Tax exempt status for nonprofits challenged

Residents of Princeton, N.J., are suing the Ivy League university in an effort to get it to pay property taxes. /FlickrCC:Harshil Shah
Residents of Princeton, N.J., are suing the Ivy League university in an effort to get it to pay property taxes. /FlickrCC:Harshil Shah

By Liz Farmer | Governing

Faced with tight budgets and in search of new sources of revenue, municipalities increasingly have been eyeing the tax-exempt status of nonprofits. Legislators say that universities’ record-high endowments and the corporate-like structure of nonprofit hospitals is making it harder and harder to swallow giving these institutions a tax break.

While many of the legislative attempts to start taxing nonprofits have failed, recent legal challenges have proved more promising. If the trend continues, it could present a financial problem for nonprofits and a financial boost for governments. So far, the focus of both legislation and legal action has been on hospitals and higher education institutions, but some worry they could spill over to smaller nonprofits and charities.

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