I'm a humble SPI list subscriber, and debian user. I've been an accountant for a number of non-profits over the years, but minimal experience with one international non-profit.
SPI's board and major projects must obtain some real tax and legal advice from genuinely knowlegeable individuals on the topic under discussion, not the speculation of non-experts. It would be money well-spent, for all of SPI's future projects. This will not be the last time this kind of question arises. And, SPI wants to be the recipient of this kind of question in the future; it is an aspect of SPI's larger corporate mission. So, SPI actually needs know it can do, and how to do it correctly, and legally. There are ways to do affiliation efforts, even internationally, and it is done all the time. Think about the international, multiple program, multiple-activity collaborations of that each entity like "Doctors without Borders" "Oxfam" "Habitat for Humanity" and so on must undertake to accomplish each of their missions. Or the Ford Foundation, for that matter. Similarly, it is common for foundations to pass directed-donations to other organization, provided they have agreements that the money will be used for proper purposes, and additional other standards, and the funded project complies with the mission, and tax exempt purpose and laws governing the funding organization. It can be concieved of as a variety of a grant, which SPI is capable of undertaking, as a U.S tax-exempt organization. But it requires attention, standards, and periodic review. Collectively, SPI must know what its doing, and have real advice. Speculation is insufficient. Best regards, Mark Jones _______________________________________________ Spi-general mailing list [email protected] http://lists.spi-inc.org/listinfo/spi-general
