Ill. Admin. Code tit. 86, § 1050.350
b) No qualified community foundation shall issue a certificate of receipt for a contribution made by a taxpayer unless the taxpayer has been issued a contribution authorization certificate by the Department and the qualified community foundation has received a copy of the contribution authorization certificate. The contribution must be made by the person whose name appears on the contribution authorization certificate. If a check or credit card is used to make a contribution, the name that appears on the check or credit card must be the name of the person whose name appears on the contribution authorization certificate. If a contribution is made using stock or negotiable securities, the stock or negotiable securities must be in the name of, or held in the name of, the person whose name appears on the contribution authorization certificate.
EXAMPLE 1: Individual A is the beneficiary of a trust. The trust obtains a contribution authorization certificate from the Department. Individual A instructs the trust to make a contribution to a qualified community foundation in the amount of $1,000. The qualified community foundation must issue the certificate of receipt in the name of the trust.
EXAMPLE 2: Individual A is the beneficiary of a trust. Individual A obtains a contribution authorization certificate from the Department. The trust makes a contribution to a qualified community foundation in the amount of $1,000. The qualified community foundation shall not issue a certificate of receipt to the trust because the contribution authorization certificate is in the name of Individual A. The qualified community foundation shall not issue the certificate of receipt to Individual A because the contribution was made by the trust. The individual must make the contribution to receive the certificate of receipt.
d) If a taxpayer fails to make all or a portion of a contribution within the timeframe by which such authorized contribution is required to be made, as provided in Section 1050.250, the taxpayer shall not be entitled to a certificate of receipt for that portion of the authorized contribution not made.
EXAMPLE: A contribution authorization certificate in the amount of $1000 is issued by the Department to the taxpayer on April 1. The taxpayer has 10 business days from the date of the contribution authorization certificate to make the authorized contribution. On April 7, the taxpayer sends the contribution authorization certificate and a check in the amount of $500 to the qualified community foundation. The qualified community foundation receives the check on April 9. The qualified community foundation must provide a certificate of receipt to the taxpayer in the amount of $500 no later than May 21 (excluding weekends). On April 16, the taxpayer sends another check in the amount of $250 to the qualified community foundation. The qualified community foundation cannot issue the taxpayer a certificate of receipt for the $250 contribution because the payment was made more than 10 business days after the issuance of the contribution authorization certificate.
e) Each certificate of receipt shall state:
6) the total qualified contribution amount; and
6) the issuing qualified community foundation's name and address; and
h) Taxpayers may make, and qualified community foundations may receive, contributions in the form of cash, real property, stocks, and negotiable securities.