How Auto Donations Fund the National Children's
Cancer Society
Many charities, including the National Children's Cancer
Society, use third-party agents who assist them in procuring
and processing cars, trucks, RVs, motorcycles and trailers for
donation. Though this actually accounts for a very small part
of their over $80 million (as of 2006) budget of the National
Children's Cancer Society and its subsidiary programs, car
donation is perhaps one of the most prominent types of
advertising for donations that most people see.
Of course, if your child or a child you know has cancer, there
is plenty that the National Children's Cancer Society does that
you can take advantage of. It is their mission to take care of
children with cancer and their families. It is estimated that
over 12,000 children in the United States are diagnosed with
cancer of some type each year.
The National Children's Cancer Society assists people with
financial aid and prescription medication aid. In addition to
families that began treating their child's cancer with adequate
finances, the National Children's Cancer Society also seeks out
families who've lost their financial security as a result of a
medical bills.
The National Children's Cancer Society, like many other
charities with a large donation base, does not accept vehicle
donations directly. Though it does accept donations of cash,
IRA funds, membership and planned donations. However, non-cash
items such as furniture or vehicles are donated through
third-party agents.
These agents are typically for-profit companies that specialize
in towing and delivery of many different types of vehicles. It
is also true that when such companies handle a vehicle for a
legitimate charity (such as the National Children's Cancer
Society), there are now limits on how much they can charge for
overhead costs without having to file more complicated
bookkeeping than is usually profitable.
It is also true that such companies often opt for selling your
vehicle at a wholesale auto auction. In fact, in the end, less
than $30 of a car you could have sold yourself for $1,000 may
be received by a charity such as National Children's Cancer
Society. Moreover, when you donate the vehicle to a charity
that doesn't use the vehicle directly, you won't be able to
claim nearly as much of a tax deduction.
Of course, you can always sell your car on the open market
yourself and then give the proceeds to the charity as a cash
donation. The National Children's Cancer Society is set up to
handle cash donations on the phone, by mail or online.
Donations of more complicated monies such as stocks or
endowment funds will probably have to wait 'til business hours,
but they make donation of money and money-like objects
easy.
Handling cars is an expensive proposition. Charities that
handle vehicles that no longer run, such as the National
Children's Cancer Society, either have to hire out to a
handling service or employ a garage and skilled mechanics.
On the other hand, charities that give cars directly and give
them to needy folks to drive, usually only take running cars
that the owners can deliver themselves. Of course, this
excludes a section of the donating population that the National
Children's Cancer Society makes good use of. Direct-use
charities require the donation of a car that's in better
running condition than the majority of cars accepted by
charities such as the National Children's Cancer Society.
Of course, direct donations are also as much as 10 times more
valuable in terms of a tax deduction. Regardless of what a
third-party agent might say about car donation deduction rates,
the National Children's Cancer Society and other non-profit
organizations (NPOs) must be very careful about leading
consumers to think that their junker car towed out of the front
lawn is going to take thousands off their tax bill.
Regardless of the end use, all sorts of charities can use
running vehicles, weather they give them away for use or sell
them to the highest bidder. The National Children's Cancer
Society is one of many that accepts any type of car, though it
lets third-party agents conduct most of the advertising as well
as all of the actual sales.
Essentially, the money charities such as the National
Children's Cancer Society earn from this activity is tantamount
to renting out their non-profit status as a type of sponsorship
that the companies pay a percentage of.
The National Children's Cancer Society and other nation-wide
charities hope that changes in tax laws since 2005 will result
in a higher percentage of more valuable cars being donated.
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