To:
Department
Adjutants
From:
P. B.
Onderdonk, Jr., National Judge Advocate
CC:
National Commander, National Adjutant, Executive Directors, Joe March, Jack
Querfeld, Billy Johnson, Shawn Long, Marty Callaghan, John Raughter, Craig
Roberts
FOR YOUR
INFORMATION:
THIS IRS
ANNOUNCEMENT MAY BE OF SIGNIFICANT INTEREST TO THE POSTS IN YOUR
DEPARTMENT.
IR
2010-87 (http://www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=225959,00.html)
IRS
has announced that under a one-time relief program small tax-exempt
organizations that failed to file returns for 2007, 2008 and 2009 can avoid
losing their tax-exempt status by filing a return by Oct. 15, 2010. Two types of
relief are available: (1) a filing extension for the smallest organizations
(eligible to file Form 990-N); and (2) a voluntary compliance program for small
organizations (eligible to file Form 990-EZ).
Filing
requirement for tax-exempts.
Under Code Sec. 6033(a), most tax-exempt organizations, other than churches,
must file with IRS an annual Form 990, Form 990-EZ (Short Form Return or
Organization Exempt From Income Tax), or Form 990-PF (Return of Private
Foundation or Section 4947(a)(1) Nonexempt Charitable Trust Treated as a Private
Foundation), or submit a Form 990-N (Electronic Notification (e-Postcard)). For
the 2009 tax year (returns filed in 2010), exempt organizations with gross
receipts over $500,000 or total assets over $1.25 million are required to file
Form 990 (rather than Form 990-EZ). Under the discretionary exemption in Code
Sec. 6033(a)(3)(B), IRS provides that exempt organizations whose annual gross
receipts aren't normally in excess of a specified amount file the simplified
Form 990-N. Starting with the 2010 tax year, IRS will increase from $25,000 to
$50,000 the filing threshold for organizations required to file Form 990-N.
Three
year filing rule.
Under the 2006 Pension Protection Act (PPA), a non-church exempt organization's
failure to file Form 990 for three consecutive years will result in the
revocation of the organization's exempt organization status under Code Sec.
501(a) on and after the date IRS has set for filing the third annual return or
notice. (Code Sec. 6033(j)(1)) The PPA filing requirement has been in effect
since the beginning of 2007, which makes 2009 the third consecutive year under
the new law. Thus, absent a relief measure, any exempt organization that fails
to file for 2007, 2008 and 2009 automatically loses its federal tax-exempt
status.
Form
990-series information returns are due on the 15th day of the fifth month after
an organization's fiscal year ends. For organizations using the calendar year as
their fiscal year, May 15 is the deadline. Since May 15 fell on a Saturday, the
deadline this year was Monday, May 17.
If
an organization loses its exemption, it ordinarily must reapply with IRS to
regain its tax-exempt status, and any income received between the revocation
date and renewed exemption may be taxable.
One-time
relief. In
IR 2010-87, IRS announced that two types of relief are available for small
tax-exempt organizations that would lose their exempt status under the
three-year filing rule: (1) a filing extension for the smallest organizations
required to file Form 990-N; and (2) a voluntary compliance program for small
tax-exempt organizations eligible to file Form 990-EZ. IRS has provided details
about the relief program on its website, along with Frequently Asked Questions
(FAQs). The one-time filing relief program FAQs can be viewed on the IRS website
at http://www.irs.gov/charities/article/0,,id=225954,00.html.
IRS
advised that tax-exempt organizations eligible to file Form 990-N need only go
to its website, supply the eight information items called for on the form, and
electronically file it by October 15. That will bring them back into compliance.
Under
the voluntary compliance program, IRS advises that tax-exempt organizations
eligible to file Form 990-EZ must file their delinquent annual information
returns by October 15 and pay a compliance fee. IRS says that the compliance fee
is in lieu of taxes, penalties, and interest that otherwise would be incurred
because of the failure to file. If the organization's gross receipts (as
reported on the 2009 information return) are $100,000 or less, the compliance
fee is $100; if they are $100,001 to $200,000, the fee is $200; and if they are
$200,001 to $499,999, the fee is $500. The payment of the compliance fee doesn't
affect the organization's liability for any taxes that would be imposed even if
they had filed their returns, including but not limited to unrelated business
income tax and employment taxes.
IRS
cautions that this relief isn't available to larger organizations required to
file Form 990 or to private foundations that file Form 990-PF.
List
of noncompliant organizations. To
further alert tax-exempt organization to the problem, IRS has also posted on its
website the names and last-known addresses of at-risk organizations with return
due dates between May 17 and Oct. 15, 2010 for which IRS has no record that the
required returns have been filed for the past three years (see http://www.irs.gov/charities/article/0,,id=225889,00.html).
IRS will keep this list on its website until Oct. 15, 2010. Organizations that
have not filed their required returns by that date will have their tax-exempt
status revoked. IRS will publish a list of these revoked organizations in early
2011.
IRS
warns, however, that the list may be incomplete, and that certain organizations
may be at risk even though their names don't appear. In addition, the list may
include organizations that were required to file Form 990 or Form 990-PF and so
aren't eligible for the relief program, as well as organizations whose filing
dates have not yet occurred.
IRS
advises that donors who contribute to at-risk organizations are protected until
this final revocation list is published.
RIA
Research References:
For tax-exempt organization's annual return Form 990, see FTC 2d/FIN
¶ S-2801; United States Tax Reporter ¶ 60,334; TaxDesk
¶ 688,001.