Nonprofit tax compliance; IRS Raises the governance bar with the revised form 990.

AuthorTrupiano, Martin J.
PositionFederaltax

the IRS has raised the governance bar for public charities. It has issued a revised Form 990, the annual information return filed by most nonprofits based on the premise that good governance produces better tax compliance (see Sidebar I). The form includes an entirely new goverance the management policies and practices of nonprofit organizations in matters directly and indirectly related to the organization's tax law compliance. Careful responses to the substantial issues raised by these new governance questions will require advance review and planning by the charity, its CAPs and legal advisers.

The revised Form 990 will be effective for tax years beginning after January 1, 2008. Now is the time to encourage your nonprofit clients to review their organizations' polices so that they are fully prepared to demonstrate compliance with both tax laws and "best practices" of nonprofit governance.

IRS Form 990 Revision

In June 2007, the IRS proposed substantial changes to its Form 990. It explained that the existing form, last revised in 1979, "failed to keep pace with changes in the law and with the increasing size, diversity, and complexity of the exempt sector," and "fail[ed] to meet the Service's tax compliance interests or the transparency and accountability needs of the states, the public, and local communities served by the organization."

More than 700 public comments (3,000 pages) were filed in response to the proposed revisions, prompting the IRS to make additional changes. The final version was published December 20, 2007, and draft instructions were published for comment on April 7, 2008. The IRS expects to finalize the instructions by the end of the year.

The revised Form 990 expands the "core" form from nine to 11 pages, and increases the number of potential schedules to 15. Organizations will determine which schedules they need to file by completing a new, 37-question checklist. The revised core form, schedules, draft instructions and IRS background explanations can be found on the IRS' website (see Sidebar 2).

An entirely new part entitled, "Governance, Management and Disclosure" (GMD) is particularly important to nonprofit directors, officers and managers. It seeks information on governance and management, the process for determining executive compensation, policies regarding conflicts of interest, whistleblower encouragement and protection, document retention, and public disclosure of tax returns and other governance and financial...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT