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Newsroom Nonprofit Panel Recommends More than 120 Actions to Strengthen Transparency, Governance, and Accountability in the Charitable Community
(Washington, D.C., June 22, 2005) – The Panel on the Nonprofit Sector, a collaboration among leaders of America’s charitable organizations, today offered a comprehensive series of recommendations intended to strengthen the ability of the nation’s 1.3 million charities and foundations to serve as responsible stewards of the public’s generosity. In the report it presented to Senator Charles Grassley (R-IA), chairman of the U.S. Senate Finance Committee, and Ranking Member Max Baucus (D-MT), the Panel recommended more than 120 actions to be taken by charitable organizations, by Congress, and by the Internal Revenue Service, which together would strengthen the sector’s transparency, governance, and accountability. Representing the collective expertise of hundreds of nonprofit leaders, these recommendations, if implemented, would constitute the most sweeping changes to the governance, operations, and regulation of charities and foundations in three decades. “Charitable organizations make indispensable contributions to every community,” said M. Cass Wheeler, chief executive officer of the American Heart Association and Panel co-convener. “To ensure that we continue to enjoy the trust and support that makes our work possible, nonprofit leaders and experts from around the country have come together to offer these wide-ranging solutions.” The report, which has incorporated input from thousands of people across the charitable community through field hearings and national conference calls, proposes a carefully integrated package of actions from charitable organizations, from Congress, and from the Internal Revenue Service. Among its proposals:
“These recommendations are intended to strike a balance between providing the oversight needed to prevent abuses and protecting the independence that is a vital element in the charitable community’s innovation and effectiveness,” said Paul Brest, the Panel’s other co-convener and president of the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation. “They reflect the Panel’s belief that any new regulation should not impose costs that exceed their benefits.” The recommendations incorporate the Panel’s interim report, released in March. In hearings before the Senate Finance Committee in April, IRS Commissioner Mark Everson called the Panel’s interim report, “an impressive effort to move the tax-exempt community to a better place.” “These recommendations carefully combine improvement within the sector, more effective oversight, and changes in the law,” said Diana Aviv, executive director of the Panel on the The Panel on the Nonprofit Sector was convened in October 2004 at the encouragement of the Senate Finance Committee Chairman Grassley and Ranking Member Baucus. Concerned about ethical lapses in governance, fundraising, and other practices, both the Senate Finance Committee and the House Ways and Means Committee have held hearings over the past year about the operations of nonprofit organizations. The IRS is also reviewing the practices of charities and foundations. The Panel will offer supplemental comments in the fall on issues of financial reporting and transparency, accreditation and standard setting, and possible changes in the legal framework, including federal and state regulation of fundraising activities. A copy of the Panel on the Nonprofit Sector report and other details are available at www.NonprofitPanel.org. ### The Panel on the Nonprofit Sector is an independent panel of 24 leaders from a wide range of the country’s public charities and private foundations. Convened by Independent Sector at the encouragement of the U.S. Senate Finance Committee, the Panel has worked over the last eight months to develop recommendations to improve the governance, ethical conduct, and oversight of nonprofit organizations. A Citizens Advisory Group, an Expert Advisory Group, and five specialized Work Groups are assisting the Panel, which also invited input from charities and foundations of all sizes serving diverse missions and geographic locations. The Panel plans to make further recommendations in a supplemental report in early spring 2006. Independent Sector is a nonprofit, nonpartisan coalition of approximately 600 charities, foundations, and corporate philanthropy programs, collectively representing tens of thousands of charitable groups in every state across the nation. Its mission is to advance the common good by leading, strengthening, and mobilizing the charitable community. |
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