EIN 76-0270942

Boys and Girls Clubs of Greater Houston

IRS 501(c) type
501(c)(3)
Num. employees
316
State
Year formed
1953
Most recent tax filings
2022-12-01
Description
Boys and Girls Clubs of Greater Houston aims to inspire and enable young people to realize their full potential as productive, responsible, and caring citizens. The club offers academic success programs that help members improve their grades, graduate on time, and pursue higher education. Their core programs include the summer learning program, Be Great Graduate, Diplomas to Degrees, and Money.
Total revenues
$13,501,369
2022
Total expenses
$13,502,127
2022
Total assets
$18,753,268
2022
Num. employees
316
2022

Program areas at Boys and Girls Clubs of Greater Houston

See Schedule OHealthy Lifestyles programs help members lead healthy, active lifestyles while reducing the likelihood of at-risk behaviors. Core Programs offered at the clubs include Smart Moves, Smart Girls, Passport to Manhood, and Triple Play Healthy Habits. Smart Moves participants are exposed to various activities designed to hone decision-making and critical-thinking skills, as well as learning how to avoid and/or resist alcohol, tobacco, other drugs, and premature sexual activity. Smart Girls is designed to meet the developmental needs of Clubs girls by exploring their own and societal attitudes and values as they build skills for eating right, staying physically fit, getting good healthcare, and developing positive relationships with peers and adults. Passport to Manhood promotes and teaches responsibility in club boys by engaging them in discussions and by helping youth understand the importance of college, academic preparation, discovering strengths and interests, college search and application process, financial aid, and college expectations. Money Matters promotes financial responsibility and independence by building their management skills and learning how to manage a checking account, budget, save and invest, start a small business, and pay for college. Power Hour provides homework assistance, tutoring, and resources that encourage members to become self-directed learners. Skill Tech is a computer program that develops club members' proficiency with office productivity software through fun, hands-on, engaging lessons and projects. Activities that reinforce positive behavior - Triple Play Healthy Habit encourages physical fitness through intramural leagues, social recreation, and healthy eating habits by teaching the power of meal choices, calories, vitamins, the food pyramid, and appropriate portion sizes.
See Schedule OGood character and citizenship programs teach members about the importance of leadership, service to the community and being global citizens. Core programs include mentoring, Keystone Program, and Youth of the Year. Keystone Club affords teens ages 14-18 an opportunity to gain valuable leadership and service experience. Members elect officers, hold meetings, and work together to implement activities in three areas: academic success, career exploration and community service. Torch Club is a chartered small group leadership and service club for members who learn to work together to implement activities in four areas: service to club and community, education, health and fitness and social recreation. Youth of the Year is a youth recognition program for club members that promotes and celebrates service to the club, community and family, academic performance, moral character, life goals, poise, and public speaking ability. Local clubs recognize members each month and select a Youth of the Year, who then participates in state competition. State winners participate in regional competitions and regional winners compete on a national level. The national Youth of the Year winner receives a scholarship and is recognized by the President of the United States.
Academic success programs reinforce and enhance the skills and knowledge members learn in school. The overall goal is to help club members improve their academic performance, graduate on time, and access a post-secondary pathway. Core programs aligned to science and technology, math, literacy, and arts offered at the club include Summer Brain Gain, Be Great Graduate, Diplomas to Degrees, Money Matters, Power Hour, DIY STEM, NASA Astro Camp, BookNook, Math Express and Skill Tech. Our summer learning program utilizes field trips and fun, high-yield learning activities that help members apply what they learn in the classroom in an interactive and enriching manner and aligns with Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills. Academic enrichment is also offered during summer programs to minimize summer learning loss. Literacy programs provide accelerated learning opportunities to assist members with closing learning gaps.
The Life & Workforce Readiness program is an integrated framework and approach that provides foundational skills and experiences, foundational career education, and advanced opportunities including work-based learning for youth in the Greater Houston region. Boys & Girls Clubs of Greater Houston believes when every young person has access to quality out-of-school opportunities that intentionally support their post-secondary readiness, they are well-positioned for Great Futures. BGCA's evidence-informed approach to workforce readiness puts holistic skill development and career exposure at the forefront of each club member's experience. The goal is to provide all youth, from age six through their teen years, with the knowledge, skills, and learning experiences they need to succeed in life and work after graduation.Career exploration provides members with exposure to the world of work and pathways to careers of their choice. In their Club experience, all members as early as six years old develop essential skills critical to success in work and life. They also gain access to job-specific hard skills to prepare them for employment. Members receive opportunities to learn and demonstrate their skills in real-world work scenarios.
Family Engagement is a family-centered and strengths-based approach to making decisions, setting goals, and achieving desired outcomes for our club members and their families. BGCGH believes in creating and sustaining strong relationships with families through engagement, empowerment, and access to community partners to positively impact the well-being of the whole family. BGCGH achieves this through family engagement, parent roundtables, and family fun fests. Family engagement events are BGCGH events in which parents are invited as the audience as well as participants. The added criteria to BGCGH events which makes these events unique is an intentional thought of including community partners that will add benefit to families through these connections. We use this opportunity to bridge the gap of services that are available within a given community, which parents may not otherwise have. Parents receive information, ask questions, and sign up for various services during our family engagement events. Clubs are required to have a minimum of two family engagement events per year. Family roundtables are BGCGH club meetings held with parents of club members and are facilitated by the club director. The goal of parent roundtables is to solicit input/feedback from parents regarding the club experience. Typically, 10 -15 parents are invited to participate in the roundtables. The roundtable atmosphere is a "safe" place in which parents are invited to share positive experiences and as well as share opportunities for the club to optimize the club experience for members and parents. Clubs are required to have a minimum of two roundtables per year. Family fun fests are typically Saturday events at clubs designed to provide FUN for club members and parents. Family fun fests are similar to traditional family engagement events as community partners who can provide benefit to families are invited. The added component making family fun fests different from traditional family engagement is a carnival-like atmosphere focused on engagement of club staff, club members, parents, and community partners. Clubs are clustered for family fun fests (those within a reasonable vicinity) while others have individual family fun fests (those in rural areas not in reasonable distance).

Who funds Boys and Girls Clubs of Greater Houston

Grants from foundations and other nonprofits
GrantmakerDescriptionAmount
Boys and Girls Clubs of AmericaSupport Bgca Program$1,350,563
United Way of Greater HoustonEarly Childhood and Youth Education$706,257
Mary Louise Dobson FoundationGeneral Support$369,089
...and 69 more grants received totalling $5,410,350

Personnel at Boys and Girls Clubs of Greater Houston

NameTitleCompensation
Kevin R HatteryPresident and Chief Executive Officer$282,289
Jonathan SturgisVice President Finance and Business Operations$167,600
Jelita BridgeforthVice President Human Resources / Board Member$140,719
Zenae CampbellVice President Club Operations$148,510
Ted SukeyDirector Finance$111,047
...and 9 more key personnel

Financials for Boys and Girls Clubs of Greater Houston

RevenuesFYE 12/2022
Total grants, contributions, etc.$13,733,753
Program services$0
Investment income and dividends$39,455
Tax-exempt bond proceeds$0
Royalty revenue$0
Net rental income$12,605
Net gain from sale of non-inventory assets$-9,770
Net income from fundraising events$-274,674
Net income from gaming activities$0
Net income from sales of inventory$0
Miscellaneous revenues$0
Total revenues$13,501,369

Form 990s for Boys and Girls Clubs of Greater Houston

Fiscal year endingDate received by IRSFormPDF link
2022-122023-11-14990View PDF
2021-122022-11-01990View PDF
2020-122021-11-01990View PDF
2019-122021-04-02990View PDF
2018-122020-09-18990View PDF
...and 9 more Form 990s
Data update history
May 18, 2024
Received grants
Identified 2 new grant, including a grant for $3,000 from Richard Stodder Charitable Foundation
February 3, 2024
Received grants
Identified 32 new grant, including a grant for $1,350,563 from Boys and Girls Clubs of America
January 22, 2024
Posted financials
Added Form 990 for fiscal year 2022
January 22, 2024
Updated personnel
Identified 8 new personnel
January 1, 2024
Used new vendors
Identified 2 new vendors, including , and
Nonprofit Types
Civic / social organizationsYouth development programsHeadquarter / parent organizationsCharities
Issues
EducationHuman servicesWomen and girlsChildren
Characteristics
Fundraising eventsState / local levelReceives government fundingEndowed supportCommunity engagement / volunteeringProvides scholarshipsGala fundraisersTax deductible donations
General information
Address
815 Crosby St
Houston, TX 77019
Metro area
Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land, TX
County
Harris County, TX
Website URL
bgcgh.org/ 
Phone
(713) 868-3426
Facebook page
BGCHouston 
IRS details
EIN
76-0270942
Fiscal year end
December
Taxreturn type
Form 990
Year formed
1953
Eligible to receive tax-deductible contributions (Pub 78)
Yes
Categorization
NTEE code, primary
O20: Youth Centers, Boys and Girls Clubs
NAICS code, primary
813410: Civic and Social Organizations
Parent/child status
Central organization
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