Re: Can anyone explain NHRA?
Ken: I agree you with you, I have never like post by phony names
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Re: Can anyone explain NHRA?
Yo Ken;
Am I allowed to post as Wally Booth,great great great great grandson of John Wilkes Booth? Ed |
Re: Can anyone explain NHRA?
And I thought the trip to Florida might help him. You know. Kinda get some of that Jersey air out of his head. But I guess not!
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Re: Can anyone explain NHRA?
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Re: Can anyone explain NHRA?
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Ed |
Re: Can anyone explain NHRA?
Julie and Kelly,
Thanks for the explanation of what Non-Profit Organizations are, and to some extent, how they operate. I am curious as to what kind of laws/rules/limitations exist that relate to the head of one of these non-taxed groups being paid a salary that is "over-the-top" large, or whether there IS any restriction on how much money the people in that position can pay themselves. I'd think that that would be a prominent part of the governmental control that is relevant to the non-profit status. Is it? Thanks for any information... Bill |
Re: Can anyone explain NHRA?
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To my knowledge there are no limits on what compensation can be. With charitable organizations, there is a lot more scrutiny because donors are looking at how their contributions are being spent. Donors want their money spent on the charity's programs, not in administrative costs. Every tax return filed for a tax-exempt organization has the salary & benefits of its officers itemized. So, whoever is looking at these things at IRS and elsewhere, sees what people are being paid. What they do with that information I have no clue. One thing not known in these forms is if the officers have a base salary only, bonuses tied to performance, etc. All we see is the end total of what they received. Determining what is excessive compensation is judgemental at best, in my opinion. You have to take into account the person's experience, what they could get in the private sector for the same work, cost of living in the area, their job performance with the organization, blah, blah, blah. Add to that our personal feelings of what is too much (I live in California, a high cost-of-living state. I'm sure someone living in Nebraska would have a difference of opinion on what they think is a fair wage out here.) So much is subjective. |
Re: Can anyone explain NHRA?
Ed,
Yes, you were very laid back down there. Jack, Did you get the record at Atco? Was it C/SA? |
Re: Can anyone explain NHRA?
One other thing is that a Non Profit can own one or more For Profit businesses (taxable).
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Re: Can anyone explain NHRA?
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It was before my time, but I guess NHRA was originated as an idea to provide services that were viewed as being of public benefit. I'm not sure you could sell that idea today (then again maybe you could), but I guess it was easy to prove that what they were doing was something of public benefit back then. I would assume as long as the terms of the original charter were not broken in any way it would still be legal and valid up until today. Bruce; thanks for the link to the IRS documents. |
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