Charleston, South Carolina – November 3, 2018 – As part of a move to small ‘decal’ size images for license plates in South Carolina, the ‘Protect Wild Dolphins’ license plate, designed by marine artist Steve Diossy, will be replaced in the new year. South Carolina DMV and Michael D Towner, CEO of Iconic Legacy, have begun the process of redesigning and approval for the reduced decal design and it should be completed and replace the original design in January, 2019. Michael D Towner was responsible for the development of the program, along with the Protect Wild Dolphins license plate program in Louisiana. In Lousiana the full color plates are produced at the state prison, and by a machine invented in the early 1900s at Angola, a maximum-security prison farm in Louisiana operated by the Louisiana Department of Public Safety & Corrections. It is named "Angola" after the former slave plantation that occupied the territory. Louisiana is continuing the use of full color designed plates. Georgia reverted back to full color designs from the decal design, after a significant decrease in specialty license plate sales due to an increase in registration fees. Other states are looking to change the colorful specialty plate designs to a decal design, including Florida, where there are 123 specialty license plates. The DMV routinely cites uniformity and law enforcement as principal reasons for this move, but there is conflicting evidence on whether the distinctively designed full color plates actually help rather than hinder law enforcement in identifying would-be offenders’ vehicles. The funds from the Protect Wild Dolphins license plate in South Carolina currently go to EarthEcho International, headed by Phillippe Cousteau Jr, the son of Jan and Philippe Cousteau Sr., and the grandson of Captain Jacques-Yves Cousteau, the iconic oceanographer. Philippe was born in Santa Monica, California and grew up between France and the United States, attending college in St Andrews, Scotland. He and his wife Ashlan are the stars of The Travel Channel’s newest series Caribbean Pirate Treasure. EarthEcho International is a nonprofit organization founded on the belief that youth have the power to change our planet. “South Carolina has a strong marine heritage and a dynamic and beautiful environment.” Philippe states, “This funding enables us to work with strong local partners to enhance ocean and marine mammal education and conservation throughout the state and encourage its citizens to continue to be active stewards of the environment.” Towner says that he hopes the design change will not adversely affect the program and is awaiting information from South Carolina DMV on statistics showing any changes to sales for license plates that have already undergone the switch from full color to the decal format. Unfortunately, it may take at least six years to evaluate the effects due to the two-year renewal process and the ability to keep the existing license plate until the mandatory ten-year plate replacement. Michael Towner says that the new design will be a combination of the original full color design and the slogan ‘Protect Wild Dolphins’ and the draft will be available for viewing and comments in December on the website: ProtectSouthCarolinaDolphins.com. The fee from the purchase of the license plate is $60.00 every two years in addition to the regular motor vehicle registration fee, a portion of the fees collected has been specifically earmarked to assist local organizations and agencies who have the required credentials, licenses and permits to collect, analyze and archive scientific data regarding the dolphin population in South Carolina waters. Towner advises that the primary component of the South Carolina ‘Protect Wild Dolphins’ program is the development of educational content, support of scientific research, and development and implementation of innovative conservation initiatives. Funding is used by EarthEcho International for specific education and conservation programs, directed at strengthening and supporting existing regional efforts to protect the environment, wild dolphins, and their coastal habitats and for scientific research conducted through collaborative efforts. Learn more at www.ProtectSouthCarolinaDolphins.com
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Jonathan Soros, an investment manager who is one of George Soros’s five children, wants nonprofits to raise money online without spending on pricey software.
So, in a move that’s raised some eyebrows, he and his wife, Jennifer, founded Give Lively, a company that started offering free digital-fundraising software to charities a year ago. The company provides the basics: a way to generate donation forms for websites and emails. But it also gives charities the ability to raise money through text messages, the means to have supporters create their own fundraising pages, and, soon, a tool to sell event tickets. Nonprofits pay only a relatively small, but standard, payment-processing fee. The couple wants to save nonprofits money and deliver online-fundraising services that are just as strong as what’s on the market today — if not stronger, says Jonathan Soros, 48. Jonathan says he and Jennifer are not out to make money. Because the company offers free services, the couple — mostly known for backing liberal causes — sees it as a philanthropic project, despite Give Lively’s status as a limited-liability company rather than a 501(c)(3) nonprofit. Jonathan Soros likened the couple’s funding of Give Lively to an "impact investment," albeit one where no profit will be made. Effectively what we’re doing is subsidizing the entire field of nonprofits that use this product," he says. Most of the nonprofits that have used Give Lively so far are small. Still, some have recognizable names, like the Malala Fund, StoryCorps, and the Women’s March L.A. Foundation. The company might be one to watch if it catches on with lots more nonprofits, experts say. But many nonprofit tech consultants and people who work at competing companies are skeptical of its offerings. Civic Nation, which launched in 2015 and houses an array of advocacy and awareness campaigns, started using Give Lively’s donation pages starting in mid-2017, says Jenn Brown, the group’s executive director. The products are simple to use, she says, and "by far the best deal for our nonprofit." Today, the charity, which projects that it will raise about $10 million this year, uses the company’s text-appeal services and its tool to allow donors to create fundraising pages for campaigns. "As a nonprofit, my number one priority is to ensure as much money as possible is going toward the causes that people are donating in support of," she says. "So my priority is to work with online processors who charge us the lowest fees possible." To generate a profit, other companies that offer similar products to Give Lively's tack on fees — sometimes up to 5 percent, depending on the service being used and how large the nonprofit is, experts say. Most providers also ask charities to pay for a monthly or annual subscription, with the price based on how large the transaction fees are. By not asking for any payments beyond transaction fees charged by Stripe, a payment processor, Give Lively is a veritable unicorn. Its promise of free software is virtually unheard of in the nonprofit-tech space. And that’s made some observers skeptical. How can a software company continue to grow, improve its tools, and compete with the likes of Classy, Network for Good, and Blackbaud with only one source of funding and no revenue? "Seems unsustainable," says Sarah Sebastian, director of brand communications at Qgiv, a company that also offers digital-fundraising tools. Some have questioned whether there’s another agenda. For instance, is the company looking to hook a lot of nonprofits by giving away services, only to sell its company to another vendor? The answer to that is "no," DeParolesa says. "Our ethos is such that the idea of selling to a for-profit entity is sort of the antithesis of how we began," he says. In late August, the Soroses approved a company statement drafted by DeParolesa called the "Forever Free Pledge." The pledge promises that all Give Lively’s current services — and some items still in the works, like the event-ticketing tool — will be free in perpetuity to all users, with no commitments. "We will never charge any annual fees, setup fees, hidden fees, or platform fees for our Forever Free Services," says the statement, which went online in August. "We pledge to offer each of our Forever Free Services for so long as we run each service." A footnote at the bottom of the pledge says: "Stop trying to find a catch. There’s no catch." Give Lively has some limitations. The company can integrate its fundraising tools only with Salesforce. That means charities using other donor databases — like Blackbaud’s Raiser’s Edge — won’t get supporter data sent directly to their systems. They’ll have to download it and then manually import it into their databases — creating an administrative task that many charities don’t like. Give Lively will be investigating ways to work with other fundraising software this year, but DeParolesa is unsure how long it’ll take to offer such services. Today, nonprofits also need to use the payment processor Stripe as part of their Give Lively account. That service typically takes two days to verify credit-card payments for nonprofits. It takes seven days for contributions made by donors directly from their bank accounts. Among other reasons, the company uses Stripe because it offers good rates for processing nonprofit donations, DeParolesa says. Give Lively, however, will start allowing nonprofits to use PayPal as its payment processor later this year, which charges fees similar to Stripe’s, but can send money to nonprofits faster in most cases. Jonathan Soros acknowledges that it might be hard to get nonprofits that are used to doing business with other companies to join Give Lively. "The transaction cost of shifting is not zero," Soros says. Still, he thinks all nonprofits — no matter their size — care about saving money: "It really feels difficult to hand over a percentage of your revenue to anybody, whether you’re small or large." Michael Towner Test Site Launched to Make State Charity Registration Easier. Michael Towner, Iconic Legacy10/2/2018 A test website for the Single Portal Initiative — a central electronic system that would allow charities to register in multiple states — went online Monday, announced state charity officials at a conference.
The new effort allows nonprofit officials to test the site and enroll their organizations to solicit donations in Connecticut and Georgia. Charities should be able to register with more states by mid-February 2019 during a second testing phase, said Chad Canfield, operations manager for the charitable-trust section of the Office of the Attorney General of Michigan. As more states join and charities provide their feedback, the site will be improved, he said. "What you see today or what you see tomorrow when you go back and look isn’t what the project is going to look like in six months or a year from now," Canfield said. The idea for the Single Portal Initiative has been in the works for many years, Canfield noted. The goal of the project is to provide a central online registration system for charities and professional fundraisers to fill out for their annual registrations in multiple states. The system would save charities time and money, officials say, because nonprofits would only have to enter in certain data and submit key documents — such as an informational tax form 990 — once. For many charities, the system would replace the bureaucratic labyrinth of completing applications — and often submitting the same documents — for multiple states. The test website launched Monday allows only charities to register, not third-party fundraisers — a feature the project’s developers expect to add. Other features they hope will come later include an analytics tool that will help charity regulators detect fraud and negligence, said Joshua Goldstein, vice president for product at CityBase, which is part of the development team on the site for state officials. State officials also want charity data to be automatically entered from the Forms 990 that organizations file with the Internal Revenue Service, he said. Currently, the test site has separate fields to enter some of the same data for registration in both Connecticut and Georgia, Goldstein noted — though the goal is for charities to enter each piece of information only once to register with many states. The bigger aim, he said, is for the registration process to become much faster. "If you’re a charity and you decide to register in a state, you should be able to complete that registration same day, if not same hour," he said, "and that’s our ambition." Michael Towner As the Morning News Anchor for ABC7 in Los Angeles since 2002, Phillip Palmer has had the opportunity to be involved in a number of charitable endeavors. He has been active in the Autism community, the ARC Walk for Independence, fundraising efforts for wounded veterans and organ donation...and that connection became deeply personal. Phillip Palmer moved to Los Angeles in November of 1998 after his career took him from Monroe, Louisiana to Wichita, Kansas and then Denver, Colorado. His job as a reporter has taken him from a Super Bowl, to Iraq, from Columbine to the Tsunami in Thailand. In 2007, Phillip’s friend Dale Davis became ill. At first no one knew what was happening, only that Dale had been rushed to the emergency room with very high blood pressure. Initial fears of a stroke were replaced with the knowledge that Dale would need a kidney transplant. By coincidence or divine intervention, Phillip had already been introduced to living donation by sports writer Rick Reilly, who had written a column about NBA star Alonzo Mourning and the kidney he received from his cousin. After being moved by the article, Phillip had made a promise to act if the need ever arose. Within weeks of Dale’s diagnosis, Phillip and Dale had transplant surgery and both are healthy and happy over 10 years later. Phillip is one of the nicest and most interesting people I have met in my nearly six years in the Los Angeles area. Living donation offers another choice for transplant candidates, and it saves two lives: the recipient and the next one on the deceased organ waiting list. Even better, kidney and liver patients who are able to receive a living donor transplant can receive the best quality organ much sooner, often in less than a year. For more information - click here |
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