List of Qualifying Charitable Organizations for 2021
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8364 Licensed Charities As of 3/10/2020 MICS 24404 MICS 52720 T
8364 Licensed Charities as of 3/10/2020 MICS 24404 MICS 52720 T. Rowe Price Program for Charitable Giving, Inc. The David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust USA, Inc. 100 E. Pratt St 25283 Cabot Road, Ste. 101 Baltimore MD 21202 Laguna Hills CA 92653 Phone: (410)345-3457 Phone: (949)305-3785 Expiration Date: 10/31/2020 Expiration Date: 10/31/2020 MICS 52752 MICS 60851 1 For 2 Education Foundation 1 Michigan for the Global Majority 4337 E. Grand River, Ste. 198 1920 Scotten St. Howell MI 48843 Detroit MI 48209 Phone: (425)299-4484 Phone: (313)338-9397 Expiration Date: 07/31/2020 Expiration Date: 07/31/2020 MICS 46501 MICS 60769 1 Voice Can Help 10 Thousand Windows, Inc. 3290 Palm Aire Drive 348 N Canyons Pkwy Rochester Hills MI 48309 Livermore CA 94551 Phone: (248)703-3088 Phone: (571)263-2035 Expiration Date: 07/31/2021 Expiration Date: 03/31/2020 MICS 56240 MICS 10978 10/40 Connections, Inc. 100 Black Men of Greater Detroit, Inc 2120 Northgate Park Lane Suite 400 Attn: Donald Ferguson Chattanooga TN 37415 1432 Oakmont Ct. Phone: (423)468-4871 Lake Orion MI 48362 Expiration Date: 07/31/2020 Phone: (313)874-4811 Expiration Date: 07/31/2020 MICS 25388 MICS 43928 100 Club of Saginaw County 100 Women Strong, Inc. 5195 Hampton Place 2807 S. State Street Saginaw MI 48604 Saint Joseph MI 49085 Phone: (989)790-3900 Phone: (888)982-1400 Expiration Date: 07/31/2020 Expiration Date: 07/31/2020 MICS 58897 MICS 60079 1888 Message Study Committee, Inc. -
Over $1000 Raised for Tornado Victims in Concert Okcrsee the Project, Includiiig Rev
VOLUME81, ISSUE6 _______ - “EDUCATIONFOR SERVICE” ___~____NOVEMBER 13,2002 Read about Greyhound the impact football falls War I1 GIs -- -- ValleyY State. on U of 1. See page 6. See Page 4. R BENEFIT CONCERT Over $1000 raised for tornado victims in concert okcrsee the project, includiiig Rev. All cm~dgoods that were donated were Beth Hunt 1,ang Brownlee, university chaplain: turned over to Gleaners Food Bank. Siclf]’ Writer Ken Sheetz, executike director of Pcrformirig at the concert were vocalist capital gifts; junior Fenrick Jatnes: Cherie Adams, formerly of the Christian Mark Fisher, senior pastor at group Avalon; Stephen Nawrocki, associate Southport United Methodist Church: professor of biology and anthropology; U “Wind of the Spirit: An Evening of and Kiggins and Winslow. of I graduate Molly Hill; and The Boanerges, Song and Praise.” a benefit concert for This group planned the event to a contemporary Christian band from the victims of the Sept. 20 tornadoes, raise awareness of the damage t’roni Southport United Methodist Church. was held Friday evening Nov. I in the the tornadoes and assist those in need. Nawrocki and Hill have been performing Christel DeHaan Fine Arts Center. The concert was free of charge. together for over three years. Nawrocki is “The idea [of holding a benefit although a cash or canned goods also the former director of the Celebration concert] came up a year ago, after Sept. donation was accepted. Praise Band at University Heights United 11,” said Beth Kiggins, director of the “All the money that was raised has Methodist Church. The Boanerges have been Center for Instructional Technologies. -
Forest Insect and Disease Conditions in the Southwestern Region, 2008
United States Department of Forest Insect and Agriculture Forest Disease Conditions in Service Southwestern the Southwestern Region Forestry and Forest Health Region, 2008 July 2009 PR-R3-16-5 The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) prohibits discrimination in all its programs and activities on the basis of race, color, national origin, age, disability, and where applicable, sex, marital status, parental status, religion, sexual orientation, genetic information, political beliefs, reprisal, or because all or part of an individual’s income is derived from any public assistance program. (Not all prohibited bases apply to all programs.) Persons with disabilities who require alternative means for communication of program information (Braille, large print, audiotape, etc.) should contact USDA's TARGET Center at (202) 720- 2600 (voice and TTY). To file a complaint of discrimination, write to USDA, Director, Office of Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue, SW, Washington, DC 20250-9410 or call (800) 795-3272 (voice) or (202) 720-6382 (TTY). USDA is an equal opportunity provider and employer. Cover photo: Pandora moth caterpillar collected on the North Kaibab Ranger District, Kaibab National Forest. Forest Insect and Disease Conditions in the Southwestern Region, 2008 Southwestern Region Forestry and Forest Health Regional Office Salomon Ramirez, Director Allen White, Pesticide Specialist Forest Health Zones Offices Arizona Zone John Anhold, Zone Leader Mary Lou Fairweather, Pathologist Roberta Fitzgibbon, Entomologist Joel McMillin, Entomologist -
Fund & Food Drive Toolkit
FUND & FOOD DRIVE TOOLKIT 21 COUNTY SERVICE AREA 12.7 7.3M pounds of fresh produce distributed. A 60% increase. Food Distributed 31,200,000 lbs 24,336,000 33% increase in the number of veteran and military households served. local pantries, schools, soup kitchens and multiple 316,470 food community organizations work with us to meet the needs of county residents. 99,600 are children 593 Mobile Pantries BackSacks School Pantries Senior Outreach 27 mobile pantries and BackSacks distributed School-based pantries in 10 senior mobile pantries 72 CARE mobile pantries to 9,000+ children in 246 52 schools serve nearly and shopping days serve serve approximately elementary schools each 10,000 students and their approximately 2,900 11,000 families each month. week. families each month. seniors monthly. Annual Program Cost $750,000 Annual Program Cost $1.5 million Annual Program Cost $780,000 Annual Program Cost $320,000 Program costs do not reflect the cost of purchased food needed to support our pantry partners and agencies. 121817 HELP FIGHT HUNGER TODAY! Thank you for partnering with us in the fight against hunger! Thanks to compassionate partners like you, we are able to provide food assistance to more than 260,000 Hoosiers who rely on our hunger relief programs each year. This document has been prepared to help you in your planning a fund and food drive. If you have any questions, please contact Heather Conner at 317-925-0191, ext. 150 or via email at [email protected]. For corporate interest, please contact Alexandra McMahon at 317-925-0191 x112 or [email protected]. -
Private Inurement As Follows: Distribution of Earnings
C. OVERVIEW OF INUREMENT/PRIVATE BENEFIT ISSUES IN IRC 501(c)(3) 1. Preface An apocryphal domestic relations case has a judge inquiring of the elderly plaintiff about why, after some fifty years of marriage, she was now seeking a divorce. "Well, your honor," she replied, "enough is enough!" In the charitable area, some private benefit may be unavoidable. The trick is to know when enough is enough. 2. Introduction IRC 501(c)(3) provides exemption from federal income tax for organizations that are "organized and operated exclusively" for religious, educational, or charitable purposes. The exemption is further conditioned on the organization being one "no part of the net income of which inures to the benefit of any private shareholder or individual." This article examines the proscription against inurement and the requirement that an organization must be organized and operated exclusively for exempt purposes by serving public rather than private interests. 3. The Prohibition Against Inurement of Net Earnings A. What Is Inurement? The statutory prohibition against inurement of net earnings first appeared in 1894. The provision has been carried forward without significant Congressional comment or debate through successive revenue acts and codifications. See "The Concept of Charity" in the Exempt Organizations Annual Technical Review Institutes for 1980 beginning at page 7. While the provision speaks of "net earnings," it is not interpreted in a strict accounting sense to mean the remainder after expenses are subtracted from gross earnings. Any unjust enrichment, whether out of gross or net earnings, may constitute inurement. See People of God Community v. Commissioner, 75 T.C. -
Feeding Southeast Michigan
SPRING 2009 a founding member of Above: Local families in need of food benefited from a food distribution event at the UAW Local 600 in southeast Dearborn. Feeding Southeast Michigan Gleaners is meeting increased demand for more emergency food while working on multiple solutions to alleviate hunger and food insecurity in our region. Read more inside... 2 Remember to Stamp Out Hunger WHAt’s with the National Association of INSIDE? Letter Carriers on May 9. Leave your nonperishable food by your mailbox, 1 Feeding Southeast Michigan and your postal carrier will do the rest! Gleaners thanks the National Association of Letter Carriers, 2–3 Problem of Hunger Branch #1; the Teamsters; Campbell Soup Company; and the U.S. Postal Service for supporting this important effort. 4 –5 Solutions to Hunger 6 How You Can Help WHAT WE DO HOW WE DO IT Collect 28.7 million pounds of food Cultivate outstanding relationships 7 Calendar of Events a year, either donated from major with companies in the food processing 8–9 Our Partners food processors, retail chains and industry, including the Detroit Produce in Action volunteer food drives or purchased Terminal, and others. at deep discounts to meet the dietary 10–11 Fund-raising Events requirements of those served. Use an efficient, technologically advanced system to collect, store and 12 Volunteer Distribute food for 424,000 meals distribute food, with very little waste, Opportunities every week to 420 partner agencies in through five strategically located five southeastern Michigan counties. distribution centers in Livingston, 13 Empty Bowls Partner agencies include shelters, soup Macomb, Oakland and Wayne counties. -
Gleaners Bible Studies E5
Gleaners Bible Studies E5 MESSAGES FROM THE PROPHETS Study 1 Jeremiah - God is True Jeremiah chapter 1 while following his ordinary path of duty in Anathoth and Read completely changed his life. Notice verse 5 of chapter 1. Can you imagine the surprise of the prophet when God In our studies in the lives of the prophets we have told him that he was already known and marked out to be already noted at least two vital factors in their work. Each a prophet of the Lord. Jeremiah protests and hesitantly man differed in personality, background and approach. expressed his sense of inadequacy for such a task. But Recognising this, we have seen how God makes use of this does not alter God’s intention. The prophet had to learn the individuality of His servants, fitting into His plans the that God’s command was also God’s enabling. The WORD particular traits of their varying personalities. So we have must be spoken - the TRUE WORD of God. God was going thought of Isaiah the statesman, Amos, the herdsman and to send Jeremiah to His people with a vital message. This Hosea the family man. Our study in the prophets becomes message would “root out”, “pull down”, “destroy”, fascinating as we keep these facts in mind. “throw down”, “build and plant”. (verse 10) Although Jeremiah felt his own complete unworthiness for the task, When we look at the life of Jeremiah, we come to a different God would not take ‘no’ for an answer. The lesson is clear character again. -
Songbird Ecology in Southwestern Ponderosa
This file was created by scanning the printed publication. Errors identified by the software have been corrected; however, some errors may remain. Chapter 1 Ecology of Southwestern Ponderosa Pine Forests William H. Moir, Brian Geils, Mary Ann Benoit, and Dan Scurlock describes natural and human induced changes in the com- What Is Ponderosa Pine Forest position and structure of these forests. and Why Is It Important? Forests dominated by ponderosa pine (Pinus ponderosa Paleoecology var. scopulorurn) are a major forest type of western North America (figure 1; Steele 1988; Daubenmire 1978; Oliver and Ryker 1990). In this publication, a ponderosa pine The oldest remains of ponderosa pine in the Western forest has an overstory, regardless of successional stage, United States are 600,000 year old fossils found in west dominated by ponderosa pine. This definition corresponds central Nevada. Examination of pack rat middens in New to the interior ponderosa pine cover type of the Society of Mexico and Texas, shows that ponderosa pine was absent American Foresters (Eyre1980). At lower elevations in the during the Wisconsin period (about 10,400 to 43,000 years mountainous West, ponderosa pine forests are generally ago), although pinyon-juniper woodlands and mixed co- bordered by grasslands, pinyon-juniper woodlands, or nifer forests were extensive (Betancourt 1990). From the chaparral (shrublands). The ecotone may be wide or nar- late Pleistocene epoch (24,000 years ago) to the end of the row, and a ponderosa pine forest is recognized when the last ice age (about 10,400 years ago), the vegetation of the overstory contains at least 5 percent ponderosa pine (USFS Colorado Plateau moved southward or northward with 1986). -
A Conceptual Hydrogeologic Model for Fossil Springs, Western
A CONCEPTUAL HYDROGEOLOGIC MODEL FOR FOSSIL SPRINGS, WESTERN MOGOLLON RIM, ARIZONA: IMPLICATIONS FOR REGIONAL SPRINGS PROCESSES By L. Megan Green A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Geology Northern Arizona University May 2008 Approved: _________________________________ Abraham E. Springer, Ph.D., Chair _________________________________ Roderic A. Parnell, Jr., Ph.D. _________________________________ Paul J. Umhoefer, Ph.D. ABSTRACT A CONCEPTUAL HYDROGEOLOGIC MODEL FOR FOSSIL SPRINGS, WEST MOGOLLON MESA, ARIZONA: IMPLICATIONS FOR REGIONAL SPRINGS PROCESSES L. Megan Green Fossil Springs is the largest spring system discharging along the western Mogollon Rim in central Arizona and is a rare and important resource to the region. The purpose of this study was to gain a better understanding of the source of groundwater discharging at Fossil Springs. This was accomplished by (1) constructing a 3-D digital hydrogeologic framework model from available data to depict the subsurface geology of the western Mogollon Rim region and (2) by compiling and interpreting regional structural and geophysical data for Arizona’s central Transition Zone. EarthVision, a 3-D GIS modeling software, was used to construct the framework model. Two end-member models were created; the first was a simple interpolation of the data and the second was a result of geologic interpretations. The second model shows a monocline trending along the Diamond Rim fault. Both models show Fossil Springs discharging at the intersection of the Diamond Rim fault and Fossil Springs fault, at the contact between the Redwall Limestone and Naco Formation. The second objective of this study was a compilation of regional data for Arizona’s central Transition Zone. -
Homeless Non-Governmental Organisations and the Role of Research Mike Allen
10th Anniversary Issue 145 Homeless Non-Governmental Organisations and the Role of Research Mike Allen Focus Ireland, Dublin, Ireland >> Abstract_This paper explores the reciprocal and often complex relationships between homelessness research and NGOs, with a particular focus on the role and motives of homeless NGOs in commissioning and undertaking research and the impact this research has on NGO practice. The paper also explores the influence on NGOs of research emanating from the broader research community, using Focus Ireland, an Irish Homeless NGO, as a case study. The ethical challenges of NGO homelessness research reflect those of the wider research community whether academic or state sponsored, with additional unease regarding the potential exploitation of NGO clients. Citing such concerns, some NGOs refuse to engage in research, arguing that their primary role is to address clients’ personal problems; however, such a stance may unwittingly buttress individual interpretations of homelessness with a conse- quent downplaying of structural issues. The paper suggests that impact of research findings on the practice of service delivery is rarely direct and sometimes hard to detect. The paper concludes with identifying possible conduits for the communication and transfer of research findings. >> Keywords_NGO research on homelessness, ethical concerns, communica- tion of research findings ISSN 2030-2762 / ISSN 2030-3106 online 146 European Journal of Homelessness _ Volume 10, No. 3 _ 2016 Introduction The European Journal of Homelessness aims to provide “a critical analysis of policy and practice on homelessness in Europe for policy makers, practitioners, researchers and academics.” While a number of articles over the years have explored the relationship between research and policy-making at Government and regional levels, rather less attention has been given to the relationship between research and the organisations where most actual practice takes place – non- governmental organisations (NGOs) providing services to people who are homeless. -
Return of Organization Exempt from Income Tax OMB No
EXTENDED TO AUGUST 15, 2019 Return of Organization Exempt From Income Tax OMB No. 1545-0047 Form 990 Under section 501(c), 527, or 4947(a)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code (except private foundations) 2017 Department of the Treasury | Do not enter social security numbers on this form as it may be made public. Open to Public Internal Revenue Service | Go to www.irs.gov/Form990 for instructions and the latest information. Inspection A For the 2017 calendar year, or tax year beginning OCT 1, 2017 and ending SEP 30, 2018 B Check if C Name of organization D Employer identification number applicable: GLEANERS COMMUNITY FOOD BANK INC Address change OF SOUTHEASTERN MICHIGAN Name change Doing business as 38-2156255 Initial return Number and street (or P.O. box if mail is not delivered to street address) Room/suite E Telephone number Final return/ 2131 BEAUFAIT 313-923-3535 termin- ated City or town, state or province, country, and ZIP or foreign postal code G Gross receipts $ 73,279,245. Amended return DETROIT, MI 48207 H(a) Is this a group return Applica- tion F Name and address of principal officer: GERALD BRISSON for subordinates? ~~ Yes X No pending SAME AS C ABOVE H(b) Are all subordinates included? Yes No I Tax-exempt status: X 501(c)(3) 501(c) ( )§ (insert no.) 4947(a)(1) or 527 If "No," attach a list. (see instructions) J Website: | WWW.GCFB.ORG H(c) Group exemption number | K Form of organization: X Corporation Trust Association Other | L Year of formation: 1977 M State of legal domicile: MI Part I Summary 1 Briefly describe the organization's mission or most significant activities: SEE SCHEDULE O 2 Check this box | if the organization discontinued its operations or disposed of more than 25% of its net assets. -
Springs and Springs-Dependent Taxa of the Colorado River Basin, Southwestern North America: Geography, Ecology and Human Impacts
water Article Springs and Springs-Dependent Taxa of the Colorado River Basin, Southwestern North America: Geography, Ecology and Human Impacts Lawrence E. Stevens * , Jeffrey Jenness and Jeri D. Ledbetter Springs Stewardship Institute, Museum of Northern Arizona, 3101 N. Ft. Valley Rd., Flagstaff, AZ 86001, USA; Jeff@SpringStewardship.org (J.J.); [email protected] (J.D.L.) * Correspondence: [email protected] Received: 27 April 2020; Accepted: 12 May 2020; Published: 24 May 2020 Abstract: The Colorado River basin (CRB), the primary water source for southwestern North America, is divided into the 283,384 km2, water-exporting Upper CRB (UCRB) in the Colorado Plateau geologic province, and the 344,440 km2, water-receiving Lower CRB (LCRB) in the Basin and Range geologic province. Long-regarded as a snowmelt-fed river system, approximately half of the river’s baseflow is derived from groundwater, much of it through springs. CRB springs are important for biota, culture, and the economy, but are highly threatened by a wide array of anthropogenic factors. We used existing literature, available databases, and field data to synthesize information on the distribution, ecohydrology, biodiversity, status, and potential socio-economic impacts of 20,872 reported CRB springs in relation to permanent stream distribution, human population growth, and climate change. CRB springs are patchily distributed, with highest density in montane and cliff-dominated landscapes. Mapping data quality is highly variable and many springs remain undocumented. Most CRB springs-influenced habitats are small, with a highly variable mean area of 2200 m2, generating an estimated total springs habitat area of 45.4 km2 (0.007% of the total CRB land area).