12 Home Loans at Conservancy
Nonprofit Says All but 2 Have Been Repaid; 5 Came Interest-Free
By Joe Stephens and David B. Ottaway Washington Post Staff Writers
Friday, June 13, 2003; Page A08
The Nature Conservancy, which earlier this month issued a statement
of regret to Congress for misreporting the terms of an internal loan to
its chief executive, has over the past decade extended 11 housing loans
to other employees, including five who were not charged interest.
In one transaction, the Conservancy's California director, Graham
Chisholm, received a no-interest $500,000 mortgage that requires no
payments until 2011, property records and an IRS filing show. The
Conservancy will share in any rise or fall in his home's value.
Another loan, this one to a North Carolina employee, remains
outstanding nearly eight months after its maturity date, said
Conservancy spokesman Jim Petterson.
Each loan was made to retain or recruit a worker who was relocating,
he said, and all but Chisholm's and the North Carolina employee's loans
have been repaid. Although incentive loans to executives are not
uncommon in the business world, some charity specialists questioned
whether nonprofits should offer such loans, especially interest-free.
"It's legal, but it's not ethical," said Peter Dobkin Hall
of Harvard University's Hauser Center, which researches charities.
"It's very bad practice and not the sort of thing that will make
donors happy."
The Conservancy's board is set to meet today at its Arlington
headquarters to review the executive loans and other financial practices
described last month in The Washington Post. Senate Finance Committee
Chairman Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa) and Sen. Max Baucus (Mont.), the
committee's ranking Democrat, have said they plan to ask the nonprofit
environmental group to account for activities that Grassley has
described as "very questionable."
The Post reported that the Conservancy had used nonprofit funds to
extend Steven J. McCormick, the organization's president and a member of
its governing board, $1.5 million toward the purchase of a McLean home.
Although Conservancy executives reported the loan was made at an
interest rate of 7 percent, property records showed that the actual rate
was 4. 59 percent.
The Conservancy suspended new loans to executives after the
disclosure, and McCormick recently repaid his debt. In a 16-page
response to the Post series delivered this month to each member of
Congress, McCormick wrote that "we regret the error."
Petterson said this week, in response to questions, that the
Conservancy has extended a dozen housing loans to employees since 1993.
All were home mortgages, except for $4,000 extended to help an employee
rent housing in Indonesia, he said.
Interest rates ranged from zero to 6.02 percent, according to
Conservancy records. Ten loans required no monthly payments. Of those,
five were interest-free.
Chisholm, former head of the Conservancy's Nevada chapter, was named
to the organization's senior California post in January 2001. Six months
later, the Conservancy extended Chisholm $500,000 toward the purchase of
a $925,000 house in Berkeley, according to property records and the
Conservancy's IRS tax filing. The interest-free loan enabled Chisholm to
buy a California house comparable to his home in Nevada, where property
is cheaper, Petterson said.
No repayment is required until July 2011 if Chisholm does not move or
switch jobs. On the 10th anniversary of the loan, the Conservancy will
receive the principal plus a share of any appreciation in the property.
If the house's value falls, the Conservancy will share the loss.
Chisholm did not respond to phone calls seeking comment.
Chisholm's "shared appreciation loan" is uncommon,
according to mortgage specialist Keith Gumbinger, vice president of HSH
Associates. He calculated that, over 10 years, a standard mortgage with
5.125 percent interest would earn the Conservancy $235,000.
Last year, the Conservancy extended to Terry Severson, who manages
land preserves in North Carolina, a $30,000 loan with 2.88 percent
interest for the purchase of a new home. The IRS filing lists a maturity
date of Oct. 15, 2002, but Petterson said the balance remains
outstanding. Severson explained that he could not immediately repay the
loan because a home he owns in Wisconsin remains unsold. Severson said
he is leaving the Conservancy for family reasons on June 18 and has
agreed to fully repay the loan in July.
The filing shows that the Conservancy last year extended to one of
its lead scientists, John A. Wiens, and his wife a loan of $375,000 for
six months with 5 percent interest. A commercial lender extended Wiens a
second mortgage at 6.1 percent.
Wiens, who did not respond to requests through the Conservancy for
comment, used the loans to buy a $1 million home in Vienna, Va. He later
sold a Colorado home and used the proceeds to repay the Conservancy,
interviews and records show.
The IRS filing states that the Conservancy loan was secured by
Wiens's home in Virginia, an assertion not supported by property
records. Petterson said this week that the filing was in error and that
Wiens used his Colorado home as security.
Researcher Alice Crites contributed to this report.
* 2003 The Washington Post Company