Archive for November, 2009

25
Nov

Automobile Donation – The Ultimate Tax Shelter?

Automobile donation – the practice of giving away unwanted automobiles to registered charities for a tax exemption – has become tremendously popular over the last decade. Despite recent regulatory changes by the IRS, car donation remains a worthy tax shelter that provides a hassle-free alternative to reselling or trading in unwanted vehicles. Despite the many benefits of charity car donation, potential donors should be aware of the regulatory requirements for claiming a car donation tax deduction and also the limitations for how much of their donations are likely to be used directly on the needy.

Why Donate your Car?

There are several reasons why people choose to donate their cars. The first and most obvious reason is the joy of giving – car donation charities typically refurbish junk car donations and either give them away to needy people or sell them at a drastically reduced price. Some charities use the cars directly in their operation, while others simply resell the cars at market price and use the proceeds to help their target audience.

Secondly, charity car donation is typically the easiest way to get rid of an old vehicle. Alternatively, you could trade your car in on a new vehicle; however, you will likely get far below market value on your trade-in. A far more lucrative alternative could be to sell the car yourself, but the process can be time consuming and many people are simply not skilled salespeople.

Finally, Americans (and Canadians) donate their cars to receive the tax deductions, which function as a quick tax shelter for your clunker. Car donation tax deductions in America hit a peak of $2.4 billion in 2004 and still amount to hundred of millions in slower years.

Is Car Donation an Effective Tax Shelter?

Car donation provided an attractive tax haven up to 2005, when the IRS allowed donors to deduct the fair market value of the car from income taxes. Many sellers abused this generosity by claiming their car at the marked-up dealer resale price rather than fair market value, costing the government millions in tax revenue. Thus, in 2005, the IRS changed the rules for claiming car donations: claims for cars valued more than $500 are limited to the actual price that the car sold for in the charity auction. Donors must attach a statement of sale to tax deductions and are not entitled to know the deduction amount before donating their cars.

Despite the new restriction, it is still possible to deduct the full market value of a vehicle, provided the charity uses the car in its daily operations rather than selling it.

How to Donate a Car

You can claim a tax exemption by donating your car to any charity that has 501(c)(3) tax-exempt status with the IRS. Charities with this status are exempt from federal income tax and are eligible to receive state tax exemptions. Most importantly, such organizations are eligible to receive tax-deductible charitable contributions, attracting a large number of individual and corporate donors.

The target charity does not have to be car-oriented, though it makes more sense to donate to a charity with the facilities to handle incoming autos. Some charities contract the refurbishing and resale of autos to car dealers, paying a fee for service rendered.

Remember, you must obtain a statement of sale from the charity to file a tax claim!

Pitfalls of Car Donation

Donating your car to charity can have significant drawbacks when compared to other methods. Income-wise, you will generally get a lower payout on donating your auto than you would from selling the car independently or even trading it in on a newer purchase. Since charities by definition re-sell to the neediest members of society, they are not chasing premium prices.

Of course, you may not care about how much money you get and are far more interested in helping the less fortunate. However in that respect you may also not be getting much bang for your buck: much of the revenue earned by charities through car sales goes into the repair and transport of the old vehicles, which are sometimes in such bad shape that the parts from multiple cars need to be combined to create one salable vehicle. Other charities subcontract the actual movement and sale of vehicles to private dealerships for a fee, and depending on those fees there may be little left to donate.

For example, The Record (Hackensack, New Jersey) ran a story by Harvey Lipman detailing the plight of the American children’s society. This registered charity resells some of its cars to regular customers, using the proceeds to help the families of sick children. Other cars are resold to these families at a low price or simply given away. The Society operates out of a used car dealership and relies on satellite dealers for logistics. Barely 25% of the ACS’s $2.9 million operating budget actually went towards its target clients – the rest went to used car dealers for advertising ($1.5 million), insurance, government fees, towing, repairs and other expenses. In some cases, cars were resold to other used car dealers, who in turn sold those cars at highly marked up prices – a perfectly legal move but one which might not sit well with people who want to see their old cars put to charitable use.

More Information

For more information on the 501(c)(3) tax-exemption status, please visit the IRS website.

Popular Car Charities in the USA:

  • Car Angel“Car Angel originated in 2000 as the New Millennium Scholarship Fund. In 2001, when we started accepting vehicle donations to aid our cause, our name was simplified to Angel Ministries. Our cause now includes funding several of our own projects, including prison outreach/rehabilitation, children’s moral DVD outreach, worldwide leadership training, and child support for children in third world countries.”
  • Helping Hands of America“Helping Hands of America personnel have been in the carmobile business over 20 years and know how to get the most money for your donation. The more we sell your car for, the more the charity receives and the bigger your tax deduction from the donation of your car… Your donation is 100% tax deductible.”

Popular Car Charities in Canada:

  • Charitycar.ca“As a charitable contribution your vehicle can make a big difference in the life of someone less fortunate in your community. We take any used car, truck or van, provide free pick-up and let you choose which charity you would like to donate to: a school, church, shelter or non-profit organization and you will receive a tax donation.”
  • The Kidney Foundation of Canada“Kidney patients benefit from your generous donation. Close to 2 million Canadians have kidney disease or are at risk. Your car donation will help in the fight against kidney disease. Also, it is an easy, hassle free way of disposing your vehicle. We will take care of coordinating the pick of your vehicle and its disposal, whether it is recycled or auctioned.”
08
Nov

Top Ten of Top Tens: How the List Format has Conquered Journalism

With the financial woes of The Independent, News International’s bizarre plan to charge for their hitherto underwhelming websites and rumours flying that the Guardian Media Group is plotting to slam the doors on The Observer, it would appear that the corn-dappled log of broadsheet journalism is sliding ever faster down the cracked porcelain toilet of history, leaving just a hardened smear of unemployed op-ed hacks for future generations to furtively scrape at with a borrowed breadknife. I’m going to hold my hands up here: whilst I’m well aware that the Obs is the world’s oldest-surviving quality paper and love it like an ill-tempered grandfather, I haven’t gone as far as actually purchasing a copy in months. No, I’ve joined the legions of educated traitors who do most of their weekend reading either on websites or via the Saturday Guardian, and it’s not like I can even excuse myself by claiming to read the Review or News sections first. Instead, I pamper my reptilian Saturday brain by overbrewing a cup of sugary tea and reaching for either the Weekend or, more often, the Guide: a newspaper section that gradually reads more like an especially comprehensive blog than an actual newspaper.

Judging by an utterly unscientific straw-poll of friends and family, many people do the same. This probably bears at least some relation to a trend that shows the ongoing reduction in the average size of news items from across the media spectrum.

Neither of these men had a beard when they started reading

Neither of these men had a beard when they started reading

Editorials have diminished to mere 800 word pamphlets when compared to the Tolstoyan epics of the Victorian era; major news feature wordcounts loll flaccidly in the low thousands and only glorious throwbacks like the London Review Of Books seem content to regularly publish anything long enough to justify forking out for a decent sub-editor. On telly, even science documentaries are frequently guilty of cramming decades of theory into pre-packaged pub anecdotes, and may often shit the bed completely by employing a bad comedian or one of the presenters from Top Gear to fling spurious factoids at the audience like an angry zoo gorilla with a fistful of dried shit.

Die.

Die.

Some erudite and learned commentators might wag a finger at the Ritalinian attention spans of the Twitter generation, nod towards a woeful decline in adult literacy, or stare witheringly at the multi-channel offal spewed forth from the flatscreen idiot lantern that does most of the educating in modern Britain.

I, on the other hand, can’t be bothered with all that because I have an easier target: the lazy desire of the modern audience to consume everything in a bloody list-format.

Behold: A Brief History of the Top Ten

The stealthy domination of human culture by the list-format has been a slow and subtle process that has been with us ever since Moses thrilled the Semitic blogosphere with his stone-based rundown of guaranteed Jehovah-irritators. Its most current form has evolved through unit-shifting successes in serious music magazines like Q and Mojo (‘Top One Hundred Albums That You’ll Buy From This List And Never Play’), vapid gender-specific glossies (“Ninety Nine Ways To Make Him/Her Come Loud Enough To Wake The Neighbours”) and bafflingly daft supermarket lady tabloids (‘Seven Most Harrowing Soap Opera Rape Scenes!”). Outside print, there seemed to be a long period when no Saturday night was complete without a seven hour televisual marathon contractually obliged to feature dull northern mannequin Vernon Kaye reminiscing stupidly about a film/snack food/invasive surgical procedure, his cheery mug superimposed atop a low-budget graphical countdown and the type of overplayed clips that would go on to clog up Youtube like matted fur in a cat’s stomach.

Shamon.

Shamon.

Whilst each of these formats can still be relied on as a cheap failsafe to boost circulation/viewing figures to appease the advertisers, the concept of the list-format has exploded like a devastating informational daisy cutter over the woody landscape of online media, mowing down ancient groves of lengthier articles (themselves often artefacts of print media) in favour of the fast-growing verbal shrubbery that suits the habits of the average web grazer. The unfortunate truth for the lumbering sauropods of print media is that most people find it simpler and more pleasurable to consume information

Heee-heee

Heee-heee

in tiny bite-sized morsels. It’s just easier to skim a chain email touting ‘Fifteen Potential Sperm Donors For Dead MJ’ at work than it is to unfold Saturday’s paper and struggle through Germaine Greer’s mind-numbingly pretentious obit piece about the number-one-in-a-list-of-one awesome, chimp-owning kiddy fiddler. The list is short, sweet and handily signposts any boring bits that you might like to skip; it renders well in pretty much any browser and can be safely consumed in-between other tasks. It’s the Milky Way of media, and hopefully you don’t need four minutes of simian mugging from Justin Lee Collins to work out that I’m referring to a chocolate bar rather than an astral formation there.

Seven reasons why even writers prefer to make lists

The other catalyst for the ubiquity of this fizzing beaker of quasi-random fact elements is that lists aren’t just easier to read, they’re also staggeringly quick and simple for people to write. Like most creative procrastinators, I’ve been churning out lists ever since I could type, for the simple reason that they often constitute the bare bones of an idea that could later be refined, edited and structured into some kind of plausibly coherent argument.

"Yes. Tom Baker is indisputably the best Dr Who. I will email Pravda directly."

“Yes. Tom Baker is indisputably the best Dr Who. I will email Pravda directly.”

Pools of examples might be drawn, shuffled around and reformulated to buttress a logical flow of ideas, and may pupate from the caterpillar of idle speculation into the elegant butterfly of convincing argument. Back in the real world, I habitually squander hours doodling stupid lists of ideas that never get out of my notebook because I lack the organisation for the time-intensive editing phase that would create anything I’d consider submitting to a magazine, newspaper or academic journal. Moreso, I ditch most of them because it’s obvious that they won’t really progress beyond the intellectual equivalent of unanswered letters to my creative Santa. Until recently, I never dreamed there would be any reason to lavish much concentration on my abandoned draft of “Nine Least Convincing Kung Fu Beards” or ‘Twelve Closeted Villains of Eighties Kids Shows”, but now I’ve got even less free time and a blog to work on, I totally plan to milk my shallow attention span and piles of old notebooks for all they’re worth. Any editor who thinks their readers wants to know which ten murderous dictators wore the sharpest suits can shoot me an email; my rates are very reasonable.

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