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Introductions

Briefing for Council Members of The British Academy’s Sponsored Institutes and Societies Ian Mathieson – Partner, PKF Julia Poulter – Senior Manager, PKF 23 January 2013. Introductions. Ian Mathieson Audit Partner. Julia Poulter Senior Audit Manager. Objective. To give an overview of:

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Introductions

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  1. Briefing for Council Members of The British Academy’s Sponsored Institutes and SocietiesIan Mathieson – Partner, PKFJulia Poulter – Senior Manager, PKF23 January 2013

  2. Introductions Ian Mathieson Audit Partner Julia Poulter Senior Audit Manager

  3. Objective To give an overview of: • Duties and responsibilities of a charity trustee • The Hallmarks of an Effective Charity and Principles of Good Governance • Relationship with the British Academy as a funder • Charity reporting and accounting requirements • Good financial management indicators for trustees in the current economic environment • Keep on your radar

  4. The Charity Sector – putting the numbers into perspective Over 162,000 registered charities with total income of just over £58 billion *Charity Commission website (at December 2012)

  5. The Charity Sector – putting the numbers into perspective Charities by Annual Income Latest published figures at 31 December 2012

  6. Duties and Responsibilities of a Charity Trustee

  7. A couple of maxims Trustees should: • Govern and not manage • Delegate but not abdicate

  8. Trustee duties and responsibilities • What is a Charity Trustee? • Charity Trustees are the people who have the general control and management of a charity’s administration

  9. Charity trustees’ duties Responsible for: • Directing affairs of the charity • Ensuring its solvency • Delivering the charity’s objectives for the benefit of the public Compliance • Charity law and regulation • Charitable objects; governing document • Other applicable law and regulation Trustees must act with integrity, avoiding personal conflicts of interest or misuse of charitable funds • you should check the charity’s governing document for provisions relating to conflicts of interest

  10. Charity trustees’ duties (cont…) Duty of prudence • Ensure continuing solvency of charity • Apply income to fulfil objects; using funds wisely • Avoid undue risk • Take special care when investing or borrowing funds Duty of care • Use reasonable care and skill • Take professional advice • (if material risk or breach of duty) (CC3 - The Essential Trustee: What you need to know)

  11. Trustees’ duties and responsibilities • Summary: • Charity’s assets are used only for charity’s purposes • Act reasonably and prudently • Act solely in the interests of the charity • Avoid conflicts of interest • Act collectively • Ensure good governance • Safeguard assets • Manage investments in accordance with the Trustee Act • 2000 • Set the policy and direction • Oversee implementation • Monitor outcomes

  12. Trustees’ duties and responsibilities Trustees must accept ultimate responsibility for everything the charity does: • Trustees are responsible for the vision, mission and overall management of the charity. They are accountable if things go wrong. • However, Trustees are able to and should delegate in certain circumstances. • Trustees must comply with ground rules when delegating power.

  13. Trustees have a duty to act collectively • Decisions and responsibilities are shared, so all Trustees should take an active role • However, ALL Trustees are collectively responsible for decisions made by the Trustees • Whilst Trustees may have different roles (e.g. Chair) responsibility for decision-making still lies with the board as a whole

  14. Trustee duties and responsibilities • Trustees are responsible for the proper administration of the charity. • They must make sure that: • the charity’s assets and resources are used only for the purposes of the charity • the charity is run in accordance with its constitution, charity law and all other laws and regulations which affect its activities

  15. Trustees’ duties and responsibilities Trustees to act reasonably and prudently in all matters relating to their charity: • Trustees must “exercise such care and skill as is reasonable in the circumstances” • The duty will be greater if a Trustee has (or claims to have) any special knowledge or experience, or if their business or profession means they can reasonably be expected to have special knowledge or experience

  16. Safeguard the assets of the charity • Reputation: A charity must recognise that its name and reputation are valuable • Risk management: Trustees are expected to identify risks and decide how they should be managed • Guard against fraud and mismanagement: Trustees should put proper financial procedures in place

  17. Trustees and payment • Trustees can recover reasonable out of pocket expenses • Except in certain specified circumstances - Trustees can’t receive any benefit from a charity • Exceptions:- • - Charities Act 2006 • - Authorisation from the Charity Commission or the court • CC 11 - Trustee expenses and payments

  18. Trustees’ expenses and payments • Recommendations: • Written policy for expenses • Complete expense claims with receipts • Clarify any fixed payments • Set caps for e.g. hotels, travel • Include senior employees and volunteers • Ensure communicated and part of induction • Set authorisation limits and rules • Minimise use of cash • Mileage – use HMRC rates to avoid tax / NI issues

  19. Trustees must act in the best interests of the charity • Trustees should not allow their personal interests or views to override this: they must exercise independent judgment • Conflict of interest rules mean that charity Trustees have: • - A duty to avoid a conflict of interest situation • - A duty to disclose a potential conflict of interest • - A duty to manage an actual conflict of interest

  20. Managing conflicts • Declaration Form on appointment • Annual Review • Maintaining a register of potential conflicts of interest • Declaration at meeting • Quorum • Remaining and speaking • Voting

  21. Liabilities of Trustees – Breach of Trust • Any liabilities that they incur as trustees can normally be met out of the charity’s resources if trustees act • Prudently • Lawfully • In accordance with the governing document • If trustees act imprudently, or are otherwise in breach of the law or the governing document, trustees may be personally responsible for liabilities of the charity or for making good any loss • The Charity Commission has powers to take proceedings in court for the recovery, from trustees personally, of funds lost to charity as a result of a breach of trust by the trustees

  22. Trustee indemnity insurance • Protects Trustees against claims made against them personally • Can cover • breach of trust; • breach of duty; or • negligence committed in capacity as trustee • Policy cannot cover • For criminal fines or penalties; • Trustees costs in defending criminal proceedings if he or she is convicted of fraud, dishonesty or reckless conduct; or • Where the liability results from a deliberate disregard of the interests of the charity • CC49 Charities and insurance

  23. Charity Commission guidance • Charity Commission : www.charitycommission.gov.uk • CC3 – The Essential Trustee : What you need to know • CC10 – Hallmarks of an effective charity • CC11 – Trustees expenses and payments • CC19 – Charities and reserves • CC26 – Charities and Risk Management: A guide for trustees • CC30 – Finding new Trustees • CC36 – Changing your Charity's Governing Document • Easy Read guidance – Being a Trustee • Protecting charities from harm – an online trustee toolkit • Reporting Serious Incidents – Revised guidance for trustees (December 2012)

  24. Useful websites • NCVO : www.ncvo-vol.org.uk :www.ncvo-vol.org.uk/governanceandleadership • ACEVO : www.acevo.org.uk • Charity Finance Group : www.cfg.org.uk

  25. What are the hallmarks of an effective charity? What are the principles of good governance?

  26. An effective charity • Is clear about its purposes and direction • Uses clear purposes, mission & values to direct its work • Has a strong board • right balance of skills & experience; acts in the best interests of the charity and beneficiaries; understands its responsibilities, with systems allowing it to exercise them • Fit for purpose • Structure, policies & procedures enable charity to achieve its purposes & mission and to deliver its services efficiently • Learning and improving • Financially sound and prudent • in a transparent and understandable way • Accountable and transparent (CC10 - Hallmarks of an effective charity)

  27. Recruitment of Charity Trustees • Consider balance of skills on the Trustee Board • Good practice for new Trustees to confirm that they are legally qualified to be a Trustee (e.g. not convicted of an offence involving dishonesty or deception, undischarged bankrupt) • Proper induction • Sign Trustees Code of Conduct

  28. What does a successful Board look like? • Some thoughts: • Provide social forums for board members to get to know each other • Make sure everyone has easy access to organisational documents • Make processes transparent • Coach individuals to voice concerns in a constructive way • Distribute leadership across the board • Provide opportunities to share accomplishments • Provide opportunities to share concerns with the Chief Executive • Have ongoing communications

  29. Engage your board members • Mine the rich experience of your board members: utilise strengths and skills • Encourage lively and challenging discussions • Clarify roles and responsibilities of the board collectively and individually • Be clear about expectations associated with board membership • Clarify the level of time commitment required for board membership and take attendance at meetings seriously

  30. Governance “The systems and processes concerned with ensuring the overall direction, effectiveness, supervision and accountability of an organisation.” (Governance of Voluntary Organisations,)

  31. Key principles of good governance • Understanding of role • Ensuring delivery of organisational purpose • Working effectively as individuals and a team • Exercising effective control • Behaving with integrity • Being open and accountable

  32. Charity Commission Guidance • Big Board Talk – Updated December 2012 • 15 questions trustees need to ask • Checklist is organised into 4 broad areas: • Strategy – opportunities and risks • Financial health • Governance • Making best use of resources

  33. Relationship with The British Academy as a funder

  34. The British Academy Is: • established by Royal Charter and • a registered charity • purposes: education/training, arts/culture The Council Members/Trustees are therefore subject to: • UK charity and trust law The British Academy is governed by its Charter and Byelaws

  35. What is the British Academy for…? The objects of the Academy are: “… the promotion of the study of the moral and political sciences, including history, philosophy, law, politics and economics, archaeology and philology.” For the benefit of the public

  36. How does it achieve this mission today? “The fundamental purpose of the Academy is: to inspire, recognise and support excellence and high achievement in the humanities and social sciences, throughout the UK and internationally, and to champion their role and value” Fellowship • takes a lead in representing humanities and social sciences Learned society • fosters and promotes the full range of work that makes up the humanities and social sciences Funder • supports excellent ideas, individuals and intellectual resources in the humanities and social sciences National forum • supports a range of activities and publications which aim to stimulate curiosity to inspire and develop future scholars, encouraging appreciation of the value of these disciplines.

  37. Your relationship with The Academy • Compliance within the terms and conditions of the grant • Funds spent on the purposes given for • Effective stewardship of those funds

  38. Charity reporting and accounting requirements

  39. Charity reporting by trustees • Legal framework: SORP 2005, Charities Act 2011, Companies Act 2006, your governing document • Administrative details • Structure, governance and management • recruitment/appointment of trustees • induction/training • how decisions are made • risk statement • Objectives and activities • Activities described linked to Statement of Financial Activities • Policies (for reserves, investment and grants) and linkage to risk statement • Achievements and future plans • Give good news, and bad • Public benefit

  40. Public benefit • Charity trustees public benefit duties • Charity trustees must: • Ensure that they carry out their charity’s aims for the public benefit • Have regard to guidance published by the charity commission on public benefit; and • Report on their charity’s public benefit in their Trustees Annual Report. • Revised guidance expected early 2013

  41. Serious incident reporting – Dec 2012 • Serious incident reporting • Updated guidance from the Charity Commission • Trustees have a legal duty to report • Trustees should report on a timely basis (i.e. not wait until annual return) • Updated summary of what is a “serious incident” • Significant financial loss • Serious harm to beneficiaries • Misuse of charity funds • Illegal activity involving the charity • Other “significant” non-compliance • If in doubt, trustees should report • Often CC/OSCR take no additional action where trustees can demonstrate resolution

  42. Charity accounting • Legal framework: SORP 2005 • Statement of Financial Activities (SoFA) • Charitable income and expenditure linked through activities (and linked to trustees’ report) • Balance sheet • Accounting policies • Transactions with trustees (related party transactions)

  43. Heritage assets –Financial Reporting Standard 30 • Applicable for years ending after 31 March 2011 • Greatly increased disclosure • Five year summary • Management of assets • Assets should be capitalised where possible • Donated assets • Relaxed valuation requirements • Where assets are excluded: • Must be able to justify it • Obtain justification for audit file • Explain in financial statements • Currently capitalised assets must remain on balance sheet

  44. Heritage assets – five year summary Distinguish between transactions reported in balance sheet and those not included If earlier information not available, give current and prior year. Build up to five years by 2014.

  45. Taxation • Charities do pay tax – or do they?? • Direct tax • Non primary purpose activities, including trading • VAT • Property transactions • Trading subsidiary • Tax emerging issues • Real time information • Updated Gift Aid forms • Small Charitable Donations Bill • Charities Online • Ask your professional advisors if you have any queries

  46. Future of UK GAAP – common questions • “I’ve heard that charities will be adopting IFRS in the near future. When is this happening?” • Key point: Only entities currently required to adopt IFRS will (continue) to be required to do so in the future. • Other entities will use FRS 100, 101, 102 (new UK accounting standards) or FRSSE (where currently permitted) • FRS 102 broadly based on IFRS for SMEs but is not an international standard • Effective date is periods commencing on or after 1 January 2015

  47. Future of UK GAAP – common questions • “Will there still be a charities SORP?” • Yes, the FRC have stated that there will be a continuing need for SORPs in the NFP sectors (charities, RSLs, education) • All SORPs are undergoing or about to undergo a redraft to take account of the new requirements • Expected consultations in 2013

  48. Future of UK GAAP – common questions • “What are the changes?” • FRS 102 is based in principals consistent with IFRS but significant accounting options currently allowed under UK GAAP continue to be allowed • Some debates on-going regarding: • donated stock : likely to be permitted to account for donated stock on sale of the stock and not on receipt • restrictions vs performance conditions : some conflicting information/confusion in current draft • merger accounting : permitted for PBEs • accounting for pension scheme arrangements : losses and DB schemes

  49. New Annual Return • New Annual Return • Updated to reflect the results of a public consultation • additionally will be asked • if the charity is registered for Gift Aid; • whether the charity owns or leases any land or buildings; and • whether any of the charity’s land or buildings are used for the charity’s purposes. • Meanwhile, previously voluntary questions are now mandatory • on overseas activities; and • the number of volunteers.

  50. Good financial management indicators for Trustees in the current economic environment

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