Make a Charitable Impact with Your IRA

How You Can Donate Pre-tax Dollars to Your Favorite Charity

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Are you looking for a way to help Quechua Benefit? You or someone you know may be eligible to make a qualified charitable distribution from an IRA.

This information is especially beneficial for people who are over 70.5 years old. When you reach 70.5 years old you must start taking Required Minimum Distributions from your IRA account. Most people who are age 70.5 are already drawing funds in retirement anyway, so they meet this requirement. But other people who don’t necessarily need the money are forced to take a certain percentage at this time. This is how the IRS makes you pay taxes on all that tax-deferred money you earned over your lifetime.

To put it very simply, this means that you can donate to any qualified 501c3 directly from your IRA and bypass paying taxes on that money. Yes, that’s right. You could give to your church or other local nonprofit and actually save money on taxes each year!

Here is an example:

Let’s say you are above age 70.5 and normally give $3,000 to a charity you love and tithe another $3,000 to your church. Instead of you writing them a check from your personal bank account, you have your IRA broker cut you a check from your IRA that’s written directly to each organization.

If you withdrew the same $6,000 from your IRA and made the donation, then you would pay taxes on that money.

If your taxes were 30% federal and 5% state, the total tax saving is $2,100 for your $6,000 donation!

You receive several benefits:

  1. The charitable contribution counts toward your required minimum distribution each year.
  2. Normally a withdrawal from your IRA would count as income, which could cause you to pay taxes on your Social Security and would count towards raising your Medicare premiums. You avoid this tax by simply having your plan administrator cut the check directly from your IRA.
  3. You also don’t need to worry about the adjusted gross income limitations for charitable donations each year.

Qualifying Requirements:

  1. You can’t give to a private (grant-making) foundation
  2. As stated above, you must be 70.5 years old.
  3. The charitable organization must give you proof of the contribution.
  4. These contributions must come from a traditional IRA.
  5. You are limited to $100,000 per year in contributions like this. But,
  6. The tax benefit is per person; so if you have a spouse with a traditional IRA you could potentially gift up to $200,000 between the two of you.

Would you like help with doing this for yourself or a family member?

Quechua Benefit is glad to help!

Contact Mike Safley (503) 703-6020 or Dale Cantwell (303) 902-4503 for more information.

 Click here to read more about the benefits of QCD(s) and the rules that govern them. Your financial advisor can help you make your Qualified Charitable Distribution to Quechua Benefit. 100% of your donations directly impact the lives of families, women, and children in Peru.

How You Can Donate Pre-tax Dollars to Your Favorite Charity

????Hopefully Quechua Benefit ????

Are you looking for a way to help Quechua Benefit? You or someone you know may be eligible to make a qualified charitable distribution from an IRA.

This information is especially beneficial for people who are over 70.5 years old. When you reach 70.5 years old you must start taking Required Minimum Distributions from your IRA account. Most people who are age 70.5 are already drawing funds in retirement anyway, so they meet this requirement. But other people who don’t necessarily need the money are forced to take a certain percentage at this time. This is how the IRS makes you pay taxes on all that tax-deferred money you earned over your lifetime.

To put it very simply, this means that you can donate to any qualified 501c3 directly from your IRA and bypass paying taxes on that money. Yes, that’s right. You could give to your church or other local nonprofit and actually save money on taxes each year!

Here is an example:

Let’s say you are above age 70.5 and normally give $3,000 to a charity you love and tithe another $3,000 to your church. Instead of you writing them a check from your personal bank account, you have your IRA broker cut you a check from your IRA that’s written directly to each organization.

If you withdrew the same $6,000 from your IRA and made the donation, then you would pay taxes on that money.

If your taxes were 30% federal and 5% state, the total tax saving is $2,100 for your $6,000 donation!

You receive several benefits:

  1. The charitable contribution counts toward your required minimum distribution each year.
  2. Normally a withdrawal from your IRA would count as income, which could cause you to pay taxes on your Social Security and would count towards raising your Medicare premiums. You avoid this tax by simply having your plan administrator cut the check directly from your IRA.
  3. You also don’t need to worry about the adjusted gross income limitations for charitable donations each year.

Qualifying Requirements:

  1. You can’t give to a private (grant-making) foundation
  2. As stated above, you must be 70.5 years old.
  3. The charitable organization must give you proof of the contribution.
  4. These contributions must come from a traditional IRA.
  5. You are limited to $100,000 per year in contributions like this. But,
  6. The tax benefit is per person; so if you have a spouse with a traditional IRA you could potentially gift up to $200,000 between the two of you.

Would you like help with doing this for yourself or a family member?

Quechua Benefit is glad to help!

Contact Mike Safley (503) 703-6020 or Dale Cantwell (303) 902-4503 for more information.

 Click here to read more about the benefits of QCD(s) and the rules that govern them. Your financial advisor can help you make your Qualified Charitable Distribution to Quechua Benefit. 100% of your donations directly impact the lives of families, women, and children in Peru.

The following is a letter written by QB Board Secretary, Dr. Chuck Gulotta. He is calling upon his community to help raise funds to purchase a bread oven for the reconstructed Community Kitchen in Ichupampa.

Dear family and friends,

chuck_grandmaThe kitchen is often the heart of any home and certainly for me, a kid growing up in a large Italian family, that was the case. The aromas, lively conversations and bustle of activity are all evocative of a thriving, happy home for many of us. I have powerful memories of watching my Grandma Rose pounding away at a new batch of dough for the day’s fresh bread. It almost seemed magical to watch the bread rise under a careful array of dishtowels. I also loved watching her cut parallel lines across the top each loaf before she applied a light brush of egg wash followed by a sprinkle of sesame seeds. The best part of the process was smelling the bread baking, knowing that I would be allowed to have a piping hot piece with butter once it was done.

As an adult I now recognize this was a true labor of love for a family to whom she devoted her life. I am sure I am not the only one with memories of Grandma Rose’s kitchen and know my cousins and extended family that followed us have all experienced the same. While we all may not have had the good fortune to know Grandma Rose or grow up in a similar environment, we can all appreciate the importance of a good meal and the value of community. It’s for this reason I write this letter to all my family and friends.

While on a recent medical and humanitarian mission in Ichupampa, Peru I walked through dirt streets to see a town that lost 70% of the homes, it’s church and most importantly, a senior center that fed over 200 senior adults and 100 children of the town every day. I walked through the destroyed 2-story building of once a vibrant community center where the seniors and children gathered to eat and receive what is often their only meal of the day.

The good news is that Quechua Benefit, the group I am involved in, has raised over $70k to rebuild the senior center. As a board member, I was challenged to raise $8k to outfit the kitchen, to include a traditional Peruvian bread oven, which seemed very fitting. I took this task in honor of my Grandma Rose, who fed anyone who came to her, whether stranger or family.

The Quechua Benefit Board has agreed to name the bread oven after Grandma Rose, and we will hang a plaque in her honor upon its completion.

I ask family and friends to help with whatever you can to make this come true. I am going to kick this off with a healthy donation to get things started; no donation is too small. Every amount will help and will be greatly appreciated by the people of Ichupampa, Peru.

–Chuck

Donate Soup Kitchen Button

Help us rebuild the
Ichupampa Community Kitchen

We are grateful for each of the donations that have been made in support of the Community Kitchen in Ichupampa, Peru. So far, we have raised $35,620 toward the $70,000 needed to build a new kitchen for the people of Ichupampa.

Since the earthquake on August 15th, the town has had no running water, working public facilities, or sewer. Mayor Paricela, the Elderly Association, and the group managing the previous kitchen all identified this project as their number one priority. You can rest assured that the new building will be engineered to withstand earthquakes much stronger than the one that destroyed the old kitchen.


donate-soup-kitchen-button-e1324423595509

In the following video, meet Dr. Jose E. Mosquera, who has teamed up with Quechua Benefit on our “Healthy Communities” initiative. He was in Peru consulting and became very interested in the tragedy in Ichupampa. Dr. Mosquera is the Executive Consultant in Public Health at PASS. He brings 32 years of experience in medicine, general surgery, and the non-profit  sector of public health. He is a very welcome addition to our team, and we are grateful for his guidance and support. Here is Dr. Mosquera’s take on the earthquake:

100% of your gifts toward this project will be spent on the brick and mortar reconstruction of the community kitchen. None of the funds will be used for the general overhead of Quechua Benefit or our other social justice programs.

With your love and generosity, we will have the new Community Kitchen open by Christmas.

Thank you!

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Help us rebuild the
Ichupampa Community Kitchen

The August 15th earthquake in Peru reduced Ichupampa, where many families of Casa Chapi students live, to rubble. Quechua Benefit recently met with Padre Marcos, the parish priest, and Rocio Paricela, the town’s new mayor, whose heart aches for the people she was recently elected to lead.

Mayor Paricela identified Ichupampa’s most pressing need in the form of a project that was destroyed by the earthquake – a community kitchen that has been in operation for many years. Prior to the earthquake, the town was prioritizing to rebuild this center, where the elderly and school children were served hot meals every day.

This kitchen is even more important today because the town is now without water or a working sewer system. Teams of women are feeding the homeless on each of the four corners of the square.

Mayor Paricela gave Quechua Benefit the complete construction drawings in hopes that we can rebuild the Ichupampa Community Kitchen. We are prepared to begin construction immediately, so long as we can raise the funds. We hope to have the kitchen open by Christmas.

Here is why it is important that Quechua Benefit construct a new community kitchen:

  • It will feed the entire town during the next three years as the town is rebuilt
  • The town needs a symbol of hope to sustain them through this uncertain and disheartening time
  • It will continue to serve the people of Ichupampa long after the town recovers

The budget for this project is $70,000. Your generosity and dedication can help this small town rise up again. Dale Cantwell, a Quechua Benefit board member, will supervise the construction to ensure that every penny of your donations will be spent in the most efficient way possible.

We believe that if our supporters open their hearts to this project, the kitchen will soon rise as a symbol of your love for our Quechua neighbors.

If you would like more information about how you might participate in the project you can contact Amanda VandenBosch at (831) 809 1147 or Dale Cantwell at (303) 651 0785 or Mike Safley at (503) 703 6020

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These elderly Alpaca Breeders home was destroyed
by the recent Earthquake in Ichupampa.


Quechua Benefit has identified a major project in the center of Ichupampa to rebuild the Community Kitchen which was destroyed by the Earth Quake. The Mayor asked if we could take responsibility for the financing and construction of the building. This will allow the town to centralize the emergency feeding operations which are currently in the open air on the four corners of the square.

This project will be rebuilt on the site of the previous kitchen which was destroyed.

We hope to have it open by Christmas.

The new project which will serve the community during reconstruction, over the next three years, and then function as a permanent kitchen into the future for the elderly and poorest school children.  Upon completion the kitchen will be operated by the local Community Association for the Elderly.

The Community Kitchen will be dedicated in honor of
Sister Antonia Kayser

7/17/1924 to 8/7/2010

If you would like more information about how you might participate in the project you can contact Amanda VandenBosch at (831) 809 1147 or Dale Cantwell at (303) 651 0785 or Mike Safley at (503) 703 6020

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