Vol. 71, No. 3, March
1998
At Issue
Encouraging Nonprofit
Organizations in Wisconsin
A rewrite of Chapter 181 encourages the formation and work of nonprofits
and their volunteers by removing many of the administrative hurdles they
currently must overcome.
Editor's Note: To view Wisconsin statutory materials
referenced in this article you must have and/or install Adobe
Acrobat Reader 3.0 on your computer.
By Thomas Frenn
1997 saw a resurgence in volunteerism. From the Summit on Volunteerism
held in Philadelphia to passage of the federal Volunteer
Protection Act, the United States is renewing its commitment to nonprofit
organizations and their volunteers. Wisconsin is following suit in 1998.
Wisconsin recently saw the introduction of legislation that clarifies,
conforms, protects, and provides flexibility under Wisconsin nonstock law
(Wis. Stat.
chapter 181) to nonprofit organizations and other entities regulated
by the statute. The legislation was introduced in each legislative house
as Senate
Bill 423 and Assembly
Bill 765.
Even though local and state nonprofit organizations provide many essential
services, over the years Wisconsin law has created a confusing web of administrative
hurdles for these organizations to overcome. Following are some of the provisions
under this legislation that will help nonprofits in their daily governance.
Flexibility
Nonprofit organizations are not all alike; they can range from trade
to religious organizations. The current approach to nonprofit law imposes
some unnecessary barriers to organizations' effectiveness. The Chapter
181 rewrite will give nonprofits the flexibility to tailor their organization's
structure to fit their needs.
Nonprofits also may authorize governing action by written ballot if it
is permitted in either the articles of incorporation or the bylaws. The
rewrite also provides for "emergency bylaw" procedures that can
be implemented when a catastrophic event occurs preventing a quorum from
attending. No such provision exists under current law.
Distributions in certain instances are allowed under the rewrite. The
distributions must specifically be permitted by the articles of incorporation,
be consistent with the organization's purpose, and the organization's
assets must continue to exceed its liabilities after the distributions are
made.
The legislation also permits derivative actions in the right of the corporation
under certain circumstances. Specific procedures and guidelines have been
established to govern the derivative actions, including a requirement that
the court dismiss the derivative proceeding if a majority of independent
directors or a court-appointed panel determine that the proceeding is not
in the corporation's best interest.
Conformity
Nonprofit law was intended to mirror Wisconsin's Business Corporation
Statute (Chapter
180). The latter has seen significant revisions since the early 1990s.
This legislation brings nonprofit law into conformity with business corporation
laws (where appropriate).
Foreign nonprofit organizations will be required to register in Wisconsin
(that is, obtain a certificate of authority). Wisconsin is one of only a
few states that do not require foreign nonprofits to register. Requiring
foreign nonprofits to register provides for uniformity in how nonprofits
are treated, regardless of their principal office location.
Current law also does not provide a procedure for foreign nonstock corporations
to "domesticate," although they can merge and consolidate with
a domestic nonstock corporation. The legislation establishes specific requirements
and procedures for foreign nonprofit organizations to domesticate in Wisconsin.
Efficiency
The legislation streamlines administrative procedures and guidelines
by creating a single repository for recording and filing documents, eliminating
confusion on where to find any filings relating to a nonprofit organization.
Procedural changes to such issues as mergers, consolidations, and judicial
dissolution also are provided.
Thomas Frenn chairs the Nonprofit Organizations Committee of the State Bar's
Business Law Section. He is a shareholder in Petri & Stocking S.C.,
Milwaukee. He practices primarily in general business and nonprofit law. |
Liability
Current standards for liability for officers and directors of nonprofits
are maintained, and protection for licensed professional volunteers is expanded.
Individuals who volunteer in their certified or licensed capacity currently
have little protection. This legislation provides limited liability to those
individuals. These changes reflect, in part, the enactment at the federal
level of the Volunteer Protection Act of 1997.
Summary
The State Bar's Business Law Section spearheaded the work on the
comprehensive rewrite to Chapter 181 of the Wisconsin Statutes. In cooperation
with attorneys, legislators, state agencies, and other organizations, the
committee, over several years, completed a line-by-line review to produce
the final bill. The committee, representing numerous types and sizes of
nonprofits, based its work on a model act of the ABA Business Law Section.
The committee thanks Sen. Brian Burke, Sen. Joanne Huelsman, Rep. Scott
Walker, Sen. Margaret Farrow, and all the cosponsors of this legislation
for their involvement. The committee especially thanks the legislative bill
drafter, attorney Scott Hubli of the Legislative Reference Bureau, for his
countless hours of work on this project.
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