Insights
Thought Leadership
October 24, 2012
Day Pitney Nonprofit News - Fall/Winter 2012
When Can Employees Provide Unpaid Volunteer Services?
By Daniel L. Schwartz and Jaclyn K. Leung
All employers, including nonprofit organizations, need to know when their employees can and cannot provide unpaid volunteer services to the organization. If an employer mistakenly accepts or receives "volunteer" services under the wrong circumstances, it could risk liability for a variety of claims arising under wage, tax, unemployment compensation and workers' compensation laws.
Under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), individuals who provide services without any expectation of compensation are "volunteers." In enforcing the FLSA, the United States Department of Labor (DOL) considers several factors to determine whether an individual is an employee or a volunteer. Such factors include but are not limited to whether (1) the designation of "volunteer" status is done unilaterally by the employer to avoid minimum wage or overtime requirements; (2) the volunteer time is for a civic, charitable or humanitarian purpose without any promise, expectation or receipt of compensation by the employee; and (3) the act of volunteering is truly voluntary, without any direct or implied coercion from the employer.
The DOL has provided some guidance as to when an employee of a nonprofit organization may volunteer at the same organization where he or she is employed. Specifically, the DOL has taken the position that employees may not volunteer to provide services for the nonprofit organization that are "the same as, similar, or related to" their regular job duties. As a general example, a school custodian may not volunteer to empty the trash cans after a basketball game, but he or she may volunteer to coach the team. The DOL also has stated nonprofit organizations cannot request or direct employees to perform volunteer work during the employee's normal working hours, even if the requested volunteer duties are not the same as or similar to the employee's regular job duties.
In addition, nonprofit organizations must exercise caution with respect to the type of perks or rewards given to volunteers for their services. While volunteers may be provided with nominal and occasional perks and rewards for their services (such as snacks or certificates), actual payments in the form of stipends and/or products of meaningful monetary value may be interpreted by the DOL as compensation for services, which may cause a putative volunteer to be classified as an employee. Determining when an employee may provide volunteer services is a fact-specific inquiry, and if in doubt, employers should consult legal counsel.
Issuance of Form 8940-- Request for Miscellaneous Determination
By Jennifer M. Pagnillo
The IRS recently issued Form 8940, Request for Miscellaneous Determination, in response to the concern expressed by practitioners that there was no published or uniform way in which a tax-exempt organization could make certain requests of the IRS or take various actions.
Now, tax-exempt organizations have a mechanism to obtain advance IRS approval of particular activities, request determinations (other than the organization's initial determination of tax-exempt status) and request exemption from the Form 990 annual filing requirements. Out of the nine uses for Form 8940, six relate specifically to private foundations. Accordingly, this form will be of particular interest to private foundation managers as well as to public charities that experience difficulty in meeting the public support test.
Form 8940 may specifically be used for the advance approval of:
- Private foundation "set-asides" (to treat funds set aside for a specific project as a qualifying distribution in the year of the set-aside rather than in the year the funds are actually paid)
- Private foundation voter registration activities
- Private foundation scholarship procedures
- The determination that a potential contribution from a particular donor constitutes an "unusual grant" (and thus is excluded from certain public support calculations)
- Offer letters that provide for severance payments
- Employment agreements
- Severance agreements
- Severance plans
- Certain bonus plans
- Change in control agreements
- The organization was not required to file annual information returns (such as Form 990 or Form 990-EZ) for taxable years beginning before 2007.
- The organization was eligible to file a Form 990N e-Postcard in each of its taxable years beginning in 2007, 2008 and 2009. This typically applies to organizations with gross receipts normally not more than $25,000 in each year but excludes private foundations and most supporting organizations.
- On or before December 31, the organization submits to the IRS a completed application for reinstatement. Applications are made using Form 1023 (for 501(c)(3) organizations) or Form 1024 (for most other organizations seeking exemption under 501(a)).
- The Highlands planning area, provided the land is (i) not located in State Planning Areas 4B or 5; (ii) not a critical environmental site; and (iii) not located in a town that has adopted a Highlands master plan element, Highlands land use ordinance or an environmental resource inventory as of May 1.
- Villages and towns designated in the Pinelands Commission's comprehensive management plan, provided the land is (i) not located in State Planning Areas 4B or 5 and (ii) not a critical environmental site.