 19 January 2007. The new rules will apply at\n the latest from 1 May 2007, together with revised detailed rules for\n implementation of the financial regulation.
\nPURPOSE : to amendRegulation 1605/2002/EC on the Financial Regulation applicable to\n the general budget of the European Communities, and present a report on the\n application of the provisions of the new Financial Regulation.
PROPOSED ACT :\n Council Regulation.
CONTENT : the Financial Regulation ('FR')\n was adopted in June 2002.In December 2002 the Commission adopted the\n Implementing Rules ('IR') of the recast FR after extensive consultation of\n the
institutions. Both these regulations, which apply to all\n institutions, entered into force on 1 January 2003. The FR is subject to\n review every three years, or whenever it proves necessary to do so. At the\n time of the adoption of the new FR in 2002, the Commission undertook to make\n a report by 1 January 2006 on the application of the provisions of the new FR\n and, in particular, on the discontinuation of centralised ex ante controls,\n and, if necessary, to submit appropriate proposals to the Council. This\n report is annexed to the document.
The main objective of the Commission’s review are to improve efficiency\n and transparencyin the operation of the rules, simplification of the\n procedural and documentation requirements for grants and contracts, and\n clarification of the rules governing methods of management.
The document describes the methods and criteria used by the\n Commission in its review. It makes it clear that legislative changes should\n be reserved for those problems where there is no alternative. Wherever\n possible, other solutions, such as interpretative notes or administrative\n measures, should be used.
The main amendments proposed are as follows:
Budgetary principles:
- regarding the principle of unity of the budget, the rule\n governing interest generated by pre-financing is simplified. The current rule\n is that pre-financing, and interest generated by it, belongs to the\n Community, and that interest must be recovered, at least annually. The\n existing scope of this rule is limited to grants subject to centralised\n management by the Commission services. This places a disproportionate burden\n on those programmes where in-house administrative resources are required to\n administer recovery orders. It is therefore proposed to allow for the amount\n of interest to be set off against the final payment to the beneficiary. This\n maintains the principles of Community ownership of prefinancing and\n accounting for the interest generated. The limits on the scope of application\n of the general rule should be incorporated in the FR instead of the IR.
- with regard to the principle of annuality, certain changes are\n made: the carry-overof non-differentiated appropriations will\n exceptionally be permitted in the case of expenditure on direct payments to\n farmers. Commitment of expenditure in advance, from 15 December of year n-1,\n will be exceptionally authorised for crisis management aid and humanitarian\n aid as referred to in Art. 110 FR. In addition, restrictions on the maximum\n threshold for advance commitmentsagainst the current\n \"EAGGF/Guarantee\" (from 15 November of year n-1) to cover routine\n management expenditure (charged to the budget of the year n) will be removed.\n Under the new European Agricultural Guarantee Fund, payment requests will be\n concentrated overwhelmingly at the beginning of the budget year n.\n Non-differentiated appropriations for veterinary measures, charged against\n the current \"EAGGF/Guarantee\" will be converted into differentiated\n appropriations, more suited to the multi-annual nature of the expenditure.
- Regarding the principle of universality, two items are added to\n the list of assigned revenue (Art.18):
the possibility for Member States to make ad hoc contributions for\n external relations programmes; and
proceeds from the sale of vehicles, equipment, installations, etc.
- At present, the Commission must be authorised by the budgetary\n authority before accepting any donations. To avoid unnecessary and cumbersome\n procedures, it would be useful to limit the requirement for authorisation to\n donations which involve significant charges.
- In relation to the principle of specification of the budget, the\n rules governing transfers of appropriations are simplified where they have\n proven cumbersome or unclear: this applies to “Notification procedure\"\n in Articles 22 and 23. Also, for reasons of efficiency, the Commission is\n allowed to decide autonomously on transfers from the reserve where no basic\n act exists for the
action concerned when the budget is established but is adopted\n during the year. Rules on transfers of administrative appropriations are adapted\n to the new Activity-Based Budgeting (ABB) structure.
Methods of management (Arts 53-57)
- The limitation of shared management to EAGFF and Structural\n funds is removed, to reflect current practice based on existing regulations\n as well as proposals for future basic acts after 2006.
- For joint management with international organisations, the\n definition and requirements need to be clarified and need to be completed in\n line with operational needs.
- The conditions and criteria for using national public-sector\n bodies (\"national agencies\") are simplified in order to facilitate\n their use, and the scope of the provision is extended to international public\n bodies.
- The specific case of special advisers/heads of mission appointed\n by the Council to manage certain actions in common foreign and security\n policy (CFSP) is included as a special case of indirect centralised\n management.
- The prohibition on delegating budget implementation tasks to private\n bodies is modified, since experience has proved the terms of this prohibition\n to be unnecessarily strict.
- Finally, taking account of the need for a common control\n framework, controls carried out by the Commission on decentralised or\n indirect centralised management, and where appropriate in shared management,\n are reinforced, particularly by adding provisions concerning the Member\n States’ responsibilities under shared management.
Financial Actors
The relationship between the Commission's internal auditor and the\n agencies (FR) is adjusted (Art. 185 FR). The latter will have their own\n internal audit function reporting to their own management boards, whereas the\n Commission's internal auditor reports to the College on the procedures and\n systems of the Commission. As regards the Accounting Officer, his/her\n responsibility for certifying the accounts, on the basis of the financial\n information supplied to him/her by the authorising officers, is clarified.
Recovery of amounts receivable (Arts. 72-73b)
The rules on recovery of amounts receivable should be clarified\n and strengthened.
- Enforced recovery is assisted by ensuring that the Community's\n claims also benefit from the instruments adopted under the Treaty provisions\n on judicial cooperation in civil law matters having cross-border\n implications.
- Recoveries should be treated by the Member States in the same\n way as they treat their own fiscal claims within their jurisdiction and\n should enjoy the same privileges.
- The practical experience of the Commission services shows that,\n unlike state authorities in many national jurisdictions, the Community is not\n subject to a period of limitation under which financial claims extinguish after\n a certain period of time. The introduction of such a period of limitation corresponds\n to the principles of sound financial management and of equal treatment of\n operators. The same period of limitation of five years is already provided\n for fines and periodic penalty payments by the Council Regulation on the\n implementation of the rules on competition.
Public procurement and contracts
One of the main objectives, and achievements, of the FR adopted in\n 2002 was to transpose the EC Public Procurement Directives so that the\n Community institutions would apply the same standards as the Member States.\n Given the adoption of the new EC Public Procurement Directive in 2004, some\n further amendments to the FR are necessary:
- Including the possibility of declaring procurement to be secret.
- Distinguishing between the most serious grounds for exclusion and\n other grounds which involve a lower level of financial risk : the most\n serious grounds for exclusion should be obligatory, while the rest should be\n applied as necessary, on the basis of a risk assessment by the contracting\n authority.
Experience has proved the following amendments to be necessary:
- Possibility of sharing a common database of those candidates or\n tenderers in situations of exclusion;
- Extension of simplified rules to govern the awarding contracts\n to external experts for evaluation and technical assistance (Arts 91, 97 FR).
- Clarification of the obligations of the institutions to suspend\n a procurement procedure or a contract in cases of fraud, etc.
Grants
Simplification of the rules is needed:\n requirements for checks and guarantees need to be better adjusted to the\n financial risks involved.
- The scope of the title on grants is clarified (Art.108 FR) in\n particular as regards financing related to loan activities and shareholdings.
- As for the public procurement, it is necessary to add the principle\n of proportionality.
- The scope of the non-profit rule is clarified and its\n articulation between FR and IR.
- In certain situations, the nature of the action leaves no choice\n in the selection of beneficiaries. This category is therefore added in\n Article 110 FR.
- The same action should not give rise to more than one grant to\n any one beneficiary. However, some basic acts permit Community funding to be\n combined since it is considered useful for example for the structural funds\n to be complemented by interventions from other programmes (e.g. TENs). It is\n also made clear that the same costs can never be financed twice (Art. 111\n FR).
- Where grants are given for running costs, the rule that the\n necessary agreement may not be signed more than four months after the start\n of the beneficiary's financial year has proved unnecessarily rigid. Since\n there are strict rules on retrospective funding, this deadline may safely be\n fixed at six months.
- The use of flat-rate payments is authorised at the level of the\n FR along with the more traditional method of reimbursing pro rata costs\n actually incurred (new Art. 113a).
- Certain restrictions on the eligibility of beneficiaries are\n removed (Art. 114 FR) in order to allow for grants to physical persons and\n certain types of association without legal personality.
- The rules on exclusion from grant procedures include the same\n distinction as that for procurement in relation to the level of seriousness\n (Art. 114 FR).
- The case in which the implementation of an action needs to give\n a financial support to third parties is expressly provided for.
Specific policy sectors in Part Two of the FR
- Title I: agriculture. Some changes have already been referred to\n above under the budgetary priciples section. In addition, the proposal\n provides that provisional commitments can be made later than the normal\n two-month deadline after receipt of the Member States' statements of\n expenditure in cases where a decision on a transfer of appropriations is\n expected. And Art. 153 FR concerning transfers is inaccurate: reference\n should be made only to the notification procedure in Art. 23.
- Title II: structural funds. Terminology is adjusted to refer\n specifically to the structural funds, cohesion fund, fisheries funds and\n rural development fund. Furthermore, in the new basic acts proposed by the\n Commission for structural actions post-2006 the rule on the automatic\n decommitment of appropriations is suspended in cases of force majeureseriously\n disrupting the implementation of the actions. The making available again of\n appropriations is therefore no longer necessary in this case. The Commission,\n however, considers it justified to keep the case of \"manifest\n error\" attributable to itself (Art. 157). This will allow commitment\n appropriations to be found without disrupting the overall programming of\n appropriations for the seven-year period.
- Title III: Research
Exceptionally, it should be possible to make decommitted\n commitment appropriations available again in the case of the framework\n research programme, under strictly defined conditions; this will enable\n decommitted appropriations earmarked for projects which were not implemented\n totally or partially to be re-used for alternative projects of sufficient\n quality.
Offices
The\n inter-institutional European Offices are authorised to act as delegated\n authorising officers for appropriations corresponding to the budget of other\n institutions.
\nThe committee adopted the report by Ingeborg GRÄSSLE (
To simplify procedures, MEPs said that the required effort\n and work to be put into checking should be proportionate to the amounts and\n risks involved. Procurement procedures should in principle be\n interinstitutional. A central standardisation service should be set up, with\n uniform application forms and a database for the notification of\n participants, to provide information and advice to applicants. Provision\n should be made for setting up a speedy review procedure for grants, in\n accordance with the obligations which also apply to the Member States.
Authorising officers should assist applicants for grants\n with the procedure, especially if they are inexperienced. To avoid\n duplication of grants, any applicant must immediately inform the authorising\n officers of any multiple applications and multiple grants for the project.\n Any reductions must be proportionate to the error objected to. If the\n preconditions for a subsidised project change (e.g. if one or more\n co-financers withdraw through no fault of the beneficiary), this should not\n automatically lead to a cut in the EU's financial contribution, which could\n have undesirable effects such as the closure of the project.
Lastly, the committee said that annual programmes for grants\n (with the exception of crisis management aid and\n humanitarian aid operations) should be published as early as possible, i.e.\n by 15 March. All grants awarded in the course of a financial year should be\n published annually, and the Commission should report to Parliament on the\n number of applicants, the number and percentage of successful applicants per\n call for proposals and per subsidising agency, the mean duration of the\n procedure and the mean period until the final assessment and final payment.
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The European\n Parliament adopted a resolution drafted by Ingeborg GRÄSSLE (EPP-ED, DE) and made several amendments to the Commission’s proposal. (Please see the\n summary of 06/03/2006.)
In addition,\n Parliament stated that supply and service contract award procedures must be\n streamlined and brought more into line with the needs of tenderers. In this\n connection, attention should be paid in particular to ensuring that the\n principle of proportionality also extends to documentation efforts. Framework\n contracts should be reflected in the Financial Regulation. Competition should\n not be constrained as a result of unnecessarily long contractual ties in\n framework contracts, and small and medium-sized undertakings should not be\n effectively debarred right from the outset, because of their size, from\n contract award procedures. Furthermore:
- The\n exclusion of tenderers should be subject to the principle of proportionality.\n The exclusion period should be limited to no more than 10 years so as to\n prevent disproportionate penalties. Exclusions for more than five years\n should take place only on the basis of an unappealable judgment.
- The\n requirement to provide supporting documents should be confined to what is\n necessary. The documentation effort required should be based, inter alia, on\n the value of the contract concerned. The obligation for grant beneficiaries\n to provide supporting documents and the penalties to which they are subject\n should at all times be proportionate to the risk involved.
- To preserve\n the institutions' reputation for administrative fairness and propriety,\n Community servants involved in grant procedures should always notify their\n superiors accordingly so as to rule out any conflict of interest.
- Tenderers\n who have been passed over should have effective legal safeguards, which the\n Member States are also required to provide. To that end, independent vetting\n bodies should be set up which can verify award procedures quickly, without\n disproportionate effort, and provide effective legal protection.
- Protecting\n the Union's financial interests must not demand too much of contractors. The\n provision of security by contractors should therefore be restricted to instances\n where this is justified and must not go beyond the purpose of providing the\n security.
- To enhance\n information for applicants, a joint service should be set up to deal with\n standardising applications for similar types of funding, providing applicants\n with information, and benchmarking for awarding funding. The joint service\n shall have the task of providing information and advice to applicants. In\n particular, this service shall: lay down joint standards for application\n forms for similar grants and monitor the size and readability of the\n application forms; supply information to potential applicants (in particular\n by means of seminars and the provision of handbooks), and maintain a database\n with the help of which the Commission can notify applicants.
- With regard\n to the liability of the authorising officer to pay compensation, in keeping\n with the principle of proportionality, the level of liability of the\n authorising officer shall be assessed primarily on the basis of the degree of\n misconduct. If the authorising officer acts negligently, the liability shall\n be restricted to a maximum of 12 months salary. If the authorising officer\n acts intentionally or deliberately, he shall be liable for the entire loss\n suffered.
- The duration\n of the framework contract for the provision of services may not exceed 24\n months, although tacit extension for a period of up to 24 months shall be\n admissible. Provision may be made for partial termination, provided that this\n is consistent with the purpose of the contract.
- With regard\n to operating grants, the following, in particular, may be claimed as costs\n eligible for financing: the costs of a bank guarantee or comparable surety to\n be lodged by the beneficiary of the grant; the amounts of turnover tax which\n the beneficiary of the grant cannot claim as a deduction of input tax; the\n costs of an external audit; administrative expenditure and staff and\n equipment costs;
\n depreciation.
- Finally,\n Parliament specified that the award procedure shall be divided into several\n procedural stages, the first of which shall comprise solely an approximate\n evaluation of the permissible applications submitted. If an application has\n already no prospect of success after this stage of the procedure, the\n applicant shall be informed accordingly. Each subsequent stage of the\n procedure must be clearly distinct from the previous one, particularly as\n regards the quantity and substance of the evidence to be submitted by the\n applicant. If evidence is required from an applicant, it may be required only\n once in the course of the procedure. Data which have been obtained shall be\n stored in a database. Efforts shall be made to complete the procedure\n speedily. The authorising officer shall, throughout the procedure, take\n particular care to ensure that the effort required of an applicant for\n purposes of publication, documentation and the provision of other compulsory\n evidence pertaining to a grant is not disproportionate to the value of the\n grant to be awarded.
\nThe Commission\n presents a modified proposal for revising the Financial Regulation,\n incorporating to a large extent the opinions of the other institutions and\n taking account of the concerns expressed by the representatives of civil\n society. This modified proposal should help to build inter-institutional\n consensus by accepting the most important requests of the institution and\n reducing the areas of disagreement, notably between Council and Parliament.\n The amendments proposed by the Commission do not change the basic structure\n of the Commission’s initial proposal and its key elements. They preserve the\n “acquis” of the financial reform, and strike a better balance between the\n protection of the financial interests and the proportionality of\n administrative costs and user-friendly procedures. The\n Commission’s amendments must be adopted by unanimity in the Council after a\n conciliation procedure with the European Parliament. The Commission will then\n decide on the necessary amendments to the Implementing Rules, which further\n specify the provisions of the Financial Regulation.
The main\n changes basically aim to do the following:
Simplification\n of access to EU funds:
- In light of\n the principle of proportionality, which is now clearly mentioned, paperwork\n for Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs), schools, universities, development\n agencies and small municipalities will be reduced. These are the usual\n beneficiaries of small grants and contracts – for them access to EU funding\n will be easier;
- various\n obligations such as the supply of evidence of clean financial health, clean\n criminal or professional records, or guarantees for up-front payments will be\n adjusted so as to be ‘appropriate and proportionate’.
Flexible\n and effective management mechanisms:
- EU institutions and Member States will be able to publish joint\n calls for tender when this is more appropriate;
- it will be\n easier for the European Commission to delegate tasks to the European\n Investment Bank and the European Investment Fund to benefit from their\n expertise;
- for actions\n involving many beneficiaries, such as exchange grants for students, deadlines\n will be shortened by allowing the Commission to simply notify the beneficiary\n of the award without signing a formal agreement;
- in end-of-year\n humanitarian or crisis management situations, the Commission will be able to\n react immediately and commit funds foreseen for the following year;
- similarly,\n legal constraints before the launch of pilot and preparatory actions in the\n field of the Common Foreign and Security Policy will be adjusted to increase\n responsiveness;
- finally, a\n possibility to delegate the management of the funds to duly recognized\n national organisations will be given to third countries receiving EU aid.
Tighter\n controls and transparency: the new proposals include an explicit reference to the principle of\n effective and efficient internal control, to which all EU institutions and\n Member States will adhere.
- levels of\n risk on the legality and regularity of financial transactions and related\n control measures will have to be fixed before launching new policies;
- in addition,\n control resources will be improved as the Commission and Member States will\n cooperate and exchange information on their audits and controls;
- the obligation\n to publish annually the list of all beneficiaries of EU funds will be\n extended to those policies managed by the Commission in partnership with\n Member States (agricultural policy, structural funds, etc.);
- for the\n purpose of better protection of the EU’s financial interests, the\n Commission’s system of identification of beneficiaries of grants and\n contracts with a proven record of professional malpractice or fraud will be\n extended to Member States managing the EU budget. This will ensure consistent\n exclusion from further EU funding for these beneficiaries.
\nThe European\n Parliament adopted a resolution drafted by Ingeborg GRÄSSLE (EPP-ED, DE) and approved the Commission proposal as amended. (Please see the summary of\n 15/03/2006.)
\nIn response to\n an initiative from the European Parliament, the Council reaffirmed the\n importance of finalising the Financial Regulation in good time. The Council\n also restated its intention to do its utmost to carry out the revision of the\n Financial Regulation in accordance with the conciliation procedure.
\nThe European\n Parliament adopted a resolution on the Financial Regulation applicable to the\n general budget of the European Communities.
The Parliament\n notes that the Commission has altered its proposal pursuant to Article 250(2)\n of the EC Treaty and, in particular, that the principle of proportionality,\n the demand for more transparency, the excluded-participants database and the\n Member States\" annual reports have been incorporated, as called for by\n Parliament in its amendments adopted on 15 March 2006.
The MEPs welcome\n the incorporation of the principle of effective and efficient internal\n control, including a tolerable level of risk. They approve the modified\n Commission proposal of 18 May 2006 in so far as it takes account of\n Parliament's amendments, without prejudice, however, to its position of 15\n March 2006 and 6 July 2006, which still applies unreservedly.
\nThe committee adopted the report by Ingeborg GRÄßLE\n (EPP-ED, DE) on the joint guideline adopted by the Council with a view to adopting\n a Council regulation amending the 2002 Financial Regulation applicable to the\n general budget of the European Communities. The committee accepted the\n conclusions of the conciliation meeting with the Council on 21 November 2006\n and declared the conciliation procedure closed.
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The European Parliament adopted a resolution drafted by Ingeborg GRASSLE (EPP-ED, DE) accepting the conclusions of the budgetary conciliation meeting with the Council on 21 November 2006 and declaring the budgetary conciliation procedure closed.
\nPURPOSE: to amend Regulation 1605/2002/EC on the Financial\n Regulation applicable to the general budget of the European Communities in\n order to reinforce the transparency of Community funds.
LEGISLATIVE\n ACT: Council Regulation 1995/2006/EC amending Regulation (EC/Euratom)\n 1605/2002/EC on the Financial Regulation applicable to the general budget of\n the European Communities.
CONTENT: The Council, following a successful\n conciliation with the European Parliament, adopted a Regulation amending\n Regulation 1605/2002 (the \"financial regulation\") on the rules\n applicable to managing the EU's general budget.
The main objectives of the revised financial regulation\n are:
- \n to improve efficiency and\n transparency concerning the rules’ operation, in particular as regards clarification\n of their interpretation and application;
- \n simplification of\n procedural and documentation requirements for contracts and grants,\n especially for those of low value, and ensuring that requirements are\n proportionate to the costs and risks involved;
- \n simplification of\n requirements for the prior verification of grants, and for financial and\n legal guarantees, ensuring that requirements, and the administrative burdens\n they place on beneficiaries, are proportionate to the costs and risks\n involved;
- \n clarification and\n streamlining of the rules governing methods of management.
The financial\n regulation is subject to review every three years, or whenever it proves\n necessary to do so.
ENTRY INTO\n FORCE: 19 January 2007. The new rules will apply at\n the latest from 1 May 2007, together with revised detailed rules for\n implementation of the financial regulation.
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