Treasurer Role in NPO
Treasurer Role in NPO
Treasurer Role in NPO
Being treasurer of a community organisation is a great honour, and a great responsibility. An active and alert
treasurer can ensure their community group is able to extend its activities, resulting in greater benefits to the
wider community. It's a big job - while you may be able to delegate some duties to staff and volunteers, you can't
delegate the responsibility.
The main duties of a treasurer are to oversee the financial administration of the organisation, review procedures
and financial reporting, advise the board on financial strategy, and advise on fundraising.
Let's look at what the treasurer needs to do in each of these areas:
Financial administration
Keep up-to-date records as well as an audit trail for all transactions (consider setting up an audit
committee and appointing an external auditor)
Protect the organisation against fraud and theft, ensuring safe custody of money, and prompt banking
Make sure the board understands its financial obligations
Make sure the organisation complies with tax regulations, such as GST, payroll tax and fringe benefits tax
Review all internal processes and reporting methods at least annually.
Small not-for-profit organisations don't employ staff, so the treasurer has to do the banking, depositing cash and
cheques, paying the bills and tracking income and expenditure throughout the year. You need to be on top of
your finances so the organisation knows how well it is tracking against the budget and how to respond if
unexpected problems arise.
In larger organisations, professional staff manage the daily transactions and record-keeping and the treasurer
maintains a watching brief on the monthly accounts. Often the treasurer can share this responsibility with a
finance committee which can provide a link between staff and board.
If you're a medium-sized organisation, and either doing the books yourself or employing someone part-time,
consider using an accountant once a month or every quarter to check your work. This will give you the security of
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Advising on fundraising
As treasurer you may be asked to prepare funding proposals for one-off grants, grants for special projects and
sponsorship.
The treasurer's duties will vary according to the organisation's size and culture, but financial management is a
team responsibility. The treasurer, the chair, other members of the governing body and staff must work together
to develop a budget, and monitor and evaluate financial progress.
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Many organisations appoint finance committees, or sub-committees, to help the treasurer. The advantage of
having a finance committee is that a group of interested and financially knowledgeable people can share the load.
Another advantage is that you can co-opt experts on to the finance committee and so bring new people into your
organisation. Don't spread the team too thin - people may not feel the same sense of commitment or
responsibility.
Some boards also appoint an audit committee whose role is to liaise with external auditors, ensure the control
systems are adequate, and examine any financial irregularities (if there's no audit committee, these duties fall on
the treasurer).
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