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Planned Giving
If you are interested in making a difference in the lives of others, please
remember St. Vincent de Paul Center in your will or estate plans. Each year
we provide critical support, care and services to the working poor and their
children, and to low-income seniors and the homeless.
St. Vincent’s programs and services are made possible through the generosity
and commitment of people like you. A planned gift helps
St. Vincent de Paul
Center secure its future enabling us to expand
our services to meet increased
demand in these difficult times. Planned gifts frequently provide the financial
difference in achieving our Mission of serving the poor.
As an example, the estate of Esther Schoentgen provided $200,000 this year
for St. Vincent’s “needy children.” Esther Schoentgen was a senior services
client of the Center and saw first-hand how great the need was to help children
of the working poor. She bequeathed 50 percent of the residue of her estate
for this purpose. Her gift is critically important in continuing our mission
and service to our children. Esther Schoentgen’s bequest will enable us to
care for children of families who could not otherwise afford adequate childcare.
Planned gifts to St. Vincent de Paul Center can bring immediate financial
benefits and tax advantages to the donor while also providing opportunities
to assist our clients. Planned gifts can be made through your will, charitable
trusts, charitable gift annuities, gifts of stocks and bonds, gifts of life
insurance and gifts of retirement plans.
Click on the following options to learn more about various types of Planned
Gifts:
Bequest
Charitable Remainder Trusts
Charitable Lead Trust
Stocks, Bonds and Other Securities
Life Insurance
Retirement Plans
Rendu Heritage Society
Bequest
Please consider making a charitable bequest to St. Vincent’s in your will.
The federal estate tax can take approximately 50 percent of one’s estate at
the time of death. Prior estate planning with your attorney or advisor can
reduce your estate tax and ensure the continuation of the Center’s vital services.
Here are three ways to make a bequest:
Specific bequest — You can designate a specific dollar amount, specific percentage
or specific property to St. Vincent de Paul Center.
Residual bequest — After your estate pays all debts, taxes, expenses and specific
bequests, the remaining amount, the residue, will be paid to St. Vincent’s.
Contingent bequest — You may designate that St. Vincent’s receive all or a
portion of your estate under certain circumstances. For example, you can name
St. Vincent’s as a beneficiary of your estate only if there are no surviving
close family members.
Bequest Language: When making a gift to St. Vincent de Paul Center through
your will, please consult your attorney and tax advisers. Click here for suggested
Bequest Language.
Charitable Remainder Trusts (CRT)
A trust is a legal agreement that specifies how the assets placed in a trust
will be managed. You can transfer cash, an IRA, stock or pension benefits
to St. Vincent’s and establish a “charitable remainder unitrust” or “charitable
remainder annuity trust” and each would provide you with annual income for
life. Essentially, there are two types of CRTs.
Unitrust income fluctuates annually with the fair market value of the trust.
Annuity Trust income payments are fixed and determined when the gift is made.
Through these types of trust arrangements, the income would be paid to you
or a loved one for life, after which the assets would be distributed to St.
Vincent’s. You are entitled to an immediate income tax deduction, you avoid
paying capital gains tax if the trust is funded by appreciated securities,
there is the possibility of reducing your estate tax, and you have the satisfaction
of making a charitable gift to support St. Vincent de Paul Center.
Charitable Lead Trust
This type of trust allows donors to make a “temporary gift,” receive tax deductions
and later get their cash or property back. In a hypothetical example, Mrs.
Robinson owns bonds that pay her $10,000 a year. Because she expects to have
substantial income for the next five years and could benefit from a larger
income tax deduction now, she transfers the bonds to a trust that pays St.
Vincent’s $10,000 a year for five years. Mrs. Robinson gets a charitable
deduction, St. Vincent’s gets $10,000 a year, and the bonds revert to her
ownership after five years.
Stocks, Bonds and Mutual Funds
Giving securities that have increased in value can offer you tax saving with
dual benefits. First, you avoid paying any capital gains tax on the increase
in value of your asset. In addition, you receive a tax deduction for the
full fair market value of the stock or bond on the date of the gift, if owned
for over one year. For income tax purposes, gifts of qualified assets are
deductible in amounts up to 30 percent of adjusted gross income, with an
additional five year carry forward.
If your investments have decreased in value, consider selling them and making
a charitable gift of the cash proceeds. This creates a loss you may be able
to deduct from other taxable income along with the amount of the cash contribution.
Life Insurance
If the life insurance policy you purchased long ago to provide for your children
or other family members is no longer needed, please consider donating it
to St. Vincent’s. By naming us as owner and beneficiary of the policy, you
can take a charitable tax deduction for its present market value and remove
it from your estate for income tax purposes. If annual premiums are still
required, you can continue to pay them and those premiums are tax deductible
each subsequent year. Your insurance agent can assist you in making this
simple transaction.
Retirement Plans
Qualified retirement plans may save you taxation dollars during your lifetime,
but unless you do special planning, your heirs will be hit with both income
and estate taxes after your death. Once you’ve provided for your family, consider
using the remainder of your retirement plan assets to fulfill your philanthropic
objectives. Of course, we hope you will include St. Vincent de Paul Center
in these special plans. Please consult your estate planner and attorney about
this option.
Rendu Heritage Society
The Sister Rosalie Rendu Heritage Society has been established to recognize
those individuals who have given the Center a planned gift or notified us in
writing of their intention to do so. New members are listed in the Center’s
Annual Report. Sr. Rendu, a Daughter of Charity, provided service to the poor
for over 53 years in the poorest neighborhoods of Paris during the 19th century.
Her beatification ceremony took place in Rome, on Sunday, November 9, 2003.
It is fitting that our Heritage Society is named for this social service pioneer
and Daughter of Charity.
If you would like additional information concerning planned gifts, please
contact Tamara Michel, Director of Advancement (312) 943-6776 ext. 2218 | tmichel@svdpc.org.
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