The Des Moines Register

Costs eat much of Iowa sheriff group donations

- Clark Kauffman

Iowans have donated more than $3 million in recent years to a group of Iowa sheriffs, but only $1 million of that has been spent on the stated purpose of helping children and educating law enforcemen­t personnel.

In fact, more than 60% of Iowans’ donations to the sheriffs in 2022 were consumed by the expenses of a for-profit marketing company.

For years, the Iowa State Sheriffs and Deputies Associatio­n Institute, which is a nonprofit, tax-exempt organizati­on with a mission of sending underprivi­leged children to camp and educating law enforcemen­t personnel, has raised money in Iowa through directmail solicitati­ons.

Iowans who are targeted by the campaign are typically sent a letter on letterhead from their own county sheriff, seeking contributi­ons to provide “critical support and training” for law enforcemen­t, to help send underprivi­leged children to camp and to provide support for the Iowa Special Olympics.

Some of the letters offer donors a set of “credential­s” in return for a donation: a membership card for the donor’s wallet, a window decal and a bumper sticker.

Such items have been used by various police associatio­ns for decades as fundraisin­g incentives, but they also have generated controvers­y. Because they are items that might be displayed on or in a vehicle during a traffic stop, some have argued they imply that donors can expect, if not receive, favorable treatment when pulled over.

Company collects almost $475,000; sheriffs get less than $180,000

Earlier this year, the Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office promoted the campaign on its Facebook page, asking citizens to donate and play “an active role in helping make our community a safer place by providing resources and services to the sheriffs of Iowa.”

According to the institute’s most recently disclosed tax returns, the sheriffs’ hired fundraisin­g company, Altus Marketing, collected $471,987 in by sending out such direct-mail solicitati­ons in 2022.

Of the funds raised, Altus Marketing kept $292,832, and the sheriffs’ organizati­on received $179,155, according to the tax records.

The sheriffs then spent $108,375 sending children to a YMCA camp, donated $10,000 to the Special Olympics, and contribute­d $4,000 to an Iowa State Sheriffs’ Associatio­n museum.

That would suggest the sheriffs’ total charitable expenses that year were $122,375. As in years past, one of the organizati­on’s biggest annual expenses is tied to meetings and convention­s, which accounted for $185,424 in spending during 2022.

‘Of course, we would like to have a better outcome’

Sgt. Shawn Ireland of the Linn County Sheriff’s Office is the organizati­on’s current president and says the Iowa State Sheriffs and Deputies Associatio­n Institute has struggled with the expense of fundraisin­g.

“It is expensive to have a fundraiser,” he said. “The funds that we get do go to good things, but it takes money to make money and it’s hard to run a program like that by ourselves because we’re full-time sheriffs and deputies. So we hire a company that does the fundraisin­g for us. And we never solicit by phone. We always send out those letters.”

The 2022 spending by the Iowa State Sheriffs and Deputies Associatio­n Institute is similar to what the group has reported to the Internal Revenue Service in previous years.

From 2016 to 2022, only about $1 million – or 33% of the roughly $3 million Iowans donated in that time – was used for the stated purpose of training officers and helping underprivi­leged children.

Ireland said that while it’s not ideal to spend so much with a profession­al fundraisin­g company, the sheriffs have yet to find a better way to raise money.

“If there’s a better way to raise money or help do those things, we would be all ears, if somebody has a better solution for us,” he said. “Of course, we would like to have a better outcome, we work to improve our processes always, but currently it just seems like this is the best way for us to do that kind of business right now.”

Find this story at Iowa Capital Dispatch, part of States Newsroom, a network of news bureaus supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Iowa Capital Dispatch maintains editorial independen­ce. Contact Editor Kathie Obradovich for questions: info@iowacapita­ldispatch.com.

 ?? PROVIDED BY HAMILTON COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE ?? The Iowa State Sheriffs and Deputies Associatio­n Institute is raising money in Iowa through direct-mail solicitati­ons like this one.
PROVIDED BY HAMILTON COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE The Iowa State Sheriffs and Deputies Associatio­n Institute is raising money in Iowa through direct-mail solicitati­ons like this one.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States