Loading organization details...
Loading organization details...
The Frankford Community Development Corporation FCDC is dedicated to the asset-based development of Lower Northeast Philadelphia by focusing on job creation affordable and workforce housing development improving awareness and outcomes around health and wellness and the creative and sustainable improvement of public space.
Source: IRS Form 990 (Tax Year 2024)
Source: IRS Form 990 via ProPublica Nonprofit Explorer
Total Revenue
▼$3.2M
Total Contributions
$3.1M
Total Expenses
▼$1.3M
Total Assets
$10.1M
Total Liabilities
▼$5.5M
Net Assets
$4.6M
Officer Compensation
→$0
Other Salaries
$420K
Investment Income
▼$8,308
Fundraising
▼$0
Source: USAspending.gov · Searched by organization name
Total Federal Funding
$1.5M
Awards Found
2
| Awarding Agency | Description | Amount | Fiscal Year | Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Department of Health and Human Services | COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING/CONGRESSIONALLY DIRECTED SPENDING - CONSTRUCTION - IN 2013, THE PHILADELPHIA CITY PLANNING COMMISSION (PCPC) ADOPTED THE PHILADELPHIA 2035 LOWER NORTHEAST DISTRICT PLAN. AS PART OF THAT PLAN THE CITY IDENTIFIED THE NEED FOR AN ADDITIONAL HEALTH CENTER (HEALTH CENTER 11) TO SERVICE THE NORTHEAST SECTION OF THE CITY. HEALTH CENTER 11 WOULD ADDRESS MAJOR HEALTH-RELATED ISSUES AND ALLEVIATE PRESSURES FROM AN OVERCROWDED HEALTH CENTER 10. THE PLAN SPEAKS TO THE “STRONG ASSOCIATION” AMONG LAND USE, TRANSPORTATION, AND ISSUES OF PUBLIC HEALTH. FURTHER, THE STUDY IDENTIFIES THE FRANKFORD TRANSPORTATION CENTER (FTC) AS THE “CITY’S SECOND BUSIEST TRANSIT HUB” AND SUGGESTS PLACING A HEALTH CENTER ADJACENT TO FTC TO MAXIMIZE ACCESSIBILITY TO THE LOWER NORTHEAST SECTION OF THE CITY. IN 2019 PHILADELPHIA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH (PDPH) RANKED 46 NEIGHBORHOODS BASED ON HEALTH OUTCOMES (LENGTH AND QUALITY OF LIFE), AND HEALTH FACTORS (HEALTH BEHAVIORS, CLINICAL CARE, SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC FACTORS, PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENT); FRANKFORD RANKED 42 AND 43, RESPECTIVELY. FRANKFORD’S LACK OF ACCESS TO FRESH FOOD AND QUALITY HEALTH CARE CORRELATE CLOSELY WITH THE NEIGHBORHOOD'S RATES OF CHRONIC ILLNESSES THAT SURPASS CITYWIDE RATES. 23.4% OF ADULTS (AGES 18-64) IN FRANKFORD LACK HEALTH INSURANCE VS. 17.4% CITYWIDE; APPROXIMATELY 39% OF ADULTS IN FRANKFORD ARE OBESE VS. 30% CITYWIDE. FRANKFORD’S PHYSICIAN TO RESIDENT RATIO VASTLY EXCEEDS THE CITYWIDE RATE (1/2576 VS. 1/1460). ONLY ABOUT 70% OF RESIDENTS REPORTED HAVING A RECENT ROUTINE MEDICAL CHECKUP COMPARED TO 75% CITYWIDE. FINALLY, HEALTH CENTER 10, THE ONLY HEALTH CENTER SERVICING THE ENTIRE NORTHEAST SECTION OF THE CITY HAS A WAITING PERIOD OF UP TO 12 MONTHS FOR A NEW ADULT PATIENT APPOINTMENT AND UP TO 6 MONTHS FOR A NEW PEDIATRIC APPOINTMENT. THIS REPRESENTS A SEVERE ACCESS BARRIER, LEAVING MANY RESIDENTS OF THE AREA TO SUFFER PREVENTABLE COMPLICATIONS. THE FRANKFORD CDC IS NOW PROPOSING TO CONSTRUCT A MUNICIPAL HEALTH CENTER AS PART OF A LARGER TRANS IT-ORIENTED DEVELOPMENT (TOD) AT FTC. THE FTC/TOD PROJECT WILL CONSIST OF A MIXED-USE DEVELOPMENT, ANCHORED BY A 20,000 SQUARE-FOOT SUPERMARKET WITH A 40,000 SQUARE-FOOT CITY HEALTH CENTER, AND MIXED-INCOME HOUSING. THE HEALTH CENTER AT FTC WILL BE A FULL SERVICE HEALTH CENTER OFFERING PRIMARY CARE SERVICES FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN, WOMEN'S HEALTH AND FAMILY PLANNING, BEHAVIORAL HEALTH, PHYSICAL THERAPY AND DENTAL. ADDITIONALLY, THIS HEALTH CENTER WILL OFFER ONSITE PHARMACY AND LABORATORY SERVICES. FINALLY, THIS PROJECT WILL HAVE A MAJOR POSITIVE IMPACT ON THE AREA SURROUNDING FTC AND WILL ALSO CATALYZE FURTHER DEVELOPMENT ALONG FRANKFORD AVENUE. THIS MIXED-USE PROJECT WILL GIVE LOCAL RESIDENTS ACCESS TO QUALITY HEALTH CARE SERVICES, FRESH FOOD, AFFORDABLE HOUSING, ADDITIONAL RETAIL, AND LIVING WAGE JOBS. THE HEALTH CENTER ALONE IS PROJECTED TO CREATE 43 JOBS WITH ANNUAL SALARY RANGES FROM $43,000 - $224,000. THE PROJECT WILL HAVE A SIGNIFICANT POSITIVE IMPACT ON THE AREA SURROUNDING FTC AND WILL CATALYZE FURTHER DEVELOPMENT ALONG THE FRANKFORD AVENUE COMMERCIAL CORRIDOR. | $1M | FY2024 | Sep 2024 – Sep 2027 |
| Department of Housing and Urban Development | PURPOSE: ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE, COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING/CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTED SPENDING AWARDS ARE AUTHORIZED UNDER THE CONSOLIDATED APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 2022 PUBLIC LAW 117-328 AND THE EXPLANATORY STATEMENT FOR DIVISION L OF THAT ACT. PROJECTS SELECTED FOR COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING/CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTED SPENDING ARE LISTED IN THE JOINT EXPLANATORY STATEMENT (JES) THAT ACCOMPANIES A SPECIFIC FISCAL YEAR’S APPROPRIATIONS ACT OR CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. THE JES LISTS PROJECT, RECIPIENT, STATE, AMOUNT AND CONGRESSIONAL SPONSOR.; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE, COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING/CONGRESSIONALLY DIRECTED SPENDING AWARD PROJECTS INCLUDE A WIDE VARIETY OF ACTIVITIES THAT RESULT IN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OR COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT OUTCOMES. HUD WILL NOT KNOW THE FULL SCOPE OF THE PROJECT UNTIL THE RECIPIENT SUBMITS THE REQUIRED PROJECT NARRATIVE AND CONFIRMS ALIGNMENT WITH THE LANGUAGE AS PROVIDED IN THE CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. TO FIND THE DETAILS OF THE GRANT AWARD AS WRITTEN WITHIN THE CONGRESSIONAL RECORD USE THE FOLLOWING LINK AND PATH SELECTIONS TO GET TO THE DESCRIPTION OF THE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE, COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING GRANTS HTTPS://WWW.HUD.GOV/PROGRAM_OFFICES/COMM_PLANNING/EDI-GRANTS, SELECT THE FISCAL YEAR OF INTEREST, SCROLL DOWN TO PROGRAM LAWS AND REGULATIONS, UNDER FISCAL YEAR 20XX CONSOLIDATED APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 20XX: CONGRESSIONAL RECORD (JOINT EXPLANATORY STATEMENT).; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: COMPLETION OF THE PROJECT AS DESCRIBED IN THE JOINT EXPLANATORY STATEMENT (JES) PROJECT DESCRIPTION AND SUBSEQUENT APPROVED PROJECT NARRATIVE.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE PROJECT BENEFICIARIES ARE THE INDIVIDUALS AND/OR ORGANIZATIONS THAT ARE AWARDED GRANT FUNDS OR SERVED BY THE ENTITIES THAT ARE AWARDED GRANT FUNDS AS IDENTIFIED IN THE JES RECIPIENT OR PROJECT DESCRIPTION SECTIONS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES ARE UNKNOWN AT THE TIME OF AWARD. | $500K | FY2024 | Aug 2024 – Aug 2032 |
Department of Health and Human Services
$1M
COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING/CONGRESSIONALLY DIRECTED SPENDING - CONSTRUCTION - IN 2013, THE PHILADELPHIA CITY PLANNING COMMISSION (PCPC) ADOPTED THE PHILADELPHIA 2035 LOWER NORTHEAST DISTRICT PLAN. AS PART OF THAT PLAN THE CITY IDENTIFIED THE NEED FOR AN ADDITIONAL HEALTH CENTER (HEALTH CENTER 11) TO SERVICE THE NORTHEAST SECTION OF THE CITY. HEALTH CENTER 11 WOULD ADDRESS MAJOR HEALTH-RELATED ISSUES AND ALLEVIATE PRESSURES FROM AN OVERCROWDED HEALTH CENTER 10. THE PLAN SPEAKS TO THE “STRONG ASSOCIATION” AMONG LAND USE, TRANSPORTATION, AND ISSUES OF PUBLIC HEALTH. FURTHER, THE STUDY IDENTIFIES THE FRANKFORD TRANSPORTATION CENTER (FTC) AS THE “CITY’S SECOND BUSIEST TRANSIT HUB” AND SUGGESTS PLACING A HEALTH CENTER ADJACENT TO FTC TO MAXIMIZE ACCESSIBILITY TO THE LOWER NORTHEAST SECTION OF THE CITY. IN 2019 PHILADELPHIA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC HEALTH (PDPH) RANKED 46 NEIGHBORHOODS BASED ON HEALTH OUTCOMES (LENGTH AND QUALITY OF LIFE), AND HEALTH FACTORS (HEALTH BEHAVIORS, CLINICAL CARE, SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC FACTORS, PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENT); FRANKFORD RANKED 42 AND 43, RESPECTIVELY. FRANKFORD’S LACK OF ACCESS TO FRESH FOOD AND QUALITY HEALTH CARE CORRELATE CLOSELY WITH THE NEIGHBORHOOD'S RATES OF CHRONIC ILLNESSES THAT SURPASS CITYWIDE RATES. 23.4% OF ADULTS (AGES 18-64) IN FRANKFORD LACK HEALTH INSURANCE VS. 17.4% CITYWIDE; APPROXIMATELY 39% OF ADULTS IN FRANKFORD ARE OBESE VS. 30% CITYWIDE. FRANKFORD’S PHYSICIAN TO RESIDENT RATIO VASTLY EXCEEDS THE CITYWIDE RATE (1/2576 VS. 1/1460). ONLY ABOUT 70% OF RESIDENTS REPORTED HAVING A RECENT ROUTINE MEDICAL CHECKUP COMPARED TO 75% CITYWIDE. FINALLY, HEALTH CENTER 10, THE ONLY HEALTH CENTER SERVICING THE ENTIRE NORTHEAST SECTION OF THE CITY HAS A WAITING PERIOD OF UP TO 12 MONTHS FOR A NEW ADULT PATIENT APPOINTMENT AND UP TO 6 MONTHS FOR A NEW PEDIATRIC APPOINTMENT. THIS REPRESENTS A SEVERE ACCESS BARRIER, LEAVING MANY RESIDENTS OF THE AREA TO SUFFER PREVENTABLE COMPLICATIONS. THE FRANKFORD CDC IS NOW PROPOSING TO CONSTRUCT A MUNICIPAL HEALTH CENTER AS PART OF A LARGER TRANS IT-ORIENTED DEVELOPMENT (TOD) AT FTC. THE FTC/TOD PROJECT WILL CONSIST OF A MIXED-USE DEVELOPMENT, ANCHORED BY A 20,000 SQUARE-FOOT SUPERMARKET WITH A 40,000 SQUARE-FOOT CITY HEALTH CENTER, AND MIXED-INCOME HOUSING. THE HEALTH CENTER AT FTC WILL BE A FULL SERVICE HEALTH CENTER OFFERING PRIMARY CARE SERVICES FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN, WOMEN'S HEALTH AND FAMILY PLANNING, BEHAVIORAL HEALTH, PHYSICAL THERAPY AND DENTAL. ADDITIONALLY, THIS HEALTH CENTER WILL OFFER ONSITE PHARMACY AND LABORATORY SERVICES. FINALLY, THIS PROJECT WILL HAVE A MAJOR POSITIVE IMPACT ON THE AREA SURROUNDING FTC AND WILL ALSO CATALYZE FURTHER DEVELOPMENT ALONG FRANKFORD AVENUE. THIS MIXED-USE PROJECT WILL GIVE LOCAL RESIDENTS ACCESS TO QUALITY HEALTH CARE SERVICES, FRESH FOOD, AFFORDABLE HOUSING, ADDITIONAL RETAIL, AND LIVING WAGE JOBS. THE HEALTH CENTER ALONE IS PROJECTED TO CREATE 43 JOBS WITH ANNUAL SALARY RANGES FROM $43,000 - $224,000. THE PROJECT WILL HAVE A SIGNIFICANT POSITIVE IMPACT ON THE AREA SURROUNDING FTC AND WILL CATALYZE FURTHER DEVELOPMENT ALONG THE FRANKFORD AVENUE COMMERCIAL CORRIDOR.
Department of Housing and Urban Development
$500K
PURPOSE: ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE, COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING/CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTED SPENDING AWARDS ARE AUTHORIZED UNDER THE CONSOLIDATED APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 2022 PUBLIC LAW 117-328 AND THE EXPLANATORY STATEMENT FOR DIVISION L OF THAT ACT. PROJECTS SELECTED FOR COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING/CONGRESSIONAL DIRECTED SPENDING ARE LISTED IN THE JOINT EXPLANATORY STATEMENT (JES) THAT ACCOMPANIES A SPECIFIC FISCAL YEAR’S APPROPRIATIONS ACT OR CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. THE JES LISTS PROJECT, RECIPIENT, STATE, AMOUNT AND CONGRESSIONAL SPONSOR.; ACTIVITIES TO BE PERFORMED: ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE, COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING/CONGRESSIONALLY DIRECTED SPENDING AWARD PROJECTS INCLUDE A WIDE VARIETY OF ACTIVITIES THAT RESULT IN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OR COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT OUTCOMES. HUD WILL NOT KNOW THE FULL SCOPE OF THE PROJECT UNTIL THE RECIPIENT SUBMITS THE REQUIRED PROJECT NARRATIVE AND CONFIRMS ALIGNMENT WITH THE LANGUAGE AS PROVIDED IN THE CONGRESSIONAL RECORD. TO FIND THE DETAILS OF THE GRANT AWARD AS WRITTEN WITHIN THE CONGRESSIONAL RECORD USE THE FOLLOWING LINK AND PATH SELECTIONS TO GET TO THE DESCRIPTION OF THE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE, COMMUNITY PROJECT FUNDING GRANTS HTTPS://WWW.HUD.GOV/PROGRAM_OFFICES/COMM_PLANNING/EDI-GRANTS, SELECT THE FISCAL YEAR OF INTEREST, SCROLL DOWN TO PROGRAM LAWS AND REGULATIONS, UNDER FISCAL YEAR 20XX CONSOLIDATED APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 20XX: CONGRESSIONAL RECORD (JOINT EXPLANATORY STATEMENT).; EXPECTED OUTCOMES: COMPLETION OF THE PROJECT AS DESCRIBED IN THE JOINT EXPLANATORY STATEMENT (JES) PROJECT DESCRIPTION AND SUBSEQUENT APPROVED PROJECT NARRATIVE.; INTENDED BENEFICIARIES: THE PROJECT BENEFICIARIES ARE THE INDIVIDUALS AND/OR ORGANIZATIONS THAT ARE AWARDED GRANT FUNDS OR SERVED BY THE ENTITIES THAT ARE AWARDED GRANT FUNDS AS IDENTIFIED IN THE JES RECIPIENT OR PROJECT DESCRIPTION SECTIONS.; SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES: THE SUBRECIPIENT ACTIVITIES ARE UNKNOWN AT THE TIME OF AWARD.
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 | $3.2M | $3.1M | $1.3M | $10.1M | $4.6M |
| 2022 | $1.2M | $1.1M | $833.6K | $4.1M | $2.1M |
| 2021 | $1.5M | $1.4M | $681.3K | $3.5M | $1.8M |
| 2020 | $787.4K | $674.3K | $624.2K | $2.3M |
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
| $981.4K |
| 2019 | $673.8K | $598.8K | $633.9K | $1.9M | $2.3M |
| 2018 | $618K | $537.2K | $597.1K | $1.4M | $414.3K |
| 2017 | $653.6K | $600.5K | $383.3K | $2.4M | $1.2M |
| 2016 | $859K | $669.2K | $353.7K | $2.1M | $878.9K |
| 2015 | $452K | $367K | $457.4K | $1.5M | $290.2K |
| 2014 | $291.8K | $26.5K | $232K | $1.5M | $307.2K |
| 2013 | $212.8K | $11.8K | $149.7K | $1.3M | $129.1K |
| 2012 | $136.4K | $3,356 | $161.6K | $1.5M | $46K |
| 2011 | $213K | $5,128 | $148.9K | $1.4M | $71.3K |
| 2021 | 990 | Data |
| 2020 | 990 | Data | PDF not yet published by IRS |
| 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 | — |