On Wed, Jul 18, 2018 at 03:58:15PM -0400, Rich Freeman wrote: > On Wed, Jul 18, 2018 at 3:34 PM Roy Bamford <neddyseagoon@gentoo.org> wrote: > > > > Spinning up a new NFP and directing future donations there seems > > OK. Moving the residue of assetts there after the tax liability is > > known is OK too. Thats the formal winding up > > ++ > > Really, though, I don't see the reason to even move at that point. I > could see moving to an umbrella. I could see not moving at all. I > don't see the point in spinning up one non-profit and shutting down > the current one. That is, unless the new state gives us some legal > advantage, or if it gives us a better chance of getting 501c3 status. > If we aren't getting either benefit then we're just doing a lot of > paperwork. If this is just about bylaws/articles/etc, then we can > change those without moving. > Look at it as "freezing" in a point in time. We would stop contributions to the old NM foundation in favor of not being taxed on contributions to the new. We will self-declare (the first year) for the new Foundation and during that time file the appropriate paperwork with the IRS. That is the immediate benefit. As I have stated, the other pieces (by-laws, etc) are just by-products of making the move. It is nothing we couldn't do now. > > > > As long as the trustees can continue to reject incomplete applications > > for funding, even from the council, there is no problem. > > > > I think that any legal entity is going to have to do reasonable care, > and the officers/directors of that entity are responsible to see that > it happens. That is, they need to verify that the expenditure is > legal and basically aligned with the goals of the org. Any umbrella > org is going to be the same. > > I do think it is important to define expectations around these reviews > depending on the model we choose. Is the Foundation/umbrella/etc just > checking to see if the request meets the minimum legal standards? Or > are they also doing a more strategic evaluation? That is, are they > asking "can we legally spend $5k on hardware signing devices?" Or are > they asking "will spending $5k on hardware signing devices be a better > use of money than saving that $5k so that we can later spend it on > newspaper ads for Gentoo?" The former is probably what an umbrella > would do. The latter is more like what the Foundation technically > does today, though we have so few requests for funding and the > requests tend to be small enough that they don't tend to turn them > down for that sort of reason. What governance body do we want making > the decisions around prioritization? > The umbrella would advise whether things are legal or not, but I would offer that it is common sense as to what is legal and is not legal. Sure, we could find some border line examples and corner cases, but let's not. I am saddened by how few funding requests we do have. I would also want to advertise, educate, and ask that members request more funding for projects etc. I would also like to explore a scenario like GSoC, but from the Gentoo Foundation. This would need a separate thread and is not an immediate concern. > I'm not really taking a side as far as this argument goes. I'm just > pointing out that this is the sort of thing that we'd benefit from > clearing up, so that we don't have two bodies disagreeing on > priorities. When it comes to legal requirements I suspect there will > be fewer disputes, and in any case I don't think the > officers/directors can legally divorce themselves of their duties > here. > > -- > Rich > I hope it has not been perceived as anyone divorcing themselves of their duties. -- Cheers, Aaron