Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2000-01-18-Speech-2-278"

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"Mr President, the Committee on Industry decided to go ahead and draw up a report on the discharge for 1997 although we were not specifically asked to do so. We went ahead because we felt we should start this Parliament in the way in which we mean to go on, that is, by making sure that we take good care of taxpayers' money in Europe. During the course of our work on this report it became clear that there are persistent problems in the spending areas under the control of our budget. They were not unique to 1997 and two strands seem to run through them. The first is a tendency for the Commission to embark on very ambitious programmes, particularly in third countries, without sufficient assessment of the practicalities of implementation and proper resourcing. The second involves serious managerial shortcomings in the Commission, in particular in relation to coordination across departments and management of external contracts. I know that all the Institutions bear some responsibility for the increasing workload of the Commission and for some of the lack of resources. That cannot excuse everything that we came across. Citizens of Europe expect the European institutions to be properly managed and they are right to do so. That is why I want to echo the comments from my colleague about the importance of the reform process which has been promised to the people of Europe by Mr Prodi and Mr Kinnock. From what I have seen of the reform process, it looks good. I saw some of Mr Kinnock's papers today, I heard some of what he had to say. I have every confidence that if we and the politicians of Europe support him we will see the kind of reform we need. But we need that reform process. Many of the general points raised in our committee's report have been covered in Mrs van der Laan's report. It is an excellent report and we should all congratulate her on it. It seems to hit on all the right points without just being like some of the old reports, a series of details. It groups them together and that is very important. There are two issues I would like to draw your attention to. One is nuclear safety in Eastern Europe. We have to get this right. The Committee of Independent Experts said the Commission was not managing this properly. We have to remedy that. The second point is about scrutiny mechanisms. We need from the Commission material we can use to help us scrutinise spending. We need proper information, given in a proper way and we all have to take this whole process a lot more seriously than in the past. It has been seen as a bureaucratic process to be done as quickly as possible in as little time as possible. I hope colleagues in this House will support the grounds for discharge for 1997 and, at the same time, that the Commission will push ahead with the reform process which is long overdue. Only in this way can we create a new culture in the Commission and at the same time get public confidence restored."@en1
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