charitable organizations;
filings; exemptions
SB 1252 requires a charitable organization to file a statement with the Secretary of State (SOS) before soliciting its first contribution and repeals the exemptions to registration requirements, while exempting only political parties, candidates for office and campaign committees.
Statute defines charitable organization as a person determined by the Internal Revenue Service to be a tax-exempt organization pursuant to §501(c)(3) or a person that holds himself to be established for a charitable purpose or who in any manner employs a charitable appeal as the basis of a solicitation. Current law requires a charitable organization to file a written statement with the SOS containing specific statutory requirements no later than three days after the organization solicits its first contribution.
Current law exempts political parties, candidates for federal, state or local office and campaign committees that are required to file financial information with federal, state or local election agencies as well as many other organizations from the registration requirements. The following groups are only a few examples of these exemptions:
1. Nonprofit hospitals, blood banks and their foundations.
2. Organizations engaged in charitable organizations in foreign countries.
3. Licensed public radio and television stations that are raising monies for their own operations.
4. Solicitations solely from private foundations.
· Repeals the section of law providing exemptions to registration requirements.