Where most people get into trouble with non-profits is when they break it up. You can't just take the assets of the non-profit and make them yours. You HAVE to give them to another non-profit.
Don't forget to drop a coke bottle out of the airplane once in a while.I was thinking about starting a non profit flight school in remote regions of South America and bring aviation to its indigenous tribes.
That was Africa, duh!Don't forget to drop a coke bottle out of the airplane once in a while.
That was Africa, duh!
The slippery slope has been approached and I fear we have already started the downward motion.
Dude. We greased the slope with CamGuard. It's like instant acceleration once you step on the edge. LOL!
Where most people get into trouble with non-profits is when they break it up. You can't just take the assets of the non-profit and make them yours. You HAVE to give them to another non-profit.
They might if the 5013c owns an airplane.
They might if the 5013c owns an airplane.
That would typically happen if someone donated the plane to a charitable club and took the FMV as a tax deduction.
I think one of the biggest misconceptions I hear about non-profits is that people assume I own Cloud Nine (the other is misconception is that non-profits have unlimited funds). Non-profits are not owned, they have a board of directors (in my case I am President of Cloud Nine). They can have paid staff (we don't), but there is no individual or group of individuals that own a non-profit, just individuals who have control over it. Because of this, when a non-profit gets dissolved, there is no individual that has the rights to the proceeds.
Anyway, Ted caught on to what I was saying about assets. An airplane. It's worth thinking about how such an organization would deal with that, up front, since there's a bunch of ways to do it.
I was thinking about starting a non profit flight school in remote regions of South America and bring aviation to its indigenous tribes.
To be honest, owning an airplane was not part of the original plan with Cloud Nine. I owned the Aztec outright as my plane, and Cloud Nine rented the Aztec. I tend to think that's a better way for most small non-profits to operate. When the 310 got donated, obviously the previous owner wanted the tax write-off, so it went straight to Cloud Nine. There are advantages and disadvantages to both setups.
LOL how'd that work out? Actually I recall a thread on the old POA about that TV show last year or before where there was a guy doing that somewhere over there. It was quite comical the guy he was training to be a bush pilot.
You are the only person that feels that way.Oh, my bad, sorry. I thought you were joking on PP. It's definitely untapped but a lot a terrorist activity there. Big Special Ops base in Djibouti.
LOL how'd that work out? Actually I recall a thread on the old POA about that TV show last year or before where there was a guy doing that somewhere over there. It was quite comical the guy he was training to be a bush pilot.
You are the only person that feels that way.
Right.
That's like going to Detroit and offering a class on balancing your investment portfolio lol
I think it's admirable that she doesn't let a disagreement get in the way of giving credit where credit is due.??? She goes off the deep end on you, starts deleting her profile then comes back, tells people not to worry about what she's doing but yet is always posting for attention. Yeah...makes complete sense.