CAN's finance and accounting programs are designed to to measurably improve the accuracy, consistency and clarity of financial reporting, thus reducing time and financial costs and improving accountability and public trust in California's nonprofit sector.

Another goal of this program is to promote a dialog and create a community of nonprofit finance professionals so please post questions and comments!

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Questions and Answers

Thanks to everybody who came to any one of the six workshops I presented at in the last month. Nonprofits from Orange County to Maine all seem to be interested in nonprofit accounting, governance issues, risk management and the new form 990.

I get asked a lot of questions at these events and the ones I can't answer I look up and respond to here. Unless I loose the paper with the questions on it.* To that end let me begin with the first one:

  1. What is the difference between a Commercial Fundraiser and Fundraising Council? What are the rules that tell us how to work with them?
    In a nut shell a Commercial Fundraiser hold the funds they solicit on your behalf and then gives them to your organization less any fee. Fundraising Council does not hold the funds for you. Contracts between CA nonprofits and commercial fundraisers need to be approved by the California Attorney General's office. For all the details please see the overview of 2004's Nonprofit Integrity Act (pdf).
  2. How do we change our nonprofits name?
    Need to file updated Articles of Incorporation with the state and let the IRS know and anywhere you have registered to solicit funds. This guy has the goods.
  3. This came up during a discussion of the new Schedule M (pdf) of the updated form 990 which talks about listing and valuing donated non-cash items (if you get more then $25,000.00 of them). The question was:
    If we have a special event to raise funds and receive proceeds from a silent auction, where do we report the income?
    In part VIII of the core form with the revenue and in any of the appropriate schedules. Schedule M is sole concerned with the valuation of the donated items. The IRS wants to make sure donors are not inflating the value of items donated to the nonprofit. For more on valuing donated items and how to book these please click here.
  4. Boards of Directors
    No specific questions here but clear from the tone of the comments and question at these events that many of us have an occasional issue with our boards. For an interesting study on this I would direct you here to the Urban Institute. For resources to help Boards out I would direct you to start with these folks.
*Sorry if I missed your question. Please email me or post a comment here if you want me to look up an answer for you.

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