Loading organization details...
Loading organization details...
Source: IRS Form 990 via ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Total Revenue
▼$12.1M
Total Contributions
N/A
Total Expenses
▼$3.8M
Total Assets
$74.6M
Total Liabilities
▼$1
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
VA/DoD Awards
$932.7K
VA/DoD Award Count
3
Funding from the Department of Veterans Affairs and/or Department of Defense.
Total Federal Funding
$3.9M
Awards Found
9
| Awarding Agency | Description | Amount | Fiscal Year | Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Department of Health and Human Services | RURAL COMMUNITIES OPIOID RESPONSE-IMPLEMENTATION | $1M | FY2021 | Sep 2021 – Aug 2024 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | THE TORRINGTON COALITION TO REDUCE YOUTH SUBSTANCE USE | $625K | FY2017 | Sep 2017 – Sep 2027 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | MENTAL HEALTH AWARENESS TRAINING GRANT, MCCALL FOUNDATION, INC. - MCCALL CENTER FOR BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SERVES A COMMUNITY WITH AN IDENTIFIED DEFICIT OF MENTAL HEALTH RESOURCES. THIS DEFICIT FURTHER COMPOUNDS THE CHALLENGES FACED AND INCREASES THE NEED FOR ACCESSING MENTAL HEALTH RESOURCES BY OUR POPULATIONS OF FOCUS - SENIORS, POPULATIONS OF COLOR, AND LAW ENFORCEMENT. UTILIZING OUR POSITION AS A COLLABORATIVE LEADER IN THE COMMUNITY AND OUR EXPERTISE IN PROVIDING QUALITY MENTAL HEALTH TREATMENT, MCCALL WILL LEAD THE TRAINING AND EDUCATION OF SERVICE PROVIDERS, THE GENERAL PUBLIC, AND MEMBERS OF OUR POPULATIONS OF FOCUS TO INCREASE THE AVAILABILITY AND ACCESSIBILITY OF MENTAL HEALTH RESOURCES IN THE REGION. BY FOCUSING ON TRAINING, EDUCATION, NETWORK BUILDING, DATA COLLECTION, AND SUSTAINABILITY, OUR APPROACH WILL ENSURE BROAD AND EFFECTIVE INTEGRATION OF MENTAL HEALTH AWARENESS TRAINING SKILLS AND EDUCATION WHERE THEY ARE NEEDED MOST. MCCALL IS POSITIONED AND HAS THE ABILITY TO TRAIN, REFER, AND PROVIDE HIGH QUALITY MENTAL HEALTH TREATMENT TO RESIDENTS ACROSS THE REGION, ENSURING THAT WE CAN BE A “ONE-STOP-SHOP” FOR MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES. HOWEVER, OUR COLLABORATIVE APPROACH WILL PROMOTE SYSTEMIC CHANGES WITHIN PARTNERING SERVICE PROVIDERS ACROSS THE REGION THAT WILL BOTH FURTHER THE INTEGRATION OF THESE NECESSARY SKILLS AND IMPROVE THE OVERALL SUSTAINABILITY OF MENTAL HEALTH RESOURCES WELL BEYOND THE GRANT PERIOD. | $500K | FY2022 | Sep 2022 – Sep 2027 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Veterans Affairs | VA IS PROVIDING PER DIEM FUNDING TO ASSIST WITH THE OPERATIONAL COSTS ASSOCIATED WITH TRANSITIONAL HOUSING BEDS FOR HOMELESS VETERANS. | $497.6K | — | — – — |
| Department of Health and Human Services | TORRINGTON AWARENESS AND PREVENTION PARTNERSHIP, DFC CONTINUATION APPLICATION | $375K | FY2022 | Sep 2022 – Sep 2027 |
| Department of Health and Human Services | COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING/CONGRESSIONALLY DIRECTED SPENDING - CONSTRUCTION | $325K | FY2023 | Sep 2023 – Sep 2026 |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Veterans Affairs | VA IS PROVIDING PER DIEM FUNDING TO ASSIST WITH THE OPERATIONAL COSTS ASSOCIATED WITH TRANSITIONAL HOUSING BEDS FOR HOMELESS VETERANS. | $288.5K | — | — – — |
| VA/DoDDepartment of Veterans Affairs | VA IS PROVIDING PER DIEM FUNDING TO ASSIST WITH THE OPERATIONAL COSTS ASSOCIATED WITH TRANSITIONAL HOUSING BEDS FOR HOMELESS VETERANS. | $146.6K | — | — – — |
| Department of Health and Human Services | THE TORRINGTON COALITION TO REDUCE YOUTH SUBSTANCE USE | $125K | FY2017 | Sep 2017 – Sep 2022 |
Department of Health and Human Services
$1M
RURAL COMMUNITIES OPIOID RESPONSE-IMPLEMENTATION
Department of Health and Human Services
$625K
THE TORRINGTON COALITION TO REDUCE YOUTH SUBSTANCE USE
Department of Health and Human Services
$500K
MENTAL HEALTH AWARENESS TRAINING GRANT, MCCALL FOUNDATION, INC. - MCCALL CENTER FOR BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SERVES A COMMUNITY WITH AN IDENTIFIED DEFICIT OF MENTAL HEALTH RESOURCES. THIS DEFICIT FURTHER COMPOUNDS THE CHALLENGES FACED AND INCREASES THE NEED FOR ACCESSING MENTAL HEALTH RESOURCES BY OUR POPULATIONS OF FOCUS - SENIORS, POPULATIONS OF COLOR, AND LAW ENFORCEMENT. UTILIZING OUR POSITION AS A COLLABORATIVE LEADER IN THE COMMUNITY AND OUR EXPERTISE IN PROVIDING QUALITY MENTAL HEALTH TREATMENT, MCCALL WILL LEAD THE TRAINING AND EDUCATION OF SERVICE PROVIDERS, THE GENERAL PUBLIC, AND MEMBERS OF OUR POPULATIONS OF FOCUS TO INCREASE THE AVAILABILITY AND ACCESSIBILITY OF MENTAL HEALTH RESOURCES IN THE REGION. BY FOCUSING ON TRAINING, EDUCATION, NETWORK BUILDING, DATA COLLECTION, AND SUSTAINABILITY, OUR APPROACH WILL ENSURE BROAD AND EFFECTIVE INTEGRATION OF MENTAL HEALTH AWARENESS TRAINING SKILLS AND EDUCATION WHERE THEY ARE NEEDED MOST. MCCALL IS POSITIONED AND HAS THE ABILITY TO TRAIN, REFER, AND PROVIDE HIGH QUALITY MENTAL HEALTH TREATMENT TO RESIDENTS ACROSS THE REGION, ENSURING THAT WE CAN BE A “ONE-STOP-SHOP” FOR MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES. HOWEVER, OUR COLLABORATIVE APPROACH WILL PROMOTE SYSTEMIC CHANGES WITHIN PARTNERING SERVICE PROVIDERS ACROSS THE REGION THAT WILL BOTH FURTHER THE INTEGRATION OF THESE NECESSARY SKILLS AND IMPROVE THE OVERALL SUSTAINABILITY OF MENTAL HEALTH RESOURCES WELL BEYOND THE GRANT PERIOD.
Department of Veterans Affairs
$497.6K
VA IS PROVIDING PER DIEM FUNDING TO ASSIST WITH THE OPERATIONAL COSTS ASSOCIATED WITH TRANSITIONAL HOUSING BEDS FOR HOMELESS VETERANS.
Department of Health and Human Services
$375K
TORRINGTON AWARENESS AND PREVENTION PARTNERSHIP, DFC CONTINUATION APPLICATION
Department of Health and Human Services
$325K
COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING/CONGRESSIONALLY DIRECTED SPENDING - CONSTRUCTION
Department of Veterans Affairs
$288.5K
VA IS PROVIDING PER DIEM FUNDING TO ASSIST WITH THE OPERATIONAL COSTS ASSOCIATED WITH TRANSITIONAL HOUSING BEDS FOR HOMELESS VETERANS.
Department of Veterans Affairs
$146.6K
VA IS PROVIDING PER DIEM FUNDING TO ASSIST WITH THE OPERATIONAL COSTS ASSOCIATED WITH TRANSITIONAL HOUSING BEDS FOR HOMELESS VETERANS.
Department of Health and Human Services
$125K
THE TORRINGTON COALITION TO REDUCE YOUTH SUBSTANCE USE
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: PF
Sources: IRS e-Filed Form 990 (XML) & ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Scroll →
| Year | Revenue | Contributions | Expenses | Assets | Net Assets |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2023 | $12.1M | — | $3.8M | $74.6M | — |
| 2022 | $1.1M | — | $3.8M | $57.4M | — |
| 2021 | $17.2M | — | $2.9M | $71.7M | — |
| 2020 | $11.1M | — | $1.4M | $47.9M | — |
Sources: ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer & IRS e-File Index
| Tax Year | Form Type | Source | Documents |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | 990-PF | IRS e-File | PDF not yet published by IRSView Filing → |
| 2023 | 990-PF | DataIRS e-File | PDF not yet published by IRSView Filing → |
| 2022 | 990-PF | 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 | $10.7M | — | $1.7M | $33.3M | — |
| 2015 | $50.5K | — | $5,212 | $4.4M | — |
| 2014 | $845.7K | — | $1.1M | $4.4M | — |
| 2013 | $2.4M | — | $1.1M | $4.5M | — |
| 2012 | $2.4M | — | $888.2K | $3.2M | — |
| 2011 | $2M | — | $288.8K | $1.7M | — |
| 2021 | 990-PF | Data |
| 2020 | 990-PF | Data | PDF not yet published by IRS |
| 2019 | 990-PF | Data |
| 2018 | 990-PF | — |
| 2017 | 990-PF | — |
| 2016 | 990-PF | — |
| 2015 | 990-PF | Data |
| 2014 | 990-PF | Data |
| 2013 | 990-PF | Data |
| 2012 | 990-PF | Data |
| 2011 | 990-PF | Data |
| 2010 | 990-PF | — |
| 2009 | 990-PF | — |
| 2008 | 990-PF | — |
| 2007 | 990-PF | — |