Loading organization details...
Loading organization details...
Source: IRS Form 990 via ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Total Revenue
▼$2.6M
Total Contributions
$2.3M
Total Expenses
▼$1.4M
Total Assets
$19M
Total Liabilities
▼$68.8K
Net Assets
$18.9M
Officer Compensation
→$0
Other Salaries
$482.9K
Investment Income
▼$376.8K
Fundraising
▼$0
Source: USAspending.gov · Searched by organization name
Total Federal Funding
$3.1M
Awards Found
16
| Awarding Agency | Description | Amount | Fiscal Year | Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Department of Health and Human Services | COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING/CONGRESSIONALLY DIRECTED SPENDING - CONSTRUCTION | $750K | FY2023 | Sep 2023 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | ADULT & TEEN CHALLENGE USA ? ADDICTION RECOVERY 2.0 - TRANSFORMING LIVES WITH TECHNOLOGY - ADULT AND TEEN CHALLENGE USA (ATC), AS THE LEAD PROJECT AGENCY, IS REQUESTING FUNDING TO UTILIZE TECHNOLOGY DESIGNED BY SOBER PEER. THIS PROJECT IS DESIGNED TO ADDRESS THE COMPLEXITIES OF PROVIDING SUBSTANCE ABUSE DISORDER TREATMENT AND RECOVERY SERVICES THROUGH THE USE OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY, ENCOURAGING A DEEPER UNDERSTANDING OF COGNITIVE BEHAVIOR TO ALLOW RECOVERY PROGRAMS TO MOVE BEYOND EPISODIC HEALTH CARE TO CONTINUOUS, VALUE-BASED CARE FOR MORE EFFECTIVE OUTCOMES. THE PROJECT RECOGNIZES COMPLEX COGNITIVE AND BEHAVIORAL PATTERNS BY USING ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IN A MOBILE HEALTH ENVIRONMENT TO MAKE ASSESSMENTS OF BEHAVIOR MORE PRACTICAL AND AVAILABLE TO A DIGITALLY CONNECTED, UNREACHED POPULATION IN NEED; USES REAL WORLD EVIDENCE PROVEN TO ENCOURAGE SUBSTANCE ABUSERS TO BE HIGHLY INVOLVED IN THEIR OUTCOMES BY EXPLORING HOW PATTERNS OF NEGATIVE BEHAVIOR CAN BE MATHEMATICALLY IDENTIFIED AND CLINICALLY APPLIED TO DISRUPT SUCH BEHAVIORS ASSOCIATED WITH POOR RECOVERY OUTCOMES; SERVES AS A PRECURSOR FOR PRESCRIPTIVE THERAPY WHERE MEASURES CAN BE CLINICALLY APPLIED TO IMPROVE OUTCOMES; AND UNITES ADDICTION SERVICES FIELD AND HEALTHCARE TO BETTER UNDERSTAND HOW TO BEST MEET THE NEEDS OF AN INDIVIDUAL, ESPECIALLY THOSE NEEDING ADDICTION TREATMENT WHO HAVE NOT YET ENGAGED WITH SPECIALTY SERVICES TO ADDRESS THEIR NEEDS. THE PROJECT WILL BE IMPLEMENTED IN 75 RESIDENTIAL RECOVERY FACILITIES IN THE UNITED STATES (IN THREE COHORTS OVER THE COURSE OF 12 MONTHS) THAT COLLECTIVELY SERVE APPROXIMATELY 1500 ANNUALLY. THE PROJECT SEEKS TO: (1) TRANSFORM THE CURRENT BEHAVIORAL HEALTH RECOVERY MODEL FROM A SERVICE BASED PROVIDER APPROACH TO CLIENT RECOVERY GOALS AND INTERVENTIONS TO A CLIENT CENTERED APPROACH BASED ON SELF REPORTED NEEDS, EMPOWERING THOSE IN RECOVERY WITH THE KNOWLEDGE AND TOOLS TO REDUCE RECIDIVISM; (2) IMPLEMENT TECHNOLOGY THAT CAN INFORM THE DEVELOPMENT OF INNOVATIONS WITHIN COMMUNITY BASED ORGANIZATIONS AND PROVIDERS TO ADVANCE RECOVERY OUTCOMES; AND (3) OBTAIN HIGH LEVEL, BASELINE DATA THAT IDENTIFIES PARTICIPANT NEEDS, ALLOWING ATC STAFF TO BETTER SUPPORT LONG TERM RECOVERY OUTCOMES. PRIMARY PROJECT OUTCOMES INCLUDE: (1) IMPROVING LONG-TERM PARTICIPANT OUTCOMES THAT HELP CURB THE COST ASSOCIATED WITH REPEAT CRISIS CARE; (2) REDUCING RECIDIVISM AMONG PROJECT PARTICIPANTS; (3) COLLECTING PARTICIPANT BEHAVIORAL RATING SCORES OVER THE COURSE OF PARTICIPATION IN THE ATC RESIDENTIAL PROGRAM PROVIDING BASELINE MEASURES FOR FUTURE ASSESSMENT AND SUPPORT; AND (4) EXPANDING ATC ORGANIZATIONAL LONG TERM SUPPORT SERVICES INCREASING THE NUMBERS SERVED BY ATC. | $464.4K | FY2022 | Sep 2022 – Sep 2023 |
| Department of Justice | MINNESOTA TEEN CHALLENGE DRUG AND ALCOHOL PREVENTION PROGRAM - KNOW THE TRUTH | $400K | FY2010 | Oct 2009 – Sep 2012 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | THE RAMSEY COUNTY OPIOID PREVENTION AND UNIFIED SERVICES COALITION | $375K | FY2020 | Dec 2019 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | THE RAMSEY COUNTY OPIOID PREVENTION AND UNIFIED SERVICES COALITION | $250K | FY2020 | Dec 2019 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Justice | KNOW THE TRUTH- MN TEEN CHALLENGE'S TEENAGE DRUG AND ALCOHOL PREVENTION EDUCATION PROGRAM FOR SCHOOLS AND COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS | $223.6K | FY2008 | Jul 2008 – Aug 2010 |
| Department of Justice | NEW HOPE ACADEMY EXPANSION OF DRUG TREATMENT TO LOW-INCOME FAMILIES | $201.2K | FY2008 | Aug 2008 – Jan 2010 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | EXPANSION OF AVAILABLE COMMUNITY BASED SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT SERVICES | $95.3K | FY2008 | Sep 2008 – Sep 2009 |
| Department of Justice | TRANSITION TO EDUCATION AND COMMUNITY PROGRAM | $89.4K | FY2008 | Jul 2008 – Nov 2009 |
| Department of Justice | PREVENTION OUTREACH PROGRAM | $50K | FY2010 | Oct 2009 – Sep 2010 |
| Department of Justice | NEW HOPE ACADEMY DRUG PROOF YOUR KIDS COMMUNITY OUTREACH | $50K | FY2010 | Oct 2009 – Sep 2010 |
| Department of Justice | ALBANY NY TEEN CHALLENGE AT RISK YOUTH DRUG PREVENTION OUTREACHES | $44.7K | FY2008 | Jun 2008 – May 2009 |
| Department of State | ANTI-DRUG AWARENESS PROGRAM IN EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS & COMMUNITIES IN PUNJAB PROVINCE, PAKISTAN | $34.9K | FY2014 | Dec 2013 – Dec 2014 |
| Department of Agriculture | COMMUNITY FACILITIES LOANS AND GRANTS - ARRA | $26.9K | FY2010 | Mar 2010 – Mar 2010 |
| Department of Justice | PRE-EMPLOYMENT PREPARATION PROGRAM | $25K | FY2010 | Sep 2010 – Aug 2011 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | EDI SPECIAL PROJECTS | $0 | FY2009 | Oct 2008 – Aug 2009 |
Department of Health and Human Services
$750K
COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING/CONGRESSIONALLY DIRECTED SPENDING - CONSTRUCTION
Department of Health and Human Services
$464.4K
ADULT & TEEN CHALLENGE USA ? ADDICTION RECOVERY 2.0 - TRANSFORMING LIVES WITH TECHNOLOGY - ADULT AND TEEN CHALLENGE USA (ATC), AS THE LEAD PROJECT AGENCY, IS REQUESTING FUNDING TO UTILIZE TECHNOLOGY DESIGNED BY SOBER PEER. THIS PROJECT IS DESIGNED TO ADDRESS THE COMPLEXITIES OF PROVIDING SUBSTANCE ABUSE DISORDER TREATMENT AND RECOVERY SERVICES THROUGH THE USE OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY, ENCOURAGING A DEEPER UNDERSTANDING OF COGNITIVE BEHAVIOR TO ALLOW RECOVERY PROGRAMS TO MOVE BEYOND EPISODIC HEALTH CARE TO CONTINUOUS, VALUE-BASED CARE FOR MORE EFFECTIVE OUTCOMES. THE PROJECT RECOGNIZES COMPLEX COGNITIVE AND BEHAVIORAL PATTERNS BY USING ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE IN A MOBILE HEALTH ENVIRONMENT TO MAKE ASSESSMENTS OF BEHAVIOR MORE PRACTICAL AND AVAILABLE TO A DIGITALLY CONNECTED, UNREACHED POPULATION IN NEED; USES REAL WORLD EVIDENCE PROVEN TO ENCOURAGE SUBSTANCE ABUSERS TO BE HIGHLY INVOLVED IN THEIR OUTCOMES BY EXPLORING HOW PATTERNS OF NEGATIVE BEHAVIOR CAN BE MATHEMATICALLY IDENTIFIED AND CLINICALLY APPLIED TO DISRUPT SUCH BEHAVIORS ASSOCIATED WITH POOR RECOVERY OUTCOMES; SERVES AS A PRECURSOR FOR PRESCRIPTIVE THERAPY WHERE MEASURES CAN BE CLINICALLY APPLIED TO IMPROVE OUTCOMES; AND UNITES ADDICTION SERVICES FIELD AND HEALTHCARE TO BETTER UNDERSTAND HOW TO BEST MEET THE NEEDS OF AN INDIVIDUAL, ESPECIALLY THOSE NEEDING ADDICTION TREATMENT WHO HAVE NOT YET ENGAGED WITH SPECIALTY SERVICES TO ADDRESS THEIR NEEDS. THE PROJECT WILL BE IMPLEMENTED IN 75 RESIDENTIAL RECOVERY FACILITIES IN THE UNITED STATES (IN THREE COHORTS OVER THE COURSE OF 12 MONTHS) THAT COLLECTIVELY SERVE APPROXIMATELY 1500 ANNUALLY. THE PROJECT SEEKS TO: (1) TRANSFORM THE CURRENT BEHAVIORAL HEALTH RECOVERY MODEL FROM A SERVICE BASED PROVIDER APPROACH TO CLIENT RECOVERY GOALS AND INTERVENTIONS TO A CLIENT CENTERED APPROACH BASED ON SELF REPORTED NEEDS, EMPOWERING THOSE IN RECOVERY WITH THE KNOWLEDGE AND TOOLS TO REDUCE RECIDIVISM; (2) IMPLEMENT TECHNOLOGY THAT CAN INFORM THE DEVELOPMENT OF INNOVATIONS WITHIN COMMUNITY BASED ORGANIZATIONS AND PROVIDERS TO ADVANCE RECOVERY OUTCOMES; AND (3) OBTAIN HIGH LEVEL, BASELINE DATA THAT IDENTIFIES PARTICIPANT NEEDS, ALLOWING ATC STAFF TO BETTER SUPPORT LONG TERM RECOVERY OUTCOMES. PRIMARY PROJECT OUTCOMES INCLUDE: (1) IMPROVING LONG-TERM PARTICIPANT OUTCOMES THAT HELP CURB THE COST ASSOCIATED WITH REPEAT CRISIS CARE; (2) REDUCING RECIDIVISM AMONG PROJECT PARTICIPANTS; (3) COLLECTING PARTICIPANT BEHAVIORAL RATING SCORES OVER THE COURSE OF PARTICIPATION IN THE ATC RESIDENTIAL PROGRAM PROVIDING BASELINE MEASURES FOR FUTURE ASSESSMENT AND SUPPORT; AND (4) EXPANDING ATC ORGANIZATIONAL LONG TERM SUPPORT SERVICES INCREASING THE NUMBERS SERVED BY ATC.
Department of Justice
$400K
MINNESOTA TEEN CHALLENGE DRUG AND ALCOHOL PREVENTION PROGRAM - KNOW THE TRUTH
Department of Health and Human Services
$375K
THE RAMSEY COUNTY OPIOID PREVENTION AND UNIFIED SERVICES COALITION
Department of Health and Human Services
$250K
THE RAMSEY COUNTY OPIOID PREVENTION AND UNIFIED SERVICES COALITION
Department of Justice
$223.6K
KNOW THE TRUTH- MN TEEN CHALLENGE'S TEENAGE DRUG AND ALCOHOL PREVENTION EDUCATION PROGRAM FOR SCHOOLS AND COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS
Department of Justice
$201.2K
NEW HOPE ACADEMY EXPANSION OF DRUG TREATMENT TO LOW-INCOME FAMILIES
Department of Health and Human Services
$95.3K
EXPANSION OF AVAILABLE COMMUNITY BASED SUBSTANCE ABUSE TREATMENT SERVICES
Department of Justice
$89.4K
TRANSITION TO EDUCATION AND COMMUNITY PROGRAM
Department of Justice
$50K
PREVENTION OUTREACH PROGRAM
Department of Justice
$50K
NEW HOPE ACADEMY DRUG PROOF YOUR KIDS COMMUNITY OUTREACH
Department of Justice
$44.7K
ALBANY NY TEEN CHALLENGE AT RISK YOUTH DRUG PREVENTION OUTREACHES
Department of State
$34.9K
ANTI-DRUG AWARENESS PROGRAM IN EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS & COMMUNITIES IN PUNJAB PROVINCE, PAKISTAN
Department of Agriculture
$26.9K
COMMUNITY FACILITIES LOANS AND GRANTS - ARRA
Department of Justice
$25K
PRE-EMPLOYMENT PREPARATION PROGRAM
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$0
EDI SPECIAL PROJECTS
Source: Federal Audit Clearinghouse (fac.gov)
No federal single audit records found for this organization.
Single audits are required for entities expending $750,000+ in federal awards annually.
Source: IRS e-Filed Form 990
No officer or director compensation data available for this organization.
This data is sourced from IRS Form 990, Part VII. It may not be available if the organization files Form 990-N (e-Postcard) or has not yet been enriched.
Source: IRS Publication 78, Auto-Revocation List & e-Postcard Data
Tax-deductible contributions: Yes
Deductibility code: PC
Sources: IRS e-Filed Form 990 (XML) & ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Scroll →
| Year | Revenue | Contributions | Expenses | Assets | Net Assets |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | $2.6M | $2.3M | $1.4M | $19M | $18.9M |
| 2022 | $1.1M | $794.3K | $1.5M | $17.4M | $17.3M |
| 2021 | $1.6M | $1.1M | $1.4M | $19.4M | $19.2M |
| 2020 | $1.3M | $927.2K | $1.5M | $19.3M |
Sources: ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer & IRS e-File Index
| Tax Year | Form Type | Source | Documents |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 990 | IRS e-File | PDF not yet published by IRSView Filing → |
| 2023 | 990 | DataIRS e-File | PDF not yet published by IRSView Filing → |
| 2022 | 990 | DataIRS e-File |
Financial data: IRS Form 990 via ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer (Tax Year 2023)
Federal grants: USAspending.gov (live)
Organization info: IRS Business Master File · ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Tax-deductibility: IRS Publication 78
| $19M |
| 2019 | $17.6M | $1.2M | $1.8M | $19M | $18.7M |
| 2018 | $1.5M | $1.5M | $1.8M | $3.2M | $3M |
| 2017 | $1.3M | $1.2M | $1.4M | $3.4M | $3.2M |
| 2016 | $1.1M | $1M | $1.4M | $3.5M | $3.4M |
| 2015 | $1.1M | $1.1M | $1.1M | $3.7M | $3.6M |
| 2014 | $990.5K | $878.7K | $1.2M | $3.6M | $3.6M |
| 2013 | $1.1M | $952.4K | $1.2M | $3.9M | $3.8M |
| 2012 | $1.1M | $969.8K | $1.2M | $4M | $3.9M |
| 2011 | $4.6M | $1.1M | $1.2M | $4.2M | $4M |
PDF not yet published by IRSView Filing → |
| 2021 | 990 | Data |
| 2020 | 990 | Data |
| 2019 | 990 | Data |
| 2018 | 990 | Data |
| 2017 | 990 | Data | PDF not yet published by IRS |
| 2016 | 990 | Data |
| 2015 | 990 | Data |
| 2014 | 990 | Data |
| 2013 | 990 | Data |
| 2012 | 990 | Data |
| 2011 | 990 | Data |
| 2010 | 990 | — |
| 2009 | 990 | — |
| 2008 | 990 | — |
| 2007 | 990 | — |
| 2006 | 990 | — |
| 2005 | 990 | — |
| 2004 | 990 | — |
| 2003 | 990 | — |
| 2002 | 990 | — |
| 2001 | 990 | — |