Foundation says agreement is lopsided
- Share via
Noaki Schwartz
NEWPORT BEACH -- Library foundation members are hammering out a
counterproposal to what they perceive to be a lopsided resolution to
their dispute with the library’s trustees.
For months, all five trustees and four key foundation members have been
meeting in an attempt to resolve the financial disagreement that first
came to public light last fall. In an Oct. 19 letter, the trustees
threatened to sever ties with the foundation unless it reduced its
operating costs, regularly sent out clear financial reports and gave the
trustees greater control of the foundation’s operations.
Here are a few of the key requirements of the proposed agreement:
* That the operating expenses of the foundation be below 30%.
* That the foundation be annually audited.
* That the money being raised for the $2.5-million endowment fund should
not be used to run the foundation.
* That a foundation member would attend trustee meetings and vice versa
in order for each to know precisely what the other is doing.
But the proposed agreement does not address some of the major underlying
disagreements between the two groups, such as what constitutes an
operating cost.For example, while the trustees said the foundation spent
more than 50% of the money it raised on operating costs, the foundation
insisted it was well below the accepted 15% level. One of the reasons for
the discrepancy is that the trustees consider the Manuscript series and
Distinguished Speaker series to be operating costs while the foundation
members do not.
The agreement was taken to the foundation for approval but was not
accepted by the rest of the 20-member board, as many were upset that it
appeared to choke the nonprofit organization.”It [does] seem like it
erodes the independence required of the foundation,” said president David
Carmichael, who was one of the four foundation members to initially sign
off on the agreement. “In order to maintain our tax status as a separate
legal entity, the directors need to keep their autonomy.”
The foundation will be meeting this week to discuss the proposal and
outline what they would like to see changed, and both groups plan to meet
at the end of the month.
Still, trustee chair Jim Wood maintains that the proposal is fair. It
might appear one-sided simply because the trustees are the ones who had
the problem with the foundation. He added that the agreement was written
by both groups and not just trustees.
“It seems like a fair document for two organizations that have a common
purpose -- namely the successful operation of the Newport Beach Public
Library -- to operate under,” Wood said.
In addition to adding measures aimed at increasing communication between
the two entities, the agreement outlines actions the foundation already
performs -- such as giving the trustees financial reports -- and spells
out the group’s role.
The proposed agreement is available for public view on the library’s Web
site, at o7 www.newport-beach.ca.usf7 .
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.