Public Services and Procurement Canada
Corporate information: 2023 to 2024 Departmental Plan

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Organizational profile

Appropriate minister: Helena Jaczek, PC, MP

Institutional head: Paul Thompson

Ministerial portfolio: Public Services and Procurement Canada

Enabling instrument: The Department of Public Works and Government Services Act establishes the Department of Public Services and Procurement Canada

Year of incorporation or commencement: 1841

Other: The Minister of Public Services and Procurement has responsibilities under 19 other acts. The most important ones are:

Raison d’être, mandate and role: Who we are and what we do

Information on Public Services and Procurement Canada’s (PSPC) Raison d’être, mandate and role: Who we are and what we do is available on Public Services and Procurement Canada’s website.

Information on the PSPC’s organizational mandate letter commitments is available on the Minister’s mandate letter.

Operating context

Information on the operating context is available on PSPC’s website.

Reporting framework

Public Services and Procurement Canada’s Departmental Results Framework and Program inventory of record for 2023 to 2024 are as follows.

Core responsibilities

Purchase of goods and services

PSPC purchases goods and services on behalf of the Government of Canada.

Payments and accounting

PSPC collects revenues and issues payments, maintains the financial accounts of Canada, issues financial reports, and administers payroll and pension services for the Government of Canada.

Property and infrastructure

PSPC provides federal employees and parliamentarians with workspace; builds, maintains and manages federal properties and other public works such as bridges and dams; and provides associated services to federal organizations.

Government-wide support

PSPC provides administrative services and tools to federal organizations that help them deliver programs and services to Canadians.

Procurement Ombudsman

The Office of the Procurement Ombudsman operates at arm’s-length from federal organizations. It is legislated to review the procurement practices of federal organizations, review complaints from Canadian suppliers, and provide dispute resolution services.

Core responsibility 1: Purchase of goods and services

Purchase of goods and services:

1.1 federal organizations have the products and services they need, when they need them, at the best value:

1.2 government purchasing is easy to access, fair and transparent for suppliers:

1.3 government purchasing supports Canada’s economic, environmental, and social policy goals:

Core responsibility 2: Payments and accounting

Payments and accounting:

2.1 Canadians, businesses and organizations receive payments on time and revenues are collected for government services in an efficient manner:

2.2 members of federal pension plans receive timely and accurate pension payments, benefits and support services to which they are entitled:

2.3 in collaboration with government departments, employees receive timely and accurate pay and benefits:

2.4 Canadians have timely access to reliable information on Canada’s finances:

Core responsibility 3: Property and infrastructure

Property and infrastructure:

3.1 federal real property and associated services meet the needs of federal government clients, partners and/or parliamentarians, and ensure best value for Canadians:

3.2 federal infrastructure spending supports Canada’s social, economic and environmental priorities:

Core responsibility 4: Government-wide support

Government-wide support:

4.1 federal organizations have access to high quality linguistic services and tools:

4.2 the government does business with ethical suppliers and ensures that sensitive information is handled appropriately:

4.3 federal organizations have the support services and tools they need to deliver their programs to Canadians:

Core responsibility 5: Procurement Ombudsman

Procurement Ombudsman:

5.1 raise awareness of procurement issues and exchange information:

5.2 procurement related issues are addressed through alternative dispute resolution:

5.3 procurement related issues are addressed through the review of supplier complaints and the review of federal organizations’ procurement practices:

Program inventory

  1. Purchase of goods and services:
    • Procurement Program
  2. Payments and accounting:
    • Federal Pay Administration
    • Federal Pension Administration
    • Payments Instead of Property Taxes to Local Governments
    • Payments and Revenue Collection
    • Government-wide Accounting and Reporting
    • Cape Breton Operations: Human Resources Legacy Benefits
  3. Property and infrastructure:
    • Federal Accommodation and Infrastructure
    • Real Property Services
    • Parliament Hill and Surroundings
    • Cape Breton Operations: Portfolio Management
  4. Government-wide support:
    • Linguistic Services
    • Information Services
    • Government-wide Corporate Services
    • Document Imaging Services
    • Asset Disposal
    • Service Management
    • Canadian General Standards Board
    • Security and Oversight Services
  5. Procurement Ombudsman:
    • Procurement Ombudsman

Changes to the approved reporting framework since 2022 to 2023

PSPC made minor amendments to its 2023 to 2024 Departmental Results Framework. Minor amendments constitute changes at the departmental result and indicator level. PSPC’s core responsibilities remain unchanged. Among those amendments, the following are worth noting:

Supporting information on the program inventory

Supporting information on planned expenditures, human resources, and results related to Public Services and Procurement Canada’s program inventory is available on the Government of Canada InfoBase.

Supplementary information tables

The following supplementary information tables are available on Public Services and Procurement Canada’s website:

Federal tax expenditures

Public Services and Procurement Canada’s departmental plan does not include information on tax expenditures.

Tax expenditures are the responsibility of the Minister of Finance. The Department of Finance Canada publishes cost estimates and projections for government‑wide tax expenditures each year in the Report on Federal Tax Expenditures. This report provides detailed information on tax expenditures, including objectives, historical background and references to related federal spending programs, as well as evaluations, research papers and gender-based analysis plus.

Organizational contact information

For more information on PSPC’s programs and services, please communicate with us through our general enquiries webpage.

You can follow PSPC on Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and Instagram.

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