Loading organization details...
Loading organization details...
Source: IRS Form 990 via ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Total Revenue
▼$85.2K
Total Contributions
N/A
Total Expenses
▼$120.3K
Total Assets
$164.7K
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
$27.7K
Awards Found
1
| Awarding Agency | Description | Amount | Fiscal Year | Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Department of Agriculture | BEEF PRODUCTION IS THE SECOND LARGEST AGRICULTURAL SECTOR AFTER DAIRY IN NEW MEXICO. THERE ARE OVER 7,000 RANCHES IN THE STATE. MOST NEW MEXICO RANCHES ARE SMALL PROVIDING MINIMAL INCOME. RANCHERS CUSTOMARILY SELL WEANED CALVES AT AUCTION THAT ARE TRANSPORTED OUT-OF-STATE TO LARGE CORPORATE PLANTS FOR FATTENING AND PROCESSING. NEW MEXICO CONSUMERS THEN BUY MEAT AT THE GROCERY OF UNKNOWN ORIGIN THAT IS SHIPPED BACK IN-STATE.THE CSP GRANT PLANNING PROJECT WILL WORK WITH A NUMBER OF TEAM MEMBERS INCLUDING THE COMMUNITY PANTRY FOOD BANK IN GALLUP, THE WHOLEHEARTED FOOD FUND, TWO SMALL, LOCAL MEAT PROCESSORS - MESA MEATS AND WESTERN WAY, NATIVE AND NON-NATIVE RANCHERS, THE PUEBLO OF ACOMA AND SPECIALIZED CONSULTANTS. ECONOMIC DATA WILL BE ANALYZED, AND A PLAN DEVELOPED TO FIRST WORK WITH THE NOT-FOR-PROFIT WHOLEHEARTED FOOD FUND THAT WILL PURCHASE LOCALLY GROWN CATTLE AT A PREMIUM FROM NEW MEXICO RANCHERS AND PROCESS MEAT LOCALLY. MEAT WILL BE PROVIDED TO REGIONAL FOOD BANKS AND TO THE FOOD DISTRIBUTION PROGRAM ON INDIAN RESERVATION (FDPIR) FOR DISTRIBUTION. THE PLAN WILL ALSO PROVIDE A BUSINESS CASE STUDY FOR A VERTICALLY INTEGRATED SYSTEM AT ACOMA PUEBLO WHEREBY TRIBAL RANCHERS WILL BE ABLE TO PROCESS THEIR MEAT LOCALLY FOR SALES TO COMMERCIAL TRIBAL FOOD VENUES IN ADDITION TO THE TRIBAL FDPIR PROGRAM, FOSTERING TRIBAL FOOD SOVEREIGNTY, SECURITY AND INDEPENDENCE. WORKSHOPS WILL BE PROVIDED TO RANCHERS AS TO HOW TO ECONOMICALLY BRING LIVESTOCK TO SLAUGHTER WEIGHT ON THE RANCH.THE PROJECT WILL CREATE A MODEL WHEREBY RANCHERS RECEIVE PREMIUM PRICING FOR THEIR CATTLE BY ELIMINATING TRANSPORTATION, FEEDLOT, MIDDLEMEN AND MARKETING COSTS. THE MONEY FROM THESE ACTIVITIES THAT NORMALLY GO OUT OF-STATE WILL REMAIN IN THE LOCAL ECONOMY. LOW-INCOME PEOPLE WHO RECEIVE FOOD BENEFITS WILL RECEIVE HEALTHY, PASTURE-RAISED MEAT PROTEIN AND LEARN ABOUT THE BENEFITS OF LOCAL PRODUCTION FOR LOCAL CONSUMPTION. A BUSINESS PLAN WILL BE DEVELOPED FOR A VERTICALLY INTEGRATED TRIBAL BUSINESS WHEREBY A TRIBE (ACOMA PUEBLO) WILL PURCHASE MEAT FROM ITS OWN RANCHER TRIBAL MEMBERS TO SUPPLY QUALITY MEAT PRODUCTS TO TRIBAL FOOD VENUES, BENEFITTING TRIBAL RANCHERS, TRIBAL FOOD BUSINESSES AND THE TRIBAL ECONOMY. | $27.7K | FY2022 | Jul 2022 – Oct 2023 |
Department of Agriculture
$27.7K
BEEF PRODUCTION IS THE SECOND LARGEST AGRICULTURAL SECTOR AFTER DAIRY IN NEW MEXICO. THERE ARE OVER 7,000 RANCHES IN THE STATE. MOST NEW MEXICO RANCHES ARE SMALL PROVIDING MINIMAL INCOME. RANCHERS CUSTOMARILY SELL WEANED CALVES AT AUCTION THAT ARE TRANSPORTED OUT-OF-STATE TO LARGE CORPORATE PLANTS FOR FATTENING AND PROCESSING. NEW MEXICO CONSUMERS THEN BUY MEAT AT THE GROCERY OF UNKNOWN ORIGIN THAT IS SHIPPED BACK IN-STATE.THE CSP GRANT PLANNING PROJECT WILL WORK WITH A NUMBER OF TEAM MEMBERS INCLUDING THE COMMUNITY PANTRY FOOD BANK IN GALLUP, THE WHOLEHEARTED FOOD FUND, TWO SMALL, LOCAL MEAT PROCESSORS - MESA MEATS AND WESTERN WAY, NATIVE AND NON-NATIVE RANCHERS, THE PUEBLO OF ACOMA AND SPECIALIZED CONSULTANTS. ECONOMIC DATA WILL BE ANALYZED, AND A PLAN DEVELOPED TO FIRST WORK WITH THE NOT-FOR-PROFIT WHOLEHEARTED FOOD FUND THAT WILL PURCHASE LOCALLY GROWN CATTLE AT A PREMIUM FROM NEW MEXICO RANCHERS AND PROCESS MEAT LOCALLY. MEAT WILL BE PROVIDED TO REGIONAL FOOD BANKS AND TO THE FOOD DISTRIBUTION PROGRAM ON INDIAN RESERVATION (FDPIR) FOR DISTRIBUTION. THE PLAN WILL ALSO PROVIDE A BUSINESS CASE STUDY FOR A VERTICALLY INTEGRATED SYSTEM AT ACOMA PUEBLO WHEREBY TRIBAL RANCHERS WILL BE ABLE TO PROCESS THEIR MEAT LOCALLY FOR SALES TO COMMERCIAL TRIBAL FOOD VENUES IN ADDITION TO THE TRIBAL FDPIR PROGRAM, FOSTERING TRIBAL FOOD SOVEREIGNTY, SECURITY AND INDEPENDENCE. WORKSHOPS WILL BE PROVIDED TO RANCHERS AS TO HOW TO ECONOMICALLY BRING LIVESTOCK TO SLAUGHTER WEIGHT ON THE RANCH.THE PROJECT WILL CREATE A MODEL WHEREBY RANCHERS RECEIVE PREMIUM PRICING FOR THEIR CATTLE BY ELIMINATING TRANSPORTATION, FEEDLOT, MIDDLEMEN AND MARKETING COSTS. THE MONEY FROM THESE ACTIVITIES THAT NORMALLY GO OUT OF-STATE WILL REMAIN IN THE LOCAL ECONOMY. LOW-INCOME PEOPLE WHO RECEIVE FOOD BENEFITS WILL RECEIVE HEALTHY, PASTURE-RAISED MEAT PROTEIN AND LEARN ABOUT THE BENEFITS OF LOCAL PRODUCTION FOR LOCAL CONSUMPTION. A BUSINESS PLAN WILL BE DEVELOPED FOR A VERTICALLY INTEGRATED TRIBAL BUSINESS WHEREBY A TRIBE (ACOMA PUEBLO) WILL PURCHASE MEAT FROM ITS OWN RANCHER TRIBAL MEMBERS TO SUPPLY QUALITY MEAT PRODUCTS TO TRIBAL FOOD VENUES, BENEFITTING TRIBAL RANCHERS, TRIBAL FOOD BUSINESSES AND THE TRIBAL ECONOMY.
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 | $85.2K | — | $120.3K | $164.7K | — |
| 2022 | $80.2K | — | $61.4K | $200K | — |
| 2021 | $78.6K | — | $47.4K | $181.2K | — |
| 2020 | $83.3K | — | $40.9K | $150.1K | — |
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 | PDF not yet published by IRSView Filing → |
| 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
| 2019 | $97.6K | — | $96.8K | $107.6K | — |
| 2018 | $97.1K | — | $100.7K | $106.9K | — |
| 2017 | $94.6K | — | $102K | $110.4K | — |
| 2016 | $96.3K | — | $86.3K | $117.8K | — |
| 2015 | $101.6K | — | $95K | $107.9K | — |
| 2014 | $106.7K | — | $90.7K | $101.2K | — |
| 2013 | $82.3K | — | $117K | $85.2K | — |
| 2012 | $70.5K | — | $74.9K | $119.9K | — |
| 2011 | $97.2K | — | $72.2K | $124.4K | — |
| 2021 | 990-EZ | Data | PDF not yet published by IRS |
| 2020 | 990-EZ | Data |
| 2019 | 990-EZ | 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-EZ | — |
| 2007 | 990-EZ | — |
| 2006 | 990-EZ | — |
| 2005 | 990-EZ | — |
| 2003 | 990-EZ | — |
| 2002 | 990-EZ | — |
| 2001 | 990-EZ | — |