Participative Policy-Making Process (MD0066)
Overview
At-a-Glance
Action Plan: Moldova National Action Plan 2016-2018
Action Plan Cycle: 2016
Status:
Institutions
Lead Institution: Ministry of Justice, the Agency for Intervention and Payments for Agriculture (AIPA)
Support Institution(s): NA
Policy Areas
Democratizing Decision-Making, Public Participation, Regulatory GovernanceIRM Review
IRM Report: Republic of Moldova End-of-Term Report 2016-2018, Republic of Moldova Mid-Term Report 2016-2018
Early Results: Did Not Change
Design i
Verifiable: Yes
Relevant to OGP Values: Yes
Ambition (see definition): Low
Implementation i
Description
Ensuring a participative decision-making process for drafting and promoting draft normative acts and policy documents
4.1. Promoting the e-Legislation system as a new public consultation mechanism in order to involve citizens more actively in the drafting of normative acts
4.2. Implementing a communication mechanism between public institutions and potential beneficiaries of grants at the early stages of the development of annual subsidy regulations Responsible institution: Ministry of Justice, the Agency for Intervention and Payments for Agriculture (AIPA)
Supporting institution(s): None
Start date: 4th quarter 2016 End date: 1st quarter 2018
IRM Midterm Status Summary
4. Participative policy-making process
Commitment Text:
Title: Ensuring a participative decision-making process for drafting and promoting draft normative acts and policy documents
4.1. Promoting the e-Legislation system as a new public consultation mechanism in order to involve citizens more actively in the drafting of normative acts
4.2. Implementing a communication mechanism between public institutions and potential beneficiaries of grants at the early stages of the development of annual subsidy regulations
Responsible institution: Ministry of Justice, the Agency for Intervention and Payments for Agriculture (AIPA)
Supporting institution(s): None
Start date: 4th quarter 2016 End date: 1st quarter 2018
Context and Objectives
In 2012, the Government launched a platform (particip.gov.md) to consult citizens on different legislative documents. The platform hosts public consultations on a variety of topics, and acts as a central location for information on all bills promoted by the central public authorities. However, many civil society stakeholders[Note163: D. Alaiba, CPR NGO, Skype interview, 29 December 2017; T. Savva, Expert-Grup NGO, Interview 21 December 2017.] consider that the utility of the platform is low because the platform is not adequately promoted and information is not sufficiently circulated, meaning citizens are not aware of what bill is being promoted and when. Government agencies and ministries 'post on the platform, they wait for feedback [from citizens], and when no feedback is received they complain about low participation,' says the interviewee from the Independent Press Association.[Note164: P. Macovei, API, media NGO, telephone interview, 10 January 2018.]
Additionally, there is no genuine offline consultation mechanism. According to interviewed CSO stakeholders,[Note165: A.Radu, journalist ZdG, personal communication, 20 December 2017; T. Savva, Expert-Grup NGO, personal communication, 21 December 2017.] ministries invite pro-government CSOs to public consultations but rarely invite stakeholders outside of the usual suspects. Although public consultations are always announced by the Ministry of Justice (or by any other relevant ministry), civil society and mass media[Note166: A.Radu, journalist ZdG, personal communication, 20 December 2017; D. Alaiba, personal communication, 29 December 2017; T. Savva, 21 December 2017.] believe that announcements are often short notice on purpose, limiting the participation of external stakeholders.
In 2016, the Ministry of Justice launched the pilot E-legislation system. Currently this system is only accessible to employees of central public authorities involved in the legislative process, and is not available for public comment.[Note167: The e-legislation system, http://elex.justice.gov.md/] This first commitment activity aims to improve public participation in the drafting and policy-making process by promoting the new e-legislation system.
During the development of annual subsidy regulations, the Ministry of Agriculture and the Agency for Intervention and Payments in Agriculture (AIPA) organizes consultations with farmer associations. Additionally, local/territorial associations organize discussions and consultations with the farmers and all proposed recommendations are collected and submitted to the governmental authorities. The second commitment activity aims to implement a communication mechanism between public institutions and potential beneficiaries of grants that can be utilized during this process. Both commitment activities meet the OGP value of civic participation, by providing new opportunities for the public to influence decision making.
Although the action plan unambiguously mentions the promotion of the e-legislation system as its objective, it is understood that this commitment is linked to the 2011–2016 Justice Sector Reform Strategy,[Note168: The law, http://lex.justice.md/md/341748/] which provides a specific framework for the system’s aims. As written, the goal is to 1) make all stages of the legislative procedure visible to the stakeholder and to the public; 2) make the system more effective; 3) create an efficient collaboration mechanism between stakeholders; and 4) launch a public consultation mechanism to promote active participation in the legislative process. While the commitment text does not state how the e-legislation system will interact with particip.gov.md, if at all, its activities are verifiable. Since the communication mechanism concerning annual subsidy regulations is also objectively verifiable, the overall specificity of this commitment is medium.
Overall, the potential impact for this commitment is minor. Some interviewed stakeholders[Note169: A.Radu, journalist ZdG, personal communication, 20 December 2017; T. Savva, Expert-Grup NGO, personal communication, 21 December 2017;D. Alaiba, CPR NGO, personal communication, 29 December 2017; T. Savva, Expert-Grup NGO, 21 December 2017, E. Chirilenco, European Business Association, personal communication, 22 December 2017.] stated that such a consultation mechanism would represent a major change to the current system. However, as written, it is not clear how the e-legislation system will significantly improve upon particip.gov.md without addressing the low awareness and engagement of citizens and the fact that ministries are not required to provide feedback on citizens’ input. Similarly, with regards to the second commitment activity, developing a consultation mechanism for potential beneficiaries of grants only represents an incremental change compared to AIPA’s pre-existing practice of organizing consultations with farmer associations.
Completion
Overall, the completion of this commitment is limited. The Ministry of Justice (MoJ) launched a public tender on 13 January 2017 in order to add a public commenting function to the e-legislation system.[Note170: T. Bucur, Ministry of Justice, Center for Legal Information, personal communication, 15 January 2018.] However, no bids were submitted, thereby canceling the public procurement process. MoJ plans to re-start the tender in 2018. The IRM researcher interviewed civil society and mass media stakeholders who said they were not aware of the e-legislation system or plans to make it public.
In 2017, the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Industry did not begin to develop a communication mechanism for public institutions and potential beneficiaries of grants. However, AIPA, the other implementing agency, launched an online chat in September 2017, which is monitored by the director of the Agency.[Note171: M. Podubnyi, Informational Technologies Department, AIPA, personal communication, 22 December 2017.] Any beneficiary can use the chat at any time; if the director is offline, messages are saved and sent to the inbox. As such, the completion for this commitment activity is also limited.
Next Steps
The IRM researcher recommends this commitment be retained in future action plans until it is fully completed. However, the formulation of the actions should be more specific and include measurable indicators. The government should include the participation of citizens and civil society in the development of the e-legislation public component concept. Once the public component has been developed, the government should organize a broad-reaching dissemination to ensure different stakeholders are aware of, and use, the e-legislation platform.
IRM End of Term Status Summary
4. Participative policy-making process
Commitment Text:
Title: Ensuring a participative decision-making process for drafting and promoting draft normative acts and policy documents
4.1. Promoting the e-Legislation system as a new public consultation mechanism in order to involve citizens more actively in the drafting of normative acts
4.2. Implementing a communication mechanism between public institutions and potential beneficiaries of grants at the early stages of the development of annual subsidy regulations
Responsible Institution: Ministry of Justice, the Agency for Intervention and Payments for Agriculture (AIPA)
Supporting Institution(s): None
Start Date: 4th quarter 2016
End Date: 1st quarter 2018
Commitment Aim:
The commitment attempted to ensure the participation of the public in decisions on the drafting and promotion of bills and policy documents. Since 2012 a central platform (particip.gov.md) to consult citizens on bills put forward by public authorities’ functions in Moldova. The utility of the platform, however, is questioned by some civil society stakeholders because of the poor promotion of it, resulting in citizens being less aware of the bills put forward and the timeline for consultations. Civil society and media consider that offline consultations are often announced at short notice on purpose so that only the usual suspects (meaning there is no diversification of participants) are able to participate.
This commitment planned to develop a public module for the e-legislation system the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) launched for public authorities in 2016. Additionally, the Agency for Intervention and Payments for Agriculture (AIPA) planned to implement a communication mechanism between public institutions and potential beneficiaries of subsidies in the agricultural sector regarding the annual subventions regulations drafting.
Status
Midterm: Limited
During the first year of implementation, this commitment had limited completion. The MoJ did not receive any bids for the development of the public commenting function to the e-legislation system, and the public procurement process was canceled. The ministry planned to launch another public tender in 2018. Moreover, civil society and media stakeholders interviewed for the midterm report were not aware of the e-legislation system and there was no public information available on the system or the plan to develop the public commentary module. The AIPA, subordinated to the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Industry, [144] was set to develop a communication mechanism to connect public institutions and potential beneficiaries of subsidies in the agricultural sector during the drafting of annual subsidies regulations. There was no clear definition on what the mechanism should include, and due to the ambiguity of formulation it was hard to assess completion. In 2017, the agency launched an online chat, which functions as a communication channel. However, it is not restricted to the annual subsidies regulations but to any area the Agency is responsible for.
End of term: Limited
The commitment implementation status did not change at the end of term. Though a report from the MoJ [145] states that the e-legislation system is currently being tested, this is a continuation of the process started back in 2017, as detailed in the midterm report, and refers only to the intra-institutional testing [146] and not to the public commentary module. After the failed public tender process, the ministry organized a new public procurement exercise in 2018 and again received no bids. [147] Thus, there has been no progress in developing the public commenting module of the e-legislation system. A new public tender is planned to take place in 2019. [148]
It should be noted that a new law on legal acts [149] entered into force on 22 July 2018, and in Article 22, the e-Legislation system is to be used to address transparency of the law-making process by making public the information related to the different stages of drafting legislation. Article 79 of the same law states that within six months of the law’s entry into force, the government will approve the stages of connecting public authorities to e-Legislation. There are, however, no references or provisions in the law concerning the public commentary function of this system.
On the other end, AIPA has continued the use of the online chat function launched in 2017, which aims to offer beneficiaries of AIPA services (including beneficiaries of agricultural subsidies) the opportunity to contact the agency directly. Between September – November 2018 [150] there were at least 250 questions answered through this channel on topics related to the services that the agency offers, though this was unable to be verified as the channel is an internal tool. Additionally, though outside the scope of the commitment, in 2018, AIPA launched a hotline that was initially intended for corruption-related complaints and notifications. However, its scope was broadened, and agricultural producers/farmers can now inquire about any relevant information. [151] There are no statistics or other public information regarding the outcomes of this activity.
Did It Open Government?
Access to Information: Did Not Change
Civic Participation: Did Not Change
A transparent system which would allow the public to follow and track the legal acts drafting process in real time and provide commentary to drafts at different stages, represents a good opportunity for strengthening civic participation. At the same time, since the public module of the E-legislation system development was not initiated, the limited completion of this commitment resulted in no changes related to civic participation.
As written, the communication mechanism was intended to create a civic participation opportunity for farmers and agricultural producers during the drafting of the annual regulations on subsidies. However, it was not clear what this mechanism should include. The action taken includes the creation of a new channel of communication and information through an online chat but does not necessarily provide the opportunity to input on the subsidies’ annual regulations but represents a communication channel anyone could use for any type of inquiry. In this sense, civic participation did not change.
Carried Forward?
The commitment was not taken into the next action plan. However, the government has included a commitment in the new action plan focused on strengthening the platforms and mechanisms of collaboration with civil society. The use of the e-Legislation system is now prescribed by law (law no. 100—see reference below) and thus will have to be implemented. The way in which the implementation of the public module will take place is still not clear. At the same time, civil society considers that this would represent a major change towards creating more civic participation opportunities. The IRM researcher recommends that the government identifies a solution for the development of the public module of E-legislation, which would make all stages of the legislative procedure available to the public. This system would also launch a public consultation mechanism to promote active participation in the legislative process. However, the government should clarify better how this mechanism would be different from the current platform particip.gov.md, which is currently used for public consultations during the drafting of laws.