The following terms and conditions will apply to grants to be made under
the Youth Justice Fund of the Department of Justice Canada,
which will subsequently be referred to as the "Fund". The
Fund has been established to support the Youth Justice Initiative, "the
Initiative". These terms and conditions are drafted in accordance
with Treasury Board’s Directive on Transfer Payments (October 2008)
Appendix D: Terms and Conditions for Grants and Appendix F: Funding Agreement
Provisions for Grants.
1. Program/Legislative Authorities
The Department of Justice Act provides to the Minister the legislative
authority to manage programs relevant to the administration of justice.
The Department received Cabinet authority to establish the Fund in March
1999 and Treasury Board authority in June 1999. The Fund supports
the Youth Criminal Justice Act.
2. Description, Purpose and Objectives of the Youth Justice
Initiative and Fund
2.1 Description and Purpose
The Youth Justice Initiative is a multi-faceted approach that includes
a legislative framework (Youth Criminal Justice Act), and programming
resources that:
- encourage a fairer and more effective youth justice system;
- respond to emerging youth justice issues; and
- enable greater citizen/community participation in the youth justice
system
through partnerships, encouraging innovations, and developing and sharing
information and knowledge about youth justice. Community and Aboriginal
organizations as well as individuals have been and will continue to be
eligible for funding to help develop community-based programming options
and partnerships that respond more effectively and in a more meaningful
manner to youth in conflict with the law. Funding support is also used
to advance changes in provincial/territorial policies and programs that
are consistent with the intent of federal policy objectives.
2.2 Objectives
Within this context, the objectives of the Youth Justice Fund are
as follows:
- Establish special measures for violent offenders;
- Improve the system’s ability to rehabilitate and reintegrate
young offenders;
- Increase the use of measures, outside the formal court process, that
are often more effective in addressing some types of less serious offending;
- Establish a more targeted approach to the use of custody for young
people; and
- Increase the use of community-based sentences for less serious offending.
2.3 How the Youth Justice Fund will further departmental and government
objectives:
The Youth Justice Fund is linked to departmental policy priorities
and program activities regarding policies, laws and programs. This
departmental criminal justice activity contributes to the departmental
strategic outcome of a fair, relevant and accessible justice system that
reflects Canadian values.
2.4 The Youth Justice Fund is intended to contribute to the
following Performance Measures and Indicators
Performance Indicator |
Performance Measure |
Collaboration by project partners on learnings and
best practices |
Examples of collaboration between project partners; for example,
joint projects between traditional and non-traditional partners;
workshops or conferences on best practices or lessons learned |
Additional or enhanced rehabilitative and reintegration
opportunities developed and implemented by the youth justice system |
Number and scope of additional or enhanced rehabilitative and
reintegration opportunities that have been developed and are being
implemented |
New and effective measures outside the formal court
process developed and implemented by the youth justice system |
Number and scope of new and enhanced alternative approaches to
justice that have been developed implemented in P/Ts |
Funded projects reach targeted groups |
Number and types of groups reached through YJF funded projects |
Additional or enhanced programs aimed at preventing
youth involvement in guns, gangs and drugs are being developed and
used by the youth justice system |
Number and scope of additional or enhanced programs aimed at preventing
youth involvement in guns, gangs and drugs that have been implemented
and are being used |
Development and implementation of innovative and
collaborative approaches to the treatment and rehabilitation of youth
with illicit substance abuse issues involved in the criminal justice
system. |
-
(a) Number of drug treatment options developed and implemented
for youth involved in the youth justice system.
-
(b)Number of activities undertaken to share knowledge
of the piloted drug treatment programs and promising practices with
provinces and territories as well as other interested stakeholders.
|
3. Classes of Eligible Recipients
Any of the following may be eligible for grant funding:
- non-profit community organizations, societies, and associations which have
voluntarily associated themselves for a non-profit purpose;
- Canadian institutions/boards of education;
- bands, First Nations, Tribal Councils, local, regional and national Aboriginal
organizations;
- Provincial, territorial and municipal governments and their agencies and
institutions;
- Private sector organizations as long as such organizations will not make
a profit on the work performed;
- For-profit enterprises, research/evaluation organizations and individuals
are eligible for funding to conduct research and evaluation activities; and,
- Individuals.
Other for-profit activities and federal Crown Corporations are not eligible
for funding under the Fund.
4. Nature and Type of Projects/Activities
Funding may be provided for any of the following:
- projects that address pressures or emerging priorities with respect to
youth in conflict with the law and to respond to them in a manner that is
consistent with the intent of the legislative framework and advances federal
policy objectives;
- projects and activities that help to identify, understand, and provide
innovative responses to youth justice system challenges at key decision points
in the youth justice process;
- projects that enable greater citizen/community participation in the youth
justice system, encourage partnerships among traditional and non-traditional
youth justice partners or encourage collaborative responses to youth justice
needs; and
- public legal education and information (PLEI) activities designed to provide
accurate information to debunk myths or correct misperceptions or share information
about effective approaches in dealing with youth in conflict with the law.
Efforts may pay particular attention to specific youth justice issues such
as gang involved youth, violent offenders, youth with illicit substance abuse
issues, and youth in conflict with the law with unique needs, for example,
Aboriginal youth, youth in care, youth with mental health issues, and youth
with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder.
Activities eligible for funding support may include the following:
- Development, implementation, testing and evaluation of demonstration/pilot
projects that:
- focus on the key stages in the youth justice process, such as extrajudicial
measures, pre-trial detention, sentencing and rehabilitation and reintegration;
- facilitate community involvement and programming at any stage of
the youth justice system; and/or
- expand the range of non-traditional partners involved in the youth
justice system and encourage collaboration between traditional and
non-traditional youth justice partners.
- Provision of seed money to community-based programs recognized by youth
justice stakeholders as having the capacity to provide innovative and valued
programs and services for youth in conflict with the law.
- Training/educational activities for professionals and service providers:
- involved in the delivery of youth justice services on evolving case
law or emerging issues (e.g., gang involved youth, violent offenders,
fetal alcohol spectrum disorder, gender specific issues); and/or
- working outside of the youth justice system, to assist them in working
more effectively with youth in conflict with the law.
- Programs, services and activities designed to:
- reduce the over-representation of Aboriginal youth in the justice
system;
- respond to youth in the youth justice system with mental health issues
including FASD; and/or
- respond to gang involved youth and violent offenders..
- The organization and hosting of meetings to:
- create awareness of youth justice activities in a community, identify
community needs with respect to youth justice services and/or build support
for a community-based youth justice initiative;
- examine how services can be better co-ordinated for youth in conflict
with the law;
- encourage the sharing of information on programs and services, including
best practices and lessons learned; and/or
- develop cross-sectoral solutions that are in keeping with the underlying
principles of the Initiative.
- Public legal education initiatives such as:
- multi-media products (e.g., videos, posters, pamphlets, fact sheets,
websites; including adaptation/translation of existing youth justice materials
to new audiences);
- information sessions or toll-free information lines;
- youth justice curricula, mock trials and other learning tools; and/or
- evaluation activities to determine the effectiveness of such initiatives.
- Evaluation activities to determine whether programs/activities are effective
in dealing with youth in conflict with the law and/or relevant for other
regions or jurisdictions.
- Research activities which contribute to policy development by:
- Synthesizing the results of existing research, contributing to a growing
awareness and recognition of promising practices and models for on-going
or emerging youth justice issues; and/or
- identifying and analyzing gaps in the current body of knowledge relating
to youth justice in Canada and creating new knowledge in areas where gaps
have been identified.
- Other appropriate and innovative responses that advance federal youth justice
policy objectives.
5. Eligible Expenditures
Funds may be used only for expenses directly related to the activities of
the project identified in either the original budgetary submission or a subsequent
budget approved by the Department of Justice.
Eligible expenses include expenditures such as:
- Salaries and wages for permanent or temporary professional, program, management,
clerical, accounting, technical, and administrative staff including grants
to the Unemployment Insurance Commission, the Canada Pension Plan, the Workers'
Compensation Board, the Provincial Pension Plan or other Employee Benefit
Plans;
- Fees for the purchase of technical and specialized services including but
not limited to translation, web/video production, training, audit and evaluation
services;
- Legal fees and disbursements directly related to the project;
- Professional development for staff including registration fees;
- Liability insurance;
- Honoraria for Elders;
- Participation incentives for youth and volunteers to participate in activities
such as programming, workshops, research and evaluation;
- Office and facility rent, insurance, normal utilities such as electricity,
heat, water and telephone, and taxes;
- Supplies and materials, shipping charges, stationery, postage, printing,
and licenses;
- Office equipment and furnishings, minor capital acquisitions - including
computers - (less than $10,000 per item) and equipment rental;
- Program supplies, resource materials, transportation costs, bus tickets,
event entrance fees, and participant refreshments.
- Culturally appropriate expenditures including, but not limited to
community feasts, ceremonial meals, ceremonies, sweat lodge rental, and tobacco
for Elders;
- Travel, mileage, accommodations, meals and incidentals associated with
traveling as it relates to the project activities;
- Advertising expenses related to the availability of youth justice program/project
and project-related employment opportunities;
- Research (as a component of a project or as a stand-alone research project);
and,
- Evaluation (as a component of a project or as a stand-alone evaluation
project).
The following expenses are ineligible:
- costs incurred prior to the start date of the agreement.
- capital costs such as buildings, land, vehicles and most other major capital
costs (more than $10,000 per item).
Administrative fees/costs should be limited to no more than 15% of the total
project cost. Administrative costs are defined as those not directly
related to delivering the project and would include items such as telephone
expenses, office supplies; postage, utilities, accounting services and management’s
time allocated to overseeing the project.
6. Maximum level of all government assistance (Stacking limit)
When reviewing proposals, Departmental officials will verify that grants made
under the Fund will not cover expenses already covered through another funding
program or strategy. When applying for funding, applicants will be required
to indicate what, if any, government funds a project is expected to receive.
Total government (federal/provincial/territorial/municipal) assistance for
projects funded under the Fund could be up to 100 percent of total eligible
costs.
The Fund will ensure that the transfer payment assistance provided respects
these stacking limits and that the federal contribution is based on the total
government assistance received (federal, provincial/territorial, and municipal
assistance for the same purpose and eligible expenses). This includes assistance
such as all grants, contribution and any other assistance including non-monetary/in-kind
grants being considered; all new investments in the applicant business; provisions
for potential losses on loan guarantees and loans; implicit subsidies; forgivable
loans; investment tax credits; and other grant or contribution for which the
applicant may be eligible.
The repayment of any grant exceeding the total government assistance limit will
be calculated on a pro-rated based (based on total government assistance received
towards the same eligible expenses).
7. Methods to Determine the Amount of a Grant
Applications to the Youth Justice Fund shall be reviewed by a committee composed
of representatives of the Youth Justice and Strategic Initiatives & Law
Reform Section of the Department of Justice Canada. Additional expertise
will be sought as required.
In determining the appropriate level of funding to a project, the Department
will be guided by the following principles:
- Fit of project objectives with mandate and policy direction of the Initiative
and the Fund;
- Ratio of youth in conflict with the law versus other youth being served
by the project.
8. Maximum amount of grants
An individual grant will not exceed $100,000 per year, per project.
A Recipient may receive funding for more than one grant in any given year,
so long as the funding is provided for different activities and there is
no duplication of expenses associated with the project.
Total funding (grants and contributions) shall not exceed $1,000,000 per year
for provincial, territorial and municipal government Recipients. All
other Recipients will each be limited to a maximum level of funding (grants
and contributions) in the amount of $500,000 per year.
9. Application and Assessment
Final applications for funding should include:
- name, address, telephone, facsimile number and e-mail address of the applicant's
authorized representative
- identification of need(s) or problem(s) to be addressed, expected impact(s)
of the project/program on the beneficiary(ies), as well as links to governmental
and departmental mandates and to the objectives of the Fund;
- detailed project description including project title, goals and objectives
of the proposed activity/project, identification of the target groups for
the proposed activity/project, identification of the anticipated specific
impacts, identification of the group who will ultimately benefit (beneficiary)
from the project/activity, description of the project team and partners,
and the expected results (service or product);
- time frame, work plan detailing activities to be undertaken to support
the attainment of project objectives and monitoring activities;
- detailed budget of the project including: amount being requested from the
Department, other proposed sources of revenue including in-kind support and
a detailed list of expenditures;
- an indication of any partner support or community involvement (commitment,
endorsement, scope and level of participation, co-operation and volunteer
involvement);
- an indication of how project design is sensitive to diversity and gender
equality issues as well as to the needs of official language minority communities;
- an indication of any provincial/territorial support for the project;
- project evaluation design (if applicable) including who will be responsible
for monitoring and evaluation, the timetable, the reporting arrangements
with applicable partners, methodology and the outcomes and performance indicators;
- disclosure of involvement of any former public servants who are under the Code
of Values and Ethics for the Public Service; and
- any additional material deemed relevant by the Department.
New applicants to the Fund will also be required to provide:
- description of the applicant’s organizational structure including
legal status (except where applicant is an individual);
- background information on organization including its mandate, objectives,
programs, and experience as well as financial statements of the organization
including sources of revenue (except where applicant is an individual);
- indication of any previous financial support received from the Department
including the amount, and purpose of the funded activity.
Departmental officials will not be represented on an advisory board or committee
established by the Recipient in relation to a grant or contribution except
to act as a resource such as in the case of oversight, evaluation and monitoring
activities.
On occasion, the negotiation of a funding agreement may be protracted, leading
to significant delays in the initiation of project activities that potentially
compromise the effective completion of the project. Where this occurs,
the effective date and start date in the agreement will reflect the date that
an agreement in principle was reached between the Department of Justice and
the Recipient on the broad project activities and budget categories; and costs
will be reimbursed as to the effective date.
10. Official Language Minority Communities
The Youth Justice Fund’s objectives are to be implemented within
the broader context of the linguistic duality of Canada by supporting projects
that will serve official language minority communities while being mindful
of gender and diversity issues.
11. Duration of Terms and Conditions
The terms and conditions shall apply from April 1, 2010. Overall evaluations
of the Fund will be performed within every five-year period, and amendments
may be submitted for approval accordingly.
12. Multi-year and Single-year Funding Agreements
Depending on the time frame of an initiative, single year or multi year funding
agreements may be used. The maximum length of time that a grant shall
be approved for the same project shall not exceed 36 months.
13. Performance Monitoring and Reporting
The departmental Project Risk Assessment Tool for Discretionary G’s and
C’s will be used to guide reporting requirements.
The Department will ensure that Recipients of grants clearly indicate whether
they are meeting the project objectives and obtaining expected outcomes. Recipients
will be required to submit detailed reports on various aspects of their projects
so that the Department can assess the viability, impact and utility of specific
projects. Where appropriate, an evaluation component will be incorporated
in the work plans of funded projects and the Department will, as needed, conduct
on-site visits to monitor their activities and progress.
14. Intellectual Property
Intellectual property created by a Recipient under a transfer payment normally
remains with the Recipient. A standard clause will continue to be included
in the grant agreement, which provides the Minister with a royalty-free,
permanent and exclusive license to produce, reproduce or publish, in any
way, the original work or an adaptation, in any language, for use within
the federal public service and for non-commercial distribution. In
the event that shared rights are negotiated with the Recipient, the understanding
will be articulated in the transfer payment agreement.