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Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders 2012-2013

Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

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Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders. 2012-2013. Governance of Nonprofit Organizations. Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders Thursday August 22, 2013. Goals. Explore the meaning of “governance” in the nonprofit context. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

2012-2013

Page 2: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Governance of Nonprofit Organizations

Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Thursday August 22, 2013

Page 3: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Goals

Explore the meaning of “governance” in the nonprofit context.

Give nonprofit leaders tools to impact the governance of their organizations.

Page 4: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Today’s Agenda

- 1:00-1:15 Introduction to Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

- 1:15-2:20 Governance: Developing a common understanding

- 2:40 – 3:45 Identifying Best Practices and applying practices in hypothetical situations

Page 5: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

I. Governance

Governance has both technical and operational aspects.-Technically – a legal relationship between a group of people and a corporation or other entity-Operationally – a functional relationship between an organization and a group of people

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Key to governance: The Board

"Board" or "board of directors" means the group of natural persons vested by the corporation with the management of its affairs whether or not the group is designated as directors in the articles of incorporation or bylaws.

Page 7: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

The Board’s Role

The role of the Board of Directors is to direct and manage the organization.

Board has ultimate obligation to manage the organization’s assets and activities.

Page 8: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Board’s Responsibilities – By Statute

Except as otherwise provided in the articles of incorporation, all corporate powers shall be exercised under the authority of, and the affairs of the corporation managed under the direction of, its Board of Directors. See North Carolina Nonprofit Corporation Act,N.C.G.S. § 55A-8-01.

Page 9: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Board Delegates

As a general rule, unless prohibited by the articles or bylaws, the Board of Directors may delegate the management of activities of the corporation to committees, provided the committee is comprised of two or more members.

Page 10: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Limits on Power to Delegate

While the Board may appoint committees, such committees may not exercise extraordinary powers.

Specifically, a committee of the board shall not:- Authorize distributions;

- Recommend to members or approve dissolution, merger or the sale, pledge, or transfer of all or substantially all of the corporation’s assets;

- Elect, appoint or remove directors, or fill vacancies on the board or on any of its committees; or

- Adopt, amend, or repeal the articles of incorporation or bylaws.See North Carolina Nonprofit Corporation Act, N.C.G.S. §

55A-8-25.

Page 11: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Governance: Operational

Governance is the process of setting goals, defining expectations, allocating resources, and verifying performance.

Page 12: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Board Member Duties in the nonprofit sector

Directors of nonprofit corporations have a unique duty to manage the affairs of the organization so that its property will be used for the “public purposes” for which it was entrusted.

Page 13: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

II. Board Composition

Electing the Board:

Bylaws provide rules for board election- Membership Organizations – Board is elected by

members at annual meeting- Non-membership Organizations – Board

nominates and appoints board members directly.

Page 14: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Composition is a Question of Mission

Page 15: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Terms and Succession

Organizations benefit from stability.

Terms should be defined in the by-laws and include:-Staggered seats-Some provision for succession (e.g. limited number of terms or years and nominating committee for new members).

Page 16: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

A note on required elements in Bylaws

Conflicts of Interest Policy (IRS) - Duty to disclose- Duty not to vote on self-interested matters- Annual statement from each board member

Document retention policy (Sarbanes-Oxley§802)- Crime to knowingly destroy documents and records- Policy defines how long records will be retained

Whistleblower (SOX)

Page 17: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

III. What is Governed

The Nonprofit Corporation: A corporation formed under state statute which:-Does not distribute earnings in excess of expenses to any individual or group.-Maintains tax-exempt purpose through activities that are consistent with IRC 501

Page 18: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Non-distribution Constraint

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Once In…

Distribution Constraints – income in excess of expenses may not be distributed.

Dissolution Constraints – on dissolution, property may only be distributed to another nonprofit.

Page 20: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders
Page 21: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Purposes

Every corporation incorporated under this Chapter has the purpose of engaging in any lawful activity unless a more limited purpose is set forth in its articles of incorporation.

See North Carolina Nonprofit Corporation Act,N.C.G.S. § 55A-8-01

Page 22: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

IV. The Board’s Responsibilities

The role of the Board of Directors is to direct and manage the organization.

Board has ultimate obligation to manage organization’s assets and activities.

• The board may use agents and employees to carry out day to day activities and to run the organization’s programs. See North Carolina Nonprofit Corporation Act, N.C.G.S. § 55A-8-01.

Page 23: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Fiduciary Duties of Directors

Nonprofit directors and officers have two primary duties;

- The Duty of Care- The Duty of Loyalty

These are owed to the organization and in some circumstances to third parties such as members.

Page 24: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Duty of Care

A director shall discharge his or her duties in good faith with the care an ordinarily prudent person in a like position would exercise under similar circumstances and in a manner the director reasonably believes to be in the best interests of the corporation.

See North Carolina Nonprofit Corporation Act, N.C.G.S. § 55A-8-30.

Page 25: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Duty of Care: Informed & In Good Faith

The Duty of Care requires that a Director be informed and act in good faith.

Page 26: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Duty of Care: Attend Meetings

To meet the Duty of Care, Directors must-- Attend Board meetings,- Have access to all organizational information,

and- Make ‘informed’ decisions.

Page 27: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Duty of Care: Obtaining Needed Information

The Duty of Care requires board members to seek out information they know they need in order to make an informed decision. This includes information that a board member should know he/she needs in order to make an informed decision based on a reasonable person standard.

Page 28: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Duty of Loyalty

Board members have a duty to pursue the corporation’s best interests rather than those of your own or others.(e.g. avoiding conflicts of interest, whether over money or politics)

Page 29: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Duty of Loyalty: Prohibits Self-Dealing

A director is prohibited from engaging in self-dealing unless there is full disclosure to the board AND the transaction is clearly in the corporation’s best financial interest AND a majority of the board must authorize, approve, or ratify the transaction.

Conflict of interest provisions may be found at N.C.G.S. § 55A‑8‑31.

Page 30: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Duty of Loyalty: Requires Faithfulness

The Duty of Loyalty requires a director’s faithful pursuit of the interests of the organization, rather than the financial or other interests of the director or another person or organization.

Page 31: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Note : Conflict of Interest Policy

The organization should adopt a clear conflict of interest policy

-Define conflicts and provide for resolution-Make sure every board member has a copy of the policy -Incorporate the policy into your bylaws and board training materials

Page 32: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Board Member Duties When Fulfilling Responsibilities

Directors of nonprofit corporations have a unique duty to manage the affairs of the organization so that its property will be used for the “public purposes” for which it was entrusted.

Page 33: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

V. To Whom is the Board Accountable?

Nonprofit and for-profit boards differ in who they are accountable to:-For profits – Shareholder-Nonprofits are accountable to their members, to the IRS, the Secretary of State and funders.

Page 34: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Standing to Sue

Potential plaintiffs include:

-The Attorney General’s Office -Beneficiaries with a Special Interest-Fellow Directors-Members

The general public lacks standing.

Page 35: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Potential Liability

A member of a nonprofit board may be personally liable for any distributions made by the nonprofit in violation of the North Carolina Nonprofit Corporation Act, when made in breach of the Duty of Care.

See North Carolina Nonprofit Corporation Act, N.C.G.S. § 55A-8-33.

Page 36: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Standard of Liability

Nonprofit directors are required to discharge their duties of Care and Loyalty:

1.In good faith

2.With the care an ordinary person would exercise in a similar situation.

3.In a manner the officer reasonably believes to be in the best interests of the corporation and its members.

Page 37: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Acting with Care Protects the Board Member

A director is not liable to the corporation, any member, or any other person for any action taken or not taken as a director, if the director acted in compliance with N.C.G.S. § 55A-8-30.

Page 38: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Impact on Tax Exemption

A board’s failure to govern an organization in a way that is inconsistent with the “public purpose” can lead to a loss of the organization’s tax-exempt recognition.

Page 39: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Three “I’s”

Idemnity

Immunity

Insurance

Page 40: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

VI. Internal Revenue Code 501 and the Board

501(c)(3) – Charitable, educational or religious organization

501(c)(4) – Social Welfare Organization

501(c)(6) – Business or Professional Association

Page 41: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Board Duties & The 4 Tests

1. Manage assets to comply with I.R.S. regulations.

2. Maintain public purpose

3. Avoid private benefit

4. Monitor political activity and lobbying

Page 42: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Manage Assets to Comply with Tax Exemption

A nonprofit must be operated in a way that is consistent with its tax status. For example:

-Not operated for the benefit of private interests or designated individuals, the creator, or family members.

-Transactions between the 501(c)(3) and board members that result in gain must be looked at carefully.

Page 43: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Maintain a Public Purpose

Activities must substantially serve the organization’s nonprofit purpose.

-Avoid substantial unrelated activity-Avoid primarily commercial purpose

Page 44: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Private Benefit and Lobbying

Nonprofit can not become a conduit for private benefit.

Nonprofit may not engage in substantial lobbying and is prohibited from political activity.

Page 45: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

VII. What does this mean for a board?

What is board service for many Board Members?

-Volunteer service-“Advisory” and not “active”

Page 46: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

What does this mean for the organization?

The board’s responsibilities are not aligned with the expectations of the members.

Therefore:-Support for decisions can be difficult to build.-Division of work suffers.-Funding and marketing are not efficient.

Page 47: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

The Value of Board Training

By clearly communicating board member responsibility and the role of board governance, you can facilitate board involvement and create additional resources to promote the organization’s mission.

Page 48: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Training Topics

Board structure, role and composition

Board procedures

Nonprofit’s tax-exempt purpose and activities

Financial procedures

Organizational structure

Page 49: Business Essentials for Nonprofit Leaders

Questions?