
http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2009 ... ne-church/






We can make that deal, are you willing to keep it balanced? Strip the charities too. If there are some churches that engage in politics, I agree with TTBF. The same with charities. However, if you're going to apply one standard, do it for all "non-profits." Are you willing to go that far?dbackjon wrote:One of the third rail of politics.
But, churches should not be tax-exempt.

Bingo!ASUMountaineer wrote:We can make that deal, are you willing to keep it balanced? Strip the charities too. If there are some churches that engage in politics, I agree with TTBF. The same with charities. However, if you're going to apply one standard, do it for all "non-profits." Are you willing to go that far?dbackjon wrote:One of the third rail of politics.
But, churches should not be tax-exempt.

I disagree about the nonprofit thing.ASUMountaineer wrote:We can make that deal, are you willing to keep it balanced? Strip the charities too. If there are some churches that engage in politics, I agree with TTBF. The same with charities. However, if you're going to apply one standard, do it for all "non-profits." Are you willing to go that far?dbackjon wrote:One of the third rail of politics.
But, churches should not be tax-exempt.


According to the IRS they're the same, they both can get 501(c)3 status. They both are nonprofits.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:I disagree about the nonprofit thing.ASUMountaineer wrote:
We can make that deal, are you willing to keep it balanced? Strip the charities too. If there are some churches that engage in politics, I agree with TTBF. The same with charities. However, if you're going to apply one standard, do it for all "non-profits." Are you willing to go that far?
The rationale behind the exemption for churches and nonprofits is totally different. Churches are exempt because of the first amendment... separation of church and state. However, it's a two way street, and churches need to stay out of politics.
Nonprofits are exempt as a way of encouraging the work they do. Many nonprofits advocate as a voice for those who are otherwise without one.

It is a liberal church... it explains that it is in the article.Gil Dobie wrote:By the looks of the sign, it looks like a fairly liberal church.

Yes indeed.ASUMountaineer wrote:We can make that deal, are you willing to keep it balanced? Strip the charities too. If there are some churches that engage in politics, I agree with TTBF. The same with charities. However, if you're going to apply one standard, do it for all "non-profits." Are you willing to go that far?dbackjon wrote:One of the third rail of politics.
But, churches should not be tax-exempt.

There IS as separation... it's in the Constitution, and Supreme Court rulings have affirmed this. Churches, in our laws and our constitution are unique. Basically, the establishment clause is a two-way street. It says that the government stays out of the church, and the churches stay out of the government. that's why i advocate a strict adherence to their tax-exemptions.ASUMountaineer wrote:According to the IRS they're the same, they both can get 501(c)3 status. They both are nonprofits.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:
I disagree about the nonprofit thing.
The rationale behind the exemption for churches and nonprofits is totally different. Churches are exempt because of the first amendment... separation of church and state. However, it's a two way street, and churches need to stay out of politics.
Nonprofits are exempt as a way of encouraging the work they do. Many nonprofits advocate as a voice for those who are otherwise without one.
I'm not sure I follow your logic about why churches are exempt. First, there is no separation of church and state. Second, if there was SoCaS, why would that matter about them being taxed or not--how does taxing a church as a business violate the First Amendment (including taxing the income of reverands)?
I understand your point about charities, but they need to stay out of politics too, or pay up. Neither should be free to engage in politics while receiving tax exempt status.


We could argue this all day, the phrase "separation of church and state" is not in the Constitution. The Establishment Clause protects the citizens from a state run religion and from persecution for having a particular religion (or none at all).TwinTownBisonFan wrote:There IS as separation... it's in the Constitution, and Supreme Court rulings have affirmed this. Churches, in our laws and our constitution are unique. Basically, the establishment clause is a two-way street. It says that the government stays out of the church, and the churches stay out of the government. that's why i advocate a strict adherence to their tax-exemptions.ASUMountaineer wrote:
According to the IRS they're the same, they both can get 501(c)3 status. They both are nonprofits.
I'm not sure I follow your logic about why churches are exempt. First, there is no separation of church and state. Second, if there was SoCaS, why would that matter about them being taxed or not--how does taxing a church as a business violate the First Amendment (including taxing the income of reverands)?
I understand your point about charities, but they need to stay out of politics too, or pay up. Neither should be free to engage in politics while receiving tax exempt status.
Nonprofits are another matter entirely. so often, their work crosses over in to policy... sort of the nature of the beast. they stay away from ELECTORAL politics like the plague. Some don't... but most of them are 501(c)4... not 3. It's a major difference.


Benne wrote:Which end of the spectrum does peace/anti-war fall on?

Then you would have few private universities. REmember private universities don't pay taxes (neither do public ones) but they typically get zero or very little public money to run the university so it is probably a wash.dbackjon wrote:Yes indeed.ASUMountaineer wrote:
We can make that deal, are you willing to keep it balanced? Strip the charities too. If there are some churches that engage in politics, I agree with TTBF. The same with charities. However, if you're going to apply one standard, do it for all "non-profits." Are you willing to go that far?
Including Private Universities. Time the level the field and revitalize our cities.
the take away the TES of educational institutions too. They have a right to free expression.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:I disagree Jon - but I also think their exemption should be revoked for engaging politics... and right now we really don't do that enough.


OL FU wrote:Then you would have few private universities. REmember private universities don't pay taxes (neither do public ones) but they typically get zero or very little public money to run the university so it is probably a wash.dbackjon wrote:
Yes indeed.
Including Private Universities. Time the level the field and revitalize our cities.
Some of it depends on the situation the Universities are in.dgreco wrote:the take away the TES of educational institutions too. They have a right to free expression.TwinTownBisonFan wrote:I disagree Jon - but I also think their exemption should be revoked for engaging politics... and right now we really don't do that enough.
I worked for the Pawtucket Foundation assessing the effect NPO's had on a city and if their exempt status benefited or hurt the city of Pawtucket; they gave so many more benefits (whether they are schools, hospitals, charities, historic buildings, social program offices, etc..) it would be a shame to take away that exemption.
It is obviously case by case, but what we saw was that unless the real estate was prime land which would allow for a high tax on the property because of size etc... it had very little effect on the whole. All the employees will/do spend money in select city, people that work for these NPO's live in the city or a near by city making up for the lost tax on the NPO's etc.. We did not go as deep as a professional firm did but we did a 5 year look through 990's and a few other things and were pretty confident in our findings.dbackjon wrote:OL FU wrote:
Then you would have few private universities. REmember private universities don't pay taxes (neither do public ones) but they typically get zero or very little public money to run the university so it is probably a wash.Some of it depends on the situation the Universities are in.dgreco wrote:
the take away the TES of educational institutions too. They have a right to free expression.
I worked for the Pawtucket Foundation assessing the effect NPO's had on a city and if their exempt status benefited or hurt the city of Pawtucket; they gave so many more benefits (whether they are schools, hospitals, charities, historic buildings, social program offices, etc..) it would be a shame to take away that exemption.
Philadelphia has been hit hard by this - non-profits (especiallay Universities) eat up a lot of the land in Philly, which shrunk the tax base to the point were the city had to raise taxes on residents to keep up with services, which caused citizens to flee, etc.


dgreco wrote:It is obviously case by case, but what we saw was that unless the real estate was prime land which would allow for a high tax on the property because of size etc... it had very little effect on the whole. All the employees will/do spend money in select city, people that work for these NPO's live in the city or a near by city making up for the lost tax on the NPO's etc.. We did not go as deep as a professional firm did but we did a 5 year look through 990's and a few other things and were pretty confident in our findings.dbackjon wrote:
Part of Phillies issue was that the city itself is pretty small, surrounded by lots of suburbs, where most of the university employees live.
Some of it depends on the situation the Universities are in.
Philadelphia has been hit hard by this - non-profits (especiallay Universities) eat up a lot of the land in Philly, which shrunk the tax base to the point were the city had to raise taxes on residents to keep up with services, which caused citizens to flee, etc.
?dbackjon wrote:dgreco wrote:
It is obviously case by case, but what we saw was that unless the real estate was prime land which would allow for a high tax on the property because of size etc... it had very little effect on the whole. All the employees will/do spend money in select city, people that work for these NPO's live in the city or a near by city making up for the lost tax on the NPO's etc.. We did not go as deep as a professional firm did but we did a 5 year look through 990's and a few other things and were pretty confident in our findings.


I think there were other problems with Philly than private institutions.dbackjon wrote:OL FU wrote:
Then you would have few private universities. REmember private universities don't pay taxes (neither do public ones) but they typically get zero or very little public money to run the university so it is probably a wash.Some of it depends on the situation the Universities are in.dgreco wrote:
the take away the TES of educational institutions too. They have a right to free expression.
I worked for the Pawtucket Foundation assessing the effect NPO's had on a city and if their exempt status benefited or hurt the city of Pawtucket; they gave so many more benefits (whether they are schools, hospitals, charities, historic buildings, social program offices, etc..) it would be a shame to take away that exemption.
Philadelphia has been hit hard by this - non-profits (especiallay Universities) eat up a lot of the land in Philly, which shrunk the tax base to the point were the city had to raise taxes on residents to keep up with services, which caused citizens to flee, etc.