LGBT Think Progress analyzed NOM's financial reports for the last few years and the trend is clear:
Year | # of Big Donors (>$5,000) | Amount Raised From Big Donors | % of Total Fundraising |
2008 | 52 | $2,161,000 | 73% |
2009 | 14 | $5,500,000 | 78% |
2010 | 17 | — | 92% |
Year | # of Big Donors (>$5,000) | Amount Raised From Big Donors | % of Total Fundraising |
2008 | 52 | $2,161,000 | 73% |
2009 | 14 | $5,500,000 | 78% |
2010 | 17 | — | 92% |
About 96 percent of NOM’s total revenue [of $10.6 million] came from donations. Of the remaining $368,513, $139 reportedly came from investment income; the rest was attributed to “other revenue.”
In 2010 the organization had a 17-member staff and no volunteers, and yet only four are listed as being paid: president Brian Brown ($212,500), then-board chair Gallagher ($152,500), treasurer Corkery ($25,000), and Jennifer Morse ($116,667). Morse is listed on the form as simply “employee,” but she is actually the founder and president of the Ruth Institute, which is a project of NOM’s 501(c)3, the NOM Education Fund – though Morse’s name does not appear on the Form 990 for this fund. Additionally, the Ruth Institute is a separate entity with its own 501(c)3 status. In the Ruth Institute’s 2009 Form 990, Morse was listed as nonsalaried, but TAI has not seen Ruth’s disclosures for 2010.
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