Loading organization details...
Loading organization details...
Source: IRS e-Filed Form 990 (from the IRS e-File system), Tax Year 2024
Total Revenue
▼$564.8K
Program Spending
65%
of total expenses go to program services
Total Contributions
$525.6K
Total Expenses
▼$441K
Total Assets
$428.2K
Total Liabilities
▼$11K
Net Assets
$417.2K
Officer Compensation
→$0
Other Salaries
$250.5K
Investment Income
$13
Fundraising
▼N/A
Source: USAspending.gov · Searched by organization name
Total Federal Funding
$2.2M
Awards Found
25
| Awarding Agency | Description | Amount | Fiscal Year | Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Department of Health and Human Services | AFFORDABLE CARE ACT (ACA) GRANTS FOR SCHOOL-BASED HEALTH CENTERS CAPITAL PROGRAM | $500K | FY2013 | Dec 2012 – Nov 2014 |
| Department of Education | LEA GRANTS | $331.3K | FY2009 | May 2009 – May 2010 |
| National Science Foundation | SBIR PHASE I: THE PULSAR ROCKET ENGINE; A VALVE-PULSED DETONATION ROCKET ENGINE -THE BROADER IMPACT/COMMERCIAL POTENTIAL OF THIS PHASE I SMALL BUSINESS INNOVATION RESEARCH (SBIR) PROJECT WILL BE SUBSTANTIAL. THIS NEW ADVANCED ROCKET ENGINE WITH ITS INCREASED THRUST, EFFICIENCY, AND SIMPLE DESIGN WILL SIGNIFICANTLY INCREASE SPACESHIP LAUNCH TO ORBIT CAPABILITIES AND REDUCE KILOGRAM TO ORBIT COSTS. SPACESHIP LAUNCH SIZES IN TERMS OF CARGO WEIGHT AND VOLUME WILL BE SIGNIFICANTLY INCREASED COMPARED TO THE CURRENT MOST ADVANCED ROCKET ENGINES. THE COMMERCIAL IMPACTS WILL BE SIGNIFICANT. FOR THE FIRST TIME SPACE TOURISM ON A LARGE SCALE WILL BE MADE POSSIBLE. THE GENERAL PUBLIC CAN REALISTICALLY EXPECT TO PARTICIPATE IN THE GREAT SPACE ADVENTURE THAT ONLY A RELATIVELY FEW ASTRONAUTS AND OTHER ADVENTURERS HAVE EXPERIENCED TO DATE. DREAMERS, ENTREPRENEURS, SCIENTISTS, AND THE SPACE INDUSTRY IN GENERAL USING THIS ROCKET ENGINE WILL BE ABLE TO PLAN AND ACTUALLY BUILD ORBITING ARTIFICIAL GRAVITY STRUCTURES PROVIDING MULTIPLE USES. FOR EXAMPLE, THE ENABLED SPACE INFRASTRUCTURE CAN BE UTILIZED AS ORBITING FACTORIES, HABITATS, SCIENCE PLATFORMS, BASES FOR ASTEROID MINING, AND TOURISM OPPORTUNITIES TO NAME A FEW. THE POWER AND EFFICIENCY OF THIS INNOVATIVE ROCKET ENGINE WILL ENABLE LAUNCH TO ORBIT EFFICIENCIES THAT WILL STIMULATE RAPIDLY EXPANDING SPACE BASED COMMERCIAL ACTIVITY FOR DECADES TO COME. THIS SBIR PHASE I PROJECT PROPOSES TO DEMONSTRATE THE ADVANTAGES OF USING PULSED REACTANT DETONATIONS AS A MEANS TO INCREASE ENGINE THRUST VIA THE DETONATION OF THE FUEL AND TO USE THOSE SAME REACTANT DETONATIONS TO TEMPORARILY VACATE A COMBUSTION CHAMBER BETWEEN DETONATIONS. IN A VACATED/PARTIAL VACUUM CONDITION BACKFLOW PRESSURE TO THE TURBO PUMPS FROM THE COMBUSTION CHAMBERS IS GREATLY REDUCED ENABLING SIGNIFICANT INCREASES IN MASS FLOW RATES. FOR ALL CURRENT ROCKET ENGINES BACKFLOW PRESSURE IS A SIGNIFICANT IMPEDANCE TO THE TURBO PUMP?S ABILITY TO INJECT REACTANTS INTO THE CHAMBER. THUS, THE INSIGHT GAINED HERE IS THAT THE THRUST FROM REACTANT DETONATION IS NOT THE PRIMARY BENEFIT OF PULSED DETONATION ENGINES. THE PRIMARY BENEFIT OF DETONATION OF REACTANTS IS IN THE MOMENTARY PARTIAL VACUUM THAT OCCURS WITHIN THE COMBUSTION CHAMBER THAT IS CREATED BETWEEN EACH DETONATION CYCLE. BECAUSE OF THE MOMENTARY PARTIAL VACUUM AND RESULTING LACK OF BACK PRESSURE WITHIN THE COMBUSTION CHAMBER FAR GREATER VOLUMES OF REACTANTS PER SECOND CAN BE INJECTED INTO THE CHAMBER BY THE TURBO PUMPS. MASS FLOW RATES ARE GREATLY INCREASED RESULTING IN INCREASED THRUST AND ENGINE EFFICIENCY. THE ENGINE GENERATES ADDED THRUST BY DETONATING THE REACTANTS AND BY GREATLY INCREASING THE MASS FLOW RATE. THIS AWARD REFLECTS NSF'S STATUTORY MISSION AND HAS BEEN DEEMED WORTHY OF SUPPORT THROUGH EVALUATION USING THE FOUNDATION'S INTELLECTUAL MERIT AND BROADER IMPACTS REVIEW CRITERIA.- SUBAWARDS ARE NOT PLANNED FOR THIS AWARD. | $275K | FY2024 | Sep 2024 – Aug 2026 |
| Department of Agriculture | COMMUNITY FACILITY 2019 DISASTER GRANTS - HURRICANE FLORENCE | $210K | FY2020 | May 2020 – May 2022 |
| Department of Homeland Security | ASSISTANCE TO FIREFIGHTERS GRANT | $156.2K | FY2021 | Aug 2021 – Aug 2023 |
| Department of Agriculture | COMMUNITY FACILITY 2019 DISASTER GRANTS - HURRICANE FLORENCE | $150K | FY2020 | Jun 2020 – Jun 2022 |
| Department of Agriculture | REAP ENERGY EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENT (EEI) GRANT UNRESTRICTED AMOUNT | $87.3K | FY2024 | Jun 2024 – Jun 2026 |
| Department of Agriculture | REAP ENERGY EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENT (EEI) GRANT UNRESTRICTED AMOUNT | $85.5K | FY2024 | Jun 2024 – Jun 2026 |
| Department of Agriculture | COMMUNITY FACILITY 2019 DISASTER GRANTS - HURRICANE FLORENCE | $60K | FY2021 | Sep 2021 – Sep 2023 |
| Department of Agriculture | PERSISTENT POVERTY (GRANT ONLY) COMBINATION CF DIRECT LOAN/GRANT | $46K | FY2021 | Apr 2021 – Apr 2023 |
| Department of Agriculture | COMMUNITY FACILITY GRANTS | $40.4K | FY2019 | Jul 2019 – Jul 2019 |
| Department of Agriculture | COMMUNITY FACILITIES - ECONOMIC IMPACT INITIATIVE GRANTS | $39.1K | FY2013 | Aug 2013 – Aug 2013 |
| Department of Agriculture | COMMUNITY FACILITIES - ECONOMIC IMPACT INITIATIVE GRANTS | $37.5K | FY2010 | Sep 2010 – Sep 2010 |
| Department of Agriculture | COMMUNITY FACILITY GRANTS | $34K | FY2016 | Jun 2016 – Jun 2016 |
| Department of Agriculture | COMMUNITY FACILITY GRANTS | $30K | FY2018 | Jun 2018 – Jun 2018 |
| Department of Agriculture | COMMUNITY FACILITY 2019 DISASTER GRANTS - HURRICANE FLORENCE | $30K | FY2024 | Apr 2024 – Apr 2026 |
| Department of Agriculture | COMMUNITY FACILITIES - ECONOMIC IMPACT INITIATIVE GRANTS | $29K | FY2016 | Apr 2016 – Apr 2016 |
| Department of Agriculture | COMMUNITY FACILITIES - ECONOMIC IMPACT INITIATIVE GRANTS | $28.9K | FY2015 | Aug 2015 – Aug 2015 |
| Department of Agriculture | PERSISTENT POVERTY CF GRANT | $27K | FY2019 | May 2019 – May 2021 |
| Department of Agriculture | COMMUNITY FACILITY GRANTS | $12.5K | FY2008 | Jul 2008 – Jul 2008 |
| Department of Agriculture | COMMUNITY FACILITIES LOANS AND GRANTS - ARRA | $12.1K | FY2010 | Jun 2010 – Jun 2010 |
| Department of Agriculture | SEC 9007 REAP-RENEW ENERGY EFFICIENCY IMPROVE GRANTS, $20,000 OR LESS (MAN) | $4,190 | FY2011 | Jul 2011 – Jul 2013 |
| Department of Agriculture | SEC 9007 REAP-RENEW ENERGY EFFICIENCY IMPROVE GRANTS, $20,000 OR LESS (MAN) | $3,327 | FY2011 | Jul 2011 – Jul 2013 |
| Department of the Interior | HABITAT RESTORATION ON PRIVATELY OWNED LAND | $2,850 | FY2008 | Sep 2008 – Oct 2009 |
| Department of Agriculture | SEC 9007 REAP-RENEW ENERGY EFFICIENCY IMPROVE GRANTS, $20,000 OR LESS (MAN) | $0 | FY2019 | Mar 2019 – Mar 2021 |
Department of Health and Human Services
$500K
AFFORDABLE CARE ACT (ACA) GRANTS FOR SCHOOL-BASED HEALTH CENTERS CAPITAL PROGRAM
Department of Education
$331.3K
LEA GRANTS
National Science Foundation
$275K
SBIR PHASE I: THE PULSAR ROCKET ENGINE; A VALVE-PULSED DETONATION ROCKET ENGINE -THE BROADER IMPACT/COMMERCIAL POTENTIAL OF THIS PHASE I SMALL BUSINESS INNOVATION RESEARCH (SBIR) PROJECT WILL BE SUBSTANTIAL. THIS NEW ADVANCED ROCKET ENGINE WITH ITS INCREASED THRUST, EFFICIENCY, AND SIMPLE DESIGN WILL SIGNIFICANTLY INCREASE SPACESHIP LAUNCH TO ORBIT CAPABILITIES AND REDUCE KILOGRAM TO ORBIT COSTS. SPACESHIP LAUNCH SIZES IN TERMS OF CARGO WEIGHT AND VOLUME WILL BE SIGNIFICANTLY INCREASED COMPARED TO THE CURRENT MOST ADVANCED ROCKET ENGINES. THE COMMERCIAL IMPACTS WILL BE SIGNIFICANT. FOR THE FIRST TIME SPACE TOURISM ON A LARGE SCALE WILL BE MADE POSSIBLE. THE GENERAL PUBLIC CAN REALISTICALLY EXPECT TO PARTICIPATE IN THE GREAT SPACE ADVENTURE THAT ONLY A RELATIVELY FEW ASTRONAUTS AND OTHER ADVENTURERS HAVE EXPERIENCED TO DATE. DREAMERS, ENTREPRENEURS, SCIENTISTS, AND THE SPACE INDUSTRY IN GENERAL USING THIS ROCKET ENGINE WILL BE ABLE TO PLAN AND ACTUALLY BUILD ORBITING ARTIFICIAL GRAVITY STRUCTURES PROVIDING MULTIPLE USES. FOR EXAMPLE, THE ENABLED SPACE INFRASTRUCTURE CAN BE UTILIZED AS ORBITING FACTORIES, HABITATS, SCIENCE PLATFORMS, BASES FOR ASTEROID MINING, AND TOURISM OPPORTUNITIES TO NAME A FEW. THE POWER AND EFFICIENCY OF THIS INNOVATIVE ROCKET ENGINE WILL ENABLE LAUNCH TO ORBIT EFFICIENCIES THAT WILL STIMULATE RAPIDLY EXPANDING SPACE BASED COMMERCIAL ACTIVITY FOR DECADES TO COME. THIS SBIR PHASE I PROJECT PROPOSES TO DEMONSTRATE THE ADVANTAGES OF USING PULSED REACTANT DETONATIONS AS A MEANS TO INCREASE ENGINE THRUST VIA THE DETONATION OF THE FUEL AND TO USE THOSE SAME REACTANT DETONATIONS TO TEMPORARILY VACATE A COMBUSTION CHAMBER BETWEEN DETONATIONS. IN A VACATED/PARTIAL VACUUM CONDITION BACKFLOW PRESSURE TO THE TURBO PUMPS FROM THE COMBUSTION CHAMBERS IS GREATLY REDUCED ENABLING SIGNIFICANT INCREASES IN MASS FLOW RATES. FOR ALL CURRENT ROCKET ENGINES BACKFLOW PRESSURE IS A SIGNIFICANT IMPEDANCE TO THE TURBO PUMP?S ABILITY TO INJECT REACTANTS INTO THE CHAMBER. THUS, THE INSIGHT GAINED HERE IS THAT THE THRUST FROM REACTANT DETONATION IS NOT THE PRIMARY BENEFIT OF PULSED DETONATION ENGINES. THE PRIMARY BENEFIT OF DETONATION OF REACTANTS IS IN THE MOMENTARY PARTIAL VACUUM THAT OCCURS WITHIN THE COMBUSTION CHAMBER THAT IS CREATED BETWEEN EACH DETONATION CYCLE. BECAUSE OF THE MOMENTARY PARTIAL VACUUM AND RESULTING LACK OF BACK PRESSURE WITHIN THE COMBUSTION CHAMBER FAR GREATER VOLUMES OF REACTANTS PER SECOND CAN BE INJECTED INTO THE CHAMBER BY THE TURBO PUMPS. MASS FLOW RATES ARE GREATLY INCREASED RESULTING IN INCREASED THRUST AND ENGINE EFFICIENCY. THE ENGINE GENERATES ADDED THRUST BY DETONATING THE REACTANTS AND BY GREATLY INCREASING THE MASS FLOW RATE. THIS AWARD REFLECTS NSF'S STATUTORY MISSION AND HAS BEEN DEEMED WORTHY OF SUPPORT THROUGH EVALUATION USING THE FOUNDATION'S INTELLECTUAL MERIT AND BROADER IMPACTS REVIEW CRITERIA.- SUBAWARDS ARE NOT PLANNED FOR THIS AWARD.
Department of Agriculture
$210K
COMMUNITY FACILITY 2019 DISASTER GRANTS - HURRICANE FLORENCE
Department of Homeland Security
$156.2K
ASSISTANCE TO FIREFIGHTERS GRANT
Department of Agriculture
$150K
COMMUNITY FACILITY 2019 DISASTER GRANTS - HURRICANE FLORENCE
Department of Agriculture
$87.3K
REAP ENERGY EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENT (EEI) GRANT UNRESTRICTED AMOUNT
Department of Agriculture
$85.5K
REAP ENERGY EFFICIENCY IMPROVEMENT (EEI) GRANT UNRESTRICTED AMOUNT
Department of Agriculture
$60K
COMMUNITY FACILITY 2019 DISASTER GRANTS - HURRICANE FLORENCE
Department of Agriculture
$46K
PERSISTENT POVERTY (GRANT ONLY) COMBINATION CF DIRECT LOAN/GRANT
Department of Agriculture
$40.4K
COMMUNITY FACILITY GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$39.1K
COMMUNITY FACILITIES - ECONOMIC IMPACT INITIATIVE GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$37.5K
COMMUNITY FACILITIES - ECONOMIC IMPACT INITIATIVE GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$34K
COMMUNITY FACILITY GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$30K
COMMUNITY FACILITY GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$30K
COMMUNITY FACILITY 2019 DISASTER GRANTS - HURRICANE FLORENCE
Department of Agriculture
$29K
COMMUNITY FACILITIES - ECONOMIC IMPACT INITIATIVE GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$28.9K
COMMUNITY FACILITIES - ECONOMIC IMPACT INITIATIVE GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$27K
PERSISTENT POVERTY CF GRANT
Department of Agriculture
$12.5K
COMMUNITY FACILITY GRANTS
Department of Agriculture
$12.1K
COMMUNITY FACILITIES LOANS AND GRANTS - ARRA
Department of Agriculture
$4,190
SEC 9007 REAP-RENEW ENERGY EFFICIENCY IMPROVE GRANTS, $20,000 OR LESS (MAN)
Department of Agriculture
$3,327
SEC 9007 REAP-RENEW ENERGY EFFICIENCY IMPROVE GRANTS, $20,000 OR LESS (MAN)
Department of the Interior
$2,850
HABITAT RESTORATION ON PRIVATELY OWNED LAND
Department of Agriculture
$0
SEC 9007 REAP-RENEW ENERGY EFFICIENCY IMPROVE GRANTS, $20,000 OR LESS (MAN)
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 2025 · 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 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024IRS e-File | $564.8K | $525.6K | $441K | $428.2K | $417.2K |
| 2023 | $263.3K | $159K | $288.8K | $550.4K | $511K |
| 2022 | $352.4K | $288K | $327.4K | $575.7K | $539.8K |
| 2021 | $208.6K | $137.5K |
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 | DataIRS e-File | PDF not yet published by IRSView Filing → |
| 2023 | 990 | DataIRS e-File |
Financial data: IRS e-Filed Form 990 (Tax Year 2024)
Leadership & compensation: IRS e-Filed Form 990, Part VII (Tax Year 2025)
Federal grants: USAspending.gov (live)
Organization info: IRS Business Master File
Tax-deductibility: IRS Publication 78
| Total |
|---|
| Kirsten Hanson-Press | Secretary | 5 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Liz Greenberger | President | 5 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Linda Vigil | Treasurer | 5 | $0 | $0 | $0 | $0 |
Kirsten Hanson-Press
Secretary
$0
Hrs/Wk
5
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Liz Greenberger
President
$0
Hrs/Wk
5
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
Linda Vigil
Treasurer
$0
Hrs/Wk
5
Compensation
$0
Related Orgs
$0
Other
$0
| $293.3K |
| $583.8K |
| $514.8K |
| 2020 | $307.9K | $227.7K | $258.9K | $720.4K | $599.5K |
| 2019 | $174.9K | $170K | $198.6K | $564.2K | $550.6K |
| 2018 | $266.2K | $218.2K | $150.9K | $585.1K | $574.3K |
| 2017 | $279.2K | $231.9K | $151.1K | $467.4K | $459K |
| 2016 | $197K | $177.6K | $93.3K | $338.5K | $330.8K |
| 2015 | $99.5K | — | $104.9K | $234.8K | — |
| 2014 | $159.8K | — | $92.3K | $218K | — |
| 2013 | $100.5K | — | $59.6K | $126K | — |
| 2012 | $43.2K | — | $26.5K | $70.4K | — |
PDF not yet published by IRSView Filing → |
| 2022 | 990 | DataIRS e-File |
| 2021 | 990 | Data |
| 2020 | 990 | Data |
| 2019 | 990 | Data |
| 2018 | 990 | Data |
| 2017 | 990 | Data |
| 2016 | 990 | Data |
| 2015 | 990-EZ | Data |
| 2014 | 990-EZ | Data |
| 2013 | 990-EZ | Data |
| 2012 | 990-EZ | Data |
| 2011 | 990-EZ | — |
| 2010 | 990-EZ | — |