CELEX: 52004PC0102
Language: en
Date: 2004-02-12
Title: Proposal for a Council Decision establishing the European Refugee Fund for the period 2005-2010 {SEC(2004) 161}

Important legal notice

|

52004PC0102

Proposal for a Council Decision establishing the European Refugee Fund for the period 2005-2010 {SEC(2004) 161}  /* COM/2004/0102 final - CNS 2004/0032 */  

Proposal for a COUNCIL DECISION establishing the European Refugee Fund for the period 2005-2010 {SEC(2004) 161}(presented by the Commission)EXPLANATORY MEMORANDUMERF II: GREATER FINANCIAL SOLIDARITY AND MORE STRATEGIC SUPPORT FOR THE COMMON EUROPEAN ASYLUM SYSTEMThe Council Decision of 28 September 2000 [1] establishing a European Refugee Fund (ERF) was one of the first asylum policy measures to be adopted on the basis of the Treaty of Amsterdam. The Fund, which was backed by the European Parliament and based on a proposal by the Commission, has been instrumental in laying the foundations of collective action by the Community for the reception of asylum-seekers and people requiring international protection as part of a comprehensive approach. It has also helped to secure agreement on the Directive on temporary protection in the event of a mass influx of displaced persons. The first phase of legislative harmonisation establishing the common European asylum system is nearing completion, and under the terms of the original decision the Council must now review this decision by 31 December 2004 at the latest on the basis of a proposal to be produced by the Commission.[1]  Decision 2000/596/EC of 28.9.2000, OJ L 252, 6.10.2000.A thorough evaluation and extensive consultation of the parties concerned was drawn on to prepare this proposal: the mid-term evaluation of ERF I completed in November 2003, a broad-based review conference held on 30-31 October 2003 and an extended impact assessment (separate Commission working document). [2][2]  SEC (2004) 161, 12.02.2004.1. Results of ERF I and needs identified for ERF IIRESULTS OF ERF IOn the whole, the Fund has fulfilled the role assigned to it in 2000 as an instrument of solidarity.Distribution of resourcesThe amount initially earmarked for the Fund was increased by the budgetary authority in 2002 and 2003. The methods of calculating the annual allocations to the Member States, laid down in Article 10 of the Council Decision, allowed changes in the distribution of funds between the Member States to reflect changes in the number of asylum applications and people awarded refugee status or another form of international protection. The fixed amounts provided for in Article 10(1) have had a positive corrective effect, by adjusting the allocation of funds in a way that is comparable to (but administratively simpler then) criteria such as the relative burden borne by each country (particularly in terms of number of asylum applications per capita GNP). The Member States encountered a few difficulties at the beginning of the programme, largely due to the late adoption of the decision by the Council in September 2000, but the programme and projects were fully operational by 2002.The Member States to benefit most from the Fund are Germany, the United Kingdom, France and the Netherlands (together accounting for around 64% of the total). Then come Sweden, Austria, Italy and Belgium (about 25.5% of the total). Finally, Ireland, Spain, Finland, Greece Luxembourg and Portugal account for the last 10.5%.Impact on national asylum systemsLooking at the way Member States have implemented ERF I, we can identify three main strategies. One group of countries (Italy, Spain, Portugal and Greece) had limited experience of reception, integration and voluntary returns before the creation of the Fund. These countries have concentrated on developing reception facilities. This is particularly striking in the case of Italy, which has developed a national programme thanks to the Fund. A second group of Member States with a longer history of structural asylum policy (the Netherlands, Germany, the United Kingdom, Sweden and Finland) have generally chosen to develop integration and return projects. The third group (France and Luxembourg) have used the Fund more as additional funding for activities that already existed. There are other variations, dictated mainly by the nature and quality of the reception provisions. Some Member States (Austria, Spain, Germany, Greece and the United Kingdom), for example, tend to use the Fund for projects geared to individuals, whereas others (Belgium, France, Luxembourg, Ireland) give priority to systems and structures.Measures and beneficiariesIn the area of reception and access to procedures (51% of national Fund activities between 2000 and 2002), the activities co-financed by the ERF focused mainly on improving accommodation and meeting basic needs, training staff working with asylum-seekers, providing help for people who are traumatised, advising asylum-seekers and improving networking and cooperation between public authorities, NGOs and governmental organisations.In the area of integration (28% of national Fund activities between 2000 and 2002), ERF aid went to language training, promoting employability, advice on housing, education, understanding and accessing social benefits, and on developing partnerships between public authorities, Community organisations, employers and housing organisations and on public information campaigns on refugee issues.In the area of returns (21% of national Fund activities between 2000 and 2002), ERF aid was mainly used to increase practical assistance for repatriation, to develop networks between organisations in Europe and/or countries of origin, advice, vocational training geared to the possibilities for reintegration and finding jobs in the countries of origin and devising information strategies on the situation in the countries of origin. The proportion of repatriation projects has risen sharply, from 15.82% in 2000 to 24.45% in 2002. However, it is proving difficult to implement them.We estimate that between 250 000 and 350 000 people (asylum-seekers or people who enjoy some form of international protection in the European Union) have benefited directly or indirectly from the projects co-financed by the Fund between 2000 and 2002.The amounts devoted to Community actions (5% of the Fund's budget) have been used between 2000 and 2002 to subsidise research and evaluation activities (53%), public awareness campaigns (24%) and capacity-building (23%).No use has yet been made of the emergency measures, given the absence of any situation requiring the adoption of a temporary protection scheme at Community level.WHAT IS NEEDED IN THE SECOND PHASE OF THE ERF?Greater emphasis on European policy dimension, added value and additionalityWhen the Fund was created, the European Union did not possess a coherent body of legislation in the field of asylum. Now that this has been developed, it is clear that the way national co-financing has been applied has paid scant attention to the general goal of European convergence on asylum policy. A number of crucial requirements have been identified: awareness of the impact of transposal and implementation of European asylum legislation and policy guidelines at European level, comparisons between practices at the level of both management and the actions co-financed, the identification of best practice and greater possibilities for transnational projects. However, it is important that each Member State should still be able to make its own choices, so that actions satisfy the specific needs of its asylum system, which are the product of its particular structural characteristics and its history of accepting refugees. In this context, particular emphasis was placed in the preparatory consultations on the need to involve all those with an interest in asylum policy in each Member State more closely in the definition of the national strategies for implementing the Fund, in order to increase its impact and the incentive effect it has on the partners.Greater emphasis must be placed on the principle of additionality and added value of Community funding in conjunction with the development of a common asylum policy. ERF funds are not intended as a substitute for the national resources that would normally be spent on national provisions for reception, integration and voluntary return, but to assist the Member States in developing provisions and structures for enforcing and supporting asylum policy, in particular by supporting action to accompany the implementation of the common standards resulting from Community asylum legislation, and by promoting innovation.Role of other financial instruments in the field of migrationSince 2003 the European Union has acquired a number of new instruments providing for solidarity in the management of migratory flows. A budget heading has been created for funding pilot projects in 2003 and preparatory action in 2004 and 2005 to explore the issue of the integration of migrants (other than refugees) in the European Union. It received EUR4 million in 2003 and at least EUR5 million in 2004. The establishment of the European Agency for the Management of Operational Cooperation at the External Borders [3] is a reflection of collective action in the management of the external borders. The Commission has also proposed financial support in the form of preparatory measures to manage returns in 2005 and 2006. This would have a total budget of EUR30 million and would focus on cases specifically identified on a common basis, covering both voluntary and forced returns, including the costs involved in actual return operations. The Council and Parliament Regulation on financial and technical assistance to third countries in the area of migration and asylum should be adopted in early 2004. It will have a budget of EUR250 million for the period 2004-08. The EQUAL programme under the ESF, part of which covers the problem of integrating asylum-seekers in the labour market, will end in 2007. For the entire programming period 2000-2006, EQUAL will have an endowment of EUR125 million for the Asylum-seekers strand. It is therefore important to ensure consistency and complementarity with all these instruments. It is also clear that the transfer to the second phase of the multiannual programming of ERF II, as proposed below, must take into account the impact of these instruments and any follow-up to them.[3]  COM (2003) 687, 11.11.2003.EnlargementAlthough the acceding countries are covered for the first time by ERF I in 2004, they will only be fully introduced to the management and objectives of the Fund from 2005. During the consultations that preceded this proposal, particular emphasis was placed on the need for clear Europe-wide guidelines to accompany the implementation of the Fund in these new Member States. It is also likely that the number of asylum-seekers and refugees for whom these countries will be directly responsible will gradually increase. Finally, more attention will have to be paid to the questions of integration and voluntary returns in these countries in future.Administrative arrangementsThe first phase of the Fund was based on a system of shared management with the Member States. In the light of experience with this system, the following needs have been identified:- greater emphasis on cost-effectiveness (given the importance for the target group and grant recipients of having access to information and to management procedures in their native language);- greater role for the Commission in the strategic and operational implementation of the Fund;- solutions to the difficulties highlighted by many Member States during the first phase of the Fund in the area of management, particularly related to the complexity and costliness of the administrative rules and the difficulties that the payment arrangements for the Community funds pose for national administrations that do not have funds under their national budgets for paying project beneficiaries the advance on the Community contribution.2. Main characteristics of ERF IIMore closely tied in with legislative harmonisation and European asylum policyAt a time when at least six pieces of secondary legislation laying down common standards in asylum policy are about to take effect in all Member States, it is essential that the Fund be applied as a genuinely complementary measure by Member States which will undoubtedly be confronted by structural changes prompted by the arrival of groups of people covered by the Fund and by the new legislation. There is now a need for proper implementation plans at national level. The need for further European action in the management of asylum systems has also become apparent, for example the organised admission into the EU of people requiring international protection (under resettlement schemes). Finally, the need for complementarity and coherence will increase with the second phase of legislative harmonisation, as laid down in Tampere and in the draft constitutional treaty.For this reason the Commission believes the Fund should be renewed, by launching a second phase that will be more strategic and will take greater account of Community legislation and its effects. This second phase will last six years, so there will be multiannual programming for two three-year periods. By splitting it this way it will be possible to take into account the impact of the new financial perspectives in 2007 and also to assess the impact on the Fund of the development of other financial instruments in the field of migration.The proposal is to retain the same target groups as in the first phase, with the addition of people admitted into the EU for international protection reasons under resettlement schemes. Although this group was not formally excluded from the Fund before, there was no mention of it, which led to confusion. This is now an issue of European concern, referred to in Commission communications [4] and the recent Presidency conclusions, [5] and the subject of operational programmes in several Member States.[4]  COM (2000) 755, 22.11.2000, COM (2003) 152, 26.3.2003, COM (2003) 315, 3.6.2003.[5]  Thessaloniki European Council, 19-20 June 2003, and JHA Council, 27.11.2003.In the interests of coherence in asylum policy, the three main types of measure (reception and asylum procedures, integration, voluntary returns) remain, but defined more precisely on the basis of experience with ERF I. In fact, greater coherence will be ensured by allowing the co-financing of actions covering two or all of the aspects of asylum. This does not pre-empt the assessment of the impact of and follow-up to financial instruments such as the pilot projects on integration or preparatory measures for the management of returns, which will be carried out at the end of their funding period. The year 2007 would be the ideal time for such an assessment (end of the funding period for all of these tools and new financial perspectives).Community action (10% of the funds allocated to the Fund, instead of the current 5%) will be increased by concentrating on best practice, more transnational projects, dialogue and information on projects results.Finally, the emergency measures connected with the application of the Directive on temporary protection in the event of a mass influx of displaced persons are renewed.Improved management and a more strategic role for the CommissionThere is still a need to delegate certain management tasks, including budgetary implementation, to the Member States in the second phase of the Fund. This is because of both the differences between asylum systems in the Member States at the moment and the need to support initiatives liable to achieve results and have an impact on the situation of people in the Member States and on the systems associated with reception, integration and voluntary return. The substantial increase proposed in the Fund's resources in the second phase is another reason for continuing delegation.The analysis of the results of the first phase of the Fund, the need that has been voiced for the Commission to play a greater role, particularly in planning and pooling information, and the entry into force of the new Financial Regulation (and implementing rules) tightening up the rules on the delegation of public service tasks to external institutions or organisations have all contributed to the decision to opt for a system of shared management in the second phase of the Fund, with management tasks being delegated to the Member States via designated bodies in each country (responsible authorities).At the same time as management and financial tasks are delegated to the responsible authorities, measures will be taken to simplify the management framework and ensure greater coherence and interoperability between management systems and information systems.The Commission, for its part, will be responsible for examining and approving the multiannual programmes (which would be proper strategic work plans by the Member States, produced after national consultations involving those involved in asylum policy) and the annual applications for co-financing. It would also provide Member States with more guidance and information on implementing the Fund.3. Allocation of resources and distribution criteriaAs stated in its communication of 3 June 2003, and in the spirit of the text of the draft constitutional treaty produced by the Convention on the Future of Europe, the Commission believes that more resources should be devoted to Community solidarity in the area of asylum policy, within the constraints of the financial perspectives. It therefore envisages two financial phases: the first from 2005 to 2007, when the amounts allocated would be broadly similar to those in the current phase, but with a slight increase, and a second phase, from 2008 to 2010, when there would a sizeable increase in the allocations, depending on the new financial perspectives. This increase would enable the Fund to become more than just a symbolic gesture and to produce results and have a significant impact not only on the target groups but also on asylum systems in general. This outlook combines sensible management of the Community budget with the need to make more strategic use of the financial resources devoted to its asylum policy. These two phases will also allow us to take account of the parallel changes and advances, reflected in both the allocation of financial resources and the content of the legal bases, being made in EU solidarity in managing migratory flows (management of external borders, instruments of policy on returns, action to promote the integration of third-country nationals, administrative cooperation between Member States, programme of technical and financial assistance or third countries in the area of asylum and migration).In view of the objectives of this instrument and the different situations of the Member States, the Commission considers that the distribution criteria laid down for ERF I should not be radically changed. The basic reference point should thus continue to be the number of asylum-seekers and people in need of international protection actually being looked after in each Member State. The principle of an adjustment in the form of a fixed grant should also be retained. It is proposed to raise this fixed amount to EUR300 000, to enable all the Member States to meet their obligations as regards the management of the Fund, and abolishing the degressive element built into ERF I. Special aid for the new Member States for the first three years of ERF II would raise this amount to EUR500 000, which should be used as a first priority to make good structural shortfalls.4. Legal basisArticle 63(2)(b) of the Treaty establishing the European Community is the legal basis for this decision, which has as its immediate objective to support and promote the efforts made by the Member States in receiving and bearing the consequences of receiving refugees and displaced persons. If the United Kingdom and Ireland wish the decision to apply to them they must notify this in accordance with Article 3 of the Protocol on their position, annexed to the Treaty on European Union and the Treaty establishing the European Community. Denmark will not take part in the adoption of the decision or be subject to its provisions, in accordance with Articles 1 and 2 of the Protocol on the position of Denmark.5. Subsidiarity and proportionalitySubsidiarityThe requirement of promoting a balance in the efforts made by the Member States requires a financial contribution aimed at both relieving the pressure on the Member States most affected and developing the capacity of the Member States whose asylum infrastructure and services are inadequate, and presupposes a redistribution at European Union level which cannot be achieved by the Member States in isolation.ProportionalityThe decision will make it possible to provide financial support from the European Refugee Fund to the actions listed in each of the areas of action it refers to, while leaving the Member States to select the actions and the way in which they are to be carried out under schemes agreed in conjunction with the Commission. However, given the adoption of common standards in asylum policy since the creation of the Fund in 2000, and the increased importance of solidarity in the management of migratory flows, the strategic aspect of this instrument as a tool of the common European asylum system is now accentuated (particularly through multiannual programming), and provision is made for an increase in the financial resources to be deployed under shared management. The use of Community appropriations must also be subject to clear and uniform rules contained in a Council decision, which is the appropriate instrument for implementing Community programmes.Commentary on the articlesArticle 1This article establishes the European Refugee Fund for the period from January 2005 to December 2010 and describes in general terms the objective of supporting the efforts of Member States to receive refugees and displaced persons in order to help achieve a balance in the efforts made by each in this respect, while at the same time tying it more closely to ongoing legislative harmonisation and European asylum policy.Article 2This article emphasises the principle of annuality of the budget and incorporation within the financial perspectives of the Union. It provides for a meeting to be held after the adoption of the new financial perspective and, if necessary, for the possibility of ensuring consistency between annual grants.Article 3This article describes the various categories that constitute the target groups which may be concerned in one way or another by the actions covered by the Decision.Article 4This article lists the three areas of action in the Member States where support from the European Refugee Fund contributes to achieving the objective set in Article 1 and puts them in the context of support for the application of Community legislation. It also allows the inclusion of a number of horizontal questions and emphasises that the Fund's resources are not a substitute for funding provided by the Member States for asylum policy.Article 5This article describes the eligible action in the Member States relating to reception conditions and asylum procedures.Article 6This article describes the eligible action in the Member States relating to integration.Article 7This article describes the eligible action in the Member States relating to voluntary returns.Article 8This article describes the action managed direct by the Commission, which may account for up to 10% of the annual allocation. Such action must be of interest to the Community as a whole because of its innovatory or transnational aspects or because it supports legislation and helps to identify best practice in the Community.Article 9This article provides for the possibility of support from the Fund for emergency measures in the event of the introduction of temporary protection measures under Directive 2001/55/EC (mass influx of displaced persons). Emergency measures fall outside the implementation of long-term actions supported by the Fund and are in addition to them. Their function is to meet the basic needs of the people concerned and the immediate requirements of the Member States.Article 10This article determines the Commission's role in implementing the Council decision.Article 11This article specifies the joint and several responsibilities of the Commission and the Member States for implementation and for the cooperation required for shared management within the meaning of Article 53 of the Financial Regulation, tailored to the specific conditions of the European Refugee Fund. In particular, it takes account of Article 35 of the provisions implementing the Financial Regulation concerning prior checks on the management and control systems in the Member States.Article 12This article provides for the establishment of responsible authorities in the Member States charged with administering the budget under the system of shared management. It lays down the minimum conditions such authorities must meet, requires national funding to be provided and specifies the various tasks they must perform.Article 13This article states that the Commission will be assisted by an advisory committee. The choice of this type of committee is consistent with the criteria set out in Council Decision 1999/468/EC of 28 June 1999 laying down the procedures for the exercise of implementing powers conferred on the Commission [6].[6]  OJ L 184, 17.7.1999, p.23.Article 14This article specifies that projects in the Member States will be implemented on the basis of two phases of multiannual programmes (2005-2007 and 2008-2010). This new approach will make it possible to respond to the need for more strategic deployment of the Fund's resources in the service of asylum policy and to introduce significant structural changes in certain Member States and any adjustments that may be necessary as a result of the adoption of the new financial perspectives. The Commission will lay down guidelines and indicative financial allocations before the start of each programming period. The draft programmes will be approved by the Commission after examining them in the light of the Fund objectives and checking that they comply with a number of conditions and the timetable laid down in the article.Article 15This article provides for the adoption of annual programmes within the multiannual programming period, in order to respect the principle of budgetary annuality. The procedure will be simpler than that in the decision establishing the first phase of the Fund, in that these annual programmes will form part of the multiannual framework.Article 16This article indicates how the available resources will be divided between the Member States. The distribution system combines an allocation proportional to the number of people received who belong to the target groups and a fixed amount of a more structural nature. The degressive element of this fixed amount that existed in the decision establishing the first phase of the Fund has been abolished. The fixed amount given to the new Member States will be higher during the first three years of the second phase. This formula has proved to be successful in reconciling support for the Member States that receive the most people, the criterion of ratio of number of people to GNP and the objectives of making good structural shortfalls.Article 17This article lays down the conditions for using annual co-financing for technical and administrative assistance in the Member States.Article 18This article contains special provisions for implementing emergency measures in the event of temporary protection. Aid for these measures is limited to the emergency period of six months and must not exceed 80% of the cost of each measure. The Member States must inform the Commission about their needs and the measures they intend to introduce. The Commission will divide the available resources between the Member States according to the number of people receiving temporary protection in their territory.Article 19This article sets out the structure of funding and specifies the form this will take (non-refundable grants) and the principle that measures co-financed are not eligible for funding from other sources covered by the Community budget (such as the European Social Fund, financial support for managing returns, the programme of technical and financial assistance for third countries in the field of migration and asylum). Funding from the Fund is intended to facilitate the implementation of projects in the Member States by lessening the burden on public finances, not to replace action by the Member States or to allow the Member States to shirk their responsibilities. Under the co-financing arrangement the level of the Fund's financial contribution is accordingly set at a maximum of 50% of the total cost of each specific measure. This proportion may, however, be increased by 10% in the case of special actions or 25% in Member States that are covered by the Cohesion Fund. Unlike the decision on the first phase of the Fund, this article allows for funding for actions lasting one to three years, subject to re-examination of the progress achieved.Article 20This article specifies the conditions of eligibility applying to expenditure. The Commission will adopt specific implementing provisions under Article 13.Article 21This article lays down the conditions for the budgetary commitments made by the Commission.Article 22This article lays down the arrangements and conditions for making payments to the responsible authorities in the Member States.Article 23This article lays down rules on the declarations of expenditure and the principles of sound financial management to be applied by the responsible authorities in the Member States. It takes account of Article 42(2)(a) of the implementing provisions of the Financial Regulation.Article 24This article lays down the arrangements and conditions for auditing and financial corrections by the Commission in accordance with the relevant clauses of the Financial Regulation and its implementing provisions.Article 25This article specifies the arrangements and conditions for auditing and financial corrections by the Commission in accordance with the relevant clauses of the Financial Regulation and under the terms of shared management.Article 26This article lays down the general principles for the monitoring and evaluation of the Fund by the Member States and the Commission.Article 27This article lays down the conditions and timetable for the reports to be produced by the Member States and the Commission for the purpose of the monitoring and evaluation of the Fund.Article 28On the assumption that the decision establishing the second phase of the Fund will be adopted in the second half of 2004, this article contains a transitional measure relating to the timetable for the first multiannual programming period 2005-2007. It expressly requires the Member States to designate responsible authorities and sets a deadline for doing so.Article 29On the assumption that the decision establishing the second phase of the Fund will be adopted in the second half of 2004, this article contains a transitional measure relating to the timetable for the first annual programme for 2005. It expressly requires the Member States to provide a description of the management and control systems that will be put in place (Article 35(3) of the provisions implementing the Financial Regulation).Article 30This article provides for a re-examination of the decision after six years.Article 31Addressees2004/0032 (CNS)Proposal for a COUNCIL DECISION establishing the European Refugee Fund for the period 2005-2010THE COUNCIL OF THE EUROPEAN UNION,Having regard to the Treaty establishing the European Community, and in particular Article 63(2)(b) thereof,Having regard to the proposal from the Commission [7],[7]  OJ C [...] [...], p. [...]Having regard to the opinion of the European Parliament [8],[8]  OJ C [...] [...], p. [...]Having regard to the opinion of the European Economic and Social Committee [9],[9]  OJ C [...] [...], p. [...]Having regard to the opinion of the Committee of the Regions [10],[10]  OJ C [...] [...], p. [...]Whereas:(1) The preparation of a common policy on asylum, including common European arrangements for asylum, is a constituent part of the European Union's objective of gradually creating an area of freedom, security and justice open to those who, forced by circumstances, legitimately seek protection in the European Union.(2) Implementation of this policy should be based on solidarity between Member States and requires the existence of mechanisms to promote a balance in the efforts made by Member States in receiving and bearing the consequences of receiving refugees and displaced persons. To that end, a European Refugee Fund was established for the period 2000-2004.(3) It is necessary to continue this process and establish a European Refugee Fund for the period 2005-2010 to ensure solidarity between the Member States in the light of new Community asylum legislation and taking account of the experience acquired when implementing the first phase of the Fund for the period 2000-2004.(4) It is necessary to support the efforts made by the Member States to grant appropriate reception conditions to refugees and displaced persons and to apply fair and effective asylum procedures so as to protect the rights of persons requiring international protection and enable asylum systems to work smoothly.(5) The integration of persons enjoying international protection into the society of the country in which they are established is one of the objectives of the Geneva Convention. Such persons must be enabled to share in the values set out in the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union and in the rights and obligations of European citizenship. To this end, there should be support for action by the Member States to promote their social, economic and cultural integration in so far as it contributes to economic and social cohesion, the maintenance and strengthening of which is one of the Community's fundamental objectives provided for by Articles 2 and 3(1)(k) of the Treaty.(6) It is in the interests of both the Member States and the persons concerned that refugees and displaced persons who are allowed to stay in the territory of the Member States should be given the opportunity to provide for themselves by working.(7) Since measures supported by the Structural Funds and other Community measures in the field of education and vocational training are not in themselves sufficient to promote such integration, support should be given for special measures to enable refugees and displaced persons to benefit fully from the programmes which are organised.(8) Practical support is needed to create or improve conditions enabling refugees and displaced persons to take an informed decision to leave the territory of the Member States and return home, should they so wish.(9) Practical ways should be found of testing innovatory action and action of Community interest in this field, and exchanges between Member States should be encouraged with a view to identifying and promoting the most effective practices.(10) A financial reserve should be established for the implementation of emergency measures to provide temporary protection in the event of a mass influx of refugees pursuant to Council Directive 2001/55/EC on minimum standards for giving temporary protection in the event of a mass influx of displaced persons and on measures promoting a balance of efforts between Member States in receiving such persons and bearing the consequences thereof. [11][11]  OJ L 212, 87.8.2001, p. 12.(11) With a view to establishing financial solidarity in an effective, relevant and proportionate fashion and taking account of experience acquired when implementing the European Refugee Fund between 2000 and 2004, shared management arrangements should be adopted and the Commission's responsibilities and those of the Member States should be delineated. Appropriate national structures should be designated for that purpose and their duties should be formalised.(12) The support provided by the European Refugee Fund will be more efficient and better targeted if co-financing of eligible actions is based on two multiannual strategic intervention programmes and on an annual work programme drawn up by each Member State taking into account its situation and needs, including within the context of the development of the Common European Asylum System.(13) It is fair to allocate resources proportionately to the burden on each Member State by reason of its efforts in receiving refugees and displaced persons.(14) The measures necessary for the implementation of this Decision should be adopted in accordance with Council Decision 1999/468/EC of 28 June 1999 laying down the procedures for the exercise of implementing powers conferred on the Commission. [12][12]  OJ L 184, 17.7.1999, p. 23.(15) The Member States should provide sufficient guarantees as regards arrangements for implementation and quality of execution, as regards the results of action implementation and assessment and as regards proper financial management and supervision.(16) Efficient monitoring is one way of ensuring that the action of the European Refugee Fund is effective. The conditions governing monitoring should be formalised.(17) Without prejudice to the Commission's responsibilities for financial control, cooperation between the Member States and the Commission should be established in that regard.(18) The responsibility of the Member States for pursuing and correcting irregularities and infringements, and the responsibility of the Commission where the Member States do not comply with their obligations, should be specified.(19) The effectiveness and impact of actions supported by the European Refugee Fund also depend on their evaluation. The responsibilities of the Member States and the Commission in this regard, and arrangements to ensure the reliability of evaluation, should be formalised.(20) Actions should be evaluated with a view to a mid-term review and impact assessment, and the evaluation process should be incorporated into project monitoring arrangements.(21) The objectives of the proposed initiative, namely to demonstrate solidarity between Member States by achieving a balance in the efforts made by those Member States in receiving refugees and displaced persons in the light of developments in Community asylum policy, cannot be sufficiently achieved by the Member States and can therefore, by reason of the scale or impact of the initiative, be better achieved by the Community in accordance with the principle of subsidiarity. In accordance with the principle of proportionality, this Decision does not go beyond what is necessary to achieve those objectives.(22) In accordance with Articles 1 and 2 of the Protocol on the position of Denmark annexed to the Treaty on European Union and the Treaty establishing the European Community, Denmark is not participating in the adoption of this Decision and is therefore not bound by it nor subject to its application.HAS ADOPTED THIS DECISION:CHAPTER IOBJECTIVES AND TASKSArticle 1Establishment of the European Refugee Fund for the period from 2005 to 2010, and objectives1. This Decision establishes the European Refugee Fund ("the Fund") for the period from 1 January 2005 to 31 December 2010.2. The purpose of the Fund shall be to support and encourage the efforts made by the Member States in receiving and bearing the consequences of receiving refugees and displaced persons, taking account of Community legislation in these matters by co-financing the actions provided for by this Decision.Article 2Financial provisions1. The annual appropriations for the Fund shall be authorised by the budgetary authority within the limits of the financial perspectives.2. In the context of the budgetary procedure for 2008, the Commission shall indicate, by 1 May 2007 at the latest, whether the amount for 2008-2010 is sufficient for the new financial perspectives. If necessary, the Commission shall take steps in the course of the 2008-2010 budgetary procedures to ensure that the annual appropriations are consistent with the financial perspectives.Article 3Groups targeted by the actionsFor the purposes of this Decision the target groups shall comprise the following categories:(1) any third-country nationals or stateless persons having the status defined by the Geneva Convention of 28 July 1951 relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967 protocol and who are permitted to reside as refugees in one of the Member States;(2) any third-country nationals or stateless persons authorised to reside in one of the Member States on the basis that they require international protection within the framework of a resettlement scheme;(3) any third-country nationals or stateless persons enjoying a form of subsidiary protection within the meaning of Directive [...];(4) any third-country nationals or stateless persons who have applied for one of the forms of protection described in points 1 and 3;(5) any third-country nationals or stateless persons enjoying temporary protection within the meaning of Directive 2001/55/EC.Article 4Actions1. The Fund shall support actions in Member States relating to:(a) reception conditions and asylum procedures;(b) integration of persons referred to in Article 3 whose stay in the Member State is of a lasting and/or stable nature;(c) voluntary return of persons referred to in Article 3, provided they have not acquired a new nationality and have not left the territory of the Member State.2. Without prejudice to other secondary legislation adopted subsequently on asylum procedures, eligibility for refugee status, subsidiary protection and long-term resident status, actions provided for by paragraph 1 must, in particular, promote implementation of the provisions of Council Regulations (EC) Nos 2725/2000 [13] and 343/2003 [14] and Council Directives 2001/55/EC, [15] 2003/9/EC [16] and2003/86/EC. [17][13]  OJ L 316, 15.12.2000, p.1.[14]  OJ L 50, 25.2.2003, p.1.[15]  OJ L 212, 7.8.2001, p.12.[16]  OJ L 31, 6.2.2003, p.18.[17]  OJ L 251, 3.10.2003, p.12.3. Actions shall take account of gender-related issues and of the specific needs of the most vulnerable, including persons who have been tortured or subjected to inhuman and degrading treatment and shall give priority to the best interests of children. The actions provided for in paragraph 1(a), (b) and (c) may be carried out on a joint basis.Article 5Eligible national actions relating to reception conditions and asylum proceduresActions relating to reception conditions and asylum procedures, and in particular the following, shall be eligible for support from the Fund:- accommodation infrastructure or services;- provision of material aid and medical or psychological care;- social assistance, information or help with administrative formalities;- legal aid and language assistance;- education, language training, help with finding work;- improvements to the efficiency and quality of asylum procedures;- first reception and management facilities in the Member States for persons admitted under resettlement schemes;- information for the local population in the host country.Article 6Eligible national actions relating to integrationActions relating to integration into the society of the Member State of residence of the persons referred to in Article 4(1)(b) and members of their family, and in particular the following, shall be eligible for support from the Fund:- social assistance in areas such as housing, means of subsistence, medical and psychological care;- actions enabling recipients to adapt to the society of the Member State, including in socio-cultural terms and to share the values enshrined in the European Union's Charter of Fundamental Rights and the rights and obligations of European citizenship;- actions to promote participation in civil and cultural life;- education, vocational training, recognition of qualifications and diplomas;- actions designed to enable these persons to provide for themselves;- actions to promote the integration of these persons involving local authorities, the general public or refugee associations, for example via voluntary work, sponsorship or the participation of socio-economic interest groups or trade unions.Article 7Eligible national actions relating to voluntary returnActions relating to voluntary return, and in particular the following, shall be eligible for support from the Fund:- information and advisory services concerning voluntary return initiatives or programmes;- information on the situation in the country or region of origin;- general or vocational training and help with reintegration;- action by communities of origin resident in the European Union to facilitate the voluntary return of the persons referred to in this Decision.Article 8Community actions1. In addition to the projects provided for by Articles 5, 6 and 7, at the Commission's initiative, up to 10% of the Fund's available resources may be used to finance innovatory action or action of interest to the Community as a whole concerning asylum policy and measures applicable to refugees and displaced persons as referred to in paragraph 2.2. Eligible Community actions essentially concern the following areas:(a) furthering of Community cooperation in implementing Community law and good practices;(b) support for the setting-up of transnational cooperation networks to facilitate exchanges of experience and good practice;(c) support for innovative pilot projects based on transnational partnerships designed to stimulate innovation and improve the quality of asylum policy;(d) support for transnational awareness-raising campaigns for target audiences on European asylum policy and the situation of the persons referred to in Article 3;(e) support for the use of IT and communications technology.Article 9Emergency measures1. In the event of temporary protection mechanisms within the meaning of Council Directive 2001/55/EC being implemented, the Fund shall also finance measures to help the Member States which are separate from and in addition to the actions referred to in Article 4.2. Eligible emergency measures concern the following types of action:(a) reception and accommodation;(b) provision of means of subsistence, including food and clothing;(c) medical, psychological or other assistance;(d) staff and administration costs linked to reception of persons concerned and implementation of measures;(e) logistical and transport costs.CHAPTER IIIMPLEMENTATION AND MANAGEMENT PROVISIONSArticle 10ImplementationThe Commission shall be responsible for implementing this Decision and shall adopt such implementing rules as may be necessary.Article 11Respective responsibilities of the Commission and the Member States1. The Commission shall:(a) adopt guidelines for the priorities of the multiannual programmes provided for by Article 14 and shall notify the Member States of the indicative financial allocations for the Fund;(b) ensure, as part of its responsibility for executing the general Community budget, that appropriate management and control systems are in place in the Member States and that they operate smoothly, so as to guarantee that Community funds are used properly and effectively. These measures shall include documentary and on-the-spot checks carried out on a prior basis on implementation procedures, control systems, accounting procedures and the procurement and grant allocation procedures followed by the responsible authorities. The Commission shall review procedures or systems whenever substantial changes are made;(c) implement the Community projects provided for by Article 8.2. The Member States shall:(a) be responsible for implementing national actions supported by the Fund by taking the measures needed for the effective operation of the Fund at national level, and involving all those concerned by asylum policy in accordance with national practice;(b) set up the appropriate structure (Responsible Authority for the European Refugee Fund) to manage national projects supported by the Fund in accordance with the applicable Community legislation and the principle of sound financial management;(c) be responsible in the first instance for financial control of actions and shall ensure that management systems and checks are implemented in such a way as to guarantee that Community funds are used properly and effectively. They shall provide the Commission with a description of these systems;(d) certify that the declarations of expenditure submitted to the Commission are accurate and shall ensure that they result from accounting systems based on verifiable supporting documents(e) cooperate with the Commission for the collection of the statistics needed for the implementation of Article 16.3. In cooperation with the Member States, the Commission shall:(a) assume responsibility for disseminating the results of actions undertaken during the 2000-2004 phase of the European Refugee Fund and of those to be implemented in the 2005-2010 phase;(b) ensure that appropriate information, publicity and follow-up are provided for actions supported by the Fund;(c) ensure that actions are cohesive with, and complementary to, other relevant Community policies, instruments and initiatives.Article 12Responsible authorities1. Each Member State shall appoint a responsible authority which shall handle all communication with the Commission. The authority may be the Member State itself, a national public body or a private-law body governed by the law of the Member State and which has a public-service mission. Where the Member State designates a responsible authority other than itself, it shall lay down all the arrangements governing its relations with the said authority and the latter's relations with the Commission.2. The body designated as the responsible authority shall meet the following minimum conditions. It shall:(a) have legal personality, except where it is a functional body of the Member State;(b) have the infrastructure required for easy communication with a wide range of users and with the responsible bodies in the other Member States and the Commission;(c) work in an administrative context allowing it to carry out its tasks correctly and avoiding any conflict of interest;(d) be in a position to apply Community fund management rules;(e) have financial and management capacities commensurate with the volume of Community funds which it will be called upon to manage;(f) have at its disposal personnel with appropriate professional qualifications and language skills for administrative work in an international environment.3. The Member State shall provide the responsible authority with adequate funding so that it can carry out its tasks properly and uninterruptedly throughout the period 2005-2010.4. The responsible authorities' tasks shall include the following:(a) consulting relevant partners (non-governmental organisations, local authorities, competent international organisations, social partners etc.) to establish the multiannual programme;(b) organising and advertising calls for tenders and proposals;(c) organising selection and award procedures for Fund co-financing in accordance with the principles of transparency, equal treatment and non-combination of grants;(d) ensuring consistency and complementarity between co-financing under the Fund and from other relevant national and Community financial instruments;(e) administrative, contractual and financial management of actions;(f) information and advisory activities; dissemination of results;(g) monitoring and evaluation;(h) cooperation and liaison with the Commission and the responsible authorities in the other Member States.5. The responsible authorities' management activities for projects implemented in the Member States can be financed under the technical and administrative assistance arrangements referred to in Article 17.6. The Commission, acting in accordance with the procedure provided for by Article 13(2), shall adopt rules concerning the Member States' management and control systems, including rules for the administrative and financial management of national projects co-financed by the Fund.Article 13Committee1. The Commission shall be assisted by a Committee.2. Where reference is made to this paragraph, Articles 3 and 7 of Decision 1999/468/EC shall apply.3. The Committee shall adopt its rules of procedure.CHAPTER IIIPROGRAMMESArticle 14Multiannual programmes1. Actions in the Member States shall be implemented on the basis of two multiannual programme phases, each lasting three years (2005-2007 and 2008-2010).2. For each programme phase, on the basis of guidelines for the priorities of the multiannual programmes and indicative financial allocations provided by the Commission and provided for by Article 11(1), each Member State shall propose a draft multiannual programme which includes the following elements:(a) description of the current situation in the Member State as regards arrangements for reception, asylum procedures, integration and voluntary repatriation of the groups covered by Article 3;(b) analysis of requirements in the Member State in question in terms of reception, asylum procedures, integration and voluntary repatriation and an indication of operational objectives designed to meet these requirements during the period covered by the programme;(c) presentation of an appropriate strategy to achieve these objectives and the priority attached to their attainment, taking account of the consultation of the relevant partners provided for in Article 12(4), and a brief description of the actions envisaged to implement the priorities;(d) indication of whether this strategy is compatible with other regional, national and Community instruments;(e) a draft financing plan which sets out, for each priority and each year, the Fund's proposed financial contribution and the overall amount of public or private co-financing.3. The Member States shall submit their draft multiannual programme no more than four months after the Commission has provided the guidelines and indicative financial allocations for the period in question.4. The Commission, acting in accordance with the procedure provided for by Article 13(2), shall approve the multiannual programmes within three months of receiving them after examining the requests in the light of the recommendations in the guidelines.Article 15Annual programmes1. The multiannual programmes approved by the Commission shall be implemented by means of annual work programmes.2. The Commission shall provide the Member States, no later than 1 July each year, with an estimate of the amounts to be allocated to them for the following year from the total appropriations allocated under the annual budgetary procedure, calculated as provided by Article 16.3. The Member States shall submit to the Commission, no later than 1 November each year, a draft annual programme for the following year, drawn up in accordance with the approved multiannual programme and including:(a) the general rules for selection of projects to be financed under the annual programme;(b) a description of the tasks to be carried out by the responsible authority when implementing the annual programme;(c) the proposed financial breakdown of the Fund's contribution between the programme's various actions and an indication of the amount requested to cover technical and administrative assistance under Article 17 for the purpose of implementing the annual programme.4. When examining the Member State's proposal, the Commission shall take account of the final amount of the appropriations allocated to the Fund under the budgetary procedure and shall adopt the decision on co-financing from the Fund no later than 1 March of the year in question. The decision shall indicate the amount allocated to the Member State and the period for which the expenditure is eligible.Article 16Annual breakdown of resources for actions in the Member States provided for by Articles 5, 6 and 71. Each Member State shall receive a fixed amount of EUR300.000 from the Fund's annual allocation. This amount shall be fixed at EUR500.000 per annum for 2005, 2006 and 2007 for the states which accede to the European Union on 1 May 2004.2. The remainder of the available annual resources shall be broken down between the Member States as follows:(a) 35 % in proportion to the number of persons admitted in one of the categories referred to in Article 3(1), (2) and (3) over the previous three years;(b) 65 % in proportion to the number of persons referred to in Article 3(4) and (5) registered over the previous three years.3. The reference figures are the latest statistics produced by the Statistical Office of the European Communities in accordance with Community law on the collection and analysis of asylum data.Article 17Technical and administrative assistancePart of the annual co-financing allocated to a Member State may be set aside to cover expenditure on technical and administrative assistance for preparation, monitoring and evaluation of actions.The annual amount set aside for technical and administrative assistance may not exceed 5% of the total annual co-financing allocated to a Member State, plus EUR30.000.Article 18Special provisions concerning emergency measures1. The Member States shall provide the Commission with a statement of requirements and an implementation plan for the emergency measures provided for by Article 9, including a description of the planned measures and the bodies responsible for implementing them.2. Financial assistance from the Fund for the emergency measures provided for by Article 9 shall be limited to a period of six months and shall not exceed 80 % of the cost of each measure.3. Available resources shall be distributed among the Member States on the basis of the number of persons benefiting from temporary protection in each Member State as referred to in Article 9(1).4. Articles 19(1) and (2), 20 and 22 to 25 shall apply.CHAPTER IVFINANCIAL MANAGEMENT AND SUPERVISIONArticle 19Financing structure1. The Fund's financial participation shall take the form of non-refundable grants.2. Actions co-financed by the Fund shall not be eligible for funding from other sources covered by the Community budget.3. Fund appropriations shall be complementary to public or equivalent expenditure allocated by the Member States to the measures covered by this Decision.4. The Community contribution to supported projects shall not exceed:(a) as regards actions implemented in the Member States under Articles 5, 6 and 7, 50% of the total cost of a specific action. This may be increased to 60% for particularly innovative actions or actions carried out by transnational partnerships, and to 75% in the Member States covered by the Cohesion Fund;(b) as regards calls for proposals within the framework of Community actions under Article 8, 80% of the total cost of a specific action.5. As a general rule, Community financial aid granted for actions supported by the Fund shall be given for a period of no more than three years, subject to periodic progress reports.Article 20Eligibility1. Expenditure shall correspond to the payments effected by the final grant recipients. It shall be justified by receipted invoices or accounting documents of equivalent status.2. Expenditure may be considered eligible for support from the Fund only if it is actually paid no earlier than 1 January of the year referred to in the Commission decision on co-financing indicated in Article 15(4).3. The Commission, acting in accordance with the procedure provided for by Article 13(2), shall adopt the rules governing eligibility of expenditure within the framework of actions implemented in the Member States under Articles 5, 6 and 7 and co-financed by the Fund.Article 21CommitmentsCommunity budgetary commitments shall be made annually on the basis of the Commission decision on co-financing referred to in Article 15(4).Article 22Payments1. The contribution from the Fund shall be paid by the Commission to the responsible authority in accordance with budgetary commitments.2. A pre-financing payment representing 50% of the amount allocated in the Commission's annual decision on co-financing by the Fund shall be made to the Member State within sixty days following the adoption of the co-financing decision.3. A second pre-financing payment shall be made no more than three months after the Commission has approved a report on implementation of the annual work programme and a declaration of expenditure accounting for at least 70% of the amount of the initial payment. The amount of the second pre-financing payment made by the Commission shall not exceed 50% of the total amount allocated by the co-financing decision or, in any event, the balance of the amount of Community funds actually committed by the Member State for selected projects under the annual programme minus the first pre-financing payment.4. Payment of the balance shall be made no more than three months after the Commission has approved the annual programme's final implementation report and the final declaration of expenditure provided for by Articles 23(3) and 27(2); failing that, a request for reimbursement of amounts released under the initial or second payments in excess of the final expenditure approved for the Fund shall be issued within that deadline.Article 23Declarations of expenditure1. For all expenditure which it declares to the Commission, the responsible authority shall provide assurance that the national implementation programmes are managed in accordance with the applicable Community regulations and that the funds are used in accordance with the principle of sound financial management.2. Declarations of expenditure shall be certified by a service or body operationally independent of the responsible authority.3. Within nine months of the deadline laid down in the co-financing decision whereby expenditure must be effected, the responsible authority shall forward a final declaration of expenditure to the Commission. Failing that, the Commission shall automatically terminate the programme and release the relevant appropriations.Article 24Audit of accounts and financial corrections by the Member States1. Without prejudice to the Commission's responsibilities for implementing the general budget of the European Communities, the Member States shall be take responsibility in the first instance for financial control of actions. To that end, the measures they take shall include:(a) organising, on the basis of an appropriate sample, checks on actions covering at least 10% of the total eligible expenditure for each annual implementing programme and on a representative sample of approved actions. Member States shall ensure an appropriate separation between checks and implementation or payment procedures concerning actions;(b) preventing, detecting and prosecuting irregularities, notifying the Commission of them in accordance with the rules and keeping the Commission informed of the progress of administrative and judicial proceedings;(c) cooperating with the Commission to ensure that Community funds are used in accordance with the principle of sound financial management.2. The Member States shall make the financial corrections required where an irregularity is ascertained, having regard to whether it is an individual or a systemic case. The corrections made by the Member State shall consist in cancelling all or part of the Community contribution, and, where the amount is not repaid in the time allowed by the relevant Member State, default interest shall be due at the rate provided for by Article 25(4).3. The Commission, acting in accordance with the procedure provided for by Article 13(2), shall adopt the rules and procedures for financial corrections made by the Member States in connection with projects implemented in the Member States under Articles 5, 6 and 7 and co-financed by the Fund.Article 25Audit of accounts and financial corrections by the Commission1. Without prejudice to the powers of the Court of Auditors or the checks carried out by the Member States in accordance with national laws, regulations and administrative provisions, Commission officials or servants may carry out on-the-spot checks, including sample checks, on the operations financed by the Fund and on management and control systems with a minimum of one working day's notice. The Commission shall give notice to the Member State concerned with a view to obtaining all the assistance necessary. Officials or servants of the Member State concerned may take part in such checks.The Commission may require the Member State concerned to carry out an on-the-spot check to verify the correctness of one or more transactions. Commission officials or servants may take part in such checks.2. If, after completing the necessary verifications, the Commission concludes that a Member State is not complying with its obligations under Article 24, it shall suspend the pre-financing or final payment relating to co-financing from the Fund for the relevant annual programmes in the following situations:(a) a Member State is not implementing the actions as agreed in the co-financing decision, or;(b) all or part of an action justifies neither part nor the whole of the co-financing from the Fund;(c) there are serious deficiencies in management and control systems that could give rise to systemic irregularities.In those cases, the Commission shall, stating its reasons, request that the Member State submit its comments and, where appropriate, carry out any corrections within a specified period of time.3. At the end of the period set by the Commission, the Commission may, if no agreement has been reached and the Member State has not made the corrections and taking account of any comments made by the Member State, decide within three months to:(a) reduce the pre-financing or final payments, or(b) make the financial corrections required by cancelling all or part of the contribution of the Fund to the actions in question.In the absence of a decision to do either (a) or (b) the interim or final payments shall immediately cease to be suspended.4. Any sum received unduly or to be recovered shall be repaid to the Commission. If the amount owed has not been repaid by the deadline set by the Commission, it shall bear interest at the rate applied by the European Central Bank to its principal refinancing operations in euros, plus three and a half points. The reference rate to which the increase applies shall be the rate in force on the first day of the month of the final date for payment, as published in the C series of the Official Journal of the European Union.5. The Commission, acting in accordance with the procedure provided for by Article 13(2), shall adopt rules and procedures for financial corrections made by the Commission in connection with projects implemented in the Member States under Articles 5, 6 and 7 and co-financed by the Fund.CHAPTER VMONITORING, EVALUATION AND REPORTSArticle 26Monitoring and evaluation1. The Commission shall carry out regular monitoring on the Fund in cooperation with the Member States.2. The Fund shall be evaluated regularly by the Commission in partnership with the Member States to assess the relevance, effectiveness and impact of actions in the light of the objectives referred to in Article 1. It shall also look at complementarity between the actions implemented under the Fund and those pursued under other relevant Community policies, instruments and initiatives.Article 27Reports1. In each Member State the responsible authority shall take the necessary measures to ensure project monitoring and evaluation.To that end, the agreements and contracts it concludes with the organisations responsible for action implementation shall include clauses laying down an obligation to submit regular and detailed reports on the state of progress of implementation and completion of the assigned objectives.2. No more than nine months after the eligibility deadline for expenditure laid down in the co-financing decision for each annual programme, the responsible authority shall submit a final implementation report and a final declaration of expenditure to the Commission as provided by Article 23(3).3. The Member States shall submit to the Commission:(a) no later than 31 December 2006, an evaluation report on the implementation of actions co-financed by the Fund;(b) no later than 30 June 2009 and 30 June 2012 respectively, an evaluation report on the results and impact of actions co-financed by the Fund.4. The Commission shall submit to Parliament, the Council, the Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions:(a) no later than 30 April 2007, an intermediate report on the results achieved and on qualitative and quantitative aspects of implementation of the Fund, together with any proposed amendments;(b) no later than 31 December 2009, an intermediate evaluation report and a proposal on the Fund's future development;(c) no later than 31 December 2012, an ex post evaluation report.CHAPTER VITRANSITIONAL PROVISIONSArticle 282005-2007 multiannual programmeBy way of derogation from Article 14, the following timetable shall apply for implementation of the multiannual programme for the period 2005-2007:(a) no later than 31 January 2005, the Commission shall notify the Member States of planning guidelines and shall provide an indication of the financial amounts allocated to them;(b) no later than 15 March 2005, the Member States shall designate the national responsible authority referred to in Article 12 and shall submit the proposal for a multiannual programme for the period 2005-2007 referred to in Article 14;(c) the Commission, acting in accordance with the procedure provided for by Article 13(2), shall approve the multiannual programmes no more than two months after the proposal for a multiannual programme has been received.Article 292005 annual programmeBy way of derogation from Article 15, the following timetable shall apply for implementation of the financial year 2005:(a) by 31 January 2005 at the latest, the Commission shall provide the Member States with an estimate of the amounts allocated to them;(b) the Member States shall present the proposal for an annual programme referred to in Article 15 to the Commission by 1 June 2005 at the latest; the proposal shall be accompanied by details of the management systems and checks which will be implemented with a view to ensuring that Community funds are used properly and effectively;(c) the Commission shall adopt co-financing decisions no more than two months after the draft annual programme has been presented, following verification of the aspects indicated in Article 11(1)(b).Expenditure actually disbursed between 1 January 2005 and that date on which the co-financing decisions are adopted may qualify for support from the Fund.CHAPTER VIIFINAL PROVISIONSArticle 30ReviewThe Council shall review this Decision on the basis of a proposal from the Commission by 31 December 2010 at the latest.Article 31AddresseesThis Decision is addressed to the Member States.Done at Brussels,For the CouncilThe PresidentFINANCIAL STATEMENTLEGISLATIVE FINANCIAL STATEMENTPolicy area(s): Justice and home affairsActivit(y/ies): Common immigration and asylum policiesTitle of action: European Refugee Fund1. BUDGET LINE(S) + HEADING(S)18 03 03 - European Refugee Fund18 03 04 - Emergency measures in the event of mass influxes of refugees18 01 04 02 - European Refugee Fund - Expenditure on administrative management18 01 04 03 - Emergency measures in the event of mass influxes of refugees - Expenditure on administrative management2. OVERALL FIGURES2.1. Total allocation for action (Part B): EUR670.090 million for commitment (Appropriations for 2007-2010 are given on an indicative basis and will have to remain within the post-2006 financial perspectives).2.2. Period of application:2005-20102.3. Overall multiannual estimate of expenditure:(a) Schedule of commitment appropriations/payment appropriations (financial intervention) (see point 6.1.1)Line 18 03 03 - European Refugee Fund(EUR million to three decimal places)&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;Line 18 03 04 - Emergency measures in the event of mass influxes of refugees (token entry)(EUR million to three decimal places)&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;b) Technical and administrative assistance and support expenditure (see point 6.1.2)18 01 04 02 - European Refugee Fund - Expenditure on administrative managementEUR million to three decimal places)&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;18 01 04 03 - Emergency measures in the event of mass influxes of refugees - Expenditure on administrative management (token entry)(EUR million to three decimal places)&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;(EUR million to three decimal places)&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;c) Overall financial impact of human resources and other administrative expenditure(see points 7.2 and 7.3)&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;2.4 Compatibility with financial programming and financial perspective|x| Proposal is compatible with existing financial programming in respect of appropriations for 2004-2006. The appropriations for 2007-2010 are given by way of indication and will have to be compatible with the financial programming drawn up in the framework of the post-2006 financial perspectives.|  | Proposal will entail reprogramming of the relevant heading in the financial perspectives.|  | Proposal may require application of the provisions of the Interinstitutional Agreement.2.5 Financial impact on revenue|x| Proposal has no financial implications (involves technical aspects regarding implementation of a measure).OR|  | Proposal has financial impact - the effect on revenue is as follows:3. BUDGET CHARACTERISTICS&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;4. LEGAL BASISProposal for a Council Decision establishing the European Refugee Fund for the period 2005-2010; Article 63(2)(b) of the EC Treaty.5. DESCRIPTION AND GROUNDS5.1 Need for Community intervention5.1.1 Objectives pursuedImplementation of a common asylum policy, as provided for in Article 63 of the Treaty establishing the European Community, includes measures aimed at "promoting a balance of effort between Member States in receiving and bearing the consequences of receiving refugees and displaced persons".Accordingly, the European Refugee Fund -- the first phase of which (2000-2004) was set in motion in September 2000 -- is a mechanism providing financial support for action by the Member States in favour of asylum seekers and refugees or persons enjoying or requesting subsidiary or temporary protection. Member States benefit from the mechanism relative to the burden they have to assume (i.e. in particular the number of persons in the above situations).In line with the provisions of the Treaty, the purpose of the ERF for 2005-2010 is to express solidarity between the Community and the Member States in the reception of asylum-seekers (between 350.000 and 400.000 each year), the integration of people enjoying international protection in the EU(between 50.000 and 100.000 each year), and actions in favour of the voluntary return of people enjoying protection or rejected asylum-seekers (between 50% and 80%), at a time when Community asylum legislation and enlargement are about to generate far-reaching structural changes. Implementation of the second phase of the Fund will have to go hand-in-hand with pursuit of the objectives laid down in Community legislation on defining a common asylum policy (Directive on standards for the reception of asylum seekers, [18] "Dublin II" Regulation, [19] Directives on asylum procedures [20] and on the qualification and status of refugees and subsidiary protection [21]), and, at a later stage, the goal of a common European asylum system. In this context, the Fund, in compliance with the subsidiarity and additionality principles, should enable measures to be developed in the Member States to improve the situation of individuals and enhance the effectiveness of arrangements for receiving asylum seekers and persons seeking protection on European Union territory and for integrating persons enjoying a form of international protection, and measures to encourage the voluntary return of such persons.[18]  Council Directive 2003/9/EC of 27 January 2003 laying down minimum standards for the reception of asylum seekers, OJ L 31, 6.2.2003, p.18.[19]  Council Regulation (EC) No 343/2003 of 18 February 2003 establishing the criteria and mechanisms for determining the Member State responsible for examining an asylum application lodged in one of the Member States by a third-country national, OJ L 50, 25.2.2003, p.1.[20]  Amended proposal for a Council Directive on minimum standards on procedures in Member States for granting and withdrawing refugee, COM(2002)326 Final, OJ C 291, 26.11.2002, p. 143.[21]  Proposal for a Council Directive on minimum standards for the qualification and status of third country nationals and stateless persons as refugees or as persons who otherwise need international protection, COM(2001)510 Final, OJ C 51 E, 26.2.2002, p. 325.In the light of experience arising from the conflict in the former Yugoslavia and Kosovo in the 1990s, there is a need to establish an emergency support mechanism to deal with any mass influx of displaced persons in order to offer them effective and humane reception arrangements, in conjunction with the relevant Community legislation. [22][22]  Council Directive 2001/55/EC of 20 July 2001 on minimum standards for giving temporary protection in the event of a mass influx of displaced persons and on measures promoting a balance of efforts between Member States in receiving such persons and bearing the consequences, OJ L 212, 7.8.2001, p.12.5.1.2 Measures taken in connection with ex ante evaluation and measures taken following ex post evaluation.This proposal for a Decision establishing the second phase of the Fund has been drawn up after a detailed impact study, which was based on the results of the mid-term review of the first phase of the Fund, carried out in 2003, and on public consultations at the conference organised by the Commission on 30 and 31 October 2003 and attended by over 350 participants from the 15 Member States and the 10 accession countries who are involved in asylum policy (representatives of national government departments, NGOs, regional and local authorities, refugees' organisations). A specific questionnaire was also sent to organisations working in the reception, integration and voluntary return of Fund target groups, and to national government departments in charge of managing Fund action at national level.The findings of the detailed impact study confirmed a number of assumptions made during the first phase of the Fund:- the criteria for distributing funds among the Member States, based on objective factors reflecting the responsibilities they have to bear (number of persons registered in their territory over the last three years who enjoy or are requesting a form of international protection), combined with a corrective mechanism (a fixed amount) to take into account factors such as the relative burden (e.g. in relation to a Member State's population, its wealth, the degree of development of its national asylum system);- the validity and cost-effectiveness of a management method in which a number of tasks are delegated to Member States: evaluation of priorities for action together with an evaluation of needs at national level, selection of projects for support, financial management of subsidies granted to projects;- the validity of the groups targeted by the action and of the wider measures framing that action: reception (including access to and the effectiveness of the procedure for examining asylum requests), integration of persons under protection in the Member State's society, measures to facilitate the voluntary return of asylum seekers (including those rejected) and refugees.Based on the findings of the mid-term review, a number of guidelines or proposals have been drawn up to improve the efficiency, effectiveness and viability of the financial instrument:- First, a substantial increase in the budget, which would turn the instrument into something more than a "symbolic" expression of Community solidarity, yield significant results and have a strong impact not only on target groups, but also on the systems themselves. Such an increase is warranted both by the trend in the number of asylum seekers (average annual increase of 13% between 1998 and 2002) and by the Fund's role in supporting the implementation of a genuine common asylum policy (e.g. minimum standards regarding reception, asylum procedures, rights and entitlements of people enjoying protection and organised voluntary returns). The increase in the funds set aside for the ERF should help to improve the situation of people seeking or enjoying international protection, having regard to patterns in the flows of such people and aiming to cover the immediate needs arising from them. According to the findings of the mid-term review, actions under the first phase of the ERF reached out to about 15% of the target population for reception, 10% for integration and 3% for returns. The second phase of the ERF is to have the objective of reaching out to a wider population averaging around 30%. The proposed increase in appropriations should also help to raise the quality and sustainability of systems and structures in terms of the common standards. The mid-term review highlighted the fact that the impact on systems and structures is substantial where the ERF's allocations added more than 10% to national funds for financing asylum. But it must be borne in mind that there are differences in the structural development of asylum systems between the Member States. The investment needed for reinforcing reception capacities and systems in the new Member States in connection with the implementation of the new Community asylum legislation, which can be expected to generate new flows for them, will have to be supported by the ERF. And the evaluation of the requisite resources will also have to be based on the improvement of the ERF's programming and management modes with the objective of maximising the ERF's efficiency and efficacy. The Commission accordingly considers that a gradual rise in the appropriations to EUR150 million annual from 2008 would make it reasonable possible to attain the objectives of solidarity and complementarity and implement Community asylum rules.- More strategic programming of Fund operations, with the Commission being given a bigger leadership role and account being taken of the legislative framework adopted by the Community on asylum policy.- The need to include in the criteria for distributing funds among the Member States not only the target population, but also the fact that the new Member States in particular must make structural investments to guarantee the effectiveness of national asylum systems. The mid-term review included an analysis of the breakdown between expenditure earmarked for strengthening structures and systems and expenditure earmarked for support for individuals. It emerged that the latter predominates, with the attendant risk of breakdowns and increased instability, particularly in relation to reception and integration. Given the situation in the new Member States, it is clear that support for systems and structures must be a priority in the new Fund - but this type of expenditure requires more substantial funding than support for individuals.- Programming and action lifecycles that yield more useful and viable results through multiannual strategies based on a consultation process (between national partners and between the Member States and the Commission), so that structural actions can be financed, also on a multiannual basis. This conclusion in the mid-term review emerged from consultation of the main partners involved in action implementation and was confirmed by the detailed impact study, as described above.- The mid-term review also looked at Community action under the present Fund. Although it identified a number of improvements that could be made, it also acknowledged the utility and value-added of this type of action. Greater emphasis will therefore be placed on the transnational dimension and on Community value-added through information systems and arrangements for sharing experience and best practice at Community level and increased support for innovatory transnational projects. Such projects should benefit from a longer duration (see above), but will have to be accompanied by measures designed to disseminate the results and bring them into the mainstream.- The delegation of management tasks to Member States, backed up by increased support at Community level (a common financial and administrative framework and common management tools), as a guarantee that the instrument is implemented in accordance with the principle of sound financial management, while providing a more favourable environment for projects to be put into action. This recommendation emerges clearly from the mid-term review, where, despite some criticisms of slow and cumbersome procedures, there was a unanimous call for a more proactive approach by the Community.5.2 Actions envisaged and budget intervention arrangementsThe European Refugee Fund translates into practice the principle of solidarity and burden-sharing between the Community and the Member States in establishing a common asylum policy and, in time, a common asylum system.Accordingly, 90% of the funds allocated will be distributed among the Member States, taking as a basis a certain fixed amount and the number of persons belonging to the target group who were registered on the territory of the Member State over the previous three years. The Member States will draw up a strategic programming framework for the action to be financed from the Fund for a three-year period. However, to allow for the budget principle of annuality and to adapt the breakdown of funds to the (sometimes rapidly) changing situation in each Member State, the actual distribution of funds will take place annually on the basis of the resources allocated in the budget procedure. This annual allocation will form the basis for national annual implementing programmes.The remaining 10% of funds will be reserved for implementation at Community level of action to improve communication and foster joint discussion on Fund activities through meetings of experts, the sharing of experiences and implementation of innovatory transnational projects.The following have been identified as beneficiaries of action under the European Refugee Fund:- Final beneficiaries: asylum seekers (around 375.000 registered each year in the EU-15), persons allowed refugee status, including through resettlement schemes, and persons allowed access to a form of subsidiary or temporary protection (around 30.000 admitted each year in the EU-15). Consideration must also be given to the special requirements of particularly vulnerable persons (e.g. unaccompanied minors, single mothers, the elderly, the disabled, victims of torture or degrading treatment).- Intermediate beneficiaries: services in the Member States responsible for establishing reception, integration and voluntary return arrangements, including services responsible for asylum procedures, and staff working for NGOs and regional/local authorities involved in establishing reception (including procedures), integration and voluntary return arrangements.Action financed from the Fund must be geared to improving conditions for the reception, integration and voluntary return of final beneficiaries, in accordance with the minimum standards laid down by Community legislation, improving the capacity of Member States' systems and fostering partnerships between the different players (central government services, local authorities, NGOs and refugee groups). Community action must be aimed at pooling and exchanging information and sharing and transferring best practice (including standards that are higher than the minimum laid down in Community rules).Action financed from the Fund will take the form of subsidies granted in accordance with the rules on calls for proposals or public procurement procedures and must be consistent with the strategic and operational objectives laid down in the multiannual programming framework and annual programmes.The Community contribution to actions may not exceed:- in the case of action implemented in the Member States, 50% of the total cost of a specific actions; this ceiling may rise to 60% for actions that are particularly innovatory or involve transnational partnerships and to 75% in Member States receiving assistance from the Cohesion Fund;- in the case of calls for proposals in connection with Community action, 80% of the total cost of a specific project.As a rule, Community financial assistance may be granted for projects under the Fund for a maximum of three years, subject to a periodic review of progress made.5.3 Methods of implementationIn the first phase of the Fund (2000-2004 -- Council Decision 2000/596/EC), management was shared with the Member States. Given the current diversity of asylum systems in the Member States and the need to support initiatives likely to yield results and have an impact on the circumstances of individuals in the Member States and on reception, integration and voluntary return arrangements, there is still a case for delegating to Member States certain management tasks -- including budget implementation --in the second phase. The substantial increase in Fund resources proposed for the second phase also justifies maintaining this system of delegation.Taking into account the results of the first phase, the calls for a bigger role for the Commission, particularly in terms of planning and the pooling of information, and the entry into force of more detailed financial rules on how tasks of public authority may be delegated to institutions or outside bodies (Financial Regulation and implementing rules), the option chosen for the second phase of the Fund is a system of "shared" management with management tasks being delegated to the Member States, which will designate -- for the management of action under the Fund -- national public-sector bodies or bodies governed by private law that are entrusted with a public service mission and provide adequate financial guarantees and meet the conditions laid down in the implementing rules (authorities responsible for the Fund). The amount granted by way of technical assistance will be increased and will consist of a fixed amount (EUR30.000) plus a variable element equivalent to no more than 5% of the annual allocation granted to the Member State. This amount will be earmarked to cover all or part of the expenditure relating to the organisation of calls for proposals, project selection, the administrative, contract and financial management of projects, publicity and information, follow-up and evaluation, and first-level inspections and audits. The Commission will also draw up common rules on administrative and financial management and develop common management tools.This management structure responds to a number of concerns:- the demand for cost-effectiveness (particularly because of the need to match national programmes to requirements identified in national asylum arrangements and the importance of providing the target group and grant recipients with access to information and management procedures in their own language);- the policy of seeking greater Commission control over implementation of the Fund in strategic and operational terms;- the difficulties pointed out by some Member States during the first phase, i.e. that the constraints arising from the "shared" management method were disproportionate to the "gains" from Community intervention, and the request that the national government departments in charge of managing the Fund be given more refined common management tools (particularly in the new Member States).In this context the delegation of management tasks -- including financial management tasks -- to Member States via the authorities responsible for the Fund will simplify the management framework and be accompanied by greater consistency and better interoperability between management systems and information systems.The Commission will manage "Community action" on a centralised basis, in accordance with the applicable rules (on public procurement, calls for proposals).6. FINANCIAL IMPACT6.1 Total financial impact on Part B - (over the entire programming period)6.1.1 Financial interventionLine 18 03 03 - European Refugee Fund(in EUR million to three decimal places)&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;Line 18 03 04 - Emergency measures in the event of mass influxes of refugees (token entry)(in EUR million to three decimal places)&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;6.1.2 Technical and administrative assistance, support expenditure and IT expenditure (commitment appropriations)18 01 04 02 - European Refugee Fund - Expenditure on administrative management(in EUR million to three decimal places)&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;18 01 04 03 - Emergency measures in the event of mass influxes of refugees - Expenditure on administrative management (token entry)(in EUR million to three decimal places)&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;6.2. Calculation of costs by measure envisaged in Part B (over the entire programming period)in EUR million to three decimal places&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;7. IMPACT ON STAFF AND ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENDITURE7.1. Impact on human resources&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;7.2 Overall financial impact of human resources&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;The amounts are total expenditure for twelve months on the basis of the instrument's management needs from 2008. The requirements in terms of administrative and financial resources will gradually be covered by the allocation assigned to the managing Directorate-General in the annual allocation procedure.7.3 Other administrative expenditure deriving from the action&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;The amounts are total expenditure for 12 months on the basis of the instrument's management needs from 2008.1 Specify the type of committee and the group to which it belongs.I. Annual total (7.2 + 7.3)  //  EUR 3 409200II. Duration of action  //  6 yearsIII. Total cost of action  //  EUR 17 386 9208. FOLLOW-UP AND EVALUATION8.1 Follow-up arrangementsUnder the management system proposed, minimum standard formats will be established in all Member States for the presentation of projects, monitoring and evaluation. In this context common indicators will be defined for the various types of action, for which data will have to be gathered when action implementation reports are presented.By the same token, a common management system (supported by a common IT application) will be developed in the financial field, in liaison with the Member States, to ensure that implementation of the programmes and actions funded is monitored on a common basis.8.2 Arrangements and schedule for evaluationSeveral national and Community evaluations are planned, based around the multiannual programming schedule of the Fund, which is divided into two programming periods: 2005-2007 and 2008-2009. The timetable of evaluations set out in the proposal for a Decision is as follows:- 31 December 2006: Member States submit national reports with an evaluation of the implementation of action under the Fund. This is followed by a Commission report pooling these evaluations no later than 30 April 2007. Given the deadline, the reports will concentrate primarily on the state of play in implementing programmes and action: it is unlikely that a detailed evaluation of the results and impact of action will be possible at that date. Nevertheless, the reports are necessary to prepare the second multiannual phase of the Fund (2008-2010).- 30 June 2009: Member States submit national reports on the evaluation of action under the Fund for the 2005-2007 multiannual programming period. The Commission will then produce an intermediate evaluation report by 31 December 2009 at the latest, accompanied by a proposal for pursuing action under the Fund from 2011.- 30 June 2012: Member States submit national reports with an ex post evaluation of action under the Fund for the 2008-2010 multiannual programming period, and an overall ex post evaluation of action. The Commission will then produce an ex post evaluation report by 31 December 2012 at the latest.Both the national and Community evaluations will be based on independent assessments conducted according to the terms of reference drawn up by the Commission under Article 26(2) of the proposal for a Decision.9. ANTI-FRAUD MEASURESAction taken under the Commission's direct, centralised management (Community action, technical assistance expenditure) will be implemented in accordance with the applicable rules, as defined in the Financial Regulation and its implementing rules. The contracts and grant agreements used will be the models recommended by the Commission and will provide for monitoring by the Commission and the Court of Auditors of the European Communities.The general rules on the administrative and financial management of action in the Member States, which will be adopted by the Commission under Article 12 of the proposal for a Decision, in accordance with the committee procedure laid down in Article 13, will comprise specific provisions on the management and control of projects by the authorities responsible and provisions on ex post checks by the Commission and the Court of Auditors of the European Communities.COMMISSION STAFF WORKING PAPERProposal for a Council Decision establishing the European Refugee Fundfor the period 2005-2010Extended Impact Assessment{COM(2004)102 final}COMMISSION STAFF WORKING PAPERProposal for a Council Decision establishing the European Refugee Fundfor the period 2005-2010Extended Impact Assessment1. INTRODUCTIONThe subject of this Extended Impact Assessment is the Commission proposal for the second phase of the European refugee Fund, a financial instrument that was initially created in September 2000 by Council Decision 2000/596/EC in support of the establishment of an area of freedom, security and justice, and in particular of a Common Asylum Policy as defined both by article 63 of the Treaty and by the conclusions of the European Council of Tampere of October 1999.The first phase of the European Refugee Fund, which runs from 1 January 2000 to 31 December 2004, was established by Council Decision 2000/596/EC [23]. The proposal for a legal base for the second phase of the European Refugee Fund should be presented by the Commission at the latest at the beginning of 2004 so as to enable the new instrument to be operational from 1 January 2005.[23]   Council Decision of 28 September 2000 establishing a European Refugee Fund (2000/596/EC), OJ JO L 252 of 6/10/2000, p. 12The Decision to undertake an Extended Impact Assessment for this proposal was taken late (June 2003), and is in many ways a "pilot exercise" at Commission services level so it may not address all the requirements usually expected from such an evaluation. However, a certain number of supporting documentation and consultation processes have been specifically implemented in order to develop this document, as detailed under section 7 of this document.The reflection on possible policy options for the second phase of the European Refugee Fund was already quite advanced at the time when this Extended Impact Assessment was undertaken. Also, the main choice policy choices were made in 2000, when the first phase of the ERF was created. The Extended Impact Assessment does not, therefore, set out the main architecture of the instrument. It was, however, useful to reassess the main objectives of the instrument in the light of developments since 2000 in the area of asylum policy, and adapt the specific objectives of the ERF to the overall objectives of this policy. Furthermore, it allowed the Commission services to thoroughly reflect on the expected impacts of the instrument in this broader context.The European Refugee Fund is a financial instrument whose prime objective is, in the context of the development of a Common Asylum Policy and, at a later stage, of a Common European Asylum System, to "promote a balance in the efforts made by Member States in receiving and bearing the consequences of receiving refugees and displaced persons".As a financial instrument, the assessment of the expected impact of the European Refugee Fund must take into account not only the economic, social and environmental consequences of the actions to be implemented, but also consider other issues such as effectiveness and efficiency of interventions. As an accompanying measure to a series of legislative initiatives aiming at the development of common European rules in the area of asylum, it must also take into account the effects of the adopted or to be adopted legislation in this area. Any expected impact of this instrument, and therefore policy choices made also have to take into account the accession of 10 new member States (some of them will constitute new external borders of the European Union) as from 1st May 2004.2. WHAT ISSUE/PROBLEM IS THE PROPOSAL EXPECTED TO TACKLE?* What is the issue/problem in a given policy area expressed in economic, social and environmental terms including unsustainable trends?* What are the risks inherent in the initial situation?* What is the underlying motive force?* What would happen under a "no policy change" scenario?* Who is affected?Issue and risks:The European Union as been faced with a drastic increase in the number of persons seeking asylum on the territory of the Member States since the early 1990s. These were first linked to the crisis in ex-Yugoslavia. Since then, the number of persons seeking asylum in the Union decreased until 1996 and then rose from 1997 to stabilise in 2002, when over 378.000 persons applied for asylum in a Member State of the Union and acceding countries. However while there may be a relative decrease in 2003, there are important differences among Member States, with some of them seeing a significant increase in numbers of asylum applications.TOTAL ASYLUM APPLICATIONS IN THE EU, 1986 TO 2002 * (1000)(Source: Eurostat)&gt;REFERENCE TO A GRAPHIC&gt;* no data available for Italy 2001 and 2002The situation of Member States faced with an influx of asylum seekers is very different, due to a variety of factors, such as the relative level of wealth, the geographical position, the existence of historic links with third countries of origin of asylum seekers, and the presence on the Member State's territory of existing communities of refugees and third country nationals from certain countries of origin. These conditions, as well as national differences in legal frameworks related to asylum may lead to secondary movements of Asylum Seekers between Member States.DISTRIBUTION OF ASYLUM APPLICATIONS BETWEEN MEMBER STATES, 1999 - 2002 *(Source: Eurostat)&gt;REFERENCE TO A GRAPHIC&gt;* no data available for Italy 2001 and 2002It is very difficult to predict future trends in numbers of asylum seekers and refugees. All international crises, wars, national conflicts, abuse of human rights have a bearing on incoming flows or on the returnability of relevant groups.The Common European Asylum policy creates common standards and has effects on the obligations of Member States with regards to the reception of asylum seekers and asylum procedures, integration of refugees and the return of asylum seekers, refugees and displaced persons. There is a growing need to enhance efficiency and decrease the duration of asylum procedures. New EC standards also aim at reducing divergences in interpretation of the needs for protection and thereby ensuring that persons who are genuinely in need of protection receive it to adequate and comparable standards in all the Member States. The implementation of the Dublin II Regulation and Eurodac clarifies the system of identification of Member State responsibility for examining an asylum claim and will also have new impacts in particular for new Member States.Europe also has an international role to play in sharing responsibilities with other regions in the world in receiving refugees and safeguarding the quality of the international protection system, the basis of which is the Geneva 1951 Convention. Europe also has a role to play in modernising the international protection system with a view to finding better durable solutions and challenges of a rapidly changing world situation. This is even more so since the adoption by the international Community in 2002 of the Agenda for protection.Economic dimension:It is difficult to have precise and comparable economic data on the cost of asylum systems in Member States, as, firstly, these figures are considered highly political at Member State level, and are therefore not widely used. Methods vary in calculation of such costs; some Member States include in their estimates all costs related to asylum related measures (including running costs of administration of the asylum procedures, social welfare and health benefits of asylum seekers and refugees, ...); others only the costs related to direct provision of services to asylum seekers or refugees. For example, Germany estimated that the cost of their reception system in 2002 was 1.5 billion Euros, while Ireland estimated the total cost of their reception, integration and voluntary return measures at 200 million Euros. In France, the cost of providing reception facilities alone to asylum seekers was estimated at 170 million EUR. It is clear, however, that the total cost of maintaining a quality asylum system can have a significant bearing on public expenses.At the same time, refugees and asylum seekers can represent a contribution to the workforce in the Member States, and valuable human capital.Social dimension:Adequate reception of asylum seekers and refugees is an obligation of International Law. That implies the provision of material conditions for reception of asylum seekers, health services, education of children etc., as well as legal guarantees for asylum seekers during the asylum procedures. Asylum seekers and refugees can be faced with racial tension and the risk of social exclusion. For refugees and other persons benefiting from international protection, there is a need to tailor integration policies to specific problems often linked to a significant degree of qualification (intellectuals, journalists, engineers, MDs) not recognised in the host country and the specific needs of vulnerable persons and victims of torture, taking also into account gender issues and the best interests of children.Questions of systemic efficiency in Member States must also be considered. These are in particular: inefficient asylum systems, lengthy procedures, administrative problems, backlog of application processing leading to very delayed decisions (up to several years), costs of reception schemes and determination procedures, opposition by local authorities and population. Developing good relationships with civil society, NGO and Refugee Community Organisations require human and financial investments on a large scale. Return of those who are either not granted protection or of refugees once conditions in their home country have changed is often difficult. It is, however, one of the conditions of the efficiency and credibility of the asylum system, as well as of other systems for organised legal migration. Such returns must be based on respect for human rights and sustainable solutions must be sought.Risks of a "no policy change" scenario:Solidarity and burden-sharing in the area of asylum are express provisions of the Treaty establishing the European Community, and were introduced through the Amsterdam Treaty. They are therefore an essential part of the progressive establishment of an area of freedom, security and justice.Furthermore, if there was no second phase to the ERF, there would be a risk that efforts undertaken under 1st phase, which have produced significant results would be undermined at the very time when the first wave of EC legislation in the field of asylum enters into force. That could be particularly detrimental for the new Member States with asylum systems in the early stages of development.Who is affected?- Asylum seekers and refugees, whose claims must be assessed fairly and efficiently, in full respect of international obligations and human dignity.- Refugees, in need of integration further to having to live in a new country following forced migration after often traumatising experiences.- Member States administrations at central, regional and local level, through the provision of services and cost to the National budget.- NGOs and Refugee Community Organisations who often provide most of the services with regard to reception, integration and return.- International organisations, other host countries and regions of origin.- EU citizens; although the social and economic costs of asylum seekers are often difficult to accept, there remains an awareness that asylum is part of our European heritage.3. WHAT MAIN OBJECTIVES IS THE PROPOSAL EXPECTED TO REACH?* What is the overall policy objective in terms of expected impacts?* Has account been taken of any previously established objectives?The general objectives of the common asylum policy are the full respect of the right to seek asylum and the establishment of a Common European Asylum System, based on the full and inclusive application of the Geneva Convention, thus ensuring that nobody is sent back to persecution, i.e. maintaining the principle of non-refoulement.This System should include, in the short term, a clear and workable determination of the State responsible for the examination of an asylum application, (a system for the identification of asylum seekers (Eurodac) also supports such a determination framework), common standards for a fair and efficient asylum procedure, common minimum conditions of reception of asylum seekers, and the approximation of rules on the recognition and content of the refugee status. It should be completed with measures on subsidiary forms of protection offering an appropriate status to any person in need of such protection. To that end, the Council should adopt, on the basis of Commission proposals, the necessary decisions according to the timetable set in the Treaty of Amsterdam.In the longer term, Community rules should lead to a common asylum procedure and a uniform status for those who are granted asylum valid throughout the Union. The Commission adopted a policy paper on this matter in November 2000.In case of mass influx of displaced persons, a special mechanism for temporary protection on the basis of solidarity between Member States will support the integrity of the asylum system.The main objective of the European Refugee Fund is set by the Treaty establishing the European Community (Article 63.2.b): to promote a balance of efforts between Member States in receiving and bearing the consequences of receiving refugees and displaced persons.The aim of the instrument is to express solidarity at Community level and to alleviate the pressures felt by Member States most affected by reception of refugees and displaced persons in facing the consequences of this reception, which includes reception conditions during asylum procedure (and ensuring fair and efficient asylum procedure), integration of recognised refugees and promoting voluntary return solutions for rejected asylum seekers and refugees who wish to return to their country of origin. Furthermore, the European Refugee Fund is one of the instruments of a Common Asylum policy, and as such the measures supported by the Fund should seek to complement and support the EU legislation already adopted or soon to be adopted in the area in order to support the progressive implementation of a Common Asylum System at all levels (common legislation and development of common best practices).The ERF is an important part of an overall policy for building a common European asylum policy. Reducing divergence between asylum systems and progressive implementation of common standards at EU level will have a cost, which will be greater for Member States with larger number of asylum seekers and refugees, but also to new Member States. The Community should contribute to correcting those imbalances and to supporting Member States in complying with their obligations. Furthermore, it should facilitate the involvement of all relevant stakeholders (governments, administrations, regional and local authorities, NGOs and Refugee Community Organisations, asylum seekers and refugees themselves) in the cross-fertilisation of ideas and in transnational exchanges of views and personnel to make the common asylum policy a practical reality.In drawing this impact assessment, and formulating the policy options available, account has been taken of previously established objectives underlying the first phase of the European Refugee Fund and their likely achievement, through the results of the mid-term review carried out in 2003 (executive summary of the report attached). Account also has to be taken of completion of other objectives (legislation) and the level of complementarity already achieved or soon to be achieved with these.Finally, account must also be taken of the other objectives being formulated in related policies, such as the integration of third country nationals, management of illegal immigration and future objectives for enhanced solidarity (including financial) in all areas as set out in the draft constitutional Treaty, which will affect the expected results, impacts, and objectives of the new phase of the European Refugee Fund.4. WHAT ARE THE MAIN POLICY OPTIONS AVAILABLE TO REACH THE OBJECTIVE?* Which policy instruments have been considered?* What is the basic approach to reach the objective?* What are the trade-offs associated with the proposed option?* What « designs » and « stringency levels » have been considered?* Which options have been discarded at an early stage?* How are subsidiarity and proportionality taken into account?4.1. Identification of policy optionsAs underlined above, the ERF forms part of a series of policy measures and is an accompanying instrument to legislative proposals. It must therefore contribute to both the objectives of promoting greater solidarity between member States in bearing the consequences of the reception of refugees and asylum seekers and support the progressive implementation of a common European asylum policy.The decision to undertake this extended impact assessment was taken late, and with the first phase of the European Refugee Fund already in force. At this time, major policy options such as "no policy change", or the simple replacement of a financial instrument by a non-financial instrument (such as open method of coordination) had already been rejected, as they did not satisfactorily address the requirements of the Treaty regarding burden-sharing. The policy options envisaged are therefore all based on the principle of financial support of the Community to the Member States, aimed at promoting a better balance of efforts and resources among Member States in the area of asylum.The mid-term evaluation of the first phase of the ERF, carried out in 2003, has already validated the main principles of the European Refugee Fund:- the allocation of the ERF to the Member States is in line with the principle of proportionality when interpreted in terms of the number of asylum applications relative to per capita GDP. This means that the distribution of funding between Member States is relevant to the overall ERF objective of promoting a balance in the efforts of the Member States in bearing the consequences of receiving refugees and displaced persons;- the measures for reception, integration and voluntary repatriation currently are and will continue to be relevant in light of the evolving needs in the Member States and in the European Union in the sense that there is clearly a need for the activities being undertaken in the fields represented by these three measures. The evaluation also concluded that currently there is no need for additional measures.- the decentralised structure of the ERF helps to ensure the relevance of the activities carried out within each measure, because the evolving needs, which the Fund is aimed at addressing are determined at the national level close to the problems.- The evaluation showed substantial results in relation to both individuals and systems/structures across all three areas. In addition the analysis showed that the projects had largely been successful in terms of achieving their planned objectives and results and the qualitative assessments of the effects on the participants were positive.However, the mid-term evaluation also raised certain questions in particular with regard to the effectiveness and the European added value of the first phase of the European Refugee Fund. Therefore, the policy options examined took into account in particular the weaknesses identified by the evaluation:- the potential added value deriving from the existence of a fund whose coverage is restricted to refugees and persons seeking protection is considerable. However, there is an overlap of funding possibilities of the ERF integration measure and those funding possibilities covered by the European Social Fund and the EQUAL Initiative.- the evaluation also found that the general level of impact on the national policies in the areas of reception, integration and voluntary repatriation, as well as on harmonisation among the Member States, remained rather limited.- Finally, the evaluation also pointed to implementation weaknesses, in particular to what was perceived as excessive administration and bureaucracy. This caused funding delays detrimental to the work of the project managers (mostly NGOs), and the need for increased support from the Commission on management of European Community Funds on a decentralised basis.Four policy options were therefore considered:- to abandon the European Refugee Fund as a separate Financial solidarity initiative, but mainstreaming measures aimed at refugees and asylum seekers into existing Community instruments such as the European Social Fund;- the continuation of the European Refugee Fund as a purely redistributive financial instrument covering the needs identified and expressed by the Member States;- a completely centralised financial instrument where the Commission would both identify needs and priorities at a European level, select and co finance actions to be supported to encourage actions that correspond to needs at Community level.- a more strategic "solidarity" instrument with a reinforced link to European asylum policy, and greater cooperation and cross-fertilisation dimension at national and European level.4.2. Impacts expected from identified policy options.The four policy options identified above were assessed with regard to potential impacts on target population, systems and structures and the management resources necessary at national and Community level.Mainstreaming of asylum seeker and refugee issues into existing solidarity programmesWith this option, specific initiatives would be sought in the actions of and the Community initiatives under the European Social Fund for the target population of asylum seekers and refugees. The advantages of this option would lie in the existence of an integrated treatment of the target population through a single instrument, and a "guichet unique" for actions aimed at integration of refugees and asylum seekers into the European labour market and European society. However, the role of such an instrument as an accompanying measure to the progressive implementation of a Common Asylum Policy (including asylum procedures) would be lost. Furthermore, the criteria of expression of "burden" or responsibility in the area of asylum are not, in most cases, related to the criteria determining the division of resources between Member States and regions within structural funds (relative wealth, in particular), and the relative distribution of funds through instruments such as the ESF would not reflect adequately the specific needs arising from the uneven distribution of asylum seekers across Member States. Finally, only part of the activities currently covered by the European Refugee Fund, and necessary to ensure a full complementarity with the development of a Common Asylum Policy could be covered through the ESF, and that is the integration of asylum seekers and refugees into the labour market. Essential actions, such as structuring and developing reception capability, improvement of asylum procedures and voluntary return schemes (representing over 70 % of measures implemented throughout the first phase of the ERF) would not be covered in such an option.The European Refugee Fund as a purely redistributive financial instrumentIn this option, the ERF would mainly act as a redistributive mechanism, based on the number of persons within the target group registered or admitted in each Member State. Each Member State would then invest the funds in accordance with its identified needs and priorities, based purely on national strategy. This option, which is, in essence, the one adopted for the first phase of the European Refugee Fund, would have the advantage of reflecting closely on the reality of needs in the field, and would be easier to manage at Community / Commission level. However, the mid-term review showed the limits of such an approach, which acts mainly as a financial compensation instrument and has little or no impact on improvement of coordination and convergence of national policies in the context of a Common European Asylum policy.A centralised financial instrumentIn view of the limitations identified above with regard to the first phase of the ERF, one could be tempted to refocus completely the financial support towards projects with a strong European added value and transnational impact, in order to ensure full adequacy of actions supported to the common standards developed. However, this approach would prove difficult to manage at EU level due to the level of human resources required and would run the risk of a disconnection between objectives and targets set at EU level and the actual needs of the target population and actors in the field (governments, NGOs, regional and local authorities) in the Member States. Furthermore, many of the actors involved would not, due to their limited size, be able to work on a transnational level or have the management capacity to present and sustain project at EU level, and an excessive centralisation of the ERF would create mainly administrative restrictions to accessing the funds for these entities. Finally, there are still significant differences in Member States asylum policies and levels of services available to asylum seekers and refugees, which require solutions adapted to those differences.A more strategic instrument of "solidarity" in the area of asylumThis last option, which is the one chosen, aims at correcting the weaknesses identified with the first phase of the ERF, building on the progressive establishment of a common asylum policy and the common European asylum system, and recognising the still wide diversity of asylum systems between Member States. It encourages a progressive convergence and consistency not only of legislation, but also of material and social conditions for the reception, the integration and the return of asylum seekers, refugees and displaced persons. In addition, strong and supportive actions at EU level would be supported, disseminated and discussed, in order to bring out innovative new approaches or methods and mainstream them into national policies and systems. Different parameters were considered in this regard, which are detailed in section 5 below.5. WHAT ARE THE IMPACTS - POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE - EXPECTED FROM THE DIFFERENT OPTIONS IDENTIFIED?* What are the expected positive and negative impacts of the options selected, particularly in terms of economic, social and environmental consequences, including impacts on management of risks? Are there potential conflicts and inconsistencies between economic, social and environmental impacts that may lead to trade-offs and related policy decisions?* How large are the additional ('marginal') effects that can be attributed to the policy proposal, i.e. those effects over and above the "no policy change" scenario? Description in qualitative terms and quantified as far as possible. Monetarisation may be used where appropriate.* Are there especially severe impacts on a particular social group, economic sector (including size-class of enterprises) or region?* What are the impacts over time?* What are the results of any scenario, risk or sensitivity analysis undertaken?5.1. Impacts of identified policy optionsWith regard to the policy option envisaged, and of the elements brought forward by the mid-term evaluation of the first phase of the European Refugee Fund, several parameters in particular were considered and discussed at the Conference organised by the Commission on 30-31 October 2003, and through a specific questionnaire addressed to a selected number of organisations, including ERF Responsible Authorities (implementing administrations at national level) in the Member States. This focused in particular on:- target groups of the ERF (continued relevance, reduction of potential overlaps with other Community programmes);- Implementation structures and management procedures (a more efficient cooperation between European and national level, more efficient management and better value for money for projects);- Increasing the impact of the ERF in all areas covered (reception, integration, return) and knowledge sharing at the European level.Measures and target groups of the ERFIn view of the often common needs of refugees and other categories of persons such as migrants, the question was raised of the continued relevance of a financial instrument targeted only at refugees and persons seeking international protection. The stakeholders consulted explicitly emphasised the importance of the need for targeted resources and expertise to deal with refugees and their needs as a positive outcome of the Fund's focus on refugees and persons seeking international protection. Even though persons seeking or enjoying international protection have the same basic needs for reception and integration as other immigrants, it should be remembered that these persons have not chosen to leave their country of origin for the purpose of economic migration and therefore may not find themselves in the same starting position as other immigrants. This indicates a need for additional help to integrate and in particular to access mainstream activities at the earliest possible opportunity. Unlike economic migrants, persons in need of international protection often have no family, communities or networks to fall back upon on arrival. Furthermore, if the available resources were to be dispersed among all migrant groups, there would be a real risk of refugees and persons in need of international protection failing to receive the necessary support. It was however noted that, in some instances, the gaps existing in the provision of services to other migrants leads to economic migrants presenting themselves as refugees in order to receive the support at a level that is otherwise available only to asylum seekers and/or refugees. Therefore, whilst a specific programme aimed at strengthening the implementation of a fair and efficient asylum system is fully justified by the specific characteristics of international protection measures, additional measures could be considered within the framework of immigration policy in order to further cover the needs of migrant populations.Implementation arrangementsDecentralisationThe main positive impact of decentralisation is that the national management level is closer to the needs of the target groups, and possesses the knowledge required to deal with the local situations, legislation and organisational structures. This means that national needs can be addressed more rapidly and effectively. Furthermore, a decentralised management model gives the National Responsible Authorities more freedom in ensuring complementarity with similar national activities, thereby making it possible to avoid duplicating activities, and ensure additionality. However, in decentralising management to the national level, it was perceived that another level of management had naturally been added to the overall structure of the Fund, complicating financial procedures and delaying payments to operators.Strategic programming and European Added ValueFinally, the duration of one year for national programmes and projects was clearly identified as a major limitation. For Member States, one year is not enough to develop a thorough strategy. Furthermore, the quite complex inter-institutional arrangements provided for in the first ERF decision had a negative consequence on the formulation of programming, the resources of both National Administrations and Commission staff having to concentrate on meeting set deadlines for adoption of documents. This was not conducive to a thorough reflection and dialogue on policy formulation and strategic planning. It is therefore proposed to move towards multi-annual strategic programming based on 3 year period, while keeping possibilities to adapt financial allocations to member States and annually, on the basis of the actual evolution of the target population. The role of the Commission in the strategic programming phase would be enhanced, in particular to encourage the development of strategies and actions aimed at the implementation of standards defined in EU legislation, as well as encouraging the development of higher standards or innovative approaches.Sustainable management rules:The choice of shared management for the European Refugee Fund, based on the model of Structural Funds, has proved very cumbersome for Member States administrations in charge of managing decentralised actions. This is particularly true for an instrument representing yearly appropriations not exceeding 45 MEUR per year, i.e. less than 0,4 % of the volume of the European Social Fund alone. It is therefore proposed, in order to ensure sound financial management and consistency of evaluation of actions co-financed, to define more precisely and develop specific management and monitoring tools for the second phase of the ERF in order to support the Member States management systems, and to raise slightly the amount of funds that can be used for the purposes of technical assistance by the Member States.Cross-fertilisation and exchange of good practices:The second phase of the ERF should also concentrate on the development of dialogue, consultations, dissemination and exchanges of information both at national and European level. To this end, the Community Actions should be strengthened, and aimed at developing easily accessible tools for dissemination of information and results (for example web-based databases), and regular consultations between actors (Commission, governments, NGOS, Refugee Community Organisations, regional and local authorities, refugees and asylum seekers themselves) at both national and EU level. Arranging meetings for project managers to create a forum for dialogue could also increase knowledge sharing, and thereby strengthen the impact of the programme. Such activities, including possibly the establishment of different EU thematic working groups, would enable worthwhile trans-national exchanges via virtual means of communication (internet and email newsletters) and occasional thematic workshops.5.2. Impacts of proposed policy optionThe table in Annex I details the expected impacts of the proposed policy options in terms of economic, social and, where possible, environmental impacts. It considers positive and negative impacts of all three measures (reception, integration and return) on the target groups of the Fund (asylum seekers and persons benefiting from international protection), as well as on other actors such as Member States, partners of the asylum policy (NGOs, local authorities) and the EU citizens. The main impacts can be summarised as follows:* Expected impacts for final beneficiaries (asylum seekers and refugees):- reception conditions and asylum procedures : improvement in quality / quantity of material reception conditions for persons seeking protection (health, housing, education, social benefits, access to the labour market), fairer and more effective asylum procedures;- integration : decrease in dependence on social welfare, improved access to the labour market for refugees enabling them to support themselves at an earlier stage, increased participation in social life through civil society organisations and other relevant channels, improved well-being and self-esteem;- voluntary return : changed or improved conditions enabling refugees and asylum seekers to return home in a sustainable way, development of skills of returnees with a positive impact on the country of origin.* For Member States:- contribution to the economic responsibility undertaken by the Member State in relation to the reception of asylum seekers and refugees and implementation of a common asylum policy;- contribution to changes in processes / policies by development of higher standards, fairer and more effective asylum procedures, reduction of the length of asylum procedures, improvement of reception, integration and return capacity, improvement of qualification of staff , exchanges of experiences and best practices at EU level.* For partners of asylum policy (NGO, Refugee Community Organisations, local and regional authorities):- capacity building and development of new services and greater involvement of self-help organisations;- improvement of qualification of staff, increased cooperation of services / structures in developing capacity in the area of reception;* For the EU citizens:- awareness raising to the issue of refugees and asylum seekers- better acceptance of reception centres by local communities.From the analysis of the tables, a few general conclusions can be drawn:First, positive impacts outweigh negative impact for all measures and at all levels. This is particularly true as regards social impacts.A redistributive analysis shows that the target group who benefits most directly is that of asylum seekers and refugees. Consideration was given to how to address illegal immigrants/residents. The conclusion was that the asylum coherence of the ERF should be safeguarded but that this could be covered by possible other instruments and budget lines within the mandate of JAI policies.Most importantly, significant important systemic effects have been identified with regard to the member States and the organisations working in this area (NGOs and Refugee Community organisations). It must be noted that the situation varies from country to country, most notably in terms of the degree of consolidation of the asylum systems and the experience with the three measures.When the type of impact is considered, the most significant are in the social sphere - economic impacts are more indirect and may be more difficult to identify given the scale of the Fund -. Direct implementation costs have not been quantified and it will be an issue to be dealt with by the monitoring system of the Fund. Indirect and associated costs are more difficult to assess. Environmental impacts are quite weak, which is consistent with the formulation of objectives (they do not include environmental considerations). It has not been possible to differentiate these impacts by target group.Identified impacts on countries of origin present a somewhat ambiguous picture - if it is clear that a better management of asylum flows accompanied by a policy of voluntary return can have positive impacts in the development of these countries, there are also associated risks. These include, for example, risks of asylum seekers and refugees losing contact with their countries of origin, and also risks of qualified people leaving these countries (brain drain).To conclude, it can be said that, overall, expected impacts across the three measures are coherent with the formulation of the mian objectives of the Fund. Indeed, the overall impacts reflect the main policy goal of the ERF, i.e. the contribution to the implementation of the common asylum standards and guidelines agreed at EU level and convergence of practices across Member States to support an open and secure European Union, fully committed to the obligations of the Geneva Convention and other relevant human rights instruments, and able to respond to humanitarian needs on the basis of solidarity.6. HOW TO MONITOR AND EVALUATE THE RESULTS AND IMPACTS OF THE PROPOSAL AFTER IMPLEMENTATION?* How will the policy be implemented?* How will the policy be monitored?* What are the arrangements for any ex-post evaluation of the policy?The proposed programme for the period 2005-2010 will be based on two programming periods of 3 years, which will give rise to multiannual strategies to be agreed between Member States and the Commission on the basis of guidelines issued by the Commission. The management of the Fund will be consolidated through harmonised management instruments (shared management between the Commission and Responsible national Authorities), which will ensure both an adequacy of actions implemented to the specific needs identified in the Member States, and improve financial management through the implementation of common administrative, financial and monitoring terms of reference. As regards monitoring, specific common reporting tools (database, set of indicators) will be developed, and used for the annual reports to be presented by Member States.The improvement of asylum statistics collection (against the background of the Action plan implemented by the Commission and the next Commission proposal for a framework Regulation for development of consistent Community statistics in the field of asylum and migration to be adopted in 2004) will support better sharing of resources.Furthermore, the "consultation, dialogue and cross-fertilisation" dimension of the programme will be reinforced through strategic dialogue with stakeholders, reinforcement of the Community dimension projects and transnational partnerships, as well as the development of specific tools for the dissemination of results and exchanges of information.Evaluations will be carried out both at national and European level at key dates :- mid-term evaluation of implementation of the programme at mid-term of the first programming period (mid-2007), in order to take into account the first results of the programme also on the basis of the final evaluation of the first phase of the European refugee Fund (ex-post evaluation to be carried out in 2005-2006), and propose adjustments of the programme in respect of the development of new solidarity instruments in the area of asylum and migration (cf. article .III-169 of the Draft Constitutional Treaty) as well as the new phase of the Financial Perspectives.- ex-post evaluation of the first multi-annual programming period at the end of 2009, with a view to contribute to a proposal to be made by the Commission on the further development of the European refugee Fund after 2010.- ex-post evaluation of the impact of the Fund at the end of 2012.7. STAKEHOLDER CONSULTATION* Which interested parties were consulted, when in the process, and for what purpose?* What were the results of the consultation?A wide consultation was carried out for the preparation of the proposal for the second phase of the European Refugee Fund, including:- a survey of all Member States national authorities as well as all projects supported between 2000 and 2002 (response rate of projects was 43 %), carried out within the framework of the mid-term evaluation of the first phase of the European Refugee Fund (January to November 2003) ;- Conference organised by the European Commission on 30-31 October 2003, which attracted over 350 participants from 15 Member States and 10 acceding countries, representing all partners involved in the implementation of asylum policy (national government representatives, regional and local authorities, NGOs, Refugee Community Organisations, . This Conference, whilst presenting the first results of the mid-term evaluation of the first phase of the European Refugee Fund, was an opportunity to gather opinions and proposals for the second phase of the instrument. The debates were organised around five workshops, focusing on new developments and needs in the three fields of intervention of the European Refugee Fund (reception, integration and return), and "horizontal" themes (development of best practices, the added value of transnationality, definition and expression of solidarity in the area of asylum policy).- a specific questionnaire on some of the questions raised by the mid-term evaluation and options envisaged through the conference was sent to a very large number of Organisations and to all Member States' responsible Authorities involved with the first phase of the ERF.The results of these consultations was the following :* The overall validation of the criteria used for the expression of solidarity needs to take into account criteria linked to the relative responsibility undertaken by each Member State (GDP), and to the short term specific needs of the 10 acceding countries with regard to structural development of their asylum systems;* The need to strengthen the European dimension of the ERF, both in terms of objectives and operations;* The ERF should receive substantially increased financial resources in order to have a substantially greater impact on structures, processes and policies, in particular given the increased need to transpose and adopt new EC legislation in the field of asylum;* The ERF should be driven by the principle of additionality to, strengthen capacity and encourage innovation;* Need for increased dialogue both at national and transnational level between all actors involved;* Multi-annual programming periods and multi-annual project duration;* A simplified and proportionate management and control system.8. COMMISSION DRAFT PROPOSAL AND JUSTIFICATION* What is the final policy choice and why?* Why was a more/less ambitious option not chosen?* Which are the trade-offs associated to the chosen option?* If current data or knowledge are of poor quality, why should a decision be taken now rather than be put off until better information is available?* Have any accompanying measures to maximise positive impacts and minimise negative impacts been taken?The mid-term review of the first phase of the evaluation as well as the wide consultation undertaken through the Conference organised by the Commission on 30-31 October 2003 have brought useful results on the assessment of measures aimed at improving the relevance, effectiveness and efficiency of the European Refugee Fund.The mid-term evaluation considered that substantial results were achieved within all three measures: reception, integration and voluntary return. The projects were largely successful in terms of achieving their planned objectives with a fairly high direct impact on the final beneficiaries, especially in the field of integration.However, the evaluation also showed that the general level of impact on the national policies in the areas of reception, integration and voluntary repatriation, as well as on harmonisation and burden sharing among Member States remains too limited to demonstrate substantial added value. This is due, in particular to the highly "symbolic" financial dimension of the Fund in terms of actual contribution to the levels of expenditure that Member States are facing in relation to asylum. It is also due to a certain number of weaknesses identified in the structure and management of the Fund: a one year project duration which does not enable innovative projects to reach their full fruition and ascertain sustainability, management arrangements causing funding delays to project promoters which are detrimental to the proper implementation of projects, complexity and heaviness of the management process with regard to the actual size of the Fund, lack of cooperation between stakeholders at national and EU level for the implementation of the Fund.Consequently there is a need to improve the implementation structures and to strengthen the role of the EC in co-ordinating national strategies in order to ensure added value and the exchange of good practice.ANNEX 15.2 IMPACTS EXPECTED FROM THE PROPOSED OPTION&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;5.2.1. RECEPTION CONDITIONS&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;5.2.2. INTEGRATION&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;5.2.3.VOLUNTARY RETURN&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;&gt;TABLE POSITION&gt;