MEL quotes a quandry: 
 
I am working with a nonprofit whose board has taken control, seeing 
problems where none exist and attempting to manage the organization 
rather than set policy. I am making recommendations regarding bylaws, 
but those alone will not stop these people. 
 
I have also recommended to the executive director that she find projects 
for board members -- such as a newsletter or fundraising -- and most 
importantly that she get an outside consultant to do board training on 
their role. 
 
And then quotes further in reply from a Board Member Code of Ethics 
based on the following text used by Dan Cain and the Cain Consulting 
Group of Hawarden, Iowa. (Note: In the original posting, MEL said, "This 
is not my creation. I would like to give credit but I don't know the 
source." A copy of the source was subsequently sent to me and I have 
replaced the incomplete version with the text as provided by the Cain 
Consulting Group. It it presented here with their permission. -Ed.) 
 
A Code of Ethics for Board Members 
 
As a member of the board I will: 
 
 
- listen carefully to my teammates, and the constituents I serve.
 
 - respect the opinions of my fellow board members.
 
 - respect and support the majority decisions of the board.
 
 - recognize that all authority is vested in the board when it meets in
 
legal session and not in individual board members. 
 - keep well-informed of developments that are relevant to issues that
 
may come before the board. 
 - participate actively in board meetings and actions.
 
 - call to the attention of the board any issues I believe will have an
 
adverse effect on the agency or our constituents. 
 - attempt to interpret the needs of constituents to the agency and the
 
action of the agency to its constituents. 
 - refer constituent or staff complaints to the proper level on the chain
 
of command. 
 - recognize that the board member's job is to ensure that the agency is
 
well managed, not to manage the agency. 
 - vote to hire the best possible person to manage the agency.
 
 - represent all constituents of the agency and not a particular
 
geographic area or special interest groups. 
 - consider myself a "trustee" of the agency and do my best to ensure
 
that the agency is well maintained, financially secure, growing, and 
always operating on the best interests of constituents. 
 - always work to learn more about the board member's job and how to do
 
the job better. 
 - declare any conflicts of interest between my personal life and my
 
position on the agency board, and avoid voting on issues that appear to 
be a conflict of interest. 
 
  
 
As a member of the board I will not: 
 
 
- be critical, in or outside of the board meeting, of fellow board
 
members or their opinions. 
 - use the agency or any part of the organization for my personal
 
advantage or the personal advantage of my friends or relatives. 
 - discuss the confidential proceedings of the board outside the board
 
meeting. 
 - promise prior to a meeting how I will vote on any issue in the
 
meeting. 
 - interfere with the duties of the administrator or undermine the
 
administrator's authority. 
 
  
 
  
 
Copyright ©1995, Dan Cain, The Cain Consulting Group, Box 272, 
Hawarden, 
Iowa 51023 USA; 712/552-2979. Reproduced by permission. 
 
Posted 1995 -- PB 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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