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1. Run Joe Run Posted: July 14, 2008 at 12:26 PM (#2855684)Without doing the review of Jeter's foundation, it sure seems odd to raise $2.3 million and hand out only $1.3million. Where is that other $1 million?
That said, it seems like it might be kind of a typical cheap shot at Rodriguez (shocking from the Post) with the comparison to Jeter since it is hard to know how much personal knowledge Rodriguez has.
Also, this is later in the article:
A-Rod does make sizeable personal charitable contributions outside his nonprofits.
The AROD charities are funded primarily from his own wallet, also.
***
Many charities have very high overhead. If you host a fund raising dinner, for example, you have to pay for the food and drinks and to rent a location, pay for entertainment or speakers, etc. You have to hire marketers to call donors or do mailings, etc. I have no idea how much of that applies to this situation, but a lot of money that goes to charities in general never makes to the intended recipients because of that.
That sentence seemingly conflicts with this one:
The bulk of that money was raised in one year alone: 2006, when the AROD Family Foundation pulled in $403,862. Most of it, $368,862, came from a fund-raiser, while Rodriguez kicked in the balance.
So he kicked in $35K out of $403K.
RJR mentions paychecks for family members. I recall Bond' foundation having his mother as exec director. Perhaps A-Rod is folding his because his exec director is divorcing him.
Indeed. I have read that the average is something like .40 on the dollar. If that is ballpark-right, then one could say Jeter's foundation is doing OK.
I think if he had an ED, he wouldn't be getting divorced.
But it wouldn't make him the perfect husband, either.
And I think the deduction allowable reflects this ... you have to subtract the value of anything you receive in exchange for your donation before you write it off. If you got a round of golf worth $120, you can only write off $80.
That's not quite what you're looking for Marty, but if only $40 went to the end charity, well, I'd argue that the other $40 going to the expenses of the non-profit organization is deduction worthy. Whether your money goes to sick kids or to cover expenses for an organization that is dedicated to helping sick kids, I think that's a small difference in terms of your motive of helping others (barring abuse by the org).
(Though obviously, you'd want the organization to run as efficiently as possible.)
I don't think Nando is expected to stick in CF. His future is in a corner.
The celebrity charity in general does seem to be more of a tax write off than anything. If you consider the basic overhead of staff, rent, equipment, there is a lot of donated money that goes to nothing charitable. I think it's best to go with one of the largest charities devoted to the specific cause to get the best return.
But keep in mind that, in order to get to the point where their operation runs on interest earned, they had to take in a lot of money and not give it out, for a long time. I wonder how the NY Post would've described them a while back.
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