Charity Highlight: To Give or Not to Give

Some wealthy British philanthropists tell the Financial Times their giving is likely to drop as a result of the government’s plan to cap tax deductions.

The newspaper also reports that major charities are threatening to boycott a planned government-hosted Giving Summit this spring to protest the proposal, which would limit overall tax breaks for high earners to £50,000 ($79,000) or 25 percent of income a year, whichever is highest.

“I give the majority of my income away. If this goes through as planned, it will reduce my philanthropic activities very substantially,” said John Spiers, former owner of financial-services firm Best Invest. “The [tax] relief was not of any benefit to me, but it means money going to good organizations that deliver a good return will instead go to the government.” 


This article is taken from "Indianapolis Business Journal"

Tracey Sheehan, President of Carmel Financial, about Legacy Fund

Would you rather row alone or with someone? Listen to Tracey Sheehan, president of Carmel Financial, talk about why partnering with Legacy Fund made more sense than creating a private foundation.



Corporate Philanthropy Redefined

Does your company care? Carmel Financial is is defining itself as a business that cares. The company and employees raise and give money to give perishable food items to the Good Samaritan Network, a charity started and supported by Legacy Fund. This year they might break 100,000 items. Take a look at this month's event (baked potato day) and what employees think. Legacy Fund works with several companies to focus their giving.




Did you see the recent Noblesville Times article about grain gifts and Legacy Fund?

Farmers have a unique opportunity to do good while reducing their tax bills. They can transfer the legal ownership of bushels of grain to charity instead of giving cash. Legacy Fund (need hyperlink), Hamilton County’s community foundation, has a robust program that makes the process simple. Donating grain can produce tax savings between 25 to 40 % because donated grain in not counted as inventory or income, reducing self-employment and income taxes. In addition, farmers can still deduct the full production cost from their tax returns. Farmers can donate at any point prior to sale, including spot deliveries or storage transfers, by delivering the grain to any local grain elevator or processor. Legacy Fund then sells the donated grain and places the proceeds in the fund designated by the farmer.

Mark Robbins, vice president of Legacy Fund, says that grain donations offer farmers great advantages, but many farmers don’t know about this program although it has been around for decades.

Legacy Fund worked with three local farmers on grain donations last year and the organization is hoping to increase this number. One of the participating donors, Al Lyon’s family, set up a scholarship fund which benefits Sheridan High School Students. They donated grain to the fund to build the fund up so it’s self-supporting in the future.

Farmers wishing to participate in the program should consult their own tax advisors as well as Legacy Fund. More information about grain donations is available at the Legacy Fund website, or by calling 317.843-2479.

Legacy Fund makes grants to Camp Riley to help kids with disabilities


Legacy Fund makes grants to Camp Riley to help kids with disabilities from Hamilton County attend camp.

Mark Robbins got a tour of the new Simon Family Tower and neonatal wing opening this year.

Fabulous!

Legacy Fund is honored to partner with organizations to help kids.

Charity Highlight: Corn crop could be 'huge' on warm weather, economist says

Good news for farmers. Higher yields could reduce the cost at the pump and grocery store. It could also enable more farmers to consider charitable gifts of grain, saving them bushels in taxes while supporting their charities of choice. Legacy Fund already has the program in place!


Corn production in the United States, the world’s biggest shipper of the grain, will be “huge” as warm weather encourages farmers to plant early to avoid the risk of late-season frost damage, economist Dennis Gartman said.

The fourth-warmest U.S. winter on record will be followed by above-normal temperatures from March through May and no floods are expected for the first time in four years, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration data show. That will give farmers a chance to plant earlier than normal and yields probably will improve, Gartman said in his daily Gartman Letter.

“Early planting favors higher yields given that the crop likely shall pollinate earlier, long before the heat of the summer and thus allowing the plant to mature before any threats of early autumn frost,” Gartman said. “This year’s corn crop then, all things being otherwise equal, is going to be huge.”

Corn futures on the Chicago Board of trade are up 3.3 percent this year on speculation that demand for the grain used to make food, fuel and animal feed will increase.

Chinese purchases and stockpiles are “the focus” of corn prices, Gartman said. U.S. exporters sold 240,000 metric tons of corn for delivery before Aug. 31 to an unknown buyer, the Department of Agriculture said on March 13. That buyer may be Chinese feed manufacturers, said Jim Gerlach, president of A/C Trading Co. in Fowler, Ind.

Indiana was ranked fifth among states in corn production a year ago!


This article is taken from "Indianapolis Business Journal"

Charity Highlight: 'New York Times’ Drops Philanthropy as Special Area of Coverage

The New York Times has eliminated its philanthropy beat, a move that could make it harder for nonprofits to get their stories told to a national audience.

The newspaper was one of the last daily newspapers to employ a reporter to cover national nonprofits on a full-time basis. That reporter, Stephanie Strom, is now writing about business.

Stephanie Yera, a spokeswoman for the New York Times Company, said the newspaper would still cover philanthropy-related stories “across news desks.”

For example, she noted that this week Eric Lichtblau wrote an article about a lawsuit over control of the Cato Institute that appeared on the newspaper’s front page. She also noted in an e-mail that “our culture and education desks are regularly churning out stories about philanthropy and nonprofits."

Online Outlets
On the one hand, news Web sites, like the Huffington Post’s Impact page and The Washington Post’s On Giving section, offer more chances for charity leaders to share their perspectives. But hard news and journalism about the field, at least at the national level, seem to be dwindling along with newspaper budgets.

The Washington Post employed a reporter to cover nonprofits full time until November 2008. A spokeswoman for the company, Jennifer Lee, said in an e-mail that in addition to its On Giving page, The Post has two reporters who cover local nonprofits on a part-time basis for its Capital Business section.

This article is taken from "The Chronicle of Philanthropy"

Charity Highlight: Another Reason to Use a Community Foundation

Some of the country’s leading philanthropic institutions have strayed far from their founders’ missions, the head of a leading donors’ organization writes in a Wall Street Journal opinion piece.

Adam Meyerson, president of the Philanthropy Roundtable, cites the Ford and MacArthur foundations, which in the decades after their establishment by business tycoons took up liberal causes, and the controversial transfer of the Barnes Foundation’s art collection as examples of such “donor neglect.”

“When a foundation is set up to dribble out its funds in perpetuity, there is a high risk it will eventually drift into projects the donor did not believe in,” Mr. Meyerson writes.

He suggests donors take “concrete action to safeguard their philanthropic principles,” such as setting out a written charitable mission, choosing foundation trustees with a similar worldview, and “giving while living.”

This article is taken from "The Chronicle of Philanthropy"

Indianapolis Business Journal - Foundations try to tap grain farmers' wealth

Historic highs - Corn and soybean prices in 2011
Farmers don't like to think of themselves as wealthy, but the past year's grain prices make it difficult to deny.

The average price Indiana farmers received for a bushel of corn reached a high last August of $7.18, nearly twice as much as the prior year. That kind of windfall tends to benefit farm-equipment sales, but it could also lead to more charitable giving.

At least, that's what Indiana community foundations are hoping. In a bid to capitalize on the recent runup, along with the longer-term rise in crop prices, they're encouraging farmers to give grain instead of cash.

Farmers don't pay self-employment or federal and state income tax on gifts of grain, and the bushels included in the gift still count toward a deduction for production costs. The tax savings, depending on income-tax bracket, range from 29.3 percent to 54.3 percent.


"They'll be able to give a larger amount, or get additional tax benefits," said Mark Robbins, vice president at the $40 million Legacy Fund, the Hamilton County affiliate of the Central Indiana Community Foundation. "So many of them are unaware of this benefit."

Despite its sprawling suburbs, Hamilton County is still home to families who farm thousands of acres, Robbins noted. But Legacy Fund has its work cut out in reaching them.

Robbins made his first inroads last fall through Craig Wallace, owner of Wallace Grain, a grain elevator and feed store in Sheridan.

The Wallace family had established a fund at Legacy several years ago in memory of Craig's parents, Phil and Marianna, to benefit hospice care. Wallace and his brother, who also farm about 500 acres, decided to contribute to the fund last year in grain, which was valued at about $2,000.

Ownership of the grain was transferred to Legacy Fund, which then executed the sale.

Wallace later helped line up grain gifts from Al Lyon and his mother. The Lyons, who farm about 1,800 acres, put their gifts into a family memorial fund that provides scholarships for Sheridan High School graduates. That fund also was established several years ago at Legacy.

Lyon wants to see the fund grow large enough to provide the scholarships from investment income. Giving part of his harvest might help him reach that goal faster.

Soybean prices reached $13.70 per bushel last May. The 100 bushels of soybeans that Lyon gave to the Lyon Cannon Memorial Fund were worth about $1,200. That was "without a doubt" more than he'd expected to give, Lyon said.

The Internal Revenue Service has permitted farmers to give commodities for many years, but the Legacy Fund and other community foundations in Indiana didn't promote it, Robbins said.

Foundation executives see the gifts of corn and soybeans as a point of entry— farmers who give grain this year might give chunks of their entire estate in the future.

Tom Zoss, CEO of the Community Foundation of Morgan County, will be talking up grain gifts during a farmers' breakfast the foundation sponsors each year at the Morgan County Fair.

"If they have a tractor big enough to climb up into, whether they admit it to themselves or not, they're millionaires," Zoss said.

The Morgan County foundation, which has assets of $6.5 million, manages many funds that are too small to be self-supporting, but Zoss hopes that with additional contributions, they'll grow into endowed funds.

The minimum for a stand-alone fund at Legacy Fund is $25,000 but farmers can also give to one of 200 existing funds, Robbins said.

Last summer's.price spikes aren't likely to be repeated, but with the ethanol industry adding to demand for corn, and China. demanding soybeans, agriculture econo-mists expect prices to remain at high levels.

"We're in an overall new plateau," said Corinne Alexander, associate professor of ag economics at Purdue University.

Purdue economists are predicting corn prices around $5.50 per bushel, if the crop is as large as expected this year.

That's still relatively high. The typical price for corn in the mid-1990s was around $2 per bushel.


Aritcle By Kathleen McLaughlin in Indianapolis Business Journal:

Treasury Department Issues Key Report: How It Affects You

The Department of the Treasury recently released an anticipated report mandated by Congress on Donor Advised Funds (DAF) and Supporting Organizations.

  • DAFs will continue to enjoy higher charitable income tax deductions compared to private foundations.
  • DAFs will not be subject to the minimum 5% annual distribution compared to private foundations. In fact DAFs distribute over 9% annually.

How does this affect You?
  • DAFs let you create a private foundation alternative without the cost or headaches.
  • DAFs give you the ability to perpetuate your giving across multiple generations.
  • DAFs enable you to give anonymously and to multiple charities
  • DAFs start at $25,000 at Legacy Fund. You need about $5 million to make a private foundation cost-effective.
  • DAFs can be funded with cash, appreciated securities, real estate or other assets.

The Council on Foundation's (COF) has issued a short summary. Click Here to access the COF summary.

Charity Highlight: Baseball’s Lessons on Promoting Social Change

In an annual ritual marking the change of seasons, pitchers and catchers just reported to Florida for spring training. Professional baseball sends a powerful lesson to those of us who work to solve social problems: Despite nearly 150 years of entrenched traditions, the sport has shown itself to be open to change. And that change is transforming how the game is played.

How does baseball point a path forward for those of us struggling to support a just and vibrant society in our troubled times?

The answer lies in the story of Billy Beane, manager of the Oakland Athletics, who demonstrated how radical innovation can allow anyone to achieve positive transformation even against seemingly impossible constraints.

Mr. Beane, immortalized in print and film by Moneyball, watched his baseball team lose the 2001 playoffs to the much wealthier New York Yankees. He approached the Athletics owner for more money to spend on salaries and was turned down—the money just wasn’t available. Yet Mr. Beane refused to take that as defeat. He still wanted his team to achieve greatness.

Mr. Beane’s staff members offered to work harder and put in longer hours to help the team win. However, he sensed that even an improved version of business-as-usual would lead to failure. He did not have access to the funding others had used to solve similar problems. He needed to radically reinvent how he ran the team to have any chance of success.

Billy Beane’s journey offers a powerful map for health clinics, homeless shelters, schools, theaters, and other organizations that weave the essential fabric of our communities. If this sounds like a stretch, consider their parallel path:

Like the Oakland Athletics, these organizations are facing crushing budget constraints. And like Mr. Beane, their first response is often to try to tap traditional financing sources for more money. Operating in a small market, the Oakland Athletics could not sustainably spend more on salaries.

Similarly, given the economic pressures we will continue to face for years to come, we do not have the resources or financing that we used to have to support our social organizations. Yet the needs these organizations address must continue to be met.

So what can we do with lower budgets? I side with the romantics who refuse to accept that we must lower our standards for how just and vibrant our communities can and will be. But like Billy Beane, we are gradually realizing that just getting better at business-as-usual approaches is not going to be good enough for long-term sustainable impact. Even many of our most efficient organizations are going bankrupt.

If we accept these budget constraints and refuse to lower our ambitions, we must embrace radical innovation. Billy Beane adopted data-driven analysis to put together a winning team.

For nonprofits,, innovation will take more diverse forms. It will lead organizations previously competing over shrinking resources to collaborate. It will inspire visionary leaders to rethink their approaches to the problems they want to solve. It will mobilize “complete capital” approaches that draw on for-profit investment alongside charity and government subsidy. And it will require us to support these organizations smartly as they shift from old business models to new, more sustainable ones.

So how can we better support game-changing innovations in the social sector?

For a donor or socially minded investor, a key piece of the puzzle is to look at the organizations you support in the greater context of the social problems you wish to influence. Billy Beane didn’t just think about winning a single game; he lifted his head up to look at the bigger picture of how baseball could be played in a different way. Similarly, for example, do you want to help a single organization or be part of the greater solution to solve homelessness in your community?

Two of Boston’s most important organizations that serve the homeless, Pine Street Inn and HopeFound, asked themselves that question two years ago. After a careful evaluation assessing how to create the most significant social change, HopeFound and Pine Street Inn recently announced a merger that will allow the combined entity to offer a more comprehensive set of homeless services than either organization could achieve alone. Through the support of the Catalyst Fund, a five-year fund to support the exploration of nonprofit collaboration and mergers in the Boston metropolitan area, homeless men and women will have better access to the services they need to get off the streets, out of shelters, and into permanent housing, bringing us one step closer to ending homelessness in Boston.

If you donate to nonprofits or sit on their boards, you can support these kinds of transformations by keeping an eye on the ultimate social impact you wish to achieve. As a board member, how might the organization you support work with other organizations in the community to achieve its mission? As a donor, what is the full scope of financial resources it takes for an organization to implement the change needed to achieve this kind of innovation? And how can you contribute to that?

The lesson for all of us is that we need to provide flexible, unrestricted funding that can allow innovative organizations to figure out new ways to meet their mission, rather than just paying for the services they have provided in the past. We also need to provide the “change capital” that will allow organizations the flexibility to build the capabilities they will need in the future. Focusing on overhead ratio as a proxy for efficiency when we consider where to donate has never made sense and is only more destructive now.

Like Billy Beane, those of us who work in the social sector must embrace his winning spirit by relentlessly asking, “What works better?” rather than, “What have we done in the past?” And we can all support the practical romantics who are figuring out how to change the game to create the type of society we all want to live in.



This article is taken from "The Chronicle of Philanthropy"

Charity Highlight: Britain’s Newly Wealthy Are More Public About Their Gifts


The increasingly open and entrepreneurial giving of Britain’s “new philanthropists,” and the often ambivalent public and media reaction to it, are the subjects of a Guardian examination.

Philanthropy in Britain remains well below U.S. levels and traditionally has been a largely private affair, but explosive pre-recession growth in the financial sector and a marked shift in the high-net-worth world from inherited to self-made wealth are fueling new giving models, according to the U.K. daily, which spoke to donors, academics, and philanthropy advisers.

But high-profile giving by Britain’s wealthy is often greeted with skepticism, particularly among left-leaning academics and media outlets, said Beth Breeze of the University of Kent’s Center for Philanthropy, Humanitarianism, and Social Justice.


“It seems to be OK to be a local giver, raise money for charity, give a bit to [U.K. antipoverty charity] Comic Relief. But as soon as you add a few zeroes, people start thinking: something’s up. What’s in it for them?” Ms. Breeze said. “Given we are where we are, do we want to cheer someone who does something to even out inequality, or discourage them?”

This article is taken from "The Chronicle of Philanthropy"

Legucy Fund debuted on the first page!


Legacy Fund is featured on the current cover of Indy Boomer magazine. Each of us has a story and a memory we want to leave behind. Giving to others can help connect each of our stories with our hopes for the future. Giving is also fun!

Legacy Fund was created in 1991 thanks to a generous matching grant from Lilly Endowment. We are affiliated with the Central Indiana Community Foundation (CICF) and are accomplishing three main goals:

  • Charitable Advising – We help individuals and their advisors set up scholarships and charitable funds which they can direct to any tax-exempt organization.
  • Grant making - Legacy Fund annually awards over $3 million to effective charities inside and outside the county. Visit the Legacy Fund official site for a list of organizations that received grants last year.
  • Community Leadership – We are a leader and convener for important community discussions such as the renovation of Coxhall Gardens, the launch of SNAP to curb teenage drinking and drug use, and the creation of the Good Samaritan Network to better coordinate services between charities for our neighbors in need.

Don’t sit on the sidelines. Use Legacy Fund as your partner to get in the game and make a bigger difference with your giving.


You can read the full article published in “Indy Boomer” here.


Charity Highlight: Billionaires and Giving


On Monday morning, Bloomberg News ran two stories on its "TOP" page regarding its new "Global Daily Ranking of Billionaires." By 3 pm (eastern), they were the second and third most read Bloomberg stories over the last 24 hours... and it is not as if it was a quiet news day overall. All of which led to me wonder about the social drivers -- particularly the balance between outdated attitudes on wealth and progress towards more socially-constructive behaviors.

First, some interesting facts that came to light directly from the two Bloomberg stories.

For those of you who like fresh data, Bloomberg will update "each net worth figure... every business day at 5:30 pm in New York." And for those who favor comprehensive research, the updates shed light on "the world's wealthiest people based on market and economic changes and Bloomberg reporting." Indeed, Bloomberg assures us that "the profiles feature a transparent analysis of how each billionaire's fortune was calculated."

Not surprisingly, the horse race commentaries have started based on the new data. On Monday morning we learned that, despite his dramatic Facebook success, Founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg is "not rich enough for [the] global billionaire ranking."

Outside the US, Brazilian billionaire Eike Batista (who ranked tenth on the Bloomberg list) intends to displace over time Carlos Slim, his Latin American peer who is ranked first. Noting that he is "competitive," Mr. Batista told Bloomberg "It's Brazil's time to be No. 1. Brazilians have always admired the American dream."

The data tell us that this group -- which, according to Bloomberg's definition, covers twenty individuals with $677 billion in wealth -- is not just an American affair. Just over half come from other countries, including Brazil, China, France, India, Mexico, Spain, and Sweden.

It should come as no surprise that all this information was eagerly gobbled up by Bloomberg readers. We live in a society that has long had a fascination with the ultra rich -- who are they, how did they acquire their fortunes, and what are they doing with it. Moreover, many of Bloomberg's users are in the financial sector, a place where too many people still treat wealth as an overwhelming factor in assessing lifetime achievements.

What may come as more of a surprise is that all this is happening now -- a time when, helped by the Occupy movements around the world, income and wealth inequalities have firmly been placed on the policy agenda. And this speaks to the risks and opportunities of Bloomberg new initiative.

The launch of the Billionaires Index could be yet another illustration that certain segments of society remain tone deaf when it comes to social realities. Indeed, some could view it as a sign of how information disseminators and opinion leaders are overly interested in metrics that say little about the underlying health and well-being of society.

This is clearly a risk. Fortunately there are countervailing forces.

Thanks to the efforts of many, a growing number of politically and financially influential people are recognizing that, in today's highly interconnected world that is trying to overcome anemic growth and an unemployment crisis, the well-being of the rich cannot (and should not) be viewed in isolation. To use one of my favorite real estate analogies, it is hard to be a great house in a weakening neighborhood -- which leads to the upside of the new data releases.

Some of the names on Bloomberg's Billionaire Index are already engaged meaningfully and effectively in deploying their wealth for the betterment of society. In addition to their considerable philanthropic donations, individuals like Bill Gates and Warren Buffett (ranked second and third, respectively, by Bloomberg) have been spearheading initiatives to ensure that fellow billionaire devote more of their wealth to socially-constructive ends.


This is where the potential upside comes in. Bloomberg's daily identification of the top billionaires could reinforce a trend where these individuals, and many others, allocate a growing portion of their wealth in a manner that helps society as a whole. In this way, the appeal of the index would prove to be less about what has happened and more about the responsibility that the rich share to help the least and less fortunate members of our global society.

This article is taken from "The Huffington Post"

Donor Services team

When you open up a charitable fund at Legacy Fund or CICF, who helps you research charities and make effective grants? Meet our Donor Services team: Monica Peterson, Kelli Elser, and Pam Velo.
Monica Peterson, Kelli Elser, and Pam Velo




Did You Know?


What percentage of Indiana high schoolers attend college. The answer will shock you...


The Hamilton North Chamber


Legacy Fund board members Kay Hartley and Steve Holt attended the Hamilton North Chamber luncheon with vice president Mark Robbins. Topic was Big Ideas for Small Businesses by Bedel Financial Consulting
Paul Munoz, Jane Hunter, Jim Schneider, and Dick Van Voorhis.

Charity Highlight: YMI

Mentoring can mean different things. To kids in need, it means the world. Reality check: Hamilton County has kids in need too. YMI is just one organization trying to make a difference




Charity Highlight: Shepherd’s Center

Hamilton County Indiana isn't just made up of school aged kids. Lots of retirees live here too. Learn how the Shepherd's Center and Legacy Fund, our community foundation, are partnering to help the elderly lead rich lives.




Legacy Fund: February News Review


February turned out to be pleasantly busy for our community foundation. Legacy Fund partnered by facilitating a fund that the town of Atlanta in northern Hamilton County used as leverage to obtain the Community Focus Fund (CFF) grant. The $600,000 grant to help the installation of a storm water system was awarded by Lt. Governor Becky Skillman after a competitive application process!
The 2012 Boxley Lecture Series regarding the life of President Theodore Roosevelt was sponsored in the town of Sheridan this month. Legacy Fund board member and Sheridan town council member Brenda Bush was involved in this event.

In the middle of the month vice president and a wealth manager at Robert W. Baird - Dan Moore and several other community members met at Legacy Fund to interview some of the brightest high school students in Hamilton County for the Lilly Endowment Community Scholarship (full ride) and the Legacy Fund Community Scholarship ($2,000 per year). Dan said this role was fun and hard, but it was a great opportunity to communicate with the future leaders of the Indiana society.
Legacy Fund board members Brenda Bush and Ann O'Hara attended the Sheridan Chamber of Commerce lunch with vice president Mark Robbins. The topic was creating a business plan and finding business financing.


Elaine Cannon of Sheridan, Indiana, recently lost her husband Mike to cancer. While creating the obituary, her brother suggested that memorial contributions could be made to Legacy Fund to bolster the family's charitable fund benefiting Sheridan High School. Dozens of gifts have been made in honor of Mike, a former financial officer at St. Vincent's Hospital. Elaine is very thankful to those who gave and is sure that her husband would have been touched by people’s generosity! Elaine added, "Flowers are beautiful, but scholarships keep growing."
Thanks to all our readers for being with us! Stay tuned for more stories of ordinary people doing extraordinary good through giving.