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Non-Profit Board Understands Their Fiduciary Duties

Be Sure Your Non-Profit Board Understands Their Fiduciary Duties

A term you might hear regarding responsibilities is “fiduciary.” But what does it even mean? And who does it apply to? Generally, fiduciary refers to the legal and ethical obligations of someone to act in the best interests of a beneficiary. The word will often be used in the context of financial advisors and trustees. However, the term also applied to non-profit boards.

Even if it conflicts with their best interest, your board members must prioritize what’s best for your organization. It’s up to you to make sure that your non-profit board understands their fiduciary duties

Primary Duties

Board members have three primary fiduciary duties, the first of which is care. Members must exercise reasonable care in overseeing your organization’s financial and operational activities. Although disengaged from day-to-day affairs, they should understand your non-profit’s mission, programs, and structure, make informed decisions, and consult others, including outside experts, when appropriate.

The second duty is loyalty. Board members must act solely in the best interests of your organization and its constituents, and not for personal gain. Obedience is the third duty. Board members need to act in accordance with your organization’s mission, charter, and bylaws, as well as any applicable federal, state, and local laws.

If any board member knowingly violates these duties, consider removing that person from your board. Board members can be held personally liable for financial harm your organization suffers. In extreme cases, director malfeasance could lead to IRS sanctions and the loss of your non-profit’s tax-exempt status.

Conflicts Of Interest

One of the most challenging, but critical, components of fiduciary duty is the obligation to avoid conflicts of interest. In general, a conflict of interest exists when a non-profit organization does business with a board member, an entity in which a board member has a financial interest, or another company or organization for which a board member serves as a director or trustee.

Appearance of wrongdoing matters almost as much as reality. To avoid even the appearance of impropriety, your non-profit should treat transactions as conflicts of interest if they involve a board member’s spouse or other family member. Also off-limits are transactions with entities in which a board member’s spouse or relative has a financial interest.

The key to dealing with conflicts of interest, whether real or perceived, is disclosure. Board members involved should disclose the relevant facts to the rest of the board and abstain from any discussion or vote on the issue unless the board determines they may participate.

Educating Your Board

Even if you’ve chosen honest, trustworthy, and charitable individuals to serve on your board, you can’t expect them to automatically know their fiduciary duties. Provide all directors with a list of duties and explain the concept of fiduciary in your new-member orientation. Contact us for help with governance questions.

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Barb Houser, CPA | Shareholder
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