What is Fiscal Sponsorship?
In the simplest terms, "Fiscal Sponsorship" is one entity accepting and managing funds for another.
At Film Arts Foundation, Fiscal Sponsorship is used primarily when a non-profit film/video project or event wants to secure funding from foundation, government or corporate sources that give only to nonprofit organizations with IRS tax-exempt status. To be considered exempt, an organization must hold a current 501(c)(3) certificate from the IRS.
Rather than attempt to secure tax-exempt status for a film/video project or production company (a lengthy, involved and costly process), individual filmmakers may contract with a fiscal sponsor to extend tax-exempt status to that specific project.
As a fiscal sponsor, Film Arts collects all funds for a project, redistributes the funds as necessary, keeps a separate ledger for all funds accepted for the individual's project, and makes records of such transactions available to those who might require it. Film Arts maintains these records in the form of account status reports and other disclosures required by grant guidelines and/or federal law.
Like most fiscal sponsors, Film Arts charges an administrative fee for any monies granted through our Fiscal Sponsorship program. This 7% fee covers the cost of our management of donations to your project (including costs associated with bookkeeping, check distribution, fiscal reporting to funders, inclusion on our web site, donations accepted through our web site, and on-going technical assistance).
The primary advantage to working with a fiscal sponsor is that it allows an individual to solicit funds from government, foundation, individual and other philanthropic sources. Furthermore, these donations are then tax-deductable to the fullest extent allowed by law.
Film Arts Foundation has a lengthy history and reputation as a fiscal sponsor and many foundation and government entities are familiar with our program.
According to standard principals and law, projects contracted with a fiscal sponsor must be consistent with the fiscal sponsor's charitable purposes. In terms of Film Arts, this means that any project you are proposing must be noncommercial and represent an imaginative contribution to the film or video art form.
Having a nonprofit fiscal sponsor does not make an individual "nonprofit" or "tax-exempt"? only the IRS can make a tax-exempt ruling.
|
|
|