The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) recently issued long awaited guidance on so-called “ancillary” joint ventures between tax exempt organizations and for-profits. An “ancillary” joint venture is a partnership between an exempt organization and a for-profit where the activity being conducted by the partnership is not a substantial part of the exempt organization’s total activities. The new guidance, Revenue Ruling 2004-51, clarifies that a 501(c)(3) organization can participate in an ancillary joint venture with a forprofit without jeopardizing its exempt status or triggering unrelated business income tax on its share of the income from the venture where participation furthers the organization’s tax-exempt purposes and where the organization shares governance and ownership of the venture on a 50-50 basis with its forprofit partner and retains control over those aspects of the venture that relate to its exempt purposes.
Employee Retention Credit: What Your CAA Needs to Know
The Employee Retention Credit (the “Credit”) was enacted on March 27, 2020, as part of the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act, the first major COVID-19 pandemic relief package. The purpose of the Credit was to help employers…