PATRICK
COUNTY HIGH SCHOOL
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
GIFT and FUND ACCEPTANCE POLICY and GUIDELINES
I. PURPOSE OF POLICY AND GUIDELINES
The purpose of these Gift and Fund Acceptance Policy
and Guidelines is to guide the efforts of the Patrick
County High School Alumni Association (The Association),
donors and their professional advisors in achieving
donors’ charitable goals. They address the policies
and procedures for accepting various types of assets,
the types of gift mechanisms that can be used and
the types of fund options available. The Association
seeks to ensure that any assets it accepts do not
place other assets of the Association at risk and
that they can be readily converted into assets that
fall within the Association’s investment guidelines.
The listing of types of outright, planned and testamentary
gift mechanisms and of types of funds that may be
established is intended as a planning reference.
II. POLICY STATEMENT
It is the policy of the Association’s Board
of Directors/Executive Body to encourage donors to
make outright, planned and testamentary gift, utilizing
the following types of assets and gift mechanisms:
Outright gifts - Planned and testamentary
gifts:
Cash, cash equivalents, checks -
Bequests
Publicly traded securities - Charitable
Remainder and Charitable Lead Trusts
Real Estate - Life Insurance, Remainder
Interests in Personal Residences, Retained Life Estates,
Retirement Assets
The Association will develop, as needs require, a
variety of types of funds to meet donors’ philanthropic
objectives, including:
Unrestricted Funds - Scholarship
Funds
Field of Interest Funds - Designated
and Organizational Endowments
Advised Funds - Supporting Organizations
III. GIFT ACCEPTANCE RESPONSIBILITIES
The Association Board
The Board will maintain and revise as appropriate
policies and guidelines relating to gift and fund
acceptance. The Board delegates to the Gift Acceptance
Committee authority to accept gifts that fall within
the Policy Statement except as provided in Section
V, below. The President is authorized to execute any
document creating a fund within the Foundation. Proposed
gifts of assets not specified in this Policy or the
proposed declination of any gift will be referred
to the Board for action.
Gift Acceptance Committee
The President, Vice-President and Treasurer constitute
the Gift Acceptance Committee. The Committee will
develop and revise as appropriate documentation by
which funds are created with the Association.
Review of Gifts
The following factors will be considered in determining
whether gifts should be accepted by the Association:
- The charitable intent and ultimate
community benefit
- The nature of any restrictions
- The permanence of the gift or,
in the case of a non-permanent fund, the amount
of time the fund will remain with the Association
- Projected costs of managing the
gift asset
- Economic practicality of administering
the gift
IV. FUND DEVELOPMENT PRACTICES
Donor Relations
The role of the Association is to inform, serve, guide
or otherwise assist donors who wish to support the
Association’s activities. Under no circumstances
will a donor be pressured or unduly persuaded to make
a gift to the Association.
The Association will hold all information concerning
donors and prospective donors in strict confidence,
subject to legally authorized and enforceable requests
for information by government agencies and courts.
The Association will not release information about
donors or prospective donors that is not otherwise
public information unless permission is obtained from
the donor.
The Association does not provide tax or legal advice.
Persons acting on behalf of the Association shall
encourage the donor to discuss the proposed gift with
the legal and/or tax advisors of the donor’s
choice at the donor’s expense.
Donor Recognition
Normally all donors will be recognized for contributing
to the mission of the Association and for providing
resources to serve charitable interests. However,
the Association will respect the confidentiality of
donors who do not wish to be publicly recognized.
V. TYPES OF GIFTS
Restrictions
In conformance with applicable statutes and regulations
governing charitable associations, gifts to the Association
may not be directly or indirectly subjected by a donor
to any material restriction or condition that prevents
the Association from employing the transferred assets
or the income derived from them in furtherance of
its exempt purposes.
Asset Types
The Association will accept gifts in the following
form, subject to the conditions described below. In
order for the Association to provide written substantiation
for gifts, the donor should provide name, address
and any necessary IRS documentation.
Cash, cash equivalents or checks.
Gifts of cash should be paid to the Association, accompanied
by a written document signed by the donor, indicating
the purpose for which the contribution will be used.
Pledges. Written pledges to make
gifts may be made applicable to any fund at the Association.
A schedule of pledges payable should be included in
the fund documentation. The donor will be invoiced
according to the schedule.
Securities. Publicly traded stocks
and bonds may be electronically transferred, reregistered
in the name of the Association or conveyed through
use of stock power form. The Association also will
accept interests in mutual funds. Generally these
securities are sold upon receipt. Stock controlled
under Securities and Exchange Commission rule 144
or other applicable restrictions on sales will be
held until the restriction on sale expires and then
will be sold. Gifts of bonds that require a holding
period may be accepted and cashed when the holding
period has expired.
Securities not acceptable include those which are
assessable or which create a potential liability,
those which by their nature may not be assigned (such
as series “A” savings bonds) and those
which have no apparent value.
Real Property. Generally, gifts
of real property in Virginia to the Association should
result in a contribution of at least $25,000. Gifts
of real property outside of Virginia should result
in a contribution of at least $50,000.
Real property will be accepted at fair market value
as established by independent appraisal paid for by
the donor. The donor must provide evidence of clear
title to the property. Real property that is encumbered
by a trust, deed, loan or mortgage will be accepted
only in exceptional circumstances. Prior to acceptance
of a gift of real property, the Association and the
donor must agree, in writing, on arrangements for
paying expenses associated with the property, including
taxes and assessments, insurance coverage and maintenance
costs.
The donor will be required to provide an independent
appraisal, an environmental review (in most cases
Phase I) and a description of the property. The Board
and Counsel will review these documents as well as
consider any liabilities, restrictions or other conditions
related to the gift. These policies also will apply
to any other asset that has real estate holdings as
an element of its value.
In addition, to the consideration listed above, commercial
properties and businesses will be examined in relationship
to the potential for exposure of the Association to
unrelated business taxable income and/or other liabilities.
Royalties, distribution rights.
The Association may accept gift of royalties or distribution
rights on published works (such as books, film or
other intellectual properties) where there is clear
evidence of marketability or assurance of an income
stream. An independent appraisal paid for by the donor
is required.
Insurance policies and proceeds.
Donors may transfer ownership of paid-up policies
or premium-due policies to the Association. In either
case the Association shall be the owner and permanent
beneficiary of the policy and retain the policy. Upon
redemption, the value of the policy may establish
a new fund or be contributed to any existing fund
in the Association.
Contributions for premium-due policies must be made
by direct payment to the Association at least ten
days prior to the premium date. It is not the Association’s
practice to advance premium payments; however, the
Association at its discretion may make premium payments
if it is deemed prudent to do so, on a case by case
basis. If a policy is canceled, the case value will
be added to the Association’s unrestricted fund
and recognized as a gift of the donor.
Retirement assets. “Account”
type retirement plans, in which a balance accumulates
as principal, may be gifted to the Association. These
include Individual Retirement Accounts (IRA), 401(k),
403(b) and defined contribution plans. (“Annuity”
plans such as defined benefit plans in which retirement
benefits are paid out as income and principal does
not accumulate generally cannot be used for making
charitable gifts.)
Methods of gifting retirement assets include:
- naming the Association as successor
or contingent beneficiary for
all or part of the assets upon death of either the
retirement asset
owner or spouse;
- creating a testamentary charitable
remainder trust with the assets
upon the death of the asset owner, naming the Association
as the
remainder beneficiary and non-charitable heirs as
income
beneficiaries.
Planned and Testamentary Gifts
The Association’s planned and testamentary giving
program encompasses all forms of gifts whose benefits
do not fully accrue to the Association until some
future time, such as the death of the donor or other
beneficiaries or the expiration of a predetermined
period of time or whose benefits to the Association
are not then followed by the interests of non-charitable
beneficiaries.
Bequest and Trust Distributions
Gifts from a will or distributions from a trust may
be used to establish any of the types of funds acceptable
to the Association. Representatives of the Association
are authorized to solicit direct testamentary charitable
contributions through wills or trusts, as well as
testamentary contributions to establish charitable
remainder and lead trusts.
A will or trust should include the following information:
- The name of the Patrick County High School Alumni
Association located in Stuart, Virginia.
- The name of the fund. (This may be a new or existing
fund.) In the case of a new fund, the purpose of
the fund should be defined unless the fund is to
be unrestricted.
Assets Requiring Board Review and Approval
Gifts of the following assets will be referred to
the Board for consideration and action:
- Gifts of real property.
- Charitable remainder trusts or
charitable lead trusts if funded with assets other
than cash or publicly traded securities.
- Remainder interest in a resident,
ranch or farm.
- Gifts of intellectual property,
mineral reserves, precious metals and other types
of assets carrying their own challenges.
- Life insurance policies requiring
future premium payments by the Association.
- Other property that may be unusual
or fall outside the type of gifts usually handled
by the Association, including tangible personal
property unrelated to the Association’s charitable
purpose or which may not be readily marketable.
Gifts requiring Board review will be handled promptly.
If a gift is not to be accepted, the donor will be
notified in writing immediately. All gift reviews
will be handled with confidentiality.
VI. INTERNAL PROCEDURES
Internal procedures for processing gifts and establishing
new funds have been established and will be revised
as necessary. |