OCCF https://occf.org Meeting the changing needs of the Community. Sun, 22 Sep 2024 02:42:18 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://occf.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/cropped-occf-favicon-32x32.webp OCCF https://occf.org 32 32 Finance Director https://occf.org/finance-director/ Sun, 22 Sep 2024 02:42:12 +0000 https://occf.org/staging/?p=244625

The Finance Director will help lead the finance team, ensuring it functions efficiently and effectively. This position provides backup and support to the Controller and directly supervises a portion of the Finance Department. The Finance Director is team-oriented and serves to support the mission of the foundation, ensuring timeliness and accuracy of all aspects of financial reporting and compliance.

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Gifts of Real Estate: Watch Every Step https://occf.org/gifts-of-real-estate-watch-every-step/ Tue, 17 Sep 2024 17:05:35 +0000 https://occfarchives.org/staging/?p=244259

Your Gifts of Real Estate: Watch Every Step

We’re hearing from more and more attorneys, accountants and financial advisors that your clients are expressing interest in giving real estate to charity. This is wonderful news!

You’re certainly aware that gifts of real estate to a fund at the Community Foundation, just like gifts of other long-term capital assets, can be extremely tax-efficient. That’s because your client is typically eligible for a charitable deduction based on the fair market value of the property. Because the Community Foundation is a public charity, when it sells the donated property, the proceeds will flow into the fund free from capital gains tax.

A donor to Westview Boys’ Home in Hollis, Oklahoma, for 20 years, Ralph Pickle established the Ralph Pickle Family Fund at OCCF through his estate in 2017, and now his impact is stronger than ever before.

To achieve the best tax outcome and overall charitable result, it’s critical to undertake a careful process along the general lines of the following (depending of course on the specific situation):

The deductibility rules are different for real estate gifts to a public charity (such as the Community Foundation) versus a private foundation. Sometimes we meet with advisors whose clients are very close to transferring real estate to a private foundation, which could be devastating in terms of missed tax savings.

  1. You’ll need to determine that the real estate is a long-term capital asset (held for more than one year). That may sound obvious, but we’ve talked with advisors and their clients in the past about a potential gift of real estate and it turned out that the property was only recently purchased. The fair market value deduction (versus cost basis deduction) is available only for a long-term capital asset.
  2. You’ll want to work with the team at the Community Foundation to structure a donor-advised or other type of fund to receive the asset, if your client does not already have a fund in place. The deductibility rules are different for real estate gifts to a public charity (such as a community foundation fund) versus a private foundation. Again, clients may not be aware of the pitfalls here.

Sometimes we meet with advisors whose clients are very close to transferring real estate to a private foundation, which could be devastating in terms of missed tax savings.

3. You’ll need to verify that the property is not subject to a mortgage or other debt. Transferring encumbered property triggers important considerations with potentially significant tax consequences. The lender might not even allow a transfer in the first place. If you’re dealing with commercial property, you’ll also need to check to be sure that the property is not subject to “recapture” if your client has previously taken depreciation deductions.

4. You will need to determine whether the property produces income and discuss this with the Community Foundation. Income-producing real estate can potentially trigger “UBIT” (unrelated business income tax) for the Community Foundation. Although there are exceptions and strategies to minimize UBIT’s impact, it’s important that this issue be dealt with up front.

5. You may need to work with the Community Foundation to determine whether an environmental audit is required for the property.

6. Verify that the client has not entered into any discussions about an imminent sale of the property. Even if the Community Foundation will sell the property shortly after receipt (so that the proceeds can flow into the donor-advised or other fund to support the client’s favorite causes), your client cannot have pre-arranged this sale. Doing so could trigger the IRS’s step transaction doctrine and wipe out the tax deduction.

7. Importantly, ensure that the client obtains a qualified appraisal to determine the fair market value of the property. This is critical to obtain a tax deduction, and the appraised value must be reported to the IRS on a Form8283 in strict compliance with the IRS’s rules.

8. Finally, transfer the property with the appropriate legal documents, including a deed.

The team at the Community Foundation is a resource and sounding board as you serve your philanthropic clients. We understand the charitable side of the equation and are happy to serve as a secondary source as you manage the primary relationship with your clients. This is provided for informational purposes only. It is not intended as legal, accounting or financial planning advice.

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Closely-Held Stock is Having a Moment https://occf.org/closely-held-stock-is-having-a-moment/ Tue, 17 Sep 2024 14:26:05 +0000 https://occfarchives.org/staging/?p=244249

Closely-Held Stock is Having a Moment

Giving stock is an important strategy for any private business owner to explore. Not only can these gifts help implement a business succession plan that calls for transferring the business to the next generation, if that is your client’s goal, but gifts of stock can also help your business-owner client achieve charitable goals and avoid estate tax.

In light of recent legal developments and pending tax law changes, more and more financial and estate planning advisors are encouraging their clients to consider implementing gifts of closely-held stock to a fund at the Community Foundation or other public charity. 

Don and Carolyn Zachritz at the OKC Zoo.

OCCF donors Don and Carolyn Zachritz at the Oklahoma City Zoo.

Notably, two developments could have a big impact on your work with these clients:

  • The estate tax exemption sunset set to occur at the end of next year continues to loom large. Without intervening legislation, a lot more of your clients will need to wrestle with the reality that their estates will likely be subject to a hefty tax, causing many clients to rethink both the timing and methods to transfer business interests. As a result, making gifts of closely-held business interests to a fund at the Community Foundation is likely to become more attractive to a broader cross-section of your client base.
  • Valuation has always been a critical factor in any type of tax or estate planning. This is certainly still the case with substantiating the value of closely-held business interests that your clients transfer to a charity, such as a fund at the Community Foundation. And now, the additional wrinkle presented by the Supreme Court’s decision in Connelly v. United States makes things even more interesting. The Connelly decision impacts the way business interests are valued for estate tax purposes. In Connelly, the Supreme Court held that life insurance proceeds ought to be included in the valuation of a company without offsetting the redemption obligation. This could translate to higher taxable estates for your business-owner clients, creating further incentive to leave a portion of closely-held stock to charity. The decision is also a reminder that careful planning can potentially avoid pitfalls.

Please reach out to the Community Foundation to learn more about how our team can help as you work with your business-owner clients to navigate legal and tax developments that could significantly impact future plans for their privately-held companies.

The team at the Community Foundation is a resource and sounding board as you serve your philanthropic clients. We understand the charitable side of the equation and are happy to serve as a secondary source as you manage the primary relationship with your clients. This is provided for informational purposes only. It is not intended as legal, accounting or financial planning advice.

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How Much Is Enough? https://occf.org/how-much-is-enough/ Tue, 10 Sep 2024 19:55:45 +0000 https://occfarchives.org/staging/?p=244038

How Much Is Enough

How much is enough??

That’s a question many parents ask as they structure lifetime gifts and bequests to children in their financial and estate plans. Wealthy clients are sometimes concerned that leaving millions of dollars, or even hundreds of thousands, to their children hoping they will be ‘wise adults who have figured out how to live independently.’

In addition to concerns about fostering entitlement and dependency, many parents are concerned that their children will miss out on the satisfaction of knowing they built wealth on their own. 

The Rees family uses their fund at OCCF to support new and innovative efforts to end generational poverty.

These parents believe that the challenges and struggles along the way will ultimately enrich their children’s lives with intangible benefits that are far greater than the obvious benefits that come with gifts or an inheritance of significant financial resources.

As you work with clients who feel this way, please reach out to the Community Foundation. Every day, our team works with families in this exact situation. We’ll help you evaluate strategies such as:

Involving the next generation in charitable planning through a DAF is a great way to introduce the role of a financial advisor and unite the family in their charitable giving efforts.

RBC Wealth Management

  • Establishing philanthropic components of an estate plan using charitable trusts as a ‘multipurpose estate planning tool’ to provide tax benefits, annual income and establish generational philanthropy.
  • Use of a donor-advised fund at OCCF to help you to create a meaningful relationship between YOU, as an advisor, and your client’s family to increase charitable impact, succession planning for family wealth and family involvement. Many of our donors at OCCF create Legacy Funds with terms of the fund providing that the children step in as successor advisors following the clients’ deaths. As successor advisors to the donor-advised fund, the children can work with OCCF to recommend

grants to favorite charities, support interest areas pre-selected by their parents or both. Many of OCCF’s donors appreciate the structure as it allows their children to stay involved with all of the family’s wealth, work together, keep sibling bonds strong and get involved in the community.

Please reach out to the OCCF team anytime. We look forward to exploring strategies to help your clients meet their financial and tax goals as well as honor their wishes for children to live happy and productive lives.

The team at the Community Foundation is a resource and sounding board as you serve your philanthropic clients. We understand the charitable side of the equation and are happy to serve as a secondary source as you manage the primary relationship with your clients. This newsletter is provided for informational purposes only. It is not intended as legal, accounting or financial planning advice.

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Walking Into the Sunset: Thoughtful Planning Now for Your Clients https://occf.org/walking-into-the-sunset-thoughtful-planning-now-for-your-clients/ Tue, 10 Sep 2024 18:59:56 +0000 https://occf.org/staging/?p=243305

Walking Into the Sunset: Thoughtful Planning Now for Your Clients

Without legislation to prevent it, the sunsetting of current estate tax laws at the end of 2025 will dramatically reduce the federal estate tax exemption from $13.61 million per person in 2024 to approximately $7 million in 2026 (including adjustments for inflation). This change would affect many high net-worth individuals and families, likely exposing many more estates to federal estate taxes.

Indeed, for a client who is charitably inclined, making larger lifetime gifts to charity and arranging for charitable bequests will help reduce the client’s taxable estate because of the charitable estate and gift tax deduction. 

Oklahoma City skyline with setting sun

Donor-advised, field-of-interest, designated, unrestricted and endowment funds at OCCF are flexible and effective charitable recipients of both lifetime and estate gifts. For some clients, you may wish to begin exploring a comprehensive, multi-generational wealth transfer plan, potentially using key tax-planning vehicles:

How OCCF Can Help

Donor-advised, field-of-interest, designated, unrestricted and endowment funds at OCCF are flexible and effective charitable recipients of both lifetime and estate gifts.

  • Charitable Lead Trust (CLTs) may be particularly effective in the current environment. These trusts can provide income to your client’s fund at OCCF for a set period, with the remaining assets passing to family members. Right now, the higher exemption allows for potentially significant initial funding of such trusts because the value of the remainder interest counts toward the client’s estate and gift tax exemption.
  • A Generation-Skipping Trust is an irrevocable trust that can benefit a client’s grandchildren and later generations. This trust utilizes a client’s Generation-Skipping Transfer (GST) tax exemption, which parallels the estate and gift tax exemption. This type of trust could allow a client to take advantage of the higher exemption before it potentially decreases in 2026. In some states, it is possible for these trusts to go on for many generations in a “dynasty” format, such that each generation benefits from the trust’s income (and potentially principal for health and education) without the trust’s assets being included in the beneficiaries’ estates for estate tax purposes.
  • Multi-Generational Funds at OCCF In addition to charitable lead trusts or generation-skipping trusts, your clients can establish Donor-Advised Funds (DAFs) at the Community Foundation that can function much like a family foundation. With a DAF, successive generations can serve as advisors or the Community Foundation can step in after the first or second generation to recommend grants from the fund to carry on a tradition of supporting the causes most important to your clients.

The team at the Community Foundation looks forward to working with you to achieve your clients’ long-term charitable goals.

The team at the Community Foundation is a resource and sounding board as you serve your philanthropic clients. We understand the charitable side of the equation and are happy to serve as a secondary source as you manage the primary relationship with your clients. This newsletter is provided for informational purposes only. It is not intended as legal, accounting or financial planning advice.

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Honoring & Remembering Louisa McCune https://occf.org/in-remembrance-of-louisa-mccune/ Mon, 12 Aug 2024 19:14:40 +0000 https://occf.org/staging/?p=243625

Louisa McCune dedicated her life to making the world a better place for both animals and people.  

Louisa McCune

Louisa McCune

With heavy hearts, we are sad to share that Louisa McCune, the executive director of the Kirkpatrick Foundation, passed away last weekend after a hard-fought battle with cancer. 

Louisa and the staff at the Kirkpatrick Foundation worked closely with the Oklahoma City Community Foundation to develop and award strategic and impactful grants to programs supporting arts & culture, animal welfare, education, historic preservation and environmental conservation.  

Kind, elegant, witty, intelligent, fierce, and compassionate were words her friends and allies used frequently to describe Louisa McCune. She was a force. Louisa has been a steadfast advocate for the arts and animal welfare in Oklahoma, leading the Kirkpatrick Foundation since 2011. Most recently, Louisa and the staff at the Kirkpatrick Foundation and Kirkpatrick Family Fund achieved one of their greatest accomplishments – creating Kirkpatrick Philanthropies to purchase and transform 133 acres in Oklahoma City into Red Ridge Study Center and Nature Preserve.  

Her tireless efforts for humane living conditions for animals in Oklahoma and around the world left a lasting impact. She ensured that organizations like the Oklahoma Alliance for Animals (OAA) had the necessary funding to assist chained dogs and abandoned animals. Louisa dedicated her life to making the world a better place for both animals and people.  

Our thoughts are with Louisa’s family, friends and everyone at the Kirkpatrick Foundation during this time. 

Our History Together: The Kirkpatrick Foundation and the Oklahoma City Community Foundation are closely linked. John and Eleanor Kirkpatrick, prominent citizens of Oklahoma City, saw a need and felt compelled to help develop the cultural and civic structures of their hometown. On May 17, 1955, Kirkpatrick Foundation was officially established with an initial contribution of $10,000 to serve as a vehicle for personal philanthropic endeavors. When private foundation laws changed in 1969, and the Kirkpatrick’s saw an opportunity to continue their charitable efforts and help individuals, families, companies and organizations invest in Oklahoma City, they helped create the Oklahoma City Community Foundation.

You may find Louisa’s obituary and information on the Aug. 17 services, here.

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In Remembrance of Paul B. Odom, Jr. https://occf.org/in-remembrance-of-paul-b-odom-jr/ Sat, 10 Aug 2024 23:41:20 +0000 https://occf.org/staging/?p=243585

Paul B. Odom, Jr.

Left to Right: Beth Odom, Paul B. Odom III, Paul B. Odom Jr, Bob Anthony

Paul B. Odom, Jr.

The Oklahoma City Community Foundation trustees and staff offer our sincere condolences to the family of Mr. Paul B. Odom, Jr.

Paul lived in the Oklahoma City area all of his life. Raised in south Oklahoma City, he attended Moore schools and graduated from Capitol Hill High School, and later from Oklahoma State University. After serving in the U.S. Army during the Korean War, he returned to Oklahoma City and, with the help and guidance of his father, began a life-long career in the construction business. He was head of the P.B. Odom Construction Company, a firm that develops land for residential, retail and commercial use. The company also develops and builds apartment complexes and retail shopping centers and manages them.

Mr. Odom served on the Oklahoma Aeronautics Commission for 18 years, as well as the board of directors for Moore Public School, INTEGRIS Baptist Foundation and the INTEGRIS Baptist Medical Center. He also assisted on the boards of Stockyards Bank, Central National Bank, Friendly National Bank and Bank One. He served on the board of directors for BancFirst, and was also a trustee for Mount St. Mary’s.

To illustrate appreciation for his service to the Oklahoma City Community Foundation, the Paul B. Odom Jr. Community Foundation Scholar Award was established to honor his years of service as a Trustee.

You may find Paul’s obituary and information on the Aug. 12 services, here.

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OCCF Awards More than $4.1 Million in Grants to Support Youth, Juvenile Justice and Criminal Justice Reform Programs through the Arnall Community Funds https://occf.org/occf-awards-4-million-through-arnall/ Tue, 23 Jul 2024 20:48:06 +0000 https://occf.org/staging/?p=243394

The Arnall Community Funds, part of the Oklahoma City Community Foundation (OCCF), recently awarded $4,154,095 in grants to local nonprofits providing services to people in the justice and foster care systems, and those experiencing homelessness.

“These innovative programs lift up teens and adults during critical transitional periods, so they have a better chance to thrive in our community,” said Trisha Finnegan, President and CEO at OCCF. “By partnering with these first-in-class nonprofit organizations, these grants help provide the pathway needed for success.”

The Arnall Community Funds are one example of how partnership significantly expands the resources available to meet pressing needs across our community. The Funds were a bold investment of the Arnall Family Foundation to further its mission to empower community partners to create lasting, transformative change through strategic investments and innovative partnerships.

People should not be defined by their circumstances and that is especially true for children in our community. These grants strengthen support systems and help our partner organizations to meet individual needs, so the resources and opportunities are available to those who need it when they need it.

Sue Ann Arnall

President, Arnall Family Foundation

We are proud to award grants to the following organizations:

City Rescue Mission – Hope Lives Here, a rapid rehousing & eviction prevention service. – $1,034,903 (over 2 years)

Oklahomans for Criminal Justice Reform – to support outreach and engagement programs. – $100,000

OKC Metro Alliance – Men’s Firstep Learning Kitchen Dining Facility. – $1,000,000

Oklahoma Mobility Institute (OMI) – Climb Ride Program expansion by embedding a mobility program coordinator to assist PIVOT clients. – $1,419,192 (over 3 years)

STAAR Resources Agency – Pathway to Excellence Pilot Program to provide job readiness and industry mentoring programs for justice-involved youth. – $600,000 (over 3 years)

About the Oklahoma City Community Foundation 

Founded in 1969, the Oklahoma City Community Foundation is a 501(c)(3) public charity that works with donors to create charitable funds that will benefit our community both now and in the future. To learn more about the Oklahoma City Community Foundation, visit www.occf.org. 

The Arnall Community Funds, created by the Arnall Family Foundation at the Oklahoma City Community Foundation, support organizations creating lasting change for our community by reducing homelessness and reforming the criminal justice, foster care and juvenile justice systems.

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Mixing Business with Charity: Due Diligence https://occf.org/mixing-business-with-charity-due-diligence/ Mon, 22 Jul 2024 13:59:19 +0000 https://occf.org/staging/?p=243317

Mixing Business with Charity: Due Dilligence

In general, a community engagement strategy can be good for business, if well-executed. For example, almost half of consumers view a brand favorably when they support a charitable cause. Community engagement programs can help with employee retention, too.

But what are the risks involved in mixing business with charity?

In the spirit of aligning doing good with doing well, some companies would love to set up their own nonprofit organizations as “charitable arms” of their enterprises. Corporate leadership may like the idea of efficiency, control, and tight alignment between the company’s offerings and the charity’s mission.

Image of the exterior of local coffee shop Not Your Average Joe.

Outdoors at local coffee shop Not Your Average Joe.

Mixing Business & Charity

Overview

A pool company owner wants to establish a charity building pools at community centers.

Mixing Business & Charity

The Facts

The charity will be supported by the company, suppliers and customers.

The company’s executives will serve on the board.

The charity will purchase pools from the company.

Mixing Business & Charity

Is This A Good Idea?

No! This strategy plays fast and loose with the rules and would put the company in a situation where they use chairtable funds to benefit itself.

Mixing Business & Charity

What To Do Instead

Establish a corportate fund at OCCF to support independent charities as a more transparent and ethical strategy.

Example:  A swimming pool company owner thinks it is a great idea to set up a charity to build swimming pools at community centers to give more kids access to water sports. The company could donate tax-deductible dollars to the charity, asking its suppliers and customers to do the same. The company’s executives would serve on the board of the charity, and the charity would purchase swimming pools from the company to carry out its mission.

Is this a good idea?

No. This strategy plays fast and loose with the rules. Beyond setting up an obvious conflict of interest, this practice would mean that a company effectively would be using charitable funds to benefit itself. This is not a “charitable purpose” in the eyes of the IRS and could result in the loss of the charity’s tax exemption. Plus, if the news got out about this structure, the company could suffer reputation damage.

The company, its executives and the community are all better off if the company pursues more transparent and ethical charitable strategies such as establishing a corporate fund at OCCF, setting up a volunteer program for employees, establishing a matching gifts program or aligning with wholly-independent charities on cause-related marketing partnerships.

Reach out to OCCF to learn more about effective corporate philanthropy strategies. We are here to help as you work with your clients to achieve their charitable goals both at home and in the workplace.

The team at OCCF is a resource and sounding board as you serve your philanthropic clients. We understand the charitable side of the equation and are happy to serve as a secondary source as you manage the primary relationship with your clients. This newsletter is provided for informational purposes only. It is not intended as legal, accounting or financial planning advice.

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Gifts of Appreciated Stock: Picking Favorites https://occf.org/gifts-of-appreciated-stock-picking-favorites/ Mon, 22 Jul 2024 13:58:05 +0000 https://occf.org/staging/?p=243311

Gifts of Appreciated Stock: Picking Favorites

You’re aware that donating highly appreciated stock to a fund at the Community Foundation offers significant advantages for your clients over making cash gifts. Communicating this benefit, however, can be challenging when clients have emotional attachments to their shares. How do you start the conversation?

Understanding the reasons a client might be reluctant to part with certain stocks in the first place is crucial. A sense of legacy given that the stock has ‘been in the family for years,’ a sense of company loyalty to where the client worked for decades or just simple preference are all reasons that can create barriers to effective charitable tax planning.

Castle Point Wealth Company's Kendall King writing on whiteboard.

Castle Point Wealth Advisor’s Kendall King talks tax-wise giving.

There is, however, a potential solution that can satisfy both your clients’ emotional needs and their philanthropic goals: They can donate shares of the highly-appreciated, emotionally significant stock to their fund at the Community Foundation. Then, they can purchase shares of the same stock in their personal investment portfolio.

Why is This an Effective Strategy?

  • Maximize tax deductions: Publicly-traded securities are typically deductible at fair market value, and the tax savings could potentially help fund the repurchase.
  • Reset cost basis: This transaction effectively resets the cost basis of the stock in the client’s personal portfolio to its current market price, potentially reducing future capital gains taxes.
  • Emotional satisfaction: Clients can support charities while maintaining their shareholder status in the company they like.
  • Community impact: The Community Foundation can sell the donated shares tax-free, thereby maximizing the proceeds flowing into your client’s fund. The fund, in turn, can be used to support your client’s favorite causes.

As you share this strategy with a client, be sure to acknowledge the emotional value of the stock and emphasize the client’s opportunity to maintain ownership in the company. Building on this, you can show your client how the tax benefits of giving stock allow them to make an even bigger difference than if they’d given cash instead.   As always, the Community Foundation can help you assist your clients with selecting the best assets to give to charity, evaluate tax implications of various giving strategies and structure gifts to achieve strong community benefit.

The team at the Community Foundation is a resource and sounding board as you serve your philanthropic clients. We understand the charitable side of the equation and are happy to serve as a secondary source as you manage the primary relationship with your clients. This newsletter is provided for informational purposes only. It is not intended as legal, accounting or financial planning advice.

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