University Letter

UND's faculty and staff newsletter

Two alumni added to Accountancy Hall of Fame

November is national Nonprofit Awareness Month, and UND’s business and nonprofit education communities have a few more reasons to celebrate.

The College of Business & Public Administration (CoBPA) Department of Accountancy recently added two new outstanding alumni to its Hall of Fame, and both are leaders on the nonprofit stage nationally: Al Royce, national chairman of the American Heart Association; and Jeff Gendreau, a nonprofit leader at his company, Baker Tilly Virchow Krause, a national accounting and advisory firm with more than 30 offices in in 13 states.

While back on campus recently, Royce and Gendreau addressed attendees of UND’s Nonprofit Leadership Luncheon. Before roughly 150 local nonprofit organization, student, staff and faculty attendees, Gendreau and Royse were each given a chance to speak about their experiences and passion for the nonprofit sector.

“I believe they’re (nonprofits) one of the five essential elements, along with the branches of government and the press, in terms of governance of this country,” Royce said.

Royce continued, saying he felt the impact nonprofits make, from an economic and service standpoint, is incredible.

“In the United States, there are 1.5 million nonprofits, 75 million volunteers and paid employees, $1.7 trillion [in revenue and expenses], over 5 percent of our GDP. Tremendous impact,” Royce said. But more importantly, from a mission standpoint, they fulfill the need and do things that otherwise wouldn’t get done, whether it’s healthcare, underprivileged youth, the homeless or affordable housing. You run the gamut, and they are fulfilling a need. It’s a critical part of who we are.”

Gendreau took time to laud a recent change made at UND that takes advantages of inherit synergies and overlap between traditional businesses and nonprofits.

This fall, UND keyed on this overlap by moving its Nonprofit Leadership Program from the College of Arts & Sciences to the CoBPA to better serve the growing demand for “social-purpose leaders with a business-thinking prospective,” According to Heather Helgeson, program director.

“I think it’s a great thing for the College because it will create many opportunities, especially for students,” Gendreau said.

Royce agreed: “the connectivity that can now exist between those programs that are now relatively close to one another will be beneficial to both the business and nonprofit students.”

“I think nonprofit organizations are desperate, in some sense, when it comes to having the right talent to assist with financial accounting and recording types of matters,” Gendreau said.

Royce concluded by saying nonprofits are part of the American DNA.

“That is who we are,” he said. “We give, we volunteer and we contribute back. We are a blessed nation and blessed people. Not only is it a part of our DNA, from my perspective, it’s part of our responsibility as citizens.”