Our annual series of charity seminars held across the region for trustees, chief executives and finance staff will focus on the main areas of risk facing charities; helping charities of all sizes and complexities to ensure that they have effective and robust governance in place to mitigate the risks their organisation faces.
4. OUR CENTENARY YEAR
We are celebrating because:
National 2018 Charity Finance Audit Survey league table special
commendation for overall service.
96% of our clients ranked the service they receive from us as good (the
highest option).
Highest placed regional firm in the UK for the number of audit services to
charities – a good start to our centenary year!
Thank you to all our clients who took part in the survey.
5. CHARITY COMMISSION SPEECH – BARONESS STOWELL
• Charities need to live up to public expectations
• Collectively charities are not yet reaching their potential
• We must ensure that charities can thrive and inspire trust, so that people
can change lives and strengthen society – that purpose is at the heart of
the Commission's new strategy.
6. GOVERNANCE RESEARCH FINDINGS
Where does your organisation stand in today’s environment?
13% had an independent review of governance in the last 3 years;
22% thought that they had a diverse board;
60% had a board away day in the last two years;
60% have an annual staff day to update on strategy and activity.
65% conduct a formal appraisal of the Chief Executive; and
65% had a board level skills audit in the last 2 years;
7. FINANCE RESEARCH FINDINGS
Where does your organisation stand in today’s environment?
60% prepare sensitised budgets/forecasts to help determine strategy;
52% had subcommittees such as finance/audit that met regularly; and
50% disclose their compliance with the fundraising code of practice.
11. IN THIS SESSION
Why is the relationship between trustees
and executives important?
Where does the balance of responsibilities
lie between trustees and executives?
How can trustees and executives support
each other in their development?
12. WHEN THINGS GO WRONG
13. Kids Company’s demand-led operating model –
based on the doctrine that no child should be turned
away – carried the constant risk that the charity would
not be able to ensure that its commitments would be
matched by its resources. The charity’s Trustees failed
to address this risk. Instead, the Chief Executive and
Trustees relied upon wishful thinking and false
optimism and became inured to the precariousness of
the charity’s financial situations.
66. There is no evidence that Trustees were involved
in the decision to turn down the philanthropist’s offer of
significant financial and human resource. At the time
the offer was made and rejected, Trustees were
attempting to manage a £4 million deficit and secure
and additional £12 million grant from the Government.
Ms Batmanghelidjh’s citing of mere intuition about an
individual’s supposed lack of emotional authenticity as
justification for blocking the exploration of a new
partnership at a time of extreme financial difficulty
underlines how unaccountable and dominant Trustees
had allowed her to become, and how far she was able
to insist on maintaining personal control.
13. WHEN THINGS GO WRONG: TRUSTEE OVERSIGHT
The
trustees
Allowed CEO to dominate
Lacked relevant experience in core field
Suspended critical faculties
Were led by an ill-informed Chair
Failed to exercise proper function
14. WHAT DOES GOOD LOOK LIKE?
THE ROLE OF THE BOARD – AS DEFINED BY THE IOD
Vision, mission, values
Strategy, structure
Delegate to management
Accountability
16. WHAT SHOULD EACH PERSON DO?
The Chair should:
Lead the Board
Ensure engagement and participation
Encourage relevant discussion,
effective decision-making, appropriate
implementation
Nurture the relationships between
Trustees.
The CEO should:
Manage day to day operations
Deliver objectives
Act as main point of contact between
the Board and the charity
17. SUPPORT, CHALLENGE, TRUST
Balance between support & scrutiny.
Honest feedback important from both sides.
Trustees should have free and open access to
the organisation.
How close is too close?
18. THE BASICS
• Distribute in good time
• Read them!
Agendas and
papers
• Driven by board needs
• Focus on strategicInformation
• Training and development
• Skills audit
• Governance review
Effectiveness
19. BOARD COMPOSITION & DIVERSITY
How many
trustees?
Future skill
requirements?
Trustee tenure?
Recruitment
process?
20. Percentage that are male
Percentage that are white
Average age
Percentage that are retired
Percentage with above-average
income
Percentage with a professional
qualification
75
61
92
51
64
60
HOW AVERAGE ARE YOUR TRUSTEES?
64%
92%
61
51%
75%
60%
21. IDEAL TRAITS OF A TRUSTEE
Ability to listen
Openness
Ability to challenge
Clear link to beneficiaries
Common sense
Correct motivation
Be able to ask the right questions
24. Laurie Trounce
Partner
Head of Charity Team
Phone: 01872 265133
Mobile: 07736 884233
Email: l.trounce@stephens-
scown.co.uk
24
25. AIMS OF THE SESSION
• To provide an overview of trustee duties and responsibilities
• To consider conflicts of interest and how to manage them
• To look at practical ways to ensure serious incidents are reported
• To provide hints and tips for being an effective trustee
• To share some thoughts on future legislative and regulatory developments
25
27. WHO ARE THE TRUSTEES?
“The persons having the general control and management of the
administration of a charity” s.177 Charities Act 2011
• Voting members of the governing body
• Legally responsible for the charity
• Operate within a formal set of rules
• In a charitable company, company directors and trustees are the
same people
• Are responsible for appropriate delegation to staff / volunteers
• Almost always unpaid
27
28. THREE KEY QUESTIONS FOR TRUSTEES
• Why does my charity exist?
• What is its legal structure and what are the legal and governance
implications?
• Are we meeting the charity’s objects in the most effective way now
and in the future?
28
29. TRUSTEE DUTIES
Public benefit Acting in the charity’s
best interests
Reasonable skill
and care
Acting collectively Safeguarding and
protecting assets
Being accountable
29
30. LEGAL STRUCTURE
Legal form Incorporated
(separate legal
personality
Additional duties
on trustees
Contracts /
employment in
the name of
Liability to third
parties limited
Trust No No Trustees personally
(for the charity)
No
Unincorporated
Association
No No Trustees personally
(for the charity)
No
Company Limited
by Guarantee
Yes Yes (Company law) Charity Yes
CIO Yes Yes (Charities Act
and CIO
Regulations)
Charity Yes
30
31. TRUSTEE LIABILITY
Potential liabilities
• Governance
o Breach of duty under charity law
• Operational
o Claims from third parties
• Criminal
Trustee liability protection
31
32. PRACTICAL STEPS FOR COMPLIANCE
• Know your governing document
• Ensure trustees have suitable inductions, regular training and updates
• Take prompt and appropriate action when things go wrong
• Ensure trustees utilise their skills and experience
• Take advice when needed
32
33. AREAS OF CHARITY COMMISSION FOCUS
• Conflicts of interest
• Fraud and financial
mismanagement
• Abuse of beneficiaries
• Abuse of charity for terrorist
purposes
33
35. CAN YOU IDENTIFY CONFLICTS OF
INTEREST?
Expect and prepare for them
• A trading subsidiary makes payments to one of its directors who is also a
charity trustee.
• A trustee becomes an employee of the charity
• A charity needs urgent building repairs (£100k). A sibling of a trustee offers
their services for a reduced price of £50k.
• A trustee is employed by a local authority that is considering funding the
charity.
35
36. WHAT IS A CONFLICT OF INTEREST?
Conflicts of interest
Where a charity trustee or someone connected to them has or may have a
personal financial interest in a transaction with the charity
Conflicts of loyalty
A charity trustees duty to the charity could conflict with their duty of loyalty to
• a member of their family
• a person connected to them
• a organisation that employs them
• another charity of which they are a trustee
• a body that has appointed them as a charity trustee
Definition of a connected person (s.188 Charities Act 2011)
36
37. WHY DO THEY MATTER?
Recognise the dangers they present
• Personal liability
• Flawed decision making
• Reputational damage
• Note additional rules for Directors and CIOs
37
38. RECENT STATUTORY INQUIRIES
•CC 29 March 2019 Relief
for Distressed Children
and Young People
•CC 27 February 2018
Reb Moishe Foundation
•CC 20 February 2018
Decision of statutory
inquiry in connection with
a grant making charity.
38
39. MANAGING CONFLICTS OF INTEREST
• Ensure you know the rules and the implications for your charity
• If a conflict is identified:
- Has it been declared?
- Can the conflict be removed?
- Can it be authorised?
• Has the conflict been recorded appropriately?
39
40. PRACTICAL STEPS FOR COMPLIANCE
• Register of Interests
• Conflicts of Interest Policy
• Approach to meetings
• Appropriate training
• Seek advice as required
40
41. REVISITING AN EXAMPLE
A trading subsidiary makes payments to one of its directors who is also
a charity trustee.
• Director of trading subsidiary is also a charity trustee
• Decision to pay the director creates a conflict of interest between the
personal interest of the director and the interests of the charity
• Director should disclose the conflict of interest at an early stage
• Before making a decision the other directors should consider the
conflict and how to eliminate the potential effect
• Consider governing document – likely to require the withdrawal of
the director from all aspects of the discussion and decision making
about the payment
• Record the conflict appropriately
41
43. SERIOUS INCIDENT REPORTING
• Purpose
• The meaning of “serious”
• Most common types of serious incidents
• Reportable vs Non-Reportable
43
44. RESPONSIBILITY FOR AND TIMING OF
SERIOUS INCIDENT REPORTS
• Trustee responsibilities
• Requirement for prompt reporting
• Annual Reports
• Consequences of failure to report
• Be aware of the Freedom of Information Act 2000
44
45. PRACTICAL STEPS FOR COMPLIANCE
• Inform your Auditor
• Undertake regular training
• Implement and review your Serious Incident Reporting Policy
45
46. Key Policies & Procedures
GDPR
Whistleblowing
Scheme of Delegation
Procurement
Land Disposal
Safeguarding
Health and Safety
Financial Procedure Rules
Equality & Diversity
Intellectual Property / Branding Guidelines
Board Development and Training
Volunteers
HR policies including Email & Internet Access
Sponsorship
Partnerships (incl. overseas payments as needed)
Reserves
Investment (including ethical investment)
Risk Management / Board Assurance Framework
Trustee Code of Conduct
Trustee Expenses
Conflict of Interest
Complaints
Social Media
Fundraising (donation acceptance and refusal)
Serious Incident Reporting
.
46
48. ESSENTIAL READING
Charity Commission Guidance:
• Essential Trustee (CC 3)
• 15 Questions
• Public Benefit: Rules for Charities
• Conflicts of interest: A guide for charity trustees (CC29)
• How to report a serious incident in your charity & Examples table:
deciding what to report
• Charity Governance Code
• Code of Fundraising Practice
48
The information in this presentation is intended to be general information only
and should not be interpreted as legal advice. English law is subject to change,
so while Stephens Scown LLP seeks to ensure the information contained in this
presentation is up to date and accurate, the law can change quickly and no
guarantee is made as to its accuracy which means the information should not be
relied upon. Presentation slides should not be viewed as an alternative to
professional advice and Stephens Scown LLP does not accept liability for any
action taken or not taken as a result of this information
52. VAT RISKS FOR YOUR REGISTER
Financial
VAT liability
Irrecoverable VAT
Penalties if you get it wrong!
Operational
Do your finance team know what they are doing?
Compliance
VAT registration
Changes in legislations
53. COMPLIANCE RISK
MAKING TAX DIGITAL FOR VAT
Is MTDfV on your risk register?
Effective from 1 April 2019
Should you enrol?
Are you deferred?
Is your software compatible?
54. VAT REGISTRATION
Would it be beneficial for you to be VAT registered?
input tax recovery
What could trigger having to register for VAT?
New grant income
New service contract
Hidden income
Overseas expenditure
VAT registration threshold is £85,000
Also think about the corporation tax small trading threshold - increase effective 1
April 2019 to £80,000
55. VAT RELIEFS AVAILABLE
EVEN IF YOU’RE NOT VAT REGISTERED
Advertising and items for collecting donations
Fuel and power
Construction
Property used for a charitable purpose
59. The risk register
Surety of income/loss of key
contracts
Costs exceeding income
Fixed v’s variable costs
Insufficient reserves
The risk management policy
Risk appetite
Procedures and controls
Assurance
1st line – Management
Policies
Control framework
Management review
2nd line – Corporate oversight
3rd line – External sources of
assurance
ASSESSING AND MANAGING RISK
60. PLANNING FOR THE FUTURE
Do you have a strategic plan?
Do you have financial forecasts?
Cash flow projections – long-term and short-term
Funding requirements/sources
Developing and maintaining strong stakeholder relationships
61. Are your trustees well
informed?
Do they have management
information that is:
Timely
Reliable
Relevant and
Understandable?
Estimates and judgements
ACCURATE FINANCIAL REPORTING
62. KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS
Financial KPI’s
Non financial KPI’s
Useful as a source of assurance
Can you link your KPIs to your reserves policy
63. What are reserves?
Liquidity
Why does your organisation need to hold reserves?
Are you holding the right level of reserves?
Developing a reserves policy
Are you articulating your reasoning in your reserves policy?
RESERVES
In order to consider the long term
financial sustainability of your
organisation you need to consider
your current level of reserves and
your reserves policy.
Your free reserves are your:
Unrestricted funds x
Less:
Tangible fixed assets (x)
Programme related investments (x)
Designated funds (x)
Any other commitments (x)
Free reserves
x
64. RESERVES POLICIES
In November 18 the Charity
Commission completed a review
of charity’s reserves policies.
Does the trustees’ annual report % of charities
Explains the charity’s policy on reserves 92%
States the level of reserves held 67%
States why reserves are held 90%
Meets all three requirements 64%
65. Fixed/core costs
Breakeven
Income fluctuations
Contract/grant income
Donations/legacies
Fundraising
Variable costs
What happens if your
projections don’t go as
planned?
SENSITIVITY ANALYSIS
CostsandRevenues
Income Level
Income
Total Costs
Fixed Costs
Break-Even Point
66. STRESS TESTING
What combination of risks would lead to failure?
For example increased costs and a lost income
stream?
Have you tested to the
point of failure?
Costing up of your risks
It’s not all bad news
67. FINAL THOUGHTS
SWOT analysis
Blank sheet approach
Trustee skills mix
What haven’t we thought of?
69. Risk from a funder’s perspective
• What risks do you think we face in our funding
programmes?
• What do you think we can do to mitigate those risks?
• What do you think you can do to help reduce our risks?
• Are our risks very different to yours?
71. Our vision for
Somerset is a county
of vibrant, inclusive
communities where
voluntary
organisations and
social enterprises
thrive, transforming
and enhancing the
lives of the most
disadvantaged
people.
72. Our mission is to be the
catalyst for
inspirational
philanthropy, providing
a simpler and more
effective way for
donors to make a
lasting difference in
Somerset through
community investment
and leadership.
73. Some thoughts on Strategy…
• Needs vs Opportunities
• Value Proposition & Positioning
• SWOT/PESTLE
74. Some thoughts on Strategy…
• Clarity of purpose is essential for strategic success
• Not having it is a risk
• It has to run through the whole organisation
• It has to be underpinned by results
• It has to be understood externally
78. Summing Up: It’s all about clarity
• It’s a lack of clarity that creates chaos and frustration. Those emotions are
poison to any living goal.
(Steve Maraboli)
• Clarity is momentum that has no resistance in it
(Abraham Hicks)
• When you have clarity of intention, the Universe conspires with you to make it
happen
(Fabienne Fredrickson)
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