The power of endowment gifts, treating your community like family, and the business of giving
Greetings from the community foundation!
We’re honored to work with you and so many other individuals, families, and businesses who’ve made charitable giving a priority. Each month I share with you some ideas about charitable giving including tax tips and pending legislation that might affect your gift planning. I would be terribly remiss if I did not mention in this issue the largest and most important giving event in Hampton Roads, which is occurring on April 23! Ten years ago we had an idea about creating a special day when area nonprofits could highlight their good work and talk about their value. We named the day Give Local 757. It was an immediate hit and every year it keeps growing. Last year over 200 local nonprofits participated and raised more than $1.8 million! |
April has become the time to celebrate the important contributions of our nonprofit organizations. Channel 13 News is daily covering stories of the good works being performed. You have also surely begun to receive more emails and social media posts. Join us as we celebrate our area charities and go to our Give Local 757 website to read about the hundreds of good programs making our area better. Please consider joining us and donating on April 23rd.
In this issue, we’re covering three frequently-requested topics:
Thank you for the opportunity to work together! We are grateful!
Michael Monteith, CEO
Peninsula Community Foundation of Virginia
In this issue, we’re covering three frequently-requested topics:
- Perhaps you’ve always been intrigued by the possibility of establishing an endowment to create a permanent source of philanthropic support for the community you love, but you thought the process might be difficult or daunting. When you work with us at the community foundation, it’s easy–and enjoyable–to structure your endowment as your gift to improve the quality of life for future generations.
- Thinking about the community when you’re updating your estate plan can help you leave a robust charitable legacy. Discover how our services and tools help giving become a family affair–and why you’re not alone if your community features prominently among your estate plan’s beneficiaries, right alongside your children and grandchildren.
- Working with the community foundation isn’t just for individuals and families. We also help facilitate corporate philanthropy for businesses of all sizes. Learn how the team at the community foundation can help your business give back to the community where your customers and employees live and work.
Thank you for the opportunity to work together! We are grateful!
Michael Monteith, CEO
Peninsula Community Foundation of Virginia
Four FAQs to help you establish an endowmentMany community-minded individuals have served on the boards of directors of charitable organizations in our region. If you’ve served on a charity’s board (or several!), you are no doubt familiar with the concept of an endowment. Many charities establish endowment funds at the Peninsula Community Foundation to help ensure that their missions stay strong during economic downturns and periods of increased community need.
What you might be less familiar with, however, is an endowment fund established with us by an individual or family. Every year, we work with individuals to establish endowment funds to support the needs of our region in perpetuity. Here are answers to some frequently-asked questions about setting up an endowment fund: |
How does an “endowment” work? “Endowment” is the word often used to refer to a designated pool of assets that are invested by the community foundation and tracked separately such that a portion of the assets are distributed each year to charitable causes, and the rest of the assets remain invested to grow in perpetuity. This growth, in turn, helps the endowment provide even more support each year to the causes for which it was established. The community foundation team is experienced at managing the accounting, investment, and distribution aspects of endowment funds.
How can I stay involved with my endowment fund after it’s established? First and foremost, you can name the endowment fund anything you want, such as the “Smith Family Endowment Fund,” or something more anonymous such as the “Endowment Fund for Our Future.” In addition, our team will keep you informed about the positive change in the community that is occurring thanks to the distributions from the endowment fund you’ve established. We can continue to keep your children and grandchildren informed, too, beyond your lifetime. In this way, your legacy continues through the generations!
What does it take to establish an endowment fund? Setting up an endowment fund is as easy as setting up any other type of fund at the community foundation. Our team will prepare simple paperwork capturing the name of the endowment fund and any areas of interest you’d like to support. Then, you can transfer cash—or, even better for tax purposes, you can transfer appreciated assets such as stock or real estate. You’ll be eligible for a charitable tax deduction in the year you make the transfer to establish the fund. You can make future transfers to your endowment fund each year, too, to achieve your tax and estate planning goals.
Our team is also happy to work with you and your advisors to structure a bequest to your endowment fund following your death. We highly recommend considering a bequest in the form of a beneficiary designation on an IRA because of the multiple tax benefits. Related, if you are over 70 ½, making a “Qualified Charitable Distribution” from your IRA directly to your endowment fund is a very effective charitable planning tool to avoid income tax and also satisfy your Required Minimum Distribution if you’ve reached that age as well.
We look forward to working with you to support our community and your favorite charitable causes for generations to come!
How can I stay involved with my endowment fund after it’s established? First and foremost, you can name the endowment fund anything you want, such as the “Smith Family Endowment Fund,” or something more anonymous such as the “Endowment Fund for Our Future.” In addition, our team will keep you informed about the positive change in the community that is occurring thanks to the distributions from the endowment fund you’ve established. We can continue to keep your children and grandchildren informed, too, beyond your lifetime. In this way, your legacy continues through the generations!
What does it take to establish an endowment fund? Setting up an endowment fund is as easy as setting up any other type of fund at the community foundation. Our team will prepare simple paperwork capturing the name of the endowment fund and any areas of interest you’d like to support. Then, you can transfer cash—or, even better for tax purposes, you can transfer appreciated assets such as stock or real estate. You’ll be eligible for a charitable tax deduction in the year you make the transfer to establish the fund. You can make future transfers to your endowment fund each year, too, to achieve your tax and estate planning goals.
Our team is also happy to work with you and your advisors to structure a bequest to your endowment fund following your death. We highly recommend considering a bequest in the form of a beneficiary designation on an IRA because of the multiple tax benefits. Related, if you are over 70 ½, making a “Qualified Charitable Distribution” from your IRA directly to your endowment fund is a very effective charitable planning tool to avoid income tax and also satisfy your Required Minimum Distribution if you’ve reached that age as well.
We look forward to working with you to support our community and your favorite charitable causes for generations to come!
Estate planning: Your kids … and your communityAs you contemplate your legacy and adjust your estate plan, it's natural to focus on your children and family as the primary beneficiaries in your will and trust. If you’re like an increasing number of charitably-minded individuals, you might find that your perspectives about what exactly it means to leave a legacy are expanding beyond your next of kin. Your community is on your mind and in your heart, and you’re interested in ways you can support and improve the quality of life for people in the region we call home.
If you’re intrigued, you are not alone! Indeed, many philanthropic individuals are broadening their estate plan beneficiaries to prominently include their community or favorite cause, right alongside children and grandchildren. Our team at the community foundation would be honored to |
discuss the ways we can help. Here are three options for funds you can establish with us to benefit your community:
- Unrestricted fund: Major advantages of the community foundation include its perpetual structure, community-based governance, and commitment to addressing needs as they change. An unrestricted fund allows you and your family to provide support that evolves over time as priorities in the region shift. Our mission is to thoroughly understand the community and improve lives within it. The community foundation's board and professional staff conduct ongoing, extensive research about the needs of the community and the nonprofit programs that are addressing those needs. Establishing an unrestricted fund means you are investing in the community foundation to support programs that are addressing the community’s most pressing needs as well as needs that can’t be identified until the future.
- A field of interest fund: This fund is an ideal way to target your giving to specific areas of community need (such as education, health, environment, or the arts). Your field of interest fund with us establishes parameters for grant making according to your wishes. The community foundation’s staff follows these parameters and uses its research and expertise to make grants that align with your intentions. Your fund can continue beyond your lifetime and for multiple generations, consistently providing grants to support your area of interest according to the terms you established when you first created the fund.
- Designated fund: A designated fund at the community foundation can help you secure your favorite organization’s financial future so that its mission continues, uninterrupted, even in the face of challenges. You can set up multiple designated funds if you’d like to support more than one organization. You can even set up a designated fund to support a governmental unit, such as the parks department. A designated fund allows you to decide on the timing of the distributions from the fund, such as during the organization’s capital campaign or to support a specific program or initiative. You can serve as an advisor to the fund to recommend the timing and amount of grants to the supported organization, or you can appoint the board of directors of the community foundation to carry out this function according to your wishes.
Businesses and GivingIf you’re a business owner, odds are you already give back to your community. Like many charitably-minded people, your business likely sponsors events, makes in-kind donations, and donates cash to favorite organizations.
Many local business owners work with the community foundation to give back. The community foundation offers a variety of tools to help you build and grow your corporate philanthropy program, including: A Corporate Foundation. Establishing a corporate donor-advised fund helps you organize your company’s giving in a convenient, 501(c)(3)-qualified structure. An Executive Donor-Advised Fund. Offering this elevated employee benefit to your executive team can help activate your senior management’s community involvement. |
Grant making administration and strategy. You and your colleagues likely receive dozens of requests each month from community organizations requesting sponsorships and monetary donations. The team at the community foundation can help you create and implement a strategy for responding to and evaluating those requests to align with your company’s goals for supporting and prioritizing causes.
Employee giving and disaster relief campaigns. The community foundation’s tools to receive and process donations can help you and your employees respond quickly and meaningfully to disasters and other urgent community needs.
The community foundation is glad to help you deepen your business’s impact and connection to your community, customers, and employees by creating a philanthropy plan that supports causes that align with the wide range of your objectives.
Employee giving and disaster relief campaigns. The community foundation’s tools to receive and process donations can help you and your employees respond quickly and meaningfully to disasters and other urgent community needs.
The community foundation is glad to help you deepen your business’s impact and connection to your community, customers, and employees by creating a philanthropy plan that supports causes that align with the wide range of your objectives.
The team at the 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.
For more information about establishing a fund, please [email protected]/757.327.0862