T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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839.1 | Press SELECT or KP7 to add... | NEWVAX::PAVLICEK | Zot, the Ethical Hacker | Wed Jun 14 1989 16:48 | 10 |
| re: .0
EASYNOTES.LIS shows this conference:
Non-Profit Fundraising {ADS,CADVAX}::FUNDRAIS 456
Seems like the people involved there might have some first-hand
experience at this (although I can't say, as I don't note there).
-- Russ
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839.2 | Ready to file a 990? | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | I'll pick a white rose with Plantagenet. | Wed Jun 14 1989 17:35 | 9 |
| The important thing about a non-profit organization (from a
governmental point of view) is that it is tax exempt. Contact
the IRS and ask for their booklet about 501(c)3 organizations
and stuff like that, and apply to the Mass. Dept. of Revenue
for the state equivalent.
You shouldn't need a lawyer.
Ann B.
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839.3 | Also you might try conference ANYWAY::ASKENET | HPSCAD::FORTMILLER | Ed Fortmiller, MRO1-3, 297-4160 | Thu Jun 15 1989 09:08 | 1 |
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839.4 | | NAC::SCHUCHARD | Life + Times of Wurlow Tondings III | Thu Jun 15 1989 09:51 | 8 |
|
I've just been involved with an organization doing the same thing.
.2 has it correct. I'm told the process is long to get the permanent
501(c)3 status, but you can get a temporary designation in as little
as 6 weeks. NOTE - until you have this designation, any contributions
made to you are NOT Tax-Exempt.
bs
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839.5 | "Town Clerk is the answer" | CSSE::CARPENITO | | Thu Jun 15 1989 09:55 | 6 |
| Go see the Town Clerk in the community that your organization will
reside in. He/she will have all of the information you will need.
Regards,
The Selectmen
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839.6 | Attourney my be required - get on pro-bono | AZTECH::JARRETT | | Thu Jun 15 1989 12:44 | 4 |
| You may need an attorney if Mass laws are similar to those in Colorado. Colorado
requires that non-profit organizations incorporate for tax exempt status,
consequently Articles of Incorporation and Assignment of Registered agent must
be filed with the Secretary of State (also semi-annual corporate reports).
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839.7 | It's so complex that we never completed the paperwork | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Thu Jun 15 1989 13:05 | 13 |
| I am a member of two different clubs in Massachusetts (and an officer
currently of one of them), and the rules for gaining non-profit status
in this state are sufficiently complicated that neither club ever
managed to get all the paperwork filed: we would have had to hire a
lawyer, which doesn't make sense when you are talking about small
organizations with a couple hundred members and a couple hundred
dollars treasury maximum. It would be useful to have the non-profit
status because it would save postage costs, which is most of the budget
(although bringing the newsletters in to the post office, which is only
open a subset of the hours I am at DEC, in order to turn them in in
zip-code order, instead of dumping them all in the mailbox when the
fold-staple-mutilate party is over each time, would be a big
nuisance!).
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839.8 | | TOKLAS::FELDMAN | PDS, our next success | Thu Jun 15 1989 13:35 | 23 |
| Post office rules are different than IRS and state rules (or at least
they were at one time). I have heard of organizations that had
non-profit postal permits without getting IRS blessings.
I think that associations (i. e. non-corporations) can get non-profit
status from the IRS, independently of any state laws. The IRS has a
critical threshhold on income or gross revenue, below which you don't
need to deal with much of the bureaucracy.
Still, incorporating may be a good idea, independently of whether or
not you get 501(c)3 status. It will provide some important protection
to the members and board of the organization. Once you get past the
initial hassles, it's worth paying the annual registration fees (I
think $50 in MA, for non-profits). You'll want a lawyer to help with
incorporation.
Pittsburgh, PA has or had an agency (non-profit, of course) whose main
purpose in life was to provide legal assistance to other non-profit
organizations interested in incorporating or getting 501(c)3 status. I
have yet to find such an agency in New England. (It wasn't the usual
Legal Aid or Neighborhood Legal Services type agency.)
Gary
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839.9 | Topic closed by moderator | CVG::THOMPSON | Protect the guilty, punish the innocent | Thu Jun 15 1989 14:15 | 5 |
| This topic is not related to Digital at all. Also pointers to
other conferences better able to handle this question have been
made. Please take furthor discussion to mail. Thank you.
Alfred - co-moderator
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