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    monthly tax moves
  • July 1: You're halfway through the year. Now's the perfect time to make some midyear tax moves that could cut your 2009 IRS bill. If your life has changed significantly since the beginning of the year, adjust your withholding to more accurately reflect your new life, and tax, situation. Just give your employer a new W-4.

    July 4: Happy Independence Day! Celebrate your independence from future tax hassles. Hire a tax professional now to help get your tax life in shape while there's still plenty of time to plan.

    July 10: Does your job include tips? If so and you received $20 in tips in June, use Form 4070 to report them today to your employer.

    July 17: Are your kids at day camp while you work? You might be able to use that expense to claim the child and dependent care credit to cover some of the costs.

    July 21: It's been summer for month. How's your air conditioner holding up? If you need a new one, make sure it's energy efficient; that way on your 2009 tax return you can claim a tax credit for 30 percent of the cost, up to $1,500. Other energy-saving home improvements also qualify. Get the details at EnergyStar.gov.

    July 31: If you kids are older and working summer jobs, make sure they understand their tax responsibilities. You also can help your youngster get a nest egg head start by helping him or her open a Roth IRA with some of those summer earnings.

    Small Business Tax Calendar -- July: Important filing, deposit and record keeping dates your company needs to know.

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Tax Terms

  • Earned income -- It's just like it sounds: Compensation you receive from work, including wages, salaries, commissions, tips and self-employment endeavors. Learn more...
  • Unearned income -- Money that is not gained by work or delivery of a service or product. It's most well-known source is from investments. Learn more...
  • Tax rates/brackets -- The U.S. tax system is a progressive one, in which the greater the earnings, the higher the tax rate. Learn more...
  • See these and other tax terms
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Cool tax quotes

  • The income tax has made
    more liars out of the American people than golf has.

    -- Will Rogers, humorist
  • I'm proud to pay taxes in the United States; the only thing is,
    I could be just as proud for half the money.
    -- Arthur Godfrey, comedian
  • Intaxication: Euphoria at getting a refund from the IRS, which lasts until you realize it was your money to start with. -- Author unknown, from a Washington Post word contest
  • "Internal Revenue Service: The world's most successful mail order business.” -- Bob Goddard, writer
  • "If you are truly serious about preparing your child for the future, don't teach him to subtract. Teach him to deduct." -- Fran Lebowitz, writer
  • "The United States has a system of taxation by confession." -- Hugo Black, Supreme Court Justice

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« Year end donations and deductions | Main | Older philanthropists have a choice to make »

Sunday, November 26, 2006

A 'modest' but far-reaching donation option

Do you believe in fate? I do, sometimes. Maybe the better word is serendipity. Whatever, this morning I logged on and planned to do a little blog administrative housekeeping and accidentally opened one of my financial blogroll links.

I'm on the laptop and I still haven't figured out why its mouseover feature opens links if it hovers for more than a few seconds. But apparently, that's what happened and Experiments in Finance popped up on my screen.

Modestneeds_2 And what happened to be the most recent entry on that blog right then? A look at an interesting philanthropic site, ModestNeeds.org.

Coming on the heels of my entry yesterday on charitable giving, it just seemed to be more than mere coincidence. Yeah, I know sometimes things just happen in seemingly related ways, but that's usually just us humans trying to convince ourselves that life is cosmically organized. But today, as we head into a season where a fat guy in a red, fur-trimmed suit takes center stage, I'm going with fate, or blog Karma or anything that means I was meant to read that particular item.

Basically, Modest Needs is designed to provide short-term help to individuals and families who usually are self-sufficient, but who've hit a rough spot. These are folks who might be between jobs or had a medical emergency or are dealing with unexpected and expensive repairs on a car that's critical to getting to work.

These folks just don't have the money right now to cover these costs or even the daily necessities until they get back on their feet. A little help in these cases makes all the difference. Without that short-term assistance, things could get worse, and quickly. Modest Needs aims to keep that from happening.

The group's approach really struck a chord with me. We've all been there or at least know someone personally in such a situation. And we've seen these people struggle (or done so ourselves) because they (we) are too proud to take even the tiniest bit of help from family or friends.

However, when the aid comes from a stranger, it's often a bit easier to accept. Modest Needs connects these strangers with the self-sufficient but struggling so that everyone wins.

Tax considerations: From the IRS standpoint, Modest Needs offers a tax break for this type of "personal" charity. In most cases, such donations are not tax deductible.

Yes, the $5 you stuff in the jar at the neighborhood grocery check-out will help out the local family whose home burned down. No, since the money is designated for a special individual, it's not a qualified (i.e., deductible) donation. Even if the money goes into a bank account set up for a special circumstance (they're called benevolence accounts in this story), the involvement of the financial institution doesn't make your contribution deductible.

But Modest Needs is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit corporation. That means it's registered with the IRS (it received its tax-exempt status OK in May 2002, a few months after the program was established) and is a qualified organization, making gifts to it deductible.

Now I know that when we give, deductions are not at the top of our consideration list. And if you want to go ahead and help out a neighbor or friend or family member with a few bucks to tide them over, then by all means do so.

But  if you and your loved ones are lucky enough not to be in need right now and you happen to be looking for a way to give to those who are, specifically during the holiday season, check out Modest Needs. You can even keep the help close to home by searching by state (or province if you're in Canada) for those who've registered for help and indicating which requests you most strongly support.

Even if you don't take advantage of the tax break, a modest gift to Modest Needs might just be the perfect gift for yourself and its recipients.

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Comments

Thanks for the mention, and sorry I didn't notice it earlier!

I, too, liked what I saw at Modest Needs, though apparently they've been around for a while. That one average guy started it himself makes it all the more impressive!

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