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Building Strong and Ethical Foundations: Doing It Right

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Building Strong and Ethical Foundations. Questions Being Asked. Who makes decisions? ... Building Strong and Ethical Foundations. Conflicts of Interest (federal ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Building Strong and Ethical Foundations: Doing It Right


1
Building Strong and Ethical Foundations Doing It
Right
  • Indianapolis
  • September 16, 2004

Janne Gallagher Vice President and General
Counsel
2
Setting the Stage
  • Excessive Compensation
  • Lavish Perks
  • Costs Exceed Grants
  • Board Conflicts
  • Investment Practices

3
Questions Being Asked
  • Who makes decisions?
  • How are they made?
  • Why is there no public input?

4
Agenda
  • Federal and State Law
  • General governance
  • Conflicts of interest
  • Compensation
  • Investments
  • Sarbanes-Oxley The Coming Storm?
  • Ethical Framework

5
Legal Requirements State
  • State Corporate and Trust Laws
  • Duty of care Knowledge and judgment
  • Duty of loyalty The foundation comes first
  • Investment laws
  • Uniform Management of Institutional Funds Act
  • Uniform Prudent Investor Act

6
Legal Requirements Federal
  • Fiduciary obligations
  • Self-dealing ( 4941)
  • Intermediate sanctions ( 4958)
  • Investment restrictions
  • Excess business holdings ( 4943)
  • Jeopardy investments ( 4944)

7
Conflicts of Interest
  • Two kinds
  • Economic
  • Non-economic (appearance of conflict)
  • Two legal structures
  • Charitable trusts
  • Nonprofit corporations
  • Two ways to resolve
  • Law prohibits transaction (self-dealing)
  • Disclosure and abstention

8
Conflicts of Interest (state law)
  • Trust law
  • Strict (but donor may vary)
  • Voidable regardless of good faith or fairness
  • Corporate law
  • Follow procedural rules
  • Not voidable if fair or proper vote
  • Some states bar loans to directors and officers

9
Conflicts of Interest (state law)
  • Remedies
  • Restitution
  • Removal
  • Ban from serving on charity boards

10
Conflicts of Interest (federal law)
  • Private Foundations
  • Basic rule No transactions with disqualified
    persons
  • Major exception compensation for personal
    services
  • Disqualified persons
  • Officers, directors, trustees
  • Substantial contributors
  • Family members of the above
  • Businesses controlled by the above

11
Conflicts of Interest (federal law)
  • Penalty excise tax
  • Self-dealer must pay back amount
  • Self-dealer pays 5 of amount
  • Managers who approve pay 2.5 of amount
  • Examples
  • Loans prohibited
  • Reasonable compensation allowed

12
Conflicts of Interest (federal law)
  • Public Charities
  • Excess benefit transactions
  • Excessive compensation
  • Other transactions rent, purchases, etc.
  • Penalty
  • Repayment
  • Plus 25 percent of amount
  • Possible manager tax 10 percent

13
Addressing Conflicts
  • Adopt and follow written policy
  • Disclosure
  • Abstain from voting
  • Leave the room

14
Compensation (state law)
  • Reasonable compensation allowed
  • Examples
  • Bishop Estate
  • King Foundation
  • NYSE

15
Compensation (federal law)
  • Services must be reasonable and necessary
  • Compensation must not be excessive
  • Service must be personal
  • Foundation management
  • Banking, legal, accounting, investment services
  • May not include real estate management, most
    consulting

16
Reasonable Compensation
  • What similar persons get paid
  • For similar work
  • In similar circumstances
  • In the same geographic area
  • A word about percentage-based compensation

17
Determining Compensation
  • Data use appropriate comparability data
  • Decision by disinterested governing board or
    committee (where possible)
  • Discussion
  • Document, document, document

18
Compensation Example
  • Chief Executive Officer/
  • President of Family Foundation
  • Source Council on Foundations, 2004 Grantmakers
    Salary and Benefits Report

19
Investments (state law)
  • Permits investments based on portfolio theory
  • Permits delegation
  • Standard of care
  • Prudent investor (trusts)
  • Ordinary business care and prudence
    (corporations)
  • Diversification
  • Required (trusts)
  • Not required (corporations)
  • Duty of Loyalty (avoid conflicts of interest)

20
Investments (federal law)
  • Self-dealing (avoid conflicts)
  • Limitations on business ownership
  • Jeopardy investments
  • Unrelated business income tax
  • No requirement to diversify (if rules are met)

21
Investment Policies
  • Investment objectives
  • Asset allocation
  • Risk tolerance
  • Benchmarks
  • Costs

22
Corporate Governance Reforms
  • Whistleblower Protection
  • A confidential, anonymous mechanism for
  • reporting inappropriate financial management
  • practices
  • What process?
  • How communicated?
  • No retaliation

23
Corporate Governance Reforms
  • Document destruction
  • Altering
  • Covering up
  • Falsifying
  • Destroying
  • Litigation-related documents
  • Involving any federal investigation.

24
Corporate Governance Reforms
  • Internal Controls
  • Is information accurate and does it fairly
    present financial condition of company?
  • Will controls detect fraud or misappropriation?
  • Is material information presented to top
    management, audit committee and outside auditor?

25
Corporate Governance Reforms
  • Audit Committee
  • Independent
  • Financial expertise

26
Corporate Governance Reforms
  • Independent Auditor
  • Limits on providing other kinds of services
  • Audit partner rotation

27
Corporate Governance Reforms
  • Other Requirements
  • Certification of financial statements
  • CEO/CFO understand and verify
  • Ethical codes for key finance staff
  • No loans to insiders

28
Corporate Governance Reforms
  • New California Regulations
  • (passed by Legislature, not yet enacted)
  • Applies to nonprofits with more than 2 million a
    year in revenue
  • Independent audit committee
  • Independent audit filed with state
  • Board review and approval of executive
    compensation

29
Corporate Governance Reforms
  • Key not slavish imitation
  • What areas in your foundation are susceptible to
    fraud or misrepresentation?
  • What controls do you need?

30
Corporate Governance Reforms
  • Some areas to think about
  • Transactions with insiders
  • Asset valuation
  • Fundraising expenses
  • Donor intent
  • Grant due diligence
  • Should investment management be separated from
    audit?

31
Ethical Framework
  • Self-imposed rules
  • Creates trust by filling gaps left by the law
  • Guides decisions in hard cases
  • Helps ensure consistency
  • Family/corporate principles
  • Policies
  • Conflicts of interest compensation investments
    grant-making
  • Disclosure
  • Explains decisions

32
Contact Information
  • Janne Gallagher, Esq.
  • Vice President and General Counsel
  • 202/467-0288 gallj_at_cof.org
  • Diane Canova, Esq.
  • Interim Director, Government Relations and Public
    Policy
  • 202/467-0405 canod_at_cof.org
  • Andras Kosaras, Esq.
  • Director, Ethical Standards and Philanthropic
    Outreach
  • 202/467-0399 kosaa_at_cof.org
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