5.1 Before submitting a proposal
Before submitting a proposal, institutions must have an institutional agreement and strategic research plan in place, as well as some other requirements for certain types of projects.
5.1.1 Institutional agreement
Before submitting a proposal to the CFI, an institution must sign an institutional agreement. This agreement defines the conditions under which the institution may use CFI funding.
Use the fillable pdf forms to submit new or revised institutional agreements.
Email the completed form to the Senior Programs Officer or Programs Officer assigned to your institution. After we receive the completed form, we will send it to the institution’s president to be signed through DocuSign.
In the institutional agreement, the president of the institution designates one or two authorized signatories, an account administrator and a liaison to act on their behalf.
Authorized signatory
The authorized signatory is authorized to sign and submit letters confirming that notices of intent, proposals and award agreements have been submitted, as well as to submit notices of intent, proposals, award finalization forms and project progress reports in the CFI Awards Management System (CAMS).
Account administrator
The account administrator has custody of the CFI funds and is accountable for the institution’s CFI financial accounts, related records and supporting documentation. The account administrator is authorized to sign award agreements and submit award finalization forms, financial reports and Infrastructure Operating Fund annual reports.
Liaison
The liaison interacts with the CFI on a day-to-day basis. The liaison is authorized to submit notices of intent, proposals, award finalization forms, amendment requests and project progress reports in CAMS. The liaison is also authorized to submit the strategic research plan.
Institutions should communicate any change to these roles to the CFI via their Senior Programs Officer.
5.1.2 Strategic research plan
The CFI requires each eligible institution to submit a strategic research plan (as either a summary document with a maximum of five pages, or a full plan). This plan sets priorities based on the institution’s vision for the future. We encourage institutions to build on their distinct advantages and to set priorities in areas that integrate ideas and knowledge from many disciplines and sectors. When completing the strategic research plan, institutions should:
- Outline the major objectives of the strategic research plan
- Outline the priority areas of research and research training
- Outline those areas for which it intends to request support from the CFI
- Describe past and planned institutional support to priority areas
- Describe planned inter-institutional and inter-sectoral collaborations
- Describe how it will measure success in meeting its objectives
- Describe the planning and approval process (including the involvement of affiliated entities).
Proposals submitted to the CFI are expected to be aligned with the institution’s strategic research plan. For specific funds, we provide the strategic research plan to the review committees. We therefore expect institutions to update us any time it revises its strategic research plan.
5.1.3 Special requirements for certain types of infrastructure projects
Institutions must ensure that researchers follow existing guidelines and adhere to the requirements for their research project. In signing the institutional agreement, the institution agrees to conform to relevant regulatory requirements and applicable laws and guidelines, including but not limited to the:
- Tri-Council Policy Statement: Ethical Conduct for Research Involving Humans
- Federal government’s National Security Guidelines for Research Partnerships
- Drugs and health products guidance documents on clinical trials from Health Canada
- Tri-Council Policy Statement: Privacy and Confidentiality
- Conflict of Interest and Confidentiality Policy of the federal research funding organizations
- Canadian Council on Animal Care’s guidelines for animal care
- Canadian Biosafety Standards and Guidelines
- Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission’s regulations, recommended procedures and safety precautions
- Provincial, territorial and federal government regulations pertaining to environmental assessment, as outlined in the Impact Assessment Act
- Licensing and regulations for research and research facilities for the Yukon, Northwest Territories and Nunavut
- Federal government’s Impact Assessment Act, Conflict of Interest Act and Lobbying Act.