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Research Results: Briefing 2011: No. 1 by Kirsten A. Grønbjerg Indiana University Click here to read the press release for this study. Click here to access the full report. Note: this is a relatively large file and you will need a free copy of the Acrobat program to read the document. Top | Exec Summary | Key Findings Executive SummaryIn early August of 2010 we launched a special initiative to contact some of the 6,950 Indiana nonprofits that were at risk of losing their federal tax-exempt status because of a change in federal reporting requirements. They were among the more than 321,000 exempt organizations nationally that had missed a May 17, 2010 deadline for filing with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and still had not done so by June 30, 2010. Most were small, exempt organizations that were required to file an entirely new form (990-N) for the first time. On June 9, 2011, the IRS released a long-awaited list of exempt organizations that had failed to file one of the required forms by the respective deadlines. Nationally 275,000 nonprofits had their tax-exempt status revoked, including 6,152 Indiana nonprofits. Our report looks at what we can learn about the revoked nonprofits by examining their characteristics as reported in the IRS Business Master File (BMF) of exempt entities published in April 2010, that is, just before the original filing deadline of May 17, 2010. In all, 9 percent of Indiana nonprofits on the April 2010 BMF had their tax exempt status revoked. We also take special look at 108 Indiana noncompliant, “at-risk” nonprofits, which had previously participated in one or more Indiana Nonprofits: Scope and Community Dimensions surveys since 2002. Because they had supported our project efforts, we sought to alert them to the new reporting requirements. By late July, 2010 when we started our initiative, 19 percent had either already filed the new form or were known to us to be defunct from our prior project work. We were able to contact 30 percent of the 108 nonprofits directly and another 28 percent indirectly by the October 15 deadline, but could not reach the final 23 percent. Based on the final June 2011 revocation list, it appears that 38 percent of our 108 nonprofits maintained their tax-exempt status. Another 17 percent are defunct. However, we believe that at least 27 percent were still in existence by the end of 2010. They account for 43 percent of the 67 nonprofits on our list which had their exempt status revoked by the IRS. Quite possibly, some of these may still be operating without knowing that their exempt status has been revoked. Click here to read the full report. Top | Exec Summary | Key Findings Our report reveals several key findings about the 6,152 Indiana nonprofits that had their tax-exempt status revoked by the IRS because they failed to meet the new filing requirements mandated by the Pension Protection Act of 2006. Click here to read the full report.
Top | Exec Summary | Key Findings We are grateful to the many Indiana nonprofits that have partici-pated in various phases of our research and hope this initiative and report is of use to them. We are also grateful for assistance provided by Jacob Knight, Katherine Novakoski, and Virginia Simpson. We also thank Beth Gazley, Leslie Lenkowsky, Al Lyons, members of the Project Advisory Board and several anonymous reviewers for their comments and suggestions. If you have questions about the Indiana Nonprofit Sector project or this report, please contact the project director, Professor Kirsten Grønbjerg, School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Indiana University, 1315 East Tenth Street, Bloomington IN 47405, Phone: 866-726-0030, Email: nonprof@indiana.edu. Updated August 6, 2011 Home | Back to Top | Citing and Terms of Use | Restricted Access |
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