Welcome to the first ngoLAW Brief of 2024
This is the first ngoLAW Brief of 2024 and coming to you a bit later than usual, as it has been a busy (and tough) first quarter of the year for ngoLAW, and many others. And it comes to you on an auspicious day, as we await results from our journeys to the polls yesterday. Whatever the election outcome, non-profits will continue to do their work, so take deep breaths and dive into our updates on and explanations of: The 18A third-party filing roll-out (31 May deadline) Beneficial Ownership- what does it mean and what do we have to do about it? Why is updating directors with CIPC suddenly so hard? Discrimination in employment for faith-based organisations. The new ‘multinational tax’- should we worry? Keep the questions coming and send us suggestions for future topics – visit our website, hit the ‘contact’ tab, and enter your question into the ‘Contact Form’ space provided. Aluta continua Nicole, Bandile, Janice, Chelsea, Lisa, Dorothy and Alison Below: our logo made with Woza Moya (Hillcrest Aids Trust) baskets on our office wall. 18A FILING REQUIREMENTS – DEADLINE, GUIDES AND SOME GOOD NEWS For those unfamiliar with the concept of 18A third-party returns, please see the introductory note in our 2023 2nd quarter Brief: https://ngolawsa.co.za/second-quarter-2023-ngolaw-in-brief/ The first mandatory deadline for filing these returns is 31 May and SARS has issued some updated information, guides and FAQs here: Tax Exempt Institutions Connect Issue 5 (May 2024) | South African Revenue Service (sars.gov.za) Please do visit this TEI issue and the FAQs for all of the detail, but our snapshot of useful bit is: The tax reference number of donors is not mandatory in this first filing season. However, advice from Somaya Khaki of SAICA is that the efiling form still makes it mandatory and this has not yet been fixed by SARS. It will become mandatory in subsequent filing seasons, so please do collect them, file them if you have them, and, depending on how soon the efiling fix is on place, there should be no need to panic in this filing season if you have not historically collected donor tax reference numbers. Organisations which have 18A status and have not issued any 18A receipts in the period 1 March 2023 to end Feb 2024 DO have to file an IT3(d) but it will be a Null declaration. This may be submitted via efiling. The period for which you file is not connected to your financial year, but is for the exact period required by SARS; SARS does accept an annual (summary) receipt being issued for monthly/other periodic donations, and has issued a Binding General Ruling in this regard: Legal-IntR-R-BGR-70-Issue-of-a-Single-Section-18A-Receipt-to-a-Donor-Taxpayer-for-Multiple-Bona-Fide-Donations.pdf (sars.gov.za). You may choose whether to issue monthly or annual receipts. The IT3(d) reporting may be conducted on efiling for up to 50 receipts being reported. The full set of FAQs contains a lot of useful detail and some step-by-step tutorials and can be found here IT3(d) Third Party Data FAQs | South African Revenue Service (sars.gov.za) (Please note that ngoLAW is not able to assist with the actual filing, as we leave those to accountants who have this skill set). WHO ARE OUR ‘BENEFICIAL OWNERS’? For non-profit organisations which, by their very nature, cannot be owned, the idea of having ‘Beneficial Owners’ is alien and feels ill-fitting. However, this is the globally understood phrase for ‘people in control’ and it seems we are stuck with it. Although non-profits have no owners, they are administered and controlled by people, and the identification of ‘Beneficial Owners’ is about listing (and then reporting on) the actual (warm-bodied) people who have the ultimate responsibility for and authority over the organisation. Beneficial Owners are not: In the case of non-profits, they are not owners. They are also not beneficiaries (unless the beneficiaries also have voting powers in the organisation). They are not other companies or organisations but are the people at the very bottom (or top!) of the structures. They are not anyone whose vote or power is less than 5% of the total voting power for the part of the organisation they serve on or belong to. So, for a club, association or with-members NPC which has more than 20 members, those members are not ‘Beneficial Owners’ and do not have to be listed as reported on. (We predict an uptick in membership for organisations whose member quotient is hovering under 20!) Beneficial Owners always include the Board All of those who serve on governing bodies of any type of non-profit will be counted as ‘Beneficial Owners because: They are people; They are in charge. So: For NPCs, the directors will all be Beneficial Owners; For Trusts, the trustees will all be Beneficial Owners; For voluntary associations, the main governing body (whether called Board, Management Committee or Governing Body) will all be Beneficial Owners. For organisations which have only Boards, only the Boards are the Beneficial OwnersFor no-members NPCs and Trusts, if there are no people or organisations which have ‘Founder’ or “Donor’ powers, then the Beneficial Owners are the directors or trustees. End of. Just them. For organisations with members or Founder/s there are more Beneficial OwnersRemember the guiding principles – we are looking for warm-bodied people who have 5% or more of voting power: For a with-members NPC or voluntary association where: all of the members are people; and there are 20 or fewer members; those people are Beneficial Owners (as well as the Board). For a with-members NPC or voluntary association where: all of the members are people; and there are more than 20 members; none of the members are Beneficial Owners. For a with-members NPC or voluntary association where some or all of the members are companies or other organisations, the Beneficial Owners will be the shareholders or members of the member companies or member organisations unless there are 20 or more of them. For any type of organisation which has named ‘Founder/s who have ongoing powers such as to appoint the board or veto certain decisions: If the Founder/s is/are people, they will be Beneficial Owners (in