Pope promulgates new law for
government of Vatican City State
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| Palazzo of the Governorate in the Vatican. |
In a letter issued motu proprio, Pope Francis has
promulgated new norms that will overhaul the Governorate of Vatican City State,
in order to make it better suited for the ecclesial service it is called to
provide for the mission of the Roman Pontiff in the world.
On 7 June 2019, the New Law on the
Government of Vatican City State will enter into effect. Pope Francisannounced
the new norms with a motu proprio beginning "Fin
dall’inizio," released on Thursday, which is dated 25 November 2018,
the Solemnity of Christ the King of the Universe. With the publication of the motu
proprio, the Press Office of the Holy See has also released an Explanatory
note (in Italian).
A reform at the service of the Church
The new legislation replaces that approved by St John Paul
II with the motu proprio of 26 November 2000, which has been in force since
February 2001. Explaining the reforms, Pope Francis states that, from the
beginning of his ministry in the See of Peter, he felt “the need for an overall
reorganization of the Governorate of Vatican City State, in order to make it
ever more suited to today's needs, for the ecclesial service which it is called
to render to the mission of the Roman Pontiff in the world, and for the
particular institutional purpose of the State of Vatican City, designed ‘by its
very nature to guarantee absolute and visible independence to the See of
Peter’.”
Simplification and transparency
The Pope recalls the three principles underlying this legislative
reform: rationalization, economy, and simplification; and the four criteria
that characterize it: functionality, transparency, regulatory consistency, and
organizational flexibility. The task of formulating the new norms was entrusted
by the Holy Father to Cardinal Giuseppe Bertello, President of the Pontifical
Commission for Vatican City State, and President of the Governorate of Vatican
City State, assisted by a working Commission.
Reducing the number of Departments and Central Offices
In line with these objectives, the new law provides for a
reduction in the number of operational bodies. The number of departments will
be decreased from the current 9 to 7: Infrastructure and Services;
Telecommunications and Information Systems; Economics; Security and Civil
Protection Services; Health and Hygiene; Museums and Cultural Heritage;
Pontifical Villas), with the Vatican Observatory as a scientific body. The
Central Offices will be decreased from the current 5 to 2: the Personnel Office
and the Legal Office.
Institution of a Unit of Control and Inspection
Transparency is being furthered by encouraging greater and
more conscious responsibility by the managers of the operational sections
through the establishment of a Unit of Control and Inspection within the
Governorate. This new body will have the specific task of verifying the
observance of the regulations and procedures, and of evaluating the efficiency
and effectiveness of the activities of the various sections.
Moderate decentralization
The new legislation tends towards a moderate
decentralisation, making the directors of the Departments or Offices
responsible for their own actions; the results achieved with respect to the
assigned objectives; the safety of the workplace; and data protection.

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