FundSvcs Community

 View Only
  • 1.  Life insurance pledges

    Posted 06-21-2022 08:57 AM

    Back in 2015, a donor signed a pledge agreement for $250,000. $150,000 of that is supposed to come from a life insurance policy - this was entered as 2 pledges for $75,000 each, each going to a different fund. Our question is should this life insurance portion have even been booked as pledges in RE? My understanding is our Finance team did not record it in their records. 



  • 2.  RE: Life insurance pledges

    Posted 06-21-2022 09:11 AM
    Annie, what to book in RE is entirely up to each organization. There are no legal rules about what you record in a donor database, so the question is only whether your setup supports the org's work and reporting needs, internal and external. It is especially common, when using RE, for pledges to be recorded which do not conform to what Finance considers a pledge. The reason is that it's pretty common for fundraisers to want to view a non-bookable promise, and to have it show up in reporting for various purposes, even though Finance doesn't book it. RE's options for achieving this are a little bit cludgy, and one common method is took book the pledge and then either book it to a Fund that does not sync over to finance, or to a sub-fund, or to use a gift attribute, or some other method to ensure that it doesn't go to Finance or that they are notified not to book the pledge.


    Thank you,
    Isaac Shalev
    Data Strategy Expert
    Sage70, Inc.
    (917) 859-0151
    isaac@sage70.com

    Schedule a 30-minute consultation now:






  • 3.  RE: Life insurance pledges

    Posted 06-21-2022 11:00 AM
    I need more information on the pledge.  What did the donor mean by pledging the life insurance?  Were they planning on dying? :-).  Or were they pledging to give you a PAID UP policy with a cash surrender value of that amount?

    If they were pledging only to take out a policy, then there is no bonafide pledge.  It would be treated more as a bequest expectancy.  But, even then, CASE would not recognize the amount, nor would there be a payment due date or pledge schedule.

    It is highly unusual to book a life insurance pledge unless the donor intended to give you a fully or partially paid whole life policy with that value built up.  Can you get us more details?

    John

    John H. Taylor
    Principal
    John H. Taylor Consulting, LLC
    2604 Sevier St.
    Durham, NC   27705
    919.816.5903 (cell/text)

    Serving the Advancement Community Since 1987






  • 4.  RE: Life insurance pledges

    Posted 07-07-2022 11:07 AM
    Hi John, the gift agreement states that "the donors pledge to secure a fully-paid, joint and survivor life insurance policy acknowledging [us] as the last beneficiary to receive all benefits on the lives of the donors. The deferred gift insurance policy in the amount of $150,000 will be paid in full by 12/31/21." My gut is that the pledges should not have been booked, but I'm not sure. I hope this is enough info to answer your questions.

    Thanks,
    Annie

    ------------------------------
    Annie Wilkins
    Development Operations Administrator
    John Tyler Community College Foundation
    awilkins01@jtcc.edu
    ------------------------------



  • 5.  RE: Life insurance pledges

    Posted 07-07-2022 12:15 PM
    Yes, I agree that nothing should be "booked."  You are not the owner of a life insurance policy.  If you were, you could have booked the interpolated terminal reserve (cash surrender) value (basically the amount of the premiums paid).

    However, you are only a beneficiary of a revocable life insurance policy.  You cannot "book" that, either.  And it does not qualify as a testamentary commitment CASE might allow you to count "below the line" in campaign totals.

    John

    John H. Taylor
    Principal
    John H. Taylor Consulting, LLC
    2604 Sevier St.
    Durham, NC   27705
    919.816.5903 (cell/text)

    Serving the Advancement Community Since 1987







  • 6.  RE: Life insurance pledges

    Posted 07-08-2022 09:34 AM
    It's been hard for me to interpret CASE's Global Reporting Standards on life insurance policies.  On one hand, in Section 3.3.5 it lays out the "booking" procedures (or how the gift is recorded on the organization's general ledger), which syncs with what John states above about only booking cash surrender value if the policy is transferred to the organization as owner and sole beneficiary. There are other nuances in Section 3.3.5 about booking the gift, depending upon where the policy is in its life cycle when donated. 

    Separately, in Section 3.6.1, CASE states: 

    "A donor of any age can make an institution a beneficiary of a retirement account or group or term life insurance policy, in full or in part.  Most retirement plan holders and life insurers make available a beneficiary designation form, which when completed is a legally enforceable document for an asset transfer.  This would be counted in VSE as a bequest/legacy intention, if the donor is at least age 65 and makes the institution aware of the intent."

    Is that confusing, or am I just confused?  Does this come down to the old "booking" (what Finance records on the general ledger) vs. "counting" (what Advancement records toward campaign totals) thing?  One ongoing issue of course is that 98.5% of donor-facing fundraisers use the colloquial term "book" when discussing whether something can be "counted" toward campaign totals/their own individual performance measures. 


    ------------------------------
    Tom Yates
    Temple University
    Executive Director of Gift Planning
    215-926-2545
    tyates@temple.edu
    ------------------------------



  • 7.  RE: Life insurance pledges

    Posted 07-08-2022 09:42 AM

    I am also confused. We count both retirement plan and life insurance beneficiary designations as bequests.

     

     

    Aaron Forrest CPA

    Senior Director Gift and Donor Services

    University of Rochester Office of Advancement

    585.275.2799 | aaron.forrest@rochester.edu

     






  • 8.  RE: Life insurance pledges

    Posted 07-08-2022 09:51 AM
    Here at Mizzou. We are struggling too. It is confusing.





  • 9.  RE: Life insurance pledges

    Posted 07-08-2022 10:19 AM
    CASE is not advising what to "book" on the GL.  Only what to count.

    And you need to read all of the Standards to get the whole picture.  Yes, you can count these designations as you would a bequest expectancy.  HOWEVER, CASE leaves it to the institution whether to count any bequest expectancy at all.  And, if so, as a separate total/goal along with conditional pledges.

    CASE also talks only about TERM policies in this quoted section.  Whole or permanent policies are discussed elsewhere and are as we previously discussed.

    For these beneficiary designations (NOT PLEDGES as was referred to in the original post) you can only them if the donor is 65+ by the end of the campaign.  NOTE: These are not counted as cash for VSE purposes!

    And only if you have a copy of the designation or signed document to that effect as mentioned elsewhere.

    Yes, looking at individual paragraphs is confusing.  It's also confusing that there are references to some of this in the "global" section and others in the US section and sometimes in both!

    John H. Taylor
    Principal
    John H. Taylor Consulting, LLC
    2604 Sevier St.
    Durham, NC   27705
    919.816.5903 (cell/text)

    Serving the Advancement Community Since 1987







  • 10.  RE: Life insurance pledges

    Posted 07-08-2022 10:17 AM

    The life insurance portion should not have been recorded as a pledge. It should have been entered as a Planned gift, with Life Insurance as the giving vehicle. 

    https://webfiles.blackbaud.com/files/support/helpfiles/rex/content/test/content/bb-planned-gift-vehicles.html



    ------------------------------
    Cameron Alzubi
    Director, Gift Administration
    Illinois Institute of Technology
    calzubi@iit.edu
    giftadmin@iit.edu
    ------------------------------