http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A37463-2004Mar30.html
Overhaul of Nature Conservancy
Urged
Report by Independent Panel Calls for Greater
Openness
By Joe Stephens
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, March 31, 2004; Page A01
An independent panel of experts created by the
Nature Conservancy last year to revamp the
environmental group's operations has issued a
final report calling for sweeping reforms that the
group hopes will become a model of ethical
standards for nonprofit organizations.
The panel is urging the Conservancy to make its
finances more public, to scrutinize tax deductions
taken by its donors and to vow to "walk away" from
financial transactions that fail to meet the
proposed standards.
Conservancy board members and their companies
should be barred from selling land to the
Conservancy or buying property from the group, the
report says, and the Conservancy's conflict of
interest policy for board members and executives
should be extended to cover major donors of cash
or land.
The report also says board members and their
companies should not enter into "cause-related
marketing" campaigns with the Conservancy, where
the group's logo is stamped on products and used
in corporate ads.
The panel urges the Arlington-based nonprofit to
bar its board members and their companies from
claiming federal income tax deductions for giving
land to the charity.
The recommendations come in a 28-page report
prepared over six months by an outside committee
led by Ira M. Millstein, a New York lawyer and an
expert on business ethics. Other panelists include
former Harvard University president Derek Bok and
former Los Angeles Times publisher Richard T.
Schlosberg III.
The Conservancy, the world's largest environmental
group, created the panel last year, after articles
in The Washington Post described controversial
practices at the organization. The Conservancy
also immediately after the articles were published
in early May banned many of the practices, saying
it would no longer lend money to corporate
insiders, sell land to its trustees or drill for
oil on nature preserve land.
The Conservancy already has adopted one of the
panel's major recommendations, made months ago in
an interim report. In January, the environmental
group approved a "complete restructuring" of its
governing board to strengthen accountability and
oversight at the $3 billion organization. The
changes include creation of an 11-member executive
committee that will wield power formerly
distributed across the 36-member board. A major
focus of the executive committee will be to
promote greater openness at the Conservancy.
In the final report distributed to Conservancy
board members this week, the panel did not dwell
on past practices at the Conservancy, choosing
instead to focus on setting new standards to
increase efficiency and safeguard the charity's
reputation.
"I have a high degree of confidence this will be
carried out," Millstein said of the
recommendations. Conservancy spokesman James
Petterson said most of the changes are already
underway.
In a statement, Conservancy board Chairman Henry
M. Paulson Jr. said the organization has made a
"commitment to strive for the best standards in
governance in the nonprofit sector. With the
assistance of this esteemed panel, and through our
own comprehensive internal review of our
governance structure, we have made significant
progress toward that commitment."
Senate Finance Committee Chairman Charles E.
Grassley (R-Iowa), who has been investigating
Conservancy practices since last year, welcomed
the report as an important step and said the
proposed reforms might have wider applicability to
other charities.
"I'm pleased that it looks like Nature Conservancy
has gotten the message that business as usual
won't cut it," Grassley said in a statement.
"People should have confidence that when they
write a check for charity, the money will help the
needy, not the greedy."
Millstein, the panel chairman, said he hopes the
recommendations will become a benchmark for the
charitable industry's best practices.
"It is essential that a non-profit board . . .
scrupulously operate in a transparent, lawful and
ethical manner," the report stresses.
The report says appropriate concerns have been
raised about the validity of appraisals used to
justify tax deductions claimed by individuals and
companies that donate conservation easements,
which restrict some types of intrusive development
on particular tracts of land. In many cases, the
donors continue to use the land as home sites.
"The panel recommends that TNC [the Nature
Conservancy] put in place careful, systemic and
strict procedures that will ensure compliance with
all aspects of the spirit and letter of the rules
for charitable contributions of conservation
donations, with particular emphasis on
appraisals," the panel wrote.
The Conservancy should refuse to sign Internal
Revenue Service documents, known as Form 8283s and
used by the IRS to document non-cash gifts to
charities, unless the value placed on the gift of
land or an easement is backed by a report from a
qualified, state-certified appraiser, the report
says.
The Conservancy, the panel wrote, "must
demonstrate that it is willing to 'walk away' from
an otherwise advantageous transaction where all
aspects of the transaction do not meet TNC's new
standards, including where a donor wishes to claim
a tax deduction based on an appraisal that is not
justified."
The report urges the organization to strengthen
efforts to monitor and enforce the development
restrictions created by the easements and to take
"aggressive action" against land owners who
violate them.
"Adequate monitoring and enforcement of easements
is critical to achieving long-term conservation
results," the panel wrote.
The report also urges the Conservancy to use its
annual return filed with the IRS, known as a Form
990 and available for public inspection, as a sort
of annual report to its members. The Conservancy
should make more disclosures in the filings than
is required by law, the report says, and should
include details about executive compensation,
conservation activities and the organization's
ethical record.
The annual Form 990 return, the panel wrote, could
serve as the nonprofit's version of the
Sarbanes-Oxley reports, which are now filed by
publicly traded, for-profit companies. Those
reports were created by Congress after disclosures
of self-dealing and profiteering at Enron and
other Fortune 500 companies.
In an interview, Millstein said, "What we are
saying is, go along with the spirit of what the
law requires, not just the letter."
Staff writer David B. Ottaway also contributed
to this report.