I'm forming a non-profit, for a 501(c)19 the term "War veteran" includes those that haven't deployed in uniform?
Resumes - A discussion with Brian Rucker – Join Bob Chambless's Crowdcast on Tue, Dec 1, 2015 12:30 AM UTC
**Just my two cents & probably worth as much.**
I look forward to hearing your show!
o https://www.irs.gov/irm/part7/irm_07-025-019.html
Section 7.25.19.6.1 "War veterans are defined as persons, whether or not present members of the United States Armed Forces, who have served in the Armed Forces of the United States during a period of war. Periods of war are generally considered to be the same as set forth in 38 U.S.C. section 101 concerning veterans' benefits." ( e.g. December 7, 1941, through December 31, 1946; June 27, 1950, through January 31, 1955; August 5, 1964, through May 7, 1975; and August 2, 1990, and ending on the date prescribed by Presidential Proclamation or by law. As of the date of drafting of these guidelines, the date was open. The IRS does not require service in the theater of combat to be eligible to be counted as a veteran member. )
Internal Revenue Manual - 7.25.19 Veterans' Organizations
IRC 501(c)(19) exempts from federal income tax a post or organization of past or present members of the Armed Forces of the United States, or an auxiliary unit or society of, or a trust or foundation for any such post or organization.
Would you exclude the widow and children of a fallen comrade? They are allowed to be . . . let's be strict say "associate" members for up to 10% of the organization . . . before the IRS will pull the plug on the organization's nonprofit status.
- In the first bit, it seems to define the phrase "war veteran" really easy. Now throughout the section it says veteran, but then it defines the phrase "war veteran" as what you just wrote. Too easy, right?
- Then the bit you wrote at the end. It never actually states that you don't have to be in a theater of combat. And I've learned with the IRS not to infer things.
Why is it important? I would like any donations to be tax-exempt, and for that to happen 90% of the org must be "war veterans".
http://www.salesforce.org/nonprofit/?pi_ad_id= [login to see] 7
Nonprofit Overview - Salesforce.org
Fundraising, Marketing, Community Engagement, Program Management, Analytics. A full suite of flexible software to help you scale your organisation.
http://www.ohioattorneygeneral.gov/Business-and-Non-Profits/Charity/Charitable-Registration
Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine - Charitable Registration
Please be aware that the filing system may experience slowdowns during peak hours. Ohio requires charitable organizations located in Ohio and groups that ask Ohioans for contributions to file annual reports with the Attorney General’s Office. These filings are public and contribute to accountability and transparency within the charitable sector.