LogoMandate
Regional Permitting Authority·2024 Engagement·14-Month Backlog → 9-Day Turnaround

We Turned a
14-Month Permit
Backlog Into a
9-Day Turnaround.

Three deputy ministers brought us in after their own reform efforts stalled. In each case, the dysfunction wasn't a resource problem — it was architectural. Mandate diagnoses the structural cause, redesigns the delivery system, and stays until the numbers prove it.

Audit ResponseService Delivery RedesignTechnology ModernizationOrganizational RestructureProcurement Reform

Engagement 01·Provincial Permitting Authority·2024

The Permit That Took Longer Than Building the Building

9d
Average processing time (from 14 months)
73%
Applications delegated to analyst tier
88%
Reduction in director review load
Context

The agency processed 40,000 commercial permit applications annually across eleven regional offices. A newly appointed Deputy Minister inherited a 14-month average processing time — a figure that had appeared in two consecutive auditor-general reports and was attracting legislative scrutiny.

Inherited Dysfunction

Initial diagnostic revealed that no single application touched fewer than seven distinct approval queues, each operating on independent scheduling logic. Staff in queue four had no visibility into queue three's decisions. Escalation pathways were verbal, undocumented, and dependent on institutional memory held by three individuals approaching retirement.

"The director was reviewing applications that a trained analyst could close in twelve minutes. That's not a workload problem. That's a governance design failure."
Diagnostic Finding

The delay was not a staffing problem. The agency was, by headcount, adequately resourced. The delay was a routing problem compounded by a decision-rights vacuum: no one below the director level had authority to approve any application category, regardless of complexity, and the director reviewed 340 files weekly.

The Intervention

Mandate redesigned the decision-rights matrix across four application tiers, implemented a parallel-routing protocol that eliminated sequential queue dependency, and established a real-time dashboard visible to all queues. A four-week staff certification program transferred director-level approval authority for 73% of application types to senior analysts.

Measured Result

Average processing time fell from 14.2 months to 9 days within the first full quarter of operation. The director's weekly review load dropped from 340 files to 41. No legislative intervention was required. The reform was cited in the following year's audit as a model for the ministry.

Engagement 02·Municipal Social Services Directorate·2023

A Legacy System That No One Could Turn Off

14mo
Delivery timeline (on schedule, on budget)
23
Undocumented decision points mapped
40%
Reduction in staff reconciliation time
Context

A city of 1.2 million residents ran its social assistance intake through a case management platform installed in 2004. The vendor had ceased support in 2019. The system processed 2,800 applications monthly. The city manager's office had attempted two modernization projects in six years; both were abandoned after procurement complications and contractor disputes.

Inherited Dysfunction

The system was undocumented. No technical specifications existed. The three staff members who understood its internal logic had each retired between 2018 and 2022. A shadow parallel process had evolved — staff maintained personal spreadsheets to track what the system could not. Decision-making was split between the official record and the informal one, creating liability exposure the city's legal team had flagged repeatedly.

"You cannot modernize a process you haven't documented. Both previous attempts bought software before anyone drew a flowchart."
Diagnostic Finding

The modernization failure pattern was consistent: each attempt began with technology selection before completing process documentation. New systems were purchased before the existing workflow was mapped. Contractors were handed a broken process and asked to automate it. The result was a more expensive version of the same dysfunction.

The Intervention

Mandate began with a twelve-week process archaeology engagement — reconstructing, from staff interviews and transaction logs, a complete map of the actual intake workflow (not the intended one). The documented workflow revealed 23 decision points that existed in staff practice but not in any policy instrument. We then ran a parallel procurement design: technology selection criteria derived from process requirements, not vendor capability sheets.

Measured Result

A new system went live 14 months after engagement commencement — on schedule and on budget. Shadow spreadsheets were retired. The city's legal exposure was resolved. Staff reported a 40% reduction in time spent on data reconciliation. The city manager's office has since applied the process-first methodology to two additional legacy modernization projects.

Engagement 03·Federal Agency — Procurement & Contracting Division·2022

Eighteen Months to Award a Contract. We Found Why.

6.8mo
Average cycle time (from 18.4 months)
63%
Reduction in procurement timeline
71%
Contracts handled via standing delegation
Context

An agency responsible for infrastructure procurement was averaging 18.4 months from project identification to contract award — more than twice the government's own benchmark. A Treasury Board review was pending. The Agency Director had commissioned two internal reviews; both concluded that the problem was "process complexity" without specifying which process, which step, or what complexity meant in measurable terms.

Inherited Dysfunction

The procurement pipeline contained 14 formal approval stages. Six of those stages had no defined turnaround standard. Three required sign-off from a committee that met quarterly. Two required legal review that, in practice, was scheduled only after all other approvals were complete — meaning legal issues discovered at stage 13 sent files back to stage 4.

"The process wasn't too complex. It was sequenced incorrectly. Legal review at stage 13 is a design choice that costs this agency four months per file."
Diagnostic Finding

Eighty-three percent of total elapsed time occurred in four stages: legal review, Treasury Board pre-approval, committee scheduling, and inter-departmental consultation. None of these stages were the problem; their sequencing was. Legal review, placed last, was the single largest source of rework. Parallelizing legal review with stages 6 through 9 would eliminate the rework loop entirely.

The Intervention

Mandate redesigned the approval sequence, moved legal review to run concurrently with stages 6 through 9, established turnaround standards for all six previously undefined stages, and replaced the quarterly committee with a standing delegation authority for contracts below $2M. A twelve-month monitoring protocol tracked elapsed time at each stage.

Measured Result

Average procurement cycle time fell to 6.8 months — a 63% reduction — within the first full year. Treasury Board review was satisfied without remediation. The standing delegation authority eliminated committee scheduling delays for 71% of contracts by volume. The redesigned process was adopted as the agency's standard operating procedure.

Diagnostic Framework

Four Phases. One Standard: The Numbers Have to Hold.

Most consultancies deliver a report and leave. Mandate stays until the measured result matches the diagnostic promise. Our four-phase framework is designed for government operating conditions — political constraints, procurement rules, and the institutional inertia that kills most reform efforts before they take root.

01

Structural Diagnosis

3–6 weeks

We map the actual process — not the intended one. Transaction logs, staff interviews, and decision-point documentation reveal where the dysfunction lives and what is causing it.

Process archaeology report
Decision-rights matrix
Root-cause brief
02

Intervention Design

4–8 weeks

Redesign is sequenced, not wholesale. We identify the three to five structural changes that will produce measurable improvement without requiring shutdown, rebidding, or legislative change.

Redesign blueprint
Change sequencing plan
Risk register
03

Implementation & Transfer

8–16 weeks

We stay through implementation. Changes are piloted in parallel before cutover. Staff are certified, not just trained. We transfer capability, not dependency.

Staff certification program
Parallel pilot results
Cutover protocol
04

Monitored Validation

12 months

Results are tracked against the diagnostic baseline. If metrics diverge, we return. The engagement is not complete until the numbers hold through a full operating cycle.

Monitoring dashboard
Quarterly performance reports
Audit-ready documentation
Track Record

Forty-Three Engagements. No Abandoned Projects.

12
Federal Agency Engagements
8
Provincial / Territorial
23
Municipal Engagements
58%
Average Cycle Time Reduction
100%
Engagements Completed On-Budget
4
Auditor-General Citations (Model Practice)

"Mandate did what two previous consultancies couldn't — they documented the actual process before recommending changes. The result held through the audit."

Catherine Moreau
Deputy Minister, Service Delivery Modernization · Provincial Ministry of Municipal Affairs

"We had a 23-year-old system, no documentation, and a city council demanding answers. Mandate gave us a defensible path forward and stayed until we were through it."

James Osei-Bonsu
City Manager · Municipality of Lakewood, Population 890,000
Certifications & Frameworks
Treasury Board Framework CertifiedPSPC Approved VendorISO 9001:2015ATIP CompliantSecurity Clearance — Level IIIndigenous Procurement Policy

If the pattern looks familiar, the diagnostic call is free.

We spend 45 minutes asking about your situation. If we can't identify the structural cause of the dysfunction, we tell you — and suggest who can. If we can, we'll tell you what we'd look for and what a realistic engagement looks like.