1(1) 2Unless it is prepared by a benefit director or benefit officer, the board of directors shall prepare an annual benefit report. The annual benefit report must include all of the following:33(a) 34A narrative description of:381. 39The ways in which the social purpose corporation pursued a public benefit during the year and the extent to which a public benefit was created.
642. 65Any circumstance that has hindered the pursuit or creation of a public benefit by the social purpose corporation.
833. 84The process and rationale for selecting or changing the third-party standard used to prepare the benefit report, if the articles of incorporation of the social purpose corporation require, or the board of directors determines, that the annual benefit report must be prepared in accordance with a third-party standard.
132(b) 133If the articles of incorporation of the social purpose corporation require, or the board of directors determines, that the annual benefit report must be prepared in accordance with a third-party standard, the third-party standard must be:1691. 170Applied consistently with any previous application in prior annual benefit reports; or
1822. 183Accompanied by an explanation of the reasons for inconsistent application or any change in the standard from the immediate prior report.
204(c) 205The name of the benefit director and the benefit officer, if those positions exist, and the respective addresses to which correspondence may be directed.
229(d) 230If the corporation has a benefit director, his or her statement as provided in s. 245607.508(3)246. 247(e) 248If the articles of incorporation of the social purpose corporation require, or the board of directors determines, that the annual benefit report must be prepared in accordance with a third-party standard, a statement of any connection between the organization that established the third-party standard, or its directors, officers, or any holder of 5 percent or more of the governance interests in the organization, and the social purpose corporation or its directors, officers, or any holder of 5 percent or more of the outstanding shares of the social purpose corporation, including any financial or governance relationship that might materially affect the credibility of the use of the third-party standard.