It is about
time someone stepped on a few toes of those getting rich at the expense of
volunteers raising money for charity. No doubt some of these may
lose their 501(c)3 tax status and some may even face jail time!!
I received this information this afternoon! All Veterans should read this!
Thanks for sending this on to others.
VETERAN
CHARITIES UPDATE 03: Americans gave millions of dollars in the past year to
veterans charities designed to help troops wounded in Iraq and Afghanistan,
but several of the groups spent relatively little money on the wounded,
according to a leading watchdog organization and federal tax filings. Eight
veterans
charities, including some of the nation's largest, gave less than a third of the
money raised to the causes they champion, far below the recommended standard,
the American Institute of Philanthropy (AIP) says in a report. One group passed
along 1 cent for every dollar raised, the report says. Another paid its
founder and his wife a combined $540,000 in compensation and benefits last year,
a Washington Post analysis of tax filings showed. There are no laws regulating
the amount of money charities spend on overhead, fundraising or giving. The
House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform was scheduled to hold its
first hearing on veteran's charities 13 DEC. "People want to help the veterans,"
said Rep. Chris VanHolland (D-MD), a member of the oversight committee.
"They don't want to enrich organizations that are cynically exploiting veterans
for their own personal gain. "We need to make sure that the generous
contributions
of Americans to veterans will help veterans and not line the pockets of
fundraisers and these organizations."
The AIP's
report suggests that 20 of the 29 military charities studied were managing their
resources poorly, paying high overhead costs and direct-mail
fundraising fees and, in some cases, providing their leaders with six-figure
salaries. The 12 charities rated as failing by the institute -- including
the Military Order of the Purple Heart Service Foundation, the AMVETS National
Service Foundation and the Freedom Alliance -- collected at least $266 million
in the past fiscal year. The charities' practices have sparked outrage among
some members of Congress. Richard H. Esau Jr., executive director of the
Military
Order of the Purple Heart Service Foundation, said the cost of fundraising
limits how much his group can spend on charitable causes. Three emergency relief
groups that are holding massive asset reserves are the official armed forces
charities for the U.S. Army, Air Force, Navy and Marines, which provide
financial,
educational and other assistance to current and past members of the armed
services and their families. These three charities have combined fund balances
of $638 million yet spent only $59 million, according to their most recently
available financial reports. Army Emergency Relief (AER) tops AIP's list of
large asset reserve charities in relation to expenses with 17.6 years of
available asset reserves and a fund balance of $307 million as of 2005. Air
Force
Aid Society (AFAS) has 10.1 years of available asset reserves and as of 2005
holds fund balances of $172 million. Navy-Marine Corps Relief Society (NCRS)
has fund balances of $158 million as of 2005. Its years of available assets is
lower at 4.8, barely low enough to keep them from earning an automatic F
grade for charities having over 5 years worth of available reserves.
Daniel
Borochoff, president and founder of the AIP, said many veterans charities are
woefully inefficient, spending large sums on costly direct-mail advertising.
"They over solicit. They love to send out a lot of trinkets and stickers and
greeting cards and flags and things that waste a lot of money that they get
little return on," said Borochoff, who plans to testify before Congress. The AIF
gave F's to 12 of the 29 military charities reviewed and D's to eight.
Five were awarded A-pluses, including the Fisher House Foundation in Rockville,
which the institute says directs more than 90% of its income to charitable
causes. One group received an A, and one received an A-minus. One egregious
example, Borochoff said, is Help Hospitalized Veterans (HHV), which was founded
in 1971 by Roger Chapin, a veteran of the Army Finance Corps and a San Diego
real estate developer. The charity, which provides therapeutic arts and crafts
kits to hospitalized veterans, reported income of $71.3 million last year and
spent about one-third of that money on charitable work, the philanthropy
institute said. In its tax filings, Help HHV reported paying more than $4
million to direct-mail fundraising consultants. The group also has run
television
advertisements featuring actor Sam Waterston, game show host Pat Sajak and other
celebrities.
Chapin, 75,
the charity's president, received $426,434 in salary and benefits in the past
fiscal year, according to a filing with the IRS. His wife, Elizabeth,
73, received $113,623 in salary and benefits as newsletter editor, the Post's
review of the tax filing showed.
Bennett
Weiner, chief operating officer of the Better Business Bureau, said the agency
has 20 standards for reviewing charities, including that a charity's
fundraising and overhead costs not exceed 35% of total contributions. Weiner,
who is scheduled to testify before the House committee said he could not
comment specifically on veterans charities until after his testimony. Advocates
for veterans said they worry that scrutiny could damage military charities
in general. Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-IA), one of Congress's leading critics
of charities, said some of the groups are abusing their tax-exempt status.
Rep. John Serbanes (D-MD), a member of the oversight committee, wants veterans'
charities to be held accountable. "I hope there is an explanation, but
it seems that most of the funds they raise never reach the veteran community,"
Sarbanes said through a spokeswoman. "Some of the practices being described
are simply outrageous."
Rick Cohen,
an expert on nonprofit groups and former executive director of the National
Committee for Responsive Philanthropy, called the spending decisions
of some charities grotesque. "I think in light of the Iraq war and the
Afghanistan war, these veterans are the people who we should really be
protecting
and not using as excuses or avenues for ripping off charity philanthropy," Cohen
said. [Source: Washington Post Philip Rucker article 13 Dec 07 ++]
VETERAN
CHARITIES UPDATE 04: The American Institute of Philanthropy (AIP), a leading
charity watchdog, issued a report card this month for 29 veterans
and military charities. Letter grades were based largely on the charities'
fundraising costs and the percentage of money raised that was spent on
charitable
activities. Following is an alphabetical summary of charities and grade
assigned:
Air Force
Aid Society (A+)
American Ex-Prisoners of War Service Foundation (F)
American Veterans Coalition (F)
American Veterans Relief Foundation (F)
AMVETS National Service Foundation (F)
Armed Services YMCA of the USA (A-)
Army Emergency Relief (A+)
Blinded Veterans Association (D)
Disabled American Veterans (D)
Disabled Veterans Association (F)
Fisher House Foundation (A+)
Freedom Alliance (F)
Help Hospitalized Veterans/Coalition to Salute America's Heroes (F)
Intrepid Fallen Heroes Fund (A+)
Military Order of the Purple Heart Service Foundation (F)
National Military Family Association (A)
National Veterans Services Fund (F)
National Vietnam Veterans Committee (D)
Navy-Marine Corps Relief Society (A+)
NCOA National Defense Foundation (F)
Paralyzed Veterans of America (F)
Soldiers' Angels (D)
United Spinal Association's Wounded Warrior Project (D)
USO (United Service Organization) (C+)
Veterans of Foreign Wars and foundation (C-)
Veterans of the Vietnam War & the Veterans Coalition (D)
Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund (D)
VietNow National Headquarters (F)
World War II Veterans Committee (D)
"...those of us, who did make it, have an obligation to build again, to teach to others what we know.
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