Conflicting Stories on the Nonprofit Sector
by Amanda Adams*, 7/25/2007
Yesterday the House Ways and Means Subcommittee on Oversight, led by Chairman John Lewis (D-GA), held a hearing on tax-exempt charitable organizations. Chairman Lewis set the overall tone with his opening statement praising the work of nonprofits. "These organizations play such an important role in our country. Charities and foundations make up the very fabric of our communities. They know the deepest human needs of our friends and neighbors and they know the solutions that work." All other committee members emphasized their appreciation for the nonprofit sector as well. Members commented that far too often the "bad apples" are the focus in the media and in legislation.
A new Government Accountability Office (GAO) report was released in conjunction with the hearing that has an alarming title; "Thousands of Organizations Exempt from Federal Income Tax Owe Nearly $1 Billion in Payroll and Other Taxes." The GAO study reports that "nearly 55,000 exempt organizations had almost $1 billion in unpaid federal taxes as of September 30, 2006," and after establishing just how many exempt organizations there are, Rep. Stephanie Tubbs Jones (D-OH) wanted a clarification. "Don't you think it would have been good to tell us there are 1.8 million exempt organizations when you threw out that 55,000 number? It's your job to get the numbers right." This GAO title seems to be a clear misrepresentation.
Ranking member Jim Ramstad (R-MN) said the vast majority of exempt groups pay their taxes "and are contributing a great deal to people in need in this country." Not only were the Members of the committee very pleased with the sector, Steven Miller, Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Tax Exempt and Government Entities Division commissioner, told the panel that the vast majority of charities are very compliant when it comes to obeying tax laws.
However, a contradicting story came from the Senate side the day before as leaders of the Senate Finance Committee expressed concern over charitable abuse. The IRS supplied follow-up answers to questions leaders of the Finance Committee asked in March on the worst compliance problems facing the exempt sector. And naturally, the negative made the news.
