A warning to charitable donors and a case for tougher disclosure laws on nonprofits
RIIIING. IT'S the National Federation of the Blind of Oregon, calling
across that state. They want money "to help the blind of the area," according
to a fund-raising script from 2003.
"This year we are working to make more reading materials accessible to the
blind and to provide more help to blind seniors and blind children," says the
telemarketer. "We were hoping you could help us with a donation of, say, $25
or so?"
Helping blind children. What a great cause. You write the check. ("That
would be wonderful!" the telemarketer is supposed to say.) Too bad the script
left out several pertinent details, the main one being that most of your $25
would get nowhere near blind children or any other blind people in Oregon.
Beware, philanthropists. Despite progress in recent years, information on
where charity donations go is still obscure and often disturbing when it
emerges, even when the practices appear completely legal.
An examination of the Baltimore-based National Federation of the Blind and
its affiliates offers another case for better disclosure laws and, in their
absence, more openness by nonprofits.
Of a $25, phone-solicited gift to the National Federation of the Blind of
Oregon, $15 - 60 percent - would be taken off the top by a for-profit
fund-raising company called CMS Inc., according to a contract on file with
Oregon's Department of Justice, one of the few state regulators to police
nonprofits. The contract is dated 2002, but other documents furnished by the
regulator indicate that CMS continues to work for NFB Oregon.
The president of CMS for many years has been Ramona Walhof, a longtime
director of one nonprofit, American Action Fund for Blind Children and Adults,
which shares NFB's Baltimore headquarters and has NFB president Marc Maurer as
its top-paid employee, and another, the Jacobus tenBroek Memorial Fund, which
owns the NFB headquarters building.
Taking that $15 cut leaves $10. Half of that would be sent to NFB
headquarters in a big building in South Baltimore that NFB and affiliates
recently expanded at a cost of $19.5 million.
The other $5 would arrive at NFB Oregon, which provides scholarships for
blind students, lobbies on issues important to the blind and does other good
work. But $5 is only a fifth of the $25 donation.
In January, NFB Oregon agreed with the state Department of Justice to
correct alleged violations that included failure to tell donors that some
funds were sent to Baltimore and misrepresenting big fund-raising commissions
as "community outreach" expenses benefiting the blind. In correcting the
deficiencies, NFB Oregon denied "liability of any wrongful acts," according to
the settlement.
Back in Baltimore, legal records and NFB documents show, a house owned by
Mary Ellen Jernigan, NFB's executive director of operations and the widow of
late NFB President Kenneth Jernigan, was bought in 2003 for $490,000 by the
Action Fund. For 2005, the Maryland Department of Assessments and Taxation
assessed the house, in Baltimore's Irvington section, at $154,040.
Despite the fact that charity business with insiders often raises questions
about whether the nonprofit is getting the best deal with donor money, the
house's purchase was not disclosed in IRS filings by either the Action Fund or
NFB.
Nor was the fact that Walhof, a director of both the Action Fund and the
tenBroek Fund, has been doing big business as a fund-raiser with an NFB state
affiliate. NFB of Oregon paid $176,836 to CMS in 2002.
Still glad you wrote the check? NFB says you should be.
NFB of Oregon President Carla McQuillan did not return my phone call.
But in its battle with the Oregon Department of Justice, the nonprofit
contended that the phone solicitations were "community outreach" programs
worth the 60 percent commission because the script had the telemarketer say,
"Do you know anyone who is losing vision or blind and may need our help?" NFB
Oregon contended the calls helped it identify frequently isolated blind
people.
"There are many number of people going blind who simply don't know about
the National Federation of the Blind or the National Federation of the Blind
of Oregon," said Andrew Freeman, a Baltimore attorney who represented NFB
Oregon in its dealings with regulators. The calls did identify blind people,
he said, although he didn't know how many. "From our point of view it is
outreach, but it is also fund-raising."
Many calls, however, were directed to people who had a history of giving to
NFB Oregon, a 2004 letter from CMS to the nonprofit shows. And according to
the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants, fund-raiser
compensation hinging on percentages of contributions must be reported by
nonprofits as a fund-raising expense, no matter what other service the
fund-raiser may perform.
Of the 60 percent commissions, Freeman said that "my understanding is that
it's a market rate" and that because community outreach occurred CMS did more
than raise money. Regulators' criticism of NFB Oregon for not telling donors
that funds went to Baltimore was "nitpicking," he said, because NFB national
serves blind people across the country, including those of Oregon.
CMS head Walhof declined to comment. James Gashel, executive director for
strategic initiatives for the national NFB, says that he is unfamiliar with
the Oregon details but that as a blind person Walhof understands the needs of
NFB affiliates, "is doing a credible job" and "is not living a lavish
lifestyle."
Copyright © 2008, The Baltimore Sun
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