How Seriously Does Your Nonprofit Board Take the Matter of Ethics?

How Seriously Does Your Nonprofit Board Take the Matter of Ethics?

By Eugene Fram                          

Most board members are aware of their obligation to ensure their nonprofit’s compliance with certain standard regulations e.g. making tax payments, submitting IRS Form 990s and/or avoiding potential fraud. But what I have found missing in the nonprofit environment is a sense of board member responsibility to provide for and sustain a viable ethics program.

Board members, as representatives of a community, profession or industry, have a significant responsibility to mitigate risks for their supporting constituencies. To ensure their integrity and prevent tainting the organization’s reputation, an internal ethical culture must prevail. An emphasis on ethical conduct should cover everyone from board members to the lowest ranking employee, and address issues that range from personal use of facilities to various types of harassment.

Following are some thoughts on putting ethics in their rightful place:

The Audit Committee in responsible-business organizations often have a full-time corporate counsel or compliance officer who are charged with seeking evidence of unethical behavior. On the other hand, nonprofits must vest significant ethics responsibilities in the audit committee. As a base approach, the audit committee should have the CEO investigate installing a hotline system that can surface questionable behaviors and issues. 

Ethical Behaviors Start with the Board – A review of existing ethical standards should be included in the orientation process of every new board member or employee– and reinforced briefly each year. Potential conflict of interest in board members can skew decision-making and jeopardize outcomes. Engaging in “sleight of hand” decisions can reverberate throughout the organization. For example: it is not unusual for nonprofit boards to seek grant dollars that support programs that are not directly related to the organization’s mission. Similar relaxation of standards can propel an organization down the slippery slopes of ethical boundaries. This also applies to senior managers whose behavior or actions are perceived to be inappropriate.

Seeking Information – Although the Sarbanes-Oxley act suggests that board directors are obliged to seek information from persons below top management, this can sometimes become controversial in the nonprofit environment.

The bottom line is that (ethics) compliance must be pervasive, ongoing and actively tested, experts say, in order to maintain a healthy culture throughout the organization. By rewarding ethical behavior and mitigating risk, nonprofit board members will be doing all they can to protect themselves and preserve values for shareholders (and help to assure ethical actions in a mission-centrist nonprofit.)*

* Boardmember.com (2014), “Compliance Oversights Starts and Ends with the Board,” May 14th.

2 comments

  1. Excellent article, Eugene!

    Not every organization can afford a true hotline. That shouldn’t stop them from have an ethics reporting system that gives options to ensure all employees and volunteers can approach someone they see as safe to clarify or report wrongful behaviour they have witnessed. That should include a least one respected person without a current or recent connection with the organization.

    Also, I believe that candidates for the board must sign a commitment to abide by the Code of Ethics/Conduct as well as the director job description. The interview held in advance needs to include questions to ensure they’ve read those documents. These practices discourage unethical people from running and helps new directors from the very start. Often their first board meeting happens before their main orientation session!

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  2. Jane: Thanks for adding your great insights to the discussion.

    Can the hotline become cost friendly if several organizations seek to share the cost via a family plan type of arrangement? A number of nonprofit boards I’ve encountered hesitate to install one because they feel the staff will view it as a lack of trust symbol by the staff.

    Gene

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