Maryland Code § BR-6-501

Section BR-6-501
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
(a) An agreement between a charitable organization and a fund-raising
counsel or professional solicitor and any subcontract or other contract in furtherance
of such an agreement shall be in writing.
(b) A fund-raising counsel or professional solicitor shall submit to the
Secretary of State a copy of all agreements under subsection (a) of this section on or
before the earlier of:
(1) the tenth day after the agreement is made; or
(2) the start of a charitable solicitation.
(c) The text that a professional solicitor or associate solicitor uses in a
charitable solicitation shall be attached to the agreement and shall include:
(1) the name of the charitable organization for which the charitable
solicitation is made;
(2) the specific charitable purpose that is to be advanced with
charitable contributions as shown in the registration statement; and
(3) a statement that the person who solicits charitable contributions:
(i) is a paid fund-raiser; and
(ii) on request, will provide a copy of the charitable
organization's financial statement.
(d) An agreement between a professional solicitor, fund-raising counsel, or
charitable organization and a person engaged to receive or hold contributions
resulting from a professional solicitor or fund-raising counsel agreement shall be
attached to the professional solicitor or fund-raising counsel agreement filed with the
Secretary of State.
(e) An agreement between a charitable organization and a fund-raising
counsel or professional solicitor may not contain a provision that states:

(1) that the charitable organization may not use contributions from
a solicitation for its charitable purposes until some or all fund-raising expenses have
been paid; or
(2) that the professional solicitor or fund-raising counsel may engage
in a direct mail or other solicitation in the charity's name for the purpose of paying
or offsetting preexisting fund-raising expenses.

‹ Prev All Maryland sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.