Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Critics question charitable gifts sitting in donor funds

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Wealthy philanthro­pists have long enjoyed an advantageo­us way to give to charity. Using something called a donor-advised fund, they’ve been able to enjoy tax deductions and investment gains on their donations long before they give the money away.

These so-called DAFs set no deadlines for when the donations must reach charities; the donors themselves decide when and where the money goes.

Critics complain that because DAFs provide no financial incentive to quickly donate the money, much of it ends up sitting indefinite­ly in accounts rather than being distribute­d to needy charities.

That criticism has helped drive a Senate bill that would tighten the rules for DAFs and aim to speed donations to charities. The bill, introduced by Sens. Angus King, a Maine Independen­t, and Chuck Grassley, an Iowa Republican, appears to be gaining bipartisan support in Congress.

The bill would make numerous reforms to DAFs by, among other things, creating newcategor­ies of accounts.

One type would give donors an immediate income tax deduction for money they agree to give to a charity within 15 years. The second would let them delay distributi­on of their money for 50 years. These donors would get no income tax deduction until then. But they would still enjoy capital gains and estate tax savings for donatingst­ocks or gifts into a DAF.

Community foundation­sponsored DAFs with less than $1 million would be exempt from the requiremen­t. Butdonors with more than $1 million in such accounts would qualify for upfront tax benefits only if they distribute­dat least 5% of their assets annuallyor gave their money to a charity within 15 years. Undercurre­nt law, assets can remainin a DAF indefinite­ly, tax-free.

“This is about as common sense a bill as I’ve ever seen,” said Mr. King, who caucuses with Democrats. “The idea of getting a tax deduction today for money that may not be paid out for 50 years makes no sense. I understand you might want to put it into a fund and have someone else manage it. But it’s got to go out within a reasonable period of time. Otherwise, it’s anabuse of the tax code.”

The proposed reforms have opened a rift in philanthro­py circles among billionair­e donors, community foundation­s and trade associatio­ns and have sparked intense lobbying efforts for and against the legislatio­n.

The debate was ignited when John Arnold, a Texasbased billionair­e who made his fortune in hedge funds and now co-chairs Arnold Ventures, joined with a group of scholars and philanthro­pies to propose a set of reforms under a coalition they called The Initiative to Accelerate Charitable Giving. Group members met with lawmakers to advocate for the reforms, which have largely been incorporat­ed into the Senate bill.

What sparked Mr. Arnold’s interest, he said, was seeing rich people with philanthro­pic intent funneling money into DAFs yet distributi­ng very little of it to charities.

“The money was just sitting there growing,” Mr. Arnold said. “There wasn’t any intent of abuse of the system. But the money was just building up because there was no forcing mechanism.”

Opponents of the bill counter that tighter restrictio­ns on DAFs are unnecessar­y because the average annual payout rates for DAFs hover around 20% — much higher than the 5% minimum required of private foundation­s. Richard Graber, who leads the conservati­ve Bradley Foundation, calls the legislatio­n “a solution in search of a problem.” (The foundation is affiliated with Bradley Impact Fund, a DAF sponsor).

Yet without payout requiremen­ts, of the legislatio­n say DAFs — which hold an estimated $142 billion in the United States — have essentiall­y become warehouses for charitable donations. The accounts let donors set up endowed accounts that exist in perpetuity and can pass on to their heirs.

AJune report by the Council of Michigan Foundation­s showed that 35% of DAFs sponsored by Michigan community foundation­s distribute­d no money in 2020, a year marked by enormous need because of the viral pandemic.

Today, roughly 1 in 8 charitable dollars are estimated to go into DAFs. The New York Community Trust, a community foundation, establishe­d the first DAF in 1931. Their use accelerate­d in the 1990s, when Fidelity Charitable launched a national donoradvis­ed fund program. Charitable arms of many financial firms, including Vanguard Charitable and Schwab Charitable, now run robust DAFprogram­s.

Community foundation­s, along with universiti­es, hospitals, faith-based groups and large charities like United Way also sponsor DAFs. Collective­ly, they account for a 300% growth in DAF accounts over the past 10 years, according to the National Philanthro­pic Trust.

Eileen Heisman, who leads the philanthro­pic trust, notes the ease of opening a DAF account online, the emergence of workplace charitable-giving accounts and low initial minimum contributi­ons. Indeed, Fidelity and Schwab require no initial contributi­ons at all for openinga DAF account, Heisman noted, thereby transformi­ng it into a financial vehicle anyone can use. Still, the average value of a DAF account — estimated at about $162,000 — shows that DAFs remain a vehicle mainly for the affluent.

The Senate bill was crafted with guidance from Ray Madoff, a Boston College law professor who, alongside Arnold, has called for stricter DAF rules. Mr. Madoff and a colleague published a study in May that showed that working charities had lost $300 billion in contributi­ons over a five-year period, as more people channeled donations through DAFs and private foundation­s rather than directly to charities.

The Philanthro­py Roundtable, a conservati­ve-leaning group that opposes payout requiremen­ts for DAFs, disputes those findings. Its president, Elise Westhoff, argues that “more mandates and regulation­s on giving will just make it harder for all Americans to support the causesthey care about.”

Supporters of the bill, including William Schambra, a philanthro­py expert at the conservati­ve Hudson Institute, say much of the pushback reflects a financial incentive that DAF sponsors want to preserve: The fees they charge to manage the accounts.

Some community foundation leaders agree.

“Community foundation­s’ business models are based on asset management,” said Paul Major, CEO of Coloradoba­sed Telluride Foundation. “They charge fees, and that’s how they fund their operations. If they have less money to manage, they bring in less fees.”

“But the objective of charitable giving is not to manage more money,” Mr. Major said. “The objective is to put themoney to work.”

Other experts agree on the need to rein in DAFs but favor a different approach. Edward A. Zelinsky, a professor at Yeshiva University’s Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, argues that creating a minimum annual contributi­on requiremen­t for all DAFs would more effectivel­y accelerate donations to charities.

Some community foundation­s say they think the bill is unnecessar­y because their organizati­ons already have policies that incentiviz­e faster payouts. Jeff Hamond, who oversees a coalition of 130 community foundation­s, contends that the legislatio­n would increase the financial burden on community foundation­s, requiring them to trackeach donation.

“For every kind of additional cost burden you put on a community foundation,” Mr. Hamond said, “you’re actually driving more people to Fidelity, Vanguard and Schwab.”

The Senate bill would also prohibit donors from claiming tax benefits for complex donations — like real estate — that exceed the value of the gift. It would also incentiviz­e private foundation­s to increase their payouts to 7% and bar them from meeting their payout requiremen­ts by paying salaries or other expenses for relatives or by donatingto DAFs.

The Senate bill has been referred to the Finance Committee, though a vote hasn’t been scheduled. A spokesman for Mr. King’s office said the senator expects a bipartisan House version of the bill to be introduced in the comingweek­s.

 ?? Greg Nash/Pool via AP I-Maine, above, and Sen. ?? Introduced by Sen. Angus King,
Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, a Senate bill that seeks to speed up philanthro­pic donations to charities appears to be gaining bipartisan support in Congress, taking aim at a popular charitable vehicle called donor-advised funds. The bill would make numerous reforms to DAFs by creating new categories of accounts, among other changes.
Greg Nash/Pool via AP I-Maine, above, and Sen. Introduced by Sen. Angus King, Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, a Senate bill that seeks to speed up philanthro­pic donations to charities appears to be gaining bipartisan support in Congress, taking aim at a popular charitable vehicle called donor-advised funds. The bill would make numerous reforms to DAFs by creating new categories of accounts, among other changes.

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