I found a story in the Philadelphia Inquirer that caught my attention. The story tells of a nonprofit that is essentially an extension of a family living out its Catholic values.
The family has adopted, at least to date, 18 kids and are guardians of 3 more. And, the family are home-schoolers. Arising from these two choices, the family has created a "service" they are calling a co-op that supports a bunch of area families who are also home-schoolers. The area families bring another 70+ kids to the family's property a couple days a week where there are classrooms and they all share in teaching classroom-style (at which point I am not sure how this qualifies as home-schooling except that the place is not part of the traditional public or private educational system).
Best as I can tell from the story, the family created a nonprofit so they could raise non-taxable revenues to offset the cost of their and the other families' lifestyle choices. Clearly this nonprofit is within the legal parameters and purposes for which nonprofit status is granted. And, the families are getting their goals met.
So, is this what being nonprofit is about? And, would this nonprofit meet all the current standards of excellence (of course, that question could be asked of many nonprofits) particularly in the area of governance and management?
Hm...