Loading organization details...
Loading organization details...
Source: IRS Form 990 via ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Total Revenue
▼$140.4K
Total Contributions
N/A
Total Expenses
▼$92.2K
Total Assets
$308.6K
Total Liabilities
▼$0
Net Assets
N/A
Officer Compensation
→N/A
Other Salaries
N/A
Investment Income
▼N/A
Fundraising
▼N/A
Source: USAspending.gov · Searched by organization name
Total Federal Funding
$3.6M
Awards Found
17
| Awarding Agency | Description | Amount | Fiscal Year | Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Department of Health and Human Services | COMMUNITY BASED ABSTINENCE EDUCATION | $1.2M | FY2007 | Sep 2007 – Sep 2012 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | MULTIFAMILY HOUSING SERVICE COORDINATORS | $442.9K | FY2017 | Jun 2017 – Dec 2025 |
| Department of Homeland Security | ASSISTANCE TO FIREFIGHTERS GRANTS | $439.5K | FY2023 | Jul 2023 – Jul 2025 |
| Department of Justice | ABSTRACT CUTTER-MORNING STAR SCHOOL DISTRICT CUTTER-MORNING STAR SCHOOL DISTRICT IS APUBLICSCHOOL DISTRICTBASED IN GARLAND COUNTY, ARKANSAS. THE DISTRICT PROVIDES COMPREHENSIVE EDUCATION FOR MORE THAN 650 PRE-K THROUGH GRADE 12 STUDENTS WHILE EMPLOYING MORE THAN 80 TEACHERS AND STAFF. THE DISTRICT AND ITS SCHOOLS ARE ACCREDITED BY THE ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION. GARLAND COUNTY RESIDENTS HAVE A PER CAPITA INCOME OF $17,961 WITH OVER 19% LIVING BELOW THE POVERTY LINE. GARLAND COUNTY POPULATION STANDS AT LESS THAN 38,000 RESIDENTS. IN GARLAND COUNTY 31% OF CHILDREN ARE IN POVERTY AND THE SCHOOL FUNDING PER PUPIL IS LESS THAN THE NATIONAL AVERAGE. CUTTER-MORNING STAR SCHOOL DISTRICT MAINTAINS RELATIONSHIPS WITH LOCAL LAW ENFORCEMENT AND REGULARLY EXAMINES EACH SCHOOL SITE FOR VULNERABILITIES. FINDINGS FROM THE ASSESSMENTS INDICATE A SIGNIFICANT NEED FOR UPGRADES TO OUR FACILITIES INCLUDING METAL/WEAPON DETECTORS AT THE ENTRANCES OF BOTH THE HIGH SCHOOL AND THE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL. ALSO, MOBILE AND PORTABLE RADIOS WITH AWIN OPERABILITY TO PROVIDE THE FASTEST RESPONSE TIME FROM LAW ENFORMENENT AND EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCIES IN THE EVENT OF A SCHOOL SHOOTING, BOMB THREAT, OR OTHER SCHOOL VIOLENCE ATROCITIES. THESE UPGRADES ARE CRITICAL TO MITIGATE VIOLENCE WITHIN OUR SCHOOLS WHILE PROVIDING A SAFE LEARNING ENVIRONMENT FOR OUR CHILDREN. | $434.2K | FY2024 | Oct 2023 – Sep 2026 |
| Department of Justice | THE PURPOSE OF THE COPS OFFICE SCHOOL VIOLENCE PREVENTION PROGRAM (SVPP) IS TO IMPROVE SECURITY AT SCHOOLS AND ON SCHOOL GROUNDS THROUGH SCHOOL SAFETY PROGRAMS AND TECHNOLOGY. FUNDING UNDER THIS AWARD PROGRAM WILL BE USED BY THE SCHOOL JURISDICTION TO IMPLEMENT EVIDENCE-BASED PROGRAMS TO IMPROVE SCHOOL SECURITY AND PROMOTE A POSITIVE LEARNING ENVIRONMENT FOR ALL STUDENTS. | $345.1K | FY2023 | Oct 2022 – Dec 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | SEC. 9007 REAP-RENEW ENERGY SYS GRANTS (MAN) | $247.9K | FY2025 | Mar 2025 – Mar 2027 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | MARTIN ADDICTION RECOVERY CENTER SUBSTANCE ABUSE INTERVENTION | $191.6K | FY2008 | Sep 2008 – Sep 2009 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | MULTIFAMILY HOUSING SERVICE COORDINATORS | $136.8K | FY2024 | Oct 2023 – Dec 2025 |
| Department of Agriculture | SEC. 9007 REAP-RENEW ENERGY SYS GRANTS (MAN) | $60K | FY2019 | Jul 2019 – Jul 2021 |
| Department of Agriculture | SEC. 9007 REAP-RENEW ENERGY SYS GRANTS (MAN) | $49.5K | FY2009 | Sep 2009 – Sep 2011 |
| Department of Education | APPLICATION FOR SMALL, RURAL SCHOOL ACHIEVEMENT PROGRAM | $35.5K | FY2012 | Jul 2012 – Sep 2013 |
| Department of Education | TO SUPPORT EVERY STUDENTS SUCCEEDS ACT. | $32.4K | FY2017 | Jul 2017 – Sep 2018 |
| Department of Education | SMALL, RURAL SCHOOL ACHIEVEMENT PROGRAM | $10.3K | FY2023 | Jul 2023 – Sep 2024 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | MULTIFAMILY HOUSING SERVICE COORDINATORS | $3,254.8 | FY2020 | Mar 2020 – Dec 2020 |
| Department of Agriculture | VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS | $0 | FY2008 | Sep 2008 – Dec 2009 |
| Department of Homeland Security | ASSISTANCE TO FIREFIGHTERS GRANT | -$37 | FY2008 | Dec 2007 – Dec 2008 |
| Department of Homeland Security | ASSISTANCE TO FIREFIGHTERS GRANT | -$82 | FY2009 | Feb 2009 – Sep 2012 |
Department of Health and Human Services
$1.2M
COMMUNITY BASED ABSTINENCE EDUCATION
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$442.9K
MULTIFAMILY HOUSING SERVICE COORDINATORS
Department of Homeland Security
$439.5K
ASSISTANCE TO FIREFIGHTERS GRANTS
Department of Justice
$434.2K
ABSTRACT CUTTER-MORNING STAR SCHOOL DISTRICT CUTTER-MORNING STAR SCHOOL DISTRICT IS APUBLICSCHOOL DISTRICTBASED IN GARLAND COUNTY, ARKANSAS. THE DISTRICT PROVIDES COMPREHENSIVE EDUCATION FOR MORE THAN 650 PRE-K THROUGH GRADE 12 STUDENTS WHILE EMPLOYING MORE THAN 80 TEACHERS AND STAFF. THE DISTRICT AND ITS SCHOOLS ARE ACCREDITED BY THE ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION. GARLAND COUNTY RESIDENTS HAVE A PER CAPITA INCOME OF $17,961 WITH OVER 19% LIVING BELOW THE POVERTY LINE. GARLAND COUNTY POPULATION STANDS AT LESS THAN 38,000 RESIDENTS. IN GARLAND COUNTY 31% OF CHILDREN ARE IN POVERTY AND THE SCHOOL FUNDING PER PUPIL IS LESS THAN THE NATIONAL AVERAGE. CUTTER-MORNING STAR SCHOOL DISTRICT MAINTAINS RELATIONSHIPS WITH LOCAL LAW ENFORCEMENT AND REGULARLY EXAMINES EACH SCHOOL SITE FOR VULNERABILITIES. FINDINGS FROM THE ASSESSMENTS INDICATE A SIGNIFICANT NEED FOR UPGRADES TO OUR FACILITIES INCLUDING METAL/WEAPON DETECTORS AT THE ENTRANCES OF BOTH THE HIGH SCHOOL AND THE ELEMENTARY SCHOOL. ALSO, MOBILE AND PORTABLE RADIOS WITH AWIN OPERABILITY TO PROVIDE THE FASTEST RESPONSE TIME FROM LAW ENFORMENENT AND EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCIES IN THE EVENT OF A SCHOOL SHOOTING, BOMB THREAT, OR OTHER SCHOOL VIOLENCE ATROCITIES. THESE UPGRADES ARE CRITICAL TO MITIGATE VIOLENCE WITHIN OUR SCHOOLS WHILE PROVIDING A SAFE LEARNING ENVIRONMENT FOR OUR CHILDREN.
Department of Justice
$345.1K
THE PURPOSE OF THE COPS OFFICE SCHOOL VIOLENCE PREVENTION PROGRAM (SVPP) IS TO IMPROVE SECURITY AT SCHOOLS AND ON SCHOOL GROUNDS THROUGH SCHOOL SAFETY PROGRAMS AND TECHNOLOGY. FUNDING UNDER THIS AWARD PROGRAM WILL BE USED BY THE SCHOOL JURISDICTION TO IMPLEMENT EVIDENCE-BASED PROGRAMS TO IMPROVE SCHOOL SECURITY AND PROMOTE A POSITIVE LEARNING ENVIRONMENT FOR ALL STUDENTS.
Department of Agriculture
$247.9K
SEC. 9007 REAP-RENEW ENERGY SYS GRANTS (MAN)
Department of Health and Human Services
$191.6K
MARTIN ADDICTION RECOVERY CENTER SUBSTANCE ABUSE INTERVENTION
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$136.8K
MULTIFAMILY HOUSING SERVICE COORDINATORS
Department of Agriculture
$60K
SEC. 9007 REAP-RENEW ENERGY SYS GRANTS (MAN)
Department of Agriculture
$49.5K
SEC. 9007 REAP-RENEW ENERGY SYS GRANTS (MAN)
Department of Education
$35.5K
APPLICATION FOR SMALL, RURAL SCHOOL ACHIEVEMENT PROGRAM
Department of Education
$32.4K
TO SUPPORT EVERY STUDENTS SUCCEEDS ACT.
Department of Education
$10.3K
SMALL, RURAL SCHOOL ACHIEVEMENT PROGRAM
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$3,254.8
MULTIFAMILY HOUSING SERVICE COORDINATORS
Department of Agriculture
$0
VALUE- ADDED AGRICULTURAL PRODUCT MARKET DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
Department of Homeland Security
-$37
ASSISTANCE TO FIREFIGHTERS GRANT
Department of Homeland Security
-$82
ASSISTANCE TO FIREFIGHTERS GRANT
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
WarningTax-exempt status was revoked on May 15, 2017
Reinstated on May 15, 2017
Exemption type: 03
990-N (e-Postcard) Filing History
This organization files simplified Form 990-N (annual gross receipts ≤ $50,000).
Sources: IRS e-Filed Form 990 (XML) & ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Scroll →
| Year | Revenue | Contributions | Expenses | Assets | Net Assets |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | $140.4K | — | $92.2K | $308.6K | — |
| 2022 | $154.7K | — | $74.5K | $260.5K | — |
| 2021 | $84.1K | — | $34.2K | $180.3K | — |
Sources: ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer & IRS e-File Index
| Tax Year | Form Type | Source | Documents |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 990-EZ | IRS e-File | PDF not yet published by IRSView Filing → |
| 2023 | 990-EZ | DataIRS e-File | |
| 2022 | 990-EZ | 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
Revocation status: IRS Auto-Revocation List
| 2021 | 990-EZ | Data |