Building a Better Board: A Guide for Canadian Charities & Nonprofits

Dov Goldberg

Most people join a charity board because they care. They want to help a cause. But many boards struggle — they feel stuck, tired, or confused about their role. To fix this, you have to ask: How are we really doing?

In Canada, charity and nonprofit law is very specific. Your board is not just a group of volunteers. It is a legal body, and with that comes real duties, real risks, and real accountability. This guide walks you through how to assess your board and make it stronger — from fiduciary duties to board culture to CRA compliance.

The Canadian Charity Board Blueprint

1. Whose Organization Is It?

Before you can be a better director, you must know who you serve. Many directors think the organization belongs to the board. Others think it belongs to the CEO. Both are wrong.

In a legal sense, a nonprofit is often its own "person." However, the board holds it in trust. You are the stewards. You are looking after it for the "members" (if you have them) and for the public. In Canada, charities get tax breaks. Because of this, the public is a stakeholder. You have a job to protect the assets of the charity for the benefit of the community.

The Life Cycle of Your Organization

Where is your nonprofit right now?

  • The "Kitchen Table" Stage: This is the start. The board does everything. They even clean the floors.
  • The Growth Stage: You hire staff. The board starts to pull back from daily tasks.
  • The Mature Stage: You have systems and policies. The board focuses on the long-term future.
  • The Stagnant Stage: Things feel old. The mission is blurry.

You cannot build a better board if you don't know your stage. A "Kitchen Table" board needs workers. A "Mature" board needs visionaries. Assessment starts by asking: Are we the right people for where we are today?

2. Building the Board You Actually Need

Many boards recruit people just because they are friends. This is a mistake. You need a Skills Matrix. This is a chart that shows what skills you have and what you are missing.

Do you have someone who understands finance? Do you have someone who understands the law? Do you have someone who reflects the community you serve? If your board is all accountants, you might miss the "heart." If it is all dreamers, you might run out of money.

Orientation and Refreshers

Every new director needs an orientation. You wouldn’t start a new job without training. Why start a board role without it?

  • New Members: They need a "Board Manual." This should include the bylaws, the budget, and the strategic plan.
  • Current Members: They need a refresher. Laws change. The CRA (Canada Revenue Agency) updates its rules. A "refresher" once a year keeps everyone on the same page.

3. Understanding Responsibilities: Personal vs. Board

This is where many boards get into legal trouble. You have two types of responsibilities.

The Board's Responsibility (The Group)

The board acts as one voice. The board is responsible for the "big picture." They set the mission. They hire the CEO. They make sure the money is spent legally. No single director has power on their own. Power only exists when the board meets and votes.

The Individual Director's Responsibility (The Person)

In Canada, every director has "Fiduciary Duties." This sounds fancy, but it means two main things:

  1. Duty of Care: You must act like a reasonably prudent person would. You must pay attention. You must read the reports. You cannot just show up for the cookies.
  2. Duty of Loyalty: You must put the charity first. If the charity is buying a building, and you own the company selling the building, you have a "Conflict of Interest." You must tell the board and stay out of the vote.

4. Board Culture: Joy and "Dumb Questions

Do your directors enjoy serving? If meetings are stressful or performative, people disengage. Great governance requires a culture of psychological safety.

The Power of the "Dumb Question"

Many directors stay silent because they fear looking ignorant. In charity law, that silence can be dangerous. If the Treasurer presents a confusing report and no one challenges it, every director at the table is still responsible if funds go missing.

The "dumb" question is usually the one everyone else was too anxious to ask — and it often uncovers the biggest problems. Asking questions is not a weakness; it is a fiduciary duty.

5. Protecting Yourself: Liability and Rules

Being a director carries real personal risk. In Canada, directors can be held personally liable for certain organizational failures — including unpaid employee source deductions (CPP, EI, income tax) and, in some cases, unpaid wages.

Three Ways to Protect Yourself

🛡️ Directors & Officers (D&O) Insurance This insurance protects individual directors against personal claims arising from their board role. It is not optional — it is essential.

📜 Indemnification: Your bylaws should state that the charity will cover your legal costs if you are sued for acting honestly and in good faith on the organization's behalf.

✅ Due Diligence: The best protection is doing your job. Reading reports, asking questions, attending meetings, and acting in good faith are your strongest legal defences.

The Musts and Must-Nots

You Must:

  • File the annual T3010 Registered Charity Information Return with the CRA each year
  • Maintain adequate books and records
  • Operate exclusively for your registered charitable purposes
  • Issue official donation receipts correctly

You Must Not:

  • Use charity assets for personal gain
  • Engage in undue private benefit
  • Conduct partisan political activities
  • Operate outside your registered purposes without CRA approval

Important: Failure to file the T3010 on time can result in the revocation of your charity's registered status. This strips the organization of its ability to issue tax receipts and can trigger significant tax consequences. See our guide on T3010 filing requirements for Canadian charities.

6. Term Limits: To Stay or To Go?

Should directors stay forever? Some people say yes because they have "history." But most experts recommend term limits.

  • Pros: New people bring new ideas. It prevents one person from "owning" the board.
  • Cons: You lose experience. A good compromise is two or three terms of three years each. This gives people enough time to learn but ensures the board stays fresh.

7. The "Lawyer on the Board" Problem

A common mistake is assuming that a lawyer serving on the board eliminates the need to retain external legal counsel. This is a serious misunderstanding — and potentially dangerous for the lawyer involved.

A director who is also a lawyer serves as a director first. They are there to contribute perspective, not to provide the organization with free legal counsel. If that lawyer gives informal legal advice that turns out to be wrong, their professional liability insurance may not cover the loss — because they were never formally retained as legal counsel.

The right approach: Use your board member with legal expertise to help identify when you need professional advice — then retain a qualified law firm for that advice.

8. Making Meetings Matter

If your meetings are just people reading reports out loud, you are wasting time.

The Consent Agenda

This is a great tool. You put all the "for information" items (like the last meeting's minutes or the monthly report) into one package. The directors read them before the meeting. At the start of the meeting, you vote to approve the whole package at once. This saves 30 minutes for real discussion about the future.

Committees and Advisory Boards

The board shouldn't do all the work.

  • Standing Committees: Like Finance or Governance. They do the deep dive and bring recommendations to the board.
  • Advisory Committees: These people are not directors. They have no legal power. They are experts who give advice. This is a great way to "test out" future board members.

9. The CEO Partnership

The relationship between the Board Chair and the CEO is the single most important relationship in the organization. When this partnership is dysfunctional, it affects everything — staff morale, donor confidence, strategic execution, and CRA standing.

  • The board sets direction and policy; the CEO manages execution.
  • An annual, documented CEO performance evaluation is essential — not optional.
  • Adopt a "no surprises" rule: the CEO does not blindside the board with bad news at a meeting, and the board does not launch new initiatives without consulting the CEO first.

10. Who Is Watching?

Charities live in a glass house. People are watching.

  • The CRA: They care about your tax status.
  • The Public/Donors: They care about how you spend their money.
  • The Media: They care about scandals.
  • The Beneficiaries: The people you help care about your services.

If you don't assess your board, you might not notice when these "watchers" are unhappy until it is too late. An unhappy donor stops giving. An unhappy CRA auditor can shut you down.

11. Board Self-Assessment Checklist 

Use this checklist to conduct an honest individual assessment. Every director should complete it independently before comparing notes as a group.

⚖️ Legal Duties & Compliance

  • ☐ I understand my Duty of Care and Duty of Loyalty as a director under Canadian law.
  • ☐ I know the steps to take if I discover a conflict of interest at the board table.
  • ☐ I am confident our organization is meeting all CRA requirements, including annual T3010 filing.
  • ☐ I understand the personal liability risks directors face and how our D&O insurance addresses them.

💬 Board Culture & Participation

  • ☐ I feel comfortable asking questions at board meetings, even if they seem basic.
  • ☐ I genuinely look forward to board meetings and feel my contributions are valued.
  • ☐ Our consent agenda is working well and meetings focus on strategic rather than routine matters.

📊 Financial Oversight

  • ☐ I can read and interpret our financial statements before approving them.
  • ☐ I understand the difference between restricted and unrestricted funds in our accounts.
  • ☐ I am confident our disbursement quota obligations are being tracked and met.

🔭 Strategic Oversight

  • ☐ I understand which life cycle stage our organization is in and what that requires of the board.
  • ☐ Our relationship with the CEO is healthy, transparent, and free of surprises.
  • ☐ We have a current strategic plan and the board reviews progress against it regularly.

🌱 Future Planning

  • ☐ We have the right people on the board for our next stage of growth or transition.
  • ☐ Our term limits policy is helping — not hurting — the board's effectiveness.
  • ☐ We have a succession plan for key board and staff leadership roles.

12. Board Skills Matrix

Use this matrix during your recruitment process. Have each current director rate themselves in each category, then identify where the gaps are. Recruit specifically to fill those gaps.

Skills and Competencies for Charities

How to Use This Matrix: Have each director self-rate (1–5) for each row, then compile and compare. Any skill with an average below 3 is a recruitment priority. Update annually or after significant board turnover.

Need Help with Charity Governance?

Charity Law Group works exclusively with Canadian charities and nonprofits. Whether you need a governance review, bylaw update, or CRA compliance advice, we are here to help. 

Speak with a Charity Lawyer →

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