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The Charitable Incorporated Organisation will not be available now until October, the government has admitted.
The update is contained in the Office for Civil Society’s one-year-on progress report in response to the recommendations of Lord Hodgson’s Red Tape Task Force.
In response to recommendation 9, that “reforms should be made to the law to give limited liability to trustees of unincorporated charities”, the Office for Civil Society said: “This recommendation will be delivered by the introduction of the charitable incorporated organisation.
“The OCS is now taking forward the various clearances required before the statutory instruments can be laid in Parliament and the new form of charity should become available during October.”
It added that an implementation timetable will be published shortly to give more of an indication of the proposed introduction times and phasing arrangements.
The launch of the CIO has been hit by repeated postponements since it was first mooted in the Charities Act 2006. The Charity Commission claimed last autumn that it had been ready for months for their introduction but hold-ups at Parliamentary level had caused the delays.
The last due date announced by government was the first quarter of 2012, but now it has been pushed back again to October.
Tim Waldron
22 May 2012
If, as is suggested by another new story today, duplication and filing differences across Companies House and the Charity Commission are to be eliminated, then surely the main advantage of CIOs falls away? This white elephant died a while ago; isn't it time to give it a decent burial before it really starts to smell?
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Attending our one day courses is a highly effective way of ensuring new and existing trustees fully understand their role, responsibilities and liabilities.
Störm
11 Jul 2012
@Tim Waldron, yes, but, no but.
At present, many charities are unable to register as such because they fall beneath the income threshold. CIO's will enable them to register regardless of annual income, and thus be regulated, listed, and receive the all-important charity number. (Additionally, it will still cost less (I believe) for very small charities, then dual registration, and require less initial paperwork.) I
I personally would prefer no CIOs, and removing the income threshold, and having a simple dual-registration tool.)
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