Ohio Attorney General Partners with OSU and Nonprofit to Study Charitable Impacts During COVID-19 Pandemic

Like other sectors, COVID-19 is limiting how charities operate with a new study showing that more than one in four Ohio nonprofits are not able to provide any services due to its economic fallout and an additional 50% are doing so at a significantly reduced capacity.

The Ohio Attorney General’s Office partnered with Philanthropy Ohio and Ohio State University’s John Glenn School of Public Affairs to produce The Ohio Nonprofit COVID-19 Survey which captured early reactions of the nonprofit sector to the pandemic, including their concerns and planned actions.

“Everyone is making financial decisions that will hopefully limit their long-term impact,” Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost said. “The stark reality is that even small cuts to Ohio charities will have large consequences. Remember your fellow Ohioan when budgeting cuts for charities – they need us more now more than ever.” 

The study began in early April in response to the public health crisis and received more than 7,700 responses from charities and nonprofits throughout the state. With input from several members of the Ohio Attorney General’s Charitable Advisory Council, the project partners plan to field further rounds of the survey in the coming months to track how nonprofits are overcoming and recovering from the coronavirus pandemic.

Without the ability to host large gatherings, cancellations and postponements are happening rapidly and are not limited to the state’s larger cities. Large charity events such as the American Heart Association’s Heart Mini-Marathon and Walk — Cincinnati’s largest fundraiser — have been cancelled or postponed statewide over the past two months. The Komen Columbus Race for the Cure, originally scheduled for May 16, has been postponed until August 1. With delays and cancellations, food banks throughout Ohio are feeding more people with limited resources.

“The sector is resilient, but keeping nonprofit doors open depends heavily on the goodwill of funders and volunteers,” said Dr. Erynn Beaton of the John Glenn School of Public Affairs. “I want this study to draw attention to the challenges these organizations face – at a time when people need them most. There are many nonprofits struggling, and even the smallest donations can help.”

The report found that the following revenue streams are “very important” to survey participants:

  • Individual donations (68.7% of respondents)
  • Business or corporate donations (43.7%)
  • Foundation grants (30.9%)
  • Earned income like service fees and charges (28.8%)
  • Membership dues (28.5%)
  • Government grants and contracts (23.2%)

Responding nonprofits already are cutting administrative expenses, applying for the Federal Payroll Protection Program and cutting or furloughing staff. About 18% of them have had to draw on reserves and others are strongly considering it.

“Philanthropy Ohio is grateful for the nonprofits who are working under difficult circumstances to continue their services to clients and communities,” said Deborah Aubert Thomas, president and CEO of Philanthropy Ohio. “We are glad that so many foundations, companies and United Ways are stepping up to help, as seen by the more than 55 COVID-19 relief funds – with more than 116 organizations – across Ohio that have raised about $26 million and disbursed over $15 million since the crisis began.”

Philanthropy Ohio is an association of foundations, corporate giving programs, individuals and organizations actively involved in philanthropy in Ohio.

Charitable organizations fulfill a vital role in Ohioans’ quality of life. The attorney general’s office provides a variety of resources, including a database of registered charities, to help charitable leaders serve their communities and reassure donors that their contributions are being used as they intend.

For more information, click here.

Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller Dismantles National ‘Puppy Laundering’ Ring

Settlement of unprecedented lawsuit dissolves ‘rescue’ organizations 

DES MOINES — Iowans who operated an alleged puppy laundering ring have agreed to dissolve their “pet rescue” nonprofits, permanently cease deceptive operations, pay the state $60,000, and submit to other restrictions as part of a settlement with Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller. 

Continue reading “Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller Dismantles National ‘Puppy Laundering’ Ring”

Montgomery County Office of Consumer Protection Uncovers Political Action Committee Engaged in Deceptive Telemarketing Regarding Alleged Donations to Local Volunteer Firefighters

Residents in Montgomery County have been receiving deceptive telemarketing solicitations from a fictitious business seeking donations to benefit local volunteer firefighters. The County’s Office of Consumer Protection (OCP) has entered into a settlement agreement with the organization making the deceptive calls but is still urging residents to be aware that the scam has occurred and could be duplicated by others. The settlement includes provisions for scammed residents to receive refunds.

Continue reading “Montgomery County Office of Consumer Protection Uncovers Political Action Committee Engaged in Deceptive Telemarketing Regarding Alleged Donations to Local Volunteer Firefighters”

Aspen Institute Update on passage of the Taxpayer First Act

NASCO is pleased to share the following update from The Aspen Institute:

Join the Aspen Institute in celebrating an historic victory for the nonprofit sector and our democracy!

A few years ago, the Program on Philanthropy and Social Innovation (PSI) of the Aspen Institute, and its partners, set out to revolutionize nonprofit data by making it easier and cheaper for researchers and the public to access information on the U.S. nonprofit sector as a whole.

Welcome to the world of nonprofit data liberation!

Congress has passed a new law requiring the electronic filing of nonprofit tax returns and the release of those forms to the public, for free, in a searchable, machine-readable format.

The provision is part of a bipartisan IRS reform measure, the Taxpayer First Act (H.R. 3151), just approved by the Senate and recently passed in the House. The bill now awaits the President’s signature to become law; I will share updates as the bill approaches this crucial last stage.

Continue reading “Aspen Institute Update on passage of the Taxpayer First Act”

NASCO, GuideStar, Multistate Registration and Filing Portal, and CityBase Creating Single System for State Charity Registration and Reporting

Will enable charities and professional fundraisers to comply with fundraising regulations in one place

Washington, DC, and Chicago, IL, April 04, 2018 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The National Association of State Charity Officials (NASCO), the Multistate Registration and Filing Portal, Inc. (MRFP), GuideStar, and CityBase have joined forces to simplify compliance with state fundraising regulations.

“Thirty-nine states require charities and professional fundraisers to register before raising money,” explained MRFP president Chris Cash.  MRFP is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation formed by NASCO members in 2013 for the purposes of administering and contracting for the development of the single filing portal.  “The registration and reporting requirements vary from state to state. Online fundraising has further complicated this situation. We need to simplify the state registration process through a single national charity registration system. We are excited to be partnering with GuideStar and CityBase to create this.”

“The current registration and reporting process is time-consuming and complicated,” noted Josh Goldstein, VP of product at CityBase, a provider of end-to-end payment solutions, digital services, and API development for local governments and utilities. “Nonprofits spend lots of time each year navigating these state-by-state reporting requirements. The portal will save charities time by capturing this information in one place. We will also ‘auto-fill’ many fields with data that GuideStar has collected from the IRS or from the charities themselves.”

The portal also will increase nonprofit transparency. “We are working with the state charity offices to help them use this registration data in their work,” stated Jacob Harold, president and CEO of GuideStar. GuideStar is the world’s largest source of information on nonprofit organizations and itself a 501(c)(3) public charity. “We will also make much of the registration data, minus private information, available for download. Researchers, policy makers, and the public will be able to use this open data to learn more about the sector. We will also incorporate state registration information into GuideStar’s Nonprofit Profiles. We are proud to help charities devote more time to their missions while ensuring compliance with state requirements.”

CityBase and GuideStar will launch an initial prototype with registrations for a few states this summer. They will work with NASCO to add more states prior to a full launch later in 2018. Additional states will be added over time to eventually create what proponents hope will be a 39-state solution.

About NASCO and MRFP

The National Association of State Charity Officials (NASCO), www.NASCOnet.org, is an association of all state offices charged with oversight of charitable organizations and charitable solicitation in the United States. NASCO provides a forum by which the states can communicate and collaborate on issues of common interest regarding charity oversight and enforcement. NASCO officials established MRFP to provide governance for development and operation of an online system that will allow nonprofit organizations and their professional fundraisers to comply with all states’ registration and annual filing requirements through a single online portal.  Members of MRFP are state agencies (attorneys general, secretaries of state, or other agencies) participating in the multistate registration portal.

About GuideStar

GuideStar, http://www.guidestar.org, is the world’s largest source of nonprofit information, connecting people and organizations with data on 2.7 million current and formerly IRS-recognized nonprofits. Each year, more than 9 million people, including individual donors, nonprofit leaders, grantmakers, government officials, academic researchers, and the media, use GuideStar data to make intelligent decisions about the social sector. GuideStar Nonprofit Profiles are populated with information from the IRS, directly from nonprofits, and via other partners in the nonprofit sector. In addition, users see GuideStar data on more than 200 philanthropic websites and applications. GuideStar is itself a 501(c)(3) public charity.

About CityBase
CityBase gives people and businesses an intuitive way to interact with utilities and government agencies. CityBase’s technology dramatically improves constituent services through payment solutions, digital services and API development for cities, states and utilities. For more information please visit http://www.thecitybase.com/.

Press release available here.

Jackie Enterline Fekeci
GuideStar
202-637-7606
jackie.enterline@guidestar.org

Chris Cash
MRFP, Inc.
303-860-6906
chris.cash@sos.state.co.us