EIN 84-1296410

Action Resources International

IRS 501(c) type
501(c)(3)
Num. employees
25
City
Laramie
State
Year formed
1991
Most recent tax filings
2023-12-01
Description
Action Resources International promotes community activism, supports National Service programs, and advocates for health, safety, and justice while preventing violence and food insecurity.
Total revenues
$875,830
2023
Total expenses
$1,068,352
2023
Total assets
$105,157
2023
Num. employees
25
2023

Program areas at Action Resources International

See Schedule O.Feeding Laramie Valley:Feeding Laramie Valley (FLV) programs work for sustainable food access and security in Albany County, Wyoming. FLV programs operate from a core premise of social justice and equity to help achieve overall safety and security in families and communities through various cooperative efforts that are action oriented, community based and driven by individuals whose expertise is primarily informed by personal experience, backed by an understanding of the social context in which that experience was created. Feeding Laramie Valley also leads and partners in action research projects that are designed, implemented and reported out using social justice models that are community defined, based and driven. Participant growth and equitable food access, security, and long-term sustainability for Laramie, Wyoming and the State of Wyoming, continue to be the driving, long term goals for FLV as it continues to expand its food production and sharing efforts in Laramie, and collaborative capacity-building across Wyoming.During 2022, the FLV food production and distribution program known as FLV Shares, continued to expand with need and the program's determination to meet that need as the COVID-19 pandemic's lingering effects, along with its health-related, social, and financial impacts on communities continued to sweep across Wyoming. The number of recipients of FLV's locally and regionally produced fresh fruits and vegetables distributed at no charge to those who need them, continued its precipitous rise, with hundreds of new individuals and their families asking for fresh produce to feed their families either picked up or delivered, under FLV's careful attention to health protections and disease prevention. The frontline staff grew in tandem with the need including dedicated year-round staff members; year-round interns; AmeriCorps members; VISTA Summer Associates; and dozens of volunteers who provided over 500 volunteer hours at the height of the food production season. From a produce production viewpoint, the most significant accomplishments of 2022 include the following:Total Pounds Produced: 1,300Total Pounds Donated: 281 Total Pounds Distributed (produced, donated and purchased): 58,820, valued at $222,276The five FLV production gardens expanded even as the community suffered from the pandemic: FLV Farm, 8th Street Gardens, LaBonte Gardens, Kiwanis Garden, and Cindy's Yard Garden blossomed with much needed food.Summer Food Program - In 2022, FLV continued its Kids Out to Lunch Program (KOTL) serving fresh, made-from-scratch, healthy and varied hot lunches, returning to strictly on-site meal consumption per Federal grant requirements. Just as with the Shares program, the numbers soared as children and their guardians came to the FLV main building to pick up meals. The meals were made available for free to all children up through the age of 18. As was established in 2016, adult guardians accompanying children were also served meals at a suggested $1.50/meal (more if you can, less if you can't). Growing Resilience -During 2022, Growing Resilience (an NIH-funded research project running from 2015 2022) continued to study the health effects of gardening on tribal members living with chronic disease (with a particular focus on diabetes). ARI CEO Gayle Woodsum is serving as the project's community advisory board convener and facilitator, as well as the community liaison between the Wind River community, health agencies, and the University of Wyoming.
See Schedule O.Americorps Vista Rural and Underserved Intermedia:As always, work on program development for the 2022 ARI AmeriCorps State Program resulted in continued advancement in sustainable direct service for organizations seeking to increase community based and led health and wellness efforts.With a special emphasis on rural, frontier, and underserved communities, ARI's AmeriCorps program provides individualized services to grassroots and community-based organizations, assisting them with achieving short and long-term objectives leading to sustainable programs within the organization and in benefit to their community.Twelve sites of greatly diverse service offerings throughout Wyoming were served by one or more AmeriCorps members throughout 2022: 4H of Washakie, Cheyenne Foster Closet, Compass Center for Families, Laramie Downtown Clinic, Laramie Foster Closet, Laramie Interfaith Good Samaritan, Salvation Army, Laramie United Way, Worland Community Garden, and Wyoming Department of Health, The Center for Popular Research, Wind River Reservation, Wind River Food Sovereignty, and Wind River Reservation.Since its inception as an AmeriCorps State program in 2017, Action Resources International has gained a great deal of experience and many accomplishments for both AmeriCorps members and the communities being served. ARI was successful in helping to establish numerous new program sites, and in the process to increase valuable partnership-building between ARI and those sites, including supervision and guidance on AmeriCorps member recruitment, training and retention. Member service under this program in 2022 included placement and management of 12 AmeriCorps members on 12 sites. Each AmeriCorps member assignment is uniquely designed to meet the needs of the site where placement is being offered, guided by MOUs that are developed together by the site and the ARI AneriCorps Program director, with an eye toward appropriateness and feasibility. The general goals and objectives covered by these individual documents and guiding principles include providing direct service to people living with health challenges, including housing, personal safety, general health, poverty and food insecurity, in particular people facing challenges noted in the overarching project goals of each member site. With local community health and food system organizations, influence of constituent voice and leadership on program development, implementation and evaluation is assessed, and the development of procedures, outreach and methods for increasing participant involvement at all program levels is facilitated, along with sustainable methods of supporting those programs.
See Schedule O.Foster grandparents of the Wyoming Rockies:Action Resources International (ARI) continues to serve as the sponsoring organization for Foster Grandparents of the Wyoming Rockies (FGP), which currently operates in seven Wyoming counties covering an area of just under 36,000 square miles: Albany, Carbon, Sweetwater, Uinta, Lincoln, Sheridan and Johnson. Focus continues in the area of community strengthening activities of K-12 success and school readiness, with a small percentage of complementary activities in child safety, welfare and health. ARI provides infrastructure support and program management oversight including a community-led advisory council; a home base, office space and materials support; and fiscal, personnel and programmatic responsibility for the program. Over 40 FGP volunteers continue to serve this program across the state. Their contributions to the community helped southeast Wyoming prevail over the pandemic and are now poised to help with the remaining long-term social, health and financial impact.The primary focus area of this program is education. It measurably contributes to improved educational outcomes for economically-disadvantaged children, and for children with special and/or exceptional needs. Wyoming is made up of predominantly rural mountain communities that are geographically isolated, location and climate challenged, facing a variety of challenges that affect educational success, while being populated by people who come from varied life experiences that are anchored in a local culture of self-sufficiency, resilience and a great capacity for developing and implementing solutions to complex problems. The cost of living in the project's seven county service areas is high, and the wages available to most community members are low; chronic health challenges, poverty and persistent food insecurity are significant. The geography of Wyoming is a key factor in the story and challenge of daily life here. Wyoming is the tenth largest state by land size, yet has the second lowest population density. The population of the state has declined every year since the economic downturn started a few years ago. Just over 586,000 people lived in the state in 2016; today, there are just under 580,000 residents in a geographic area that could contain all the states of New England and then some. Additionally, Wyoming has an economy which closely follows a boom-and-bust cycle typical where extractive energy resources are key to state revenue. Foster Grandparents of the Wyoming Rockies' 7 counties are divided into 3 distinct service areas: Laramie and Sheridan, for which there is a Project Coordinator each, and the Western Wyoming area which is served long distance. The program as a whole is well positioned to continue to move forward and continue to grow. As a leader in establishing and facilitating partnerships for the advancement of community strengthening and the reduction of educational, social and health disparities, ARI will continue to meet priority work-plan directed outputs and resulting outcomes by all FGP volunteers. ARI will also aid the program staff and coordinators in identifying successes, barriers and opportunities for not only retaining FGP volunteers, but increasing service-learning opportunities for current volunteers and outreach to increase diversity among staff, volunteers and program recipients. ARI provides its own network of collaboration and communication with Wyoming's elder population. In Albany County, ARI's flagship food security program, Feeding Laramie Valley (FLV), works extensively with community elders as advisors, volunteers and program service recipients. Since 2011, FLV has provided locally grown fresh fruits and vegetables every week to a large number of Foster Grandparents through its Shares program, at no charge. FGWR remains committed to the goal of developing and implementing training and outreach that is more inclusive of minority and traditionally disenfranchised populations, and pays careful attention to proactive involvement of people of color; members of the LGBTQ community; immigrant populations and people for whom English is a second language; people living with disabilities and chronic health issues; veterans and their families. ARI and its food security program Feeding Laramie Valley have had great success in promoting this philosophical commitment and translating that into practice.

Who funds Action Resources International

Grants from foundations and other nonprofits
GrantmakerDescriptionAmount
Wyoming Governor's Residence FoundationFood, Meal, And/or Infrastructure Support$6,064

Personnel at Action Resources International

NameTitleCompensation
Gayle WoodsumChief Executive Officer$133,967
Crystal BallardNational Service Program Director
Lina DunningCommunity Engagement Director$73,657
Barbara SummerSecretary$0
Linda DunningPast Treasurer$67,454

Financials for Action Resources International

RevenuesFYE 12/2023
Total grants, contributions, etc.$862,934
Program services$14,684
Investment income and dividends$0
Tax-exempt bond proceeds$0
Royalty revenue$0
Net rental income$140
Net gain from sale of non-inventory assets$0
Net income from fundraising events$2,242
Net income from gaming activities$0
Net income from sales of inventory$-4,170
Miscellaneous revenues$0
Total revenues$875,830

Form 990s for Action Resources International

Fiscal year endingDate received by IRSFormPDF link
2023-122024-11-12990View PDF
2022-122023-11-15990View PDF
2021-122022-11-15990View PDF
2020-122022-03-31990View PDF
2019-122022-03-29990View PDF
...and 8 more Form 990s

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Serve and ConnectColumbia, SC$1,613,156
NaevaAlbuquerque, NM$1,445,822
Action Institute NCCharlotte, NC$1,169,592
Alabama Institute for Social JusticeMontgomery, AL$401,143
Until We Are All Free MovementNew Hope, MN$277,992
Farm AidCambridge, MA$4,013,981
Data update history
November 14, 2024
Updated personnel
Identified 1 new personnel
January 7, 2024
Posted financials
Added Form 990 for fiscal year 2022
December 29, 2023
Received grants
Identified 5 new grant, including a grant for $10,093 from Wyoming Nonprofit Network
December 26, 2023
Used new vendors
Identified 1 new vendor, including
November 25, 2023
Posted financials
Added Form 990 for fiscal year 2019
Nonprofit Types
Social advocacy organizationsHuman service organizationsCharities
Issues
Human servicesVoting rights
Characteristics
Fundraising eventsGrassroots organizingReceives government fundingCommunity engagement / volunteeringTax deductible donationsAccepts online donations
General information
Address
PO Box 536
Laramie, WY 82073
County
Albany County, WY
Website URL
actionresources.ngo/ 
Phone
(307) 399-3815
IRS details
EIN
84-1296410
Fiscal year end
December
Taxreturn type
Form 990
Year formed
1991
Eligible to receive tax-deductible contributions (Pub 78)
Yes
Categorization
NTEE code, primary
P20: Human Service Organizations
NAICS code, primary
813319: Social Advocacy Organizations
Parent/child status
Independent
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