Establishing Separate Relief Association Accounts
The OSA occasionally finds that a volunteer fire relief association has commingled special and general funds into one bank account, rather than keep them in separate accounts. Fire state aid and municipal contributions must be deposited into the special fund of a relief association. Because the special fund consists of public funds and is a restricted pension fund, Minnesota law strictly limits how the funds may be invested and disbursed. Having a commingled bank account makes it difficult for a relief association to properly track its special fund assets and to ensure compliance with statutory requirements.
Each relief association should deposit fire state aid and municipal contributions into a special fund bank account that is separate from the association’s general fund bank account. Establishing separate accounts also facilitates tracking special fund assets and market values that must be reported to the OSA on annual relief association reporting forms.
In addition, if a relief association has a charitable gambling fund, the charitable gambling fund should have its own bank account that is separate from the relief association’s special fund and general fund accounts. Donations from lawful gambling cannot be used for the benefit of a pension or retirement fund.
Date this Avoiding Pitfall was most recently published: 04/08/2022