Yesterday, President Trump signed into law the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, which will provide $900 billion in coronavirus relief and $1.4 trillion to continue to fund the government. The legislation covers a lot of territory and clocks in at over 5,500 pages. Because of the delay in passage and further delay in signing, there is little time before 2020 ends for donors to ask what will be extended and what will be changed for 2021. Below is our reporting of a few key provisions in this law that will impact fundraisers and donors.
We reminded readers of the approaching expiration of important CARES Act provisions in an early November 2020 blog. Among many other things, the new law extends three philanthropic provisions of the CARES Act into 2021 that are of interest to gift planners:
The CARES Act suspension of the required minimum distribution from most retirement plans for 2020 does not appear to have been extended into 2021.
The full text of the bill as passed by Congress can be found here. See Sections 212 and 213 under Division EE - Taxpayer Certainty And Disaster Tax Relief Act Of 2020.
There will certainly be clarifications and technical corrections coming out in the near future. President-Elect Biden has referred to this relief package as "a good start," so stay tuned for more changes and more news cycles. We'll keep you updated.