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Finance and Revenue

(page 58 of 111)

Abuse Claimants Seek Access to Minn. Diocese’s Charity Assets

The federal judge overseeing the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis’s bankruptcy is weighing a call by victims of clergy sexual abuse to include hundreds of millions of dollars from church-affiliated charities among its assets, reports The Wall Street Journal.

Scandal Wracks Fla. Private School Funded by Koch Brother

Mining and energy magnate William Koch has fired the top official at the Florida academy he launched in 2011 amid allegations of sexual harassment, kickbacks, excessive spending, and grade-changing, The New York Times writes.

Scrutiny Leads Mo. Hospital to Curb Debt-Collection Suits

A nonprofit Missouri medical center that drew media and Congressional attention for suing thousands of low-income patients over unpaid bills has overhauled its financial-aid and collection practices, ProPublica and NPR report.

Women Primed to Give Big — if Nonprofits Are Willing to Change

Women have the wealth and ambition to be a major force in philanthropy, but charities have to recognize and respond to big changes in the demographics of donors.

Cash Giving From Businesses Edges Up, Chronicle Survey Shows

Gilead Sciences, Walmart, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs, and ExxonMobil led the way, reflecting a strong presence throughout the list of financial institutions and drug companies.

Big Medical Charities See Yield From Biotech Investments

Groups like the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Wellcome Trust are becoming important sources of capital for fledgling firms working on new drugs and diagnostic tools and are seeing big profits on some investments, Reuters reports.

Survey Finds Pa. Charities Paid Dearly in State Budget Fight

Pennsylvania nonprofits shed hundreds of jobs and lost hundreds of thousands of dollars to interest payments on bridge loans as a result of a budget impasse that blocked the flow of state money for six months last year, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports.

Aid Charity Swears Off E.U. Money to Protest Migrant Deal

Doctors Without Borders says it will refuse all future funding from the European Union in protest of the bloc’s pact with Turkey to take back migrants landing in the Greek islands, writes The Wall Street Journal.

New Health Networks Championed by Obama Denied Tax Exemption

The Internal Revenue Service turned down a bid for tax-exempt status by an accountable care organization, saying it did not serve an exclusively charitable purpose, creating a major hurdle for the new type of medical network promoted by the administration as part of its health-care reform, The New York Times writes.

27% of Groups Scored by Charity Navigator Will See Ratings Change

27% of Groups Scored by Charity Navigator Will See Ratings Change

The watchdog is revising its system for evaluating charities’ financial health, adding new criteria and changing others.

Charity Navigator Unveils Changes in Rating System

The watchdog group will switch Wednesday to a new set of measurements that tweaks how it assesses the financial health of more than 8,000 nonprofits, including changes in how it weighs overhead costs, The New York Times reports.

Drug Firms Subpoenaed in Review of Ties to Co-Pay Charities

Federal investigators’ demands for documents from Biogen, Jazz Pharmaceuticals, and Gilead Sciences come amid a widening inquiry into the pharmaceutical industry’s relationship with nonprofits that take donations from the companies to help patients pay for medications, Bloomberg reports.

N.Y.’s Struggling Beth Israel Hospital to Shut Down

Facing debts of more than $200 million, the 127-year-old Lower Manhattan institution will shutter and re-create itself as a much smaller facility, The Wall Street Journal writes.

Minn. Sues Telemarketer Over Charity ‘Pledge Reminders’

The state’s attorney general filed suit Wednesday against fundraising firm Associated Community Services, which regulators allege barraged people who had declined to donate to a veterans organizations with follow-up calls and emails seeking payment of supposed pledges, the Star Tribune reports.

U. of Massachusetts to Drop All Fossil-Fuel Investments

The UMass system said Wednesday that it will sell all of its $770 million endowment’s holdings in oil, coal, and gas, reportedly becoming the first major public university to fully embrace fossil-fuel divestment, writes The Boston Globe. 

Ill. First Lady’s Charity Joins Budget Suit Against Governor

An early-childhood-education nonprofit headed by Diana Rauner, the wife of Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner, has joined a coalition of charities suing her husband and several members of his administration over failure to pay off state human-service contracts, according to Crain’s Chicago Business.