Your board is responsible for ensuring adherence to legal standards and ethical norms. Trustees must ensure that the foundation follows its articles of incorporation, bylaws, and policies, complies with federal and state requirements, and holds to its purpose to serve the public good.

The board also serves as the foundation’s moral compass, protecting it from reputational risk by appropriately considering the consequences of decisions and actions. Here are five strategies for keeping your trustees on the right track.

5 Strategies for Keeping Trustees on the High Road

Foundation trustees have many responsibilities, but fulfilling their legal duties tops the list. As such, you must know the rules and where trustees trip up most. Beyond the law, there are many things a foundation can do to help trustees stay out of trouble.

1. Develop a Cohesive and Compelling Purpose for the Foundation

Foundations that have a clear mission statement—to which trustees are committed and which potential grantees understand—avoid the sorts of conflicts that can arise when trustees’ personal agendas dominate.

2. Expect Great Things from Your Board Members

Generally, people will rise to the occasion if you expect them to. Set and communicate standards before individuals agree to become trustees—even in family foundations. Ensure trustees are well-trained, active, informed, and respectful in meetings.

3. Make Sure They Know and Follow All State and Federal Rules

Seven sections of the Internal Revenue Code relate to private foundations. Trustees should be exceptionally well-versed in the following rules:

  • Self-dealing—Be sure you know who meets the criteria of a disqualified person and know the extensive list of prohibited transactions with disqualified persons. Most notably, be careful not to break the rules when renting space, paying compensation, and paying for family to attend board meetings or charity events.
  • Taxable expenditures—Be sure you don’t make grants that influence public elections or support noncharitable activities or lobbying. The IRS only allows other expenditures if the foundation meets additional requirements (e.g., special steps for international grants or scholarship programs).

4. Put Policies and Processes in Place to Help Trustees

A few simple policies and processes can help trustees to make consistent, unbiased, and thoughtful decisions, including:

  • Conflict of interest policy to minimize the potential for bias and unethical decision-making
  • Internal financial controls (and perhaps a whistle-blower policy) to ensure proper financial oversight
  • An investment policy statement to help trustees uphold their fiduciary duties by establishing a plan for your foundation’s investments and advisors
  • A decision-making process that encourages consensus but allows for healthy discussion and dissent
  • Ethics policies, which are considered a best practice by the Internal Revenue Service, define the overall moral fabric of a foundation and hold trustees to high standards

5. Engage Competent Outsiders to Strengthen and Educate Trustees

People are often better able to internalize ideas and concepts after hearing them from several different sources.

Read the full article about board trustees at Exponent Philanthropy.