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FAAE Committee Report

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APPENDIX A: PROJECTS IN UKRAINE FINANCED BY THE CANADIAN INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT AGENCY

BILATERAL PROJECTS — CURRENT

Rule of Law (Sustainable Economic Growth)

Combating Corruption — $5,639,571 (2008-12)

Implementing Organization — Justice Canada

  • This project enhances the effectiveness of the Government of Ukraine in developing a coherent and integrated national strategy to combat corruption.
  • Results to date: In order to help build a better understanding of the specific nature of corrupt practices in Ukraine, research was conducted on 14 subjects including: capacity of media and NGOs to contribute to anti-corruption efforts, corruption in the private sector, whistleblowing, public views of elected officials, business environment, political environment, opposition to anti-corruption efforts. The findings from these studies will be shared with the Ukrainian government before the project ends to contribute to future government efforts to combat corruption.

Juvenile Justice Reform — $6,661,799 (2009-15)

Implementing Organization — AgriTeam Canada

  • This project addresses current issues and concerns regarding the services, rehabilitation and support provided to youth at risk in Ukraine.
  • Results to date: 8 judges and 36 juvenile justice stakeholders participated in a national Policy Development Seminar to review juvenile justice best practices, learn about juvenile justice policy options and how to support reform, as well as begin work on identifying, analyzing and addressing gaps in juvenile justice policy and legislation.

Judicial Education for Economic Growth in Ukraine — $6,600,000 (2012-16)

Implementing Organization — National Judicial Institute and Office of the Commissioner for Federal Judicial Affairs

  • This project will develop curriculum and training courses, and train trainers, in order to improve the judiciary’s capacity to resolve cases where business firms and entrepreneurs are involved.
  • Expected Results: Up to 120 staff and judges within the National School of Judges will be trained to improve the knowledge and skills of at least 500 judges on core judicial skills and general commercial, corporate, and administrative matters in pilot locations.

Accountable Public Institutions (Sustainable Economic Growth)

Municipal Local Economic Development project — $14,147,560 (2010-15) Implementing Organization — Federation of Canadian Municipalities

  • This project improves planning and delivery of services that support economic growth at the municipal level.
  • Results to date: All 12 cities involved in the project have established Strategic Planning Task Forces. 180 people (city staff, city councilors, business and public representatives) are involved with the strategic planning process taking place in each city.

Evidence-Based Economic Development — $10,012,797 (2010-15)

Implementing Organization — Conference Board of Canada

  • This project strengthens the capacity of officials in Lviv and Dnipropetrovsk to develop economic development plans (national, regional and municipal).
  • Results to date: 6 partner cities were identified (Lviv, Drogobich, Chervonograd, Dnipropetrovsk, Nikopol and Krivii Rig). A training capacity and needs assessment was designed and undertaken for all partner cities.

Policy Reform Implementation Support Mechanism — $8,400,000 (2006-13)

Implementing Organization — Canadian Bureau for International Education

  • This initiative supports sub-projects to improve the capacity of government institutions at the regional level to formulate and implement reform-oriented policies that are in the public interest and that adhere to international best practices and European standards.
  • Results to date: Eleven policy formulation projects targeting communication policy, agricultural cooperatives, gender equality, regional strategic development and permit services have been approved by CIDA and are under way.

Civil Service Human Resource Management Reform — $5,732,562 (2006-12)

Implementing Organization — Canadian Bureau for International Education

  • This project supports Ukraine's efforts in developing an accountable and transparent civil service that is in line with European norms.
  • Results to date: Collaborated with the Canada School of Public Service to help establish a leadership program for Ukrainian senior civil servants. This program was originally intended as a pilot reaching 15 participants, but it was expanded to become the official leadership program for all deputy ministers and assistant deputy ministers at the request of the Ukrainian Cabinet of Ministers, reaching 150 senior officials out of 600. In addition, new candidate assessment instruments in line with SIGMA/OECD norms were developed and piloted as part of hiring and promotion processes, leading to the appointment of seven managers and seven policy analysts.

Regional Governance and Development — $7,650,814 (2005-12)

Implementing Organization — Canadian Urban Institute

  • This project assists the government of Ukraine to institutionalise and replicate the successful participatory regional economic development practices piloted by the project in two regions from 2005 to 2010.
  • Results to date: Thirty-seven strategic priority projects and 22 capital investment projects have been developed, attracting a total of $5,478,843 in investment to the two regions. To replicate these achievements beyond the initial two regions of focus, the project has launched a training program to train trainers across Ukraine.

Developing Election Training Capacity and Enhancing Voter Awareness — $1,200,000 (2012-13) — Implementing Organization — Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe

  • This project builds the capacity of the Central Elections Commission (CEC) to train election commissioners and helps raise awareness of Ukrainian voters about the importance of elections, their legal rights, elections procedures.
  • Expected results: Increased voter activity and civil society engagement in election activity in Ukraine, measured through voter turnout and the level of civil society engagement in the election process.

Enabling Environment (Sustainable Economic Growth)

State Customs Service of Ukraine Capacity Building — $2,019,122 (2009-12)

Implementing Organization — Canada Border Services Agency

  • This project strengthens the capacity of customs laboratories to properly identify goods in order to apply the correct duties.
  • Results to date: Four gap analyses (methodology, instrumentation, detection instrumentation, relationships between central/regional labs) completed on the central laboratory in Kyiv and 3 regional laboratories (Dnipropetrovsk, Simferopol, Odessa).

Business Enabling Environment — $2,200,000 (2008-12)

Implementing Organization — International Finance Corporation

  • This project streamlines and simplifies burdensome administrative and regulatory procedures for SMEs.
  • Results to date: Reduced red tape by improving or eliminating more than 2,100 administrative procedures, including the reduction of mandatory permits and licenses to start and operate a business. Canada’s support for regulatory changes has resulted in 11 pieces of legislation and generated $24 million in savings to private sector businesses.

Strengthening the National Bank of Ukraine — $6,045,901 (2009-13)

Implementing Organization — International Monetary Fund

  • This project improves the overall business environment and potential for economic growth by strengthening the National Bank of Ukraine.
  • Results to date: Helped the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU) intervene in 28 banks, of which 3 received recapitalization by the state, 6 were rehabilitated or sold, 16 were sent into liquidation and 3 were placed under temporary administration.

Entrepreneurship (Sustainable Economic Growth)

Decentralized Management and Skills Training — $7,027,560 (2005-2012)

Implementing Organization — Saskatchewan Institute of Applied Science and Technology in association with the Association of Canadian Community Colleges

  • This project assists the development of a national demand-driven vocational skills training system across the country.
  • Results to date: Nearly 700 vocational schools have created committees that involve employers in the design of training programs, and over 240 schools have designated an officer responsible for promoting and ensuring gender inclusiveness.

Agriculture (Sustainable Economic Growth and Food Security)

Improving the Competitiveness of the Dairy Sector — $9,100,000 (2008-13)

Implementing Organization — Société de cooperation pour le développement international

  • This project assists dairy farmers in Lviv and Dnipropetrovsk to improve the quantity and quality of the milk they produce and gain access to the dairy marketing and processing value chain.
  • Results to date: A total of 3,000 dairy farmers from 70 village communities, 37 private farmers and 14 agri-businesses have benefitted from technical assistance, exceeding the target 2,500 dairy farmers in 50 communities.

Horticulture Development — $10,250,000 (2008-13)

Implementing Organization — Mennonite Economic Development Association

  • This project strengthens the capacity of smallholder farmers and other value chain stakeholders in Crimea and Zaporizhzhia to engage in the production, processing, and marketing of selected crops.
  • Results to date: Over 3,300 smallholder farmers increased their competitiveness in the horticulture sector through technical assistance that focused on the cultivation of high value crops. CIDA also helped improve the ability of 142 women farmers, especially poor, single mothers, to earn extra income through the cultivation of high value crops such as strawberries and table grapes.

Grain Quality and Safety — $3,000,000 (2011-13)

Implementing Organization — CanEd International

  • This project improves grain quality grading and classification systems to meet international standards and provides lab testing equipment.
  • Expected Results: Demand for grain testing and quality analysis services will increase by 50%, to be measured by the range of testing and analysis services provided to different stakeholders in the grain supply chain.

Agri-Insurance Development — $2,500,000 (2011-13)

Implementing Organization — International Finance Corporation

  • This project establishes a viable agriculture insurance industry in Ukraine, through a better regulatory framework, greater transparency, improved capacity of private insurance firms, and public awareness.
  • Expected Results: A government agency consisting of a minimum of 5 staff members will be created and financially supported to manage subsidy programs for agri-insurance.

Ukraine Grain Storage and Marketing Cooperatives — $13,500,000 (2012-16)

Implementing Organization — To be determined (Directive Project, RFP to be launched shortly)

  • This project will address the constraints faced by small and medium-sized grain producers in two regions of Ukraine by organizing cooperatives to provide modern storage, grain handling and marketing services.
  • Expected Results: Volume of grain sold by cooperative members will increase from 15,000 tonnes to 60,000 tonnes.

BILATERAL PROJECTS — LEGACY

Inclusive Education for Children with Disabilities — $4,899,922 (2008-13)

Implementing Organization — Canadian Centre on Disability Studies Inc.

  • This project promotes the inclusion of children with disabilities in schools and communities in Lviv and Crimea, and increases the capacity of non-governmental organizations to support this inclusion.
  • Eighty-five national and 60 regional government representatives were trained on developing social policies for children with disabilities and formed three cross-sectoral ministerial working groups.

PARTNERSHIP PROJECTS — CURRENT

Canada World Youth — Youth Leaders in Action: 2008-14 -—$4,668,326

  • Canada World Youth is the largest PWCB partner in Ukraine. Ukraine accounts for 10% of funding under PWCB’s current program support envelope for Youth Leaders in Action 2009-14, or a total of $4,669,326 over the 5-year program. Seventy-two volunteers will be sent to Ukraine each year for the 5 years of the program, partnered with 72 volunteers from Ukraine who will also visit Canada. Key areas of intervention for Canada World Youth in Ukraine include Health Education, STD Control including HIV/AIDS, Biosphere Protection, and Environmental Education and Training.

Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada — Students for Development: 2010-15 — $614,221

  • The Students for Development 2010-2015 program provides Canadian and developing-country senior level university students with work experience that complements their fields of study and career goals, while increasing their knowledge of international development issues. Operations in Ukraine represent 4% of the overall project.

World Hope International — Program to Assist At-Risk Youth: 2009-13 — $435,391

  • World Hope International Canada works with a local NGO, World Hope Ukraine and the municipal government of the City of Odessa (social services department and three local orphanages). The project aims to introduce an improved model of care to strengthen the human rights and life opportunities of at-risk and institutionalized youth. This project is exclusively implemented in Ukraine.

Disabled Peoples' International — DPI Human Rights Defenders: 2010-12 — $101,080

  • The Disabled Peoples' International (DPI) project aims to positively influence the lives of people with disabilities in developing countries, more specifically in five CIDA Countries of Focus that have ratified the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD): Tanzania, Bangladesh, Peru, the Caribbean (Jamaica) and Ukraine. Nineteen percent of the overall activities target Ukraine.

Mennonite Economic Development Associates — International Youth Internship: 2010-13 — $134,640

  • In Ukraine, the project goal is to enable Ukrainian individuals, organizations, public and private institutions to sustainably support and promote a thriving, equitable horticulture subsector with full participation of smallholder farmers including women, men and marginalized communities. Interns will identify new Value Chain Development opportunities. The Ukraine component represents 27% of the MEDA's internship program.

YMCA — International Youth Internship YMCA: 2010-12 — $44,550

  • The objective of the internship is the development and implementation of a youth leadership program in three YMCA locations within Ukraine (Volyn, Kyiv and one more TBD) based on a current program offered by the YMCA of Calgary. The Ukraine component represents 9% of the YMCA's internship program.

Saskatchewan Institute of Applied Science and Technology — Skills for Employment in Ukraine: 2012-16 — up to $4 million

(Note: Contribution agreement under negotiation (Over $2 million Call))

  • The proposed project aims to improve the ability of vocational training graduates to succeed in the growing private sector in Ukraine and to improve access to training for employment and self-employment for women and other disadvantaged groups, with emphasis on economically disadvantaged areas. The project will enhance business programming in three institutions: The Anton Makarenko Industrial-Pedagogic College (Kyiv), the Lviv Higher Vocational School of Restaurant Service and tourism, and the Ivano-Frankivsk Higher Vocational School of Hotel Service and Tourism. Activities include: i) the development of stronger and mutually beneficial relationships among government, community and private sector stakeholders, ii) new teaching resources, iii) curriculum review, and iv) training of trainers. This project will benefit 1,300 students immediately and 14,000 students over the course of the project.

Equitas — (Component of) Global Human Rights Education Program: 2008-13 — $521,393 (including some CEE/FSU sub-regional expenses)

  • Within its Global Human Rights Education Program, Equitas has a sub-regional component in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE)/Former Soviet Union (FSU) that mainly involves four countries: Ukraine, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia. Since 2008, nine Ukrainians have been trained through Equitas’ annual training session in Montreal, while CEE/FSU sub-regional activities have involved 13 Ukrainians to date. This initiative also included the design of a human rights education training course adapted to the regional reality, which was delivered in March 2011 and is expected to become an ongoing human rights education course that will be delivered on a regular basis by Equitas’ local partner based in the Ukraine, the Ukrainian Center for Common Ground.