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Labor of Love: Establishing a Company Giving Program
A corporate giving program can help attract and retain employees,
increase staff morale, and reduce corporate tax burden. The
Chillicothe-Ross Community Foundation has worked with numerous local
businesses to create giving programs that serve the community. Call
us to discuss your options for corporate philanthropic programs.
Corporate
philanthropy is thriving in the U.S. despite tough economic times.
According to the 2003 Giving USA study, a philanthropic survey
compiled by the Center on Philanthropy at Indiana University,
corporate giving rose 10.5 percent nationally in 2002, compared with
a year earlier.
The rewards of a
corporate giving program are well known: it can make a real
difference in the community and help establish the company as a
responsible citizen. A giving program can also help attract and
retain employees, increase staff morale, and reduce the corporate
tax burden.
Corporations are
taking note that consumers and potential job applicants are
expecting them to be more socially conscious. According to a 2002
survey sponsored by Cone, a Boston consulting company that links
businesses to social causes, 84 percent of people surveyed say it is
important that the companies doing business in their communities
exhibit a commitment to social issues. Additionally, 77 percent of
those surveyed would consider a company's social commitment when
deciding whether to accept a job offer.
Companies often
establish a private foundation to accomplish these goals. However,
community foundations frequently provide the same services at lower
cost and with fewer administrative hassles. Additionally, community
foundations can also provide strategic planning consulting to
businesses that need assistance with assistance identifying their
long-term philanthropic goals, and establishing employee programs
such as scholarships and matching gift programs.
Matching Businesses and Local Nonprofits
Community
Foundations are virtual libraries of information about every
nonprofit in their respective communities. They know the programs
that are working and those that are in need of special assistance.
Managers at
community foundations can work with companies to align their core
businesses with a special charitable focus. For example, if a paper
company wants to focus its efforts on community recycling, the
community foundation can help them identify appropriate community
programs to support. Giving programs with this kind of special focus
can help attract employees and boost morale by showing that the firm
is a conscientious player in business and philanthropy.
Community
foundations can also match companies with charities that are
overlooked. A smaller company's donation to a national philanthropic
organization may be dwarfed by a million-dollar gift from a larger
company. A smaller firm can really benefit from a community
foundation's knowledge of local issues and charitable organizations;
their experience matching gifts with programs can maximize a
company's local impact and give community exposure that shows the
company is a good neighbor.
Staying Abreast of Local Needs
Community
foundations also keep their corporate partners up to date on
important community needs. For example, in the hometown of one
community foundation, the mayor proposed a revitalization of the
city's urban downtown area. The community foundation initiated a
conference of many local businesses that give through the community
foundation to create a strategic assessment for an urban renewal
program. As a result, the meeting yielded a new urban renewal fund
and a union of local philanthropic leaders.
The companies
involved with the community foundation were invited to take part in
a solution that pooled resources and affected real and immediate
changes in the lives of local residents such as improving housing
and education. For smaller businesses, this connection with the
community foundations can be especially valuable; they are alerted
to pressing issues and have a first shot at participating, keeping
them visible within the community.
Cost-Effective, Flexible Philanthropy
In addition to
making a valuable difference with local nonprofits, facilitating
corporate philanthropy through a community foundation makes economic
sense. In a private foundation, a company would have to grant 5
percent of the assets in that foundation each year to maintain the
nonprofit status. But if the fund were through a community
foundation, no annual payout amount would be required. This allows
the corporation great flexibility in its giving program; the company
could grant as much or as little as it wanted. In addition, a
private foundation must pay an excise tax each year, which is equal
to approximately 1 percent of its assets. A fund with a community
foundation does not have to pay that tax.
Some community
foundations also offer tax credits for sale at a discount. For
example, a company might have an opportunity to purchase $1 million
worth of tax credits for $900,000, saving $100,000 in state taxes
for the year. Because of the affiliation with the community
foundation, a company would have an opportunity to purchase these
credits.
Setting Up a Corporate-Advised Fund
It takes about an
hour to set up a corporate advised fund at a community foundation.
Community foundations employ money managers, tax experts, lawyers
and researchers, saving all the hassles of hiring a private staff.
Community foundations also handle all of the tax burdens: they fill
out returns each year, keep public notification forms up to date,
and are completely responsible for any audits. Outsourcing the
administrative aspects of corporate philanthropy to a community
foundation saves thousands of dollars each year in these operating
expenses. And because a community foundation is a nonprofit itself,
it doesn't factor its own profit in to any of its minimal fees.
Community
foundations can handle gifts of stock, real estate, art collections
or other nontraditional assets to establish a fund. With a corporate
advised fund, the community foundation holds the assets and makes
gifts as the company wishes. It looks and feels like a private
foundation, and the community foundation can be as invisible or
visible as the company wishes. The community foundation merely acts
as a knowledgeable, nonprofit friend and expert in the
administrative details and community programs.
Community
foundations can provide philanthropically minded businesses with the
resources they need to make a difference in the communities where
they operate and in the lives of their customers and other
neighbors.
Written by HNW for
Community Foundations of America.
Copyright 2003. Used with permission.
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Chillicothe-Ross
Community Foundation
45 E Main Street
Chillicothe, OH 45601
Scott Graham
740-774-GIFT (4438) |