Dear Commissioner: Community Council for Australia
David Crosbie
No one wants the ACNC to succeed in its role more than the sector itself and hugely knowledgable sector leaders are ready to offer advice, guidance and support, writes David Crosbie in our Dear Commissioner bonus edition.˜
Note from the editor: this is the final instalment of˜ Dear Commissioner, a series in which sector leaders were invited to write a letter to the future Commissioner of Australian Charities and Not for Profits Commission (ACNC), welcoming them to the role and explaining what they think the priorities should be for the organisation going forward.˜˜
Dear new ACNC commissioner,
Congratulations on your appointment to this important role.˜ I am sure you feel both excited and a little daunted.
The one thing I can confidently assure you is that there are many outstanding people willing you to succeed, including the Assistant Minister for Charities, and that is a great starting point. Previous commissioners and assistant commissioners; Susan Pascoe, Murray Baird, David Locke and key people who worked so hard establishing the ACNC like Robert Fitzgerald, Myles McGregor-Lowndes and Krystian Seibert all know where some of the traps lie. These well-informed people also share a willingness to give generously of their time and experience to support our sector. You can and should draw on their knowledge and insight as you work your way through the many issues you will confront.
I am sure you are already aware that there are a wide range of sometimes contradictory expectations on this role.˜ Some expect the ACNC to be:
- an enforcer: a tough policeman on the charity block constantly patrolling and cracking down on all potentially inappropriate activities
- a forensic accountant: following money trails down endless rabbit holes
- a marketer: promoting the value of charities
- an accreditor: attesting to the value and merit of every charity on the ACNC register
- a capacity builder: strengthening how charities operate
- an adjudicator: judging or ranking the work of charities as good or bad
- a rationaliser: some have suggested the ACNC should be playing a role in reducing duplication across the sector and pushing mergers between charities
- a magician: able to apply regulations that actually do not exist or that you have no powers to conjure up.