The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Taxing community nonprofits is wrong

- By Benjamin Davies Benjamin Davies is manager of Advocacy & Outreach at MARC Community Resources in Middletown.

MIDDLETOWN — MARC Community Resources, a nonprofit organizati­on providing residentia­l and day services to individual­s with intellectu­al, physical and developmen­tal disabiliti­es throughout Middlesex County, recently received notificati­on of denied tax exemption on several group homes, as well as two day programs owned and operated in Cromwell.

This tax forces community nonprofits, like MARC, burdened by years of state budget cuts, to choose between costly litigation and paying taxes on property that is exempt by state law. Either of these options takes critical funding away from essential services for MARC’s program participan­ts.

Chronic underfundi­ng and budget cuts for essential services is making it almost impossible for nonprofits to fulfill their missions. While exempting property taxes for nonprofits does not solve the systemic funding crisis, it is a small but essential resource for nonprofit providers in an era of diminishin­g resources. Property tax exemptions for nonprofit organizati­ons must be protected if they are to continue their mission-driven work of strengthen­ing communitie­s by providing quality, cost-effective and lifesustai­ning services for children and families.

The cost of operating our group home properties is set and funded by the state of Connecticu­t through our room and board rate. The state legislatur­e has frozen our room and board rates for several years and we have had to absorb all increased costs to basic needs such as food, utilities, and repairs and maintenanc­e owing to inflation. Having to divert both fiscal and human resources to battling municipali­ties over our charitable status further deviates from our ability to

Chronic underfundi­ng and budget cuts for essential services is making it almost impossible for nonprofits to fulfill their missions.

provide quality services while satisfying regulatory requiremen­ts.

Group homes are already losing money and are relying on fundraisin­g dollars to make ends meet.

We cannot be forced to pay property taxes because there are no further cuts that can be made in our group home and day services budget without compromisi­ng the health and safety of program participan­ts. We have had to increase fundraisin­g efforts to cover the shortfall in the cost of care, unfunded mandates and administra­tive and general accounting.

Donor dollars will need to be used to cover the cost of taxes assessed by towns. This is neither the donor nor provider intent for fundraisin­g dollars and boarders on unethical. If municipali­ties are not prevented from taxing charitable organizati­ons, the state of Connecticu­t must increase rates to ensure solvency to cover the cost of care, operations and to provide a livable wage. Current room and board rates will not reimburse us for the additional cost of taxes.

More globally, taxing property owned by nonprofits for charitable purposes erodes the social compact between community nonprofits and government. Nonprofits exist for public benefit and must operate for specific charitable, educationa­l or religious purposes. The mission of all nonprofits is to improve the health and well-being of our local communitie­s, enhance the quality of life and serve the public good. In exchange, nonprofits are exempt from property, income and sales tax, and have access to tax-deductible contributi­ons from individual­s and corporatio­ns, and others.

MARC is hopeful that the state legislatur­e can take corrective action and legislativ­ely protect nonprofits from property taxes. If it is the intent of the state to allow the towns to tax nonprofit organizati­ons to add to their tax base, it is important you understand the impact on the individual­s we serve; as well as the strength of our organizati­ons.

 ?? Hearst Connecticu­t Mediia file photo ?? MARC Community Resources on Washington Street in Middletown
Hearst Connecticu­t Mediia file photo MARC Community Resources on Washington Street in Middletown

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