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Giving Voice to Mission: Nonprofit Advocacy and Lobbying – Yes You Can!. Key Terms. Public Policy Advocacy Lobbying Legislation. What is public policy?. Public policy is the set of decisions that we make as a society about how we will care for one another, our communities, and the land.
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Giving Voice to Mission:Nonprofit Advocacy and Lobbying – Yes You Can!
Key Terms • Public Policy • Advocacy • Lobbying • Legislation
What is public policy? Public policy is the set of decisions that we make as a society about how we will care for one another, our communities, and the land. Marcia Avner Minnesota Council of Nonprofits
What is lobbying? You are lobbying when you ask an elected or appointed official to vote in a particular way on a specific piece of legislation or rule.
And finally – what is legislation? • Action by Congress, state legislatures, local governing bodies, or by the public in a referendum. • Does not include action by the executive branch or independent administrative agency.
501(c)(3) Nonprofits CAN Lobby! Know the Rules and Limits
1976 Law • Generous Spending Limits • Easy To Calculate • Clear Definitions
Direct Lobbying Stating your organization’s position on specific legislation to legislators or other government employees who participate in the formulation of legislation and/or urging your members to do so.
Grassroots Lobbying Stating your position on specific legislation to the general public and asking them to contact legislators or other government employees who participate in the formulation of legislation.
Grassroots or Direct Lobbying? Lobbying for or against ballot initiatives and referenda is considered direct lobbying, not grassroots, because the public becomes the legislature.
Public Policy Activities – That Are NOT Lobbying • Self defense • Communicating with members on legislation – even taking a position – but not asking them to lobby • Lobbying by volunteers • Response to written request • Regulatory activity • Discussion of broad social or economic issues • Non-partisan research
501(h) Election • Nonprofits must ELECT to come under the 1976 Law • Form 5768 • Subject to “expenditure test”
Substantiality Test • “…no substantial part… consists of carrying on propaganda or otherwise attempting to influence legislation…” • What is “substantial”? • Ambiguous and subjective
Take the 501(h) Election • Generous spending limits • Easy to calculate • Clear definitions • Track expenditures only • No single year penalty • No individual managers penalty • Does not increase risk of audit
Expenditures To Track(for 501h Electing Nonprofits) • Staff and overhead to prepare materials + Actual materials • Compensation to lobbyist • Expenses reimbursed • Allocation of broader communications • Report on 990
501(c)(3) Nonprofits CANNOT • Endorse political candidates or parties • Mobilize supporters to elect or defeat candidates • Align with parties • Contribute to candidates or parties
FOCUS ON POLICY Not Politics
Government Funding • Cannot use government funds (grants or contracts) to lobby • Nonprofits that receive government funds can lobby – using other funds
To Lobby NCGA • Register with NC Secretary of State • Principal and Compensated Lobbyist(s) • Anytime, Before Lobbying • For Two-Year Legislative Cycle • File Expense Reports
The Bottom Line • 501(c)(3) nonprofits can lobby! • Take the 501(h) election! • Stay focused on issues!
www… CLPI.org AFJ.org ADVOCACY.org OMBWATCH.org NCNONPROFITS.org IRS.gov SOSNC.com NCLEG.net NCGOV.net FIRSTGOV.gov Resources www.opensourceleadership.com