Investment Management
Sound stewardship and the achievement of best value through life-cycle management of assets and acquired services,, including investment planning, and the management of projects, programmes, procurement, real property and materiel.
Start with these instruments:
The Directive on Government Contracts, Including Real Property Leases, in the Nunavut Settlement Area ensures that government contracting in the Nunavut Settlement Area will meet the Government of Canada’s obligations under Article 24 of the Nunavut Agreement.
This guide is for managers who need additional resources to achieve organizational goals and are considering procuring those resources as professional services through a contract.
The policy ensures that the Government of Canada has the necessary assets and services in place to support program delivery to Canadians.
Provides advice to managers and functional specialists on identifying, collecting and proactively publishing contract information.
Policy sub-topics:
Investment Management
The Directive on Government Contracts, Including Real Property Leases, in the Nunavut Settlement Area ensures that government contracting in the Nunavut Settlement Area will meet the Government of Canada’s obligations under Article 24 of the Nunavut Agreement.
This guide is for managers who need additional resources to achieve organizational goals and are considering procuring those resources as professional services through a contract.
The policy ensures that the Government of Canada has the necessary assets and services in place to support program delivery to Canadians.
Provides advice to managers and functional specialists on identifying, collecting and proactively publishing contract information.
Materiel management
The directive ensures that materiel is planned, acquired, operated, maintained and divested in a manner that supports the delivery of programs and services to Canadians, while ensuring best value to the Crown.
Procurement
Provides direction to government institutions on efficiently and consistently processing access to information requests.
This standard defines common procurement item classification code which allows for consistent recording, aggregation and reporting of financial information within the departmental finance and materiel management systems (DFMS).
Contracting Policy Notices (CPNs) are official communications issued by the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat’s Office of the Comptroller General. These notices provide updates, interpretation and guidance related to federal procurement, and support government departments and agencies in awareness and compliance with regulations, Treasury Board policy instruments and trade agreements.
This policy requires that the procurement of goods and services actively promote environmental stewardship and should be read in conjunction with the Greening Government Strategy: A Government of Canada Directive.
Assists departments when procuring network equipment, in support of the Internet Protocol Version 6 Adoption Strategy.
This guide is for managers who need additional resources to achieve organizational goals and are considering procuring those resources as professional services through a contract.
The directive ensures that procurement of goods, services and construction obtains the necessary assets and services that support the delivery of programs and services to Canadians, while ensuring best value to the Crown.
The objective of this policy is to increase the potential for Commercial Exploitation of Intellectual Property developed by a Contractor in the course of a Crown Procurement Contract.
Project management
The directive ensures that government projects and programmes are effectively planned, implemented, monitored, controlled and closed, so that the expected benefits and results are realized for Canadians.
The mandatory procedures are to be used government-wide for assessing the project management capacity of organizations.
The mandatory procedures are to be used government-wide to assess project complexity and risk.
Real property
The directive ensures that real property is planned, acquired, used, and disposed of in a manner that supports the delivery of programs and services to Canadians, while ensuring best value to the Crown.
The Guide to portfolio management and the real property portfolio strategy supports the development, implementation and monitoring of a real property portfolio strategy, reflecting best practices in real property portfolio management, as set out in subsections 4.1.4 and 4.2.5 of the Treasury Board Directive on the Management of Real Property.