$25,000 Grant for Morton High School’s CTE program, funds for year-end, gifts from your IRA, and assets you can give to your fund
Hello from the Morton Community Foundation!
We’re honored to work with so many of you as you support the charitable causes that mean the most to you and your family. If you’ve not yet established a fund at the MCF, please reach out! We’d love to help you structure a charitable giving plan that’s just right for you, including a donor-advised fund, legacy gift, designated fund, field-of-interest fund, or all of the above and more. Our goal is to help you make a difference in the ways that mean the most to you.
Here are the stories in this month’s newsletter:
The MCF had the opportunity to partner with Compeer Financial in the Rural Collaboration Project, receiving a $25,000 grant to benefit Morton High School’s Career and Technical Education program, and the SkillsUSA program. SkillsUSA is the #1 workforce development organization for students. They empower students to become skilled professionals, career-ready leaders and responsible community members. READ MORE
We’re so glad to see that field-of-interest funds and designated funds are gaining popularity. A field-of-interest fund allows you to support a specific charitable cause by leveraging the community foundation’s expertise. A designated fund allows you to support a favorite charity or charities over time. Best of all, if you’re over the age of 70 ½, both of these funds are eligible recipients of Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs) from your IRA, up to $105,000 a year. Reach out to learn more about field-of-interest funds, designated funds, and QCDs. READ MORE
Many Americans hold a significant portion of their net worth in one or more IRAs. Have you thoroughly considered all of the ways your IRA can help you meet your charitable giving goals, both during your lifetime and through a legacy? Giving to charity from an IRA is one of the most tax-savvy moves you can make. Reach out to the community foundation team to learn more. READ MORE
It’s that time of year! You may be starting to review your tax projections to determine an ideal level of charitable giving at the end of 2024. Before you start writing checks, stop to consider the many types of assets that frequently make even better gifts to your fund at the community foundation. Our team can help you and your advisors identify the best assets for year-end giving. READ MORE
Finally, and most importantly, our hearts go out to the millions of people affected by Hurricane Helene. Community foundations in the affected areas and across the country are making it as easy as possible to donate to relief efforts. Please contact the team at the Morton Community Foundation to learn more about how you can help swiftly and most effectively.
With gratitude…
Your Morton Community Foundation Staff
Scott Witzig, Executive Director
Darcy Riddle, Administrative Manager
P.S. We’re excited about the first ever DAF Day, a national campaign to encourage giving from donor-advised funds. We love watching so many of you deploy your donor-advised fund for good, year in and year out. Please reach out to the community foundation team if you’d like to learn more.
Morton Community Foundation Joins Compeer Financial in Rural Collaboration Project…$25,000 Grant for MHS SkillsUSA program.
The Morton Community Foundation is proud to announce its partnership with Compeer Financial in the Rural Collaboration Project, an initiative designed to bolster rural vitality across the Midwest, with a focus on Youth entrepreneurship, leadership and financial education/experiences. Programs focused on youth volunteerism, integrity, excellence, diversity & community partnership.
In a significant step toward enhancing rural communities, the MCF was selected as one of 13 community foundations across the upper Midwest to participate in this pioneering initiative, receiving a $25,000 grant from the Compeer Financial Fund for Rural America donor-advised fund, the Agriculture and Rural Initiative.
These funds will be used at Morton High School for their SkillsUSA program, specifically to support leadership opportunities for students, and to help start a Diesel Education program. MHS teacher, Tiffany Beard, said, “This grant is life changing for our Career and Technical Education program. It accelerates the start of a Diesel Ed program at MHS by at least 5 years.
Compeer Financial, a Farm Credit cooperative, is committed to leading the way in pursuing a collaborative approach to rural vitality. Their vision centers around active, strong rural communities capable of supporting thriving economies.
“We see rural communities flourish when organizations and individuals unite around a shared purpose,” said Karen Schieler, manager of corporate giving at Compeer. “With this project, we’re able to support a multitude of efforts ranging from community and farming needs to education and entrepreneurship.”
This year, Compeer selected 13 community foundations across Illinois, Minnesota and Wisconsin, awarding a total of $663,750 in grants. The Morton Community Foundation was one of 6 community foundations selected in IL. The other IL CFs were: Community Foundation of the Quincy Area, DeKalb County Community Foundation, Freeport Community Foundation, Galesburg Community Foundation, and Moline Regional Community Foundation.
Field-of-interest and designated funds could be your year-end friends
As you’re looking ahead to year-end giving, you’re likely thinking about transferring cash, or ideally appreciated stock, to your donor-advised fund so that you can maximize tax benefits and support the charities you love. And absolutely, a donor-advised fund can be a fabulous component of your overall charitable giving portfolio.
Think beyond donor-advised funds, though, especially at year-end. The Morton Community Foundation offers a wide variety of funds to meet your charitable giving goals and also help you maximize your tax and financial planning efforts.
Two excellent fund types that are sometimes overlooked are designated funds and field-of-interest funds.
When you set up a field-of-interest fund at the community foundation, you’re setting aside charitable dollars for a specific charitable purpose. For example, you might decide to set up a field-of-interest to support youth sports, to support organizations that assist individuals with disabilities, to enable the installation of adaptable recreational equipment in public spaces, and so on. With a field-of-interest fund, you’re leaning on the knowledgeable of the Morton Community Foundation to distribute grants to achieve your wishes. As is the case with a donor-advised fund, you’ll choose a name for your fund, whether you wish to use your own name (e.g., Samuels Family Fund or Samuels Family Fund for the Arts), maintain anonymity (e.g., Morton Fund for the Arts), or something else altogether (e.g., Bettering Our World Fund).
A designated fund is a good choice if you know you want to support a particular charity or charities for multiple years. This is useful so that the distributions can be spread out over time to help with the charity or charities’ cash flow planning, which allows you to potentially benefit from a larger charitable tax deduction in the year you establish the fund if, for example, your tax rates are higher than usual in that particular year. Your designated fund document allows you to specify the charities to receive distributions every year…forever. You can choose just one charity as the recipient of the annual grants, or list several charities to receive portions of the grant money divided however you like.
Last but not least, if you are over the age of 70 ½, pay particular attention to designated funds and field-of-interest funds as year-end approaches because these two types of funds, unlike donor-advised funds, can receive “Qualified Charitable Distributions” from IRAs–up to $105,000 per person in 2024!
As always, thank you for the opportunity to work together!
Your IRA is a force for good
It probably would not surprise you to learn that over 42% of Americans own an IRA. In many cases, IRAs–especially for people who have rolled over one or more employer retirement plans–represent a significant portion of a household’s net worth. When it comes to charitable planning, IRAs should never be ignored. Indeed, your IRA may offer some of the best opportunities to support the causes you care about most.
For starters, no matter what your age, consider the benefits of changing the beneficiary designation on your IRA to name your donor advised fund at the Morton Community Foundation as the recipient of all or a portion of the account. This is an easy, tax-effective way to leave a bequest to support the causes you care about. The MCF can help you structure the terms of your fund to match your intended charitable legacy. For example, you can make arrangements for your children to serve as advisors on the fund to recommend grants to particular areas of interest, or the Morton Community Foundation itself could deploy the money to support Morton’s areas of greatest need.
The reason an IRA beneficiary designation is such an ideal form of charitable bequest is because of the tax advantages. Dollars flowing to the MCF from an IRA upon your death are not subject to estate tax. In addition, as a public charity, the Morton Community Foundation does not pay income taxes on the IRA assets it receives. By contrast, if you were to name your children as beneficiaries of the IRA, those IRA distributions to the children are subject to income tax, which can be hefty given the tax treatment of inherited IRAs. Plus, the IRA assets would be included in your estate for estate tax purposes.
Exploring ways to give your IRA to charity can also serve as a helpful reminder to review all of your beneficiary designations. Although they may appear to be innocuous and may even be easy to overlook, those beneficiary designation forms actually represent critical components of your estate plan. To understand this, you need look no further than the cautionary tale of a Procter & Gamble employee who died in 2015, leaving behind a retirement plan. Way back in 1987, the employee had named his girlfriend as the beneficiary of his retirement plan. Despite their relationship ending, the employee never updated the beneficiary designation. By the time the employee died, the retirement plan, which had grown to nearly $1 million, passed via the beneficiary designation to the 1980s ex-girlfriend. Wow!
Finally, if you have reached the age of 70 ½, you can make what’s known as a Qualified Charitable Distribution (“QCD”) from your IRA directly to certain charities, including a designated fund or a field-of-interest fund at the Morton Community Foundation–up to $105,000 per year per spouse. You won’t pay income tax on the distribution and, happily, if you’ve reached the age for Required Minimum Distributions, your QCDs count toward those distributions.
The upshot? Next time you review your financial and estate plan with your advisor, take a close look at your IRAs. If you intend to leave a charitable legacy, or if you’d like to support your favorite organizations during your retirement years, your IRA may be your best bet to make a big difference in the causes you care about.
Variety is the spice of … giving
If you’ve been working with the Morton Community Foundation for a while, you certainly know that it’s easy to make a contribution to your fund. And by now, you likely know not to automatically reach for your checkbook! The Morton Community Foundation is happy to work with you and your tax advisors to review the options for types of gifts. Here’s food for thought:
Marketable securities
Gifts of long-term appreciated stock to a donor-advised or other type of fund at the MCF is always one of the most tax-savvy ways to support favorite charitable causes because capital gains tax can be avoided. Gifts of publicly-traded stock, for example, are easy to transfer to a fund. The Morton Community Foundation provides transfer instructions to make the process simple. CLICK HERE.
As is the case with a cash gift, the Morton Community Foundation will provide a receipt for tax purposes, and the gift of stock will be valued at the shares’ fair market value on the date of transfer. When the MCF sells the shares, the proceeds flow into your fund without any reduction for capital gains taxes. This is because the Morton Community Foundation is a 501(c)(3) charitable organization and therefore does not pay income tax. That would not have been the case, however, if you had sold the stock first and then transferred the proceeds to your fund; you would owe capital gains tax on the sale. Especially in cases where you have held the stock a long time and it’s gone up significantly in value, the capital gains hit can be big.
Closely-held business interests
The Morton Community Foundation is happy to work with you and your advisors to explore how you might give shares of a closely-held business to a fund at the MCF. Not only will transfers be eligible for a charitable deduction during the year of transfer (and at fair market value if the shares are held for more than one year), but also these gifts could potentially reduce income tax burdens triggered upon a future sale of the business. Be sure to talk with us well before any potential sale is in the works; otherwise, you could lose out on tax benefits. Gifts of closely-held business interests are powerful but can be tricky to administer.
QCDs from IRAs
As always, keep in mind that the Qualified Charitable Distribution (“QCD”) is a very smart way to support charitable causes. If you are over 70 ½, you can direct up to $105,000 from your IRA to certain charities, including a field-of-interest, designated, unrestricted, or scholarship fund at the Morton Community Foundation. If you are subject to the rules for Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs), QCDs count toward those RMDs. That means you avoid income tax on the funds distributed to charity. Plus, keep in mind that leaving your IRA to your fund through a beneficiary designation is a very tax savvy move, so be sure to discuss this option with our team and your tax advisors.
Real estate
You can give a tax-deductible gift of real estate, such as farmland or commercial property, to your fund in a variety of ways. An outright gift is always an option; lifetime gifts of real estate held for more than one year are deductible for income tax purposes at 100% of the fair market value of the property on the date of the gift, which also avoids capital gains tax and reduces the value of your taxable estate. Other ways to give real estate include a bargain sale or a transfer to a charitable remainder trust which produces lifetime income for you and your family.
Life insurance
Don’t overlook life insurance as an effective charitable giving tool, whether by naming your fund at the Morton Community Foundation as the beneficiary or, in the case of whole life policies, naming the fund as beneficiary and transferring the policy itself. If you transfer a policy, you may be able to make annual, tax-deductible contributions to the MCF to cover the premiums.
Other “alternative” assets
The Morton Community Foundation is happy to discuss your options for giving other non-cash assets to your fund at the MCF, including oil and gas interests, negotiable instruments, cryptocurrency, artwork, and collectibles.
We look forward to working with you to explore all the options!
The team at the Morton Community Foundation is honored to serve as a resource and sounding board as you build your charitable plans and pursue your philanthropic objectives for making a difference in the community. This newsletter is provided for informational purposes only. It is not intended as legal, accounting, or financial planning advice. Please consult your tax or legal advisor to learn how this information might apply to your own situation.