Internal:Audit

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Revision as of 00:40, 8 May 2016 by Econterms (talk | contribs) (revised sub-tasks for first round)
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Basic background: Audit committee's charter and responsibilities

  • Wikimedia DC has a standing Audit Committee of 3 or more Directors who shall conduct an annual review of the financial records of the Corporation. (from the Bylaws)
  • Wikimedia DC's Audit Committee has five members, listed here
  • We are "auditing", (or reviewing) this document centrally: Annual financial report (2014–2015)
  • Also from Bylaws, ARTICLE X - FISCAL CONTROLS (edited to focus on audit issues):
  • Disbursements over $25 shall be made only by check drawn on the Corporation's bank account or by electronic means, except where a resolution of the Board allows for cash disbursements in excess of $25 for specific purposes. Any disbursement over $5 shall be supported by voucher or receipt. All checks, drafts, notes and evidence of indebtedness of the Corporation shall be signed by either the Treasurer or the President. Disbursements in excess of $2,500 shall require the signature or written approval of both the President and the Treasurer.
  • 2. Annual Budget. Prior to the commencement of each fiscal year, the Board shall prepare an estimated budget for the following fiscal year for the approval of a majority of those present and voting at a membership meeting.
  • 4. Capital Expenditures. Capital expenditures in excess of $1,000 must be approved by a majority of those present and voting at a membership meeting. Approval of a line item in the annual budget shall constitute membership approval of a capital expenditure.
  • Need to audit chapter's finances from 2014-2015.
  • Could examine whether Fiscal Controls was followed.
  • more centrally, see the Fiscal control policy
  • At a top level, the committee's main task is to look at WMDC's financial records (which includes the detailed accounting records in QuickBooks, plus the summary financial statements in our annual financial report) and verify their accuracy.
  • In other organizations, an "audit committee" would generally be a Board committee interfacing with EXTERNAL auditors. This is what it means at WM PL and WM FR, and in corporations. However we are a small non-profit so our audit committee is to conduct an "internal audit" only, which is a much lighter thing.
  • look at QuickBooks and maybe bank and paypal statements
  • the committee's main task is to look at WMDC's financial records (which includes the detailed accounting records in QuickBooks, plus the summary financial statements in our annual financial report) and verify their accuracy.

Likely sub-tasks in first round

  • Do either (a) an exhaustive comparison of the underlying bank/debit/PayPal/etc. transactions against the QuickBooks records, or (b) selective spot checks, or some other form of verification.
  • Verify that a reconciliation occurred of bank/paypal with QuickBooks at the end of the fiscal year
  • If we find a problem, work with Walter and Kirill to update/correct it.
  • At the end: the committee should produce some sort of statement to the effect of "we looked at the records and think that they're accurate".
  • A model one is the one at the top of the Annual Financial Report for Fiscal Year 2011–12 (which was basically written by Matt Bisanz who I believe is a CPA) (in other years our audit committees have not produced such statements)[1]
  • Notes: I believe that statement should probably be updated to say (a) we're a 501(c)3 now; (b) we checked and the organization did stay within the 501(c)3 bounds regarding advocacy expenditures; (c) we are reporting this correctly (according to policy) to our donors.
  • Research and revise Fiscal control policy 7.1 to replace "financial records . . . consistent with US GAAP . . . particularly . . . FAS 116 (Accounting for Contributions Received and Contributions Made) and FAS 117 (Financial Statements of Nonprofit Organizations). by something like "the treasurer should maintain financial records that will enable financial statements to be prepared that are consistent with US GAAP FAS 116 and FAS 117." That incorporates two changes: (a) GAAP applies to statements not records ; (b) it is not appropriate/feasible for a small nonprofit to actually meet the GAAP requirements, he thinks, which require lengthy precise footnotes that we have not included and should not bother to include. (There is a discussion among accounting specialists about whether there SHOULD be a "light" version of GAAP, but right now there isn't one.) Therefore we should focus the assertion on those bits of GAAP that we are trying to match -- 116 and 117 -- but even these are 200-page documents, which we should skim before we commit to them so we know what we're talking about
  • Revise 7.7 to add something like "look for other nonprofits and what standards they use."
  • Revise 6.4 to say something like "All solicitation documents shall accurately report [the 501©3 status] of the organization." The current assertion make us responsible for too much -- the tax status of the donor's income and the on the tax deductibility of donations made to Wikimedia DC in the donor's jurisdiction --- for example, we should make no such assertion for foreign donors.
  • Look over our past Annual Financial Reports, and examine any substantive changes in the report for 2014-2015. Do we know why those changes were made and are we comfortable with the changes?
  • Research task: Maybe look at another nonprofit to see what standards they say they use.
  • Whistleblower Policy -- it assigns tasks to us. Review it ; if we have received any significant reports of illegal activity that we are taking action. (Brainstorm here.)
  • Non-discrimination policy -- assigns a responsibiilty to chair of Audit committee ; claim: it's been satisfied.
  • Review Delegation of Authority Policy, especially article (3), and Talk:Delegation of authority policy -- do we think the policy was followed, based on our limited information?
  • Review Record retention policy -- for the purposes of this Policy, the President, the Secretary, the Chair of the Audit Committee, or any legal counsel retained by Wikimedia DC shall be authorize : (g) External audit reports.
  • Review our tax submission to the IRS, make sure somebody on our committee knows who wrote it and sent it
  • Walter knows this report: * Movement-wide Financial Report -- Walter is expert on this ; should somebody else review it?
  • Review our grant submissions and reports m:Grants:PEG/WM_US-DC from 2014-2015-- any red flags, or anything we should verify with the bank/paypal/quickbooks systems? spot checks?
  • Draft a statement from this round of the audit committee to be attached to the 2014-2015 financial report

Second round

  • Meet again in 2-4 weeks
  • Review what got done ; decide what needs still to be done, to be redone, to be followed up
  • Draft a Report from the Audit Committee, phrased so we can all in good conscience sign on to it (or if that fails, we work out another procedure like a vote and a minority report)
  • after 2 weeks more, agree on Report or revise it

History of Wikimedia DC's treasurers, presidents, and audit committees

  • Trish Melikian was treasurer in the 2014-2015 year. She's in touch.
  • Walter became treasurer after that and is treasurer now
  • Peter was treasurer before Trish
  • James was treasurer before Peter
  • User:Econterms/Glossary for Wiki-DC -- audit committee history: it was chaired as of 3/2013 by Kirill

References

Bibliography of WM DC records