Giving in the News: Switching From Private Foundations to Donor-Advised Funds

Jilian Mincer highlights the trend of givers transferring their private foundations to donor-advised funds in a recent Wall Street Journal article.

In the article, Mincer highlights the fact that moving one’s foundation assets into a fund causes substantial tax savings (meaning more to give), cost benefits, additional privacy, and higher levels of flexibility. Donors can be more focused on where and how they give charitably, rather than spending time on administrative duties.

Comparison Chart

Ms. Mincer also highlights the potential drawbacks why some might not like the idea of abandoning the private foundation model – primarily lack of independence and total control. She cites, for example, the legal requirement that all grants from funds be directly made to charitably exempt organizations, as opposed to individuals and groups that aren’t officially recognized as such by the IRS. This is an accurate point. At Servant, however, we’ve partnered with benevolence ministries such as Helping Hands Ministries to channel tax-deductible gifts to qualified individuals. We’ve also seen that givers prefer the freedom from the administrative details of the private foundation. In the example cited in the article, a donor that had typically spent several weeks each year on foundation maintenance was able to reduce that by 75%. And all of that time can be focused on the actual giving of grants.

You can read the entire article here.

New Receipting Changes Beginning Nov. 11

We are pleased to announce a new feature for fundholders to receive electronic notifications when new contributions are posted. Instead of receiving hardcopy receipts, donors who have an active email address on file with us will be sent an alert when contribution receipts are available online. An email will be sent as soon as the contribution has been posted to the fund, giving our donors faster access to their documents. This new service will take effect November 11. If you would prefer to continue to receive your contribution receipts through US Mail, please contact Jonathan at jharrison@servantchristian.com.

This change will not affect givers who already receive their statements in the US Mail, and friends or supporters who give to another’s fund will continue to receive paper receipts.

Upgrades such as these help the foundation wisely allocate limited resources. In 2008 alone, 4,060 receipts were mailed (approximately 78 per week). These upgrades also allow donors faster access to their documents in a securer format.

Upcoming Events: Passion Awards!

Faith_Unleashed_BannerWhat would it look like if we chose to unleash our faith?

Join us for the 2009 Passion Awards, one of the largest Christian ministry awards celebrations in the country!

Monday, November 9, 2009
6:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.
Pre-event and Registration begins at 5:30 p.m.
Overland Park Convention Center
6000 College Boulevard
Overland Park, Kansas

Early Bird Special
Register by October 15th for $650/table of 10 or $65/individual.
$750/table of 10 or $75/individual after October 15th.

registerevent

How to Set Up a Giving Circle

One of the recent trends in giving is the rise of “Giving Circles” —individuals who come together to pool their assets to make a difference with their giving.

Setting up a Giving Circle is easy, and you may be surprised how meaningful it is to give among friends. Here are six basic steps to help you get started:

Step 1 – Set Goals and Structure
Identify a group of your peers, colleagues, or family members who may share a common interest and invite them to get together. Your first meetings will focus on setting up the Circle’s structure such as giving guidelines, meeting schedule, and deciding a name.

It is up to your group to determine the contribution amount that each member should make. There are circles that require $500, $5,000, or more in annual commitments. It is important for the group to have complete consensus on the final amount.

Step 2 – Establish Your Mission

Your group needs to decide which charities you would like to focus on. You may also wish to simply designate a general category, such as evangelism, inner city, youth, or poor and needy.

Step 3 – Open a Giving Fund
Your group can open a Fund at SCCF by making a suggested tax-deductable contribution of $2,500 or more.

Step 4 – Create Work Groups
Once your focus is established, having members volunteer for particular tasks will build personal commitment in your Circle. For example, one work group could organize meetings and Circle events, another could manage the Fund online (recommend grants, review Fund balances, etc.), while another might research new giving opportunities.

Step 5 – Develop Partnerships

Determine how you want to be involved with the organizations that you fund. Will you also volunteer for
an organization that you have funded? Web development, program planning, and mentoring are some examples of ways your members might get involved.

Step 6 – Evaluate Your Impact
Take time to examine your short-term and long-term goals on a regular basis. This will help develop a sense of satisfaction and show how your contributions are making a difference.

Candid feedback from the organizations you have funded and partnered with will always be an important ingredient of this process.
________________________________________
Original article by Pam Pugh, Copyright © 2008, The National Christian Foundation

Thine Eyes Documentary

This week Thine Eyes – A Witness to the March for Life is showing their documentary on their website, www.thineeyes.org, for free. Thine Eyes raised support through a donor-advised fund at SCCF, and has produced the movie to raise awareness for this annual pro-life event as well as the media’s intentional failure to publicize it.

Steve Sanborn, the executive producer for the film, posted the video online in response to Pro-life terrorism accusations resulting from the Tiller shooting. He says, “The murder of abortionist George Tiller cannot be condoned. Neither can accusations of Pro-life ‘terrorism’ be condoned. The crime of one unaffiliated man does not speak for the Pro-life Movement. But this documentary does…”

Additional info can be found on Thine Eyes website.

Study finds giving circles benefit members

A study titled “The Impact of Giving Together” looked at the effects of giving circles and found:

1. Giving circles influence members to give more.

2. Giving circles influence members to give more strategically.

3. Giving circle members give to a wide array of organizations.

4. Giving circle members are highly engaged in the community.

5. Giving circles increase members’ knowledge about philanthropy, nonprofits and the community.

Since its inception in 2000, Servant Christian has recognized the importance of giving circles and sponsors several. For more information on how you can get involved, send us an email at info@servantchristian.com. You can read the entire article highlighting the study here.

Giving in the news: Women Take the Lead in Couples’ Charitable-Giving Decisions

Women Take the Lead in Couples’ Charitable-Giving Decisions

Published May 19 in The Chronicle of Philanthropy

By Paula Wasley

Women are taking an increasingly prominent role in determining their household’s charitable giving, with high-income women in particular more likely to seek financial advice and use sophisticated methods when making donations, according to a new study sponsored by Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund.

An online survey of 1,000 adults who had given $1,000 or more to charity in 2007 — half of whom had donated $5,000 or more — found that more women than men act as their household’s primary decision maker in determining how much to donate to charity and which causes to support.

Among participants in the survey — 80 percent of whom were married — the majority of male respondents named their spouse as the primary influencer in charitable-giving decisions, while women in the study were more likely to name a range in influencers that included family members, friends, and co-workers.

Women in the survey also felt more strongly about involving their children in philanthropy. Nearly half of the women in the study (48 percent) strongly agreed that it was important to them that their children continue their tradition of charitable giving, as compared with 39 percent of men in the study.

Upper Tier

While the average household income for participants in the survey was $136,000, the study particularly looked at the giving habits of the 11 percent of respondents who were women with household incomes of at least $150,000.

The survey found that, in comparison to the other respondents, these high-income women were more likely to make public rather than anonymous gifts to charity, to use more complicated financial structures to make gifts, and to seek the guidance of financial advisors when making charitable contributions.

For example, 7 percent of women in this group said they had made gifts of securities to charity, as compared to 4 percent of all respondents, and 3 percent of men of comparable household incomes.

And 16 percent of high-income women said they had used a donor advised fund, charitable remainder trust, or a private foundation to make contributions, as compared with 9 percent of all donors, and 10 percent of high-income men.

High-income women were also more likely than others in the survey to donate to health and science causes and to make additional gifts to charity in response to increasing needs and difficult economic times, the survey found.

The survey’s findings offer insights into how women are likely to shape the future of philanthropy, says Sarah C. Libbey, Fidelity’s president. “Women have always had a hand in their household’s charitable outreach, but that role is evolving as women increasingly create their own wealth and become beneficiaries of wealth transfers because they live longer,” said Ms. Libbey, in a written statement. “We, and other nonprofit organizations, should pay more attention to this very influential group of donors.”

Researchers also grouped respondents into four distinct donor “profiles” based on their giving patterns and attitudes toward philanthropy.

The “mainstream contributor” — which accounted for 52 percent of those in the study — was less likely than others to increase giving in difficult economic times. And, when cutting back on the percentage of the household income contributed to charity, donors in this category tend to give to the same number of causes as in previous years but decrease the size of their gifts. Donors who fell into this category gave an average of $6,842 to charity in 2008.

Nearly a third of the respondents in the study were identified as “empathetic givers” who were more likely to give more in tough economic times and to respond to a cause when personally touched by illness or tragedy. Respondents in this group gave an average of $7,287 in 2008.

About 15 percent of those surveyed were described as “reactive contributors” who, in comparison to the other groups, give a smaller percentage of their household income to charity and are more likely to reduce their donations in difficult economic times. Total donations from individuals in this group averaged $3,687 in 2008.

Just 4 percent of respondents were identified as “pioneering givers.” Donors in this group gave away the highest percentage of their income to charity, were more likely to give to new and lesser-known causes, and more frequently used credit cards or securities to make donations. Individuals in this group gave an average of $7,347 to charity in 2008.

Giving in the News: The National Christian Foundation Celebrates $2 Billion in Grants

The National Christian Foundation (NCF) reached a major milestone in giving with the distribution of its two billionth grant dollar since 1982. This record illustrates the exponential growth of the non-profit as it took almost 25 years to reach their first $1 billion grant mark, while the $2 billion grant milestone came in just over three years.

NCF President, David Wills said, “We attribute this growth to God at work in and through believers as they seek to be wise and faithful stewards, even in these difficult economic times. Additionally, our expanding network of over 37 Affiliates around the country has allowed us to work more closely with those whom we are privileged to serve.”

Currently, NCF and its 37 Local Christian Foundation Affiliates are ranked as the nation’s
22nd largest charity.1 Givers make contributions to their donor-advised funds at NCF and then recommend grants to organizations that are making a difference here and around the world.

The $1.5 million grant that made this milestone possible was recommended by “The Green Fund to Reach the Children,” a donor-advised fund of Hobby Lobby, one of America’s fastest growing arts and crafts retail chains. Their grant will go to help needy children.

David Green, C.E.O. of Hobby Lobby says, “At a time when our nation’s charities need help like never before, we are delighted to be a part of this new milestone in the history of American giving. With the help of NCF and their Kansas City affiliate, The Servant Christian Community Foundation, Hobby Lobby is able to give more to the causes that are closest to our hearts, such as needy children.”

1 2008, Chronicle of Philanthropy, Non-Profits Ranked by Revenue

Resource Management

RESOURCE MANAGEMENT

English (in Bible) – stewardship
Greek – oikonomia – economy, management of another’s affairs

> If God owns it all and we own nothing, then we are responsible to Him to manage His affairs.

> The REAL ISSUE is whether we view what we manage as ours or the Lords.

> The amount we manage is not the test, it is how faithful we are with what He entrust to us.

> Time is our most valuable asset. This life is brief therefore consider the long tomorrow.

> God has given us talents, aptitudes and abilities, to glorify Him and serve others.

> The Bible has 2,320 verses dealing with money and possessions.

> Ten % of the New Testament relates directly to money, and Jesus talked about it more than any other subject other than eternity. The reason is that our possessions are the number 1 competitor to Jesus for lordship of our lives.

> With our mouths we can pray, recite Scripture and talk about service, but our checkbook is a true test of our commitment to the Kingdom.

> Only two things will last and get to Heaven – the Word of God and people. Therefore, we not only manage our time, our talents, and His treasure but also the Truth and relationships.

> We have a responsibility to learn and apply Scriptural truths in all areas of our life.

> The time spent in cultivating relationships by loving and serving people has both present and eternal significance.

From “Conformed to His Image” by Ken Boa

frankbrownFrank E. Brown served as a pilot for TWA for 25 years. He is currently the Chairman of Via Bancourier. He has been active in Christian ministries for 30 years, and serves on the board at SCCF.

Are You On A Generosity Track?

By Frank Brown

 

The challenge is to consider the steps that you have experienced in your giving journey to determine if you are  becoming more generous.

 

Do you make donations of any significant amount to any church or charity?

 

How would you classify yourself at this point in your giving journey: non-giver, emerging giver, “Tickled Tither”, mature giver, generous giver? 

 

If you feel that you are a giver at some level at what point did you embrace it & what factors or experiences made the difference?

 

Have you committed your life & all that you have to Jesus?

 

Do you believe that God owns it all & that you are His manager of the resources He has committed to your control?

 

Were you giving before you committed your life to Jesus?

 

As you became aware of giving as a part of your walk with the Lord did you feel a desire to give or was it an obligation?

 

In the early stages of this maturing process what was the most motivating factor that first inspired you to make a donation? For example: was it parents modeling giving, Bible teaching, a Crown study, saw a need you wanted to give to, etc.

 

What did you feel the first time you made a significant donation? Did this motivate you to give again or give more?

 

Have you experienced great joy in giving?  Do you feel that your gifts have made a significant difference in God’s Kingdom? (If not you probably aren’t giving enough).

 

frankbrownFrank E. Brown served as a pilot for TWA for 25 years. He is currently the Chairman of Via Bancourier. He has been active in Christian ministries for 30 years, and serves on the board at SCCF.