Tag Archives: tax policy

Nonprofit Radio for Dec. 24, 2010: Charitable IRA Rollover Analysis & Savvy Job Search Strategies

Big Nonprofit Ideas for the Other 95%

Compliance. Board relations. Fundraising. Technology. Volunteer management. Accounting. Finance. Marketing. Social media. Investments.

Every nonprofit faces these issues and big nonprofits have experts in each. Small and medium size nonprofits have Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio. Trusted experts throughout the country join Tony to take on the tough issues facing your organization.

Episode 21 of Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio for December 24, 2010

Tony talks about the Charitable IRA Rollover Extension: How Does It Work, Who Are Best Prospects & Where To Promote. To get up to speed, take a look at his two blog posts from this week:

Tony’s Guests:

Paula Marks; President, Hire Resources; and Leonora Scala, nonprofit job seeker.

I’m Looking: Savvy Strategies for Your Search:

Leonora, our nonprofit job-seeker, gets continuing advice–including a new resume–from recruiter Paula Marks. We last checked in with them in late October. Paula’s tips will help you in your own search, whether it’s today or in the future.

Here is a link to the podcast: 023: Charitable IRAs and Your Job Search

When and where: Talking Alternative Radio, Friday, 1-2pm Eastern.

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Welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent of your aptly named host. What a coincidence that i found this show it’s our christmas eve edition welcome. Um, you may remember that ah, last week we’re not sure what you heard. We had a big technical problems last week, so i’m not sure what you heard last week’s show will actually be heard next week, and i’ll talk about that at the end of this one. This week, though it’s going to be me talking about the charitable ira roll over this was just extended last friday when president obama signed the tax relief act of two thousand ten. I’m going explain how the charitable ira rollover works who were the best prospects for it and where to promote it among your constituents. Ah, all the good ira commentators were busy today on christmas eve, so it’s me talking about the ira child will roll over and how it helps your non-profit and also in our second segment, i’m looking savvy strategies for your search leonora are non-profit job seeker gets continuing advice, including a new resume from our search consultant, paula marks. With has checked in with the two of them in late october. That was the october twenty ninth show. Listen today to help your own job search and your career, whether that’s, today or in the future. And between the two segments on tony’s, take two at thirty two minutes after the hour. Someone who i admire a man i’ve never met, but who i admire very much, and also a reminder about next year’s next-gen charity conference, that’s, all after this break. But right after this break, i i asked larry bloom, the host of ah, the divorce, our show that precedes mine. Teo hangout for just ah minute or two cause. I have a little funny story to tell him, based on what i just heard on the last minutes of his show. So that’s all after this break. Stay with me. E-giving didn’t think dick tooting getting tempted. You’re listening to the talking alternate network. E-giving. E-giving good. Is your marriage in trouble? Are you considering divorce? Hello, i’m lawrence bloom, a family law attorney in new york and new jersey. No one is happier than the day their divorce is final. My firm can help you. We take the nasty out of the divorce process and make people happy. Police call a set to one, two, nine six four three five zero two for a free consultation. That’s lawrence h bloom two, one two, nine, six, four, three five zero two. We make people happy. Are you suffering from aches and pains? Has traditional medicine let you down? Are you tired of taking toxic medications, then come to the double diamond wellness center and learn how our natural methods can help you to hell? Call us now at to one to seven to one eight, one eight three that’s to one to seven to one eight one eight three or find us on the web at www dot double diamond wellness dot com way. Look forward to serving you. Hey, all you crazy listeners looking to boost your business? Why not advertise on talking alternative with very reasonable rates? Interested simply email at info at talking alternative dot com welcome back to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent in a couple minutes. I’m going to be talking about the charitable ira roll over that was just created by the tax relief act last week, but first i asked the host of the divorce our which is the show that precedes mine. I’m here on talking alternative larry bloom. Teo, hang out with me for just a minute. To larry. Welcome to the show. Thanks. It was a real real trouble getting here today and a big surprise that he has no idea what i’m about to say. So in the last few minutes of his show, he got a call from a woman named tatiana and she was calling teo. Ask larry about his services. Larry is a divorce attorney, has an office in new york as an office in englewood, new jersey. And she was calling to talk to him about having him represent her. And i have a very good friend who has a wife named tatiana. So if it turns out larry that touch on his husband’s named greg, then i want to know. Okay, my lips are sealed. Totally put him on the spot. You were aware of the fact there’s something called the attorney client privilege. It’s total confidence of god. I realize that. But i just, well, what are the odds? But i could wink if you’d like. The odds are quite small that my friend greg’s wife tatiana called, but i just i couldn’t let the coincidence go. And by the way, lower you have very admirable list of, i don’t know, maybe two dozen or so resolutions for one thousand eleven at least. And what are your expectations for? Ah accomplishing. As long as i get the divorce done by the end of the year. Old hap lorts kottler was talking about his own divorce. So he does one out of twenty four. No. And i get him. Well, you know what my goal is. Other than the weight stuff i fully expect to get them done. By the way, i don’t expect again. It’s. A very admirable list of lots of resolutions. I do admire it and i admire your show. Very cathartic, heartfelt radio. It is self therapy. One of the resolutions i did not say was to stop treating the show. Like self up to get back into more law stuff, but, you know, whatever the listener wants, i’ll give the listener i don’t know that you should add that to your list. I like the show as it is. Thank you, larry. Want to thank you very much for staying. Thank you, mary crispy holidays merry christmas, happy new year. Thanks very much, larry. Okay, thank you. We’re going to talk about the i r a charitable rollover. This was created last friday, just last friday when president bush signed, oh, president obama signed the tax relief act of two thousand eleven, and there are a lot of provisions in there actually that impact non-profits i’m focusing on what’s called the charitable ira roll over, this is a way for non-profits to get gift directly from iras to the charity on dh it applies to people who are seventy and a half and over, and i’m going to go into the details very shortly. I blogged about this you, khun read on my block at mpg, a dvd dot com and you’ll see that i have two pretty lengthy block posts on this very topic. The three old law was that when someone wanted to make a gift from their ira, they had to ah, take it as income, they had to take a distribution from there, ira withdrawal, take take it as a distribution to themselves and pay income tax on that, um, they then made a gift to the charity from that distribution that they made and got a charitable deduction. And in a lot of cases, that might be a tax wash. But it’s, not in every case. Um, and we actually have a caller that i’m going to bring on, and i’ll go into the previous law after the break, probably. David, you’re david. Hello. Hello, tony, thank you very much for calling the show. How are you doing? I’m doing very well. Thank you. Do you have a question? I presume about the charitable ira roll over? I do, actually, please thie issue is if we’re talking. Teo, a donor who has already taken a distribution in two thousand ten but has not taken, hasn’t maxed up to the hundred thousand dollars. So say that his distribution is the forty thousand dollars you mean i mean that’s his that’s his he then give the the difference, so in that case, stay the sixty thousand dollars for two thousand ten, so you’re in your hypothetical now the donors maximum required distribution is forty thousand dollars. Uh, well, it’s not clear to me whether that’s the maximum or whether that’s just what he took, okay, is he? I mean, i don’t know the actual figures in this in this donor’s particular daughter’s case, it’s really just a question of if there is a difference between the distribution that they already took for two thousand ten and one hundred thousand dollars, they can they still give the difference between what they took and one hundred thousand dollars for two thousand? Okay, david’s question is getting into the details that i haven’t gotten into yet, but dahna but i’m happy to answer it. The issue, david, is whether they’ve reached their own maximum required distribution, so not whether they’ve gone up to one hundred thousand dollars in two thousand ten, but whether they’ve reached their maximum required distribution. So because the one hundred thousand dollars that you’re mentioning that’s the maximum that someone khun do in a gift from their ira to charity that’s that’s what? That hundred thousand dollars that’s that maximum the maximum you can give to a charity the their maximum required distribution that’s personal that’s individual based on their life expectancy and lots of ah, an arcane formula that that is used to determine what someone over seventy and a half must withdraw every year. So what you really need to know is have they taken their individual maximum required distribution for two thousand ten? If they have, then they’re not going to be able to do anything for your non-profit in two thousand ten. If they have not, then they can. And they can go up to their maximum distribution or one hundred thousand dollars, whichever comes first guy. Does that make sense? Okay, so what you really need to know is there what’s their individual maximum distribution and have they reached it? Okay. Okay. Cool. Thanks for calling, david. Thank you very much. You’re welcome. Thank you. Bye bye, david. And is there another callers? No. Okay. We’re going to take a break, and i will come back and explain the details of the charitable ira rollover. This is tony martignetti non-profit radio talking alternative radio twenty four. Hours a day. Oppcoll are you feeling overwhelmed in the current chaos of our changing times? A deeper understanding of authentic astrology can uncover solutions in every area of life. After all, metaphysics is just quantum physics, politically expressed hi and montgomery taylor and i offer lectures, seminars and private consultations. For more information, contact me at monte m o nt y at r l j media. Dot com are you stuck in your business or career trying to take your business to the next level, and it keeps hitting a wall? This is sam liebowitz, the conscious consultant. I will help you get to the root cause of your abundance issues and help move you forward in your life. Call me now and let’s. Create the future you dream of. Two, one, two, seven, two, one, eight, one, eight, three, that’s to one to seven to one, eight one eight three. The conscious consultant helping conscious people. Be better business people. Dahna i really need to take better care of myself if only i had someone to help me with my lifestyle. I feel like giving up dahna is this you mind over matter, health and fitness can help. If you’re expecting an epiphany, chances are it’s not happening. Mind over matter, health and fitness could help you get back on track or start a new life and fitness. Join Joshua margolis, fitness expert at 2 one two, eight sixty five nine to nine xero, or visit w w w died mind over matter. N y c dot com dafs you’re listening to the talking alternative network. Welcome back to tony martignetti non-profit radio i’m in the studio alone talking about the ira charitable roll over before the call, i had explained how the law used to work that was before two thousand six, when the pension protection act was created past and that created the qualified charitable distribution. This thing that i keep calling a charitable ira rollover, i’m calling it that because that’s how it’s popularly known, but it actually isn’t a rollover rollovers of different things that your ira advisor could talk to you about this actually is a distribution it’s a distribution that goes from your chat from your ira to a charity, but i’m calling it the rollover because that’s the language that everybody understands. So in two thousand six, this roll over was created and through extensions that got extended through two thousand nine, and then it ended december thirty first, two thousand nine. All this year, we’ve been under the old law where you had to take the distribution and pay tax on it, addition to your income and then make the gift to charity that ended last friday when president obama signed the tax relief act of two thousand. Ten and that revived the direct ira gif ts so where we have, what we have now is for people who are seventy and a half or over, um, they can make a gift directly from their ira to your non-profit the ira has to be a traditional aura roth and the most that they can do this for across all charities is one hundred thousand dollars per person per year, and that was the that was one hundred thousand dollars that the caller david was asking about. So that hundred thousand dollars is the maximum that one person in a tax year can give to us many charities as he or she wants to from one or as many ira’s they have but it’s a maximum hundred thousand dollars per person not-for-profits hyre a per year, and the distribution has to go directly to your non-profit it would be wrong for the person to take income and then make a distribution make a gift to your charity from that income there is something that’s interesting, recognizing that two thousand ten is all but departed for us, and since the bill was the bill was just signed into law last friday if your donors want teo in january on ly in january of two thousand eleven, they can have a gift dated december thirty first of two thousand ten, and what that does is lets them use up mohr of their maximum required distribution if they haven’t already reached that in two thousand ten. Now, most people probably have mean it’s december twenty fourth. Most of your donors have probably already taken their maximum required distribution for two thousand ten and won’t be able to take advantage of that. But if you have a donor, who hasn’t, they can do this roll over into in january on ly in january of two thousand eleven and have account for december thirty first after january than everything that’s given to charity has to count for two thousand eleven. And actually, the comments on my blogged and conversations i’ve had with people since this past i strongly suggest that there are gonna be a lot of people who still haven’t taken there man required mac minimum distribution for two thousand ten probably won’t have a lot of people who could take advantage of that. All these charitable rollovers have to be done before. January first of two thousand twelve. This is on ly goes for two thousand eleven and two thousand twelve. The traditional and the roth iras are eligible could be either one. Simple iras and sep iras are not eligible, and the most likely gift are going to come from the traditional accounts. There’s. Sort of a technical reason for that. And you can see the technical explanation on my blogged again, m p g a d v dot com. I’m not going to go into it right now. But there it’s most likely that these gifts were going to come from the traditional iras. The hyre s ruled in previous years when we had the ah qualified charitable distribution available under the philanthropy protection act, that if if the i r a custodian, uh, rights delivers a cheque to your donor and it’s made payable to your organization and then your donor and gives you that check that does constitute being direct from the ira to the charity that’s an i r s ruling it was actually notice. Two thousand seven dash seven from the irs. So remember, earlier i had said the distribution has to go directly from the ira to your charity. Well, the service has ruled that if it’s done the way i just described that counts as being direct from the ira to your charity or it can be done hyre literally, directly where the charity the ira just send. The ira custodian sends a cheque right to your charity without including your donor. The gift amount has to be such that if it were not part of this roll over, it would be one hundred percent deductible that’s important because it means that your donors can’t use the charitable ira. Roll over to say bye tables at your buy. A table or seats at your gala, or to buy sports tickets or to pay for auction items. Because under any of those circumstances, if this wasn’t a charitable roll over the, the gift would not be one hundred percent deductible. The deductibility would be reduced by the amount of the value that your donor got back in the case of the sports tickets or the auction item or the gala dinner ticket. So your donors can’t use these types of gif ts for that purpose. It has to be something that would be one hundred percent deductible if it wasn’t part of this roll over. So how should you be promoting these types of gif ts your best prospects, obviously they need to be over seventy and a half s o seventy, you know, that’s talking english, not the way tax writers tax code writers write was seventy and a half, but over seventy on dh if they’re on your board, i would say that that makes a terrific prospect. You might make this a board meeting agenda item. You might also send an email blast to your board members because they’re insiders to your organization, letting them know about this. We have a client that did just that sent an email blast to former board members. I thought that was a very good idea. Also very close to the organization for non board members, i would send an email blast and i would follow-up with paper mail if your budget allows, you know, using the u s mail for follow-up because that can be a bit expensive, but i think that’s a very good way of following up to an e mail blast for those non but if you’re talking actively to donors right now about a year end gift and there’s only a few days left, but if you’re talking to them now and they’re over seventy, this is a very age appropriate topic to raise with those over seventy, donors you might be talking to right now. After the new year, i would look to donors that have multiyear pledges because this could be a very good way of accelerating their pledge payments. They might be ableto doom or from their ira than they would have been able to do from other assets. So look to those donors who have made a commitment over many years, and maybe you can front load that commitment with larger gif ts in two thousand eleven, um, use all your communication channels. No, so anything that might be read by somebody who’s over seventy is a good way of promoting this ira e-giving so if you have a newsletter, including article or maybe a sight may be just a side bar, and i would, including that article or newsletter. What? Your legal name is the organization’s legal name. What? Your federal tax i d number is so that people can do this on their own without having to talk to you, but i would also include a name and a phone number so that people donors can talk to someone if they’d like to. Integrate this with your annual appeal if you’re sending annual appeals next year, include, ah, half a page or maybe a third of a page buckslip with information about the ira e-giving again include your legal name, your tax i d number on that buckslip and a name for someone to talk to if they would like to make a phone call and actually get advice from someone. So those were the way that i have to recommend promoting the ira charitable roll over. I’ll be interested in how this does, i think it’s very promising for for charities in the coming years, and i look forward to maybe having a conversation about this with a guest, perhaps maybe six months or are you are so from now we’ll see how this is doing for non-profits at this point, i want to bring on leonora scala and paula marks for our i’m looking sabat strategies for your search segment. Ladies, how are you? Hi, leonora chaillou hello. I miss you guys. Heimans study downtown berkeley. The kitchen zsystems that’s, right? Paul is calling from california, and leonora is calling from staten island. When we last checked in with them, it was october twenty ninth was the show and ah, we’re interested to hear what leonora and paula have been doing together. Um, i’m sorry, paula, before we start talking to leonora in some detail. What? What? What kind of environment are you finding for job seekers? I’m seeing a lot of opportunities that i haven’t seen in i want to say more than two or three years, i see a lot of growth. I see it’s very sudden, i see organizations that have been talking to me for two years, three years, all of a sudden calling me and saying, you know, we need you to staff up the top of our organization and you know, that we’ve been talking about this for two to three years where we just got the funding, so i’m enormously optimistic and it’s about time, i’m gonna be sixty one next friday. All right, congratulations. Now, i didn’t give your bio because you’ve been in your own transition since since our october show. You want to tell people what you’re doing now? Sure, i started a corporation. Oh, i don’t know. About fifteen years ago, hyre resource incorporated and it was a contest in me company that i own, which was full of marks, and i gave one hundred dollars, reward for anybody who gave you the best titles that we selected. Yeah, after six and a half years with gilbert tweeted soc aside decided it was time to go back and be my own boss and it’s really amazing what has happened since the thursday before thanksgiving, and i want to say, i’m grateful to my higher power. All right, so paula is now president of hyre resource is and that’s a chai r e resource is paul? Is there a website yet for hyre resource is no, we’re going to keep it a paula okay? And i’ll add since polls modest and all, i had a little background of what what she used to do before entering executive search, which was in nineteen eighty five. So she’s been an executive search for about twenty five years? She before that she held director level positions in corporate human resource is at bergdorf goodman, bonwit teller and lane bryant stores. And, of course, paula is our resident experts search consultant for the i’m looking segments. Leonora, how are you doing? I’m doing well doing well, i’m just trying to keep afloat and work with paul er, as much as i can, ok, what you say now, keep afloat. What does that mean? Well, sometimes i feel like it’s so much to do to get your name out there and to be able to make that transition from the corporate world, the non corporal, baby non-profit world, because they see you as being. How do i say it a different mindset and it’s, hard to break that barrier for them, okay, we’re going. We’re going to follow up with that that’s, an interesting place to start. We’re going to take a break right now. I’m with paula marks and leonora scala, respectively. Hour shows, search consultant and non-profit job seeker. This is tony martignetti non-profit radio stay with us. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Dahna this is tony martignetti aptly named host of tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent technology fund-raising compliance social media, small and medium non-profits have needs in all these areas. My guests are expert in all these areas and mohr tony martignetti non-profit radio fridays one to two eastern on talking alternative broadcasting do you want to enhance your company’s web presence with an eye catching and unique website design? Would you like to incorporate professional video marketing mobile marketing into your organization’s marketing campaign? Mission one on one media offers a unique marketing experience that will set you apart from your competitors, magnify your brand exposure and enhancer current marketing effort. Their services include video production and editing, web design, graphic design photography, social media management and now introducing mobile marketing. Their motto is we do whatever it takes to make our clients happy contact them today. Admission one one media dot com hey, all you crazy listeners looking to boost your business, why not advertise on talking alternative with very reasonable rates? Interested simply email at info at talking alternative dot com no. Welcome back to tony martignetti non-profit radio it’s, time for tony’s. Take two and i’m going to do this quickly because the show is sort of escaping me. There is a man who i admire, who i had never heard of until i read his obituary. And this was in the december eleventh issue of the new york times that’s where his obituary wass his judge, samuel king on in hawaii and back in nineteen ninety five, he recognized some wrongdoing going on among the leaders of what was the richest charity in nineteen ninety five. And actually, i’m sorry. In nineteen ninety seven is when he co authored a very critical essay of very critical essay regarding the leaders of what was the largest charity in the us in nineteen ninety five and ultimately it led to investigation by hawaii’s attorney general and the i r s and ultimately, those trustees of that charity were removed. Now what’s remarkable about this is that that would be akin to someone today charging leadership of the gates foundation with fraud and self dealing. And judge king, just in back in nineteen ninety seven, stood up for what he thought was right. He felt that those who were being served by the charity were being ill served because the leaders of the charity were doing some dishonest things. And so when i read that obituary in the december eleventh new york times, i just thought how much i admire the man for challenging the leadership of is i said, what would today be the gates foundation and ultimately brought justice to the people who that charity in hawaii was serving? Also want to remind you that the next-gen charity conference is scheduled for november seventeenth and eighteenth, two thousand eleven, and just until tomorrow, december twenty fifth. There’s a deep, deep discount if you register the standard registration is six hundred fifty dollars, but if you register but by and including tomorrow it’s only one hundred fifty dollars that’s a five hundred dollars savings off what i know is going to be a very good conference because i was at last i was at two thousand ten conference. I know two thousand eleven is going to be very good. You can sign up register for the conference at next-gen charity dot com on ly today or tomorrow to get a very, very deep discount i’m with leonora and paula marks and we’re talking about leonora, his job search, and we’re checking in with the pair every month or so, leonora so you started to say that things air feeling kind of daunting that this is, um, you know, very different than the type of activity you’re accustomed to. Yeah, it’s more the fact of trying to talk to people and getting your foot in the door. And when they look at your resume and they look oh, you came from corporate world, we think differently and it’s hard to make that transition and get your foot in the door. At least just talk to them. Yeah. Paula, what advice do you have for leonora? You guys have been working together for a while now. Yeah, i have. And i have to say working with leonora is a pleasure because i’m learning a lot from her. May i think that what we suffer from it country is the eighty twenty rule, which is that eighty percent of the sales are done by twenty percent of the population. So what you have are a lot of limited. Now go find it dull people in recruitment both my husband and i recruitment professionals, i hope nobody would say we’re dull, but you have people whose first response to everything is no, no, not possible. You didn’t do what you can’t do it, it can’t be done. And i think that when the senior executives understand how limiting the recruiters are, they would be dahna nastad who they’ve passed up to their organization. I also think that what lian or is not saying because she’s way too kind. If there is an age bias in this country, i don’t know that it necessarily comes from the top, but i think because we’ve been doing it for so long, that it’s just kind of a knee jerk reaction on i have thirty years experience, they must be too old and then there’s the philosophy where the next up in the organization says, well, you know, why don’t we want to hire a fifty year old he’s going to leave in ten years? Well, what we saw in america in the last easily ten years with the people didn’t get to stay employed more than eighteen, thirty six months anyhow. So what do you care if the guy is ninety, if somebody could do the job, they have the experience, they are in the right price range and they really wants to do the work, and they’re enthusiastic. I take a ninety year old anything. Yeah, ok, but earlier you said you were very optimistic generally, and and i want to be, you know, specific for leonora and what i understand the context, but what does leonora duda overcome it? Well, i think working with somebody like me and i don’t mean that to be biased, i think that we also need to change some of the language and tremendous patient because she comes out of a lot of years of one way of doing something much to her credit, however, she gets the first time around most people that i suppose you need repeated over and over and over, and they can’t necessarily integrated into their thinking and presentation. So what we’ve done is we’ve crafted some very proactiv letters that helps to identify what she can bring to an organization that the organization isn’t thinking of them selves. Okay, so you’re using the cover letter than i guess. Sara lee, i think the cover letter and sometimes the language in the resume. Okay, leonardo, you’re going to say something. Sorry. Yeah, i am using the cover letter because i am trying to mail directly to corporations and maybe battle. I have a new voice for may. Well, i’m sorry, but your mailing directly to non-profits, though, right? Yeah. Okay, why don’t you remind the audience what type of job it is you’re looking for in non-profit i’m looking for something that will give me a, um, merchandising planning, um, some type of forecasting because i’m very good about the numbers, it’s all about the numbers, and i understand, you know, trying to help make money for this non-profits so that we could utilize it in a different way, that our corporate world would use it and that’s where i find the excitement. Leonora, i need to give you a plug here if i may, tony. Okay, what leonora brings to any organization, whether before profit or not for profit, whether it be a small, midsize or large organizations, she’s got a very unusual blend of really strong mathematical, analytical and creative skills, and she also is a people person and it’s very difficult to find people. With all four of those skills, at least in the ten thousand people i’ve interviewed last five. So the lesson the lesson, the broader lesson is you need to focus on what it is that is unique about you, and then what? Use your materials, including the cover letter, as you were saying earlier, to promote what’s unique about you, right? Okay, now i’m part of leonardo’s materials. We know that she has a revised resume from the last show in october, and you could go to my blogged you see the old and the new. If you go to the the blogger post, my blog’s mpg a dvd dot com go to the post for today’s show and there’s a link to leah nora’s old resume and her new resume. And lena are one of the things that that i saw first cause it’s on the first line is you have a new email address and i’m bringing this out because i think it’s an important point your your old email was was what it was actually body at mind bring dot com right bachi b a c i a and what is bochy mean in italian? I know. You know, cause you’re fluent. It means kiss, right? So that’s, i guess you’ve decided that that was not the best professional email address tohave for a job search. That is correct, right? So leonora chain and i think that’s something that a lot of people want to look at, because when i used to see resumes, you know you’d see the most bizarre personal emails. And i think you should just get a free account with a professional sounding email for your job search and so what’s your e mail now. Leonora leonora at el scala dot com. Yes. Excellent. And if and if i went to el scala dot com and what do you have up there? Actually have the resume up there. Still needs to be tweaked, but it’s it’s working, right. So you have sort of a mini website, right? Yeah. And i could do a blogging. I could do other work. I just haven’t gotten in depth into it yet. Okay, paula, is that something that is a very good idea for for jobseekers in two thousand eleven. Absolutely funny. When i first started working with feces on a broader base, i thought that hot tail with a point of fight. So come anybody that said the a resume from hot male i the leaders. I also thought that cnn was catholic news network. You don’t want to. Mit has people soon and assuming correctly and if you’re a professional, if your email it with hot pants three what is the message you’re putting out there, right, exactly. So so leonora is a ll the old email of kisses. I guess bochy would be plural. Is that right? Well, because is okay. Thanks, lenore. Your conversational in italian. I speak restaurant and hotel italian. Very much, tony. And get you. You know, a hotel room in a great meal. Well, that’s, right? I don’t go hungry and there’s always a roof over my head. But it’s not conversational, like like leonora. They’re very shallow conversations let’s. See? So that’s the resume and said all right, yeah lean over this many website. Why don’t you explain? Was that hard to do for you? For you to set up this resume this resume website? Actually trying to find somebody to do it. It was more the heart. A part of it. But believe it, believe it not. My brother in law, this is what he does for a living. He actually puts up people’s websites for businesses in dahna only just personal and we happen to be talking at thanksgiving saying, i’m really trying to find somebody else, i could do it for you. I’m like, you’ve got to be joking. You’ve been sitting how how far from may? Right? All right, what’s so i was talking to him about it, and we within that weekend we were able to put up something on the website we still need to finesse it, but he was showing me all the different pointers and the different things that i could do for it, and i’m like, oh, my god, now my mind is going and there’s so many things that i could do to help get myself out there like you mentioned you mentioned you’d like to blogger on the site? Yeah, there’s there’s a section there, we could do some blogging, and i’m like that’s a good idea. Okay, i think what you have set up is a wordpress blawg sort of template and okay, so you got lucky. Your brother in law is an insider, but anybody i’m sure most people know somebody who does websites on yours is a pretty simple one. But it’s, i think, very effective your resume with a pdf linked to download the resume, and now you’re thinking about adding blogging, okay, why don’t you describe for the audience how your resume is different from what you had in october? Just generally, first of all, i think the visual appearance is very different here on the new one it’s more of the high summary of the things that i’m skilled at, where my pluses four in my background and they’re more general, where they could definitely fit into a nonprofit organization. Okay, so the trying to make the translation from your for-profit work, which is very impressive, companies like avon and your and jp morgan chase and what you’re aspiring to ok, because the old one was definitely talking to the corporate world. I mean, just by the language in and the visual appearance as well, and just in the minute or so we have left before the break. Have you been getting interviews yet? I’ve been getting phone calls, okay? So, um what did start ok? Some calls? Yeah. That’s it’s. Encouraging. So what do you mean, you’ve been sending your letter, and then what you get a phone call back, sometimes idea when sometimes i don’t, most of the time, it’s, more e mails. A couple of times i’ve sent out applications, and somebody is nice. We’ll call you and says, you know, your background really doesn’t fit, and no give you an example of why and that’s fine, i just need to understand where my transit, you know, translation or the transition going, yeah, what those translatable skills are. Okay, wait, paul, i’m sorry. We’re going, we’re going to take a break. Can you? Can you hold that thought until after the break? Please follow. Okay, thank you. This is tony martignetti non-profit radio stay with us dahna talking alternative radio, twenty four hours a day. Are you stuck in your business or career trying to take your business to the next level, and it keeps hitting a wall? This is sam liebowitz, the conscious consultant. I will help you get to the root cause of your abundance issues and help move you forward in your life. Call me now and let’s. Create the future you dream of. Two, one, two, seven, two, one, eight, one, eight, three, that’s to one to seven to one, eight one eight three. The conscious consultant helping conscious people. Be better business people. Dahna i really need to take better care of myself. If only i had someone to help me with my lifestyle. I feel like giving up. Is this you mind over matter, health and fitness can help. If you’re expecting an epiphany, chances are it’s not happening. Mind over matter, health and fitness could help you get back on track or start a new life and fitness. Join Joshua margolis, fitness expert at 2 one two eight six five nine two nine. Zero or visit w w w died. Mind over matter. Y si dot com. Durney buy-in do you want to enhance your company’s web presence with an eye catching and unique website design? Would you like to incorporate professional video marketing mobile marketing into your organization’s marketing campaign? Mission one on one media offers a unique marketing experience that will set you apart from your competitors, magnify your brand exposure and enhance your current marketing efforts. Their services include video production and editing, web design, graphic design, photography, social media management and now introducing mobile market. Their motto is. We do whatever it takes to make our clients happy. Contact them today. Admission one one media dot com. Told you. No. Yeah, welcome back to tony martignetti non-profit radio, where in our i’m looking segment savvy strategies for your search, and right before the break, i asked our resident search search consultant, paula teo, hold on with a thought. So paula, go ahead, please. One of the things that leonora said that i think is really critical to job searchers is if you get to chat with somebody, even if they called to say we don’t have anything now and hear the reasons why you’ve made a much deeper connection and that i believe were hiring happens. I even believe it’s, where a recruiter says to a fellow recruiter in a former company, or that they played tennis with or whatever it is, where we meet people on connect this really lovely woman, and we’re not hiring right now or she doesn’t have what we’re looking for, but you want to meet her because i really liked her on the phone and i got a really impressive resonate. The more people who know you, the better. Of course, leonora more they know you because of your ability to communicate is really key. Leonora, how did you follow up with those phone? Calls that you got how do you think those people? I basically just i’m very honest with them, and i’m like, thank you very much for calling. May i do appreciate the honesty and the direct feedback because it’s, the only way that i’m going to learn and grow into an area that is so new to me, um and i really do appreciate any feedback that i can get because i want to make an impact in the world, and i need a little help understand, you know, here’s what i would sadio i would call them in a week or two and say, i’d like to take you out for coffee. You were so helpful to me in the worst they can say no that’s shooting, you’re absolutely right. That’s what? You pay me the big bucks, right? Ok. So a little more personal. A little more personal. Thank you. Wait a few weeks. I don’t have black and why the bad it should be. Three weeks, ten days of fifteen days. You know, i think people are in the threat to politick a’s that sending out christmas cards and return and gifts and i would give somebody i don’t know maybe till january fifth with the eighth or whatever it is, but i would do it and again, the worst that happens is they say no. Now, i could tell you personally on the coaching side that i networked with a tremendous number of people last year, this time for a home furnishings business that i’m doing the search for the u s president and i got a call from a woman six months later, she said, i’m sorry i didn’t return your call, but i love the way you spoke on the phone and left a message for me, and i need a code. I am a spell out of my chair. She really she remembered you six months later from a voicemail message. Yeah, yeah, she didn’t call in the leonardo. Yeah. Leonardo, what about support? Are you networking with any other job seekers, or is there is there anything formal or informal going on for you that way? Yeah, my corporation gave us an outplacement program, so there is a place for me to sort of connect with other people who are out of out of the job market and just by talking to some of those people i’ve met some people who are interested in non-profit so i’m trying to pick their brains, and are you finding that a pretty positive experience, or is it really a bunch of people just kind of grousing duitz each other that they can’t find anything? No, no, it’s definitely helpful because i just know that they know somebody and everyone is willing to offer advice. Oh, you know what? I may not be the right person, but, you know, my friend so and so go talk to this person, i’ll let them that they’re gonna be calling them, and that is a great help because at least, you know, somebody else understands going from one side of the organization to the other side on they get it right away. They are the people who tend to be a little bit more responsible, more open minded. Um, so i feel like it’s working it’s just i need to give it time. Yeah, ok. There’s something else, leonora, that you did you help to pull together a networking event in my apartment in the city? And she showed up with a tray of great she’s from artist donald and we didn’t have this many people show has had committed, but it’s, how you create this connective ity yeah, and i guess as i had said earlier, that the more people who know you, the better and we’re exploring ways to get people to know you on gillian or it is encouraging that you are getting getting those calls, even for people who say you’re not quite right, but something about your presentation to them is stimulating a phone call, right? Doing that and that’s what? I’m appreciative up because at least, you know, maybe with the next person, they’ll be that what do they say? Do they tell you why they singled you out to call? They were very impressed with my resume, okay? They like it and and for them to pick up the phone, i was that’s me. It is a lot kapin that’s okay, okay, i think there’s something. I want a layer on the leonora. She sent a letter to a president of a very large, well known branded organization in new york and got a very nice response saying thanks, but no thanks. And i said to her, why don’t you send it? To the chairman of the parent company. What do you have to lose as long as it is professional and positive? And i believe she followed up on that and, you know, that’s kind of how you build a network. It is really no different. I actually think that bill gates knows everything he knows because it’s made because i absolutely have been a manual networker, i think from the day i was born and bill gates has been following your advice, you believe? Yes. That’s him. All right, leonora, what about online network social media network? So you mentioned your own blogging possibility on your on your website at el scala dot com. But are you doing anything more now with linked in facebook, et cetera? I’m using more length in than facebook. Maybe i should look more into facebook but limping it’s definitely looking at people’s backgrounds and connections and working with that has helped it just right now. It’s, like i feel like it’s the beginning stages so it eventually pan out. And what are you doing there specifically linked in? Well, i’m actually looking at different backgrounds, different corporations that definitely help me narrow it down. Look at who is connected to who and try to even get introductions and it’s not introductions about jobs. I mean, yeah, i want a job, but at the same time, it’s more trying to understand the different mentality, i want to learn it. I want to understand why people are saying, you know, you’re not the right fit or you came from corporate. Well, i need to talk to more people and understand that because i know i could do it, but i need to convince them and maybe just missing one element that somebody could shed light on. And, paula, we have just one minute left. So do you want to wrap up with with advice on using linkedin for job seekers? Yes, i think lawrence leonora, you need to spread out and go around the human resource executives because they are without a doubt the gate keepers, you need to go to people who are heads of line busy, even if you think it’s not related because you never know where they’re married to you don’t know who they’re sweet made it. We really don’t know anything, and we we should not make assumptions just as we do not want others to make assumptions about us. Correct, ladies, thank you very much. Thank you. You, tony and everybody have a happy, healthy holiday and here’s to a wonderful thank you. Have a great thank you, paula. Thank you, leonora. Thank you, ladies that’s our i’m looking segment savvy strategies for your job search and we’re going to check back with leonora and paula in january. The other guest for today was me. So i’m grateful that i took the time to explain the charitable ira roll over next week on the show is going to be what was supposed to be last week’s show. Remember i mentioned earlier with technical problems? Last week, the show got recorded, but it didn’t get streamed out, so nobody heard it. So what we recorded last week is going to play next week on january december thirty first that’ll be the new year’s eve show and the first guest on that show will be talking about the bank of america. Hi networth study. Claire costello, bank of america merrill lynch’s expert on the study talks about the numbers in the study and what they mean for your fund-raising and your donor. Relationships. Who makes the giving decisions? What motivates high net worth donors to give? What do they expect from you? And why do they sometimes stop giving to non-profits interesting that was recorded in a pastry shop right by the studio here on west seventy second street because we had a studio miscommunication. So we already spoke to claire costello from bank of america merrill lynch in a pastry shop so you can join us over scones and coffee in next week’s first segment and after claire costello will be scott koegler, he’ll be talking about seven principles for a successful newsletter. Scott is the editor of non-profit technology news and, of course, he’s, our show’s technology contributor. He and it’s a lot of newsletters, so he’s not on ly devoted to technology is not a one trick pony, and he’s got seven principles for a successful newsletter to help you with your communications, you can get our insider alerts. Sign up for those and like us on the facebook page. That’s at facebook dot com tony martignetti non-profit radio the creative producer of tony martignetti non-profit radio is clear. Meyerhoff the show’s line producer is sam liebowitz and sam. Is also the owner of talking alternative dot com, our social media, the facebook page and other social media. Also for the show is done by regina walton of organic social media. I’m tony martignetti, host of tony martignetti non-profit radio. Join us next friday, one p, m eastern, co-branding dick dick tooting getting ding, ding, ding, ding! You’re listening to the talking alternate network, waiting to get you thinking. Nothing. Cubine are you suffering from aches and pains? Has traditional medicine let you down? Are you tired of taking toxic medications, then come to the double diamond wellness center and learn how our natural methods can help you to hell? Call us now at to one to seven to one eight, one eight three that’s to one to seven to one eight one eight three or find us on the web at www dot double diamond wellness dot com way look forward to serving you. Are you feeling overwhelmed in the current chaos of our changing times? A deeper understanding of authentic astrology can uncover solutions in every area of life. After all, metaphysics is just quantum physics, politically express hi and montgomery taylor and i offer lectures, seminars and private consultations. For more information, contact me at monte m o nt y at r l j media. Dot com you’re listening to talking alternative network at www dot talking alternative dot com, now broadcasting twenty four hours a day. Is your marriage in trouble? Are you considering divorce? Hello, i’m lawrence bloom, a family law attorney in new york and new jersey. No one is happier than the day their divorce is final. My firm can help you. We take the nasty out of the divorce process and make people happy. Police call a set to one, two, nine six four three five zero two for a free consultation. That’s lawrence h bloom two, one two, nine, six, four, three five zero two. We make people happy. Duitz bilich oppcoll i really need to take better care of myself. If only i had someone to help me with my lifestyle. I feel like giving up. Is this you mind over matter, health and fitness can help. If you’re expecting an epiphany, chances are it’s not happening. Mind over matter, health and fitness can help you get back on track or start a new life in fitness. Join joshua margolis, fitness expert two one two eight sixty five nine to nine xero or visit www. Died mind over matter. Y si dot com. Talking.

Fact & Commentary: Charitable IRA Rollover Extended, Part II

Crossword puzzle and pencil

Yesterday I explained the nuts-and-bolts of the extended Charitable IRA rollover. That was the facts: Fact & Commentary: Charitable IRA Rollover Extended, Part I. Today I’ll spend time on how to promote this and weave it into your other fundraising channels.

Today is . . .

The Commentary

Who Are The Prospects. You need prospects over 70. If they’re on your board, send an email blast with basic information and follow-up by phone. Make it a short agenda item in your next meeting to encourage participation. Ideally, a board member who made an IRA gift to you stands up in the meeting and encourages colleagues to do the same.

For non-board members, send an email blast if you have addresses. Then follow-up with paper mail. I’d wait until just after the new year. The odds of getting one of these closed before year-end are small. You’ve got enough going on in the next two weeks–don’t kill yourself by adding this. Besides, January gifts can be dated December 31.

On the other hand, if you’re actively talking to appropriately-aged prospects about their end of year giving, bring it up with them quickly.

After the new year, look to donors with multi-year pledges. This might be a way of accelerating payment in 2011. January gifts can be dated December 31, up to $100,000. An additional 2011 gift can be made up to the same amount, so that one donor can rollover $200,000 to you in 2011 (half dated 12/31/10 and the rest dated in 2011). If your donor has a spouse, together they can rollover $400,000 next year, if they start in January.

Finally, look to other IRA gift prospects. Don’t dismiss those not at the two- to four-hundred thousand dollar level. In 2007 we had a college client achieve nearly 20 gifts in four and low five-figure amounts. Wisely, they welcomed each to their planned gift recognition society.

How To Promote. Use all your communications channels. I single out for mention, sidebars in materials that go to wide audiences. You probably don’t want to devote full blown article space to this if only a small percentage of your constituents are the right age. In your sidebar, include your legal name and federal tax ID number so prospects can convert themselves to donors without having to talk to you, but provide contact information so they can talk if they’d like to.

Can you afford printed direct mail? Do it. Those over 70 still respond to the written personal letter.

Do you talk to your elder constituents on Facebook? I covered this in my NextGen:Charity workshop, Planned Giving & Social Media. Their video isn’t up yet, but my slides are: Planned Giving & Social Media. The FB penetration rate among those 60 and over is growing steadily, but is still less than half. If you’ve engaged your elder prospects on social media properties, this is an ideal topic because it’s strictly age related. I think this is a considerable growth area for Planned Giving.

Integrate With Annual Appeal. If you send annual appeals, next year include a one-third-of-a-page buckslip with information about making the annual gift through an IRA. Include your legal name and tax ID number, and a contact name and number. Maybe a tease printed on the carrier envelope flap?

Integrate With All Giving. In whatever way you define your fundraising team members, get them all comfortable opening the door to a conversation about IRA giving. It should be standard protocol when they’re talking to prospects over 70. Many, many unassuming “middle income millionaires” are among us. They had careers as teachers, postal workers and nurses, and in their working years they put a lot of money into retirement accounts. Raise IRA giving with them over lunch in their kitchen, in seminars and on the phone.

Take the opportunity to expand the conversation. Talk about naming your nonprofit as a beneficiary of an IRA. I explained this in a 2006 newsletter when the Pension Protection Act first approved qualified charitable distributions. In this newsletter, scroll down to the “Planned Giving” heading.

Not Necessarily A Wash. Here’s something that may come up while you’re talking about this in 2011. I have been asked many times in meetings and seminars, and occasional prospects will raise as an objection to your solicitation, “Isn’t doing a charitable IRA rollover the same as making an IRA withdrawal, paying the additional income tax, making a gift, and claiming the charitable deduction? Doesn’t the deduction offset the tax, making it a (tax neutral) wash?”

Not necessarily, for four reasons.

      1. Non-itemizers. Those who don’t file Form 1040 can’t claim the charitable deduction. They accept the standard deduction.

      2. State of residence. Some states (including New York) don’t allow charitable deductions from income. The deduction’s value would be lost for state income tax purposes.

      3. Income level. The addition to income might kick the non-IRA donor into a higher marginal tax bracket, while reduced taxable income might putt the IRA donor into a lower tax rate. Wouldn’t you rather be putted than kicked? Also, there are deductions, like medical expenses, tied to taxable income. The IRA donor–with lower taxable income–will be more likely to benefit from these.

      4. 50% cash donation limitation. Charitable deductions for gifts of cash are limited to 50% of adjusted gross income. The non-IRA donor might be up against this limit, and have to carry the deduction forward into future years. The IRA donor doesn’t worry about it.

Talk about IRA giving with your constituents who are the right age. Engage your prospects where they are hanging out: board meetings; on phone calls; reading mail at home; or on Facebook.

I’m interested to hear how your IRA giving is going in 2011. Keep in touch.

Fact & Commentary: Charitable IRA Rollover Extended, Part I

Deductions, Taxes and Tax Day

The Facts:

Your 2010 end-of-year giving season can include January 2011.

The Tax Relief Act signed by President Obama last Friday includes the long-awaited IRA charitable rollover. It allows donors over seventy-and-a-half to make a gift directly to your charity from their traditional or Roth IRA. January gifts can be claimed this year.

Please recognize that my analysis is based on my reading of the Joint Committee on Taxation Technical Explanation, without the benefit of IRS rulings, tax court decisions or other official guidance that has yet to come. I am not providing tax, accounting or legal advice. Donors must consult their own advisors to determine whether, and how, to make a charitable gift.

Old Law-Giving from IRAs. A charitable gift that originated from your donors’ Individual Retirement Accounts had to be treated as any other IRA distribution. Your donors reported the distribution as income, presumably in the same year they would claim their charitable deduction for gifts to your charity. Thus, your donors had to pay additional income tax and the distribution benefiting your nonprofit could have put them in a higher marginal tax bracket. Many of us know from personal experience that the tax payment on the additional income deterred most donors from giving from often over-funded IRAs.

That was the state of the law before August 2006, when the Pension Protection Act created the “qualified charitable distribution.” PPA, via extensions, continued through 2009. All this year, we’ve been under pre-PPA law, waiting impatiently for new law. Enter the Tax Relief Act of 2010, to revive direct IRA giving.

New Law-Giving from IRAs. The Act permits charitable gifts that originate from an IRA, without your donors having to report their IRA distributions as income. (These really are “distributions,” not rollovers. I’m using the vernacular for its recognition, but it’s not technically correct.) Here are the requirements for a qualified charitable distribution under the just-signed Act:

    1. 1. Your donor is at least 70 1/2 years old on the date of gift
      2. The IRA is a traditional or Roth
      3. Maximum $100,000 per donor per tax year, aggregated across all qualified distributions
      4. The IRA custodian makes a distribution directly to your charity
      5. The full value of the gift would be eligible for an income tax charitable deduction if it were not a qualified charitable distribution
      6. The dollars transferred would be includible in gross income if they were not within a qualified charitable distribution

Important Notes. Recognizing that 2010 has all but departed, the Act allows gifts in January 2011 to be reported by donors as if made on December 31, 2010. Your end-of-year giving from those 71 and over (let’s talk about age like people, not tax code) gets a one-month extension, if you have the consent of your gift processing office, CFO, auditors and gift crediting policy.

Your donors will find this significant. Amounts rolled over count against their annual required minimum distribution, and many elders are required to distribute to themselves (withdraw) more than they need. This isn’t as prevalent as it was in 2006 and 2007, because IRA balances used to calculate the minimum distributions are smaller than they were then, but overfunded IRAs still exist. After age 70 (OK, at 70 1/2) there’s a penalty for not withdrawing at least the required minimum, but your donors can work-off some of their required minimum distribution for 2010–in 2011– without increasing their 2010 gross income. Then they can do the same for 2011, in January, or anytime during the year. Only January qualified charitable distributions can count for 2010 or 2011, at your donors’ discretion.

(Interesting question: what if your donor is 70 1/2 when they make their January distribution, but wasn’t 70 1/2 on December 31? We’ll have to wait for guidance, or maybe we can presume IRS’s posture based on similar situations elsewhere. I’d say date of gift (12/31/10) controls, but that’s merely an early, and conservative, answer. Have an insight?)

January 2011 distributions that are claimed in 2010 also won’t impinge next year’s limit of $100,000. They’ll count toward this year’s maximum.

Fast-acting donors might prefer to rollover before December 31. I’m not fully confident that IRA custodians can accommodate that.

All charitable rollovers must be completed before January 1, 2012.

While traditional and Roth IRAs are eligible (and SIMPLE and SEP IRAs are not), the most likely gifts will come from traditional accounts. That’s because of number 6 above. Traditional IRAs are much more likely to be funded with dollars that would be included in gross income if not for the rollover, because those accounts are where contributions that are deducted from income (deductible) are made while working. Although Roth accounts cannot accept deductible contributions, there are true rollover scenarios where deductible dollars end up there. So, while it’s possible for Roth IRAs to hold dollars otherwise taxable on withdrawal, it’s not likely.

You may find it helpful to remember this generalization:

  • Traditional: Deductible from income on the way in, taxable on the way out.
  • Roth: Not deductible from income on the way in, not taxable on the way out.

The $100,000 annual maximum is per donor (IRA owner), not per retirement account.

Regarding number 4, while we were under the Pension Protection Act, the IRS explained in Notice 2007-7 that where a check payable to a nonprofit is delivered to the IRA owner by the account custodian, and the IRA owner delivers the check to the charity, the Service will consider that a direct distribution. I see no reason why that would not still apply.

Note also that distributions to supporting organizations and donor advised funds are not eligible.

Lastly, number 5 is significant. Qualified distributions are not charitable deductions from income. Instead, the tax advantage to donors is exclusion from gross income. Yet the gift amount must be such that it would be 100% deductible if it were not a charitable rollover, ignoring the 50% and 30% deduction limitations, and any income limitation that may apply.

That means your donors can’t use the charitable rollover to buy a table at your gala; or tickets to your sporting events; or pay for auction items. None of these gifts is 100% deductible. The deduction for each is reduced by the value received in exchange for the gift.

This requirement also disallows charitable gift annuities, remainder trusts and lead trusts. Neither earns donors a full face value charitable income tax deduction. (Their deductions are based on the present value of: what’s estimated to remain; estimated charitable remainder; and anticipated stream of charitable lead payments, respectively.)

The Commentary:

That’s Part II, tomorrow, when I’ll explain who’s a good prospect for an IRA rollover gift; give suggestions for promoting this to prospects (don’t forget your board–and Facebook); integrating this planned gift with your other fundraising channels; and why it’s not a tax “wash” when comparing this with an IRA withdrawal, then paying additional income tax, making a gift and claiming a charitable deduction. This might come up in your conversations with prospects and I can prepare you to answer that question (objection?) as you encourage rollover gifts in the coming months.

Check back tomorrow.

Nonprofit Radio for Dec. 3, 2010: How To Cripple Your Career & Tax Policy

Big Nonprofit Ideas for the Other 95%

Compliance. Board relations. Fundraising. Technology. Volunteer management. Accounting. Finance. Marketing. Social media. Investments.

Every nonprofit faces these issues and big nonprofits have experts in each. Small and medium size nonprofits have Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio. Trusted experts throughout the country join Tony to take on the tough issues facing your organization.

Episode 18 of Tony Martignetti Nonprofit Radio for December 3, 2010

Tony’s Guests:

Robert Sharpe – Robert Sharpe, Jr. is president of The Sharpe Group. He has over 25 years of nonprofit fund development and consulting experience. He has helped hundreds of leading nonprofit organizations and institutions plan, develop, and implement successful major gift planning and endowment development efforts.

Topic: How To Cripple Your Career In 5 Easy Steps.  You’ll learn how Planned Giving fundraisers can shoot their careers in the foot. My interview with Robert from the National Conference on Philanthropic Planning continues with part 2.

Emily Lam & Perry Wasserman – Emily has worked in the Office of Tax Policy at the Treasury Department. Now she is with a prestigious D.C. law firm. Perry is a lobbyist who works exclusively with nonprofits.

Topic: “Tax Policy & The Future Of Philanthropic Planning.  These two also joined me at NCPP to talk about what a new Congress might hold for nonprofits. This was recorded before November’s election, but we were pretty certain the election would turn out as it did.

Here is the link to the podcast: 020: Career Killers and Legislative Update

When and where: Talking Alternative Radio, Friday, 1-2pm Eastern.

You can subscribe on iTunes and listen anytime, anyplace on the device of your choosing.

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Dahna welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent on your aptly named host tony martignetti last show, which was two weeks ago, and i hope you had a good thanksgiving last week we had bountiful bequests. My guest was susan dame green, and you’ll recall that we talked about why you should start a plan giving program with requests and how to do it. And when i was also joined by shevawn weber, we talked about thrift shops, ops, how your non-profit i should, how to get into the thrift shop business and whether it’s right for your non-profit this week, how to kill your career in five easy steps part to the second half of my interview with robert sharp from the national conference on philanthropic planning and the interview that i did at that same conference with emily lamb and perry wasserman, the subject tax policy and the future of philanthropic planning. Emily is a washington, d c attorney for non-profits, and she used to work with the treasury department in the internal revenue section, and perry wasserman is a lobbyist for non-profits and the three of us will be talking. About what’s likely to happen legislatively in washington and how that affects your organization’s bottom line. That’s this week on talking on tony martignetti non-profit radio. We’re going to take a break and after the break, how to kill your career in five easy steps. Stay with me. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Are you feeling overwhelmed in the current chaos of our changing times? A deeper understanding of authentic astrology can uncover solutions in every area of life. After all, metaphysics is just quantum physics. Politically expressed buy-in, montgomery, taylor and i offer lectures, seminars and private consultations. For more information, contact me at monte m o nt y at r l j media. Dot com i really need to take better care of myself. If only i had someone to help me with my lifestyle. I feel like giving up. Is this you mind over matter, health and fitness can help. If you’re expecting an epiphany, chances are it’s not happening. Mind over matter, health and fitness could help you get back on track or start a new life and fitness. Join Joshua margolis, fitness expert at 2 one two eight six five nine two nine. Zero or visit w w w died. Mind over matter. Y si dot com. Cerini buy-in is your marriage in trouble? Are you considering divorce? Hello, i’m lawrence bloom, a family law attorney in new york and new jersey. No one is happier than the day their divorce is final. My firm can help you. We take the nasty out of the divorce process and make people happy. Police call a set to one, two, nine six four three five zero two for a free consultation. That’s lawrence h bloom at two one two nine six four three five zero two. We make people happy. Hyre talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. Welcome back to tony martignetti non-profit radio. I’m away this week, but we’re having interviews that i did earlier at the national conference for not for philanthropic planning, and the first of those is going to start very shortly right now. And that is how to kill your career in five easy steps with robert sharpe. What do you say? The board members who say, well, all right, that’s, a fine example thie and antillean and her niece. But where we’re a business were incorporated is a nonprofit corporation where we’re trying to run a business here, and we need to know what we can expect when someone says you’re in my will. Okay, then i’ll give you five names and you call him up, and then you come back and teach me how to do it. Yeah, you make five of those calls and see what you encounter and then come back and tell me to do it. You can’t say that that’s, that’s altum elearning cripple your career that will you? That’s an execution. But no, the point is you, you, you that’s where oftentimes you can bring in, you know not to be in any way self serving for what we do or what you do, tony. But you can get outside people to come in sometimes and make those points right a cz part of a known as part of an overall, you know, it’s part of talking to a board or a management group about, quote, plan giving this is a point that can be made. And you know what most people who reasonable once you personalize it and they use an example like until they get it because they wouldn’t call their own parents up and ask him that question it’s personal stuff and most of the bequest of residual ery bequest anyway, and they have no idea. And by jargon jacket i yes, residual request that relates to what we’re talking about foreign, that you’ve got three, basically, three kinds of requests that people can leave you. They can leave you a request of a specific amount, which tend to be small because if people have to guess at what they can afford to leave you it’s going to be on the low end or they can leave you a percentage of the estate, or they can some combinations of these. Or they can leave you what’s called the residue that most most charitable bequests come from residual ery estates from very wealthy people who have enough money to take care of their family. Pay the tax on that money, and then have some leftover or people that have no children, and they and their close to their nieces and nephews, and but they don’t want they’ve been involved with certain charities all their lives, and it’s really part of their family. That’s why saying, when people put you in the will their elevated to the status of a family member, and that’s what you should and from their perspective you are you are there somebody spends somebody’s eighty years old. And they spent fifty, sixty years acquiring what they have for them to choose your organization to be one of the places that they trust with their lifetime accumulation of assets. That is a very important thing. And it’s not a business transaction, right? That’s especially, is a family it’s a personal transaction? A residual. Ery bequest is where they leave one hundred thousand dollars each to three nieces and nephews, and all the rest and residue split between four five it’s normally six point eight charities in the will it’s, not just one charity it’s, the six that make the cut and what you’re really doing in the bottom line here is looking for market share among a relatively small number of people, the needle’s in your haystack, and you don’t know who they are, so you have to shake the haystack would put a magnet there, pull them out and you don’t have to go burn the haystack down and then find the needles that are left and there can be a lot of money in those residual area states, though, is the largest one, just just because it’s called residue thats the big ones that they’re five to six x times the size of the average specific request is probably ten to twenty five thousand dollars jump in if you disagree, tony, i mean that, you know, they’re the ones you see there are specific amounts they rarely over fifty thousand dollars, whereas the residual really quote something well hyre like twenty. Eight to thirty years somewhere in there i mean, the comedians about ten, if you look in an organization that has, like, fifteen hundred states a year, get one hundred million dollars, a lot of those estates or small, specific bequests, half of them are western. Fifteen thousand dollars, you know, listening. But one hundred fifty to two hundred thousand is not unusual for a residual request. Our guest is robert sharp, and you’re listening to the chronicle of philanthropy and tony martignetti non-profit radio coverage of the national conference on philanthropic planning robert’s kind enough to join us before doing his seminar at the conference, which is how to cripple your career in five easy steps, and we’re not gonna be able to get to all five of the steps. But let’s, talk about something that you did allude to earlier, which is working with other fundraisers. You said that there’s annual giving and this major giving this corporate in foundation giving and and often we see these operating in self contained silos that don’t seem to have a phone line to the others. What about what about working with integrating with other other fundraisers in your organization? Well, this is this is an example of where, ironically, the smaller charity is in this environment, they have advantages with the fewer fewer people on staff when you’re dealing with wealthy donors, when you’re dealing with people that major gifts or for plan gives proximity, those people and being able to manage the relationships are very, very important hyre now the big shops that have three hundred, people in them and they’ve got annual funds and they’ve got real estate departments, and they’ve got all these various things. They have advantages from a technical standpoint, but that’s not that’s a disadvantage when it comes to managing the relationship because a donor at a big university with three hundred people on staff, someone sends a card and ask him for information dahna state it could take two or three weeks to figure out. You know what your what? Your vector victor. You know, who’s got the goods you should answer what’s your clearance clearance, clarence, you know what? Do you know who can, who has clearance to talk? This donor is the small shop with the director development. One person they can get on the subway or a bus or in. The car we’re on a plane and b to c that donor within twenty four hours and or even just pick up the phone and not and not think of the concern that they’ve stepped on a board members toes or there are some some person that those of somebody they’d never met, right? So, you know, they can do what i call them, mohammed, all these school of fund-raising they could float like a butterfly and sting like a bee, but let’s, get to the shops that have more complexity where you do have to integrate sometimes, if you’re dealing with, like a smaller organization with a lot of may, a lot of big donors of all ages, they then your problem is integrating with with with major gifts. But if you’re dealing with a large organization has a big direct mail or annual fund or whatever you’re talking about integrating with that function in a lot of places, you have to do both the main point. I’m going to make it my session is that i’m going to show this with a lot of charts and graphs and whatever is that? Well, let me let me buckslip go. Backto little prior think the average age one major national health organization that gets one hundred million dollars a year, or maurin, request the average age of their donors when they make the first gift to that organization is seventy six years old? I worked with universities with thirty forty million dollars worth of the question come and you go look at the annual fund history and in minutes, not the average age at the first gift to the annual fund will be in the fifty’s half of the median will be in the fifties. A lot of these people it’s a short cycle from first gift, like the one i mentioned is seventy six it’s average twelve years from first gift until death, so during that twelve years they start out is like direct male donors, and then they stick on the file and then maybe there’s a capital campaign going on. But you’ve got to keep the eye on the ball and make sure that as donors are reach in the end of their natural life cycle, you began to turn down the asks for current money. I’ve never seen an eighty five year old who was giving fifteen dollars upgrade her e-giving so quit senator stuff about thanks for fifteen bucks, can you send me more? She may have turned her thermostat down to be able to afford to send you fifteen dollars. You’re turning her off? Why not pick up the phone and call her? And same is this zone? So we realised now that you’ve made over fifty gifts or you’ve given over a thousand dollars and thank you so much, we know in times like these, people are making sacrifices, recognizing the cumulative militant and longevity and then turning down the volume for gifts that are more appropriate younger and when they go through that match your match by integrating we mean t make sure that the donor is seeing different faces of your fundraising efforts, depending on where they are in their life cycle and every donor as a certain age and every donors a certain wealth. So depending on where they are wealth wise and age wise, you want to integrate sometimes when they’re young right out of college it’s just annual funds, but if they’re in eighty five year old and dwindling in their current giving, most of it may be talking to them about ways they can leave a legacy who are the typical planned gift donors we’ve we’ve talked around this little fun playing let’s go right, well, ok, who’s, the typical trust donorsearch no, now let’s not be that technical who’s most likely to include the organization in their will. Now, do you want to raise money in the next funny in fifty years when i want the money to come in? I wanted this to be long term fund-raising so maybe fifty years, but thirty years, so you’re bored wants to spend money now to generate money in thirty years? Yes, they’re willing to do that. Okay, well, then, you’re probably not you’re not going to be influencing much of that because most of the people that leave money to charities, they’re maximum e-giving cycle was like fifteen to eighteen years, and they died age eighty seven on average. So most of the people that make the end up leaving the bequest ultimately our people outside hyre education and religion, they tend to be people that are required relatively late in life. There you’re longer term flag your files, frequency, longevity, age and gender. You lou, look. For people who’ve given frequently over a long period of time who are going to die in the next ten to fifteen to twenty years? And keep in mind that a sixty five year old couple has about a twenty eight year life expectancy. So really, you’re talking about people that are pretty much over the age of sixty five forty five year olds are going toe fifty years, maybe look at the life story s o i don’t paint if you find a forty five year old it’s got you in there, will you probably have a budding major gift prospect because somebody that has the dough native intent to put you in there, will it fifty years old? Think about what it takes to elevate a person or even think about doing that. So the people it’s not how much they’re giving you it’s how many times that when the attorney says you any charitable interests you want to fire off in their brain and the more likely the more times they’ve written you checks in the more times they’ve made the decision to give, the more likely it is you’re going to be one of the six. Point eight. Charities that are included in their will e-giving anything tooting, getting thinking. You’re listening to the talking alternate network. Get in. Duitz e-giving you could are you suffering from aches and pains? Has traditional medicine let you down? Are you tired of taking toxic medications, then come to the double diamond wellness center and learn how our natural methods can help you to hell? Call us now at to one to seven to one eight, one eight three that’s to one to seven to one eight one eight three or find us on the web at www dot double diamond wellness dot com way look forward to serving you. Do you want to enhance your company’s web presence with an eye catching and unique website design? Would you like to incorporate professional video marketing mobile marketing into your organization’s marketing campaign? Monisha wanna one media offers a unique marketing experience that will set you apart from your competitors, magnify your brand exposure and enhance your current marketing effort. Their services include video production and editing, web design, graphic design photography, social media management and now introducing mobile marketing. Their motto is we do whatever it takes to make our clients happy. Contact them today. Admission one one media dot com hey, all you crazy listeners looking to boost your business, why not advertise on talking alternative with very reasonable rates? Interested simply email at info at talking alternative dot com welcome back to tony martignetti non-profit radio were listening to my interview with robert sharp on i was also joined by raymond flandez of the chronicle of philanthropy, and the subject was how to kill your career in five easy steps from the national conference on philanthropic planning in october of this year. Here’s the rest of that interview and also shouldn’t you be encouraging these gifts by will. With some regularity and frequency, so yes, that you will be top of mind when when they do go visit there, get that gets to that gets to step five to cripple your career is to ignore the economics. If you have limited resources, you need to spend them in ways that are going to produce the most return. Then when you start getting money in, then you can expand your efforts and do things that are a little longer term, our lord, our lower probability, the money that you, what you want to do is ok, let’s say you’ve got one hundred thousand donors are fifty thousand ten thousand and you’ve got enough resource is to handle twenty, five hundred. You can re sources that you could market request, for example, to your entire donorsearch base once a year, or you could go three times a year to the three thousand people that are over the age of to the to the small number who were in the right age and the longevity range. You’re better off to go four times a year, whether it’s, male or whatever you’re doing focusedbuyer money on frequency of contact with a smaller group of people rather than hitting your entire file once a year because different people are having different events in their lives and there’s this continuity is important. The more things they read about somebody who’s done this especially if you’re not a natural bequest recipient, a college or certain other types of organizations. Wilmore naturally come into someone’s mind than a very niche organization. Let’s say you’re an avid stamp collector, and when the attorney says, are you? Ah, do you have any charitable interest, your college or your religious affiliation or whatever may come more naturally top of mine to get for the american stamp collection foundation that raises money to to fund research and conferences and whatever on stamp collecting, there are people that will put that stamp collecting organization there will, but they’ve got to go out and communicate that idea more often and frequently so. When the attorney says it, you make it into the same slot because they made care more about stamp collecting, then they do their college in the final analysis, rehman’s continue to tie that in with the failure of marketing i think that’s that’s really this marketing marketing, right, miss? Marketing and failure to allocate your marketing resources correctly is another way to fail in this environment, there are people out there that are saying ignore people over the age of seventy because they’ve already made up their minds that and spend your time and effort on younger people. Frankly, that’s, because it’s easier to get a younger person to request a free will planning guide from any blast. And it is a seventy eight year old whose fingers don’t work well enough to work the keys on their computer. And so the fact the matter is they also based on surveys where they go out on the call a bunch of people and say, well, would you consider putting this charity in your will? Yes, i would that’s like when did you stop beating your wife? You know, so a forty five year old is more likely to say they would consider it yeah, way are starting to see more, more suggestions that people thirty five and forty should be should be encouraged include the organization there were wonderful, but you’re going to get money in seventy years and so and how likely is it that is going to? Change the aren’t the person’s philanthropic interests goingto charity priority’s gonna change up from thirty toa seventy eight. I have worked with clients, for example, a sponsorship organization where they have a lot of young donors in their twenties and thirties who give to this organization before they get married and before they have children, hundreds of thousands of them. But then they get married in their twenties and thirties. They have children. They start paying tuitions there, paying for houses in mortgages. All of sudden the discretionary income to spend thirty bucks a month for a sponsorship goes away and they disappear off the radar screen and maybe never come back. There’s, another group of people that it’s sixty to sixty three. When they’re empty nesters they start, they get acquired at that point, and then they start. They start giving at that point so it’s more the later acquired donors who are the ones that tend to actually do it. And that’s true with education, too, in many cases. Let’s see if we can maybe just approach one more. Well, you know what, before we do that you had a request marketing advice for organisations that have maybe ten or even fifty thousand suppose an organization just so now we are giving a deviating a little from career, but but we’re talking about marketing and organization that has maybe just a thousand donors and let’s say that they’re normally normally distributed across age, so a certain percentage of them are over sixty, sixty five, right? What can they do? Tow, promote request just a simple bequest. E-giving well, that organization is likely not tohave i’m a dedicated specialist argast certainly probono no, no way, unless it’s a thousand million dollar donors. Okay, now i’m not gonna happen, okay? So so what you’re trying to do there is educate those people on what i would do in that case is i would be incorporating messages about remember the organization in your will on stationery, on everywhere you can on every solicitation include something about remember the organisation that will or i have already included it would consider including don’t depending on good news is it doesn’t draco’s bad way that goes back to raymond’s question earlier what’s what’s the appropriate way to be asking depends what does depends certain certainly to some extent on on the age of those people. But the good news about having a thousand donors is it doesn’t cost very much money to be exposing the concept to everybody. So occasionally, you know, once or twice a year, you might want to send out something that’s ah, letter from somebody on your board that’s got you in the will and have include some information on the importance of keeping your plans up to date in case you’re terrible interest changed. So the that the good the good thing about being small is that you can if you can afford to go to everybody. But if you have five hundred thousand donors or five million or whatever the larger the organization is and the and the more precious the resources are, you have to do all kinds of things. Then you have to spend more time focusing in on the exact organization i have a question with what if a donor says no he’s, no. Here she has been contributing and giving gifts the organization but but then it’s, like i’m not able to. I don’t want teo are how what’s the next step. Where? Charity there. Well, i would say never say never because people’s someone who is someone who is seventy eight year old and has a sick spouse, i’m thinking of a particular situation where a person had asked about had sent information saying, i’m interested in maybe including this organization, my will, one of the people, but that this conference was telling me that she called this man about eighty years old and, you know, said, you entered you indicated interest in this, and i was just i was in orlando, and i thought i’d come by and say hello. He said, no, don’t bother, you know, i’ve just right now i can’t think about this. My wife is sick, i’m tired. I don’t feel like talking to anybody right now, okay? Let’s say, three years from now, he’s, eighty one years old, his wife dies a year from now and now, it’s, two years from now and he’s gone through his grieving mourning period and whatever and now he gets something else from you. He may then change his mind so events and people’s lives are changing all the time there and that’s. Another reason to be consistently focusing the message on the right group of people because things are changing their lives and things do happen, they do, they do lose a spouse, they do have children that has special needs or grandchildren are all sorts of things happen. So all you’re doing when you’re talking to a person at any point in time, their lives or movies, you’re just taking a snapshot of that moment. And at that moment, the picture may not include a bequest for you, but that can change over time as things happen in their in their lives, same token, somebody can say yes, you’re in my will and then take you out because something happens, they get an illness so they waste a lot of money on something or lose the money and they don’t have the resources that they have, and then they go their lawyer and the lawyer says, have your charitable interest change? Well, you know, since i lost all my money to main off, i just can’t i can’t do this anymore, so it works both ways. Some people that say no now will be yes later and some people that are telling you now on ly about seventy percent of request commitments come through in the end because things change and a lot of those commitments when they say you’re in the will remember their contention on one spouse pre decease in the other. And if the spouses die in the wrong order that you may not get the quote unquote wrong you may get you may not get a request, but they didn’t lie to you. Circumstances changed, but i’ll tell you this. The younger people are when they tell you, when people tell you that you’re in their will and they tell you when they’re under sixty years old, there’s only about a fifty fifty chance you’ll ever get to request. And i know that because i’ve studied thousands of the states where the people notified in advance and we look at the age of the people when they notified him. Then after they die, you look at the probability that they got the request and the older they are. When they tell you, the more likely they are to come through because there’s fewer life circumstances to change their minds that we have to leave it. There were no thank robert sharp very much for your advice. Think. Well, you’re welcome, tony and good luck, raymond. Thank you, too. This is the chronicle of philanthropy and tony martignetti non-profit radio coverage of the national conference on philanthropic planning. Coming from lake buena vista, florida, our guest has been robert sharpe, and our coverage will continue with future interviews later later, just just later today. Thank you very much for joining us, robert and agreement. That was my interview with robert sharpe. How to kill your career in five easy steps, and i was joined by raymond flandez of the chronicle of philanthropy after this break, tax policy and the future of philanthropic planning. Another not national conference on philanthropic planning interview. Stay with us. You’re listening to the talking alternative network. Are you stuck in your business or career trying to take your business to the next level, and it keeps hitting a wall? This is sam liebowitz, the conscious consultant. I will help you get to the root cause of your abundance issues and help move you forward in your life. Call me now and let’s. Create the future you dream of. Two, one, two, seven, two, one, eight, one, eight, three, that’s to one to seven to one, eight one eight three. The conscious consultant helping conscious people. Be better business people. And i really need to take better care of myself. If only i had someone to help me with my lifestyle. I feel like giving up. 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Contact them today. Admission one one media dot com. Talking. Welcome back to tony martignetti non-profit radio big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. I have another interview for you. This is emily lamb and perry wasserman. Emily is a washington, d c attorney for non-profits perry is a lobbyist for non-profits, and we were talking about what’s likely to happen legislatively in washington and how that affects your bottom line from october of this year. Here’s that interview welcome to tony martignetti non-profit radio and the chronicle of philanthropy coverage of the national conference on philanthropic planning. We are outside orlando, florida, in lake buena vista, florida, for the national conference hosted by the bye ppp. The partnership for philanthropic planning and our guests today are emily lamb and perry wasserman there seminar is titled tax policy and the future of philanthropic planning, and i’m very glad that their practices bring them to our coverage of the conference, both of you, thanks very much for joining us. Thank you, thanks for having us. Emily lamb is a council at skadden arps slate meager in flom in the washington, d c office, and she advises non-profits on diverse tax issues, including tax controversy and tax accounting lots of tax. Excellent, and she is a frequent speaker and panelist, and her co presenter at the conference is perry wasserman and he’s, the managing director of five o one c three strategies, which is a washington, d c based lobbying firm. Working exclusively with non-profits perry is the chief lobbyist for ppp. The partnership for films, traffic planning again welcome, your your seminar is tax policy. See the future of philanthropic planning? What is happening in tax policy? The start just generally that is going to impact philanthropic planning. And let me just remind the audience we are recording before november third. November third is obviously a critical day, and we’re in late mid october right now. So let’s bear in mind that emily and perry are doing the best that they can tell us what the future looks like, but it could change after november third. So what’s happening generally apparent. Certainly. Well, you know, the better question tony might be what has not happened this past session? It’s congress, particularly the senate has been ah, overwhelmingly slow. Some might say negligent on tax issues so we haven’t seen ah lot happen. Obviously, congress is in recess right now. We’re about twenty days out into ah to the midterm elections, and when they come back, the next thing is they’ll come back on november fifteenth. We believe, for a lame duck session, they have a number of issues, they have to confront the three big tax issues as they may relate to non-profits would be certainly the estate tax, which we’ve been hearing a lot about this conference already, it would be the extension of the so called bush tax cuts, these two thousand one, two thousand three tax cuts for individuals, and it would also be this big package of extenders, which includes a host of provisions, including the ira charitable roll, over which a lot of non-profits have been have been watching. So, you know, in the in the short term congress is going to have to address those issues, they may choose to address him in the lame duck session, which starts in you know, we’ll go for about a week after the election and before thanksgiving, and then i’ll come back in december, perhaps they made aside just a punt those issues to the new congress in twenty eleven in january. S o we’re not really sure at this point, but that’s kind of the state of play, you know, as we’re talking, emily slow and negligent on taxes, this our congress, you agree? I probably shouldn’t speak to that, because during the last three years, i’ve actually been at the department of treasury in the office of tax policy. So i think my remarks here should be limited and not reflect that type of knowledge from my government service. I think it would certainly be fair to say that there were a number of very large matters on the congressional plate, obviously health care reform being one of them, which does have some significant impact for the nonprofit sector. Notably there was legislation enacted that impacts the responsibilities of charitable hospitals um, and obviously healthcare and the extremely large bill, there are a number of new non-profit type entities that are contemplated in that legislation, it’ll be interesting to see how that plays out. Certainly, i think there’s there’s the facts speak for themselves, you know, estate tax was not an issue that was taken up extenders, you know, were introduced but have not been enacted, mom and certainly no one can just see. From the political landscape that it has been difficult to get many different things accomplished. What about health care reform? Emily for non-profit healthcare organizations and this is, i think, tumultuous mai mai mai aptly stated, you can you could describe it differently, but for your non-profit clients that are hospitals, how did they get their arms around this enormous legislative change? Well, the changes certainly for hospitals are significant, as you mentioned, certainly my experience recently on the regulatory side, the irs and treasury are in the process of getting guidance out on those particular hospital provisioned i’m referring specifically to five o one r, which has a number of new requirements for hospitals to keep their exemption, and the government issued a notice requesting comments earlier this year. My understanding is that they have received numerous comments, they’re certainly working diligently to try to get guidance out there so folks will understand, you know how best to comply and when you refer to five o one are just give us the full name of the act that we’re talking about. Oh, i apologised five, five, one ours the new section of the internal revenue code. Okay, that was added in the health care isolation, okay, and can you can you give us one or two of the items that are significant there in five? Oh, one are that are going to impact healthcare non-profits sure there are requirements now that for the hospitals to keep their exempt status, they need to have in place at certain times of policies, for example, of financial, a written financial assistance policy and that has to be widely publicized they need to have adopted and in place on emergency medical care policy. There are limitations on the type of charges that the hospital’s may impose on underserved or indigent type patients. There are requirements regarding analysis of community benefit type activities and charity care. Mom, and there is, in fact, a new excise tax that is imposed for a failure to conduct that particular analysis on the community benefit activities carry your are our lobbyist on the panel. What do you foresee any of this changing for? For health care, for non-profits it was an enormous change in health care law. Is there any likelihood of this being revised it all? Emily said a lot of comments have been received or what? Do you think the future of this particular the five o ones fiveone are is? Well, certainly from a kind of macro level we have republicans in the senate and the house candidates running right now on a platform of repealing all are, you know, some of the health care reform bill? I don’t really think that pertains to the five oh one r provisioned but ensure i do want to mention want her vision in the health care bill, which was kind of like a sleeper provisions that will actually affect every single non-profit and that was a ah revenue raising provisions. You know, this bill, it was important and actually required by law that it be offset that it be so called revenue neutral to the government in one way that congress decided to raise revenue and offset the cost of the bill. Was teo tweaker requirement that any entity, including non-profits, will now have to file ah, form ten, ninety nine with the irs for any payment they make to a vendor for six hundred dollars, or more a year? That includes one time payments and cumulative payments over six hundred dollars. Six l thought it would be the provision was said teo have raised or will raise nineteen billion dollars toe offset the cost of of health care reform, so that kind of gives you an idea of the administrative, the nightmare that a lot of you know, every entity but you know, we’re talking about non-profits might face, so there certainly has been a move the last couple months teo to repeal that provision of health care reform. It doesn’t certainly doesn’t go to the subject substantive issues of health care, but there has been a a move teo to repeal that provision they haven’t been able to do it yet, in part because they have to find another nineteen billion dollars if they get rid of that provision. So it’s something that the partnership for filling topic planning has certainly been watching because when those new rules go into effect, which it’s set for twenty twelve, if nothing changes it’s going to be a huge shift for aa lot of non-profits particularly the small and medium sized non-profits who may be a little less sophisticated on some of these issues, tio start to comply with so that’s one issue of the health care bill i think that’s going directly impact non-profits and depending on what happens with the election, you know, we’ll see if it if he gets repealed or not. Yeah, and you allude to something very important for our audience. I mean, the audience for the show. It is small and midsize non-profits. And just how do they get their mind around something this this enormous what’s the timeframe of the sort of the comment period and then the and then the reformulation period. If if there is that reformulation how’s that process where for this provision for this provision ableto make comments and just generally what’s the the time frame? Well, it would be it would have to be a legislative fix. I mean, they would have to be legislation that that that changes the law. Since the president, you know, signed the health care reform bill into law, there has been ah, a lot of movement in the senate in particular, through amendments trying teo drastically raise the six hundred dollar limit. So, i mean, at this point, it’s still in the legislative spirit, hasn’t gone over to the regulatory side of things. So i mean, all i could really say is you know, certainly we’ll have information on the ppp website. I know some other kind of national umbrella charities are following this, but, you know, i would encourage members to reach out tio they’re members of their members of congress are your listeners rather to reach out to their members of congress and let them know that they find this provision to be to be troubling? Because i think there’s definitely a a movement on capitol hill, a bipartisan movement to repeal this provision, but the problem is that i alluded to earlier in order to do that in order to comply with other laws that are on the books. Congress has to offset this change, so they’d have to come up with nineteen billion dollars somewhere and ah, and that’s kind of the name of the game in washington on dh, so i think that’s going to be the potential roadblocks. My guests are emily lamb and harry wasserman, you’re listening to tony martignetti non-profit radio and the chronicle of philanthropy coverage of the national conference on philanthropic planning. Emily and perry’s seminar at the conference is tax policy and the future of philanthropic planning emily can we switch to the estate tax obviously critical. Nobody really knows what’s happening. We just know that this year two thousand ten there is no estate tax. Enormous repercussions, i think for fund-raising non-profits what? What’s your advice going, toby or what? You’re not advice. What do your word’s going to be around this for the for your seminar audience wow, that that’s a tough one. Obviously think many of us who work in this space and who watch it are just continue to be surprised by where things stand today. And, you know, certainly for the first half of the year, i was still inside at the department of treasury, where my colleague cathy hughes has responsibility for st gift tax matters and she’s, my ex colleague now, obviously, but certainly want to put a pitch out there. Kathy is fantastic and really a wonderful resource to folks who may be interested in this area or have particular concerns. Obviously, from the seat that i was in, as perry alluded to earlier, you know, this has not reached the regulatory side yet. It za legislative matter-ness needs to enact the law that will be on the books or certainly if if nothing happens, the way it works now would be, we’d go back to the two thousand one status. Could you remind us of what that is essentially fifty five percent rates of the death tax? And i think one million dollar exclusion amounts and those air significantly, the tax rate is higher, the exclusion amount is significantly lower than it was in two thousand nine because extra, the legislation that enacted this kind of ten year look forward system had had a system of of great changes and exclusion amounts. I’m just stopping once, emily, on my show, we have george in jail, and i’m warning you, i’m the warden know you know you don’t contribute that would only only sent your fine no door locking it. Sometimes i have keys, i don’t wear remote, so i don’t have my keys. But just for our audio, what is what? Remind us what avectra was boy, i’m not even sure i know the what the two thousand one wall, this tent this ten year look forward that that emily was talking about. It was the legislation, and i have to say, and and we were talking a little bit. About this last night, i mean, in two thousand won when congress was debating this legislation and coming up with this compromise that it would go away in two thousand nine. But she back-up in two thousand and ten labbate nobody or i’m sorry go away in two thousand ten, and she back-up in in two thousand eleven. Nobody thought we’d be in this position where we’d be in october on congress, you know, would be campaigning right now, possibly coming back for a lame duck and nobody knows what’s gonna happen with the state tax. So it’s a precarious situation to be in. I don’t know how this is all going toe going to shake out the house has ah passed last year at the end of the year, i believe they passed essentially an extension of two thousand nine levels. Senator baucus who’s, chairman of the senate finance committee, has ah supported that in the senate. But there’s ah, a coalition of senators of both parties who want a ah ah, you know ah, a different version of the tax so on what the house did is unacceptable to them. So it’s kind of this game of political chicken, you know, unfortunately, a lot of people are caught up in the middle of it, and quite frankly, i don’t know how it’s going it’s going to shake out? We’ve heard some reports congressional staff certainly indicate that chairman baucus, when they come back for lame duck, has a package ready to go that deals primarily with the these two thousand won in two thousand three bush tax cuts, and certainly many expect that a state tax will be dropped in there, but but it’s tough, you have to count them numbers in the senate and it’s very likely that senator baucus will not have sixty votes, which is the magic number in the senate. Teo to move the legislation forward. So unfortunate for this one, i think we’re going to have to wait and see how everything shakes out. I’m with emily lamb and perry wasserman at the chronicle of philanthropy and tony martignetti non-profit radio coverage of the national conference on philanthropic planning in lake buena vista, florida. I’d like to talk about senator grassley on the senate finance committee. Very activist around non-profit issues which perry do you wantto? What are you going to start? Okay. Okay. And then, well, then we will turn family. Okay, well, yeah, i would just agree with your assessment. Ah, that now ranking member grassley has been very active ill non-profit issues, probably more so than any any chairman or ranking member of senate finance that we’ve ever seen. Ah, and i think the sector has i think it’s actually transformed the sector, perhaps in ways he didn’t envision a lot of what he was talking about was not legislated the, you know, regulatory actors didn’t end up dealing with it, but the sector itself, i think, has really stepped up. Oh, and dealt with a lot of what he was talking about. And ah, i would say, is perhaps it’s proof of that? And since the two thousand six pension protection act, which i talked about earlier, that had a lot of these reforms in it, i think it’s kind of income quiet on the reform friend, i don’t think i mean, other than health care, i don’t know if we’ve seen a whole lot of ah ah, hold out of reform. So i think that’s how that’s that’s kind of working i do want to note on again. We’ll have to see how everything shakes out after the election, but from all indications that i’m aware senator grassley will be stepping off the finance committee. There’s a very complicated system in place in the senate for committee membership in committee leadership positions, there’s rules on each side about which committees people can serve on in the time limit. So it looks like, ah, senator grassley will be going in a ranking member, chairman capacity to the judiciary committee. Senator hatch will take his place, so i think he’ll still be involved on the issues, but he’s certainly not gonna have that kind of perch that he that he once had. Emily, please, absolutely. I think i absolutely agree, perry, that we’ve seen a lot of activity from senator grassley. He’s had a number of staffers who have been very, very activist and interested in these issues, and i would agree that certainly there were a number of significant reforms enacted not just in the pension protection act in two thousand six, but in a piece of legislation in two thousand five, which imposed a new code, section forty nine sixty five, which are basically tax shelter penalties on exempt organizations that engage in tax shelter transactions on what we had seen through the early two thousand’s was what people refer to as the tech shelter wars, mostly on the taxable for-profit side. But, you know, iris went out there and there were a lot of tax payers engaged in abusive tax shelter transactions, and there was a great deal of activity on that front, i think ultimately it’s pretty clear that the government won those wars, but i think you also saw a little bit of a trend where sametz empt organizations were engaging in that type of activity. So one of those, maybe the abuses that people are most familiar with is the the donation of automobiles, bond, the deduction around those is that is that one of the things you’re referring to that is, i think, definitely a charitable abuse that is not a listed or reportable tech shelter transaction. Thanks. Pension protection might have dealt with the automobile. Yes, i know, but they’re about tax shelter. Yes, which is ah, sort of a very specific, you know, kind of structure transactions that would take advantage of the exempt organization or exempt entities exempt status to help evade taxes. Essentially, you saw that in, oh five, and then clearly the pension protection act in two thousand six, it had a number of reforms. In addition to the incentives, i think is perry really referred to really change the landscape for certain types of charitable giving vehicles, especially supporting organizations and donor advised funds. I think on the regulatory side, quite frankly, iris and treasury are still dealing with that. They’re still in the process of working through regulatory guidance to get that legislative package enacted. And where is that guidance, emily? When will it be ready? One can never predict, but but i know that the folks some of that guidance i worked on while i was in the government, and i know folks are continuing to work very hard on that. Obviously, with healthcare coming down the pike, that’s another thing that really divert a ton of iris resource is because a lot there pieces of healthcare that were effective immediately, including the provisions related to the hospitals. You know, a lot of it is deferred till twenty twelve, but it’s kind of a whole new infrastructure, both for the world outside land for the government to build in order to make that system run. But the last thing i would just notice, i do think that the interest by senator grassley in these areas, even where it did not lead to actual legislation, has kind of transformed the sector and been helpful. The thing i would point tio would be the college and university conversation where senator grassley, i think, was very vocal about why are these universities not spending more out of their endowments? You know, looking at some of the tuition rates and all that he had some round table meetings where a number of very prominent folks came to the table. There was a fairly uniform view expressed at the round table and about the conversation that, you know, one size doesn’t fit. All a mandatory distribution would not be helpful. I mean, we see ultimately, at least to date that that has not being part of any type of introduced legislation. But during that conversation, i think you saw some very large institutions, you know, voluntarily announced that they were going to change some of their policies in terms of endowment spending. Save you no tuition scholarships in that space. And i think that’s clearly got to be helpful, and since grassley has been such a mover in these areas, what do we expect? Can we predict what it looked like when senator hatch takes grassley’s place? Emily, can you can you comment on the replacement? A better insight? I would say obviously, senator baucus has also expressed interest, you know, he’s been with grassley throughout this process, i know he in particular is interested in rural type philanthropy, a zit impacts, you know, his home state, obviously and caucuses from which the montana thank you, of course, in terms of the of the hatch, you know, move over. I don’t know if you have thoughts, parent. Well, i i think you’re exactly right, emily. Senate finances is a unique committee on, particularly with senators baucus and grassley, they worked very close together, they usually least publicly we’re on the same page. So i think regardless of what happens with the election in which party takes control of the senate, i think we’re going to see senator baucus certainly continue with his interest in the sector on dh, maybe even pick up some of senator grassley’s interest it’s also important. To know kind of in the day to day workings of washington. Andi, you may have made this point earlier, emily, that a lot of the staffers may end up sticking around on dh they carry a lot of the load, so certainly they work at the pleasure of the chairman and the ranking member on day work under their direction, but geever even an expertise that we now have on senate finance dahna with the staffers and tax exempt issues, i think we might see them continue toe work on, you know, in the space, so to speak, in terms of senator hatch, i mean he’s certainly known as as a partisan, perhaps a little bit more so than grassley, we know that he is concerned, leased in the last few weeks, we know that he’s concerned with the political issues, particularly how they feel how they relate to see fours and see fives and see sixes that may be an issue that he actually disagrees with senator baucus on, but i don’t i don’t think he’ll deal with those issues to the exclusion of other non-profit issues, but i think we’re going to continue, you know? I don’t want to leave your listeners with this feeling that because senator grassley’s moving over to judiciary, suddenly the tax writing committees may not care about tax exempt organizations? I don’t, i don’t think that’s true, but certainly he had a unique approach to oversight hey used his perch in senate finance to conduct ah, very aggressive oversight of the sector. Ah, and i’m not sure if we’ll see that continue, but they’re still going to know we’re out there and you know what we’re up to, all right? We’re going to leave it there. My guests have been emily lamb and perry wasserman. Emily is counsel for skadden, arps, slate meager in flum in the washington, d c office and perry is managing director of five o one c three strategies washington d c based lobbyist firm they’re seminar at the conference is tax policy and the future of philanthropic planning. Your listening to tony martignetti non-profit radio and the chronicle of philanthropy coverage of the national conference on philanthropic planning. I want to thank both of you for taking time out to join us. You’re you’re terrific team together. Thank you, thank you, thank you very much. You’ve been drinking, ending the getting dink, dink, dink, dink. You’re listening to the talking alternate network, waiting to get you thinking. Cubine are you feeling overwhelmed in the current chaos of our changing times? A deeper understanding of authentic astrology can uncover solutions in every area of life. After all, metaphysics is just quantum physics, politically expressed hi and montgomery taylor and i offer lectures, seminars and private consultations. For more information, contact me at monte m o nt y at r l j media. Dot com talking alternative radio twenty four hours a day. This is tony martignetti, aptly named host of tony martignetti non-profit radio. Big non-profit ideas for the other ninety five percent. Technology fund-raising compliance, social media, small and medium non-profits have needs in all these areas. My guests are expert in all these areas and mohr. Tony martignetti non-profit radio friday’s one to two eastern on talking alternative broadcasting, you’re listening to talking on their network at www dot talking alternative dot com, now broadcasting twenty four hours a day. That’s all the time we have today for tony martignetti non-profit radio next week, friday, december tenth, join me at one pm when we’ll have maur interviews from the national conference on philanthropic planning. I am in bangladesh, sri lanka and thailand right now, returning in a couple of weeks hope you’ll join me next week for the interviews that continue from that conference. 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Morning Interview: Emily Lam & Perry Wasserman

Me interviewing Emily Lam and Perry Wasserman
These two are Washington insiders. Emily has worked in the Office of Tax Policy at the Treasury Department. Now she is with a prestigious D.C. law firm. Perry is a lobbyist who works exclusively with nonprofits. Their conference topic is “Tax Policy & the Future of Philanthropic Planning“.

We started with the caveat that the game changes on election day, November 2nd. I refrained from asking for their predictions.

Congress has been “slow and negligent” on tax issues, Perry concludes. The estate tax, Bush tax cuts and the tax extenders, including the charitable IRA rollover, have all been delayed or ignored. Financial and healthcare overhaul pushed these to the back burner.

Emily shared concerns about the new Internal Revenue Code provision troubling healthcare institutions, section 501(r). It’s enormously intrusive, requiring subsidized care at minimum levels, for instance.

They both shared opinions on what it will mean when, under the most likely scenario, Orrin Hatch replaces Senator Grassley on the Senate Finance committee–an important tax-writing committee. Grassley has been an unprecedented maverick around nonprofit oversight and the two expect his successor to the ranking member spot to be quite interested in charity regulation, but not as outspoken as Grassley.

More interviews today and a flight home this afternoon.