Nonprofiteers

Shenk, David

Nonprofiteers HOW to lobby like a coporation and pay taxes like a charity by David Shenk A brief role-play exercise: Let’s say you can’t stand Jesse Jackson. You’ve seen the man on TV,...

...Strengthen oversight...
...And outside of Washington, he probably never could be...
...One is I would never have to eat in anything less than a first-class restaurant...
...To the ACU Foundation, they are...
...Your blood stirs...
...Illegal, yes, but this is the sort of violation that sneaks by without drawing an audit...
...Not by a long shot...
...Robinson and his outfit may deserve credit for maintaining U.S...
...The legitimate “common good” promulgated by charitable nonprofits is worth nurturing-honestly and overtly, in exchange for clear accounting of funds...
...Groups that specialize in exposing government waste and fraud have, understandably, neglected to turn the spotlight on themselves...
...Jeez-don’t they have tax deductions for pornographic art and other filth...
...Some c3/c4 mailings read “nonprofit” without saying “not deductible”-a federal reporting requirement for nonprofits...
...So he and his liberal friends have launched a campaign to make crime-ridden and corrupt Washington the 51st state...
...That’s the argument the libertarian Cat0 Institute implicitly invokes in one of its pamphlets: “In order to maintain an independent posture, the Cat0 Institute accepts no government funding...
...But contributions still weren’t tax-exempt until Jesse Helms came along...
...As for traditional lobbyist watchdog Public Citizen-well, it’s a c3/c4 split...
...But more disturbing is how nonprofit political lobbies like the ACU, already having it so good, have manipulated a tax-law loophole to have it even better-at taxpayer expense...
...Independent Sector, America’s largest umbrella group for nonprofits, has been lobbying hard to keep the loopholes open for nonprofits rather than close them...
...Unfortunately for taxpayers, though, nobody knows how to work the system like the nonprofits’ policy wonks...
...I’m not giving money to them...
...In addition, virtually all c3 and c4 mailings are sent out on the special nonprofit bulk mail rate of 9.4 cents, as opposed to the 16.7 cents for standard bulk mail...
...Because government alone clearly can’t feed all the poor and train all the unemployed and so on, it makes sense for government to help nurture those organizations willing to serve the public interest on their own...
...There is, however, one backdoor hope for reining in the sector: the awesome federal deficit...
...But then you see the fine print-“Contributions are not tax deductible...
...Now, says Jones, “you can . . . be generally consistent with a party’s political line,” as long as you pass an educational “methodology” test of the procedures for investigation and reporting...
...Certainly not nonprofit media like Nonprofit Times and The Chronicle of Philanthropy, neither of which has written about the split-scam...
...Noncharitables-advocacy groups and lobbies-are untaxed, but their donors cannot take a -deduction under 501(c)4, at least not in theory...
...Indeed, the philosophical rationale for this exemption is both practical and humane...
...Maybe even throw in a cash contribution, ifyou can write it off...
...But you’re a working stiff of modest means...
...Call it libertarian license...
...Take, for example, the “charitable” Heritage Foundation, which provided money-up to $100,000-for the contras through Oliver North and Carl “Spitz” Channell...
...And Jesse often gets what Jesse wants...
...I made the call myself this summer, and had I been of a pro-ACU mind, I could have sent a check and taken that deduction...
...the second for even more subsidized “research in service to the main...
...But is there any way I could give money to it so that it would be tax deductible...
...Secondly, I would never have to stay in anything but a first-class hotel...
...The “charitab1es”- nonlobbying groups like the Urban League and Brookings Institution-have long been able to attract individual donors more easily because donations are tax deductible...
...But over the years, the “nonpartisan” or “propaganda” test has given way to a new standard...
...But these things have a way of adding up...
...But Helms and Lear needn’t worry...
...Unfortunately, however, some “charitables” manage to carry on in a rather corporate manner...
...Today, charitable groups can spend no more than $1 million a year on lobbying, or, if they’re a small organization, no more than a fifth of their funds...
...But while appearing to crack down, the IRS also loosened up, narrowing its definition of lobbying to the point where a solicitation can now look, walk, and quack like a lobby, but unless it specifically asks respondents to send letters to Congress, it’s not called a lobby...
...The government just shouldn’t be paying for the hardware...
...Inside, a letter from the American Conservative Union (ACU) reads, “Jesse Jackson has never been elected to any legitimate office...
...A spokesman said that the agency deals only with individual nonprofits on an individual basis...
...Feeding friendly There’s one very simple reason why we’re stuck with lax enforcement of lax rules: The nonprofit game has virtually zero political opposition...
...But it is better to support the political causes we believe in with our own dollars, not the government’s, no matter how worthy our goals...
...But the c4 paid only one eleventh of the salary of President Arthur Kropp, who supervises both operations...
...Surely the government must be watching to ensure that lobbies and researchers stay on their own side of the bed...
...Even worse, many times in the course of investigating this story I found myself listening to some lobby representative announcing incorrectly that contributions were tax deductible, usually as an “innocent,” though crucial, error...
...My net cost for a $100 donation to Cat0 is $72...
...The next step was for James Lucier and Joseph Carbaugh, Helms aides who had engineered the first batch of groups, to test the charitable waters with a parallel set of c3s: Coalition for Freedom, Institute of American Relations, Institute on Money and Inflation, and American Family Institute, all run by the same people for the same ends...
...In fact, the IRS doesn’t even know how many splits there are...
...Inherent in the current system of legally sanctioned identical twin organizations is the virtual assurance that the truth about millions of financial transactions will never be known...
...One day a letter drops through your mail slot...
...Special interest money poured in, establishing enormous PACs and other advocacy groups...
...That’s bad enough...
...Pretty serious...
...Those 501 blues Political lobbies and do-good groups like The United Way have traditionally operated under two completely distinct tax codes, each of which has one big pro and one big con...
...An “alert” message on the envelope catches your- eye...
...Just in case, you phone the ACU: “Hi, are donations to the ACU tax deductible...
...taxpayers, by means of the federal government, will pick up the rest of the tab for denigrating Jesse...
...Besides which, the Coalition donations would be tax deductible...
...They can buy whatever beer they like...
...501(c)3s, also untaxed, are supposed to be a higher and purer form of life, conducting research, educating the public, checking into the powerful institutions of government and industry, but not soiling their hands with lobbying or advocacy-hence the deduction...
...Attempting to establish a power base, Helms and his associates started by getting Viguerie to help them set up a series of fundraising and lobbying groups...
...The regulation states: “The method used by the organization will not be considered educational if it fails to provide a factual foundation for the viewpoint or position being advocated, or if it fails to provide a development from the relevant facts that would materially aid a listener or reader in a learning process...
...In other words, combat the frequent, “accidental” suggestions by nonprofit staffers that contributions are tax deductible...
...How serious are the transgressions the IRS is prone to overlook...
...And with nonprofits providing rich sources of official-sounding quotes from every known political angle at daily “educational” forums, not even journalists dare to take note...
...Over the next few years, Helms raised tens of millions of dollars and generated reams of “educational” printed material designed to bring colleagues around to his way of seeing things...
...you ask...
...Or visit the chandeliered University Club of Washington to hear Robert Novak or William Bennett lecture college kids, thanks to the largess of the conservative Madison Center for Educational Affairs...
...Could TransAfrica, the pro-African National Congress group with an in-office foundation that publishes “educational” pamphlets and sets up conferences, pass that test...
...Bork-barrel subsidy While nonprofits have grown rapidly in number and influence during the past 20 years, oversight and restrictions have eased steadily, most recently in the form of an RS rules clarification of late 1990, born out of the Robert Bork battles of 1989...
...People for the American Way, the First Amendment group set up by television producer Norman Lear, has a c3 foundation, which took in $3.5 million in 1989, and a c4 “action fund,” which that same year took in $2.7 million...
...Total deductions for charitable contributions taken by individual taxpayers added up to nearly $51 billion in 1988...
...Probably not, but who’s watching...
...For that noble politician who wants to cut a hefty slice off the debt without being unfair to any segment of the country, here are a few simple reforms: *Call a subsidy a subsidy...
...As a result the donor is implicitly encouraged to give and deduct...
...Trouble is, as we subsidize their postage stamps and their lobbying and their “educational” conferences at Vail, only a fraction of those half-million nonprofits perform what most of us would consider public interest functions-the great rationale for tax exemption...
...Right now the IRS has no system for tracking c3k4 splits...
...That America’s 500,000 nonprofits are exempt from income tax (and in some states, sales tax) while they gross more than $700 billion a year is not inherently a bad thing...
...Before long, Helms’s two-pronged nonprofit attack had earned him a reputation as one of the loudest and most influential senators...
...In our computer age, there’s no excuse for that...
...The c3/c4s share offices, staff, directors, equipment, donors, and of course, political views...
...But even more important, the “c3Ic4 split” begat more splits, as noncharitable advocacy groups began erecting “educational” foundations to perform research and other less overtly partisan functions...
...Jesse wants power...
...Nope, admits Jones, the IRS spokesman...
...Tlhat has historically been true...
...Once they’re established . . . I’m not sure that in recent years we’ve really made an effort to try to make sure that every organization that claims to be educational [actually] is...
...Because the groups span the political spectrum, nonprofit reform isn’t any party’s plank, and cozy relations between established nonprofits and incumbent politicians mean that Congress isn’t likely to press the IRS for tighter oversight...
...The word “institute” or “foundation” in its name usually identifies a c3...
...Our friends to the left have been similarly culpable in mixing their nonprofits...
...That transaction indisputably violated the “educational, nonpartisan” condition of Heritage’s tax status...
...The c4 nonprofit, which advocated statehood, was trying to become a c3...
...Conduct spot checks with fines...
...Thus, today, split groups abound on both right and left, including NARAL, Fund for a Feminist Majority, American Security Council, Friends of the Earth, Gun Owners of America, SANEEreeze, the ACLU, and hundreds more...
...What that case did was give people more confidence that it was legal,” says Mike Trister, a tax lawyer who has represented dozens of nonprofits for Lichtman, Trister, Singer, and Ross...
...But despite the fact that the smoking gun was uncovered in Congress’s Iran-contra investigation, neither Congress nor the IRS pursued the foundation...
...Well, um, I just got a mailing concerning Jesse Jackson and statehood...
...Welcome to the murky sea of nonprofits...
...Well, you could give to the ACU Foundation, which provides most of the research for that project, finding out quotes and stuff like that...
...Allegedly because then-Congressman Richard Cheney threatened to retaliate with subpoenas of the records of every liberal think tank in Washington...
...to handle lobbying...
...You’ve seen the man on TV, rabble-rousing in 1 verse, and you wish you could take him-on, just tell him to shut up...
...Though not tax deductible as “charity,” donations to industry lobbies are often written off as “business expenses...
...Of course, that rugged independence doesn’t keep Cat0 from battening on federal tax exemptions in any number of ways...
...The economics would stay the same for everyone involved, but perceptions would begin to match reality...
...So what’s the big deal...
...There wasn’t a domestic beer in the place,” recalls one attendee approvingly...
...But without such an unlikely pair of self-destructing groups, there’s nothing in sight to inhibit the nonprofits’ drain on the treasury...
...The second great galvanizer was a 1983 Supreme Court case, Taxation With Representation of Washington v. Donald Regan...
...You always knew that guy was up to no good...
...A pamphlet from the institute, which touts itself as a government waste watchdog, mentions a recent “Benefactor Summit” on St...
...Jesse Jackson wants you to pay his salary and $3.5 million in benefits...
...Thus the IRS-created barrier designed to separate the charitable from the noncharitable often, conveniently, disappears...
...In the early seventies, as various public and private political institutions emerged from the turmoil of the preceding decade, archconservative Richard Viguerie was tinkering with databases and envelopes...
...When the North Carolina senator wanted to raise some money, he hired Viguerie, and in so doing became the first to mate the noncharitable studhorse with the charitable mare and breed the hybrid worth billions in government subsidies...
...A lot of nonprofit money is no doubt spent wisely and honestly...
...To the ACU Foundation, they are...
...Follow me, if you will, to the dining room of the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), another c3, where the fine silver is complemented by china place settings with the AEI logo...
...And yes, your contributions to the Cat0 Institute are tax deductible-which means the federal government is quietly chipping in plenty...
...David Shenk is a Washington writer...
...Require full disclosure...
...Split identity Of course, all 235 million of us can split that $28 pretty easily...
...economic and political pressure on South Africa during the eighties, but do their forums and pamphlets truly serve as purely “educational” organs...
...Or go uptown to the NRA, where the direct mail writer, Brad O’Leary, gets hundreds of thousands of dollars a year to compose press releases touting such worthy events as a Celebrity Shoot in Los Angeles featuring appearances by Charlton Heston and Chuck Norris...
...And lastly, I would never have to deal with anyone telling me to my face what they actually think of me...
...Senator Ted Kennedy once said of Randall Robinson, TransAfrica’s director, “Robinson has been the lOlst senator in all our debates on apartheid...
...That subsidy was so enormous that the lobbying nonprofits had to notice...
...None of this necessarily indicts these two organizations...
...Government inspectors should pay particular attention to the c3k4 “split” nonprofits, and should audit transfers between them...
...It’s mostly an issue when organizations are applying for recognition of an exemption-they have to show us that what they’re doing is charitable...
...Government subsidies, consultant contracts with members of the Board, and the cost of that “summit” on St...
...Thomas should all be listed...
...The habit of veiled subsidies doesn’t improve the nonprofits any more than an addiction to price supports enhances American agriculture...
...Helms’s Conservative Caucus’s c3/c4 set-up includes such a vague arrangement of shared equipment and employees...
...Because, like many other nonprofit groups, it’s two legally separate organizations rolled into one...
...Tax-deductible money was also used to cover salaries and fund airplane tickets and lavish lunches...
...Is Lenkowsky too cynical...
...Helms himself openly admitted to the charade of the Coalition for Freedom to The New Yorker in 1981: “I think [Carbaugh, Lucier, et al.] figured they could be more effective raising money if [citizens targeted by direct mail] didn’t have a letter every week from the Congressional Club...
...The principle is simple and compelling...
...Direct mail fundraising, he reckoned, would be an essential part of Washington’s future...
...It is entirely conceivable that all of the payments are being made in proportion to the work carried out for each organization, and that everything is perfectly legal...
...As with the Jesse Jackson/ ACU incident, one can designate a check for a “foundation” and still have the money go toward the desired lobbying, thus allowing a deduction...
...In the end, it shouldn’t matter whether it’s Jesse Jackson or Jesse Helms you want to nail to the wall...
...For each $72 contribution to the Cat0 Institute, say, the treasury would ante up $28...
...Why not for this...
...He was right...
...When I fnst went to work for a nonprofit,” says Leslie Lenkowsky, the former president of the Institute for Educational Affairs and now president of the Hudson Institute, “someone informed me that there were three things that I would never have to worry about again...
...The first of these were noncharitable c4s: the Congressional Club, Conservative Caucus, Committee for the Survival of a Free Congress, and a PAC-the National Conservative Political Action Committee...
...But, to apply George Bush’s standard, this is certainly not above the appearance of impropriety...
...Though one fundraising event grossed $1,133,072, the expense charge came to $927,421, leaving net proceeds for the Caucus at a piddling $205,651, 40 percent of which went straight to Richard Viguerie as payment for his efforts...
...Hot damn-now your $100 donation is going to cost you only about $75...
...Still, nonprofits have never been very good at watching themselves, which is why we have the IRS...
...So let’s eliminate tax write-offs for charitable organizations altogether and replace them with cash...
...Not surprisingly, in offices where split groups have virtually the same names and resources, both the finances and the politics often become hopelessly entangled...
...Smell fishy...
...Nonprofiteers HOW to lobby like a coporation and pay taxes like a charity by David Shenk A brief role-play exercise: Let’s say you can’t stand Jesse Jackson...
...It] loosened up the IRS’s attitude about it and encouraged us on the outside...
...Charitables] aren’t supposed to do something that’s one-sided,” says David Jones, spokesman for the IRS...
...It was all Moosehead and Heineken, and great food...
...The Caucus returns also show a $78,000 “consulting fee” to a separate Howard Phillips CorporationPhillips is listed as “full-time” chairman of the Caucus-on top of Phillips’s regular $134,000 salary...
...Why could the ACU say donations were not deductible, then turn around and tell me I could write mine off...
...Say I’m in the 28 percent tax bracket...
...This is the same frugal Jesse Helms, you might recall, who raised a national furor over a few thousand dollars in art subsidies...
...Thomas-tax-exempt, naturally...
...The first is for governmentsubsidized lobbying and demagoguery...
...The rest of America pays $28 to cover my write-off...
...Although 1989 tax returns show that the c3 Conservative Caucus Research Analysis & Education Foundation earned roughly 17 percent of the income of the c4 Conservative Caucus, Inc., the foundation paid nearly 30 percent of the total wages...
...What could YOU possibly do that would have any effect...
...I noticed it says that donations to that project are not tax deductible...
...Research assistance was provided by Jennifer Bradley, Eric Konigsberg, and Dan Rocconi...
...Whatever they want you to sign, you’ll sign...
...In fact, these days, even the teensy National Community Education Association of Alexandria, Virginia, has a “National Community Education Foundation” to take tax-deductible contributions...
...And there are other apparent imbalances, such as a payment four times as large from the c3 than from the c4 for the services of lawyer Mike Hudson, and consulting fees of $38,074 to Anthony Podesta and $30,000 to David Cohen from the c3, but nothing for either from the c4, where they serve on the board of directors...
...The two breeds of nonprofit are commonly identified by their treatment under section 501(c) of the IRS code...
...It was only a matter of time before the noncharitable lobbies figured out that, thanks to the see-no-evil IRS, they could con the government into subsidizing their supporters’ donations...
...And they had to have a piece of the action-hence the birth of the c3Ic4 split...
...One way to apply that pressure would be to form a 501(c)3 Institute for Critical Study of Tax-Exempt Organizations (to raise money and apply for research grants) and, in the same office, a 501(c)4 Coalition to Curb Nonprofits Now...
...Meanwhile, “noncharitables” such as the Tobacco Institute, the National Rifle Association (NRA), and the National Abortion Rights Action League (NARAL) can’t offer the tax deduction, but they can lobby like there’s no tomorrow...
...That’s why lobbies with the good sense to keep clever tax lawyers on their payrolls have managed to slip through the cracks in the regulatory codes with astonishing frequency...
...A nonprofit’s privilege should come with a responsibility to bare its financesnot only in an annual report for insiders, but in regular mailings to contributors...
...The group lost the case, but in the opinion, Justice William Rehnquist pointed out plainly that a c4 had an alternative: It could set up a complementary c3...
...While there was previously a general assumption that charitables would not lobby very much-the statutes were remarkably vague-the way “charitables” such as the Alliance for Justice lobbied against Bork’s nomination irked conservatives enough to press for a formalization of rules...

Vol. 23 • December 1991 • No. 12


 
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