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Trustees’ Responsibilities

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Presentation on theme: "Trustees’ Responsibilities"— Presentation transcript:

1 Trustees’ Responsibilities
Thursday 16th November 2017 Tracy Davies – Clay Shaw Butler Chartered Accountants & Registered Auditors 24 Lammas Street, Carmarthen, SA31 3AL

2 Trustee eligibility Minimum age Company/CIO = Minimum 16 years old
16/11/2017 Trustee eligibility Minimum age Company/CIO = Minimum 16 years old Any other charity = Minimum 18 years old

3 Trustee eligibility cont.
2. Not disqualified You must not act as a trustee if you are disqualified under the Charities Act. This includes if you: are disqualified as a company director have an unspent conviction for an offence involving dishonesty or deception (such as fraud) are an undischarged bankrupt, or have a current composition or arrangement including an individual voluntary arrangement (IVA) with your creditors have been removed as a trustee of any charity by the commission (or the court) because of misconduct or mismanagement

4 Trustee eligibility cont.
3. Fit and proper person Charities that want to claim UK tax reliefs and exemptions (e.g. Gift Aid) must meet the management condition in the Finance Act This requires all of the charity’s managers (including trustees) to be ‘fit and proper persons’.

5 Trustee eligibility cont.
4. Extra rules if working with children/vulnerable adults Illegal for a barred person to apply for a regulated activity (paid or voluntary) Illegal for charity to knowingly employ a barred person to work in a regulated activity Being a trustee is not a regulated activity Reputational risk

6 Responsibilities 1. Public benefit 2. Comply with governing docs & law 3. Act in charity’s best interest 4. Manage resources responsibility 5. Act with reasonable care and skill 6. Ensure charity is accountable

7 16/11/2017 1. Pubic benefit Everything the charity does should be to achieve its purpose (and no other) a. Ensure you understand purpose as set out in governing document - What Who How Priority Restrictions Serious to spend charity funds outside purpose

8 1. Public benefit cont. b. Understand how charity benefits public
All charities must operate for the public benefit Public benefit guidance on CC website Needed for charitable status

9 1. Public benefit cont. c. Planning and reviewing your charity’s work
Trustees responsibility to plan how charity will carry out its purpose Consider funds/resources required and where they will come from Involve staff/volunteers Review effectiveness

10 1. Public benefit cont. d. Review charity objects periodically
Still appropriate, relevant and up-to-date e.g. beneficiaries, locality Update objects if necessary (legal documents)

11 2. Comply with governing docs & law
Governing documents contain key info: Purpose Powers Trustees, number, appointment, removal etc. Members Meetings

12 2. Comply with governing docs & law cont.
b. Comply with charity law i) Register with the charity commission (E&W) Keep proper financial records Prepare annual accounts Inform CC of changes Annual return Report serious incidents

13 2. Comply with governing docs & law cont.
c. Comply with other laws Depends on charity structure, activity etc. i) All charities – equality, data protection, copyright ii) Other areas Company/CIO/Community benefit society Employ staff Own or rent premises Operate vehicles Provide regulated advice, housing, medical/care services, work with vulnerable people Fundraising Tax relief Work outside the UK

14 3. Act in charity’s best interest
Trustees must: Act to best enable charity to carry out its purpose Long and short-term Not about serving trustees/staff interest, supporters/funders, members, the institution

15 3. Act in charity’s best interest cont.
b. Make balanced & adequately informed decisions Vital role Act within your powers Act in good faith Ensure adequately informed Consider relevant factors/ignore irrelevant Deal with conflicts of interest Record significant decisions

16 3. Act in charity’s best interest cont.
c. Avoid conflicts with personal interests/ loyalties Could relate to you or a connected person e.g. close relative, business partner, company Need to: i) Identify and declare conflicts of interest ii) Prevent them affecting decisions iii)Record conflict and how dealt with

17 3. Act in charity’s best interest cont.
d. Not receive benefit (unless authorised) Trustees usually unpaid Can reclaim expenses Restrictions for transactions with trustees/financial connected people e.g. supplying goods/service, employment, acting as beneficiary, loans etc. Permission required

18 4. Manage resources responsibly
Duty of prudence (responsibly, reasonably, honestly) Assets only used for charitable purpose b. Avoid exposing assets/beneficiaries/reputation to undue risk Risk management Establish risk policy Identify risks Assess risks (likelihood and impact) Action (avoid/transfer/insure/accept) Review, monitor and assess regularly

19 4. Manage resources responsibly cont.
c. Budgeting Important to manage money and resources properly. Plan and monitor income and outgoings d. Consider income generation Avoid relying on single source of income Consider options available e.g. fundraising, trading etc. and costs, benefits, risks Legal requirements Reputational issues

20 4. Manage resources responsibly cont.
e. Keep funds safe Procedures for income & expenditure Keep accurate records Financial controls Protect from theft/fraud Reserves policy Tax reliefs f. Special care regarding investment/borrowing not to put charity assets at risk

21 4. Manage resources responsibly cont.
g. Comply with restrictions on spending funds etc. Restricted funds h. Manage property Ensure property in charity’s name Adequate insurance Properly maintained Review if suitable for charity’s purposes Restrictions on selling/leasing

22 5. Act with reasonable care & skill
Use your skills and experience Reasonable in the circumstances Specialist knowledge/experience b. Take advice when needed Some decisions carry more risk e.g. buying/selling land, investing funds, legal actions

23 5. Act with reasonable care & skill cont.
c. Give sufficient time, thought & energy Prepare for meetings Attend meetings Actively participate d. Deal with problems promptly Prevent or minimise further loss or damage Report to CC, police etc. Prevent re-occuring

24 6. Ensure charity is accountable
Comply with accounting requirements Prepare accounts/annual return Requirements vary depending on size/constitution b. Be accountable to people with an interest in the charity Complaints procedures Good practice

25 6. Ensure charity is accountable cont.
c. Trustees and delegation Delegation can be useful Chose what to delegate (not high risk/unusual) Can not delegate overall responsibility Put in writing e.g. job descriptions Clear, appropriate channels for communication

26 6. Ensure charity is accountable cont.
d. Ask questions Need to hold people to account Question information provided Be prepared to say “I don’t understand” Ensure receive timely, understandable info Request training if required

27 7. Liability Personal liability to the charity
Trustees can be liable to charity for any financial loss Trustees who act honestly & reasonably generally protected No legal protection for acting dishonestly, negligently or recklessly

28 7. Liability cont. b. Liability to third parties
16/11/2017 7. Liability cont. b. Liability to third parties e.g. breach of employee rights, public injury, liability to staff pension scheme Depends on legal structure Incorporated bodies can specify trustee/members limit Unincorporated – trustee sign contracts personally. Honest mistakes can be met by charity but if insufficient funds trustees must meet

29 7. Liability cont. c. Criminal liability - Can be held responsible for offences committed by staff e.g. Bribery Act, corporate manslaughter law

30 7. Liability cont. d. How to reduce personal risk
Ensure understand responsibilities Ensure can meet financial obligations before signing new contracts Hold regular meetings and keep records Deal with conflicts of interest appropriately Ensure transactions with trustees/connected persons are authorised Take appropriate advice Ensure delegated powers are clear and written Ensure effective management and financial controls Ensure comply with laws Consider whether needs additional insurance Consider whether need to incorporate

31 Thank You Any Questions?

32 Contact details Tracy Davies Relationship Accountant Clay Shaw Butler


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