Loading organization details...
Loading organization details...
Source: IRS e-Filed Form 990 (from the IRS e-File system), Tax Year 2023
Total Revenue
▼$216.2K
Program Spending
94%
of total expenses go to program services
Total Contributions
$200.1K
Total Expenses
▼$176.6K
Total Assets
$263.4K
Total Liabilities
▼$41.3K
Net Assets
$222.2K
Officer Compensation
→$72K
Other Salaries
$58.4K
Investment Income
$7,867
Fundraising
▼$9,097
Source: USAspending.gov · Searched by organization name
Total Federal Funding
$2M
Awards Found
7
| Awarding Agency | Description | Amount | Fiscal Year | Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Department of Health and Human Services | DRUG FREE COMMUNITIES POSITIVE COMMUNITY NORM CAMPAIGN | $750K | FY2010 | Sep 2010 – Sep 2020 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | ELIZABETHTOWN AREA YOUTH ALLIANCE | $375K | FY2015 | Sep 2015 – Sep 2020 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | CARA GRANT DIRECTED AT YOUTH OPIOID USE - ELIZABETHTOWN AREA COMMUNITIES THAT CARE (EACTC) HAS SERVED THE ELIZABETHTOWN COMMUNITY FOR 20 YEARS, DEVELOPING PARTNERSHIPS THROUGHOUT THE IMMEDIATE COMMUNITY AND THE COUNTY. EACTC IS COMPLETING ITS 10TH YEAR AS A DFC GRANTEE AND ITS 3RD YEAR AS A CARA GRANTEE. LOCATED IN THE NORTHWESTERN CORNER OF LANCASTER COUNTY, ELIZABETHTOWN?S DISTANCE FROM THE LANCASTER COUNTY SEAT AND ITS RURAL NATURE POSE CHALLENGES TO COMMUNITY MEMBERS IN ACCESSING CRITICAL SOCIAL SERVICES. AS A RESULT OF LACK OF ACCESS TO AND PRESENCE OF SERVICES IN ELIZABETHTOWN, COMMUNITY-WIDE HEALTH DISPARITIES HAVE DEVELOPED. PA RANKS 4TH IN FATAL OVERDOSES NATIONALLY AND THE ADULT FATAL OVERDOSE DEATHS IN ELIZABETHTOWN DOUBLED IN 2020 FROM 2019. YOUTH PROBLEM BEHAVIORS RELATED TO SUBSTANCE USE AND ABUSE ARE PRESENT IN THE ELIZABETHTOWN COMMUNITY. SIGNIFICANT STIGMA AROUND OPIOID AND HEROIN USE PERSISTS AS DOES STIGMA AROUND THE PROVISION OF NALOXONE. STUDENTS ARE ABUSING PRESCRIPTION DRUGS AT RATES THAT EXCEED COUNTY AND STATE BENCHMARKS AND THERE ARE GAPS IN STUDENT PERCEPTION ON THE RISKINESS OF PRESCRIPTION PAIN RELIEVER ABUSE. TEENS INDICATE THAT PARENTAL STIGMA AND SHAME IS THE LARGEST BARRIER TO TREATMENT. STUDENT DRUG USE IS INEXTRICABLY LINKED TO MENTAL HEALTH CONCERNS. ELIZABETHTOWN STUDENTS THAT REPORT HIGH DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS ARE 5.6 TIMES MORE LIKELY TO USE MARIJUANA. ELIZABETHTOWN DATA INDICATES THAT STUDENTS WHO HAVE ABUSED PRESCRIPTION PAIN MEDICATIONS ARE ALSO FREQUENTLY USING MARIJUANA. 70% OF 10TH GRADE STUDENTS AND 46% OF 12TH GRADE STUDENTS THAT ABUSED PRESCRIPTION PAIN RELIEVERS ALSO REPORT USING MARIJUANA 40 OR MORE TIMES IN THEIR LIFETIMES.EACTC PLANS TO UTILIZE STRATEGIES TO PREVENT OPIOID AND PRESCRIPTION DRUG USE AMONG YOUTH, TO CHANGE THE CULTURE REGARDING THE ACCEPTABILITY OF YOUTH MISUSE, AND DECREASE THE AVAILABILITY OF PRESCRIPTION PAIN RELIEVERS WITHIN THE COMMUNITY. -EACTC WILL IMPLEMENT A TARGETED YOUTH AND PARENT SOCIAL NORMS CAMPAIGNS TO DECR EASE STUDENT MISPERCEPTIONS OF PRESCRIPTION DRUG ABUSE AND TARGET MISPERCEPTIONS ON TREATMENT. -EACTC WILL USE NATIONAL PRESCRIPTION DRUG TAKE BACK EVENTS TO DISTRIBUTE INFORMATION, EDUCATE COMMUNITY MEMBERS ABOUT SAFE STORAGE PRACTICES, OFFER NALOXONE KITS AND TRAINING, DISTRIBUTE PRESCRIPTION DRUG LOCK BOXES AND DETERRA THROUGHOUT THE COMMUNITY.-TARGETED NALOXONE DISTRIBUTION TO PARENTS AND INDIVIDUALS IN RECOVERY/ADDICTION-EACTC WILL WORK WITH THE HEALTH TEACHERS TO PROVIDE RESOURCES AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE ON BEST PRACTICE MATERIALS FOR THE MIDDLE SCHOOL AND HIGH SCHOOL CURRICULA.-EACTC WILL PROVIDE MULTIPLE MENTOR PROGRAMS FOR STUDENTS IN GRADES K-12-EACTC?S YOUTH COALITION WILL CONTINUE TO PROMOTE MENTAL HEALTH WORKSHOPS AND EXPAND THESE WORKSHOPS TO BECOME COMPONENTS OF THE 9TH GRADE HEALTH CURRICULUM-EACTC WILL WORK TO CHANGE CONSEQUENCES FOR YOUTH THROUGH MONTHLY AND ANNUAL STUDENT RECOGNITION PROGRAMS THAT ACKNOWLEDGE POSITIVE BEHAVIORS AND HEALTHY CHOICES. -SUPPORT AND PROMOTE MULTIDISCIPLINARY COMMUNITY RESOURCE PROGRAM AND TREATMENT OPTIONS FOR INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILIES AFFECTED BY OPIOID ADDICTION-EACTC WILL PROVIDE BEST PRACTICE POLICIES ON DRUG POSSESSION/USE TO THE SCHOOL DISTRICT AND LOCAL RESOURCES FOR STUDENTS, PARENTS, AND FAMILIES STRUGGLING WITH PRESCRIPTION DRUG USE/ABUSE ON LOCAL TREATMENT OPTIONS. -CONTRIBUTE TO STATE-WIDE ADVOCACY THROUGH THE COMMONWEALTH PREVENTION ALLIANCE RELATED TO DRUG LAWS AND OPIOID MANUFACTURER SETTLEMENT ALLOCATIONS-EACTC WILL CONNECT WITH COUNTY PARTNERS AND SERVICE PROVIDERS TO BRING THREE NEW SERVICES/INITIATIVES/RESOURCES DIRECTLY TO ELIZABETHTOWN TO ADDRESS COMMUNITY HEALTH DISPARITIES RESULTING DIRECTLY FROM OPIOID ABUSE. | $250K | FY2021 | Jul 2021 – Jun 2026 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | ELIZABETHTOWN AREA YOUTH ALLIANCE | $250K | FY2015 | Sep 2015 – Sep 2020 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | EACTC STOP ACT GRANT 2023 - ELIZABETHTOWN AREA COMMUNITIES THAT CARE (EACTC) HAS SERVED THE ELIZABETHTOWN COMMUNITY FOR 24 YEARS, DEVELOPING PARTNERSHIPS THROUGHOUT THE IMMEDIATE COMMUNITY AND THE COUNTY. LOCATED IN THE NORTHWESTERN CORNER OF LANCASTER COUNTY, ELIZABETHTOWN’S DISTANCE FROM THE LANCASTER COUNTY SEAT AND ITS RURAL NATURE POSE CHALLENGES TO COMMUNITY MEMBERS IN ACCESSING CRITICAL SOCIAL SERVICES. AS A RESULT OF LACK OF ACCESS TO AND PRESENCE OF SERVICES IN ELIZABETHTOWN, COMMUNITY-WIDE HEALTH DISPARITIES HAVE DEVELOPED. IN IMPLEMENTING THE COMMUNITIES THAT CARE (CTC) RESEARCH-BASED PROCESS OF COMMUNITY CHANGE, ELIZABETHTOWN HAS DEVELOPED A WELL-ESTABLISHED, BROAD-BASED COALITION OF KEY LEADERS AND STAKEHOLDERS THAT REGULARLY COLLECT LOCAL DATA ON RISK/PROTECTIVE FACTORS AND SUPPORT THE IMPLEMENTATION OF STRATEGIES AND PROGRAMS THAT REDUCE ADOLESCENT BEHAVIORAL PROBLEMS. EACTC PLANS TO UTILIZE THE STRATEGIES AND COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIPS THAT HAVE BEEN DEVELOPED OVER THE COALITION’S TWENTY-FOUR YEAR HISTORY TO PREVENT AND REDUCE ALCOHOL USE AMONG YOUTH AND TO CHANGE THE CULTURE REGARDING THE ACCEPTABILITY OF YOUTH USE. EACTC WILL ENGAGE MORE COALITION MEMBERS, PARENTS, AND COMMUNITY PARTNERS THAT ARE RACIALLY AND ETHNICALLY DIVERSE IN DEVELOPING AN ACTION PLAN USING THE SPF TO ENHANCE PREVENTION INITIATIVES AND IMPLEMENT CULTURALLY RESPONSIVE STRATEGIES. EACTC WILL ENHANCE PROGRAMS/MATERIALS TO ADDRESS THE NEEDS OF DIVERSE YOUTH USING AN EVIDENCE-BASED SOCIAL NORMS CAMPAIGN MODEL (MONTANA STATE POSITIVE CULTURAL NORMS FRAMEWORK), ENGAGE IN TOWN HALL STYLE MEETINGS WITH YOUTH AND ADULTS (SAMHSA COMMUNITIES TALK), COORDINATE WITH PARTNERS FOSTERING INTERGOVERNMENTAL COLLABORATIONS INCLUDING THE ELIZABETHTOWN MAGISTERIAL COURT, NATIONAL GUARD COUNTERDRUG TASK FORCE, LANCASTER COUNTY DRUG AND ALCOHOL COMMISSION, AND MULTIPLE POLICE JURISDICTIONS ON THE ISSUE OF ALCOHOL USE AMONG YOUTH AND YOUNG ADULTS, INCREASE DIVERSE STUDENT PARTICIPATION IN EACTC PROGRAMS AND IN STUDENT LEADERSHIP ROLES BY 20%, DISSEMINATE STATE OF THE ART MATERIALS THROUGH A COMMUNITY EDUCATION CAMPAIGN (SAMHSA TALK. THEY HEAR YOU), EXPAND THE FOCUS OF THE POSITIVE SOCIAL NORMS CAMPAIGN TO INCLUDE MESSAGING THAT HAS BEEN PILOT TESTED WITH DIVERSE AUDIENCES TO VET MESSAGES AND VISUALS TO ENSURE THAT HEALTH MESSAGES REPRESENT AND APPEAL TO A WIDE VARIETY OF STUDENTS (INCLUDING BIPOC STUDENTS), AND LAUNCH A NEW RESEARCH AND EVIDENCE INFORMED PROGRAM FOR COURT INVOLVED YOUTH (SAFE PROJECT CONNECTIONS PROGRAM). THIS PROJECT WILL DRAMATICALLY INCREASE THE COALITION’S EFFECTIVENESS AT ADDRESSING UNDERAGE DRINKING IN THE COMMUNITY THROUGH A MORE CULTURALLY CONSCIOUS AND RESPONSIVE APPROACH. | $180K | FY2023 | Sep 2023 – Sep 2027 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | COMMUNITY BASED COALITION ENHANCEMENT GRANTS TO ASSESS LOCAL DRUG CRISIS | $150K | FY2018 | Jul 2018 – Jun 2021 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | CDC-RFA-CE21-2106 | $0 | FY2018 | Jul 2018 – Jun 2021 |
Department of Health and Human Services
$750K
DRUG FREE COMMUNITIES POSITIVE COMMUNITY NORM CAMPAIGN
Department of Health and Human Services
$375K
ELIZABETHTOWN AREA YOUTH ALLIANCE
Department of Health and Human Services
$250K
CARA GRANT DIRECTED AT YOUTH OPIOID USE - ELIZABETHTOWN AREA COMMUNITIES THAT CARE (EACTC) HAS SERVED THE ELIZABETHTOWN COMMUNITY FOR 20 YEARS, DEVELOPING PARTNERSHIPS THROUGHOUT THE IMMEDIATE COMMUNITY AND THE COUNTY. EACTC IS COMPLETING ITS 10TH YEAR AS A DFC GRANTEE AND ITS 3RD YEAR AS A CARA GRANTEE. LOCATED IN THE NORTHWESTERN CORNER OF LANCASTER COUNTY, ELIZABETHTOWN?S DISTANCE FROM THE LANCASTER COUNTY SEAT AND ITS RURAL NATURE POSE CHALLENGES TO COMMUNITY MEMBERS IN ACCESSING CRITICAL SOCIAL SERVICES. AS A RESULT OF LACK OF ACCESS TO AND PRESENCE OF SERVICES IN ELIZABETHTOWN, COMMUNITY-WIDE HEALTH DISPARITIES HAVE DEVELOPED. PA RANKS 4TH IN FATAL OVERDOSES NATIONALLY AND THE ADULT FATAL OVERDOSE DEATHS IN ELIZABETHTOWN DOUBLED IN 2020 FROM 2019. YOUTH PROBLEM BEHAVIORS RELATED TO SUBSTANCE USE AND ABUSE ARE PRESENT IN THE ELIZABETHTOWN COMMUNITY. SIGNIFICANT STIGMA AROUND OPIOID AND HEROIN USE PERSISTS AS DOES STIGMA AROUND THE PROVISION OF NALOXONE. STUDENTS ARE ABUSING PRESCRIPTION DRUGS AT RATES THAT EXCEED COUNTY AND STATE BENCHMARKS AND THERE ARE GAPS IN STUDENT PERCEPTION ON THE RISKINESS OF PRESCRIPTION PAIN RELIEVER ABUSE. TEENS INDICATE THAT PARENTAL STIGMA AND SHAME IS THE LARGEST BARRIER TO TREATMENT. STUDENT DRUG USE IS INEXTRICABLY LINKED TO MENTAL HEALTH CONCERNS. ELIZABETHTOWN STUDENTS THAT REPORT HIGH DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS ARE 5.6 TIMES MORE LIKELY TO USE MARIJUANA. ELIZABETHTOWN DATA INDICATES THAT STUDENTS WHO HAVE ABUSED PRESCRIPTION PAIN MEDICATIONS ARE ALSO FREQUENTLY USING MARIJUANA. 70% OF 10TH GRADE STUDENTS AND 46% OF 12TH GRADE STUDENTS THAT ABUSED PRESCRIPTION PAIN RELIEVERS ALSO REPORT USING MARIJUANA 40 OR MORE TIMES IN THEIR LIFETIMES.EACTC PLANS TO UTILIZE STRATEGIES TO PREVENT OPIOID AND PRESCRIPTION DRUG USE AMONG YOUTH, TO CHANGE THE CULTURE REGARDING THE ACCEPTABILITY OF YOUTH MISUSE, AND DECREASE THE AVAILABILITY OF PRESCRIPTION PAIN RELIEVERS WITHIN THE COMMUNITY. -EACTC WILL IMPLEMENT A TARGETED YOUTH AND PARENT SOCIAL NORMS CAMPAIGNS TO DECR EASE STUDENT MISPERCEPTIONS OF PRESCRIPTION DRUG ABUSE AND TARGET MISPERCEPTIONS ON TREATMENT. -EACTC WILL USE NATIONAL PRESCRIPTION DRUG TAKE BACK EVENTS TO DISTRIBUTE INFORMATION, EDUCATE COMMUNITY MEMBERS ABOUT SAFE STORAGE PRACTICES, OFFER NALOXONE KITS AND TRAINING, DISTRIBUTE PRESCRIPTION DRUG LOCK BOXES AND DETERRA THROUGHOUT THE COMMUNITY.-TARGETED NALOXONE DISTRIBUTION TO PARENTS AND INDIVIDUALS IN RECOVERY/ADDICTION-EACTC WILL WORK WITH THE HEALTH TEACHERS TO PROVIDE RESOURCES AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE ON BEST PRACTICE MATERIALS FOR THE MIDDLE SCHOOL AND HIGH SCHOOL CURRICULA.-EACTC WILL PROVIDE MULTIPLE MENTOR PROGRAMS FOR STUDENTS IN GRADES K-12-EACTC?S YOUTH COALITION WILL CONTINUE TO PROMOTE MENTAL HEALTH WORKSHOPS AND EXPAND THESE WORKSHOPS TO BECOME COMPONENTS OF THE 9TH GRADE HEALTH CURRICULUM-EACTC WILL WORK TO CHANGE CONSEQUENCES FOR YOUTH THROUGH MONTHLY AND ANNUAL STUDENT RECOGNITION PROGRAMS THAT ACKNOWLEDGE POSITIVE BEHAVIORS AND HEALTHY CHOICES. -SUPPORT AND PROMOTE MULTIDISCIPLINARY COMMUNITY RESOURCE PROGRAM AND TREATMENT OPTIONS FOR INDIVIDUALS AND FAMILIES AFFECTED BY OPIOID ADDICTION-EACTC WILL PROVIDE BEST PRACTICE POLICIES ON DRUG POSSESSION/USE TO THE SCHOOL DISTRICT AND LOCAL RESOURCES FOR STUDENTS, PARENTS, AND FAMILIES STRUGGLING WITH PRESCRIPTION DRUG USE/ABUSE ON LOCAL TREATMENT OPTIONS. -CONTRIBUTE TO STATE-WIDE ADVOCACY THROUGH THE COMMONWEALTH PREVENTION ALLIANCE RELATED TO DRUG LAWS AND OPIOID MANUFACTURER SETTLEMENT ALLOCATIONS-EACTC WILL CONNECT WITH COUNTY PARTNERS AND SERVICE PROVIDERS TO BRING THREE NEW SERVICES/INITIATIVES/RESOURCES DIRECTLY TO ELIZABETHTOWN TO ADDRESS COMMUNITY HEALTH DISPARITIES RESULTING DIRECTLY FROM OPIOID ABUSE.
Department of Health and Human Services
$250K
ELIZABETHTOWN AREA YOUTH ALLIANCE
Department of Health and Human Services
$180K
EACTC STOP ACT GRANT 2023 - ELIZABETHTOWN AREA COMMUNITIES THAT CARE (EACTC) HAS SERVED THE ELIZABETHTOWN COMMUNITY FOR 24 YEARS, DEVELOPING PARTNERSHIPS THROUGHOUT THE IMMEDIATE COMMUNITY AND THE COUNTY. LOCATED IN THE NORTHWESTERN CORNER OF LANCASTER COUNTY, ELIZABETHTOWN’S DISTANCE FROM THE LANCASTER COUNTY SEAT AND ITS RURAL NATURE POSE CHALLENGES TO COMMUNITY MEMBERS IN ACCESSING CRITICAL SOCIAL SERVICES. AS A RESULT OF LACK OF ACCESS TO AND PRESENCE OF SERVICES IN ELIZABETHTOWN, COMMUNITY-WIDE HEALTH DISPARITIES HAVE DEVELOPED. IN IMPLEMENTING THE COMMUNITIES THAT CARE (CTC) RESEARCH-BASED PROCESS OF COMMUNITY CHANGE, ELIZABETHTOWN HAS DEVELOPED A WELL-ESTABLISHED, BROAD-BASED COALITION OF KEY LEADERS AND STAKEHOLDERS THAT REGULARLY COLLECT LOCAL DATA ON RISK/PROTECTIVE FACTORS AND SUPPORT THE IMPLEMENTATION OF STRATEGIES AND PROGRAMS THAT REDUCE ADOLESCENT BEHAVIORAL PROBLEMS. EACTC PLANS TO UTILIZE THE STRATEGIES AND COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIPS THAT HAVE BEEN DEVELOPED OVER THE COALITION’S TWENTY-FOUR YEAR HISTORY TO PREVENT AND REDUCE ALCOHOL USE AMONG YOUTH AND TO CHANGE THE CULTURE REGARDING THE ACCEPTABILITY OF YOUTH USE. EACTC WILL ENGAGE MORE COALITION MEMBERS, PARENTS, AND COMMUNITY PARTNERS THAT ARE RACIALLY AND ETHNICALLY DIVERSE IN DEVELOPING AN ACTION PLAN USING THE SPF TO ENHANCE PREVENTION INITIATIVES AND IMPLEMENT CULTURALLY RESPONSIVE STRATEGIES. EACTC WILL ENHANCE PROGRAMS/MATERIALS TO ADDRESS THE NEEDS OF DIVERSE YOUTH USING AN EVIDENCE-BASED SOCIAL NORMS CAMPAIGN MODEL (MONTANA STATE POSITIVE CULTURAL NORMS FRAMEWORK), ENGAGE IN TOWN HALL STYLE MEETINGS WITH YOUTH AND ADULTS (SAMHSA COMMUNITIES TALK), COORDINATE WITH PARTNERS FOSTERING INTERGOVERNMENTAL COLLABORATIONS INCLUDING THE ELIZABETHTOWN MAGISTERIAL COURT, NATIONAL GUARD COUNTERDRUG TASK FORCE, LANCASTER COUNTY DRUG AND ALCOHOL COMMISSION, AND MULTIPLE POLICE JURISDICTIONS ON THE ISSUE OF ALCOHOL USE AMONG YOUTH AND YOUNG ADULTS, INCREASE DIVERSE STUDENT PARTICIPATION IN EACTC PROGRAMS AND IN STUDENT LEADERSHIP ROLES BY 20%, DISSEMINATE STATE OF THE ART MATERIALS THROUGH A COMMUNITY EDUCATION CAMPAIGN (SAMHSA TALK. THEY HEAR YOU), EXPAND THE FOCUS OF THE POSITIVE SOCIAL NORMS CAMPAIGN TO INCLUDE MESSAGING THAT HAS BEEN PILOT TESTED WITH DIVERSE AUDIENCES TO VET MESSAGES AND VISUALS TO ENSURE THAT HEALTH MESSAGES REPRESENT AND APPEAL TO A WIDE VARIETY OF STUDENTS (INCLUDING BIPOC STUDENTS), AND LAUNCH A NEW RESEARCH AND EVIDENCE INFORMED PROGRAM FOR COURT INVOLVED YOUTH (SAFE PROJECT CONNECTIONS PROGRAM). THIS PROJECT WILL DRAMATICALLY INCREASE THE COALITION’S EFFECTIVENESS AT ADDRESSING UNDERAGE DRINKING IN THE COMMUNITY THROUGH A MORE CULTURALLY CONSCIOUS AND RESPONSIVE APPROACH.
Department of Health and Human Services
$150K
COMMUNITY BASED COALITION ENHANCEMENT GRANTS TO ASSESS LOCAL DRUG CRISIS
Department of Health and Human Services
$0
CDC-RFA-CE21-2106
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.
Tax Year 2024 · Source: IRS e-Filed Form 990
Individuals serving as officers, directors, or trustees of the organization.
| Name | Title | Hrs/Wk | Compensation | Related Orgs | Other |
|---|
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 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2023IRS e-File | $216.2K | $200.1K | $176.6K | $263.4K | $222.2K |
| 2022 | $217.9K | $217.5K | $165.3K | $285.8K | $222.2K |
| 2021 | $199.2K | $199.2K | $159.4K | $234.6K | $169.5K |
| 2020 | $197.2K | $197K |
Sources: ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer & IRS e-File Index
| Tax Year | Form Type | Source | Documents |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 990 | IRS e-File | PDF not yet published by IRSView Filing → |
| 2024 | 990 | IRS e-File | PDF not yet published by IRSView Filing → |
| 2023 | 990 | DataIRS e-File |
Financial data: IRS e-Filed Form 990 (Tax Year 2023)
Leadership & compensation: IRS e-Filed Form 990, Part VII (Tax Year 2024)
Federal grants: USAspending.gov (live)
Organization info: IRS Business Master File
Tax-deductibility: IRS Publication 78
| Total |
|---|
| Caroline Lalvani | Treasurer | 1.5 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Jonathan Woodall | President | 1.5 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
Caroline Lalvani
Treasurer
$0
Hrs/Wk
1.5
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Jonathan Woodall
President
$0
Hrs/Wk
1.5
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Members of the governing board. Board members often serve without compensation.
| Name | Title | Hrs/Wk | Compensation | Related Orgs | Other | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Debra Dupler | Director | 1 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Gail Viscome | Executive Di | 40 | $72K | $0 | $0 | $72K |
| Jacob Kadilak | Director | 1 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Missy Hartman | Director | 1 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Rose Snyder | Director | 1 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
Debra Dupler
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
1
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Gail Viscome
Executive Di
$72K
Hrs/Wk
40
Compensation
$72K
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Jacob Kadilak
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
1
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
| $187.1K |
| $284.8K |
| $129.7K |
| 2019 | $239.9K | $239.8K | $225.5K | $135.5K | $119.6K |
| 2018 | $199.2K | — | $192.8K | $117.3K | — |
| 2017 | $162.1K | — | $156.9K | $105K | — |
| 2016 | $200K | — | $189.9K | $100.1K | — |
| 2015 | $154.6K | — | $147.2K | $88.7K | — |
| 2014 | $168.2K | — | $148.6K | $77.4K | — |
| 2013 | $191.1K | — | $188.1K | $64.5K | — |
| 2012 | $155.1K | — | $163.3K | $56.2K | — |
| 2011 | $117.8K | — | $127.2K | $78.9K | — |
| 2022 | 990 | Data |
| 2021 | 990 | Data |
| 2020 | 990 | Data |
| 2019 | 990 | Data |
| 2018 | 990-EZ | Data |
| 2017 | 990-EZ | Data |
| 2016 | 990-EZ | Data |
| 2015 | 990-EZ | Data |
| 2014 | 990-EZ | Data |
| 2013 | 990-EZ | Data |
| 2012 | 990-EZ | Data |
| 2011 | 990-EZ | Data |
| 2010 | 990-EZ | — |
| 2009 | 990-EZ | — |
| 2008 | 990 | — |
| 2007 | 990 | — |
Missy Hartman
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
1
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Rose Snyder
Director
$0
Hrs/Wk
1
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0