Skip to content

Logout | Home | New! Government Agencies Hi ! | Your Control Panel
Home | New! Government Agencies Hi ! Remember me | I'm not
Sign up | Home | New! Government Agencies Email:      Password: Remember me

Welcome to Idealist.org - Where the Nonprofit World Meets
Nonprofit FAQ Blog

The Nonprofit FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) is based on questions and answers about nonprofit organizations exchanged on the Internet since 1994. Suggestions and corrections are always welcome. For more information, see About the Nonprofit FAQ.



New Look at the Internet Nonprofit Center





Starting in January of 2002, the Internet Nonprofit Center
has a wholly new look. We want to thank
the people at Social Ecology (http://www.socialecology.com) who have helped us
design and implement this new format for providing information over the
World-Wide Web; Social Ecology also provides the webserver for INC as a public
service.



We'll be very interested to get your feedback on how the new
appearance and arrangement of the Internet Nonprofit Center works for you. We expect there will be some rough spots;
after all, the FAQ has been around since the early '90s and some parts of it
haven't been revised in a long time.
Please write editor@nonprofits.org">href="mailto:editor@nonprofits.org">editor@nonprofits.org to let us know if you find things
that seem to need further attention.



We also have a new facility for sending out announcements of
new Bulletins (again, provided by Social Ecology, using their DonorLink
product). This email system will make it easier for us (and for our readers) to
keep email addresses up to date, handle any difficulties that may arise, and
over time connect better with the people who use this site to help them manage
and understand nonprofits. There's an
easy link in the left-hand margin for anyone who would like to subscribe to the
announcement service that lets readers know when a new Bulletin has been
posted. If you are not already on this list and would like to be, please
type in your email address and click on the 'subscribe' button now. This email
service is used only for announcements about the Internet Nonprofit Center;
your personal information will never be given or sold to anyone else for any
purpose.



Interview with the New Head of the Corporation for National Service



The Senate confirmed Les Lenkowsky as CEO of the Corporation
for National and Community Service in October 2001. On December 6, he made some informal remarks and answered
questions at a gathering hosted by the Independent Sector, ranging over many
topics of interest to people who work in or care about the nonprofit sector
(see http://www.IndependentSector.org/members/Lenkowsky.html). Prior to this appointment, Les Lenkowsky was
Professor of Philanthropic Studies and Public Policy at Indiana
University/Purdue University at Indianapolis, as well as a research associate at
the Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University (for more about his
background, see http://www.cns.gov/about/family/bios/lenkowsky.html)



Reading the Form 990



Many people quite reasonably observe that public access to
an organization's Form 990 is one thing while understanding it is quite
another!



Peter Swords, working with support from the Ford Foundation,
has written How to Read the IRS Form 990 & Find Out What It Means and
the Nonprofit Coordinating Committee of the City of New York (where he was the
director for many years) has posted it on the Web at
http://www.npccny.org/Form_990/990.htm. The form is complicated. Reading it
requires specialized knowledge. Anyone who wants to use a 990 to get greater
understanding of the nonprofit that filed it will find this publication a great
help.



And, by the way, any organization
that wants to make sure that people reading its 990s will find the data they
need and gain confidence in its work might also want to look carefully at Peter
Swords' advice. Making it easy for people to make sense of the 990 matters more
and more, as more and more people learn they can have online access to the
forms through Guidestar
(http://www.guidestar.org) and many other portals.



Car Donations Revisited



The IRS and the National Association of State Charities
Officials issued a joint advisory to taxpayers late last year about the
complexities of donating a car. See
http://ftp.fedworld.gov/pub/irs-news/ir01-112.pdf — it's a .pdf file,
so you'll need an Acrobat reader from Adobe (available free from
http://www.adobe.com/products/acrobat/readstep2.html) to access it. I've written about car donation programs
before in these Bulletins and elsewhere. As a result, I get frequent queries from people who want advice
about how to find an organization that will use the car (or the money derived
from selling it) wisely. The answer to
this question is the same as it is about any donation: ask the charity. (And, if you want, check out the information
about it at http://www.guidestar.org too).



There are lots of technicalities about donating cars,
though. If the tax-benefits of the
donation are important, checking every aspect of the transaction carefully
before bidding the old buggy a fond farewell will be an especially good idea.



An Urban Legend



The word has been circulating among nonprofits that putting
a sponsor's web-address into a flyer or newsletter could call into question the
use of the nonprofit rate when the piece is mailed. Ellenor Kirkconnell of the Alliance of Nonprofit Mailers
(http://www.nonprofitmailers.org) explains that there was a brief flurry around
this question when the US Postal Service raised the issue of whether links to
websites were a form of advertising. After discussions, though, it was
recognized that simply providing a URL is like giving the sponsor's phone
number; it doesn't become advertising unless the nonprofit's mailing makes an
explicit appeal for readers to buy something or use the sponsor's services.



Sponsors that offer charge cards, insurance or travel
services may spark extra attention from the Postal Service, though, since
nonprofit rates can never be used to promote such things. A mailing that might
appear to bump up against that rule should be checked with the eligibility
experts at the Business Mail Entry facility where the mailing will be
done. In fact, it's a good idea to
check with these people for any out-of-the-ordinary mailing, especially if the
timing is important or your organization would find it difficult to pay the
extra postage for standard mail rates while appealing an unfavorable ruling at
the time the mailing needs to be sent.



 








Putnam Barber

Editor, The Internet Nonprofit Center

A project of The Evergreen State Society (http://www.tess.org)

Seattle, Washington USA



Posted by Putnam on January 15, 2002
[ Give Us Your Feedback | Mail a friend | FAQ Bulletin ]



Search

For this page: