With more than 50,000 private foundations in the United States and the increasing scrutiny of the IRS, this much-needed, annually updated manual provides you with a wide range of tax rules and regulations for these foundations. Coauthored by a lawyer and tax accountant, the revised and expanded Third Edition includes practical tax compliance suggestions and in-depth legal explanations. Capturing all-new developments in the private foundations arena, the new edition presents you with line-by-line instructions, sample-filled IRS forms, and complete citations. BRUCE R. HOPKINS is a senior partner in the law firm of Polsinelli ShaltonFlanigan Suelthaus PC, practicing in the firm's Kansas City, Missouri, and Washington, D. C., offices. He specializes in the representation of private foundations and other taxexempt organizations. His practice ranges over the entirety of law matters involving exempt organizations, with emphasis on the formation of nonprofit organizations, acquisition of recognition of tax-exempt statusfor them, the private inurement and private benefit doctrines, the intermediate sanctions rules, legislative and political campaign activities issues, public charity and private foundation rules, unrelated business planning, use of exempt and for-profit subsidiaries, joint venture planning, tax shelter involvement, review of annual information returns, Internet communications developments, the law of charitable giving (including planned giving), and fundraising law issues. Mr. Hopkins served as Chair of the Committee on Exempt Organizations, Tax Section, American Bar Association; Chair, Section of Taxation, NationalAssociation of College and University Attorneys; and President, Planned Giving Study Group of Greater Washington, D. C. Mr. Hopkins is the series editor of Wiley's Nonprofit Law, Finance, and Management Series. In addition to co-author of Private Foundations: Tax Law and Compliance,Third Edition, he is the author of The Law of Tax-Exempt Organizations, Ninth Edition;The Planning Guide for the Law of Tax-Exempt Organizations:Strategies and Commentaries;IRS Audits of Tax-Exempt Organizations: Policies,Practices, and Procedures; The Tax Lawof Charitable Giving, Third Edition; The Law of Fundraising, Third Edition; The Tax Law ofAssociations; The Tax Law of Unrelated Business for Nonprofit Organizations; The Nonprofits'Guide to Internet Communications Law; The Law of Intermediate Sanctions: A Guide forNonprofits; Starting and Managing a Nonprofit Organization: A Legal Guide, Fifth Edition;Nonprofit Law Made Easy; Charitable Giving Law Made Easy; Private Foundation Law MadeEasy; 650 Essential Nonprofit Law Questions Answered; The First Legal Answer Book forFund-Raisers; The Second Legal Answer Book for Fund-Raisers;The Legal Answer Book forNonprofit Organizations; The Second Legal Answer Book for Nonprofit Organizations; andThe Nonprofit Law Dictionary; and is the co-author, with Jody Blazek, of The Legal AnswerBook for Private Foundations; with Thomas K. Hyatt, of The Law of Tax-ExemptHealthcare Organizations, Third Edition; with David O. Middlebrook, of Nonprofit Lawfor Religious Organizations: Essential Questions & Answers; and with Douglas K. Anning, Virginia C. Gross, and Thomas J. Schenkelberg, of The New Form 990: Law, Policyand Preparation. He also writes Bruce R. Hopkins' Nonprofit Counsel, a monthly newsletter, published by John Wiley & Sons. Mr. Hopkins received the 2007 Outstanding Nonprofit Lawyer Award (VanguardLifetime Achievement Award) from the American Bar Association, Section of Business Law, Committee on Nonprofit Corporations. He is listed in The Best Lawyers inAmerica, Nonprofit Organizations/Charities Law, 2007-2008. Mr. Hopkins earned his J. D. and L. L. M. degrees at the George Washington University National Law Center and his B. A. at the University of Michigan. He is a member of the bars of the District of Columbia and the state of Missouri. JODY BLAZEK is a partner in Blazek & Vetterling LLP, a Houston CPA firm focusing on tax and financial planning for exempt organizations and the individuals who create, fund, and work with them. BV serves over 400 nonprofit organizations providing financial reports and tax compliance and planning services. Ms. Blazek's accounting career has concentrated on nonprofit organizations for over 38 years. This focus began with KPMG (then Peat Marwick) when she studiedand interpreted the Tax Reform Act of 1969 as it related to charitable organizations and the creation of private foundations. From 1972 to 1981 she gained nonprofit management experience as treasurer of the Menil Interests, where sheworked with John and Dominique de Menil to plan the Menil Collection, The Rothko Chapel, and other projects of the Menil Foundation. She reentered public practice in 1981 to found the firm she now serves. She is the author of six books in the Wiley Nonprofit Series: Nonprofit FinancialPlanning Made Easy (2008); IRS Form 1023 Preparation Guide (2005); IRS Form 990 TaxPreparation Guide for Nonprofits (2004); Tax Planning and Compliance for Tax-Exempt Organizations, Fourth Edition (2004); Private Foundations: Tax Law and Compliance, ThirdEdition (2008); and The Legal Answer Book for Private Foundations (2002), the latter two volumes co-authored with Bruce R. Hopkins. Ms. Blazek serves on the Panel of the Nonprofit Sector, Transparency and Financial AccountabilityWork Group. Ms. Blazek is past Chair of the Tax-Exempt Organizations Resource Panel and a member of Form 1023 and 999 Revision Task Forces for the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants; she serves on the national editorial board of Tax Analysts'The Exempt Organization Tax Review and the AICPA's The Tax Advisor; and is an advisor to the Volunteer Service Committee of the Houston Chapter of Certified Public Accountants. She is a founding director of Texas Accountants and Lawyers for the Arts and a member of the board of the Anchorage Foundations, Houston Artists Fund, and the River Pierce Foundation. Ms. Blazek isa frequent speaker at nonprofit symposia, including AICPA Not-for-Profit Industry Conference; University of Texas Law School Nonprofit Organizations Institute; Texas, New York, Arizona, and Washington State CPA Societies' Nonprofit Conferences; conference of Southwest Foundations and Association of Small Foundations; and Resource Center's Nonprofit Legal and Accounting Institute, among others. INDICE: Preface. Chapter One: Introduction to Private Foundations. ChapterTwo: Starting and Funding a Private Foundation. Chapter Three: Types of Private Foundations. Chapter Four: Disqualified Persons. Chapter Five: Self-Dealing. Chapter Six Mandatory Distributions. Chapter Seven: Excess Business Holdings. Chapter Eight: Jeopardizing Investments. Chapter Nine: Taxable Expenditures.Chapter Ten: Tax on Investment Income. Chapter Eleven: Unrelated Business Income. Chapter Twelve: Tax Compliance and Administrative Issues. Chapter Thirteen: Termination of Foundation Status. Chapter Fourteen: Charitable Giving Rules. Chapter Fifteen: Private Foundations and Public Charities. Chapter Sixteen: Donor-Advised. Appendix A: Sources of the Law. Appendix B: Internal Revenue Code Sections. Table of Cases. Table of IRS Revenue Rulings and Revenue Procedures. Table of IRS Private Determinations Cited in Text. Table of IRS Private Determinations Discussed in Bruce R. Hopkins' Nonprofit Counsel. Table of IRS Private Letter Rulings, Technical Advice Memoranda, and General Counsel Memoranda. Index.
- ISBN: 978-0-470-32242-0
- Editorial: John Wiley & Sons
- Encuadernacion: Cartoné
- Páginas: 712
- Fecha Publicación: 08/09/2008
- Nº Volúmenes: 1
- Idioma: Inglés