[LGM] finances

Dave Crossland dave at lab6.com
Thu Nov 23 21:05:51 UTC 2017


Hi

Google is a big company, but Google Fonts is not a big team, and it would
be just me handling this, and I don't have time to administer individual
reimbursements. What I do have time for is a single sponsorship agreement
(using a Google template contract) and cutting a single check to an LGM
entity, be that an umbrella one or a direct one.

Am I right that if Google Fonts was to offer to sponsor LGM with a single
$15,000 payment in December (ie, get the agreement signed before end of
this month, next week, then invoice within first two weeks of December)
then this wouldn't be possible because LGM has no legal entity that could
sign a sponsorship agreement and invoice the money?

If so, that's a pity, because it may be easier for me to offer than now
then next year, due to the nature of 'end of year' liquidity.

Cheers
Dave

On 22 November 2017 at 19:05, Louis Desjardins <louis.desjardins at gmail.com>
wrote:

> Hi folks,
>
> After reading tonight’s log, here my 2-cents.
>
> I strongly support that we connect with SPI.
> https://www.spi-inc.org/projects/services/
> and let them handle the money and the reimbursements.
>
> *The tax-deductible thing is really only noise in the discussion. Each
> country handles its fiscal law regardless of others. There is no practical
> solution to this problem. If we go the SPI way, money donated by
> individuals from within the USA will be tax-deducted, other money won’t.
> However, a regular compagny that would provide a subsidy to LGM from
> anywhere in the world will probably enter it into its expenses and thus
> will reduce by the same its bottom line... and hence will pay less income
> tax. Again, not an issue. (Also, considering the average amount we got from
> individuals (in Pledgie), this was less than $50 so tax-deductible would
> only be a fraction of small amounts. Nothing worth establishing a global
> multinational organisation to save little money. Let’s not get hysterical!)*
>
> I suggest we vote on this to give some weight to the decision. If the
> majority votes for SPI, we’re in; money can go there.
>
> What’s left to us is to find sponsors. SPI won’t help us. But they can
> handle the money, in and out.
>
> If we’d prefer, we could vote on the reimbursements and ask if we want to
> pursue, or not.
>
> In any way, we need to clarify things quick.
>
> We also need to think long-term.
>
> Cheers!
>
> Louis
>
>
>
>
>
>
> 2017-11-19 6:36 GMT-05:00 Louis Desjardins <louis.desjardins at gmail.com>:
>
>> 2017-11-18 16:13 GMT-05:00 Dave Crossland <dave at lab6.com>:
>>
>>> Hi
>>>
>>> I think Google Fonts may be interested in this sponsorship, with a focus
>>> on bringing people together to do focused work on Variable Font support in
>>> all libre graphics applications.
>>>
>>> Felipe Sanches was working on Inkscape support and got stuck, so if he
>>> can attend and meet Inkscape core devs to make progress towards being ready
>>> to ship, that would be great.
>>>
>>> What were the total budgets for lgms in the past?
>>>
>>
>> Roughly :
>> - Europe LGMs : 10-15K USD
>> - North America LGMs - 20-30K USD
>> - Outside “Occidental North” is much higher (from rough evaluations).
>>
>> The numbers greatly vary from the needs of travellers and we have no way
>> of accurately predicting this until late in the process of organising a LGM
>> (ie, after we know who’s coming from which team, who makes a talk, who
>> animates a workshop, who’s in need of travel sponsoring).
>>
>> If you can have money from Google (say, they reserve an envelope of 15K
>> for Sevilla), the best way to handle it would be through them directly
>> (Google money to sponsored participant directly), using their
>> administrative way, forms, money handling, etc.
>>
>> If this is not feasible but Google accepts to sponsor the event, then we
>> need an organisation to handle this.
>>
>> From experience, the reimbursement process is not easy because of the
>> many variables that are unknown at some point in the reimbursement process,
>> including bad bank infos, missing documents, impossibility to handle a
>> reimbursement based on where in the world the transaction ends (some money
>> get stuck months in intermediary banks). Probably things that a company
>> such as Google would handle best.
>>
>> *
>>
>> To those who have been participating in the past discussions on that
>> subject:
>>
>>    1. I am permanently out of this process now, given a) the level of
>>    dissatisfaction and b) the level of non-enthusiasm the detailed proposals
>>    I’ve made to solve the issue in a sustainable manner have received.
>>    2. We definitely had a final decision of moving to a international
>>    non-profit organisation who already handles the money of many FLOSS
>>    projects, for a decent fee. Side note: I am *very surprised* to see that in
>>    the past 3 years, and after the heavy discussions we had about finances,
>>    nothing has moved forward (although the decision was made). Lots of talks,
>>    no action.
>>
>> It’s never to late for action. Either give up on reimbursements or make
>> it happen.
>>
>> To me, if Dave can have Google be on our side again and handle the
>> reimbursements, I support this strongly. I think it’s the most simple way
>> and it will take away from us the most difficult task in the organisation
>> of LGM.
>> As a long time LGM supporter and organiser, I am still ready to help,
>> with other stuff.
>>
>> Have a wonderful day!
>>
>> Louis
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>>
>>> On Nov 18, 2017 10:38 AM, "Gregory Pittman" <gpittman at iglou.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> On 11/18/2017 10:01 AM, ale rimoldi wrote:
>>>> > hi
>>>> >
>>>> > so, if i understand it correctly, the current status is that we will
>>>> > not have any "official" reimbursement of travel costs from the global
>>>> > lgm for 2018.
>>>> >
>>>> > if anybody is not comfortable with this, please step up before the
>>>> next
>>>> > lgm meeting and let us discuss it!
>>>> >
>>>> > (for reference: it has also been suggested that we should get (and
>>>> > help...) the teams to collect their own money).
>>>> >
>>>>
>>>> I think another way to look at this is to try to see it from the
>>>> outside. Why would or should some outside organization donate to this
>>>> meeting? What's in it for them? We know it doesn't have to be some
>>>> monetary return for some corporation, but still, of the various meetings
>>>> and organizations that are out there, why donate to LGM?
>>>>
>>>> We have to try to begin to answer this question.
>>>>
>>>> Having said this, I have put out a feeler to Red Hat, and so far the
>>>> response has been rather feeble.
>>>>
>>>> Greg
>>>>
>>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>> Libre-graphics-meeting at lists.freedesktop.org
>>>> https://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/libre-graphics-meeting
>>>>
>>>
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>>>
>>>
>>
>
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-- 
Cheers
Dave
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