Is your nonprofit thinking about getting politically active?

This business attorney says your nonprofit should be aware of the tax consequences of making political contributions this election year

By William S. Speros, MacDonald Illig

In a presidential election year, tax-exempt organizations may consider becoming more active in the political process. For example, there are nonprofits that regularly engage in neutral, non-partisan voter registration and get-out-the-vote drives. Others might go a step further and view campaign season as an opportunity to raise public awareness of an issue of particular interest to the organization or to influence the passage of related legislation. When such increased political activity crosses into an attempt by the organization to elect a candidate or slate of candidates based on their position on the issues, the result could have negative tax consequences.

Under Internal Revenue Code section 501(c)(3), a nonprofit organization may not qualify for tax exempt status unless it not only meets the requirement of operating for an exempt purpose, but also refrains from participating or intervening in “any political campaign on behalf of (or in opposition to) any candidate for public office.” Campaign regulations clarify that a 501(c)(3) making any written or oral statements for or against a candidate for public office, including the rating of candidates on a non-partisan basis, constitutes political campaigning and is prohibited. The prohibition on participation in campaign activities is absolute, and 501(c)(3) organizations must use caution not to wander into questionable activities that might put their tax exempt status at risk.

William S. Speros

Nonprofits often participate in political activities without displaying partisanship or explicitly endorsing a particular candidate. In such circumstances, steering clear of risk can still prove difficult. There is no bright-line test for determining if the 501(c)(3) participated or intervened in a political campaign, and all facts and circumstances must be considered to determine whether the organization engaged in some reasonably overt communication that supports or opposes a political candidate. Even educational organizations can inadvertently cross the line if their communication drifts toward advocacy, such as presenting conclusions unsupported by facts or based on opinions rather than objective evaluations.

When a nonprofit supports or opposes an initiative or referendum, such activity is typically considered to be lobbying rather than prohibited political campaign activity. A 501(c)(3) organization is permitted to engage in limited lobbying activity, but risks tax implications if a substantial part of its activities amount to attempting to influence legislation. This limitation is less restrictive for nonprofit organizations described in other subsections of IRC 501(c), such as subsection (c)(4) for social welfare organizations, (c)(5) for agricultural organizations or unions, or (c)(6) for business leagues and trade boards. These organizations can generally engage in lobbying in support of their exempt purpose provided they stop short of promoting or opposing candidates for office.

Read the full advisory here


If you liked this post, you’ll love our daily environmental newsletter, EnviroPolitics. It’s packed daily with the latest news, commentary, and legislative updates from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, Delaware…and beyond. Please do not take our word for it, try it free for an entire month. No obligation.

Is your nonprofit thinking about getting politically active? Read More »

Looking back a decade after the lanternfly landed in our backyards

After a decade of living with spotted lanternfly in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware, some things are better than we feared, and some are worse. But all that stomping helped

What you should know

  • Spotted lanternfly is a sap-sucking planthopper that harms native trees, shrubs, and plants. Local officials and scientists encourage residents to kill the insect on sight.
  • While lanternflies aren’t as destructive to hard wood trees (used for timber) as previously expected, they are devastating to Pa.’s billion-dollar grape and wine industry.
  • Inspect a property for signs of lanternfly, squash the bug whenever seen, and call specialists if trees and plants begin to show signs of lanternfly activity.

When lanternflies were first discovered in Berks County in 2014, panic set in among the country and region’s top scientists. They feared the insect would devastate Pennsylvania’s robust farming, lumber, and grape industries. A 2019 study projected annual costs of damage could reach $324 million and result in the loss of 2,800 jobs across agricultural industries.

Researchers from Pennsylvania State University’s College of Agricultural Sciences used an economic assessment software program to estimate potential damage and said in the worst-case scenario the damage could climb to half a billion dollars annually.

In this Thursday, Sept. 19, 2019, photo, Heather Leach, an entomologist who does lanternfly outreach at Penn State Extension inspects grape vines in Kutztown, Pa.
In this Thursday, Sept. 19, 2019, photo, Heather Leach, an entomologist who does lanternfly outreach at Penn State Extension inspects grape vines in Kutztown, Pa.Matt Rourke / AP

According to Brian Walsh, a Penn State lanternfly researcher, these concerns stemmed from the fact that the lanternfly had zero natural predators in the U.S., their affinity for fruit and timber trees could jeopardize billions of dollars in economic activity, and they could easily spread by hitching a ride on cargo and vehicles.

“I mean, look, it made it to Pennsylvania from China in one shot,” Walsh said. Lanternflies invaded the U.S. attached to a stone shipment sent to a local landscaping company.

The concern was enough to turn Philly into a unified band of bug stompers. But did it work?

Read the full story here


If you like this post, you’ll love our daily environmental newsletter, EnviroPolitics. It’s packed daily with the latest news, commentary, and legislative updates from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, Delaware…and beyond. Please do not take our word for it, try it free for a full month.

Looking back a decade after the lanternfly landed in our backyards Read More »

Warning: Pushing a burning car into a gulley could cause forest fire

By Ian Austen, Qasim Nauman and Amanda Holpuch, NY Times, July 25, 2024, 4:19 p.m. ET

Wildfires spread across Northern California and western Canada on Thursday, leaving officials issuing evacuation orders, sending tens of thousands of firefighters to combat the blazes and broadcasting air quality warnings as smoke-filled air moved across the United States.

The Park fire in Northern California, which has burned more than 71,400 acres, is the largest there so far this year, after it ballooned overnight.

Officials in Northern California said on Thursday that they had arrested a 42-year-old man who was believed to have pushed a car on fire into a gully in Chico, Calif. The car was sent careening down a 60-foot embankment, sparking the Park fire, officials said. The man, who was not named, was being held in the Butte County Jail, and he was expected to be arraigned on Monday, the Butte County District Attorney’s office said in a statement.

Related: Massive Park fire sparked by man pushing burning car into a gully, officials say (LA Times)

The Park fire was one of hundreds burning in the western United States and western Canada, creating smoky skies that reached all the way to the East Coast. In Northern California, the authorities issued evacuation orders for parts of Tehama County and Butte County, where the Park fire had started on Wednesday in Bidwell Park, a large recreational area with hiking and biking trails and swimming holes, in the city of Chico. The fire swelled in the early morning hours on Thursday and was 3 percent contained.

Read the full story here


If you liked this post, you’ll love our daily environmental newsletter, EnviroPolitics. It’s packed daily with the latest news, commentary, and legislative updates from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, Delaware…and beyond. Please do not take our word for it, try it free for an entire month. No obligation.

Warning: Pushing a burning car into a gulley could cause forest fire Read More »

That doggone Elon is at it again

Though its EV business is contracting, Tesla’s energy storage segment is growing fast, helping it reap the benefits of surging demand for batteries.

By Dan McCarthy, Canary Media

Tesla may be struggling when it comes to electric vehicle sales, but its energy storage business is on a serious upswing.

In the second quarter of this year, Tesla deployed 9.4 gigawatt-hours of battery storage, a record for the firm and more than double its deployment in Q2 of last year. Revenue from the firm’s energy generation and storage segment doubled year over year to just over $3 billion in the quarter, contributing nearly 12 percent of Tesla’s revenue for the period; in Q2 of last year it accounted for just 6 percent of revenue.

“This is growing faster than anything else,” Tesla CEO Elon Musk said of the energy storage business, which sells both residential and utility-scale battery products, during the company’s Q2 earnings call.

The strong storage growth is helping the firm weather a difficult time for its EV business.

Its automotive revenue dropped by 7 percent year over year in Q2 and is down by more than 10 percent through the first half of the year. Vehicle production and deliveries also slipped both this quarter and last. The company’s profits plunged 45 percent year over year, despite record-high quarterly revenue.

Tesla’s turbulence comes as EV sales climb to record heights both globally and in the U.S.despite recent analysts’ concern about a potential contraction for the overall market. The EV pioneer faces increasing competition both on the global stage from the likes of Chinese EV giant BYD, which briefly dethroned Tesla as the largest EV maker in the world late last year, and in the U.S. from traditional automakers like Ford, General Motors, Kia, Hyundai, and BMW.

Read the full story here


If you like this post, you’ll love our daily environmental newsletter, EnviroPolitics. It’s packed daily with the latest news, commentary, and legislative updates from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, Delaware…and beyond. Please do not take our word for it, try it free for a full month.

That doggone Elon is at it again Read More »

How PA’s oil industry quietly dumps waste across the state

Spreading fracking wastewater on roads is banned. Oil and gas companies do it anyway

By Jake Bolster, Grist, July 24, 2024

Siri Lawson and her husband live on a stamp of wooded, hilly land in Warren County, Pennsylvania, nestled in the state’s rural northwest corner. During the summer heat, cars traveling on the county’s dirt roads cast plumes of dust in their wake. Winter’s chill can cause a hazardous film of ice to spawn on paved roads. To protect motorists from both slippery ice and vision-impairing dust, communities across Pennsylvania coat these roads with large, cheap volumes of de-icing and dust-suppressing fluids. In Lawson’s case, her township had been using oil and gas wastewater as a dust suppressant, believing the material was effective.

But researchers have found it is no better at controlling dust than rainwater. It can also contain toxic chemicals and have radioactive concentrations several hundred times the acceptable federal limit in drinking water. Given the risks it poses to human health and the environment, Pennsylvania lawmakers and the state’s environmental agency disallowed this practice more than seven years ago. 

But oil and gas companies have continued to spread their wastewater practically unchecked across the state, thanks to a loophole in state regulations.

A Grist review of records from 2019 to 2023 found that oil and gas producers submitted more than 3,000 reports of wastewater dumping to the state Department of Environmental Protection, or DEP. In total, they reported spraying nearly 2.4 million gallons of wastewater on Pennsylvania roads. This number is likely a vast undercount: About 86 percent of Pennsylvania’s smaller oil and gas drillers did not report how they disposed of their waste in 2023

Read the full story here


If you like this post, you’ll love our daily environmental newsletter, EnviroPolitics. It’s packed daily with the latest news, commentary, and legislative updates from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, Delaware…and beyond. Please do not take our word for it, try it free for a full month.

How PA’s oil industry quietly dumps waste across the state Read More »

Trump coming to private Kushner fundraiser on the Jersey Shore

Former President Donald Trump speaks at a rally Saturday in Grand Rapids, Michigan, the bandage on his right ear visible after the assassination attempt on his life.
President Trump is scheduled to attend a fundraiser in Deal Sunday, hosted by the Kushners, casino mogul Steve Wynn, and Rep. Elise Stefanik.

By Carly Baldwin, Patch Staff

DEAL, NJ — Former President Donald Trump is scheduled to attend a fundraiser in Deal this Sunday.

This was first reported by the Asbury Park Press, but the invitation to the event can be found here on YouTube.

The last time Trump was on the Jersey Shore was in May, when he held a rally in Wildwood that the Associated Press reported drew 80,000 to 100,000 people. This past weekend, Gov. Phil Murphy reportedly met Trump at Trump’s Bedminster golf club; Murphy said the meeting was to wish Trump well as he recovers from the assassination attempt.

Sunday’s event will be a private fundraising dinner; the invitation does not say where exactly it will be held. Guests are asked to RSVP to t47events@gop.com. At minimum, tickets are $3,300 to attend and VIP tickets are $10,000. A photo with Trump is $50,000 per person; a seat at his dinner table is $150,000, the Press reports.

Deal Police said they cannot comment on whether there will be any road closures or extra security measures in place this Sunday. That is all coordinated by the Secret Service.

According to the invitation, the fundraiser is hosted by Las Vegas casino mogul Steve Wynn and his wife Andrea; Midtown Equities owner, record producer and reported billionaire Joe Cayre, as well as the Chera family.

To be named as a host, donors had to contribute at least $500,000 to the Trump 2024 re-election campaign.

Read the full story here


If you like this post, you’ll love our daily environmental newsletter, EnviroPolitics. It’s packed daily with the latest news, commentary, and legislative updates from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, Delaware…and beyond. Please do not take our word for it, try it free for a full month.

Trump coming to private Kushner fundraiser on the Jersey Shore Read More »

Verified by MonsterInsights