Loading organization details...
Loading organization details...
CIESC PROVIDES FREE AND AT-COST EDUCATION PROGRAMS THROUGHOUT CENTRAL INDIANA.
Source: IRS Form 990 (Tax Year 2024)
Source: IRS Form 990 via ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Total Revenue
▼$18.9M
Total Contributions
$4.9M
Total Expenses
▼$19.1M
Total Assets
$10.2M
Total Liabilities
▼$0
Net Assets
$10.2M
Officer Compensation
→$862.7K
Other Salaries
$7.2M
Investment Income
▼$75.6K
Fundraising
▼$0
Source: USAspending.gov · Searched by organization name
Total Federal Funding
$1M
Awards Found
4
Department of Justice
$999.8K
CENTRAL INDIANA EDUCATIONAL SERVICE CENTER (CIESC) WILL SERVE ALMOST 93,000 STUDENTS IN SIX DISTRICTS AND INDIANA ONLINE SCHOOL. THROUGH THE EXPANSION OF TRAUMA-INFORMED SOLUTIONS, INCLUDING A TRAUMA-INFORMED ANONYMOUS REPORTING SYSTEM (ARS)/HELP APPLICATION, RACHELS CHALLENGE (SCHOOL VIOLENCE PREVENTION PROGRAM), TERRACE METRICS (BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AND WELLNESS ASSESSMENT AND INTERVENTION), THRIVE (PERSONALIZED AND ADAPTIVE COGNITIVE BEHAVIORAL TRAINING), AND PREPARE TRAINING (IMPROVING SCHOOL CRISIS RESPONSE AND MANAGEMENT PLANS), CIESC WILL FOCUS ALL EFFORTS ON VIOLENCE PREVENTION FOR CREATING AND SUSTAINING SAFE SCHOOLS. THESE SCHOOLS ARE BEING SUPPORTED WITH ADDITIONAL EVIDENCE-BASED TRAUMA-INFORMED PROGRAMS AND SERVICES TO BEST MEET THE MORE COMPLEX NEEDS OF THEIR STUDENT POPULATIONS. CIESC SERVES 36 MEMBER DISTRICTS ACROSS CENTRAL INDIANA.
Department of Justice
$997K
CENTRAL INDIANA EDUCATIONAL SERVICE CENTER (CIESC), IN PARTNERSHIP WITH SEVENTEEN INDIANA SCHOOL DISTRICTS, SUBMITS THIS PROPOSAL TO LEAD THE TRANSFORMING INDIANA FOR THE PROTECTION OF STUDENTS (TIPS) PROJECT. TIPS IS A STATEWIDE INITIATIVE DESIGNED TO PROVIDE TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS AND TRAINING TO ENHANCE SCHOOL SAFETY. TIPS WILL IMPROVE SCHOOL SAFETY FOR MORE THAN 76,000 K-12 STUDENTS IN CENTRAL INDIANA. ON AVERAGE, 40% OF THE CHILDREN ATTENDING TIPS SCHOOLS ARE ECONOMICALLY DISADVANTAGED. THESE SCHOOL ARE FACING DISPROPORTIONALY HIGH RATES OF DISCIPLINARY ISSUES, STUDENT ARRESTS AT SCHOOL, HARASSMENT, AND BULLYING. SADLY, VIOLENCE IS A REALITY ON K-12 CAMPUSES THROUGHOUT THE STATE OF INDIANA. ONCE SEEN AS SAFE LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS, BOTH URBAN AND RURAL SCHOOL CAMPUSES HAVE SEEN AN ALARMING NUMBER OF VIOLENT ACTS. IN FACT, INDIANA REPORTED 1,321 STUDENTS ARRESTED AND 5,257 BULLYING INCIDENTS IN THE 2018-2019 SCHOOL YEAR. THESE STATISTICS ARE THE DRIVING FORCE BEHIND THE RECENT INDIANA SCHOOL SAFETY RECOMMENDATION REPORT, REQUESTED BY THE GOVERNOR OF INDIANA, TO EXAMINE EXISTING SCHOOL PROTECTIONS AND EXPLORE NEW WAYS TO KEEP SCHOOLS SAFE. THE GOAL OF THE TIPS PROJECT IS TO INCREASE SCHOOL SAFETY BY ADDRESSING INDIANA’S SPECIFIC CONCERNS RELATED TO PREVENTING AND REDUCING SCHOOL VIOLENCE. THE OBJECTIVES ARE TO IMPROVE SCHOOL SAFETY BY IMPLEMENTING TRAINING (SOCIAL-EMOTIONAL LEARNING/SEL) TO PREVENT VIOLENCE AMONG STUDENTS; TECHNOLOGICAL SOLUTIONS INCLUDING ANONYMOUS REPORTING TECHNOLOGY THAT CAN BE IMPLEMENTED AS A MOBILE PHONE-BASED APP, A HOTLINE, OR A WEBSITE TO ENABLE STUDENTS, TEACHERS, FACULTY, AND COMMUNITY MEMBERS TO ANONYMOUSLY IDENTIFY POTENTIAL THREATS OF SCHOOL VIOLENCE, AND STUDENTS IN NEED; INCIDENT MOITORING; AND A PANIC ESCALATION FEATURE EMBEDDED DIRECTLY IN THE APP. BASED ON THE RECOMMENDATIONS FROM THE STATE REPORT, WITH STOP SCHOOL VIOLENCE GRANT FUNDING, CIESC WILL SERVE AS A “ONE-STOP-SHOP” FOR THESE SCHOOL SAFETY INNOVATIONS FOR SCHOOLS THROUGHOUT INDIANA. THE PROJECT WILL PROVIDE INDIANA’S HIGHEST-NEED SCHOOLS WITH AN ANONYMOUS REPORTING SYSTEM, 24/7/365 INCIDENT MONITORING AND EMERGENCY INCIDENT MANAGEMENT SERVICES, SEL RESOURCES AND TRAINING. COORDINATION WITH THE 17 PARTNERING DISTRICTS WILL BE FACILITATED BY DISTRICT COORDINATORS. CIESC AND THE 17 PARTNER DISTRICTS REQUEST $996,998 TO PROVIDE LIFE-SAVING TECHNOLOGY SOLUTION TO TRANSFORM SCHOOL SAFETY IN INDIANA SCHOOLS.
Source: Federal Audit Clearinghouse (fac.gov)
Total Audits
1
Clean Audits
0
Material Weakness
Yes
Noncompliance Issues
Yes
| Year | Status | Financial Report | Federal Expenditure | Low Risk | Accepted |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | Material Weakness | adverse_opinion,not_gaap | $4.7M | No | 2025-03-05 |
Financial Report
adverse_opinion,not_gaap
Federal Expenditure
$4.7M
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 | $18.9M | $4.9M | $19.1M | $10.2M | $10.2M |
| 2022 | $14.8M | $2.6M | $15.5M | $10.5M | $10.5M |
| 2021 | $13.7M | $2.4M | $12.4M | $11.3M | $11.3M |
| 2020 | $12.9M | $2.6M | $12.2M | $11M |
Sources: ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer & IRS e-File Index
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
| $10M |
| 2019 | $13.9M | $4.1M | $12.6M | $9.3M | $9.3M |
| 2018 | $13.2M | $3.8M | $11.7M | $7.9M | $7.9M |
| 2017 | $12.3M | $3.7M | $11M | $6.5M | $6.5M |
| 2016 | $10.8M | $3.7M | $9.4M | $5.2M | $5.2M |
| 2015 | $9.9M | $3.5M | $8.8M | $3.7M | $3.7M |
| 2014 | $9.3M | $3.8M | $8.6M | $2.6M | $2.6M |
| 2021 | 990 | Data |
| 2020 | 990 | Data |
| 2019 | 990 | Data |
| 2018 | 990 | Data |
| 2017 | 990 | Data |
| 2016 | 990 | Data |
| 2015 | 990 | Data |
| 2014 | 990 | Data |