ITEM 122-109-R0304

901.9 Campus-Affiliated Foundations;
Montana University System

Effective September 17, 1998; Issued October 21, 1998


1. Purpose of Foundations:

Private support for public higher education is an accepted and firmly established practice throughout the nation. Foundations are established to enable institutions to accomplish more than public funding allows. The private, independent nature of foundations also provides the added advantage of flexibility in fiscal management and responsiveness in donor services. Foundations affiliated with the campuses of the Montana University System have an outstanding record of providing additional financial support for their campuses so they can achieve a level of excellence not possible through state funding and tuition alone.

The Board of Regents recognizes and appreciates the contributions made to higher education by the foundations affiliated with the campuses of the Montana University System. The Board pledges to do its part in preserving and ensuring the future growth of these foundations. It acknowledges these foundations can best serve the special needs and interests of donors who desire their contributions to go toward enhancing the mission of the campuses, and not be used to replace necessary support from the state.

The purpose of foundations affiliated with campuses of the Montana University System is to engage in raising funds consistent with the mission and priorities of that campus. These foundations are expected to have mission statements relevant to this purpose and to adopt policies, plans, and budgets to achieve their missions. Each campus-affiliated foundation is authorized to accept restricted and unrestricted gifts on behalf of that campus. The campus agrees, through its chief executive officer, to keep the foundation apprised of its needs and priorities; the foundation agrees to consider and communicate to the campus its ability and plans to fund those needs and priorities. An affiliated foundation must agree not to solicit or accept gifts, the use of which would be inconsistent with the campus' mission, goals, or objectives.

 

2. Public Confidence:

The Board of Regents recognizes it cannot and should not have direct control over campus-affiliated foundations. These foundations must be governed separately to protect their private, independent status. However, because the Board of Regents is responsible for ensuring the integrity and reputation of the university system and its campuses and programs, it must be assured that any affiliated foundation will adhere to ethical standards appropriate to such organizations in order to assure the public that it is conducting its mission with honesty and integrity.

Therefore, each campus chief executive officer should ensure that the campus foundation ascribes to the following requirements in order to enhance public confidence in the foundation:

�        Compliance with state and federal law applicable to such organizations.

�        Maintaining financial and accounting records in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles or other comprehensive Basis of Accounting, as approved by an independent auditor. Such records shall be audited annually or biannually by a firm of Certified Public Accountants and shall be maintained separately from the records of the affiliated campus.

�        Annual or biannual submission of audited financial statements by each October 1 (to allow campus compliance with GASB 39) and a list of foundation officers, directors, or trustees, through their campus chief executive officer (and President), to the Commissioner of Higher Education and Board of Regents. The Commissioner shall make this information available to the executive and legislative branches of state government and members of the public who request it.

The relationship between the campuses of the Montana University System and the foundations supporting those campuses must be based on a recognition of and respect for the private and independent nature of the foundations. Transactions between a campus and its foundation must be consistent with the foundation's mission to assist and benefit the campus and must also be consistent with the campus' obligation to hold, manage, and use public property and resources to benefit the public interest. To ensure that the campus/foundation relationship is clearly defined, each campus shall consummate a formal written operating agreement with its affiliated foundation. To ensure the independence of the foundation, no employee of the Montana University System shall hold a voting position on a campus-affiliated foundation board. The Regents may allow exceptions to this restriction during a three-year transition period for those campuses that historically and currently have faculty or other employees serving as voting members of their campus-affiliated foundation boards. Senior administrators of the campus should, however, participate on the foundation board in an ex-officio capacity.

 

3. Operating Agreement:

The campuses of the Montana University System and their affiliated foundations shall enter into a public, written operating agreement that (1) outlines the relationship between the two entities; (2) incorporates an appropriate balance of foundation independence and Board of Regents' oversight; and (3) defines appropriate foundation activities. This agreement shall be reviewed and approved by the Board of Regents at least every two years and, at a minimum, include:

�        The services and benefits the campus and foundation provide each other and any payments made, including whether campus assets are managed by the foundation;

�        How gifts, grants, and endowments are accepted and accounted for;

�        That gifts made to a campus of the Montana University System be accounted for and ownership maintained by that campus; that gifts made to a campus-affiliated foundation be accounted for and ownership maintained by that foundation;

�        That the foundation has a conflict-of-interest policy;

�        That no salary supplements for a unit chief executive officer will be underwritten by a foundation without the approval of and public disclosure by the Board of Regents;

�        That campus input will be sought by the chief executive officer before defining the major needs and priorities for foundation consideration;

�        That other requirements stated or implied by this policy have been followed.

 

4. Board of Regents� Authority:

As provided in Article X of the Constitution of the State of Montana, the Board of Regents has authority over the campuses of the Montana University System. Under such authority, the Regents have responsibility for ensuring the public interest is served by any individual or organization established to support a campus of the Montana University System. While the Board of Regents cannot control or direct individuals or private organizations, it has the full authority to control the activities of its agents and agencies in their relationships with such individuals or organizations. Such control extends to the regulation of participation in those organizations and the use of a name, logo, or other insignia identified with campuses of the Montana University System.

History: Item 100-003-R0798, Campus-Affiliated Foundations; Montana University System (NEW Board of Regents' Policy), approved by the Board of Regents on September 17, 1998.