Progress: Procedure completed
Role | Committee | Rapporteur | Shadows |
---|---|---|---|
Lead | CONT | STAES Bart ( Verts/ALE) | SARVAMAA Petri ( PPE), LIBERADZKI Bogusław ( S&D), ALI Nedzhmi ( ALDE), VALLI Marco ( EFDD), KAPPEL Barbara ( ENF) |
Lead committee dossier:
Subjects
Events
This document concerns Decision (EU) 2019/991 of the European Parliament on the closure of the European Asylum Support Office (EASO) for the financial year 2016.
The closure of the accounts of the European Asylum Support Office for the financial year 2016 have thereby been approved.
PURPOSE: to grant discharge to the European Asylum Support Office for the 2016 financial year.
NON-LEGISLATIVE ACT: Decision (EU) 2018/1358 of the European Parliament on discharge in respect of the implementation of the budget of the European Asylum Support Office for the financial year 2016.
CONTENT: the European Parliament has refused to grant discharge to the Executive Director of the European Asylum Support Office in respect of the implementation of the Office's budget for the 2016 financial year.
The decision is accompanied by a resolution of the European Parliament containing the observations which form an integral part of the decision on discharge in respect of the implementation of the general budget of the European Union for the 2016 financial year.
Ongoing investigations
In its resolution, Parliament recalled that OLAF was currently investigating several former and current members of the Office in middle and senior management positions. It welcomed the decision taken by the Management Board on 6 June 2018 to release the Executive Director of his duties with immediate effect.
While welcoming the appointment of an interim Executive Director (who is not the subject of OLAF's investigation), it regretted that the Management Board had not taken this measure earlier on its own initiative, which would have avoided delaying the discharge procedure.
Parliament welcomed the measures already taken by the acting Executive Director to improve the governance structure of the Office, restore transparency and build trust. It stressed the importance of addressing the deficiencies previously identified in the legality and regularity of transactions and invited the Bureau to prepare a comprehensive and detailed roadmap outlining the way forward. It asked OLAF to inform the discharge authority of the outcome of the investigation as soon as it is closed.
Basis for the qualified opinion on the legality and regularity of the underlying transactions
Parliament expects that every effort will be made to recover the amount of the following irregular payments made in respect of the 2016 financial year in respect of two of the five major procurement procedures in 2016: (a) EUR 920 561 (tender procedure for the provision of travel services) and (b) EUR 592 273 (framework contract for recruiting temporary support staff as part of its response to the migration crisis). It recalls that only full transparency of tendering procedures can guarantee effective control.
Parliament also continues to be concerned about the trend in the reimbursement of transport costs; it notes that the amount of reimbursements amounted to EUR 997 506 in 2014, EUR 987 515 in 2015 and EUR 1 012 147 in 2016.
Lastly, it underlines the importance of the operational support operations carried out by the Office in the hotspots of some Member States being properly planned, managed and implemented.
The European Parliament decided (186 votes to 317, with 164 abstentions) to refuse to grant the Executive Director of the European Asylum Support Office discharge in respect of the implementation of the Office’s budget for the financial year 2016.
In its resolution adopted by 547 votes to 108, with 14 abstentions, Parliament welcomed the fact that the initial decision of 18 April 2018 postponing the discharge led to the strong corrective measures , the corrective measures taken to date have partially responded to the reservations presented by Parliament.
The ongoing investigation of the European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) : an OLAF investigation is currently ongoing concerning several former and current members of the European Asylum Support Office occupying middle or senior management positions. Members welcomed the decision of the Office’s Management Board on 6 June 2018 to release the Executive Director from his duties with immediate effect. They also welcomed the designation of an ad interim Executive Director as well as measure to improve the governance structure of the Office, restore transparency and build trust. They regretted, however, that the management board did not take this action on its own initiative much earlier in the process.
The Office is called on to prepare a comprehensive and detailed roadmap presenting the way forward in order to counteract the previously detected deficiencies in the legality and regularity of transactions. This roadmap should include a clear plan for restoring trust in management to make sure that the recruitment and training of the significant number of new staff foreseen for 2018 and 2019 is of such a level that the Office will have well-motivated and high quality personnel at its disposal and that there will be less turn-over of staff and its knowledge and experience are retained.
Basis for the qualified opinion on the legality and regularity of the underlying transactions : recalling the material findings made by the Court of Auditors in relation to two out of five significant procurement procedures from 2016 for which payments were incurred during that year, Parliament expect all possible actions to be taken to recover irregular payments from the budget year 2016: EUR 920 561 (procurement procedure for the provision of travel services) and EUR 592 273 (framework contract for interim services to support it in its response to the migration crisis).
The resolution welcomed the action plans drawn up by the Office to remedy the issues identified by the Court, namely: (i) the procurement procedure for the provision of travel services (FCM Travel Agency) was replaced by an open tender procedure which was finalised and led to the conclusion of a new contract; (ii) the framework contract for interim services in Greece (Randstad) was replaced by an open tender procedure which was finalised and led to the conclusion of a new contract.
Members remained concerned by the development of travel reimbursement costs (in 2014, EUR 997 506 was reimbursed, in 2015 reimbursements amounted to EUR 987 515, and in 2016 reimbursements amounted to EUR 1 012 147).
They underlined that the increase of travel cost reimbursements and the decrease of category-A attendees may indicate an arbitrary reimbursement scheme.
The staff of the Office is urged to properly assume their responsibilities regarding administrative matters and on-the-ground work.
By adopting the second report by Bart STAES (Greens/EFA, BE) on discharge in respect of the implementation of the budget of the European Asylum Support Office for the financial year 2016, the Committee on Budgetary Control called on the European Parliament to:
grants the new ad interim Executive Director of the European Asylum Support Office discharge in respect of the implementation of the Office’s budget for the financial year 2016; approve the closure of the accounts of the European Asylum Support Office for the financial year 2016.
Members welcomed the fact that the initial decision of 18 April 2018 postponing the discharge led to the strong corrective measures taken by the Commission’s Directorate-General for Migration and Home Affairs, the Management Board and the Office’s new ad interim Executive Director.
The ongoing investigation of the European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) : an OLAF investigation is currently ongoing concerning several former and current members of the European Asylum Support Office occupying middle or senior management positions. Members welcomed the decision of the Office’s Management Board on 6 June 2018 to release the Executive Director from his duties with immediate effect. They also welcomed the designation of an ad interim Executive Director as well as measure to improve the governance structure of the Office, restore transparency and build trust.
The Office is called on to prepare a comprehensive and detailed roadmap presenting the way forward in order to counteract the previously detected deficiencies in the legality and regularity of transactions. This roadmap should include a clear plan for restoring trust in management.
Basis for the qualified opinion on the legality and regularity of the underlying transactions : recalling the material findings made by the Court of Auditors in relation to two out of five significant procurement procedures from 2016 for which payments were incurred during that year, Members expect all possible actions to be taken to recover irregular payments from the budget year 2016: EUR 920 561 (procurement procedure for the provision of travel services) and EUR 592 273 (framework contract for interim services to support it in its response to the migration crisis).
The report welcomes the action plans drawn up by the Office to remedy the issues identified by the Court.
Members remained concerned by the development of travel reimbursement costs (in 2014, EUR 997 506 was reimbursed, in 2015 reimbursements amounted to EUR 987 515, and in 2016 reimbursements amounted to EUR 1 012 147).
They underlined that the increase of travel cost reimbursements and the decrease of category-A attendees may indicate an arbitrary reimbursement scheme.
The staff of the Office is urged to properly assume their responsibilities regarding administrative matters and on-the-ground work.
The European Parliament decided by 622 votes to 46, with 21 abstentions, to postpone its decision on discharge to the Executive Director of the European Asylum Support Office (EASO) on the implementation of the Office's budget for the financial year 2016.
Follow-up to the 2013 and 2014 discharges : Members noted with concern the number of outstanding issues and ongoing corrective actions in response to the Court’s comments in 2013 and 2014 related to late payments, internal control standards (ICSs) and high staff turnover. They called on the Office to complete the corrective actions as soon as possible in the course of 2018.
Basis for the qualified opinion : Members expressed deep regret the material findings made by the Court in relation to two out of five significant procurement procedures from 2016 for which payments were incurred during that year, which demonstrates a lack of rigour in the Office’s procurement procedures.
The resolution recalled that two of the three tenderers participating in one audited procurement procedure for the provision of travel services under a framework service contract amounting to EUR 4 million for the period from 2016 to 2020 were asked to provide additional information in relation to the same selection criteria. Although neither of them submitted the requested information (CVs of the persons who would perform the task at the Office’s premises), only one of them was excluded from the procedure for this reason. The other tenderer was awarded the contract on the basis that the relevant CVs would be provided following the award of the contract. The procurement procedure did not comply with the principle of equal treatment . Members stated that the framework contract and associated 2016 payments, amounting to EUR 920 561, are therefore irregular.
Another framework contract for interim services to support it in its response to the migration crisis for a period of 12 months amounting to EUR 3 600 000 was awarded to a single preselected economic operator without applying any of the procurement procedures laid down in the Financial Regulation. The associated 2016 payments, amounting to EUR 592 273, are irregular.
The European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) has opened an investigation on the Office’s operations.
Budget and financial management : budget monitoring efforts during the financial year 2016 resulted in a low budget implementation rate of 80.64 %. Members noted that the Office’s work programme was amended three times and its budget four times in order to take into account significant changes that took place during 2016, in particular the significant increase in the operational support activities of the Office in “hotspots” in some Member States and the implementation of the EU-Turkey Statement.
Commitments and carry-overs : the level of committed appropriations carried over for administrative expenditure was high at EUR 2.5 million or 43.9 % (compared to EUR 1 076 583 or 36.9 % in 2015). These carry-overs mainly relate to IT infrastructure, translations and publications, business consultancy and the costs for management board meetings for which contracts were signed towards the end of 2016 or invoices were only issued in 2017.
Parliament also made a series of observations regarding procurement and staff policy, the prevention and management of conflicts of interests and internal audits.
It highlighted that in 2016 the Office faced several challenges in its operating environment, including not only a substantial increase in its budget and expansion of its tasks but also a significant increase in the number of transactions, a change of the accounting officer with several interim solutions and the introduction of a paperless workflow system. It regretted that this situation of considerable change and instability was neither mitigated by a revalidation of the accounting system nor by introducing a system of regular ex post verifications of transactions .
In 2016, the Commission presented a proposal for a new Regulation that proposed transforming the Office into a fully-fledged agency. Members noted the opening of offices in Rome and in Athens and the expanding role of the Office across the Union as it reaches out closer to the hotspots.
Parliament welcomed the Office's support to Member States, in particular Greece and Italy, in responding to the constant and unprecedented pressure to which their asylum systems have been subjected, as well as its full support for the implementation of the EU relocation program in Italy and Greece for persons in clear need of international protection.
The Committee on Budgetary Control adopted the report by Bart STAES (Greens/EFA, BE) on discharge in respect of the implementation of the budget of the European Asylum Support Office (EASO) for the financial year 2016.
The committee called on the European Parliament to postpone its decision on granting the Executive Director of the European Asylum Support Office discharge in respect of the implementation of the Office’s budget for the financial year 2016.
Follow-up to the 2013 and 2014 discharges : Members noted with concern the number of outstanding issues and ongoing corrective actions in response to the Court’s comments in 2013 and 2014 related to late payments, internal control standards (ICSs) and high staff turnover. They called on the Office to complete the corrective actions as soon as possible in the course of 2018.
Basis for the qualified opinion : Members expressed deep regret the material findings made by the Court in relation to two out of five significant procurement procedures from 2016 for which payments were incurred during that year, which demonstrates a lack of rigour in the Office’s procurement procedures.
The report recalled that two of the three tenderers participating in one audited procurement procedure for the provision of travel services under a framework service contract amounting to EUR 4 million for the period from 2016 to 2020 were asked to provide additional information in relation to the same selection criteria. Although neither of them submitted the requested information (CVs of the persons who would perform the task at the Office’s premises), only one of them was excluded from the procedure for this reason. The other tenderer was awarded the contract on the basis that the relevant CVs would be provided following the award of the contract. The procurement procedure did not comply with the principle of equal treatment. Members stated that the framework contract and associated 2016 payments, amounting to EUR 920 561, are therefore irregular.
Another framework contract for interim support services regarding the migration crisis was also deemed as incompatible with the relevant Union rules.
The European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) has opened an investigation on the Office’s operations.
Budget and financial management : Members noted with concern that budget monitoring efforts during the financial year 2016 resulted in a low budget implementation rate of 80.64 %. They noted that the Office’s work programme was amended three times and its budget four times in order to take into account significant changes that took place during 2016, in particular the significant increase in the operational support activities of the Office in “hotspots” in some Member States and the implementation of the EU-Turkey Statement. Commitments and carry-overs : the level of committed appropriations carried over for administrative expenditure was high at EUR 2.5 million or 43.9 % (compared to EUR 1 076 583 or 36.9 % in 2015). These carry-overs mainly relate to IT infrastructure, translations and publications, business consultancy and the costs for management board meetings for which contracts were signed towards the end of 2016 or invoices were only issued in 2017.
Members also made a series of observations regarding procurement and staff policy, the prevention and management of conflicts of interests and internal audits.
They highlighted that in 2016 the Office faced several challenges in its operating environment, including not only a substantial increase in its budget and expansion of its tasks but also a significant increase in the number of transactions, a change of the accounting officer with several interim solutions and the introduction of a paperless workflow system. They regretted that this situation of considerable change and instability was neither mitigated by a revalidation of the accounting system nor by introducing a system of regular ex post verifications of transactions.
Lastly, in 2016, the Commission presented a proposal for a new Regulation that proposed transforming the Office into a fully-fledged agency . Members noted the opening of offices in Rome and in Athens and the expanding role of the Office across the Union as it reaches out closer to the hotspots.
Having examined the revenue and expenditure accounts for the financial year 2016 and the balance sheet as at 31 December 2016 of the European Asylum Support Office (EASO), as well as the Court of Auditors' report on the annual accounts of the Office for the financial year 2016, accompanied by the Office's replies to the Court's observations, the Council recommended the European Parliament to give a discharge to the Executive Director of the Office in respect of the implementation of the budget for the financial year 2016.
The Council welcomed the Court's opinion that, in all material respects, the Office's annual accounts present fairly its financial position as at 31 December 2016 and the results of its operations and its cash flows for the year then ended, in accordance with the provisions of the Office's Financial Regulation, and that the underlying transactions for 2016 are legal and regular in all material respects.
Nevertheless, the following observations were made:
procurement : the Council noted the increased level of responsibility and the Office's involvement in tackling the migration crisis in 2016. In this regard, it regretted the Court's qualified opinion on the legality and regularity of payments underlying the accounts due to the lack of rigour in the management of two procurement procedures. It called on the Office to request further explanations from tenderers that present abnormally low offers and introduce systematic checks for every supplier's quotes and invoices issued to the framework contractor. The Council also called on the Office to improve the planning for procurement procedures for administrative expenditure and to improve the monitoring of procedures and contracts under framework contracts, as already agreed in an action plan between the Office and Commission's Internal Audit Service; financial planning : the Council called on the Office to continue improving its financial programming in order to reduce the level of commitments carried over to the next financial year to the minimum strictly necessary; action plan : lastly, the Office is encouraged to implement the action plan to increase the efficiency of operations and to further ensure cooperation and coherence of activities with its EU and international partners working on migration related issues.
PURPOSE: presentation of the EU Court of Auditors’ report on the annual accounts of the European Asylum Support Office (EASO) for the year 2016, together with the Office’s reply.
CONTENT: in accordance with the tasks conferred on the Court of Auditors by the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, the Court presents to the European Parliament and to the Council, in the context of the discharge procedure, a Statement of Assurance as to the reliability of the annual accounts of each institution, body or agency of the EU, and the legality and regularity of the transactions underlying them, on the basis of an independent external audit.
This audit focused on the annual accounts of the European Asylum Support Office ( EASO ). As a reminder, its task is to support the development of the Common European Asylum System. It was established with the aim of enhancing practical cooperation on asylum matters and helping Member States fulfil their European and international obligations to give protection to people in need. EASO acts as a centre of expertise on asylum. It also provides support to Member States whose asylum and reception systems are under particular pressure.
Statement of Assurance : pursuant to the provisions of Article 287 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU), the Court has audited:
the annual accounts of the Foundation, which comprise the financial statements and the reports on the implementation of the budget for the financial year ended 31 December 2016; t he legality and regularity of the transactions underlying those accounts.
Opinion on the reliability of the accounts : in the Court’s opinion, the Office’s annual accounts present fairly, in all material respects, its financial position as at 31 December 2016 and the results of its operations and its cash flows for the year then ended, in accordance with the provisions of its Financial Regulation and the accounting rules adopted by the Commission’s accounting officer.
Basis of the qualified opinion on the legality and regularity of payments underlying the accounts : the Court made material findings in relation to two out of five significant procurement procedures from 2016 for which payments were incurred during the year. This demonstrates a lack of rigour in the Office’s procurement procedures. A procurement procedure for the provision of travel services did not comply with the principle of equal treatment. The contract was awarded to a tenderer who did not fulfil all selection criteria.
In February 2016, the Office directly awarded a framework contract (FWC) for interim services to support it in its response to the migration crisis for a period of 12 months amounting to EUR 3.6 million. The FWC was awarded to a single preselected economic operator without applying any of the procurement procedures laid down in the EU Financial Regulation. The award was therefore not in compliance with the relevant EU rules and associated 2016 payments, are irregular.
The Court noted, however, that except for the effects of the matters described above, the payments underlying the accounts for the year ended 31 December 2016 are legal and regular in all material respects.
The report also made a series of observations on the budgetary and financial management of the Office, accompanied by the latter’s response. The main observations may be summarised as follows:
The Court’s observations :
budgetary management : the Court noted that the level of committed appropriations for administrative expenditure carried over was high at EUR 2.5 million. The carry-overs mainly relate to IT infrastructure, translations and publications, business consultancy and Management Board meeting cost for which contracts were signed towards the end of 2016 and/or invoices were only issued in 2017.
The Office’s replies :
qualified opinion : the Office takes note of the Court’s observation however, EASO made its decision based on the fact that the awarded company was the only one with the existing capacity to fulfil the contractual obligations.
EASO’s actions were in the context of extreme urgency linked to the refugee crisis which was at its peak at the time, compounded by the necessity to implement the decisions of the Council regarding the emergency tasks entrusted to the Office and to compensate for the shortage of Member States’ experts. The contractor chosen under these extreme circumstances was the same who was previously contracted by another EU agency located in Greece. EASO relied on the eligibility and financial capacity checks performed by that agency. The decision was documented and approved in an exception request .
In the meantime, EASO has launched a new open tender procedure to award a new framework contract.
Lastly, the Court of Auditors’ report contains a summary of the Office’s key figures in 2016 :
Budget : EUR 53 million. Staff : 125 including officials, temporary and contract staff and seconded national experts.
PURPOSE: presentation by the Commission of the consolidated annual accounts of the European Union for the financial year 2016, as part of the 2016 discharge procedure.
Analysis of the accounts of the European Asylum Support Office (EASO) .
CONTENT: the organisational governance of the EU consists of institutions, agencies and other EU bodies whose expenditure is included in the general budget of the Union.
This Commission document concerns the EU's consolidated accounts for the year 2016 and details how spending by the EU institutions and bodies was carried out. The consolidated annual accounts of the EU provide financial information on the activities of the institutions, agencies and other bodies of the EU from an accrual accounting and budgetary perspective.
It is the responsibility of the Commission's Accounting Officer to prepare the EU's consolidated annual accounts and ensure that they present fairly, in all material aspects, the financial position, the result of the operations and the cash flows of the EU institutions and bodies, including the European Asylum Support Office ( EASO ), with a view to granting discharge.
Discharge procedure : the final step of a budget lifecycle is the discharge of the budget for a given financial year. It represents the political aspect of the external control of budget implementation and is the decision by which the European Parliament, acting on a Council recommendation, " releases " the Commission (and other EU bodies) from its responsibility for management of a given budget by marking the end of that budget's existence. The European Parliament is the discharge authority within the EU.
The discharge procedure may produce three outcomes: (i) the granting; (ii) postponement or; (iii) the refusal of the discharge.
The final discharge report including specific recommendations to the Commission for action is adopted in plenary by the European Parliament and are subject to an annual follow up report in which the Commission outlines the concrete actions it has taken to implement the recommendations made.
Each agency is subject to its own discharge procedure, including the EASO .
The European Asylum Support Office (EASO) : the Office was set up under Regulation 439/2010 of the European Parliament and of the Council. Its main aim is to help to improve the implementation of the Common European Asylum System (the CEAS).
2016 was EASO’s fifth year of operation that witnessed major events having a significant impact on the Agency. The first key event was the signing of the EU-Turkey Statement in March 2016 that gave EASO a mandate to support the implementation of several measures in Greece, in particular the admissibility procedure.
As regards the Office’s accounts , these are presented in detail in the document on the consolidated annual accounts of the European Union for 2016:
Commitment appropriations :
available: EUR 66 million; made: EUR 53 million.
Payment appropriations :
available: EUR 55 million; made : EUR 35 million.
For further details on expenditure, please refer to the final accounts of the EASO .
PURPOSE: presentation by the Commission of the consolidated annual accounts of the European Union for the financial year 2016, as part of the 2016 discharge procedure.
Analysis of the accounts of the European Asylum Support Office (EASO) .
CONTENT: the organisational governance of the EU consists of institutions, agencies and other EU bodies whose expenditure is included in the general budget of the Union.
This Commission document concerns the EU's consolidated accounts for the year 2016 and details how spending by the EU institutions and bodies was carried out. The consolidated annual accounts of the EU provide financial information on the activities of the institutions, agencies and other bodies of the EU from an accrual accounting and budgetary perspective.
It is the responsibility of the Commission's Accounting Officer to prepare the EU's consolidated annual accounts and ensure that they present fairly, in all material aspects, the financial position, the result of the operations and the cash flows of the EU institutions and bodies, including the European Asylum Support Office ( EASO ), with a view to granting discharge.
Discharge procedure : the final step of a budget lifecycle is the discharge of the budget for a given financial year. It represents the political aspect of the external control of budget implementation and is the decision by which the European Parliament, acting on a Council recommendation, " releases " the Commission (and other EU bodies) from its responsibility for management of a given budget by marking the end of that budget's existence. The European Parliament is the discharge authority within the EU.
The discharge procedure may produce three outcomes: (i) the granting; (ii) postponement or; (iii) the refusal of the discharge.
The final discharge report including specific recommendations to the Commission for action is adopted in plenary by the European Parliament and are subject to an annual follow up report in which the Commission outlines the concrete actions it has taken to implement the recommendations made.
Each agency is subject to its own discharge procedure, including the EASO .
The European Asylum Support Office (EASO) : the Office was set up under Regulation 439/2010 of the European Parliament and of the Council. Its main aim is to help to improve the implementation of the Common European Asylum System (the CEAS).
2016 was EASO’s fifth year of operation that witnessed major events having a significant impact on the Agency. The first key event was the signing of the EU-Turkey Statement in March 2016 that gave EASO a mandate to support the implementation of several measures in Greece, in particular the admissibility procedure.
As regards the Office’s accounts , these are presented in detail in the document on the consolidated annual accounts of the European Union for 2016:
Commitment appropriations :
available: EUR 66 million; made: EUR 53 million.
Payment appropriations :
available: EUR 55 million; made : EUR 35 million.
For further details on expenditure, please refer to the final accounts of the EASO .
Documents
- Follow-up document: OJ L 160 18.06.2019, p. 0023
- Follow-up document: 32019B0991
- Decision by Parliament: T8-0406/2018
- Debate in Parliament: Debate in Parliament
- Committee report tabled for plenary: A8-0299/2018
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE627.697
- Committee draft report: PE623.711
- Results of vote in Parliament: Results of vote in Parliament
- Debate in Parliament: Debate in Parliament
- Decision by Parliament: T8-0140/2018
- Committee report tabled for plenary: A8-0083/2018
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE618.240
- Supplementary non-legislative basic document: 05941/2018
- Committee opinion: PE615.183
- Committee draft report: PE613.447
- Court of Auditors: opinion, report: N8-0018/2018
- Court of Auditors: opinion, report: OJ C 417 06.12.2017, p. 0079
- Non-legislative basic document: COM(2017)0365
- Non-legislative basic document: EUR-Lex
- Non-legislative basic document published: COM(2017)0365
- Non-legislative basic document published: EUR-Lex
- Non-legislative basic document: COM(2017)0365 EUR-Lex
- Court of Auditors: opinion, report: N8-0018/2018 OJ C 417 06.12.2017, p. 0079
- Committee draft report: PE613.447
- Committee opinion: PE615.183
- Supplementary non-legislative basic document: 05941/2018
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE618.240
- Committee draft report: PE623.711
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE627.697
- Follow-up document: OJ L 160 18.06.2019, p. 0023 32019B0991
Activities
- Notis MARIAS
Plenary Speeches (2)
- Bart STAES
Plenary Speeches (2)
- Nedzhmi ALI
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Inés AYALA SENDER
Plenary Speeches (1)
Votes
A8-0083/2018 - Bart Staes - décision 18/04/2018 12:55:17.000 #
A8-0083/2018 - Bart Staes - résolution 18/04/2018 12:55:31.000 #
A8-0299/2018 - Bart Staes - Résolution 24/10/2018 13:09:53.000 #
Amendments | Dossier |
59 |
2017/2177(DEC)
2018/01/19
LIBE
27 amendments...
Amendment 1 #
Draft opinion Paragraph -1 (new) -1. Welcomes the Court of Auditors' conclusions that the annual accounts of the European Asylum Support Office (‘the Office’) present fairly its financial position on 31 December 2016; notes, however, the qualifying remarks on two procurement procedures;
Amendment 10 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 a (new) 2 a. Highlights that, due to the migration crisis, the Office amended its budget several times to respond to calls from the Commission and Member States for an operational expansion, which led to the provision of Asylum, Migration and Integration Fund emergency funding pending approval of regular funding; as a result, not all additional Union funds granted in 2016 were used;
Amendment 11 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 3. Requests the Office to improve its budgetary management as the level of committed appropriations for Title II (administrative expenditure) carried over was high at EUR 2,5 million (43,9 %) and corresponds to contracts signed towards the end of 2016, in part due to additional budget payments towards the end of that year, or for which invoices were
Amendment 12 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 3.
Amendment 13 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 4. Regrets th
Amendment 14 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 4. Regrets the fact that two of the five significant procurement procedures that audited payments (representing 2.9% of the total expenditures) were irregular due to related irregular public procurement procedures; notes also the signature of an irregular additional framework contract for which no payments were made;
Amendment 15 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 4. Regrets the fact that two of the five procurement procedures that audited payments (representing 2.9% of the total expenditures) were irregular due to related irregular public procurement procedures; notes also the signature of an irregular additional framework contract for which no payments were made; requests the Office to cancel all related contracts; notes also the fact that the Office has taken measures to replace the contracts in question;
Amendment 16 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 4. Regrets the fact that two of the five procurement procedures that audited payments (representing 2.9% of the total expenditures) were irregular due to related irregular public procurement procedures; notes also the signature of an irregular additional framework contract for which no payments were made; requests the Office to cancel all related contracts
Amendment 17 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 4. Regrets the fact that irregularities were found in two of the five audited procurement procedures
Amendment 18 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 5 5. Requests the Office to improve its internal control processes; welcomes the remedial actions that have already been put in place in terms of the adoption of new internal control standards; stresses the
Amendment 19 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 5 5. Requests the Office to improve its internal control processes; notes that new internal control standards have already been approved; stresses the lack of proper planning for public procurement procedures; notes that the Office did not insure 65 containers (EUR 852 136) located in a risky location where other containers have previously been destroyed by riots, although it also notes that such insurance may not have been financially viable; notes that the Office had not recovered all its VAT reimbursement in a timely fashion for the years 2014 and 2015;
Amendment 2 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 1 1.
Amendment 20 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 5 5. Requests the Office to improve its internal control processes; stresses th
Amendment 21 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 5 a (new) 5 a. Regrets that, in the framework of a grant agreement between the Commission and the Office for the purchase and subsequent donation to the Greek State of 90 fingerprint-scanning machines and 90 compatible computers for an amount of EUR 1,1 million, Office staff was not present on the spot to ensure the proper delivery, installation and subsequent ownership transfer to the Greek police; deplores the fact that the confirmation from the relevant Greek authorities that the equipment had been delivered to the hotspots was only received in July 2017, more than a year after delivery;
Amendment 22 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 6. Notes that the late payment ratio decreased from 65 % in January 2016 to 9 % in October 2016, while the total number of transactions increased from 483 in January 2016 to 806 in October 2016; calls on the Office to complete effective corrective actions in order to efficiently tackle shortcomings, in particular those regarding recruitment procedures, late payments, high staff turnover and reimbursement of costs and welcomes action already taken to remedy most issues; calls on the Office to submit to the discharge authority a plan outlining reforms to improve its budgetary and management performance parameters;
Amendment 23 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 6. Notes that the late payment ratio decreased from 65 % in January 2016 to 9 % in October 2016, while the total number of transactions increased from 483 in January 2016 to 806 in October 2016; calls on the Office to complete
Amendment 24 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 6.
Amendment 25 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 7 7. Urges the Office to
Amendment 26 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 7 7. Urges the Office to adopt a policy and a practical guide on both institutional management and the prevention of conflicts of interest through greater transparency and better communication ; calls on the Office to adopt binding internal rules for the effective protection of whistleblowers and for respecting their fundamental rights.
Amendment 27 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 7 7.
Amendment 3 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 1 1. Highlights that significant additional tasks were assigned to the Office at the beginning of 2015 and that in order to cover its support to Member States of first entry, in particular for the registration and interviewing of asylum applicants and for the relocation scheme, the budget of the European Asylum Support Office (‘the Office’) increased by 273 %; underlines the fact that the Office’s staff increased by only 34 % and that far fewer experts from Member States have been deployed to Member States of first entry than actually needed;
Amendment 4 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 1 1. Highlights that in order to cover its support to Member States of first entry, in particular for the registration and interviewing of asylum applicants and
Amendment 5 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 1 a (new) 1 a. Highlights that, in order to cover its support to Member States of first entry, in particular for the registration and interviewing of asylum applicants and for the relocation scheme, the budget of the European Asylum Support Office (‘the Office’) increased by 273 %; notes that the Office’s staff increased by 34 % and that fewer experts from Member States have been deployed to Member States of first entry than actually needed;
Amendment 6 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 Amendment 7 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 2. Notes that due to the
Amendment 8 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 2. Notes that due to the
Amendment 9 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 2. Notes that due to the migration crisis the Office has faced problems absorbing additional Union funds granted in 2016 leading to considerable cancellations and carry-overs as well as difficulties in complying with budgetary and financial rules
source: 616.698
2018/03/02
CONT
12 amendments...
Amendment 1 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 2.
Amendment 10 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 27 – indent 2 Amendment 11 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 36 36. Notes that, according to the Court’s report, the Office purchased and installed 65 containers to be used as mobile offices in the Greek and Italian hotspots for a total amount of EUR 852 136; notes that some of the containers were placed in a location where similar containers not belonging to the Office were later destroyed by riots;
Amendment 12 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 41 41. Observes with dissatisfaction that the Office did not reply to the discharge authority on their efforts to ensure a cost- effective and environmentally friendly working place and to reduce or offset CO2 emissions; calls on the Office to pay attention also to the environmental implications of its activities, especially in the light of its future growth to up to 500 staff;
Amendment 2 #
Motion for a resolution Recital b – paragraph 1 recalls that in February 2016 the Office directly awarded a FWC for interim services to support it in its response to the migration crisis for a period of 12 months amounting to EUR 3 600 000;
Amendment 3 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 8. Notes with concern that budget monitoring efforts during the financial year 2016 resulted in a low budget implementation rate of 80,64 %; notes furthermore that the payment appropriations execution rate was 63,40 %;
Amendment 4 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9. Notes that the Office’s work programme was amended three times and its budget four times in order to take into account significant changes that took place during 2016, in particular the significant increase in the operational support activities of the Office in the “hotspots” in some Member States and the implementation of the EU-Turkey Statement; asks the Office to take into account the ECA Special Report 6/2017 entitled "EU response to the refugee crisis: the “hotspot” approach", and calls upon the Court to give priority to the follow-up report to this Special Report, that was asked for by the Parliament in order to take account of the hotspots as part of the wider asylum system of the EU and its Member States;
Amendment 5 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 12 12. Notes that the executive director effected 20 budget transfers during 2016 to compensate for budget shortfalls and to accommodate the exponentially increasing budgetary needs in the hotspots, in particular following the EU-Turkey Statement; notes
Amendment 6 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 13 13. Notes
Amendment 7 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 14 14. Notes that, according to the Court’s report, contracting authorities are to request in writing details of the constituent elements of the price or cost if they appear to be abnormally low, and are to give the tenderer the opportunity to present its observations; notes, however, that for two of the lots (lots 3 and 5), procuring cultural mediators/interpreters in different countries, the Office received financial offers which were 50 % and 31 % respectively lower than the next lowest offers; deeply regrets that, whilst this is indicative of the offers being abnormally low, the Office did not consider it necessary to request any further explanation from the tenderer in this regard;
Amendment 8 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 20 20. Notes that in 2016, on average, the Office’s staff was on sick leave for a total of 2,4 days; observes with some concern that the Office has not reported on the budget or on the number of days spent per staff member on well-being activities in 2016;
source: 618.240
2018/09/10
CONT
20 amendments...
Amendment 1 #
Proposal for a decision 1 Citation 5 a (new) - having regard to the actions taken up by the DG HOME and the Management Board of the European Asylum Support Office following the Parliament’s decision of 18 April 2018 postponing the discharge that resulted in the resignation of Mr. José Carreira from the post of Executive Director of the European Asylum Support Office on 6 June 2018;
Amendment 10 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 5 5. Welcomes the action already undertaken by the ad interim Executive Director in order to improve the governance structure of the Office, restore transparency and build trust; calls on the Office to prepare a comprehensive and detailed roadmap presenting the way forward; furthermore, calls on the Office in this respect to include in the roadmap a clear plan for restoring the trust in management, especially taking into account that competent and effective management is key in view of the challenges the Office is facing in general, and in particular to make sure that the recruitment and training of the significant number of new staff foreseen for 2018 and 2019 is of such a level that the Office will have at its disposal well-motivated and high quality personnel and that there will be less turn-over of staff and its knowledge and experience are retained;
Amendment 11 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 5 5. Welcomes the action already undertaken by the ad interim Executive Director in order to improve the governance structure and rebuilds internal capacity of the Office, restore transparency and build trust; calls on the Office to
Amendment 12 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 5 5. Welcomes the action already undertaken by the ad interim Executive Director in order to improve the governance structure of the Office, restore transparency and build trust; underlines the importance of counteracting the previously detected deficiencies in legality and regularity of transactions; calls on the Office to prepare a roadmap presenting the way forward;
Amendment 13 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 6. Calls on OLAF to inform the discharge authority of the outcome of the investigation as soon as it is closed
Amendment 14 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 6 a (new) 6 a. Calls on the Committee on Budgetary Control to integrate the findings from the OLAF report in the Office’s 2017 discharge report and by doing so insures that possible new recommendations to the Office are to be fully implemented;
Amendment 15 #
Motion for a resolution Subheading 2 a (new) expects all possible actions to be taken to recover irregular payments from the budget year 2016: EUR 920.561 (procurement procedure for the provision of travel services) and EUR 592.273 (framework contract for interim services to support it in its response to the migration crisis);
Amendment 16 #
Motion for a resolution Subheading 2 b (new) remains concerned by the development of travel reimbursement costs; notes that in 2014, EUR 997.506 were reimbursed, in 2015 reimbursements amounted to 987.515, in 2016 reimbursements amounted to EUR 1.012.147; notes that attendees that fall into category A have specific tasks to fulfil during meetings; notes the decrease of category-A reimbursements, which dropped from 69 % in 2014 to 52 % in 2015 and 37 % in 2016; is concerned by the apparent discrepancy between an increased workload for the Office and less category- A attendees; underlines that the increase of travel costs reimbursements and the decrease of category-A attendees may indicate an arbitrary reimbursement scheme;
Amendment 17 #
Motion for a resolution Subheading 2 c (new) Notes, again, that the Office’s work programme includes operational support activities of the Office in “hotspots” in some Member States; underlines the importance of this activity and stresses the wider consequences for the entire Union if tasks are not duly planned, managed and executed; strongly urges the personnel of the Office to properly assume its responsibilities regarding administrative matters and on-the-ground work;
Amendment 18 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 7 a (new) 7a. Regrets the harm done to the EASO's image by the errors found in the aforementioned procurement procedures; reiterates that effective control can only be assured when there is full transparency in these procedures;
Amendment 19 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 8 – introductory part 8.
Amendment 2 #
Proposal for a decision 1 Citation 5 b (new) - having regard to the hearing of 3 September 2018 and to the presented corrective measures already taken by the new ad interim Executive Director of the European Asylum Support Office since his appointment in June 2018;
Amendment 20 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 9 9.
Amendment 3 #
Proposal for a decision 1 Paragraph 1 1. Grants the
Amendment 4 #
Proposal for a decision 1 Paragraph 1 1.
Amendment 5 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 1 1. Underlines the importance of acting responsibly, in an accountable and transparent manner, and in accordance with all relevant rules and regulations, in the implementation of
Amendment 6 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 a (new) 2 a. Welcomes the fact that the initial decision of 18 April 2018 postponing the discharge led to the strong corrective measures taken by the DG HOME, Board of Managers and the new ad interim Executive Director of the Office;
Amendment 7 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 2 b (new) 2 b. Recognises that apart from the completion of the OLAF investigation against the previous leadership of the Office corrective measures taken up to date have sufficiently answered to reservations presented by the parliament in its decision of 18 April 2018 postponing the discharge;
Amendment 8 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 3 3. Recalls that an OLAF investigation is currently ongoing concerning several former and current members of the European Asylum Support Office (the “Office”) occupying middle or senior management positions;
Amendment 9 #
Motion for a resolution Paragraph 4 4. Notes with appreciation the decision of the Management Board of the Office on 6 June 2018 to release the Executive Director from his duties with immediate effect; welcomes the designation of an ad interim Executive Director, not subject to the OLAF investigation; regrets, however, that the Management Board didn't take this action of its own initiative much earlier in the process, thus obviating the delay in discharge;
source: 627.697
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