Ah, the murky waters of charitable contributions... For the record, I'm not a lawyer or tax professional, but here is how I understand it (and I checked with the IRS about this again today):
Per the IRS
You [the taxpayer/donor] can deduct your contributions only if you make them to a qualified organization
To become a qualified organization, most organizations other than churches and governments must apply to the IRS.
So, no, they cannot claim the contributions are legit if given to the PTO. But here's the twist, if the contribution is given to the school (and it's not for the benefit of a specific person -especially their own child) then it could be deductible.
Public schools are by definition charitable organizations. Parochial schools are probably okay as part of a church, but you should check. Others (private/charter) would probably have to be set up as qualified non-profit.
So who's issuing the receipt and who is the donor listing on their tax return? If the (non-qualified) PTO is acting on behalf of the school and the
school is the charitable organization, the donor could claim it.
For those of you who have been around the Forum for awhile, you know my views have mellowed over the years. For some PTOs - especially middle school where they may only hold a niche position and deal with relatively small amounts of money, I'd probably advocate them not becoming a big, separate organization, but instead just acting as a volunteer organization within the school's domain.
The key questions are:
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- How much money is flowing through your group? If it's more than $5000 (gross) per year, the IRS says you should file for 501(c)(3) status.</font>
- How good is your relationship with the school? Would an alternate relationship work?</font>
- How much independence do you really want? Is absolute control over funds a necessity?</font>
- Would your school agree to allow you to operate as a dependent organization?</font>
- Do you have the structure, the leadership, and the volunteer support to run a 501(c)(3) - which is a type of business? Parent volunteers are quite capable of performing these tasks (filing taxes, setting up good accounting practices, maintaining insurance, etc.) But do you want to? Will you?</font>
If you have a strong, fairly formal organization with substantial funds flowing through it, then you should set it up legally as an independent entity (incorporate, get tax exempt status from your state, apply for 501(c)(3) with the IRS.)
As long the goals are clear and the parent group and the school agree on the structure, I think either way can be successful.
But what shouldn't happen (and so often does) is the group continues operating on semi-independent basis, but not following best practices and ignorant of laws in this area.
This is purely my opinion....
P.S. And be aware that most of your school officials do NOT understand the issues and legalities of a PTO. There are a lot of myths, miscommunications, "policies" that don't really exist. So once you start discussing options with your principal or others, be patient and be prepared to (diplomatically) question any barriers thrown at you.
[ 08-27-2004, 10:37 AM: Message edited by: JHB ]