Nonprofit in Maryland

Maryland Nonprofit Intel

Wednesday, May 13, 2026
2 min read
5 stories

Welcome to your daily briefing on nonprofit developments in Maryland. Today we're covering 5 key stories including updates on maryland nonprofit headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.

1

Maryland Nonprofit Headlines

2 stories

1.1

Requests for Proposals from Maryland Philanthropy Members.

Our membership organization is excited to share RFPs from members with the wider community.

Why It Matters

This initiative provides valuable opportunities for nonprofit professionals in Maryland to collaborate and access resources.

Sources:Source
1.2

Governor Moore Allocates Over $19 Million for Year Two of ENOUGH Initiative in Maryland.

Governor Wes Moore has announced the allocation of more than $19 million to support communities in the second year of the ENOUGH Initiative.

Why It Matters

This funding presents significant opportunities for nonprofit organizations in Maryland to engage in community support and development initiatives.

Sources:Source
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2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

A conflict-of-interest policy that fails the test.

The IRS-recommended COI policy requires (1) annual disclosure by all directors and key employees, (2) a process for review of any disclosed conflict, (3) recusal procedures, and (4) documentation in board minutes. Policies that have only the disclosure form without the review and recusal process do not satisfy the recommendation.

Why It Matters

A weak COI policy is a Schedule L disclosure waiting to happen, and Schedule L disclosures correlate with future IRS examination selection.

2.2

Why every Form 990 line is public — and what most boards forget.

Form 990 is required to be made public by the filing organization on request and is indexed by ProPublica and others within weeks of filing. Sections most boards underestimate: Schedule J (top-staff compensation), Schedule L (transactions with interested persons), and Schedule O (narrative explanations that "soften" other answers). Donors and reporters read these.

Why It Matters

Items that read fine in management's narrative often read very differently in print. Pre-filing review by a non-finance board member catches optics issues that a CFO will not.

2.3

Volunteer screening: the liability that comes from process, not policy.

Negligent-screening claims arise not from failing to have a screening policy, but from failing to follow the policy that exists. A documented policy with inconsistent enforcement is harder to defend than no policy at all, because the deviation is evidence of negligence.

Why It Matters

Insurance carriers tighten coverage on organizations with screening-process gaps. The cost of consistent enforcement is small; the cost of a single uninvestigated incident can close the organization.

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Issue Summary

DateMay 13, 2026
Stories5
Sections2
Read Time2 min
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