Loading organization details...
Loading organization details...
Source: IRS Form 990 via ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Total Revenue
▼$13.7M
Total Contributions
$13.3M
Total Expenses
▼$13.8M
Total Assets
$8.8M
Total Liabilities
▼$4.4M
Net Assets
$4.4M
Officer Compensation
→$277.3K
Other Salaries
$7M
Investment Income
▼$76.1K
Fundraising
▼$34.6K
Source: USAspending.gov · Searched by organization name
Total Federal Funding
$3.9M
Awards Found
3
Department of Health and Human Services
$2.5M
RURAL OREGON HIV SERVICES ACCESS PROGRAM FOR PEOPLE WHO INJECT DRUGS - RURAL OREGON HIV SERVICES ACCESS PROGRAM FOR PEOPLE WHO INJECT DRUGS (HSAPP) WILL TARGET PRIMARILY BLACK, INDIGENOUS, AND PEOPLE OF COLOR (BIPOC) PEOPLE WHO INJECT DRUGS (PWID) ACROSS HIV ALLIANCE?S CURRENT SYRINGE SERVICES PROGRAM (SSP) SERVICE AREA. THE SERVICE AREA INCLUDES SIX OREGON COUNTIES: LANE, MARION, DOUGLAS, JOSEPHINE, CURRY, AND COOS. THIS TARGETED PROGRAM WILL BE COMPREHENSIVE, CLIENT CENTERED, TRAUMA INFORMED, AND CULTURALLY COMPETENT AND UTILIZE EVIDENCE-BASED STRATEGIES TO DELIVER HIV PREVENTION AND CARE AS WELL AS ESSENTIAL SUPPORT SERVICES TO BIPOC PIWD/PWID IN RURAL OREGON. THE PROGRAM WILL BUILD ON EXISTING SERVICES OFFERED BY HIV ALLIANCE?OUR SSP IN PARTICULAR?AND OUR STRONG RAPPORT AND TRUSTING RELATIONSHIPS WITH THE TARGET POPULATION AS WELL AS LONGSTANDING PARTNERSHIPS WITH OTHER COMMUNITY ORGANIZATIONS, HEALTH DEPARTMENTS, GOVERNMENT AGENCIES, AND CLINICAL SERVICE PROVIDERS IN OUR SERVICE REGION. TO ACHIEVE OUR GOALS, RURAL OREGON HSAPP WILL PROVIDE BIOOC PWID/PWID IN THE SERVICE AREA WITH (1) SYRINGE SERVICES AND OVERDOSE PREVENTION TRAINING AND SUPPLIES IN PARTNERSHIP WITH ORGANIZATIONS SERVING BIPOC; (2) TESTING FOR HIV, HCV, GONORRHEA, CHLAMYDIA, AND SYPHILIS AT HIV ALLIANCE SSPS, AT TESTING EVENTS, IN THE COMMUNITY, AND AT LOCATIONS FREQUENTED BY PWID AND BIPOC; (3) LINKAGE TO HIV, FOR BOTH NEWLY DIAGNOSED PEOPLE LIVING WITH HIV AND PREVIOUSLY DIAGNOSED PEOPLE LIVING WITH HIV WHO ARE OUT OF CARE, WITHIN 30 DAYS; (4) REFERRAL TO PARTNER SERVICES IN COLLABORATION WITH LOCAL PUBLIC HEALTH DEPARTMENTS; (5) MEDICAL ADHERENCE SERVICES THROUGH HIV ALLIANCE?S CARE COORDINATION PROGRAM; (6) REFERRALS TO PREP/NPEP VIA HIV ALLIANCE?S PREP/NPEP NAVIGATION PROGRAM; (7) SAFER SEX SUPPLIES AND EDUCATION; (8) STREET (COMMUNITY-BASED) OUTREACH; AND (9) INFORMATION AND REFERRAL TO OTHER SERVICES AT HIV ALLIANCE (E.G., HEALTH INSURANCE ENROLLMENT ASSISTANCE, BEHAVIORAL HEALTH/PEER SUPPORT SERVICES) AND IN THE LOCAL COMMUNITY (E.G., T REATMENT FOR SUBSTANCE/OPIOID USE DISORDERS, SOCIAL SERVICES, HOUSING ASSISTANCE). IN ADDITION, HIV ALLIANCE WILL UTILIZE EXISTING FORMAL AGREEMENTS AND ESTABLISH NEW AGREEMENTS WITH LOCAL PUBLIC HEALTH DEPARTMENTS TO SHARE DATA AND SUPPORT CLUSTER RESPONSE ACTIVITIES, AND STATE AND LOCAL HEALTH DEPARTMENTS WILL BE SUPPORTED WITH DATA-TO-CARE EFFORTS.THE PURPOSE OF THE PROGRAM IS TO MITIGATE ACCESS BARRIERS, DECREASE HEALTH DISPARITIES, AND ULTIMATELY CONTRIBUTE TO REDUCING HIGH RATES OF HIV TRANSMISSION AMONG BIPOC PWID/PWID IN OREGON. EXPECTED OUTCOMES OF THE PROGRAM INCLUDE INCREASED ACCESS TO AND RECEIPT OF HIV TESTING AND INTEGRATING SCREENING SERVICES, INCREASED ACCESS TO AND RECEIPT OF HIV MEDICAL CARE AND ART FOR PEOPLE LIVING WITH HIV (BOTH NEWLY DIAGNOSED AND THOSE OUT OF CARE), INCREASED ACCESS TO PARTNER SERVICES FOR PEOPLE LIVING WITH HIV AND THEIR PARTNERS, INCREASED ACCESS TO AND RECEIPT OF ESSENTIAL SUPPORT SERVICES (E.G., SYRINGE SERVICES AND OTHER SERVICES AVAILABLE AT HIV ALLIANCE AND IN THE COMMUNITY) FOR PEOPLE LIVING WITH HIV AND THE TARGET AT-RISK POPULATION, INCREASED ACCESS TO PREP AND NPEP FOR THE TARGET POPULATION, INCREASED ACCESS TO CONDOMS AND OTHER SAFER SEX SUPPLIES AND EDUCATION, AND INCREASED COLLABORATION WITH STATE AND LOCAL PUBLIC HEALTH DEPARTMENTS TO SUPPORT HIV OUTBREAK/CLUSTER RESPONSE.THESE OUTCOMES WILL REDUCE NEW HIV AND OTHER SEXUALLY TRANSMITTED INFECTIONS; REDUCE HIV-RELATED HEALTH DISPARITIES AMONG BIPOC AND PWID; INCREASE MEDICATION ADHERENCE, IMPROVE HEALTH OUTCOMES, INCREASE VIRAL LOAD SUPPRESSION, AND REDUCE DEATH AMONG PEOPLE LIVING WITH HIV; INCREASE SAFER INJECTION PRACTICES AMONG PWID TO REDUCE THEIR RISK OF ACQUIRING AND TRANSMITTING HIV; INCREASED HEALTH DEPARTMENT AND COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT FOR CLUSTER DETECTION AND RESPONSE; AND IMPROVED RESPONSE TO HIV TRANSMISSION CLUSTERS AND OUTBREAKS.
Department of Health and Human Services
$1.2M
SPECIAL PROJECTS OF NATIONAL SIGNIFICANCE
Department of Health and Human Services
$200K
HIV ALLIANCE'S HCV PREVENTION & TESTING PROPOSAL WILL REACH OUT
Source: Federal Audit Clearinghouse (fac.gov)
Total Audits
5
Clean Audits
4
Material Weakness
No
Noncompliance Issues
No
| Year | Status | Financial Report | Federal Expenditure | Low Risk | Accepted |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | Clean | Unmodified (Clean) | $2M | No | 2025-12-09 |
| 2023 | Minor Findings | Unmodified (Clean) | $2.3M | No | 2024-11-20 |
| 2022 | Clean | Unmodified (Clean) | $3.4M | No | 2022-12-13 |
| 2021 | Clean | Unmodified (Clean) | $1.5M | No | 2022-03-28 |
| 2016 | Clean | Unmodified (Clean) | $1.1M | Yes | 2016-11-07 |
Financial Report
Unmodified (Clean)
Federal Expenditure
$2M
Financial Report
Unmodified (Clean)
Federal Expenditure
$2.3M
Financial Report
Unmodified (Clean)
Federal Expenditure
$3.4M
Financial Report
Unmodified (Clean)
Federal Expenditure
$1.5M
Financial Report
Unmodified (Clean)
Federal Expenditure
$1.1M
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 | $13.7M | $13.3M | $13.8M | $8.8M | $4.4M |
| 2022 | $13M | $10.8M | $11.1M | $7.6M | $4.4M |
| 2021 | $10.2M | $9.8M | $9.9M | $5.5M | $2.5M |
| 2020 | $6.7M | $6.3M | $6.3M | $4.2M |
Sources: ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer & IRS e-File Index
| Tax Year | Form Type | Source | Documents |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 990 | IRS e-File | PDF not yet published by IRSView Filing → |
| 2023 | 990 | DataIRS e-File | PDF not yet published by IRSView Filing → |
| 2022 | 990 | 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
| $2.2M |
| 2019 | $5.7M | $5.7M | $5.3M | $3.5M | $1.9M |
| 2018 | $4.1M | $3.8M | $3.8M | $3.4M | $1.4M |
| 2017 | $3.3M | $3.2M | $3.1M | $3.1M | $1.1M |
| 2016 | $2.8M | $2.8M | $2.7M | $1.1M | $870.3K |
| 2015 | $2.4M | $2.3M | $2.4M | $1.1M | $806.4K |
| 2014 | $2.3M | $2.3M | $2.3M | $1.1M | $818.6K |
| 2013 | $2.1M | $2.1M | $2.1M | $1.1M | $819.7K |
| 2012 | $1.7M | $1.7M | $1.8M | $1.1M | $744.8K |
| 2011 | $1.8M | $1.8M | $1.8M | $1.2M | $896.7K |
| 2021 | 990 | Data |
| 2020 | 990 | Data |
| 2019 | 990 | Data |
| 2018 | 990 | Data |
| 2017 | 990 | Data |
| 2016 | 990 | Data |
| 2015 | 990 | Data |
| 2014 | 990 | Data |
| 2013 | 990 | Data |
| 2012 | 990 | Data |
| 2011 | 990 | Data |
| 2010 | 990 | — |
| 2009 | 990 | — |
| 2008 | 990 | — |
| 2007 | 990 | — |
| 2006 | 990 | — |
| 2005 | 990 | — |
| 2004 | 990 | — |
| 2003 | 990 | — |
| 2002 | 990 | — |
| 2001 | 990 | — |