10 Questions Funders Should Ask Grantees Who Use Fiscal Sponsors
1. Is there an alignment between your mission and your fiscal sponsor’s mission?
2. Is your fiscal sponsor financially sound and does it follow the appropriate standards of financial management, transparency, and integrity?
- Are the fiscal sponsor’s financial records accessible on demand?
- What written policies provide checks and balances to safeguard funds?
- What system does the fiscal sponsor use to monitor program expenditures and activities?
- Does the fiscal sponsor arrange for an annual audit of its finances overseen by an independent audit committee?
- Does the fiscal sponsor post its 990 and the results of its annual audit on its website?
3. Do you have a written agreement with your fiscal sponsor?
4. Do you understand the implications of the model of fiscal sponsorship your project is using?
Arts activities generally use the Pre-Approved Grant Relationship model (Model C), but they can also use other models. In Model C, foundation grants and donations may be the only funds going through the sponsor (and therefore given oversight). Earned revenues from the same project activity will not necessarily show up on the project budget the fiscal sponsor produces. These revenues are not required to go through the fiscal sponsor in a Model C relationship (although in many cases they do, especially when the fiscally sponsored project wants all its activity represented in one place). One reason some arts-based fiscally sponsored projects prefer this model of fiscal sponsorship is to avoid a fee on their earned income.
The Pre-Approved Grant Relationship model of fiscal sponsorship is widely misunderstood and easily abused as a “conduit” when the fiscal sponsor fails to exercise the requisite “discretion and control.” The key element to avoid in fiscal sponsorship relationships is the creation of a “pass-through” or “conduit” arrangement. The fiscal sponsor must exercise “variance power” or independent “discretion and control” over the fiscally sponsored project for the relationship to pass IRS muster.
Projects that utilize Comprehensive Fiscal Sponsorship (Model A), become a part of the fiscal sponsor's organization and operate as a program as the fiscal sponsor. A comprehensive fiscal sponsor assumes all legal and fiduciary liability for the project's activities, all employees are employed by the fiscal sponsor, and all monies must be held by the fiscal sponsor as the only legal entity of record.
5. What other services does the fiscally sponsored project receive?
6. What does fiscal sponsorship cost?
An issue that comes up when a fiscally sponsored project wishes to change sponsors is whether the administrative allocation on the unexpended funds will be returned. There is no uniform agreement on this question in the field, but it is useful for the project to know its sponsor’s practice. In any event, how the relationship between the FSP and the fiscal sponsor is terminated should be spelled out in the initial agreement.
7. Do you get regular, timely, accurate financial accounting of your sponsored funds?
8. Does your fiscal sponsor provide programmatic and financial oversight of your project?
9. Does your fiscal sponsor file your grant reports with your grantors?
10. Does your fiscal sponsor follow the National Network of Fiscal Sponsors’ guidelines for best practices?
Part of the impetus in the fiscal sponsorship field to codify these “best practices” was to help funders understand the fiscal sponsorship relationship and to weed out those sponsors (which are unfortunately still out there) who give the field a bad name by merely “passing through” or laundering the funder’s grant money.