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2016–2019 Agricultural Research Institute of Ontario business plan
Executive summary
The agri-food and agri-products industry contributes more than $33 billion (thirty three billion dollars) to the Ontario economy and employs approximately 700,000 people. Research and innovation are key contributors to the strength of Ontario's agri-food industry. Ontario is a top innovator in agri-food, developing value-added products and providing industry solutions that contribute to a competitive and sustainable agri-food sector.
The Ontario Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs (OMAFRA) is the provincial lead overseeing Ontario's thriving agri-food industry. OMAFRA works to advance the government's efforts to promote a more competitive and productive agri-food and agri-products sector, and economic growth and opportunities for rural Ontario. OMAFRA supports rural and urban communities and a high quality of life for all Ontarians. Keys to achieving success include strong rural communities, thriving agriculture and food sectors, and, safe food, healthy animals and a healthy environment.
The Agricultural Research Institute of Ontario (ARIO) is classified as a Board-Governed provincial agency reporting to the Minister of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs. ARIO is focused on ensuring Ontario maintains its competitive advantage in agri-food and agri-products research and innovation and concentrates its efforts in these four ways:
- Providing strategic advice to the Minister on agri-food and agri-products research and innovation;
- Leading the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy initiative to modernize the province's agri-food and agri-products research and innovation physical and virtual infrastructure;
- Promoting the Ontario agri-food and agri-products research and innovation system; and,
- Providing administrative and managerial oversight of open competitive research programs (e.g. New Directions, Food Safety), and the 17 ARIO owned research properties with over 6,500 acres, 300+ buildings with a book value of approximately $83 million (eighty-three million dollars) (including capital projects under construction), and over 40 tenants that include government, not for profits, industry and private.
In addition to "increasing consumption of local food…" and "open for business…", the OMAFRA's current strategic priority that most directly aligns with the ongoing work of ARIO is "increasing the competitiveness and productivity of Ontario's agri-food and agri-product businesses through market focused innovation". For more information on ARIO's on-going work see the attached appendices.
Key ARIO accomplishments for the 2015/16 fiscal year include:
ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy
Vineland Research and Innovations Centre (VRIC) at Vineland:
Construction of a new research greenhouse facility was completed in the fall of 2015. VRIC is planning a grand opening for June 2016.
Livestock Research and Innovation Centre at Elora:
- Construction of the new dairy research facility at Elora which began in the summer of 2013 was completed with a Grand Opening and open house held in May 2015. The barn was commissioned and the dairy herd moved in the Fall 2015 and is now fully operational.
- OMAFRA engaged Infrastructure Ontario on behalf of ARIO to acquire additional land to expand the Elora research station to support current activities and future development. This acquisition is expected to be completed during the first half of 2016.
Other Centres:
- Implementation of the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy recommendations continued:
- Significant upgrades to the Winchester site (eastern Ontario component of a network of integrated field crop sites) including people, equipment and land (tiling) were put in place for the 2015 growing season.
- Planning continues on a new facility for the Guelph Turfgrass Institute and the relocation of research plots with detail design underway. A transfer payment between the University of Guelph and ARIO was signed and initial funds transferred.
- Ongoing discussions with Beef Farmers of Ontario regarding the consolidation of beef research at Elora and New Liskeard continued throughout 2015.
Minor Capital program
- Focus of the 2015-16 programs continued to be the completion of a number of existing large renovation projects. In addition, animal and human safety, regulatory and equipment failure issues were addressed on a case by case basis. Over 70 projects were undertaken during the year including numerous physical infrastructure upgrades at Ridgetown, Huron, Alfred, Winchester and Vineland.
- Ongoing effective administration and managerial oversight of the current research infrastructure portfolio is provided by the Secretariat.
Research Programs
- Continued to support modernization of research program administration through ongoing development of the Research Management System (RMS). Focus continued to be on increasing functionality and capacity of RMS to capture and retrieve more research results data, and to accelerate knowledge translation and transfer, thereby, increasing adaptation and commercialization opportunities.
- Continued effective administration of OMAFRA's open research programs ( New Directions and Food Safety including additional specific calls related to bee pollinator health and climate change) and other research programs (e.g. plant germplasm royalty reinvestment) by Research and Innovation Branch (RIB) staff (ARIO Secretariat). Total annual expenditures of approximately $3 million (three million dollars).
While continuing the work of managing the research infrastructure portfolio and the administration of OMAFRA's open research programs, ARIO recognizes the importance of continuing with implementation of the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy and looks forward to the next phases of development and implementation of the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy in the year ahead.
Mandate and Mission Statement
Background
The Agricultural Research Institute of Ontario (ARIO) was created in 1962 and continues its mandate under the Agricultural Research Institute of Ontario Act. R.S.O. 1990, c. A.13 as amended (ARIO Act) and reports to the Minister of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs (OMAFRA).
ARIO is classified as a Board-Governed provincial agency under the Agencies and Appointments Directive (AAD), with a mandate to, among other things, provide strategic advice to the Minister on agri-food research and related issues and interests, manage and hold funds (ARIO manages open, competitive research funds and other trust funds) and to acquire, maintain and dispose of real property in the manner described in the ARIO Act.
ARIO's strategic priorities in supporting the OMAFRA's current goals and objectives are described in Section D and are summarized under four main categories as: 1) Strategic Advice 2) Leadership - implementation of the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy 3) Promoting Ontario Agri- food and Agri- Products Research & Innovation 4) Managerial Oversight - of the ARIO owned Research Infrastructure.
ARIO Mission Statement
Within this legislative context, ARIO has adopted the following mission statement, in support of OMAFRA's vision for successful and sustainable agri-food and agri-products businesses:
"ARIO, as appointed representative of the agri-food sector, is dedicated to the strategic use of science and innovation to enhance the sustainability and profitability of Ontario's agri-food and rural sectors"
Environmental Scan
Partnering to build a sustainable and thriving agri-food research and innovation system
Governments around the world, including here in Ontario, are faced with a sharply increased focus on public governance, transparency and accountability and value for money when delivering services and programs to citizens and businesses. New partnership models joining industry with governments and academia are key to the long-term success of the agri-food and agri-products industry, and are necessary for sustained economic prosperity and growth.
The ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy is based on principles that include:
I. a shared financial commitment with industry on all research infrastructure capital construction projects
II. an increased level of industry participation in priority setting and overall governance
This increase in industry involvement and commitment can also be seen under Growing Forward 2 (GF2) federal provincial programs (2013-2018), which has resulted in an overall increase in innovation funding and the requirement to embed innovation throughout GF2 funded programs. Industry-led research and innovation, along with industry, academic, business and government collaborations are becoming increasingly important to advancing innovation and commercialization, and this is reflected in GF2
- In December 2012, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC) announced the federal-only Agri-Innovation Program. This program includes the industry-led research and development Agri-Science Cluster and Agri-Science Project initiatives. The Agri-Science Initiatives will mobilize scientific expertise across industry, academia and government.
- An industry-led Agri-Innovation Commercialization Program was announced at the same time. This program provides repayable support to industry in order to reduce the financial risk of developing and adopting later stage agri-based innovations, such as technologies, products, processes and services and commercialization opportunities.
- Under the Research and Innovation Designated Program (Canada-Ontario GF2 Bilateral Agreement), support is being provided to the Agri-Technology Commercialization Centre (ATCC), Innovation Centres (such as VRIC, the Livestock Research and Innovation Corporation and others) and the University of Guelph (UofG) Knowledge Translation and Transfer, Highly Qualified Personnel and commercialization activities through the Catalyst Centre.
- In addition, innovative projects are receiving a higher level of government support through Ontario's GF2 cost-share programs for producers, processors and collaborations and organizations.
Partnership models and infrastructure leading jurisdictions use for research and innovation
A world-wide scan of how other jurisdictions organize and manage agricultural and agri-food research and development infrastructure was completed by KPMG on behalf of ARIO1. This scan concluded that jurisdictions around the world who lead in agricultural research and innovation have these success factors for agri-food and agri-products research and innovation strategic business planning and infrastructure capacity:
- Linking infrastructure plans to vision and strategy
- Use of multiple governance models
- Mission-oriented long-term vision
- Portfolio of projects
- Need for an integrated research and development models, e.g. from producer to processor to consumer; or from basic, to strategic, to applied, to demonstration, to scale-up, to financing and commercialization. Also means that different scientific disciplines are integrated into the overall model as appropriate
- Development of business case and implementation plan
- Involvement of users in programs or projects
- Access to world-wide expertise and facilities
- State of the art equipment and facilities
- Supporting critical mass, e.g. clustering
1. Foot note: KPMG. Development of a Comprehensive Agri-Food R & D Infrastructure Strategy for the Agricultural Research Institute of Ontario: Background Research Paper. March 7, 2008.
Building on foundation of specialized focused capacity to modernize partnerships and infrastructure
The long-term funding agreement and relationship between OMAFRA and the UofG (the Partnership Agreement) is the primary vehicle for delivering OMAFRA's agri-food and agri-products innovation agenda and the supporting the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy put forward by ARIO. The Agreement provides the research and innovation capacity to help attract and retain investment by government and industry for both discovery and applied scientific research. The UofG as the primary user of the ARIO properties has an active role in the new agri-food and agri-products research and innovation centres emerging under the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy and supported through GF2.
Modern partnerships to drive innovation and operating efficiencies
Implementation of the Infrastructure Strategy has been a catalyst for new, industry-influenced governance models that support the strong research and innovation capacity and boost Ontario's economy. The Vineland Research and Innovation Centre (VRIC) at Vineland and more recently, the Livestock Research and Innovation Centre (LRIC) at Elora have demonstrated industry's increased commitment to supporting the agri-food innovation system in partnership with governments and the research community. These two centres and the proposed remaining centres (Bioeconomy, Food and Health, and Field Crop Production) will continue to drive the modernization of relationships between innovation partners - governments, industry and the research community, and lead to necessary operating efficiencies across ARIO and non-ARIO infrastructure.
In conclusion, to continue enabling Ontario's economic growth, Ontario needs to focus its agri-food and agri-products research and innovation, on the development of innovative products, safe food and sustainable and efficient production. To do so effectively, Ontario's agri-food and agri-products sectors must have the appropriate research and innovation infrastructure platforms, with oversight by new governance models that reflect increased industry investment, access, and involvement in partnerships between government, industry and academia.
Overview of Current and Forthcoming Programs and Activities
The Director of Research for ARIO (appointed by the Minister under the authority of the ARIO Act), the appointees of the Director of Research for ARIO and the delegates of the Director of Research for ARIO ( the Secretariat) and the members of ARIO (appointed by the Minister) have been, and continue to be, responsible for these key programs and activities:
Strategic Advice
- Continue to advise the Minister on research priorities and issues related to the agri-food and agri-products sectors.
- Provide advice on the renewed Uof G/OMAFRA Partnership Agreement and on emerging research centre governance models e.g. Livestock Research & Innovation Corporation (LRIC) and the Vineland Research and Innovation Centre (VRIC).
Leadership - Implementation of the Infrastructure Strategy
Continue implementation of the research Infrastructure Strategy leading to a modern, integrated agri-food and agri-products research and innovation system with industry-influenced governance models and modern state of the art infrastructure capacity built on shared funding models between industry and government that includes:
- Consolidate livestock research at the Elora research station, including working with industry to plan for the relocation of swine and poultry research to Elora
- Enhancing beef research capacity at the Elora research station
- Working with Infrastructure Ontario to acquire additional lands in proximity to the Elora research station to facilitate consolidation of research at Elora
- Working with the turfgrass industry and the University of Guelph to develop detailed plans and begin implementation of relocating from the Guelph research statioContinue to refine, develop and implement investments in the three remaining centres (enhanced field crops; bioeconomy; food for health).
Promoting Ontario's Agri-Food and Agri-Products Research and Innovation
Through focused outreach opportunities for the Chair and members, build relationships between ARIO and industry stakeholders to broaden awareness, engage and seek support for OMAFRA's research and innovation priorities and the research Infrastructure renewal that is necessary to maintain and strengthen Ontario's local, national and global competitiveness in the agriculture and agri-food and agri-product sectors.
Managerial Oversight
- Provide operational and managerial oversight of the 17 agri-food research locations comprised of over 300 buildings, 6,500 acres and over 40 tenants (both government and non-government) to ensure continuing effective and efficient management of the research property portfolio in support of the various research programs.
- OMAFRA provides $4 million (four million dollars) in annual funding to ARIO in support of the ARIO Minor Capital Program (both Base Building and Infrastructure Renewal). An annual capital program prioritized project list is established during discussions between the Secretariat, and the UofG and VRIC. Once approved by ARIO, day to day site project management and implementation is provided by the UofG and VRIC with oversight by the Secretariat.
- The Base Building component of the program is used to support projects related to human health and safety, code compliance, building integrity, life cycle replacement, and efficiency, conservation and cost containment to enhance program delivery and building performance.
- The Infrastructure Renewal (program-related) portion of the program supports projects addressing animal care, including health, safety and well-being, program needs and priorities as well as some dedicated equipment replacements.
- Continue to provide effective and efficient administration of current OMAFRA Open Research programs (e.g. New Directions; Food Safety, Germplasm Reinvestment)
- Continue to provide effective and efficient administration of financial operations/ programs including all aspects of financial reporting, consolidation with OMAFRA, and administration of open research programs and other transfer payment agreements on behalf of OMAFRA.
Strategic Direction
ARIO Strategic Focus
Together, the Director of Research for ARIO, the Secretariat, the delegates and appointees of the Director of Research for ARIO and the members of ARIO appointed by the Minister are responsible for, and will continue to focus their efforts on four key aspects of the agricultural research system:
Leadership - Implementation of ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy
ARIO plays an important role in modernizing the agri-food and agri-products research and innovation system. For example, ARIO has recommended an approach to the Minister that OMAFRA is adopting to modernize the agri-food research and innovation system. OMAFRA has begun implementing some of the various phases of this Strategy. The ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy initiative is the road-map for modernizing research infrastructure and strengthening innovation in Ontario by providing state of the art, modern research platforms necessary to support development of new value added products and technological innovation and commercialization according to the following key criteria of the stakeholder-endorsed policy framework:
- Government, industry and academia partnerships
- Financial operating efficiencies found and savings reinvested into priority areas
- Aligning infrastructure investments to specialized intellectual capacity including physical and virtual platforms
- Greater utilization of infrastructure across both ARIO portfolio and non-ARIO infrastructure, e.g. industry, government and academia achieve improved access and collaboration
For more information visit the ARIO website.
Strategic Advice
A key role of ARIO is to provide strategic advice to the Minister on agri-food and rural research. The current focus is on the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy, the Partnership including ongoing research themes and priorities, and the emerging governance models under the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy (e.g. LRIC) and on the strategic direction of agri-food research in the province.
Promoting Ontario's Agri-Food Research and Innovation Strategy
ARIO and its members undertake focused activities to generate increased awareness of OMAFRA's agricultural, agri-food and agri-products priorities and generate buy-in for the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy through increased ARIO member engagement with agri-food industry stakeholders.
Managerial Oversight
ARIO provides operational and managerial oversight of the infrastructure portfolio to ensure effective and efficient management of the research property portfolio in support of the various research programs. ARIO also provides oversight and the effective administration of current OMAFRA Open Research programs and all financial operations/programs including all aspects of financial consolidation of ARIO with OMAFRA with respect to these activities.
Resources Needed to Meet Goals and Objectives
Resources to meet ARIO's goals and objectives are being provided through transfer payment funding from OMAFRA as well as through Secretariat services provided by the Research and Innovation Branch (RIB) of OMAFRA. ARIO also receives some revenues from leasing land and buildings within its property portfolio. Funding for major capital projects (implementation of the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy) is requested and approved annually as a key component of OMAFRA's PRRT: Program Review, Renewal and Transformation process.
Funding for the necessary staffing and operating resources required to support the administration of ARIO have been, and will continue to be, provided through RIB budget allocations within OMAFRA. These costs are estimated at approximately $1.3 million (one million three hundred thousand dollars) annually. . ARIO has no staff of its own and RIB provides all Secretariat functions for ARIO. The actual cost of ARIO member per diems and travel related costs is relatively insignificant and is approximately $50k/yr of the $1.3 million (one million three hundred thousand dollars) total.
The decision to consolidate ARIO with OMAFRA for the purposes of financial reporting and budgeting and the very significantly increased focus on agency governance, transparency and accountability have greatly impacted financial and operational reporting activities of the Secretariat resulting in a need for additional resources.
Revenues from ARIO's property portfolio (tenants) are used to partially offset the cost of ownership and maintenance of the portfolio.
ARIO continues to seek out non-government sources of capital investment from agricultural and agri-food related industry partners. The livestock sectors have agreed to the current model being used to develop the dairy research facility at Elora, whereby, industry will provide 20% (twenty percent) of the capital costs of any construction/redevelopment projects.
Current (2015-16) Research and Innovation Branch secretariat support to ARIO:
Research and Innovation Branch
Director | Research Unit | ARIO Secretariat | Finance, Infras. & Admin | Innovation Unit | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ARIO 40% | ARIO 50% | ARIO 100% | ARIO 80% | ARIO 30% | ARIO $$ | |
Salaries and Benefits | 60,268 | 377,949 | 539,889 | 205,617 | 1,183,723 | |
Operating | 42,173 | 25,650 | 48,370 | 24,355 | 19,163 | 159,711 |
Total | 102,441 | 403,599 | 48,370 | 564,244 | 224,780 | 1,343,434 |
Risk Identification, Assessment and Mitigation Strategies
ARIO is an Operational Services Agency of the government and as such has a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with OMAFRA. The MOU outlines the roles and responsibilities of both parties and how the ARIO Act and the various government policies and directives apply to the relationship between ARIO and OMAFRA.
All ARIO business decisions are the sole responsibility of the Director of Research for ARIO. The ARIO Director of Research is currently an OMAFRA Assistant Deputy Minister (Minister's appointment). ARIO has no staff and all Secretariat functions are provided by OMAFRA through the RIB. Funding for programs and properties administered by ARIO is provided largely through OMAFRA and the government's budget process.
Implementation of the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy requires significant funding over the next several years. OMAFRA has begun implementing the recommendations of the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy (e.g. new dairy facility at Elora and a new research greenhouse at Vineland). It is always possible that budget constraints, economic and political realities might cause delays in completing ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy recommended. However, given that the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy supports current priorities of the government and its focus on increasing competitiveness and productivity of the agri-food and agri-products sector, the risk of significant delays or cancellation is low. The ARIO Secretariat continues to work with Business Planning and Financial Management Branch(BPFMB and central agencies in submission of annual updates and refinements to the strategy captured in their processes.
Given the role and decision making structure of ARIO, overall risk (operational, financial, political etc) is very low; however, the ability to maintain financial commitments for the multi year nature of capital infrastructure construction projects can be impacted by changes in government and changes in government funding priorities, neither of which can be predicted with confidence over such a time frame. This risk is mitigated by the fact that the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy is now well underway and that significant funds for future phases have been transferred to ARIO and have been committed to individual projects.
Human Resources and Organizational Governance
Membership
ARIO is comprised of up to 15 members appointed by the Minister for OMAFRA and this membership has been maintained at a level between seven and nine for many years. Members of ARIO are recognized as leaders in the agriculture, food and rural sectors. They have been drawn from a broad cross section of commodity and business interests and geographic areas. Members do not represent any particular organization but hold their position in their own right.
ARIO Director of Research is appointed by the Minister under the ARIO Act and is responsible for the business and affairs of ARIO. The current ARIO Director of Research is the Assistant Deputy Minister, Research and Corporate Services Division and Chief Administrative Officer of OMAFRA. OMAFRA (RIB) provides administrative, operating and managerial support and acts as the ARIO Secretariat. Operational decision-making and approvals are made by the ARIO Director of Research, or his/her authorized delegate(s).The duties of the Director of Research are detailed in the ARIO Act, as well as in the MOU between ARIO and OMAFRA.
Staff Numbers (Staff Strength)
As mentioned earlier, ARIO does not itself hire or employ staff. OMAFRA staff act as the Secretariat to ARIO by providing all administrative and managerial support in accordance with subsection 9(4) of the ARIO Act. This support is outlined in the MOU between ARIO and OMAFRA. Standard OPS disclosure policies and procedures are applicable to staff providing support to the Secretariat.
ARIO members are appointed under the ARIO Act and are paid set daily per diems and travel costs to reimburse them for attendance at meetings held throughout the year. These per diems are set by an Order in Council.
The ARIO Act allows for the establishment of standing committees to support strong-decision making within ARIO. The following standing committees were created (in the 2005-06 fiscal) and are still active:
- Executive Committee: Provides long term strategic leadership to the ARIO including coordination of any other ARIO committee activities and, strategic advice to OMAFRA.
- Infrastructure Committee: Committee membership currently includes members from ARIO and Secretariat staff. The committee reviews proposals related to the properties, addresses operational issues affecting the ARIO infrastructure portfolio, and makes recommendations that are then presented to ARIO as a whole for discussion and ratification. Recommendations are then made to the Director of Research for decision.
The following diagram summarizes the organizational structure of ARIO in its current form.
Figure 1: The organizational structure of ARIO
Third Party Initiatives
In the past several years, global fiscal and economic realities facing all governments and the need to do more with less has resulted in a more focused effort and a significant shift towards collaborative research, funding partnerships, and new industry/government governance models. An example of this modelwas used to build the new dairy facility at Elora whereby the industry stakeholders/producer groups agreed to fund 20 per cent of capital construction costs, and are taking a much more active role in priority setting and overall governance of the site through the Livestock Research Innovation Corporation, (recently established industry led not for profit corporation). This new model of increased industry involvement and financial commitment is the model for all other sectors (livestock and others) wishing to rebuild their aging provincially supported research infrastructure and is the basis on which the revitalization of research infrastructure for the other primary livestock groups (e.g. swine, poultry, beef) is proceeding.
Currently ARIO receives industry funding as a condition of previous capital investments to industry by the province under the Ontario Ethanol Growth Fund (OEGF) to be used to support OMAFRA's open research programs administered by ARIO.
In addition, ARIO is collaborating with OMAFRA, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC) and other innovation partners to leverage opportunities under GF2, a Federal, Provincial and Territorial agricultural policy framework. GF2 in Ontario was announced jointly by Canada and OMAFRA on April 2, 2013 and focuses on innovation, competitiveness and market development initiatives.
RIB provides all secretariat, administrative and managerial support functions for ARIO. With respect to research programs, enters into research funding agreements with research institutions. The structure of these agreements was developed and continues to be reviewed/modified by the Legal Services Branch of the Ministry of the Attorney General assigned to support ARIO.
Other transfer payment initiatives administered by ARIO on behalf of OMAFRA are developed in consultation with ARIO's assigned legal support and OMAFRA's BPFMB ensuring compliance with Transfer Payment and Accountability Directives where appropriate.
Implementation Plan for Ongoing Strategies
For 2016-17, the Director of Research, the members of ARIO and the Secretariat will be responsible for the following key activities:
Leadership - Implementation of the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy
Continue implementation of the Infrastructure Strategy leading to a modern, integrated agri-food and agri-products research and innovation system with industry-influenced governance models and infrastructure capacity, some owned by government and some by industry. Upcoming activities related to the infrastructure component of the innovation strategy includes:
- Continue to advance the strategy by:
- Working with Ministry of Infrastructure (MOI) and Infrastructure Ontario (IO) to finalize the purchase ofadditional land at Elora
- Working with MOI and IO to sell parts of the New Liskeard Agricultural Research Station (including a portion to the Municipality)
- Working with the University and the Turfgrass Institute to relocate to the University and Elora
- Working with the other primary livestock producers (swine, poultry and beef) to advance plans for relocation to Elora
- Continue to work with stakeholders to implement the remaining centres (Bioeconomy, Field Crops and Food and Health).
- Continue to look for opportunities for achieving operational efficiencies to support a world class integrated network of research platforms/facilities.
Strategic Advice
- Continue to advise the Minister and OMAFRA senior management regarding the implementation and strategic positioning of the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy including both new investments and opportunities to achieve operational efficiencies.
- Continue to provide advice on the renewed the Partnership including ongoing research themes and priorities, and the emerging governance models under the Innovation Strategy (e.g. LRIC).
- Continue ongoing support to research priority setting by providing advice via participation in OMAFRA Research Advisory Network (ORAN) on new and existing research for the agri-food and agri-products sectors.
Promoting Ontario's Agri-food and Agri-Products Research and Innovation
- Through focused outreach opportunities for the Chair and members, build relationships between ARIO and industry stakeholders to broaden awareness, engage and seek support for OMAFRA's research and innovation priorities and the research Infrastructure renewal necessary to maintain and strengthen Ontario's local, national and global competitiveness in the agriculture and agri-food and agri-product sectors.
Managerial Oversight
Continue to:
- Provide operational and managerial oversight of the 17 agri-food research properties comprised of over 300 buildings, 6,500 acres of land and over 40 tenants (both government and non-government) to ensure effective and efficient management of the research property portfolio in support of the various research programs.
- Provide effective and efficient administration and managerial oversight of current OMAFRA open research programs (currently New Directions, Food Safety, Germplasm Reinvestment, Proof of Principle etc.)
- Provide effective and efficient administration and managerial oversight of all financial operations/programs including all aspects of financial consolidation of ARIO with OMAFRA.
Communications Plan
Objectives
In alignment with both the government's plan to build Ontario up through investments in the economy, people and infrastructure of Ontario and OMAFRA's strategic direction for research and innovation; ARIO effectively promotes Ontario's agri-food and agri-product research and innovation system through the following communication objectives:
- Raise awareness to industry, government and the public (e.g. at stakeholder annual meetings, conferences) of the contributions that Ontario's agriculture sector (agri-food and agri-products research, innovation and knowledge transfer) makes to the province (in areas such as the economy; health; environmental protection; social good and job creation).
- Advance the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy through internal and external communication opportunities and materials that provide progress updates on efforts working with industry stakeholders/partners to modernize research infrastructure that supports Ontario's agri-food sector's competitiveness.
- Raise industry and the public's awareness (through outreach events such as Canada's Outdoor Farm Show) of Ontario's agri-food research priorities and strategic partnerships that align with stakeholders (e.g. industry, AAFC, and universities, particularly the UofG) and that strengthen Ontario's agri-food research and innovation system.
- Establish and enhance working relationships among key partners and stakeholders (e.g. LRIC, VRIC, Agri Technology Commercialization Centre [ATCC]) to strengthen strategic partnerships to leverage communications/ research/ promotional opportunities to advance agri-food and agri-product research and innovation.
Key Messages
- Ontario's agri-food sector is one of the province's leading economic engines, contributing $34 billion annually to the province's GDP
- Agri-food produces substantial economic returns. The greatest returns come from enhancing the value of food products and processes through research, innovation and knowledge transfer
- Research and innovation are keys to the success of agri-food businesses in Ontario and are essential to maintaining a competitive and sustainable agri-food sector in Ontario
- Research and innovation: creates new opportunities for the agri-food sector, supports enhancement of the public good by providing safe and healthy food and supports the sustainability of agriculture and the environment.
- Investments in research and innovation will enhance the sustainability and profitability of Ontario's agri-food and rural sectors, strengthen Ontario's economy and create more good jobs for the people of this province.
- Partnerships such as with the University of Guelph and the 17 agri-food research stations throughout the province are key pillars that support Ontario's agri-food research and innovation system
Key Audiences/Stakeholders
- Innovation partners (e.g. LRIC, VRIC, ATCC);
- Industry partners across sectors sectors including commodity organizations, food processing/retailing bioeconomy, health sciences, agri-technology, knowledge mobilization;
- Academic institutions such as universities with an interest in agriculture, agri-food, and/or rural research priorities (e.g. U of G and Trent University);
- Other governments and agencies across jurisdictions (e.g. Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, provincial counterparts (e.g. AAFC, counterparts in other provinces (e.g. Alberta, Quebec) and agencies (e.g. Genome Alberta);
- General Public; and
- Farming, rural commties and other rural audiences
Tools and Tactics
- Internal communication materials to brief the OMAFRA Minister and senior management on progress and successes to date and on implementing next steps of the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy;
- Formal annual reports and business plans submitted to the Minister containing updates regarding the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy and the operational and managerial oversight of the 17 research stations;
- ARIO meetings that provide an opportunity to engage key partners and stakeholders in supporting planning, evaluation and reviewing, updating and advising on agri-food and agri-products research priorities and issues; and
- Stakeholder and partner engagement/communications activities planned in consultation with OMAFRA, including opportunities to participate in various industry trade shows, outreach events and annual meetings.
Potential Communications Opportunities in 2016-17
Event | Date |
---|---|
OMAFRA Research and Knowledge Transfer Event: Food for Health Day | April 2016 |
Agricultural Institute of Canada Conference | April 13-14, 2016 |
OMAFRA Research and Knowledge Transfer Event: Food Safety Research Forum | May 2016 |
OMAFRA Sponsored Event: International Symposium on Biplastics, Biocomposites and Biorefining | May 31-June 3, 2016 |
Vineland Research and Innovation Centre Greenhouse Complex Opening | June 3 2016 |
OCE Discovery 2016 | May 2016 |
LRIC (Beef facility announcement) | Summer 2016 (TBD) |
Guelph Turfgrass Institute (Relocation announcement) | Summer 2016 (TBD) |
Outdoor Farm Show | September 13-15, 2016 |
International Plowing Match | September 20-24, 2016 |
Ontario Economic Summit | November 2-4, 2016 |
Royal Agricultural Winter Fair | November 4-13, 2016 |
* ARIO will be updated on new communication opportunities as they arise and are confirmed.
Financials
Overview of Funding
Under the ARIO Act, the Institute may accept gifts, grants, donations or bequest money for use in research and the Director of Research holds and administers these funds received "in trust".
Investments Held in Trust
ARIO contracts with an investment management company to assist with the management of investments held within the ARIO trust funds. The ARIO's investment policy generally follows the requirements of the Trustee Act R.S.O. 1990, c. T23 as amended (Trustee Act) and the Financial Administration Act R.S.O. 1990, C.F.12 as amended (Financial Administration Act). The investment strategy's first priority is to guarantee preservation of capital, and then, to provide liquidity to meet short-term cash flow requirements, and then after that, maximize returns to funds held by ARIO. This investment plan guarantees that funds are managed on a very conservative basis in accordance with the Financial Administration Act and the Trustee Act.
See Appendix B for the Statement of Investment Policy for the Institute.
Operational Costs
(Excluding operation and management costs of the research stations)
The cost to administer the programs within ARIO (including the proportionate cost of salaries and benefits for OMAFRA staff that spend varying portions of their time on ARIO issues) are paid from OMAFRA's budget within the allocation assigned to the RIB. The current estimate cost to provide the ARIO Secretariat functions is approximately $1.3 million (one million three hundred thousand dollars) (part of RIB budget).
Per diem rates and travel expenses are set by Orders in Council and are paid to ARIO members for their attendance at scheduled meetings. These per diems follow Treasury Board Guidelines for Agencies, Board and Commissions and are paid out of RIB funds. Details are provided to members in the ARIO member's handbook.
Financial Projections (3-year Outlook)
ARIO is required to submit its Annual Report including audited financial statements to the Minister within 120 days of its year-end (by July 29th annually). The annual report is prepared by OMAFRA staff and includes financial statements that are prepared and audited by an external auditor (public accountant) contracted by OMAFRA.
A forecasted Balalnce Sheet and Financial State showing projected revenues and expenses for 2015-16, 2016-17 abd 2017-18 is included in Appendix C
ARIO is consolidated for financial reporting purposes with OMAFRA due to its close relationship, the ARIO's reliance on OMAFRA for research program funding and administrative support, and due to the "financial materiality" of ARIO resulting from the transfer of 17 agri-food research properties that had an approximate $60 million (sixty million dollars) book value in 2007 at the time of the transfer of the properties from the then Ontario Realty Corporation to ARIO. ARIO is required to provide a three-year financial outlook to OMAFRA for financial consolidation purposes.
Performance Measures
Infrastructure Planning and Management
Below is a report on achievements in accordance with the current performance measures framework outlined in the ARIO MOU and includes the current focus of the ARIO's Innovation Strategy.
Outcomes | Performance Measures | Targets (2012-18) |
---|---|---|
Increased third party investment/collaboration in R&D infrastructure | Level of funding from non-OMAFRA sources that goes toward investment in infrastructure. Performance Target : - Average 20% of capital investment to come from non-provincial government sources. | Achievements:The LRIC at Elora: The Livestock Research and Innovation Corporation (LRIC), representing the primary livestock commodity groups (Beef Farmers of Ontario, Ontario Pork, Dairy Farmers of Ontario and the Poultry Industry Council) have confirmed 20% support for the capital costs of redevelopment of Elora into the Livestock Research and Innovation Complex. This has established a new model of shared investment between industry and government that will be used for all future centres under the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy and is demonstrated through the dairy industry contribution of $5million (20%)towards the $25 million new dairy research facility recently completed. Targets:Develop industry-influenced governance and funding models for the up to five (5) new centres recommended under the ARIO's Infrastructure Strategy -Vineland (Hort), Elora (Livestock), Bioeconomy, Field Crops and Food for Health. |
Accountability and efficiency in the operation of infrastructure | Infrastructure Operation & Maintenance measures that consider third party investment in Operation & Maintenance, efficiencies and offsets developed. | Achievements: Identified and implemented operating efficiencies in current ARIO properties. These savings have offset inflation pressures as budgets have remained flatlined. Additional opportunities have been identified and are under consideration. Effective and cost efficient management of ARIO infrastructure/ property portfolio achieved by the ARIO Secretariat and the UofG (on behalf of ARIO). |
Client Service Standards | ARIO participates in periodic client service standards review as part of RIB. |
Appendix A - Strategic Recommendations
ARIO presented the following recommendations to the former Minister of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs "Defining an Infrastructure Strategy for Agri-Food and Rural Research, Discovery, Adaptation and Commercialization in Ontario" in 2008.
Recommendation 1
ARIO endorses a new infrastructure vision, mission and principles to guide the implementation and communication of the Infrastructure Strategy
Vision: ARIO endorses a new infrastructure vision, mission and principles to guide the implementation and communication of the Infrastructure Strategy
Mission: ARIO's mission is to facilitate leadership and investment in research infrastructure that is fundamental to the enhancement of Ontario's rural and agri-food value chain.
Guiding principles: ARIO's leadership in agri-food and rural research infrastructure investment will be guided by the following principles:
- All recommendations and actions are taken to establish Ontario as having a world-leading integrated system (human and physical capacity) for agri-food research, discovery, adaptation and commercialization
- Investment in the system infrastructure must create tangible value for participants in the agri-food sector
- Investment in the system infrastructure must provide value to the broader public
- Investment in the system infrastructure will be done in close connection with the private sector to assure that the research leads to market-driven products
Recommendation 2
ARIO will begin a process of developing a network of up to five regionally-led sector-oriented centres (Regional Agri-Food Research and Discovery Centres):
Challenging regions across the province to develop concepts for regionally/sector-championed and supported centres for agri-food research, discovery, adaptation and commercialization.
Requiring strong, committed, visionary leaders and teams for driving these ideas forward (champions)
Recommendation 3
Working with champions, develop a purpose and focus for each centre.
- Each centre will:
- Advance research and innovation (research)
- Generate new ideas and bring them to market (value-added)
- Be a visible hub for regional and community activity (community)
- Centres will share in the direction of effort and results, providing regionally-championed, sector-oriented solutions.
Recommendation 4
Establish logical groups and relationships to create appropriate models.
- Centres will link to the UofG's hub of basic research and knowledge translation, leveraging off OMAFRA's sustained commitment through the new Partnership Agreement
- Champions will define the infrastructure requirements to support the value-added vision for agri-food research, discovery, adaptation and commercialization in Ontario, expecting that they include provincial, federal and other infrastructure capacity.
Recommendation 5
Establish parameters by which OMAFRA and ARIO shepherd and support centres.
- Confirm ongoing government role (emphasis may vary and evolve over time)
- Continue to set strategic direction
- Continue to provide core funding support
- Continue to provide regional and technical support
- Sponsor the creation of new partnerships across governments, with universities, research institutions and the private sector, where appropriate.
Recommendation 6
Actively pursue involvement of federal government, other institutions and the private sector to ensure that existing provincial, federal and regional infrastructure and capabilities are considered together and to encourage collaborative approaches to common issues. This is to occur throughout the process.
Appendix B - Statement of Investment Policy
General
This Statement of Investment Policy expresses the investment objectives and constraints of the ARIO. In addition to providing a framework for general direction of the portfolio, it provides a basis upon which to periodically review and evaluate portfolio performance relative to appropriate asset class benchmarks.
Investment Objectives
The portfolio shall be managed to meet the following objectives (in priority order listed):
- Ensure safety of capital over a 1 to 3 year time horizon by investing in high quality fixed income securities, including government bonds and/or professionally-managed pension level bond portfolios.
- Provide liquidity, with a portion of the portfolio available to adequately meet short-term (up to 1 year)individual program and capital reinvestment cash flow requirements. Investments may include Treasury Bills, Government of Canada/Provincial bonds or coupons, and Bankers Acceptance Paper maturing within one year.
Investment Constraints
Consistent with both the Trustee Act and the Financial Administration Act, the following securities are examples of eligible investments for the ARIO portfolio:
- Federal Government Treasury Bills and Bonds
- Provincial Government Treasury Bills and Bonds
- Instruments offered by the five major chartered banks, namely, Royal Bank, TD Canada Trust, Bank of Montreal, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce and Bank of Nova Scotia including GICs, Term Deposits and Bankers Acceptances (note: investments can be greater than the $60,000 CDIC limit).
Diversification
The Portfolio should be diversified, within constraints of ARIO investment policy, to reduce risk to capital.
Performance Objectives
The performance objectives of each element of the portfolio is to equal the appropriate market benchmark index over a full market cycle, namely, 1-3 years. *Note: this goal is ambitious given that the ARIO portfolio(s) are constrained i.e. Canadian corporate bonds are not eligible investments but are included in the benchmark index, and due to high cash flow demand Cash maturities may average less than 90 days.
Investment Advisor
ARIO shall engage the services of a professional investment firm for investment advice through a competitive process.
ARIO Comptroller
The ARIO Comptroller (currently Manager, Corporate Controllership in OMAFRA) shall have responsibility to ensure the Statement of Investment Policy is adhered to.
Reporting
The investment advisor shall prepare and provide a detailed monthly statement showing the composition of the portfolio at month end and shall report all transactions during the month.
A comprehensive portfolio review and performance evaluation shall occur annually including performance of the portfolio, as well as updates on the current and future economic outlook and investment strategy.
All fees billed shall be fully disclosed, transparent and included in the monthly/quarterly report as they occur.
Review of Investment Policy
The ARIO investment policy shall be reviewed as required.
Appendix C - ARIO Proforma Financial Statements
Agricultural Research Institute of Ontario (ARIO)
2015-16 RbP - Forecast
Proforma Statement of Financial Position
Assets | Opening (April 1, 2015) | Transactions | End Balance (Mar 31, 2016) | 2016-17 | 2017-18 | 2018-19 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cash | 10,734,631 | 2,163,098 | 12,897,729 | 14,699,229 | 5,799,729 | 7,090,229 |
Temporary Investments | 29,575,572 | (15,363,604) | 14,211,968 | 9,721,968 | 7,721,968 | 2,721,968 |
Accounts Receivable | 174,690 | 174,690 | 174,690 | 174,690 | 174,690 | |
Capital Assets under construction | 23,126,396 | (20,126,396) | 3,000,000 | - | 13,000,000 | 25,500,000 |
Capital Assets - Net | 58,372,649 | 39,230,309 | 97,602,958 | 107,358,267 | 103,951,076 | 100,543,885 |
Total Assets | 121,983,938 | 5,903,407 | 127,887,345 | 131,954,154 | 130,647,463 | 136,030,772 |
Liabilities | Opening (April 1, 2015) | Transactions | End Balance (Mar 31, 2016) | 2016-17 | 2017-18 | 2018-19 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Accounts Payable | 1,615,704 | - | 1,615,704 | 1,615,704 | 1,615,704 | 1,615,704 |
Holdbacks | 3,955,723 | - | 3,955,723 | 3,955,723 | 3,955,723 | 3,955,723 |
Deferred Revenue | 283,091 | - | 283,091 | 283,091 | 283,091 | 283,091 |
Sub Total Current Liabilities | 5,854,518 | - | 5,854,518 | 5,854,518 | 5,854,518 | 5,854,518 |
Deferred Capital Contribution - Original Infra. Tfr | 53,615,001 | (2,769,691) | 50,845,310 | 47,600,619 | 44,193,428 | 40,786,237 |
Deferred Capital Contribution - Mission 2050 - Prov Funding | 30,181,643 | 1,000,000 | 31,181,643 | 34,181,643 | 34,181,643 | 34,181,643 |
Deferred Capital Contribution - Mission 2050 - Private Funding | 5,707,723 | 3,000,000 | 8,707,723 | 8,707,723 | 8,707,723 | 8,707,723 |
Deferred Capital Contribution - Research Cluster Centres - Prov Funding | - | 2,510,000 | 2,510,000 | 5,020,000 | 5,020,000 | 12,520,000 |
Deferred Capital Contribution - Other Investment - Provincial Funding | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Sub Total Deferred Capital Contributions | 89,504,367 | 3,740,309 | 93,244,676 | 95,509,985 | 92,102,794 | 96,195,603 |
Total Liabilities | 95,358,885 | 3,740,309 | 99,099,194 | 101,364,503 | 97,957,312 | 96,195,603 |
Equity | Opening (April 1, 2015) | Transactions | End Balance (Mar 31, 2016) | 2016-17 | 2017-18 | 2018-19 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fund Balances | 12,587,770 | 2,163,098 | 14,750,868 | 16,552,368 | 18,652,868 | 19,943,368 |
Unclaimed Expenditures (Research Programs) | 5,798,706 | - | - | - | - | - |
Accumulated Remeasurement Losses | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Contributed Equity | 14,037,283 | - | 14,037,283 | 14,037,283 | 14,037,283 | 14,037,283 |
Sub Total | 26,625,053 | 2,163,098 | 28,788,151 | 30,589,651 | 32,690,151 | 33,980,651 |
Total Liabilities and Equity | 121,983,938 | 5,903,407 | 127,887,345 | 131,954,154 | 130,647,463 | 136,030,772 |
Agricultural Research Institute of Ontario 2015-16 RbP Forecast for the Year Ended March 31
Revenue
Research | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
2015-16 Full Fiscal Year (12 months) | 2016-17 Plan | 2017-18 Outlook | 2018-19 Outlook | |
Property | ||||
Other | ||||
Grants - Provincial | 2,450,000 | 2,650,000 | 2,650,000 | 1,850,000 |
Grants - Federal | ||||
Grants - Other | 98,000 | 378,000 | 378,000 | 378,000 |
Intellectual Property | 1,200,000 | 1,000,000 | 1,000,000 | 1,000,000 |
Sub Total | 3,748,000 | 4,028,000 | 4,028,000 | 3,228,000 |
Grants - Provincial - Minor Capital | 4,500,000 | 4,500,000 | 4,500,000 | 4,500,000 |
Rental income - Provincial | 827,508 | 865,000 | 870,000 | 870,000 |
Rental income - Private industry | 693,638 | 720,000 | 730,000 | 730,000 |
Mission 2050 GTI | 7,000,000 | 8,000,000 | 0 | 0 |
Operations and Maintenance - Provincial | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Operations and Maintenance - Private industry | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Transfer payments - payments in lieu of taxes | 750,000 | 750,000 | 900,000 | 900,000 |
Payments in lieu of taxes - IO | 82,356 | 82,000 | 82,000 | 82,000 |
Payments in lieu of taxes - UG and Vineland | 130,000 | 130,000 | 130,000 | 130,000 |
Amortization of deferred capital contribution | 2,769,691 | 3,244,691 | 3,407,191 | 3,407,191 |
Sub Total | 16,753,193 | 18,291,691 | 10,619,191 | 10,691,191 |
Other Income | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Investment income | 113,871 | 137,000 | 121,000 | 111,000 |
Sub Total | 113,871 | 137,000 | 121,000 | 111,000 |
Total Revenues (A) | 20,615,064 | 22,456,691 | 14,768,191 | 13,958,191 |
Expenditures
Research | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
2015-16 Full Fiscal Year (12 months) | 2016-17 Plan | 2017-18 Outlook | 2018-19 Outlook | |
Property | ||||
Other | ||||
Research project\program | 2,484,446 | 2,500,000 | 2,150,000 | 2,150,000 |
Intellectual Property | 765,000 | 590,000 | 590,000 | 590,000 |
Sub Total | 3,249,446 | 3,090,000 | 2,740,000 | 2,740,000 |
Payments in lieu of taxes | 969,316 | 1,000,000 | 1,200,000 | 1,200,000 |
Minor capital | 3,640,611 | 4,500,000 | 4,500,000 | 4,500,000 |
Mission 2050 GTI | 7,000,000 | 8,000,000 | 0 | 0 |
Operations and maintenance | 820,313 | 820,000 | 820,000 | 820,000 |
Amortization of capital assets | 2,769,691 | 3,244,691 | 3,407,191 | 3,407,191 |
Sub Total | 15,199,931 | 17,564,691 | 9,927,191 | 9,927,191 |
Other expenses | 2,589 | 500 | 500 | 500 |
Write down of investment | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Sub Total | 2589 | 500 | 500 | 500 |
Total Expenditures (B) | 18,451,966 | 20,655,191 | 12,667,691 | 12,667,691 |
Net Surplus (Deficit) (A - B) | 2,163,098 | 1,801,500 | 2,100,500 | 1,290,500 |
Agricultural Research Institute of Ontario (ARIO) for the Year Ended March 31 - Notes to the Proforma Financial Statements
1. Capital Assets 2015-16
Open. Balance | Additions | Amortization | Balance | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Land | ||||
Buildings | ||||
Original ARIO Property | 9,793 | 9,793 | ||
Colleges | 3,092,104 | 3,092,104 | ||
Research Stations | 10,967,029 | 17,000,000 | 27,967,029 | |
Total Land | 14,068,926 | 17,000,000 | 31,068,926 | |
Colleges | 38,330,296 | 38,330,296 | ||
Research Stations | 23,860,583 | 25,000,000 | 48,860,583 | |
Other Infrastructure | ||||
Total Buildings | 62,190,879 | 25,000,000 | 87,190,879 | |
Less: Accumulated Amortization | -17,887,156 | -2,769,691 | -20,656,847 | |
Net Book Value - Bldgs | 44,303,723 | 25,000,000 | -2,769,691 | 66,434,032 |
Total | 58,372,649 | 42,000,000 | -2,769,691 | 97,602,958 |
Agricultural Research Institute of Ontario (ARIO) for the Year Ended March 31 - Notes to the Proforma Financial Statements
1. Capital Assets 2015-16
2016-17 | 2017-18 | 2018-19 | |
---|---|---|---|
Land | |||
Buildings | |||
Original ARIO Property | 9,793 | 9,793 | 9,793 |
Colleges | 3,092,104 | 3,092,104 | 3,092,104 |
Research Stations | 27,967,029 | 27,967,029 | 27,967,029 |
Total Land | 31,068,926 | 31,068,926 | 31,068,926 |
Colleges | 38,330,296 | 38,330,296 | 38,330,296 |
Research Stations | 61,860,583 | 61,860,583 | 61,860,583 |
Other Infrastructure | |||
Total Buildings | 100,190,879 | 100,190,879 | 100,190,879 |
Less: Accumulated Amortization | -23,901,538 | -27,308,729 | -30,715,920 |
Net Book Value - Bldgs | 76,289,341 | 72,882,150 | 69,474,959 |
Total | 107,358,267 | 103,951,076 | 100,543,885 |
Appendix D - ARIO Risk Management Plan Summary
Risk Category: Strategic
Risk Statement | Existing Risk Mitigation Activities | Risk Priorit- ization | Risk Priorit- ization | Risk Priorit- ization | Risk Management Plan |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Score | Rating | Rationale | |||
Strategic direction /objectives / mandate not clearly understood by external stakeholders and some internal ministry staff | Communications plans for major initiatives (e.g. Infrastructure Strategy) have been developed and/or refined for all relevant stakeholders. Discussions between external stakeholders and ARIO members continue to take place as needed | 9 | Low | See Scores | Option Chosen: Accept Rationale: Risk is low and is mitigated on an ongoing basis |
Inadequate funding for programs and capital infrastructure | ARIO provides advice to the ministry on program resource requirements and allocation. Decisions on allocations are the responsibility of ministry. Program: Continue to identify allocation needs through the annual Results-based Planning (RbP) process, leverage additional funds from other levels of government (GF2), industry partners, & academia. Infrastructure: Continue to identify capital allocation needs through the annual Results-based Planning process, leverage additional funds from other levels of government, industry partners & academia. As part of 2014-15 PRRT (RbP) process $15 million re profiled to fiscal 2018 and 2019 | 17 | Medium | Key component of long term research program effectiveness | Option Chosen: Accept Rationale: No choice but to continue to inform & advocate to senior management through annual RbP |
Inability to generate stakeholder support for the strategy to revitalize the agri-food research infrastructure system | Have now established industry support for Infrastructure Strategy, including a joint committee in the livestock sector that is working on new governance and funding models. Turfgrass industry has notionally accepted the need for industry commitment to rebuild GTI. Continued identification of needs and progress through OPS annual RbP process | 14 | Low | Have established financial contribution parameters that have been accepted by industry groups. | Risk Option: Accept Rationale: Industry has helped to establish a precedent by committing to contributing 20% of the cost of the new Elora dairy research facility now under construction. Industry contribution will be one of the determinants in future decisions on which projects to support. |
Advice and recommendations on research needs and resource allocation not reflective of sector needs | The advice provided to the Minister by ARIO is an important part of setting the direction & resource allocation for agricultural and agri-food related research in the province. Ministry staff work closely with and assist ARIO members in developing recommendations made by ARIO to the ministry. ARIO only provides advice to the Minister. All decisions on research direction & resource allocation are the responsibility of the ministry & take into account ARIO recommendations & other stakeholder recommendations / feedback. | 6 | Low | See Scores | Risk Option: Accept Rationale: ARIO provides advice on research needs and resource allocation & is only 1 component of the decision making process. All decision making authority rests with the ministry. ARIO is only one part of the advice informing priority setting & resource allocation. |
Risk Category: Accountability/Governance
Risk Statement | Existing Risk Mitigation Activities | Risk Prioritization | Risk Prioritization | Risk Prioritization | Risk Management Plan |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Score | Rating | Rationale | |||
Perceived conflict of interest re governance structure with respect to the current dual role of Director of Research/ CAO and dual role of staff secretariat | The Director of Research of ARIO is appointed under the ARIO Act to administer the business and affairs of the Institute. The Director of Research is the ADM of Research & Corporate Services Division. Continued training & orientation of ARIO membersEnsure ministry staff & ARIO members are familiar with ARIO-OMAFRA Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) which details all roles & responsibilities as defined in the ARIO Act | 14 | Low | Role of ARIO has been established for a very long time. | Risk Option: Accept Rationale: No other option |
Central agencies understanding of ARIO agency's role and structure | Continued discussions with central agency staff to communicate role of ministry staff, ARIO role & governance structures & relationship to ministry | 14 | Low | Continue to work with and educate central agency staff. | Risk Option: Accept Rationale: No other option. Mitigation is continual & ongoing |
Inability to maintain sufficient and qualified number of members, as well as timely appointments to fill vacancies in membership | Quorum for meetings is defined by the ARIO Act as 50% of the appointed members The ARIO Act allows members to continue to serve past the end of their term until they are replaced. Appointments are at the sole discretion of the Minister. Ensure appropriate advertising of o |