Category Archives: Nonprofit Accounting

Nonprofit News Roundup

IRS and the 990

logo-irsAs I mentioned in the post below the Urban Institute’s 990 online is getting ready to start processing the updated form 990. They hope to be ready to go by the end of July (not the end of June as I previously mentioned in my last post).  There is a great piece in Blue Avocado about the system and a call to action to help improve it. Worth a read, especially for those thinking of jumping in and using the system.

Perhaps not everyone wants to read the IRS’s five year strategic plan?  No problem, the nice folks at Guidestar have and let us know what the Internal Revenue Service has in store for tax exempt organizations. Between what they lay out here and several recent speeches by Lois Lerner and Sarah Hall Ingram (also reported on by Guidestar in the above link) we can be pretty sure of where their focus will lie.  As the article points out, nonprofit should:

Pay the proper employment taxes on your staff; use appropriate comparable wage data to set executive compensation and document your decisions; file Form 990 promptly and accurately (and electronically, if possible); use efficient fundraising methods; and spend most of your revenues on achieving your tax-exempt purpose.

Good advice all around.

Managing in Tough Times

In case there was any confusion about it, times are still tight.  Two items from the Bridgespan Group and The Listening Post Project give us an update, and California’s budget meltdown is being replayed in other states.

Bridgespan’s piece is a follow-up to their November 2008 7 Steps article. From the opening paragraph:

The percentage of nonprofits that have resorted to layoffs has increased, as has the percentage that has made broad-based programmatic reductions. More organizations have drawn down their reserves. Nonprofit leaders appear to be optimistic about the future, though: Almost half of the respondents reported that they believe their organization will be on stronger financial footing in a year’s time.

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The Listening Post Project, from the Center for Civil Society Studies at Johns Hopkins University, released a new study, “Impact of the 2007-09 Economic Recession on Nonprofit Organizations” (link opens a PDF). From the executive summary:

Key findings from the 363 organizations responding to this Sounding include the following:

  • 83 percent of responding organizations reported some level of fiscal stress during the target period of September 2008 to March 2009.
  • Close to 40 percent of the organizations considered the stress to be “severe” or “very severe”.
  • Theaters and orchestras were particularly hard hit, with 73 percent of the former and half of the latter reporting “severe” or “very severe” stress.

The deadline to pass California’s budget came and went last week.  The Chronicle of Philanthropy has a good piece on how CA nonprofits will be effected by the state government’s game of chicken.

Nonprofit Financial Tools

I’ll try to end this post on a happier note with a couple of tips and resources! For accounting!  Leading off is a recent article from Guidestar, “Ensuring a Smooth Annual Audit.” While it may not have a lot of revelations in it it is solid advice for any organization that is planning on a annual financial audit.

Tye Bridgespan Group is offering nonprofit organizations its new Nonprofit Cost Analysis Toolkit.  This is a fine set of tools to help nonprofits understand what are the true, real, honest costs of running our organizations.  Not knowing what it really costs your organization to do all that it does makes it difficult to move forward.

More cost analysis and fiancial tools can be found in my Managing Challenging Times section.

The News This Week

Box 'o resourcesThis weeks news update features some timely HR issues, an interesting resource and a partial list of where I will be presenting.  Other gigs are in the works, I’ll list those as they are conformed.  If you have been to one of my recent workshops and are wondering where those resources I mentioned are hiding, this link should get you started.

Human Resources

Got a summer intern at your nonprofit?  It is a great way to introduce people to the sector and bring in some skills the organization my be looking for.  But this can be a dicey area for federal and state labor laws.  The Risk Management Center has this nice piece that covers the federal Department of Labor issues, always a good idea to make sure you are doing it right.

The Federal Minimum Wage will go up on July 24th.  Check out this link to find out if you will be effected and what the minimum wage in your state, and all the states you may have employees in, is.

From Girl Scout cookies to March Madness, fundraising in the office and betting pools can be pretty common.  Here are a few things to think about if this goes on in your office.

The Chronicle of Philanthropy had another of its Live Discussions, this one called, “Grooming the Next Generation of Nonprofit Leaders: an Intergenerational Discussion.”  Thant link will take you to a transcript of the discussion, worth a read.

Resources

Have you ever wanted to see what someone else had written for a presentation, proposal or a plan?  To be able to take advantage of what others have worked on rather than trying to reinvent the wheel every time?  Or would you like to share your resources to help others out?  IdeaEncore was created as a place to do just that.  From their website:

IdeaEncore helps nonprofits build their reputation, spread their mission, and create earned income by providing a cross-sector nonprofit marketplace for document sharing. Our online file downloads and sharing services enable you to publish, browse, share, and retrieve files to better understand what your peers are doing. Why re-invent the wheel? When you can re-use tools and templates to better manage your work and assist your daily work.

Events I’m At

I’m horrible about publicizing these, but here is a list of where I will be presenting as of today:

Cal State Fullerton’s Summer School for Nonprofits in July

Long Beach Nonprofit Partnership’s Tools Of The Trade, June 16 event

Ventura Community Foundation’s Center for Nonprofit Leadership Financial Literacy workshops in July.

Northern California Association of Nonprofits Annual Meeting in September.

A Nonprofit News Round-Up

roundupToday I just have a short round up of interesting items from the last few weeks.  But I first want to say thanks to the Nonprofit Congress Blog for mentioning this blog in the Nonprofit Blog Carnival it recently hosted.

This piece is from mid May but it is worth another mention.  The article is on administration costs and charity ratings from the Good Intentions Are Not Enough blog.  The premise is that the focus on administrative costs can do harm than good, and I agree with the author’s arguments.

This article from the Nonprofit Professionals Advisory Group is a nice wrap up of the President’s Stimulus plan and its possible effects for the nonprofit sector.  From helping organizations stay afloat to expanding others, there is a lot to know about the plan.

Our sector is not immune to questionable ethical decisions.  This article from the Stanford Social Innovation Review highlights some of the issues specific to the nonprofit sector and ways to promote ethical behavior in charitable organizations.

When groups talk about saving money all options should be on the table.  But eliminating Directors and Officers liability insurance is a risky option.  This article gives some good reasons why you shouldn’t cut it and some tips about judging your own coverage or shopping for other coverage.  Here is a good resource for D&O insurance and other organizational coverages.

Nonprofit Resources – Three helpful items

Have a question about a nonprofit issue?

BoardSource has a really nice Question and Answer section.  Some of the items are member only but there is plenty of free information available.  This site also has a bunch of Q&A’s here.

How does a nonprofit go out of business?

While there may be some state specific rules you’ll need to look up, the IRS recently published this piece on how to terminate an organization.

Private Inurement, Excess Compensation, Intermediate Sanctions, and Rebuttable Presumption

This free publication from GuideStar outlines what the IRS expects of charities and how we can comply with the rules that govern 501(c)(3) organizations.