The Board’s Fiduciary Role Inspires and supports ... · PDF fileExpands board...
Transcript of The Board’s Fiduciary Role Inspires and supports ... · PDF fileExpands board...
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The Board’s Fiduciary Role: Moving Beyond Oversight
Susan S. Meier, Senior Governance Consultant September 13, 2016
© 2016. Not to be distributed or reproduced without the express permission of BoardSource.
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BoardSource
• Inspires and supports excellence in nonprofit governance and board and staff leadership
• Is the premier source of cutting-edge thinking and resources related to nonprofit boards
• Engages and develops the next generation of board leaders
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Susan Meier • Senior Governance
Consultant at BoardSource • Principal, Meier and
Associates • Former Vice President of
Consulting & Training at BoardSource
• 28+ years in the nonprofit sector
• Board member experience 4
Objectives
To increase our understanding of:
the fiduciary role of a nonprofit board of directors the range of systems, policies, committees, and documents that nonprofits should have in place to help ensure appropriate financial oversight the distinction between program monitoring and evaluation and the board’s role in each the basics of good legal and ethical oversight
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Agenda Fiduciary Oversight, Transparency and Confidentiality
Financial Oversight
Program Monitoring and Evaluation
Legal & Ethical Oversight
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Poll Question 1: What does “fiduciary” even mean?
A. A person who holds something in trust for another
B. A trustee
C. A person or institution given the power to act on behalf of another in situations that require great trust, honesty and loyalty
D. All of the above
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I. Fiduciary Oversight, Transparency and Confidentiality
Transparency & IRS Form 990
Part VI: Governance, Management, and Disclosure Part VII: Compensation of Officers, Directors, Trustees, Key Employees, Highest Compensated Employees, and Independent Contractors
on of Officers,oyees, Highest Compendependent Contractors
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Form 990 - Governance 1. Number of voting board members 2. Family or business relationships between officers, directors, trustees,
key employees 3. Significant changes to organizational documents 4. Contemporaneous minutes of board and committee meetings 5. Process to review 990 6. Conflict of Interest Policy 7. Whistleblower Policy 8. Document Retention and Destruction Policy 9. Process for determining compensation for CEO, officers, key
employees 10. Public availability of 1023 or 1024
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Form 990 - Compensation • Salary and wages, bonuses • Severance payments, deferred payments, retirement
benefits, fringe benefits • Other financial arrangements or transactions such as
personal vehicles, meals, housing, personal and family educational benefits, below-market loans, payment of personal or family travel, entertainment, and personal use of the organization’s property
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Executive Compensation Safe Harbor
• Review and approval by governing body or compensation committee (without conflict of interest with respect to a compensation arrangement)
• Use of comparable data • Contemporaneous documentation and
recordkeeping of deliberations and decisions
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Poll Question 2
Does your full board review your IRS 990 before it is filed?
a) Yes b) No c) Not sure
d?
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Beyond the Form 990: Transparency
The Basics • Open communication • All board members have access to the same
information
External Transparency
• Annual reports, board and staff lists, and 990 on Web site
• Proactive sharing of good and bad news
Being Proactive
• Hard questions are asked • Hard truths are spoken
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Transparency vs. Confidentiality
• Board confidentiality
• Dealing with a breach
• Electronic communications
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II. Financial Oversight
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Can you repeat that, please?
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• “sell the forward spread
and buy protection on the tightening move,”
• “use indices and add to existing position,”
• “go long risk on some belly tranches especially where defaults may realize” and
• “buy protection in rallies and turn the position over to monetize volatility.”
Investment Strategy Quotes New York Times, 1/26/2012
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Poll Question 3
Which financial statements does your full board of directors review regularly? (Check all that apply.)
Annual budget Budget-to-actual statements Cashflow statements Balance sheets Other
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Basic Questions Every Board Member Should Be Asking
• Is our financial plan consistent with our strategic plan? • Have we run a gain or a loss? • Is our projected cash flow adequate? • Do we have sufficient reserves? • Are any specific expense areas rising faster than their
sources of income? • Are our key expenses, especially salaries and benefits,
under control? • Are we meeting guidelines and requirements set by our
funders?
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Assess Financial Performance
Learn about overall financial health.
• Liquidity • Revenue and expense activity • Status of significant investments • Reserves • Compliance with donor
restrictions where applicable
s
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Assess Financial Performance (cont’d)
Board “Must Haves”
Reserve policy
Diversified revenues
Investment policy and strategy to guide decision making
Access to investment expertise, not just on the board but in a third party
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1. Understand the Organization’s Finances
4. Assess Financial Performance – Monitor and Provide Oversight 3. Assess and
Minimize Risk
2. Review Financial Requirements (budgets,
projections)
I. Set Direction II. Ensure Resources III. Provide Oversight
The Board’s Role in Financial Oversight
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Relationship between the Board and Financial Committees
Full Board
• Ultimate fiduciary responsibility to the organization
• Can delegate tasks to committees
Financial Committees
• Make recommendations rather than binding organizational decisions
• As such, members do not have individual liability or authority
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Fiscal policies Budgets Anticipates financial problems Educates the board Ensures reporting requirements
Financial Committees
Finance Committee Audit Committee
Full Board
Reviews and approves audit reports Manages the scope of the audit Selects external firm to provide the audit Ensures compliance and reporting Often responsible for review of 990
Oversees organizational investments Selects and oversees external investment advisors Comprises individuals knowledgeable about investments
Legally responsible for the financial success of the organization Prepare for meetings, including review of financial statements (Care) Disclose conflicts of interest (Loyalty) Mission fidelity (Obedience)
Investment Committee
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Financial Management Systems That Protect Nonprofits
1. Internal Controls
2. Accounting Policies and Procedures
3. External Audits
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1. Internal Controls
Segregates Duties
Deters and detects improper behavior
Processes and procedures that protect the assets of
the organization
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Financial Controls Policy
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2. Accounting Policies and Procedures
• Accounting Manual
– Contains the guidelines for processing transactions and maintaining good internal controls
• Investment Policies
– Includes procedures for safeguarding cash and ensuring liquidity
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Investment Policies
• Investment committee • Investment consultant,
Advisors, and Agents • Objectives • Asset allocations • Rebalancing
Procedures • Investment Guidelines • Asset Quality • Asset Diversification • Proxy Voting • Custody and Securities
Brokerage • Cash Flow
Requirements • Restrictions • Mission-based
Investment Criteria • Exceptions to
Restrictions • Reporting
Requirements
•••
•
••
•
•
• InAdObAsRePrInAsAs
•
•••
•••
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3. External Audit
• Process to ensure that financial statements accurately reflect financial position
• Adds a level of oversight and scrutiny to ensure the organization is on solid footing
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III. Program Monitoring and Evaluation
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Monitoring versus Evaluation
• Monitoring – Are we doing what we said we would do?
• Evaluation – Are we doing the right thing?
•
•
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Basic Questions
• Is this program or service making enough of a difference for the people served?
• Is it cost-effective? • To what extent is it still needed or wanted? • Is there a more effective and efficient way
to meet the need? • What is another way to address the issue
we are trying to respond to?
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Use of Dashboards: Why and How?
Source: Lawrence M. Butler, author of The Nonprofit Dashboard: Using Metrics to Drive Mission Success, Second Edition (BoardSource, 2012).
What is the value of using a dashboard?
Saves time Tracks progress Sheds light on system dynamics Points up potential problems Reveals patterns Expands board members’ comfort zones Develops a shared knowledge base Focuses information from a governance perspective Reinforces board oversight
What approaches can be used to define dashboard metrics?
Outcomes Mission as spine Strategic initiatives or drivers of success Risk factors Services and resources
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Graphic Dashboard
Source: Lawrence M. Butler author of The Nonprofit Dashboard: A Tool for Tracking Progress (BoardSource, 2007).
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IV. Legal and Ethical Oversight
Legal Duties of the Board and Board Members
Duty of Care Duty of Loyalty Duty of Obedience
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• Duty of Care – Using your best judgment – Actively participating, paying attention – Asking pertinent questions
• Duty of Loyalty – Avoiding conflicts of interest – Putting aside personal and professional interests
• Duty of Obedience – Staying true to the organization’s mission – Obeying the law, both public and organizational
Exists when a board member, officer, or management employee has a personal interest that is in conflict with the interests of the organization, such that he or she may be influenced by this personal interest when making a decision for the organization.
Conflict of Interest
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Conflict-of-Interest Policy Full disclosure Persons in decision-making roles make known their connection with groups or individuals doing business with a nonprofit. Information provided annually.
Abstention Abstain from voting on any actual or potential conflict- of-interest transaction. Record Recusal is noted in the minutes.
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Other Areas to Beware
• Whistleblower • Document Retention & Destruction • Employment Taxes • Self-dealing & excessive benefit e benefit
Minimizing Risk
1. Timely submission of IRS 990 2. Transparency 3. Basic Financial literacy for all board members 4. Conflict of Interest Policy 5. Approval of compensation for CEO and senior staff 6. Regular review of bylaws, policies, and insurance 7. Dashboards 8. Assessments 9. Informed Board Members 10. Engaged governance and decision-making
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Thoughts, Questions…
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Resources www.boardsource.org
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Mark Your Calendars: Upcoming Webinars • The Board Building Cycle
– Tuesday, March 24, 2015: 1:00 – 2:00pm Eastern • Pivotal Points: The Board’s Role in Leadership
Transitions – Friday, May 8, 2015: 1:00 – 2:00pm Eastern
• The Board’s Role in Fundraising – Monday, June 2, 2015: 12:00 – 1:00 Eastern