1 / 32

Current Nonprofit Tax, Corporate, and Compliance Issues

Gain insights into nonprofit corporate fundamentals, board roles, tax-exempt status, and governance policies from the NCHER Winter Legal Meeting. Understand fiduciary duties, compliance, and key trends.

saville
Download Presentation

Current Nonprofit Tax, Corporate, and Compliance Issues

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Current Nonprofit Tax, Corporate, and Compliance Issues March 24, 2017 2017 NCHER Winter Legal Meeting Janice M. Ryan Venable LLP jmryan@Venable.com 202.344.4093

  2. Today’s Discussion • Nonprofit Corporate Fundamentals and Trends • Sources and Hierarchy of Governing Rules • Board Roles and Responsibilities • Duty of Care • Duty of Loyalty • Duty of Obedience • Key Governance Policies • Tax-Exempt Status Fundamentals and Trends • Sources of Tax-exemption • 501(c)(3) Fundamentals • Lobbying and Political Activities Restrictions

  3. Nonprofit Corporate Fundamentals and Trends

  4. What is a Nonprofit Organization? • Governed by state law (statutes and common law) • Nonprofit Corporation Laws • Unincorporated Association Laws • Non-distribution constraint is fundamental characteristic • Nonprofit status is not synonymous with tax-exempt status

  5. Governance—State Nonprofit Corporation Law • State nonprofit corporation statutes set forth: • Requirements for maintaining corporate status • Rights and obligations of board • Rights and obligations of members, if any • Default provisions if not self-addressed • Internal affairs of a corporation are governed by the law of the state in which the corporation was formed • Registration as a “foreign corporation” may be required in other states where the corporation does business

  6. Governance—Sources and Hierarchy of Rules

  7. Governance—Role of the Board of Directors • Board of directors is the ultimate decision-making body under state law • Board sets the mission and policy of the organization and exercises strategic direction and oversight, not day-to-day management • Delegation to officers, committees, or staff is permissible (and important!), but oversight is required • Boards generally are only allowed to act in a meeting or by unanimous written consent

  8. Board Member Fiduciary Duties • Authority to govern the corporation comes with duties • State statutory and common law requires that corporate board members fulfill: • Fiduciary duty of care • Fiduciary duty of loyalty • Fiduciary duty of obedience

  9. Fiduciary Duty of Care • Standard is that of “ordinary and reasonable care” – what would an ordinarily prudent director do in the same or similar circumstances? • Business judgment rule – bad decisions are more easily defended than ignorance • Courts will not view decisions from benefit of hindsight, but, rather, from the perspective of the directors making the decisions at that time (was it an informed, reasoned decision?) • Due diligence process matters most

  10. Fiduciary Duty of Care • Compliance with fiduciary duty of care: • Attend meetings • Review all materials provided to you in advance of meetings • Ask questions • Be familiar with the organization’s articles, bylaws, and policies and procedures • Maintain confidentiality of information and documents • Rely on experts when appropriate (but such reliance does not excuse willful ignorance) • Review all meeting minutes (particularly recorded votes) to ensure accuracy • Insist on legal/accounting/other expertise when necessary and appropriate

  11. Fiduciary Duty of Loyalty • Duty of undivided allegiance to the corporation • Duty to avoid conflicts of interest (actual, potential and apparent) • Examples: • Business dealings with the corporation • Dealings with competitors • Corporate opportunities doctrine • Remedies: • Disclosure; recusal or resignation • Confidentiality

  12. Fiduciary Duty of Loyalty • Compliance with fiduciary duty of loyalty: • Adhere to written conflict of interest policy • Disclose actual, apparent and potential conflicts of interest, both annually and as they arise during the year • Deliberate as a board or through a committee of the board to determine appropriate responses to and management of actual, apparent and potential conflicts of interest (conflicts policy process)

  13. Fiduciary Duty of Obedience • Articles of incorporation, bylaws, and other governing documents and policies and procedures must be followed • Applicable laws and regulations must be followed • Be faithful to the organization’s mission

  14. Governance Summary—Keys to Fulfilling Board Responsibilities • Meet and deliberate • Be prepared • Actively participate • Ask questions • Act in the best interest of the organization at all times • Provide strategic direction and oversight • Set direction, but delegate execution • Engage in strategic thinking and planning • Tend to the mission • Provide oversight and accountability

  15. Governance Trends • Form 990 Focus on Governance (2008) • Increased charitable sector enforcement and oversight by states • Charitable fundraising/consumer protection • Protection of charitable assets for public purposes • Legislation • California Nonprofit Integrity Act (2004) • Audit and audit committee requirements • Executive compensation review • New York Nonprofit Revitalization Act (2013) • Audit and audit committee requirements • Conflict of interest policy requirements • Whistleblower policy requirements

  16. IRS Form 990 and Governance • Questions Regarding Board and Management • Are minutes taken at board and board committee meetings? • Does the board receive a copy of Form 990 before filed? • Questions Regarding Governance Policies • Maintain a written conflict of interest policy • Maintain a compensation review policy—follow the procedures for the “rebuttable presumption” • Maintain a written whistleblower policy • Maintain a written document retention and destruction policy • Maintain a joint venture policy to govern transactions with taxable entities

  17. Key Governance Policies • Conflict of interest policy • Why? • Facilitates tax compliance, according to IRS • Facilitates compliance with corporate duty of loyalty • Key elements are: • Defining a conflict • Defining who is covered • Creating a disclosure and resolution process • Annual disclosure of conflicts form • Form 990 asks in particular about annual disclosure of conflicts by directors, officers, and key employees

  18. Key Governance Policies • Whistleblower policy • Sarbanes-Oxley has limited application to nonprofit organizations, but the whistleblower protection provisions do apply • Important to have a process for receiving, investigating, and resolving whistleblower claims • Document retention and destruction policy • Considered a best practice and asked about on the Form 990 • Can help manage risks associated with not having records that are legally required to be retained or maintaining records that could have been destroyed or deleted

  19. Key Governance Policies • Compensation policy • Excessive compensation=private inurement • IRS rebuttable presumption of reasonableness

  20. Tax-Exempt Status Fundamentals and Trends

  21. Sources of Tax Exemption • Federal Tax Exemption • Internal Revenue Code provides exemption from federal income tax to qualified nonprofit organizations • Recognition by IRS obtained through application (Form 1023) • State Tax Exemption • State statutes may provide exemption from state income or franchise tax, as well as state property, sales, and use taxes • May be conditioned upon recognition of federal tax exempt status but not always tied together or automatically granted—application to state revenue agency may be required

  22. Section 501(c)(3) Tax-Exempt Status • Tax-exempt purpose—educational, scientific or charitable • Contributions tax-deductible by donors as charitable contributions (minus value of benefits received in return) • No “private inurement” or impermissible “private benefit” • No “substantial” lobbying • No political campaign activities • Taxation of unrelated business income (“UBIT”)

  23. 501(c)(3) Lobbying and Political Activities—Basic Do’s and Don’ts • A 501(c)(3) may not • Support or oppose candidates for public office (absolute prohibition); or • Lobby on legislation in substantial part or, under Section 501(h), beyond a certain percentage of its expenditures • A 501(c)(3) may • Lobby on legislation within the Code’s lobbying limits • Conduct certain non-partisan, unbiased election-related activities • Get-out-the vote and voter registration drives • Legislative voting records, provided not limited campaign season • Candidate debates

  24. Section 501(c)(3) Lobbying Rules • What is Lobbying? • Basic general concept—attempts to influence legislation at the federal, state, or local levels through direct or grassroots communications • Two options for measuring compliance with (c)(3) limitation on lobbying activities: • No substantial part test • 501(h) expenditure test

  25. Section 501(c)(3) Lobbying Rules • No substantial part test: • Vague, facts and circumstances test • Strict sanctions • revocation of exempt status • excise tax on organization and its managers (5% of lobbying expenditures) • 501(h) expenditure test: • Lobbying activity measured solely by the amount of money spent on lobbying • Lobbying will not be considered “substantial” provided organization does not exceed expenditure cap • Clear definitions of lobbying and exclusions for specific activities • Must affirmatively elect to use by filing IRS Form 5768 • Flexible sanctions • 25% tax on amount spent over the cap • No tax penalties imposed on organization managers for exceeding the limits • Revocation of exempt status results only if the organization exceeds 150 percent of the cap over a 4-year consecutive averaging period

  26. Section 501(c)(3) Lobbying Rules—501(h) Caps NOTE: Grassroots lobbying expenditures limited to no more than 25% of the total amount permitted for lobbying in a year.

  27. Definition of “Lobbying” under 501(h) Election • Direct Lobbying: attempts to influence legislation through communications with covered officials that refer to specific legislation and reflect a point of view on the legislation • any member or employee of a legislative body • any government official or employee who may participate in the formulation of legislation • the public in a referendum, initiative or constitutional amendment • Grassroots Lobbying: attempts to influence the general public through communications that refer to specific legislation, reflect a point of view on the legislation, and include a “call to action”

  28. Definition of “Lobbying” under 501(h) Election • Specific exclusions from the definition of lobbying: • Communications with members regarding specific legislation • Point of view okay • No call to action • Nonpartisan analysis, study, or research • Discussions of broad social and economic problems • Efforts to change regulations • Requests for technical advice • Conducting self-defense activity • Volunteer time • The excluded activities are not counted against a 501(h) electing organization’s annual lobbying expenditure cap

  29. 501(c)(3) Lobbying Rules—Form 990 Reporting • Tax-exempt organizations report lobbying activities on Form 990, Schedule C • Effective compliance requires careful tracking of time and money spent on lobbying • Include allocable staff time and compensation, overhead, and administrative costs • Time and money spent on research, planning, drafting, reviewing, publishing, and mailing in support of lobbying is included

  30. Lobbying Activities—Other Applicable Laws • Lobbying registration and reporting laws • Federal, state, and local • Different definitions of lobbying may apply (e.g., lobbying may include attempts to influence not just legislation but also executive branch activities) • Ethics laws for public officials and employees • Federal, state, local, and agency governing acceptance of gifts, etc. • Restrictions on use of federal funds

  31. Tax-exempt Status Trends • IRS oversight capacity is limited • Streamlined determinations • Low audit rates • Tea Party scandal repercussions • Proposed repeal of “Johnson Amendment” • Tax reform may affect charitable deduction

  32. Questions and Discussion Janice M. Ryan, Esq. Venable LLP 600 Massachusetts Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20001 jryan@Venable.com t 202.344.4093 To view Venable’s index of articles, presentations, recordings, and upcoming seminars on nonprofit legal topics, see: • Articles: www.venable.com/nonprofits/publications • Monthly Webinars: www.venable.com/nonprofits/recordings • Upcoming and Past Events: www.venable.com/nonprofits/events

More Related