- Disclaimer: This article is a real yawner.
Unless you get super excited about non profit disclosure, the Shriners
or what non profit experts have to say, you probably won't make it past
the first few sentences. It's long, technical, dry and detailed. If you
want to read something interesting, go to my blog. You have been so warned!
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- The Tampa Tribune published a story on
2 July 2006 about charity watchdog groups who have questioned the Shriners'
$9.5 billion endowment. The Chronicle of Philanthropy reported late last
month that Senator Charles Grassley, chairman of the Senate Finance Committee,
is moving towards stricter non profit regulations.
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- Non profits are in the news.
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- Today's topic is disclosure.
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- Non profit groups, such as the Shriners
Hospitals for Children, have strict disclosure guidelines, especially when
it comes to their taxes. Certain questions on the IRS non profit 990 tax
return forms provide important indications of how a group is doing. Or
tell who the group is affiliated with. Or answer if they lobbied or if
they had real estate transactions between the corporation and directors,
officers or employees. Or if they amended their governing documents.
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- First, we'll take a look at two news
stories; one about the Shriners and the other covering nonprofit legislation
passed by the Senate. Second, a description of discrepancies found on Shriners'
annual reports and tax returns. Third, a few comments from the country's
top charity experts who participated in a First Tuesday Forum at the Urban
Institute to discuss non profit disclosure. Finally, an interview with
Rich Cowles, Executive Director of The Charities Review Council of Minnesota,
with a focus on disclosure.
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- Non profits in the News
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- On July 2, 2006, the Tampa Tribune ran
"Charity Watchdog Critical of Shriners' Endowment" by Alan Snel
and Mary Shedden. It described how the Shriners are able to spend so much
of their budget on program expenses and so little on fundraising because
they rely on the individual Shriners in their Temples to raise money at
no cost for them. From the article:
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- "The American Institute of Philanthropy
gave the Shriners an "F" for maintaining such a high amount of
money in the bank, said Daniel Borochoff, the institute's founder. Any
charity that has more than five years' worth of budget spending in the
bank gets an automatic "F," he said. "Most nonprofits have
limited charitable resources. Most nonprofits can barely meet their budgets,"
Borochoff said. "It's not that they're a horrible group, but [having
all the money in the bank] is a poor basis to be asking people for money."
According to the article, "if Shriners relied on only its endowment
and its returns, it could run its hospitals for the next 13 years without
another cent of fundraising."
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- The Tampa Tribune article can be read
at: www.tbo.com/news/nationworld/MGB6P8RS4PE.html
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- On June 29, the Chronicle of Philanthropy
ran Harvy Lipman's story "Senate Committee Passes New Accountability
Rules; Passage of Giving Incentives Now in Doubt." Lipman described
the Senate's efforts to legislate higher standards for non profit accountability
and, more specifically, how Sen. Charles E. Grassley, chairman of the Senate
Finance Committee, "has been trying to win enactment of legislation
that would both encourage increased giving to charity and close what he
sees as loopholes in federal tax law that allow unscrupulous people to
benefit from their involvement with nonprofit organizations."
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- >From the article:
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- "For more than a year, Senator Grassley
has been trying to win enactment of legislation that would both encourage
increased giving to charity and close what he sees as loopholes in federal
tax laws that allow unscrupulous people to benefit from their involvement
with nonprofit organizations. Some people are exploiting vagueness in the
laws or a lack of enforcement to enrich themselves rather than serve the
public, Grassley said. It's unseemly for tax-exempt groups to function
this way. It's also unfair to the taxpayers who subsidize that behavior.
That's why I continue to try to tighten the laws governing tax-exempt groups."
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- In addition to the increased penalties
for political activity, the Senate Finance Committee also voted to:
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- · Require nonprofit groups to
file their informational tax returns electronically.
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- · Increase penalties for taxpayers
who deliberately overvalue items donated to charity so they can get bigger
tax write-offs than they deserve. In addition, the legislation would tighten
the definition of who is qualified to appraise the value of donated items
to avoid conflicts of interest and other problems.
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- · Levy higher penalties on top
officials at private foundations or charities who engage in illegal financial
transactions with the organization, and stiffen the penalties for nonprofit
officials who approve such transactions.
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- · Allow the IRS to share with
state regulatory officials more information about actions taken against
nonprofit organizations in an attempt to improve enforcement of charity
laws.
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- · Abolish privacy rules that make
it illegal for the IRS to tell the public when it has denied or revoked
an organization's tax-exempt status, and allow the agency to make public
documents in the organization's IRS file supporting that action.
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- The Chronicle of Philanthropy article
can be read at: www.philanthropy.com/free/update/2006/06/2006062901.htm
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- Disclosure Discrepancies
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- Note: The Shriners Hospitals for Children
is a 501c3 charitable group incorporated in Colorado. This group was founded
and is controlled by the Imperial Council of the Ancient Arabic Order of
the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine for North America AKA Shriners Temples,
a 501c10 fraternal group incorporated in Iowa. Neither group voluntarily
discloses their 990s, annual reports, audits or board minutes on their
web sites. The information below was obtained through Guidestar.org, Offices
of the Secretary of State for Iowa and Colorado and court clerk records
for Hillsborough and Polk counties, Florida and Polk county Iowa.
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- According to the latest restated Articles
of Incorporation filed with Iowa's Secretary of State by the Shriners Temple
fraternal group:
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- "The objects and purposes of this
corporation and business to be transacted by it areto maintain, control,
conduct and superintend any and all charities, benevolences and hospitals
now established, maintained and controlled by the Imperial council and
to create and maintain a charitable and educational fundfor the purchase,
erection, operation and maintenance of Shriners Hospitals for Children."
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- Discrepancy 1) Here is how the Shriners
Temple fraternal describes their activities to the IRS:
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- "The Imperial Council is the supreme
authority of the Shriner Temples of North America. The Shrine is an international
fraternity with 434,633 members who belong to the 191 temples worldwide.
The Imperial Council's activities support the Shriners Hospitals for Children."
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- Should the word "support" be
replaced with "maintain, control, conduct and superintend" as
stated in the Articles of Incorporation?
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- Discrepancy 2) Question #12 on the Colorado
annual financial statement for Charitable Organizations reads: "Is
your organization related through membership, governing bodies, trustees,
officers, etc to any other exempt or non exempt organization? (Line 80a
990)."
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- For the years 2002, 2003 and 2004, the
Shriners answered "YES" on their federal tax returns. For the
same years, the Shriners answered "NO" on their annual reports
to Colorado. Both forms were signed by Willard E. Fawcett, Controller.
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- Discrepancy 3) Part III, question 2 on
the 2003 990 tax returns reads:
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- "During the year, has the organization
engaged in any of the following acts with trustees, directors, officers,
creators, key employees or members of their families or with any taxable
organization for which any such person is affiliated as an officer, director,
trustee? These acts include sale, exchange or leasing of property."
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- On September 22, 2003, A Satisfaction
of Mortgage between Donald W. Peirce (employee) and the Shriners Hospitals
for Children for the principal sum of $110,000 was recorded in Hillsborough
County, Florida. The document was signed by Willard E. Fawcett, Controller
and Jay Fleisher, managing attorney.
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- This transaction was not reported to
the IRS.
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- At this point, it is unclear if Shriners
Hospitals' real estate transactions between Charles G.Cumpstone Jr., the
recently retired Shriners Executive Vice President, and Lewis K. Molnar,
recently retired Hospital President, were reported to the IRS. These transactions
took place from 1979 to 1992. Tax documents from those years have been
requested, but are not yet available. One such transaction is a Satisfaction
of Mortgage that was recorded 4/11/85.
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- Grantors or those conveying title, the
owners, were listed as Shriners Hospital for Crippled Children and Lewis
K. Molnar. The Grantee, or the one receiving the title or buying it is
listed as Charles G. Cumpstone. In other transactions, it appears that
there were two separate mortgages on one of Cumpstone's properties. The
mortgages were taken out on 7/12/79 and 10/5/79. Each were satisfied or
paid off in less than six years on 4/11/85 and 7/12/85.
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- Discrepancy 3) Part VI, question 77 on
the 2000 990 tax return reads:
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- "Were there any changes made in
the organizing or governing documents but not reported to the IRS?"
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- On October 17, 2000, a Resolution was
filed with the Clerk of Polk County, Florida, which is due east of Hillsborough
County, where both Shriners groups are head quartered. The paraphrased
resolution reads:
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- "Be it resolved that any one of
the following officers; the Chairman of the Board of Directors; the President;
the First Vice President; the Second Vice President; the Secretary; the
Assistant Secretary or the Treasurer, is authorized, on behalf of the Shriners
Hospitals for Children:
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- 1) To accept annuities, gifts, bequests
for the benefit of the Corporation and/or any individual Shrine Hospital.
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- 2) To demand, recover and receive from
any fiduciary or other persons any property of any nature for the benefit
of the Corporation and/or any Shrine Hospital by any person or under any
will, trust agreement, or other instrument
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- 3) To execute documents in suits and
proceedings in which the Corporation has an interest and settle lawsuits,
claims, debts or controversies of whatever nature affecting the Corporation.
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- 4) To transfer, convert into other securities,
endorse, sell, exchange, assign, and deliver any shares of stock, bonds,
notes, options, and evidences of indebtedness or other securities owned
by said Corporation and to execute and deliver all written instruments
of transfer.
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- 5) To endorse notes, checks, drafts,
bills of exchange or other collection items which may require the endorsement
of said Corporation for deposit as cash or collections.
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- 6) To make and execute such agreements
and documents as may be necessary concerning the tangible personal properties
of the Corporation and to execute documents necessary to comply with any
legal requirements of the Corporation with governmental authorities.
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- 7) To transfer any property, real or
personal, to any fiduciary with which the Corporation has a contract for
investment management.
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- 8) To accept gifts and devises of real
property, mineral estates and water rights, for the benefit of the Corporation
and/or any individual Shrine Hospital."
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- The next section conveys broader powers
of buying and selling to various combinations of two of the above mentioned
officers and directors. The third section gives similar individual powers
of buying and selling to the General Counsel, the Managing Attorney and
the Second Vice President. This resolution offers no accounting, GAAP review
or other oversight mechanisms.
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- The answer to the question 77 is marked
"No." The Shriners did not report this change in governing documents
to the IRS or to the Colorado Secretary of State.
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- Discrepancy 5) Annual reports to Iowa
by the Imperial Council of the Ancient Arabic Order of the Nobles of the
Mystic Shrine for North America lists Charles Cumpstone as their registered
agent. According to the Secretary of State's office, the registered agent
must be an Iowa resident. Cumpstone lives in Florida.
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- Non Profit Forum on Disclosure and Accountability
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- In February, 2005 a group of non profit
experts gathered to participate in a First Tuesday Forum held by the Urban
Institute to discuss "Non Profit Disclosure: The Key to Accountability?"
The experts include John Rogers, senior vice president and chief financial
officer at the Urban Institute, Dr. Mark Hager, a senior research associate
in the Urban Institute's Center on Nonprofits and Philanthropy, Julie Floch,
a partner at Eisner LLP and director of the firm's not-for-profit practice,
Art Taylor, the president and CEO of the BBB Wise Giving Alliance and Dean
Zerbe, senior counsel for the Senate Finance Committee.
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- Here is what some of these experts have
to say about non profit disclosure and accountability.
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- Dr. Mark Hagler, senior research associate
in the Urban Institute's Center on Nonprofits and Philanthropy, began by
talking about the "Nonprofit Overhead Cost Project" and what
he found:
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- "One of the assumptions that underlie
our research as well as the broader work of the National Center for Charitable
Statistics is that transparent disclosure of a nonprofit organization's
operations and its finances is an important component of public accountability.
This seems to also be the historic position of the federal government,
since they require public charities to report each year on Form 990 if
they are large enough; they make the form available to the public if we
ask for it. Form 990 is the only document that's legally required to be
publicly available, and as a consequence, this form bears the brunt of
accountability discussions. Lots of people have jumped onto the charities
disclosure bandwagon. Individual forms can be viewed at http://GuideStar.org.
This is, I think, an incalculable advance in the disclosure and accountability
realm-probably the single most important development in information on
nonprofit organizations ever."
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- Art Taylor, BBB Wise Giving Alliance:
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- "These ratios, while they tell us
maybe how much an organization might be spending on fundraising or how
much they might be spending on administration, they really don't get at
some of the larger challenges that nonprofits have and, I think, some of
the more important issues that we should be concerned about with nonprofits-namely,
how is it being governed? Is it being governed well? Does it have an engaged
board? Is the organization telling the truth to the public about what it
intends to do with the resources that it's given? Is it marketing itself
in a truthful way? We want to know, for instance, if an organization even
gets an annual audit and whether they are providing those audits to people.
We want to know if an organization is open to questions and whether they
deal with those questions forthrightly and whether an organization is truly
going about attempting to meet a mission."
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- Dean Zerbe, Senate Finance Committee:
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- "Congress views it the same way-that
990s are a pillar for oversight of public charities, particularly public
charities. I think a very broad sweeping comment about the enormous benefits
of financial controls regardless of the size, given the fundamental importance
of a board's responsibility to safeguard assets. However, adequate financial
controls must be a board priority. They say 'Why I didn't put down the
salary. I had a dental appointment that day; my dog ate it.' You know,
you can give all of these explanationsIf you have an account overseas and
you don't report it to the IRS-which I can say to you is usually a gateway
for money laundering and everything like that-we don't put up with your
'I have a story to tell you.' We just say, 'That's great; you pay the penalty;
bless your heart; and you know what, next time you'll learn.'
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- I'll give you a good example. We've been
finding enormous problems in type three supporting organizations. An easy
way for me to find that there is a problem-why does an organization have
$200 million in assets if they only put out less than a million dollars
in grants per year with $200 million sitting there. That to me is a strange
little bird in my ear that says maybe this is an organization I need to
take a look at."
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- Dr. Mark Hager, Urban Institute:
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- "My comment is very much in the
same area. I have a colleague in the back of the room, Linda Lampkin, who
I'll quote saying, "There is no checkbox on the 990 that says 'I'm
committing fraud'. That would be very helpful for us. So when we look at
an organization, we look at its 990 and it's got numbers in most of the
boxes, you know, it's hard to know whether they are right or wrong. It's
only when we start seeing something egregious, and we've seen some examples
pointed out here, and the most famous one is the one that Art has seized
upon-that large proportions of organizations that get lots of contributions
and by Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP), expenses related
to raising contributions are fundraising expenses and you see a zero on
that line. We can probably explain away a few of them, but we know of specific
examples through the work on the overhead cost from case studies, you have
a fulltime fundraising executive working in your organization and they
have a zero on the line. There are enough examples there for us to not
think we can explain it away with volunteers or complex organizational
structures."
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- The article can be read at: http://www.urban.org/publications/900780.html
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- Comments by Cowles
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- Rich Cowles, who has been Executive Director
of the Charities Review Council of Minnesota since 1999, kindly agreed
to answer some questions about disclosure. Cowles has worked hard to strengthen
charitable groups, has had a longtime interest in the nonprofit sector
and has served on a variety of boards and committees. These include as
an officer of the Council of Agency Executives of the Greater Twin Cities
United Way, and as a member of the Institute for Executive Director Leadership's
Strategic Planning Committee at the University of St. Thomas Center for
Nonprofit Management. His answers are general and apply to all non profits.
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- Question: Why does the IRS have disclosure
laws for non profits?
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- Cowles: The tax exemption enjoyed by
nonprofits -- and the tax deductions enjoyed by those who donate to them
-- are significant subsidies of charitable services. As such, nonprofits
are assets of the community, and the public deserves to know about the
results they produce. Nonprofits have an obligation to fully disclose their
activities and demonstrate they are good stewards of their resources and
the public's trust. Independent Sector, a nonprofit professional association,
characterizes the sector as being guided by a spirit of "organized
neighborliness." Disclosure is an important part of this ethic. IRS
and State disclosure laws are an important legal bulwark against fraud
and can be used as a tool to build public trust. The best nonprofits see
their disclosure obligations as an opportunity to tell their stories.
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- Question: Why is it important that non
profits disclose their financial activities?
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- Cowles: Disclosure of nonprofit financial
activities helps donors and regulators monitor the stewardship of funds
for financial activities. Financial information can be used to describe
the activities of nonprofits. The most well known example of this is the
distinction between program versus management or fundraising expenses.
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- Editors Note: An example of program v
management expenses is the Afifi Shrine Temple in Tacoma, Washington. Their
program services were 6% or $21.594 of $426,483 total expenses. The charity
watchdog group, Give.org, uses 65% or over to measure charity effectiveness.
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- Question: Are you familiar with non profit
groups who have not disclosed things and have been caught? If so, what
happened to them?
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- Cowles: IRS penalties are severe, including
loss of nonprofit status and fines. But the IRS doesn't have the resources
to fully monitor the large and growing nonprofit sector.
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- Question: What do you think it may mean
if a non profit does not disclose financial and other information on their
990s and state reporting forms? Why would a group do this?
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- Cowles: Like any sin, there are sins
of omission and commission. There are certainly cases where a lack of disclosure
could be a mistake. Such forms can be complicated. If the nonprofit has
limited financial management capacity, a lack of disclosure may well be
due to lack of knowledge of requirements. Active lack of disclosure or
obvious willful omission of financial transactions is a red flag that the
nonprofit is hiding some kind of ethical malfeasance, such as the misuse
of a nonprofit for personal gain. Even if this is rare, this level of lack
of disclosure can lead to public scandals that harm the entire nonprofit
sector. Nonprofit scandals have a corrosive effect on the public trust
that is the lifeblood of all nonprofits.
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- Question: What is your take on the state
of non profits today?
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- Cowles: The nonprofit sector continues
to grow and meet more public needs than ever before. The competition for
the donated dollar is high and increasing. Fortunately, the majority of
nonprofits are aware of accountability and transparency expectations. They
are adversely affected by a lack of public trust. While many have taken
steps to build public trust, many still feel overwhelmed by fundraising
and other daily management pressures. Nonprofits are generally leanly staffed.
So, even while most nonprofit leaders are mission-driven and pre-disposed
to do the right thing, few leaders feel they have enough resources to be
as accountable as they desire.
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- Nonprofits are more successful in terms
of growth, versatility and innovation than ever before. Unfortunately,
some high profile examples of leaders of large nonprofits enriching themselves
courtesy of the public's generosity has naturally fostered a climate of
skepticism and scrutiny -- especially of larger nonprofits. The current
attention paid to excessive executive compensation is an example of this
distrust. While excessive compensation in the nonprofit world is not as
widespread as in the for-profit world, the distance between the highest
paid and the lowest paid has increased in the nonprofit sector as it has
in the for-profit sector. One of the major challenges for large established
nonprofits is to maintain a spirit of openness that allows the public to
understand and believe in their work as easily as when they were smaller.
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- Question: Are there trends you're observing?
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- Cowles: Some general trends based on
what we hear from donors: More public questioning of excessive compensation;
potential donors feeling overwhelmed by aggressive fundraising. Nonprofits
are increasingly concerned by a growing lack of younger leadership to replace
current executive directors. The best trend we've seen at the Council is
that there are more nonprofits that welcome help demonstrating their accountability.
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- Question: What do you think of Congressional
efforts to pursue tighter standards for non profit accountability?
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- Cowles: The frank and very public nature
of these discussions is welcome and will be fruitful. Some of the proposed
measures seem to address abuses well; others are designed to punish the
small minority of abusers but have negative implications for the sector
as a whole. The Senate Finance Committee is working hard to listen to and
solicit input from nonprofits via the Nonprofit Panel and other nonprofit
leaders. They should be commended for this.
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- I'd like to thank Rich Cowles for his
hard work as the Executive Director of the Charities Review Council of
Minnesota and for taking the time to answer these questions. And thanks
to the other experts who care so much about non profit transparency and
accountancy.
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- All copies of material reprinted or duplicated
from "by Sandy Frost" must include the following credit line:
From http://sandyfrost.newsvine.com/
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- Copyright © 2006 by Sandy Frost.
Used by permission.
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http://thecassandrafrostcollection.blogspot.com/
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