Nonprofit Mergers, Acquisitions and Dissolutions
Location
Description
Nonprofit Mergers, Acquisitions and Dissolutions Wednesday, February 21 | 1:30 PM – 3:00 PM | Webinar Presented by: Don Kramer, Esq and Catherine Gillespie, Esq Moderated by: Tish Mogan, Standards for Excellence Consultant, PANO Offered in Partnership with: Nonprofit Issues *CPE & CLE credits are available for this program for accountants and lawyers; to receive credit you must register through Nonprofit Issues. |
Many nonprofits are wondering what path forward provides the best possibility of continuing and improving their ability to fulfill their mission. They have struggled with their finances. They have lost staff. The external world has changed. For many executives, staff members, and their boards, burnout is real. And yet, the need for their work continues, and is often growing.
The return to relative normalcy provides an opportunity for nonprofits to consider whether they should emerge from the relative silo of their operations and expand their collaborations, perhaps even to the point of an actual merger with a complimentary organization. Thinking about it can be an intimidating prospect but may be necessary if the organizations want to continue and thrive.
This webinar will discuss the many considerations along the way from collaboration to merger. It will walk through the personal opportunities and legal minefields involved in making such changes. It will discuss the various alternative legal relationships and the kind of "due diligence" investigation appropriate for considering a new way of doing business. It will discuss the types of procedures necessary to accomplish the goals, including the possible requirement for approval from the state Attorney General. And it will discuss the steps that many may be forced to take, if nothing else makes sense, to dissolve the organization and go out of business. *CPE & CLE credits are available for this program for accountants and lawyers; to receive credit you must register through Nonprofit Issues. |
Single Login Cost: Terms of Participation
Group Screening Cost (4-10 individuals): Terms of Participation
This option makes the most sense when you have 4-10 individuals interested in viewing the webinar. For fewer than 4 attendees, a single login ticket for each person is the most cost-effective option. For more than 10 attendees, please email Christina at christina@pano.org to discuss options.
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Materials & Login/Call-In Instructions: Can’t attend? All webinar registrants will receive a recording of the webinar following the live session! |
About the Facilitators
Donald W. Kramer serves as chair of Montgomery McCracken’s Nonprofit practice group. Don has more than 45 years of experience dealing with the concerns of nonprofit organizations, not only as a lawyer, but also as a teacher, writer, publisher, and board member. He has worked with nonprofits of all types and sizes, helping structure startup situations and restructure multiorganizational health and educational systems. He counsels on a wide range of nonprofit corporate structure and governance, private and community foundations, continuing care retirement communities, exempt organization taxation, low-income housing tax credit transactions, real estate, charitable giving, and other nonprofit issues. Don has provided legal services to The Philadelphia Foundation for more than 40 years. Don serves as the editor and publisher of Don Kramer’s Nonprofit Issues®, a national newsletter of “Nonprofit Law You Need to Know,” which he founded in 1989. Prior to joining Montgomery McCracken in 1972, Don served as deputy development coordinator and assistant to the mayor of Philadelphia.
Catherine H. Gillespie focuses on higher education law, health care, and corporate and tax law issues generally affecting nonprofit and tax-exempt organizations. Cathy’s work with colleges and universities includes advice on the interpretation and implementation of FERPA, the Clery Act, HIPAA and the Americans with Disabilities Act. She regularly advises colleges and universities on a wide-range of matters, including student-related matters; grievance procedures; drafting faculty policies and procedures; writing and reviewing contracts; compliance with federal and state regulations; real estate tax and other charitable exemption issues; drafting amendments to bylaws and articles of incorporation; and governance issues. Cathy is also involved with bond financings as the college or university’s counsel.
Due to her prior experience as a social worker in the health care field and her legal training, Cathy understands health care professions and organizations and regularly works with 501(c) health care entities to advise them on board governance and structure, state and federal regulatory compliance, licensure issues, contractual arrangements, and day-to-day business operations.
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