The Norwalk Hour

Teacher who raised money through Facebook off the hook for taxes

- By Paul Stern

Sometimes one person’s generosity inspires others. For Louis Goffinet, the middle school teacher who accidental­ly racked up a $16,000 tax bill while raising thousands of dollars to feed his community during the pandemic, this is true three times over.

When news broke last week of Goffinet’s tax bill and his inability to pay, generous souls from all over the country flooded his Mansfield post office box with checks. As of Thursday, he said, he had amassed about $13,000 he can use to cover the bill.

“It’s a big relief,” he said Thursday. He’s gotten checks from as far away as Wisconsin and California. “Four different individual­s – three of them strangers – offered to pay the whole $16,000.”

But he won’t be doing that.

A local CPA and a New York tax professor have determined that Goffinet does not owe income taxes on the $41,000 he raised through a Facebook fundraiser to buy and distribute groceries for people throughout his community. Instead, they will help him set up a charity so he can continue his good work for those in need without creating any more tax problems for him or anyone else.

After meeting with Goffinet and looking over his records, Windham CPA Dawn Brolin and Columbia University tax professor Rick Davino agree that Goffinet’s grocery distributi­on efforts were what Brolin terms “a gift-raising activity.”

“Amounts received by reason of the donor’s ‘detached and disinteres­ted’ generosity are NOT taxable to the recipient but rather are treated as tax-free gifts under section 102 of the Federal income tax laws,” said Rick Davino, an adjunct tax professor at Columbia Law School. After learning

Goffinet’s story, “I can’t imagine any of the donors on Mr. Goffinet’s Facebook page being motivated by other than such generosity. Thus, the receipt of those funds by Mr. Goffinet would NOT be taxable to him. No doubt at all.”

Despite the Form 1099-K that Facebook sent the IRS identifyin­g the $41,000 as personal income, the money people gave Goffinet to buy groceries was given so he could spend it on others — with no expectatio­n of a tax deduction or anything else in return, Brolin said. “There was no quid pro quo.”

After hearing to the contrary from a number of tax experts, “I was really skeptical there was a way out,” Goffinet said. But he said the last thing he wants to see is for money intended to help people go back to the IRS.

So, with help volunteere­d by Brolin’s firm, Powerful Accounting Inc., Goffinet said will set up a legal 501(c)3 tax-exempt organizati­on to handle the thousands sent to cover his debt. Once that’s done, he said, everyone who sent him money to pay the tax bill will be given the option of donating the money to the charity — for the benefit of others — or simply getting it back.

In response to news of his unexpected tax liability incurred while buying groceries for needy people in his community, dozens have sent him enough money to cover Louis Goffinet’s entire bill. But with the help of a volunteer tax advisor, he has a better idea.

Meanwhile, said Brolin, she will file Goffinet’s tax return without claiming the $41,000 as income. She and Goffinet are also building a file that will comprehens­ively account for all the money he received and how and on whom he spent it.

Fortunatel­y, he has been keeping detailed records, Goffinet said. “She wants two years of my credit card and bank statements,” the 27-year-old teacher added.

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