Title: Michelle Fortnam
1The Code of Conduct The Responsible Use of
University Funds A Timely Friendly Reminder
Michelle Fortnam Associate Director of Internal
Audit and University Compliance Officer Patti
McCabe Director of Training Office of Research
Administration Debra Zumwalt Vice President and
General Counsel Office of the General
Counsel February 7, 2005
2Code of Conduct
- You come to a job with your sense of ethical
values - based on upbringing
- life experiences
- Stanford has developed the Code of Conduct to
set clear ethical standards for its Community
3Provost John Etchemendy
- This code is based on high ideals, Stanford
could not claim to be a world-class institution
if, in the pursuit of our mission or in the
conduct of any of our business, we as faculty and
staff did not act with integrity.
4The Stanford Code of Conduct
- Outlines the overarching core values of the
university - Reflects the university's high ethical
expectations -
- Guides all work-related activities
5Members of the Stanford University Community
- Are responsible for sustaining the highest
ethical standards of this institution - Must be cognizant of and comply with all relevant
policies, standards, laws and regulations that
guide our work - Must avoid even the appearance of misconduct or
impropriety - Are individually and collectively accountable for
our behavior
6Eight Categories
- The code consists of provisions that fall under
eight general categories - Standards of integrity and quality
- Confidentiality and privacy
- Conflict of interest and commitment
- Human resources
- Financial reporting
- Compliance with law
- Use of university resources
- Reporting suspected violations
7Reporting Suspected Violations
- The revised code emphasizes that reporting
concerns will not have negative repercussions - Raising them is a service to the university and
will not put anyone's job in jeopardy - Reports of alleged or actual violations, as well
as subsequent investigations, will be kept
confidential or anonymous (if requested)
8The Current Environment
- Corporate - Governance scandals and reform
efforts - Enron, Global Crossing, Tyco
- Martha Stewart
- Marsh McClennan
- IRS - Increasing concern about personal
inurement violations in the non-profit sector - Nature Conservancy
- Religious and charitable organizations
- Stanford - Affirming a commitment to maintaining
the highest ethical standards - Code of Conduct
- Cabinet meeting
9 Higher Ed Not Immune
- Recent Wall Street Journal article revealed the
forced resignation of a very visible faculty
member (leader in corporate governance reforms)
at Yale University for alleged financial
irregularities involving 150K in travel expense
reimbursements - CFO at CalTech dismissed last year for personal
use of university resources - Dean of Divinity School at Ivy League school
dismissed for financial irregularities
10 Stanfords Privileges and Risks
- World-class research and educational institution
- Intense scrutiny by the media and Aunt Emma
- Constant presence of external auditors (DCAA,
etc.)
- Recipient of significant sponsor and donor funds
- IRS regulations and audits
11Categories and Sources of Funds (FY04)
- Restricted can be spent only in accordance with
the wishes of a sponsoring agency or donor - Direct costs of sponsored projects (760M
including SLAC) - Endowment income (400M)
- Expendable gifts (105M)
- Unrestricted may be used for any institutional
purpose - Tuition and fees (332M )
- Indirect cost recovery (164M)
- Returns earned on unrestricted fund investments
(77M)
12Responsibility for University Funds
- The Board of Trustees has delegated to deans,
department chairs, directors, principal
investigators and other University officers the
responsibility for the management of funds. - These officers have the authority to expend these
funds to accomplish their assigned
responsibilities, and are responsible for
assuring that expenditures charged are - Consistent with established University policies
and practices applicable to the work of the
University, including instruction, research, and
public service. - Consistent with sponsor or donor expenditure
restrictions. - Reasonable and necessary
Administrative Guide Memo 36
13Determining A Reasonable Cost
- A cost is reasonable if a prudent person would
purchase the item at that price, under the
circumstance prevailing at that time - Determine whether a cost is reasonable by
considering whether - The cost is necessary for the performance of the
activity - Incurrence of the cost is consistent with
established institutional polices and practices
14Stanford Policy
- The University authorizes reimbursement of
reasonable and necessary business expenses - The person who incurs the expenses the approver
are responsible for ensuring maximum practical
economy in the expenditure of funds - The price paid by the individual is compared with
the price that would have been paid by the
University in a similar situation - When the price paid by the individual exceeds
that - which would have been paid by the University,
the lesser - amount will be reimbursed
Administrative Guide Memo 36.4
15Reasonable
- Is the expense a reasonable expense for
reimbursement by - The Federal government
- A donor
- The University
16IRS Restrictions
- Difference between a business expense and a
personal expensealways an interest of IRS - Limit on what gifts employees can be given
without it being considered income subject to tax
(25 guideline) - IRS recently announced it will conduct audits of
2000 nonprofits, focusing on compensation. Some
universities already being audited.
17Litmus Tests
- When charging items to the University, ask
yourself these four questions - Is this the right thing to?
- Does it comply with applicable restrictions
(IRS/ sponsor regulations, donor restrictions, SU
policy, etc.) and the Stanford Code of Conduct? - Is this something your administrative assistant,
or other staff in central offices, would clearly
see as a Stanford business expense? - Would you be unconcerned reading about it in the
Stanford Daily or Wall Street Journal? Would
your family be at ease? - If an IRS auditor picks it as part of the IRSs
sample of extra benefit transactions for
executives, would you be free from worry?
18Pop Quiz
- A research lab wants to encourage discussion
about research findings so it hosts a monthly
happy hour. How would you handle the expense? - Charge it to the sponsored project that benefited
from the discussion - Charge it to the gift fund that benefited
- Charge the food to the sponsored project but not
the alcohol - Charge it to a Department fund
- Advise the PI that she should cover the cost of
the happy hour
19Pop Quiz
- Professor Sharon Stone is late in registering for
a conference at a major hotel in downtown NYC.
The hotel rooms are fully booked up at the 200
rate. Concerned about safety, Prof. Stone, opts
for the available more expensive suite _at_ 450
instead of booking a hotel five blocks down the
street that would have cost 225 per night. Is
this reasonable? - yes
- no
20FY03 University Expenditures
- What would you do with
- Recurring restaurant dinners with colleagues from
outside the University - Expensive wine purchased for meals at home with
colleagues - Taking research lab staff, with spouses, to a
concert - Dinners with very expensive wine at upscale
restaurants with Stanford colleagues, spouses,
children, etc. - Gifts for employee weddings and baby showers
- Taking departmental administrators on a Bay
dinner cruise - Recurring faculty club lunches (60 in a year for
one individual) - Subscription to an airline Club Room service
- Purchase of an espresso machine (over 1k) to
equip a new lab
21Call to Action
- Maintain your integrity and that of the
University - Give some thought to your business expense
reimbursements and those you processapply a
cognitive process - Weigh the use of every dollar spent
- Use the litmus test questions just listed
- If you or the person being reimbursed cant
answer Yes! to each question dont approve the
expense. If youre still uncertain call for
advice.
22What You Can Do?
- Read the Code of Conduct and use it to guide your
behavior - Support your coworkers in this effort
- Report suspected violations to general counsel or
institutional compliance after discussing with
management
23Questions?
- fortnam_at_stanford.edu
- zumwalt_at_stanford.edu
- pmccabe_at_stanford.edu
-
- http//institutionalcompliance.stanford.edu
- http//codeofconduct.stanford.edu