INTEGRATION
PLAN
FOR
COMMUNITY BASED ORGANIZATIONS (CBO)
Public Private Partnerships for Improving Social Services: Towards
Developing A Framework Program Support Unit
Sindh Devolved Social Services Program
Finance Department
Government of Sindh
March 2004
- Policy Orientation
In order to achieve development objectives, it is clear that all
stakeholders need to be involved. This is necessary not only because
such involvement can assist in better design, greater ownership
and commitment but also add value when it comes to implementation.
With this guiding principle, Governments all over the world now
recognize and appreciate the need to enter into Public Private
Partnerships (PPPs) with stakeholders to leverage their specific
technical, administrative, financial or political powers. In Pakistan
too, there has been a clear shift in conceptualization of the
development activity and the days of considering the Government
as the sole agency responsible for initiating, leading and delivering
development programs and activities, are now slowly accommodating
newer institutional arrangements, wherein different stakeholders
are allowed room to contribute towards the overall effort to improve
services for the public. This pace of accommodation and acceptance
of such new institutional arrangements for service delivery is
still quite slow, but the initial steps towards full-fledged PPPs
have at least been taken. There is therefore a need to develop
a framework that provides for the manner in which the role of
PPPs in improving service delivery can be both enhanced and strengthened.
Community Based Organizations represents a most vital link in
the value chain of devolved governance structure. The backward
integration of this indigenous grass-root level organization with
Taluka Municipal Administration, District Governments and Provincial
Line Departments would result in true deepening of social services.
The Devolution Plan focuses on improvement in education, health
and access to water and sanitation, and thus helps reduce poverty
and gender imbalances. Desirable outcomes would be enhancement
in school enrolment, wider coverage of health services and clean
water and sanitation services. The key success factor in attainment
of foregone objectives is improvement in governance and financing
of social services that should in turn result in increased access
to elementary social services. A common challenge that traverses
through communities is under capacity in finance and governance
that inhibits maximization of benefits through their social services.
Devolution would continue to fall short of its cherished objectives,
if the Government alone was to bear the brunt of managing and
leading all development activity. There is thus a need to engage
community organizations and to give them adequate recognition
and support. Community-based organizations (CBOs) can be made
responsible for routine services, as has been shown in the education
sector. The proximity of beneficiaries offers a major opportunity
to improve transparency, quality, and accountability of services
on a sustainable basis. Increased accountability is predicated
on well initiated and self-managed CBOs, and other ancillary citizen
oversight arrangements. The outcome of recently concluded studies
under Sindh Structural Adjustment Credit favors expansion of social
services through Public Private Partnership (PPP) and the private
sector.
Devolution provides the opportunity to take bold steps toward
community owned social services. The Sindh Local Government Ordinance
supports greater involvement of community-based organizations
(CBOs), non-government organizations (NGOs), and the private sector.
SLGO rather formalizes the role of CCBs by providing for 25% of
development expenditure through them. These have become important
forces in social services expansion, and the transition provides
a unique opportunity to develop partnerships. The proposed approach—flexible
support to local governments to carry out their own agenda based
on certain terms and conditions to ensure accountability and maximize
benefits for the poor—reflects the major thrust that emerged
from the participatory planning process undertaken.
- Issues
Sustainability of services requires an overarching support and
a sharp focus on development of local institutions to enhance
services delivery based on the principles of partnership. SMCs
need to be further institutionalized to operate schools, and expanded
to include secondary schools. VDAs or private sector arrangements
need to be developed to manage water schemes. SMCs and VDAs need
capacity building to develop and implement plans and communities
need to understand their role in supporting the SMC and VDAs in
providing services. The health sector, by the nature of its business,
is more complicated, but also offer opportunities to establish
and strengthen patient associations and health boards, and gradually
make health services more autonomous, self-sufficient, and accountable,
and thus raise standards of health service delivery and mobilize
other sources of financing.
However, the desire to increase the level of involvement of CBOs
is hampered by the absence of adequate number of trained, organized
CBOs at the grass roots levels. Not only is the number of active
CBOs low, a number of them are not registered and most lack the
requisite mechanisms of an organized set up. As a result, there
is a tendency for concentration of work and resources amongst
only a handful of large, mostly urban NGOs. This reality is at
odds with our declared approach for attempting to widen the net
of involvement with CBOs at the local level and poses a strong
challenge to our desired implementation arrangements.
Perception amongst the government on capacity of CBOs, stems partly
from lack of communication and partly because the CBOs are presented
as an alternative to the government rather than as supplementary
mechanisms. The problem is serious enough to warrant investments
in capacity building initiatives aimed at improving the conceptualization
of roles and responsibilities by the PLDs with longer institutional
memory and at increasing understanding of social mobilization
concepts as well as the use of alternative service delivery modes.
Understandably an extended exposure to new participative structure
over a period of time would entail better understanding of respective
roles and responsibilities. Additionally a legal outfit e.g. one
envisaged for SMCs, would sufficiently address their sustainability
issues.
Notwithstanding some initial successes the comprehensive mainstreaming
of communities is still a remote reality. To capture these developments,
a favorable governance and financial environment is necessary,
as well as local, hands-on capacity building. Indeed, given the
political economy of Pakistan, the Government cannot be expected
to operate social services effectively without strong community
support.
- The Role of the Private Sector
Too often, Public Private Partnerships (PPPs) tend to be viewed
as a restricted concept in that they are perceived to be synonymous
with Public-NGO Partnerships. The fact is however, that there
is a clear and considerable role for the private sector as a whole—including
the corporate sector, in improving service delivery. The PPPs
thus need to be viewed from a broader perspective. Indeed, there
are now a number of initiatives, including the UN Global Compact
and the Business for MDGs initiative which recognize the importance
of involving the corporate sector in helping governments achieve
the MDGs and the DSSP is cognizant of these approaches and of
the need to provide a role for corporate sector assistance in
meeting the challenge of improving services at the local level.
The concept of Corporate Social Responsibility appears to be fairly
well recognized amongst Pakistani business community and there
are already several examples of partnerships between Governments,
NGOs and the corporate sector, especially in education and health,
which highlight the many opportunities available for achieving
synergy on common goals.
- Media
The media helps keep the public informed and can shape public
opinion and perspectives. If used judiciously and responsibly,
the media can not only encapsulate and articulate the voice of
the masses and act as a valuable instrument of accountability,
but also provide the means of a constant dialogue between the
public functionaries and the citizenry. In areas of dissemination
of information, communication with clients and voicing concerns
of the common man, soliciting feedback on performance of the local
governments as well as a means of transparency of actions, there
is clearly a role for the media under DSSP. Advocacy is central
strategy in public private partnerships. Lifeblood of such strategy
is embedded in its propagation through entities with a responsible
position in that particular administrative matrix. Experience
has established that such implementation strategies have a better
follow through with visibility of stakeholders rather than an
external support. Opportunities for performing this role would
be provided to the media through various channels, such as stakeholder
dialogue, involvement in preparation and implementation of Program
communication strategy and by encouraging the media to assist
in raising awareness about various critical issues, including
those related to health and education. DSSP would play a pivotal
role in imparting success to the media strategy.
- Objectives of the Plan
- To broadly outline the steps required for developing an
enabling policy framework for PPPs
- To outline the roles and responsibilities envisaged under
the DSSP for stakeholders
- To highlight issues regarding the implementation of PPPs
- Implementation Strategy
The Government will establish simple guidelines, criteria, and
procedures for the use of funds transferred to LGs and CBOs. These
will include an agreement on the scope of activities to be supported,
and procedures, for using funds (such as public announcement of
available funds, annual accounts monitoring, approved annual plan
and budget and possible matching grant). LGs will ensure that
they will adopt the general guidelines and procedures for financial
management prepared under the DSP for use in the social sector.
GOVERNMENT will establish a system for verifying the registration
and bookkeeping capacity of CBOs to determine this eligibility
for transfer of grant-in-aid, and to actively seek to improve
their capacity to make them eligible for support
Distribution of funds to CBOs will be based on yearly verification
of their needs-based, transparent, and accountable use of funds.
For this purpose, CBOs will need to meet certain basic requirements
like having books of account that can be audited, and record of
staff attendance and utilization. Funds allocated to CBOs may
not be used or retained by LGs. Government will use the capacity
building funds under the TA to build the capacity of CBOs, SMCs,
health boards, and VDAs, to qualify them as recipients of GOVERNMENT
financing to improve local social services. Qualifying organizations
will eventually be allowed to operate their own services, including
contracting of staff. Such community organization will also benefit
other sectors and overall improve devolution and governance in
the public sector. To be eligible for funding, these CBOs must
be registered entities and sign a memorandum of understanding
with the LG stipulating the terms and conditions of use of funds.
SMCs will receive funding to improve basic school conditions.
While in principle any eligible SMC can be supported, about two
thirds of primary schools already receive Government funding.
The Program will support expansion of all SMCs of schools up to
grade 12, including kindergarten but not colleges. Support to
SMCs will be based on the number of pupils in school rather than
classrooms, so that shelter-less schools will also be supported.
If the DG so desires, non-governmental schools may also be supported.
SMCs will be allowed to hire teachers on contract basis, and assistant
teachers for home schools and kindergarten. SMCs will be required
to monitor the attendance of teachers and pupils. Eligible health
boards, patients associations, or comparable CBOs will receive
funding for specific health facilities to improve operation and
maintenance, including procurement of equipment and supplies.
To be eligible, health boards must be registered, use participatory
planning processes, have at least two female members, and maintain
proper financial records. HBs will be allowed to retain user fees
and use the earnings for the facility. There should be clear advertisement
of the fee structure and easy waiver arrangements. Examples of
these arrangements are in place in Khairpur district, which serves
as a model. VDAs and comparable CBOs will receive funding from
TMAs to improve small water and sanitation schemes.
- Next Steps
In order to implement this vision of Public-Private Partnerships
(PPP) in Sindh helping local Governments to improve the coverage
and quality of social services for the poor, a number of actions
need to be taken, which have been summarized below. These actions
will serve as the basis for the PPPs take-off and provide the
minimum levels of effort and commitment that is required to allow
PPPs to get a foothold and subsequently to flourish at the local
Government level.
- Developing Policy Framework
Although there is a clear focus of the Government on PPPs as enunciated
in the SLGO as well as evidenced from its support to Sindh Education
Foundation and SMCs in education and to VDAs in the water sector,
and Farmers Organizations under Sindh Water Management Ordinance
(SWMO-2002). However, there are some gaps such as in Health, where
the concept and role of PPPs is either absent or unclear. There
is thus a need to provide an umbrella policy framework for PPPs,
where there is a need to develop the mechanisms for establishing
CBOs, outline their structures, compositions, roles and responsibilities
and to empower them along the lines of the SMCs. In addition,
there is a need to develop a framework through which the SMCs,
VDAs and Health Boards, can eventually become self-sustaining
through collection and retention of user fees. This would impact
the current modes of revenue collection at the service facility
level and will involve further financial decentralization to enable
such facility-specific collection and use of funds.
Actions:
- Develop Health Board Policy
- Develop model of financial sustainability at facility level
Responsibility: PLDs, PSU
- Supporting Institutional roles
Under the SLGO, the concept of CCBs was introduced, envisaging
community involvement in development activity at the LG level.
However, the CCBs have yet to take root in Sindh due to a number
of reasons, including the lack of political buy-in, the slow community
mobilization and the inability of communities to raise counterpart
funds. However, there is a need to support the institutional role
envisaged under the SLGO for community involvement through this
mechanism by closely monitoring and analyzing the reasons for
CCB inactivism and to work with the relevant LGs and in particular
with the Community Development Departments in each District to
mobilize communities. Similarly, the current role of the SMCs
needs to be supported through expanding the scope of their financing
and the work of the SEF as regards PPPs through specific programs
such as Adopt a School, needs to be viewed as a model for replication
not only within the education sector, but for the Health sector
as well.
At the same time, it is important to track the financial support
offered to such new institutional arrangements. The support for
SMCs, CCBs, VDAs and for CBOs under DSSP would therefore need
to be closely monitored to ensure that the financial support is
as per plan.
Actions:
- Reinforce role of SMCs in congruity with the SMC Act; as
and when it is enforced
- Develop working paper for establishing Health Boards through
articulation of the views of the community and other stakeholders
- Track financing of CBOs and PPPs through periodic review
of funding
Responsibility: HD, ED, DGs, PSU
- Initiate Capacity Building
In order to address the twin challenges of improving the perception
of CBOs and to mobilize communities at the local level, there
is a need for substantial investment in institutional capacity
building. Furthermore, the objective of widening the net of CBOs
for engagement at the local level means providing assistance and
capacity building for small and frequently unorganized CBOs and
grass roots organizations to reach a stage where they can register
as legal entities and to thus become eligible for financing under
DSSP. A formidable support to such initiative would come from
the existing institutes.
At the same time, there is a need to work closely with the Nazims
and Councilors to focus on ways in which the CBOs and the PPP
framework can provide complementarities to their functions and
supplement their efforts to provide better services to the public.
In this respect, there is a need to organize various policy dialogues
involving stakeholder discussions on the roles and responsibilities
of each institution and how these can be organized in a way that
support, rather than conflict with each other.
Actions:
- Organize Training sessions aimed at improving understanding
amongst stakeholders of the work done by each player
- Organize policy dialogues on PPPs as a means of poverty
alleviation and improving social services
- Prepare Guidelines and Toolkits for stakeholders on PPP
establishment, management and accountability
Responsibility: PSU, DGs, TMAs, PLDs
- Develop Communication Tools
Some of the difficulties being faced in the implementation of
PPPs emanate from the communication void that exists amongst stakeholders.
There is thus a need to establish and use various regular, formal
and informal modes and tools of communication to ensure transparency
and knowledge management as part of an overall, broader development
communication system. Development of instruments such as websites,
programming content for electronic media, meetings, workshops,
seminars, conferences, newsletters in regional and national languages
etc. are envisaged as part of this effort to improve stakeholder
communication. The role of the media can be quite crucial in this
respect, as agents of dissemination and instruments of public
accountability and would require working closely with them to
improve public understanding of issues and to generate public
debate on social service issues.
Actions:
- Outline a Development Communication System for Sindh
- Develop specific instruments such as websites, content, organize
meetings etc.
- Outline a plan for media engagement
Responsibilities: PSU, P&D, DGs, ID, ITD
|
|