On
Nonprofits ©
February
2010
Asking
For Donations? Be Sure You Are Properly Registered
Q:
Can you address what nonprofits must and should
do about registering in their own and other states
when they solicit donations? I am employed by
a management support organization. Many of the
nonprofits with which we work are not aware of
the requirements and I would like to provide them
with current information. I appreciate anything
you can share with me on this matter.
A:
You raise an issue that is getting a lot of attention
today, especially from the states themselves and
the IRS. The short answer is that organizations
must be registered in the states in which they
solicit funds. And, that might as well be every
state if they have a “donate now”
button on their website. While each state has
different laws on the books – for instance,
some allow for exemptions for such things as religious
organizations, organizations receiving money from
only a handful of individuals within the state
or organizations receiving an insignificant amount
of money from within the state – they are
all looking for full compliance.
The
registration requirements are not new. Organizations
have long been obligated to register in those
states in which they conduct a solicitation by
any means – e.g., direct mail, email, raffle
sales, telemarketing, personal visit and so on.
This has been true whether or not the organizations
have a physical presence in the state. Even the
ubiquitous “donate now” buttons on
websites can trigger registration requirements
in states that argue that one of their residents
could conceivably come upon one of these sites,
see the button as a solicitation and be motivated
to give.
Throughout
the years, a number of organizations have received
calls from states that proactively identified
them as scofflaws, threatening fines and demanding
immediate registration. In the grand scheme of
things, it was not a large number. But, just because
one of your organizations may have knowingly or
unknowingly ignored these laws with impunity in
the past, they do so now at their own peril.
Three
situations have emerged to make this so. The first
is the public’s growing unease over the
scandals that have rocked both for-profit and
nonprofit corporations, and the states’
corresponding desire to protect their citizens
by, at the very least, keeping track of who is
asking those citizens for money. Second, the poor
economy has motivated states to look for every
source of revenue they can find. Registration
fees and fines for the failure to register contribute
to states’ coffers. And third, the IRS did
a major rewrite of the Form 990, which now requires
nonprofits to report the states in which they
must file a copy of their Form 990 and the states
in which they are registered or have received
an exemption from registering. These two questions
allow the IRS to determine the states from which
an organization has raised funds. Failing to answer
is not an option. Answering falsely opens the
leadership to charges of perjury. In either case,
the leadership may be personally liable for civil
and in some cases criminal penalties, which can
bring fines up to $25,000 and potential jail time.
Ensuring
one’s compliance to the filing requirements
is not easy because each state has its own stipulations
for registration. Some grant registration automatically
if an organization files a copy of its IRS determination
letter, along with a cover sheet that includes
basic identifying information and any required
filing fee. Thirty-six states, plus the District
of Columbia, accept the Unified Registration Statement,
version 3.20, which is available – with
supplemental forms for 13 states – at www.multistatefiling.org.
But, organizations still have to file this form
separately in each state, along with the applicable
filing fee. Still other states require completion
of a unique registration form, plus any filing
fee. The filing fees can range from $25 to $400.
On top of this, registration is an annual requirement,
with different filing deadlines in each state.
There
are companies that will process all of an organization’s
registration materials each year. They tend to
run around $7500 in professional fees (exclusive
of filing fees), with some a little less and some
a little more. If an organization goes this route,
it should be sure to ask what the fee covers and
what level of accountability the company assumes
if they miss a filing deadline or makes some other
mistake.
Obviously,
an organization can file its own registrations.
It is my understanding that this takes an average
of two weeks of dedicated attention, though not
all at one time and each organization’s
unique situation will impact the actual number
of hours. Contact the states’ Attorney General
or Secretary of State (the Department of Agriculture
and Consumer Affairs in Florida and the Department
of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs and the Office
of Tax and Revenue in the District of Columbia)
for specific requirements and to learn of any
exemptions and penalties that might apply in the
organization’s case.
While
complex, registration is a task that cannot be
put off. Get going today. Good luck.