Publication 557
taxmap/pubs/p557-025.htm#en_us_publink1000200303If you are a member of an organization that wants to obtain recognition
of exemption from federal income tax as a labor, agricultural, or horticultural
organization, you should submit an application on Form 1024. You must indicate
in your application for exemption and accompanying statements that no part of
the organization's net earnings will inure to the benefit of any member. In
addition, you should follow the procedure for obtaining recognition of exempt
status described in chapter 1. Submit any additional information that may be
required, as described in this section.
taxmap/pubs/p557-025.htm#en_us_publink1000200304taxmap/pubs/p557-025.htm#en_us_publink1000200305A labor organization is an association of workers who have combined
to protect and promote the interests of the members by bargaining collectively
with their employers to secure better working conditions.
To show that your organization has the purpose of a labor organization,
you should include in the articles of organization or accompanying statements
(submitted with your exemption application) information establishing that the
organization is organized to better the conditions of workers, improve the grade
of their products, and develop a higher degree of efficiency in their respective
occupations. In addition, no net earnings of the organization can inure to the
benefit of any member.
taxmap/pubs/p557-025.htm#en_us_publink1000200306While a labor organization generally is composed of employees
or representatives of the employees (in the form of collective bargaining
agents) and similar employee groups, evidence that an organization's membership
consists mainly of workers does not in itself indicate an exempt purpose. You
must show in your application that your organization has the purposes described
in the preceding paragraph. These purposes can be accomplished by a single labor
organization acting alone or by several organizations acting together through a
separate organization.
taxmap/pubs/p557-025.htm#en_us_publink1000200307The payment by a labor organization of death, sick, accident,
and similar benefits to its individual members with funds contributed by its
members, if made under a plan to better the conditions of the members, does not
preclude exemption as a labor organization. However, an organization does not
qualify for exemption as a labor organization if it has no authority to
represent members in job-related matters, even if it provides weekly income to
its members in the event of a lawful strike by the members' union, in return for
an annual payment by the member.
taxmap/pubs/p557-025.htm#en_us_publink1000200308Agricultural and horticultural organizations are connected with
raising livestock, forestry, cultivating land, raising and harvesting crops or
aquatic resources, cultivating useful or ornamental plants, and similar
pursuits.
For the purpose of these provisions, aquatic resources include
only animal or vegetable life, but not mineral resources. The term harvesting,
in this case, includes fishing and related pursuits.
Agricultural organizations can be quasi-public in character and
are often designed to encourage the development of better agricultural and
horticultural products through a system of awards, using income from entry fees,
gate receipts, and donations to meet the necessary expenses of upkeep and
operation. When the activities are directed toward the improvement of marketing
or other business conditions in one or more lines of business, rather than the
improvement of production techniques or the betterment of the conditions of
persons engaged in agriculture, the organization must qualify for exemption as a
business league, board of trade, or other organization, as discussed next in the
section on 501(c)(6) organizations.
The primary purpose of exempt agricultural and horticultural
organizations must be to better the conditions of those engaged in agriculture
or horticulture, develop more efficiency in agriculture or horticulture, or
improve the products.
The following list contains some examples of activities that
show an agricultural or horticultural purpose.
- Promoting various cooperative agricultural, horticultural,
and civic activities among rural residents by a state and county farm and home
bureau.
- Exhibiting livestock, farm products, and other characteristic
features of agriculture and horticulture.
- Testing soil for members and nonmembers of the farm bureau
on a cost basis, the results of the tests and other recommendations being
furnished to the community members to educate them in soil treatment.
- Guarding the purity of a specific breed of livestock.
- Encouraging improvements in the production of fish on privately
owned fish farms.
- Negotiating with processors for the price to be paid to members
for their crops.