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Tompkins Financial declares quarterly dividend of 44 cents a share
ITHACA, N.Y. — Tompkins Financial Corp. (NYSE: TMP) recently announced that its board of directors has approved payment of a quarterly cash dividend of 44

Laraque-Arena announces symposium series in Upstate inaugural address
SYRACUSE — SUNY Upstate Medical University plans to host a presidential symposium series entitled “Connected to the Future.” The series of events over the next 18 to 24 months will demonstrate how Upstate Medical is “forward thinking about the trends and needs of the 21st century university.” That’s according to Dr. Danielle Laraque-Arena, who announced
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SYRACUSE — SUNY Upstate Medical University plans to host a presidential symposium series entitled “Connected to the Future.”
The series of events over the next 18 to 24 months will demonstrate how Upstate Medical is “forward thinking about the trends and needs of the 21st century university.” That’s according to Dr. Danielle Laraque-Arena, who announced the symposium series during remarks that were part of her inauguration as Upstate Medical University’s 7th president.
Upstate Medical held the event April 15 at the Nicholas J. Pirro Convention Center at Oncenter.
Those participating in the symposium series, said Laraque-Arena, will represent a “range of disciplines,” including the sciences, education, clinical practice, law, community, industry, and information systems to discuss “our most pressing problems requiring novel and bold solutions.”
“The focus will be on social, scientific, and systems goals that align our mission, vision, and values in support of transformative health-care delivery, transformative education, and transformative research … actively engaging the community and supporting the economic development of our region,” Laraque-Arena continued.
The upcoming seminars will be “action oriented,” designed to promote an “exchange of ideas and to develop concrete steps to achieving results.”
The themes of the seminars will include genes and precision medicine, building off the $575,000 grant that SUNY awarded Upstate Medical University to launch the SUNY Institute for Precision Cancer Research, Education and Care.
Upstate Medical in October will host Dr. Mary-Claire King, professor of genome sciences and medicine at the University of Washington School of Medicine.
Laraque-Arena described King as a “noted geneticist and human-rights activist.”
Other themes will include society and health, and gender inequity in academic medicine.
Laraque-Arena, who began her job as president in January, also said she’s been working with colleagues in a “process of strategic planning.”
Some of the goals developed during those planning sessions include the elimination of health disparities; attracting, training, and retaining the best talented clinicians, scientists, and educators; increasing the school’s responsiveness as a “progressive” health system; and providing “patient and family-centered quality care,” Laraque-Arena said.
Inaugurationz
SUNY Chancellor Nancy Zimpher formally inaugurated Laraque-Arena during the April 15 ceremony.
“Yes, a glorious day this is for me … I’m deeply honored to be installed as the 7th president of the State University of New York Upstate Medical University,” Laraque-Arena said to open her remarks.
SUNY trustee chair Carl McCall, several members of the SUNY board of trustees, and presidents from seven colleges and universities also attended.
Syracuse Mayor Stephanie Miner, Onondaga County Executive Joanie Mahoney, and Robert Simpson, president and CEO of CenterState CEO, also extended greetings to Upstate’s new leader.
The inauguration featured an academic procession and greetings from representatives from the community as well as professional societies.
The event also included a dance performance by the Haudenosaunee singers and dancers of the Onondaga Nation.
Dr. Marie McCormick provided remarks during the ceremony. McCormick is the Sumner Esther Felder professor of maternal and child health in the department of social and behavioral sciences at the Harvard Y.H. Chan School of Public Health. She’s also a professor of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School.
Thomas Taylor, chair of the Upstate Medical University Council, described McCormick as Dr. Laraque-Arena’s “mentor and friend.”
In her remarks, McCormick admitted to being a “little confused” about what mentoring means. She thinks some people see mentors as those who can provide “competent advising” but in her mind, mentoring is “a little different.”
“To me the underpinning of the relationship is a shared passion for science, for teaching, for clinical care. It’s this shared goal that makes the relationship so special and so productive,” she said.
“In Danielle, I think that the university has gained a great mentor. She shares your commitment to excellence in professional education. She shares your striving for excellent science and important science and science that can be translated into well being. And most importantly, she shares the common goal of improving health,” said McCormick.
Laraque-Arena began her service as president of Upstate Medical on Jan. 14.
She previously served as chair of the department of pediatrics at Maimonides Medical Center and vice president of Maimonides Infants and Children’s Hospital of Brooklyn. As president, Laraque-Arena oversees a public, academic medical center and health system. It includes a 735-bed hospital on two campuses with “numerous” outpatient sites, according to a school fact sheet.
Upstate Medical is the region’s largest employer.
Contact Reinhardt at ereinhardt@cnybj.com

Syracuse University launches Blackstone LaunchPad in Bird Library
SYRACUSE — Syracuse University formally opened an experiential entrepreneurship program for all students and faculty on April 19 at Bird Library. The 625-square-foot, glass-encased room, called the Blackstone LaunchPad, is in the center of the main floor of the library. “We are developing a pipeline for students to learn critical thinking, planning, and design,” Linda
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SYRACUSE — Syracuse University formally opened an experiential entrepreneurship program for all students and faculty on April 19 at Bird Library.
The 625-square-foot, glass-encased room, called the Blackstone LaunchPad, is in the center of the main floor of the library.
“We are developing a pipeline for students to learn critical thinking, planning, and design,” Linda Hartsock, executive director of the Blackstone LaunchPad project, says. “The growth in startups is explosive, and this allows students to be a part of the economic landscape.”
The construction of the Blackstone LaunchPad in Bird Library was fully funded with a $900,000 grant from the Blackstone Charitable Foundation, a New York City–based foundation devoted to supporting entrepreneurship globally, and allows the space to be fully funded for three years. Syracuse University’s Office of Planning, Design, and Construction planned and created the facility.
Students of all majors and years can walk in to the glass cube to develop their entrepreneurial skills, whether it’s pitching a new idea or growing an existing company. The space is multi-faceted, with students using it for workshops, group projects, and networking events.
“The room is designed with flexible furniture and has nooks for personal meetings, couches and chairs that can be rearranged, whiteboards for collaboration, and is adaptable to big and small groups,” Hartsock says. “That is the most valuable part; it can be used for so many purposes.”
Besides the flexible working space, students can meet with mentors who have years of entrepreneurial experience in the Central New York area.
“We have community mentors, faculty mentors, and young SU alumni are really jumping in to work with students,” Hartsock says. “We want to hear from them [alumni] and expand the network.”
The LaunchPad is open from 8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. and Hartsock says she is looking to expand the hours until midnight by hiring Blackstone fellows. The fellows will be comprised of upper class and graduate students who are interested in entrepreneurship and are willing to mentor younger students.
“It got off on a flying start,” David Seaman, Syracuse University’s Dean of Libraries says of the LaunchPad. “The place is packed and is finding an immediate home within the entrepreneurial student population.”
Seaman credits the location of the LaunchPad to its success. “We deliberately put it in Bird Library for students who may not have a class or center in their school like Whitman or Newhouse does.”
The busy Bird Library is a hub for Syracuse students to pass by before making their way to their next class, and the visible glass cube was designed to catch students’ attention. As it is a neutral location for students, students across disciplines and cultures can come together to collaborate on a startup, says Hartsock.
The Blackstone Charitable Foundation announced last year that it would offer five New York universities a chance to build their own entrepreneurial center and announced the winners on Oct. 23, 2015. Blackstone LaunchPad has been accessible to more than 500,000 students globally since 2015, according to its website, and has marked its place at New York University, University at Albany, University at Buffalo, and Cornell University, in addition to Syracuse. All told, Blackstone LaunchPad can be found at 17 universities in the U.S. These universities are all connected through a network for students to share ideas and pitches as well as partnerships.
All services at the LaunchPad are free including one-on-one mentoring, online resources, and networking events. Anyone using the services can rest assured that their idea won’t be stolen as Blackstone LaunchPad and Syracuse cannot have a stake in a student’s idea. All mentors sign a non-disclosure agreement with Blackstone LaunchPad so student-ventures are protected and solely their own.
The Blackstone Charitable Foundation started in 2007 as part of the investment firm, the Blackstone Group L.P. (NYSE: BX), which has $336 billion in assets under management and more than 2,000 employees worldwide.
The ribbon-cutting ceremony for the Blackstone LaunchPad took place the afternoon of April 19 at the Blackstone LaunchPad in Bird Library, where the winners of the CompeteCNY business plan competition were announced.

Oswego Health, SOS partnering to provide orthopedic care in Oswego County
OSWEGO — Oswego Health and Syracuse Orthopedic Specialists, PC (SOS) are still working out the details of their partnership that will bring SOS orthopedic surgeons to Oswego County to provide care. The organizations announced their “collaboration” in a news release that Oswego Health issued April 5. They did not disclose any financial terms of their
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OSWEGO — Oswego Health and Syracuse Orthopedic Specialists, PC (SOS) are still working out the details of their partnership that will bring SOS orthopedic surgeons to Oswego County to provide care.
The organizations announced their “collaboration” in a news release that Oswego Health issued April 5.
They did not disclose any financial terms of their agreement.
Oswego Health is hoping it’s a “long term” agreement,” says Charles (Chuck) Gijanto, president and CEO of Oswego Health, who spoke with CNYBJ on April 20.
Oswego Health has a “fairly small” orthopedic program but believes it is “important” for its patients to get care “as close to home as possible.”
Many of Oswego Health’s patients were traveling to Onondaga County for SOS’s services, according to Gijanto.
“We really thought rather than trying to build and compete with them, why not see if we could partner with them,” he adds.
When asked if both Oswego Health and SOS would share the revenue generated from the orthopedic services, Gijanto said that “clearly both parties should benefit from this opportunity.”
The SOS staff will work alongside Oswego Health’s orthopedic team to provide office visits at the Oswego Health Services Center and perform surgeries in Oswego Hospital’s surgery center, Oswego Health said in the release.
Oswego Health anticipates the SOS staff will use Oswego Health facilities this summer, but both organizations are still coordinating the details on implementing SOS’s care in Oswego.
“We won’t start … with surgeries [right away], but we’ll start with office hours here in conjunction with our existing orthopedics office,” says Gijanto.
The office hours could start in late spring. The surgeries may not start until later in the year, he adds. “…when we’re ready to go is when we’ll initiate [orthopedic surgeries] and not before,” Gijanto notes.
SOS has 28 orthopedic surgeons on staff. Most offer care for knees, hips, hands and upper extremities, feet and ankles, and the spine. They also treat sports injuries of high school and college athletes, and “weekend warriors” as well.
Oswego Health currently has one independent orthopedic surgeon and two employed orthopedic surgeons on its medical staff.
This collaboration is a “great opportunity” for SOS to offer care in Oswego County, Mike Humphrey, CEO of SOS said in the Oswego Health news release.
“Health care keeps changing and I think the future is all about collaboration and looking at the best way to provide effective care,” said Humphrey.
It will also “improve access to care,” he added.
“Most importantly, I think this new relationship will assist in coordinating care with an individual’s primary-care physician, as well with any physical therapy services that may be needed,” said Humphrey.
Founded in 1999, DeWitt–based Syracuse Orthopedic Specialists has more than 25 physicians and employs about 600 additional staff members.
It operates offices in locations that include Auburn, Lysander, Camillus, Cicero, Clay, DeWitt, Manlius, and Onondaga.
The Oswego Health system includes Oswego Hospital, The Manor at Seneca Hill, Springside at Seneca Hill, Oswego Health Home Care, Physician Care, P.C., and other supporting affiliates that provide health services to about 120,000 people in Oswego County.

Utica College adds multi-sport air dome, plans to repair Clark Center
UTICA — Utica College has added a new athletic venue on its campus and is preparing for renovation work on an existing facility. Utica College (UC) on Dec. 12 dedicated the $8 million Todd and Jen Hutton Sports and Recreation Center, a new 135,000-square-foot, multi-sport, recreational air dome. “From groundbreaking to dedication, it was about
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UTICA — Utica College has added a new athletic venue on its campus and is preparing for renovation work on an existing facility.
Utica College (UC) on Dec. 12 dedicated the $8 million Todd and Jen Hutton Sports and Recreation Center, a new 135,000-square-foot, multi-sport, recreational air dome.
“From groundbreaking to dedication, it was about eight months,” says David Fontaine, UC’s director of athletics and physical education, referring to the construction time involved.
He spoke with CNYBJ on April 18.
The college is also preparing for renovation work at the Harold T. Clark, Jr. Athletic Center.
New York has awarded the school $2.5 million in matching state funds toward improvements at the Clark Center.
Harold (Tom) Clark, Jr. and his wife Bernadette pledged $1.4 million toward the construction of the air dome, according to ucpioneers.com, the website of Utica College Pioneers, the school’s athletic teams.
Air dome
Utica College has 25 intercollegiate sports and has “outgrown” its facilities, something Fontaine called “a good problem.”
The school has a track and field team, which didn’t have any facilities when it started about five years ago.
“We were running in the hallways,” says Fontaine.
The idea of a multi-sport, air-supported structure came up during a meeting in the fall of 2014.
Syracuse–based Hayner Hoyt Corporation served as the general contractor on the project, which Fontaine describes as “the second largest air-supported structure in North America.”
New Hartford–based Alesia & Crewell Architects P.C. designed the facility and Minneapolis, Minnesota–based Yeadon manufactured it, according to ucpioneers.com.
The facility includes an eight-lane, 200-meter track, “multiple” throwing circles, two pole-vault areas, two sand pits, a weight room, and four multi-purpose courts in the middle of track, which can accommodate volleyball, tennis, and basketball, according to Fontaine.
Since it opened in December, the facility has hosted Utica College track meets and local high-school track meets as well.
“We’ve had Section II and Section III track meets in the dome. It’s been very well received,” says Fontaine.
Clark Athletic Center
Utica College is also working on plans for improvements to its Clark Athletic Center.
“We’re in a building that was [constructed] for 12 sports and we have 25,” says Fontaine.
The renovation work has yet to begin. School officials have discussed a possible repair of the pool, locker-room expansions; and adding coaching offices.
“I think the details are still being worked out,” he adds.
Utica College hasn’t yet secured a contractor or architect for the upcoming work at the Clark Center, he notes.
The state is providing the $2.5 million in funding through the Higher Education Capital Matching Grants Program (HECap), New York State Senator Joseph Griffo (R–Rome) and New York State Assemblyman Anthony Brindisi (D–Utica) said in a Feb. 5 news release.
Utica College applied for the HECap grant in 2015 and will target those dollars for the Clark renovations.
The school hasn’t determined how much the renovation work at the Clark facility will cost, says Fontaine.
The HECap program awards grants to private colleges and universities in New York based on enrollment and relative student financial need, with an eye toward economic development, high technology, urban renewal, or historic preservation.
The program matches $1 in state funding for every $3 raised for these college projects, according to the lawmakers.
Griffo and Brindisi say the funding is a way to “further enhance the appeal of Utica College at a time when the institution is improving the educational experience it offers.”
“This amazing new sports and recreation center fills such an important need and provides so many wonderful opportunities for our students as well as the greater Utica community,” Todd Hutton, president of Utica College, said in the lawmakers’ release. “The facility, along with the renovations to the Harold T. Clark, Jr. Athletic Center, not only offer a premier athletic training and competition venues for our students, but support many campus-wide wellness education initiatives, including our new wellness and adventure education degree program.”
Utica College made headlines in October 2015 when it announced plans to reduce the cost of undergraduate tuition by 42 percent. The school is slashing tuition from just over $34,000 to just under $20,000.
The tuition “reset,” as Utica College calls it, will take effect this fall for all new and returning students in the on-campus, undergraduate program.
Attorney discusses importance of a family-business succession plan
When the owners of family-run businesses begin thinking about a succession plan, they need to consider something much more important than just all the paperwork involved. They need to focus on identifying who in their family should be the successor or successors, says Anthony (Tony) Marshall, an attorney in the Syracuse office of law firm Harris
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When the owners of family-run businesses begin thinking about a succession plan, they need to consider something much more important than just all the paperwork involved.
They need to focus on identifying who in their family should be the successor or successors, says Anthony (Tony) Marshall, an attorney in the Syracuse office of law firm Harris Beach, PLLC, which is headquartered in Rochester. Marshall spoke with CNYBJ from Florida on April 18.
“We want to identify persons who are likely candidates involved in the business to buy the business and also those who have the skill set, or potential skill set … to take over management,” says Marshall, whose practice partly focuses on corporate tax and trust and estate issues. Most of his clients are closely held, family businesses in upstate New York. Marshall says he is also licensed as a certified public accountant (CPA).
Speaking generally about Syracuse–based family businesses, when the owners, usually a husband and wife, reach their 50s in age, their kids are likely teenagers or in their 20s. The parents have to determine if any of their children want to and are qualified to become owners of the family business.
While doing so, the current owners need to consider two questions, says Marshall.
“Who am I going to identify and put in place to take over this business?, number one, and number two, what are the economics of the deal?,” he adds.
If an owner’s children are involved and the owner is “financially secure” without needing to cash out of the business, then the succession process is “a bit simpler.”
“It almost becomes like an estate-plan matter in structuring the family plan that involves the company-ownership interest,” says Marshall.
If the business doesn’t have family members who are in line to take over the leadership role, the owner will either target other “key employees” or work to sell the business.
When a family business owner reaches age 50, Marshall believes he/she should start thinking about or discussing a succession plan, even if only informally.
“You’re 52. You’ve made a fair amount of money. Do you want to work until you’re 66 or what do you want to do?” Marshall asks, paraphrasing how he might approach a client with the succession topic.
He also recommends a business owner involve the firm’s independent CPA when discussing succession planning.
“I think that’s wise to recommend,” says Marshall.
Hiscock Legal Aid Society CEO, Susan Horn, to retire in July
SYRACUSE — Susan Horn, president and CEO of Hiscock Legal Aid Society, plans to retire on July 31. Horn announced her upcoming retirement in a letter to “Friends, Colleagues and Supporters” that was dated March 31. Hiscock Legal Aid Society (HLAS) operates at 351 S. Warren St. in Syracuse. Horn has spent 32 years with
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SYRACUSE — Susan Horn, president and CEO of Hiscock Legal Aid Society, plans to retire on July 31.
Horn announced her upcoming retirement in a letter to “Friends, Colleagues and Supporters” that was dated March 31.
Hiscock Legal Aid Society (HLAS) operates at 351 S. Warren St. in Syracuse.
Horn has spent 32 years with Hiscock Legal Aid Society, including 26 years as president and CEO. In the letter, she called those 26 years “exciting and challenging.”
Suzanne Galbato, chair of Hiscock’s board of directors, has appointed a search committee, which former board chair Anthony Malavenda is leading.
The committee, which includes board members and staff members, is working with consultant Patricia Pap of Boston, Massachusetts–based Management Information Exchange to conduct a “professional, thoughtful and thorough” search for Horn’s successor, according to Horn’s letter.
Horn also posted the job description to the letter, which is also available at the organization’s website: www.hiscocklegalaid.org/job-opportunities
She called her tenure at HLAS “a time of enormous growth and change” for the organization, as well as for the “provision of civil legal services and indigent defense” in the community and throughout the state.
Horn also noted that “more change is on the horizon,” making it a time of “great challenge and great opportunity.” The HLAS board of directors, its staff, and Horn are “deeply committed to ensuring” that it remains a “premier” provider of legal assistance to those in need in Central New York and to “expanding, enhancing and improving those services.”
As for her “future path,” Horn intends to remain “actively engaged” with the issues of access to justice that she has worked on “for so long,” she said in the letter.
IIABNY CEO, Poppa, to retire at end of 2016
DeWITT — Richard (Dick) Poppa, president and CEO of Independent Insurance Agents and Brokers of New York (IIABNY), will retire at the end of 2016. Poppa (pronounced Poppy) has led the organization for nearly 20 years, IIABNY said in a news release issued April 19. “When you say the name Dick Poppa to industry peers,
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DeWITT — Richard (Dick) Poppa, president and CEO of Independent Insurance Agents and Brokers of New York (IIABNY), will retire at the end of 2016.
Poppa (pronounced Poppy) has led the organization for nearly 20 years, IIABNY said in a news release issued April 19.
“When you say the name Dick Poppa to industry peers, a smile immediately appears. From the warmth and unwavering integrity in which he handles all people and business, to his tireless work ethic and forward-thinking strategic planning — his reputation proceeds him,” Todd Rockefeller, chair of the IIABNY board of directors, said in the release. “Dick has dedicated his life’s work to strengthening the Independent Agency channel and his impact has been felt around the country. IIABNY has been blessed to benefit from his talent and inspiration for almost two decades of a storied career. He will be greatly missed.”
A native of Indianapolis, Indiana, Poppa has served as IIABNY’s CEO since 1996.
Prior to that, he was senior VP and COO for the Independent Insurance Agents Association of America, executive VP of the Independent Insurance Agents of Indiana, and administrative VP of the Independent Insurance Agents and Brokers of California, according to IIABNY.
In addition to his work with IIABNY, Poppa was a catalyst for, and held a leadership position with, TrustedChoice.com, a website that helps the user “choose the right insurance company and insurance agent,” according to the website.
“It has been my privilege to serve independent agents, innovate with an incredible team, and I’m proud of the work we have accomplished together,” Poppa said in the news release. “The true highlight of my career has been the amazing people we have been blessed to spend time with and now call our life-long friends. In my life, that means the most.”
The IIABNY board of directors has formed a search committee and selected a national search firm to help choose Poppa’s successor, IIABNY said.
Succession Planning — Just Do It, But Do It Right
An organization’s ability to learn, and translate that learning into action rapidly, is the ultimate competitive advantage. — Jack Welch One of the Top 10 governance responsibilities for a nonprofit board is the identification and selection of the CEO who leads the organization. In addition to selecting the CEO, the board also is responsible for
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An organization’s ability to learn, and translate that learning into action rapidly, is the ultimate competitive advantage.
— Jack Welch
One of the Top 10 governance responsibilities for a nonprofit board is the identification and selection of the CEO who leads the organization. In addition to selecting the CEO, the board also is responsible for performing an annual performance evaluation of the CEO, which must be formally documented.
About 17 million baby boomers born between 1946 and 1964 are now retiring at the average rate of 10,000 per day for the next 15 years. This demographic tsunami has resulted in a critical void in nonprofit leadership, particularly at the CEO level, but also in the recruitment and retention of board leaders. The resulting effect is that every nonprofit organization must have a succession plan for both CEO and board leadership. The focus of this column is on CEO succession planning. However, many of the recommendations included here can be easily applied to board leadership as well.
After nearly four decades of specializing in nonprofit organizations, I have developed a three-legged stool metaphor that is universally applicable to all tax-exempt organizations. We all know what happens when one leg of a three-legged stool is weak or non-existent. The first step in succession planning should be a self-assessment of your current organization regarding the strength of the following three legs of the stool:
– Management and board leadership
– Fiscal strength, sustainability, and access to private-sector fundraising
– Cost-effective, high-quality services in fulfillment of the mission
In this decade of nonprofit consolidation, affiliation, and merger, the three attributes described above have consistently produced successful organizations that are able to maintain some form of local control and autonomy.
There is no question that effective, energetic, and enthusiastic leadership is of significant value to the successful tax-exempt organization. Therefore, with another variation of my now ubiquitous Top 10 Lists, I offer the following advice regarding an effective CEO succession-planning process.
1. When should the planning process start? The best time to begin a succession-planning process is years in advance of the actual need to replace the CEO. That is, every organization should have a documented succession-planning process that can be tailored and modified when a CEO search / replacement process is necessary. I suggest that using the following nine suggestions will put you well on your way to a successful and formally documented succession-planning process.
2. Is the CEO retiring or being replaced for lack of performance? The process to follow is similar in either case. However, CEO retirement should be made known to at least the board chair / executive committee about 12-18 months in advance of the retirement date. But CEO replacement for lack of performance will compress the timeline described below.
3. Are there one or more qualified internal candidates? This is a key question that should be addressed by the full board before final decisions are made regarding the actual search process. It is important to recognize that qualified internal candidates must understand why the board has decided to conduct an external search. The primary reason for this is that qualified internal candidates may take great exception to a board’s decision to conduct a formal search process if the rationale is not adequately explained to the internal candidate(s). A search process should ideally never result in a qualified internal candidate seeking employment elsewhere before the search process begins.
4. Who should be involved in the search process? Most common and most successful, in my experience, is a search committee composed of board leaders. This can be a committee made up of board-leadership positions and certain committee chairs or, in many cases, the executive committee. What is most important is to have informed, confidential board members involved in the search process while limiting the number of members to preferably fewer than 10.
5. Is a search consultant / facilitator necessary? This is a decision that must be made by the search committee with input from the full board, if necessary. As with any professional consultant, interviewing and selecting the appropriate person is critical to a satisfactory result. Costs and related fees must be affordable and reasonable for the organization.
6. What type of person does the board want? Using the current CEO job description and the most recent performance evaluations of the current CEO, the search committee should develop and recommend to the full board the most desirable CEO skills and performance attributes that will influence the ultimate decision.
7. Should the search committee / board operate in isolation? It depends. However, I strongly recommend that input from the current CEO, management team members, program funders, and long-tenured former board members is an important element of a successful search process.
8. When should the search process start? In the case of a planned retirement, I believe the optimum time frame for beginning a search process that involves external candidates is 6-9 months before the planned CEO retirement date. This window of time allows for sufficient planning and execution of a successful search process. The question of whether overlap should occur between retiring and new CEO should always be addressed. The answer to the question depends on facts and circumstances. However, if overlap is considered desirable, it should be between 30 days and 90 days.
9. Who will be involved in vetting and interviewing CEO candidates? Generally speaking, either the full search committee or, in my view, a sub-set of the search committee should be prepared to interview each candidate with a list of pre-determined questions to be asked of each and every candidate. Checking references for the final candidate(s) should be performed by either the chair or a designated member of the search committee.
10. What is the most effective process for finalizing a compensation package and approval of the selected candidate? I believe it is imperative to have either a letter of agreement or a contract with the CEO that formally documents all of the terms and conditions of the CEO’s employment. Agreement regarding compensation, fringe benefits, severance, involuntary termination, etc. should involve legal counsel.
The selection of a CEO is, without question, one of the most important responsibilities of sustaining a successful tax-exempt organization. If you follow the approach described above, there is a high probability that you will choose the right candidate. However, it is important to recognize that if the board has made a mistake in selecting the wrong individual, no more than 12 months should pass before the mistake is acknowledged and a new CEO is recruited.
Always remember that the ability to acknowledge a mistake and take timely action to correct it is a vital component of success.
Gerald J. Archibald, CPA, is a partner in charge of the management advisory services at The Bonadio Group. Contact him at garchibald@bonadio.com
A Living Will is Not a Will — But No Less Important
Lawyers are occasionally guilty of speaking legal jargon that a non-lawyer has no idea what the lawyer is talking about. For example, an estate-planning lawyer (or perhaps an estate-planning website you found) may suggest that you execute a living will in addition to a will, health-care proxy, and power of attorney. Like the article title
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Lawyers are occasionally guilty of speaking legal jargon that a non-lawyer has no idea what the lawyer is talking about. For example, an estate-planning lawyer (or perhaps an estate-planning website you found) may suggest that you execute a living will in addition to a will, health-care proxy, and power of attorney.
Like the article title implies, a living will really has no relation to a will. A will primarily deals with directing who will inherit your assets when you die. It is only effective after you pass away and an order accepting probate of the will is issued by the appropriate court.
By contrast, a living will is a document that is effective only while you are alive, does not require a court order to be effective (unless someone challenges its validity), and has nothing to do with your assets. Its purpose is to set forth a person’s instructions about treatment to be followed in the event the person becomes incapable of making treatment decisions and primarily involves life-sustaining medical treatment.
For example, a living will may state that, “If I become terminally ill, I do/do not want to receive the following treatments…” or “If I am in a coma or persistent vegetative state, with no hope of recovery, then I do/do not want…” These statements are then typically followed by special instructions about certain medical treatments you want withheld (or continued) such as artificial respiration or artificial nutrition and hydration (i.e. nourishment and water provided by feeding tubes).
There is no statute or “official” form for a living will in New York state, as they are primarily a creation of case law. New York case law has permitted the use of living wills as clear and convincing evidence of a person’s intentions regarding health-care decisions.
Similarly, there are no legal guidelines for execution of living wills but the general practice is to execute a living will in the same manner as a traditional will (i.e. two disinterested witnesses).
It is also wise to discuss your health-care wishes and end-of-life preferences with your health-care agent and give him or her a signed copy of your living will.
After signing a living will, you still have the right to make health-care decisions for yourself as long as you are able to do so.
So what is the big deal if you do not have a living will? If you tragically end up in a persistent vegetative state and there is no clear and convincing evidence of your wishes about artificial respiration or feeding tubes, it can turn potentially even more tragic if your loved ones get into a dispute about what should be done. This is what happened in the Terri Schiavo case, a story that made national news involving a Florida woman who fell into a persistent vegetative state that led to a protracted legal battle between her husband and her parents about whether to remove her feeding tube or not. If Schiavo had a living will in place explaining her wishes, this nasty dispute may have been avoided.
So while a living will is not really a will at all, one can see that it is no less important.
Ryan Emery is an attorney with Mackenzie Hughes LLP in Syracuse. He is a member of the firm’s estates department. Emery focuses his practice in the areas of estate planning and trust and estate administration in both New York and Florida. This viewpoint article was drawn from the Mackenzie Hughes blog, called “Plan Talk.” Contact Emery at (315) 233-8368 or email: remery@mackenziehughes.com
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