EIN 94-3112338

HomeRise

IRS 501(c) type
501(c)(3)
Num. employees
430
Year formed
1990
Most recent tax filings
2022-12-01
Description
Founded in 1990, Community Housing Partnership is an award-winning San Francisco nonprofit dedicated to helping homeless people secure housing and become self-sufficient.
Also known as...
Community Housing Partnership
Total revenues
$23,138,290
2022
Total expenses
$22,563,274
2022
Total assets
$48,130,595
2022
Num. employees
430
2022

Program areas at HomeRise

Community Housing Partnership is the leading nonprofit permanent supportive Housing provider in san francisco. Three of our main areas of focus are: 1) providing supportive Housing to formerly homeless individuals, families & youths that helps them to become self-sufficient and move on to independent or less service-enriched Housing. 2) providing a job training and job placement program to help formerly homeless individuals become self-supporting. 3) utilizing our Community organizing & resident engagement program to advocate for public and governmental support for policies that address the root causes of homelessness and expand Housing opportunities for low-income individuals.
Chp's employment services is a workforce development program which provides a way to mitigate some of the barriers which traditionally prevent individuals from obtaining jobs. Such as prior criminal charges, physical and/or mental health issues, a lack of work experience or steady work history -or a combination of any/all of those. Our 15-month program addresses this problem by providing job skills training, paid on-the-job training and work experience with chp's social enterprise, help to apply for and secure permanent positions, as well as one year of continued support and mentorship to ensure the program graduate's continuing success and job retention.
Community Housing Partnership currently owns, manages, and/or provides services in 17 buildings in san francisco which served over 1,900 individuals and families last year. All of chp's Housing properties are service enriched: they either have programs and services onsite or co-located with another one of or properties nearby. Services include everything from basic case management with regular check-ins, to behavioral health and substance abuse counseling, life skills & budgeting. Resident engagement activities including volunteer in the Community and advocating for changes to Housing policies. Currently 98% of our residents are maintaining stable Housing.
We currently own, manage, and/or provide services to 17 permanentsupportive Housing sites throughout san francisco, which collectivelyhoused over 1,900 formerly homeless individuals and families last year.most chp residents were considered "chronically homeless" (per hud'sdefinition), which means that they were consistently homeless for atleast a year, or homeless off and on for the majority of 3 years beforethey came to us. All of our residents are categorized as "low" to "verylow-income", over 80% are persons of color, 34% are seniors, 14% arefamily units, 46% have a physical disability and 60% report a chronicmental health condition. Despite their many challenges, an amazing 98%of current and former residents are remaining housed and permanentlybreaking the cycle of homelessness. Together with our supporters, wehave shown that a home has the power to stabilize a person's life -helping people to improve their health, cook for their family, find ajob, begin paying rent, feel a sense of dignity, and contribute to thecommunity.it is generally acknowledged that the best way to help formerlyhomeless individuals achieve permanent, economic stability is to helpthem rejoin the workforce. Chp's employment services is a workforcedevelopment program which provides a way to mitigate some of the barriers which traditionally prevent individuals from obtaining jobs.these can include prior criminal charges, physical and/or mental healthissues, a lack of work experience or steady work history -or acombination of any/all of those. Our 15-month program addresses thisproblem by providing job skills training; paid on-the-job training withchp's social enterprise solutions sf which serves 16 non-profit and forprofit partners; help to apply for and secure permanent positions; aswell as one year of continued support and mentorship to ensure theprogram graduate's continuing success and job retention. However, someindividuals who have experienced long term homelessness aren't ready tomove immediately into job training programs or an actual job, and needan interim step while they build life skills, social skills and jobskills, so program staff created the Community volunteer team (cvt)which allows individuals who are recovering from homelessness toperform supervised volunteer work for a variety of local nonprofitorganizations while gaining confidence and work experience. Currently,the programs serves over 150 participants and benefits 15 nonprofitswho regularly utilize the volunteers to help carry out their missions.additionally, because Community Housing Partnership takes a holisticapproach to reducing homelessness in san francisco, our work addressesboth the immediate need of providing Housing and services forindividuals who are recovering from homelessness, as well as advocatingfor changes to laws and public policies in order to address the largersocietal and economic root causes of homelessness. We offer a "we areall organizers" training program and associated field training forresidents who are interested in participating in Community organizing.our advocacy efforts use proven, evidence based messaging to show that all sf residents have a connection to, and stake in, the homelessnesscrisis; how public policies impact homelessness and poverty; and alsoto explain the collective economic & social benefits of addressing thisproblem. Staff work alongside resident volunteers who have experiencedhomelessness themselves and are trained to perform outreach and publicspeaking. Through this program, chp gives our residents a voice toaddress issues that directly impact their lives.

Who funds HomeRise

Grants from foundations and other nonprofits
GrantmakerDescriptionAmount
Tipping Point Community (TPC)Housing Issue Area$600,000
Harry & Jeanette Weinberg FoundationTo Support the Construction of A 96-unit Permanent Supportive Housing Residence for Formerly Homeless Single Adults That Will Include Onsite Case Management, Health Counseling, and Workforce Development Services.$500,000
Charles and Helen Schwab FoundationHuman Services$150,000
...and 12 more grants received

Personnel at HomeRise

NameTitleCompensation
Janea JacksonChief Executive Officer
Gerald TurnerChief Strategy and Operating Officer$220,159
Christine AliotoInterim Chief Financial Officer
Bilal ShahVice President of Finance$128,576
Ken HarootunianVice President of Fund Development
...and 37 more key personnel

Financials for HomeRise

RevenuesFYE 12/2022
Total grants, contributions, etc.$14,909,082
Program services$7,715,278
Investment income and dividends$498
Tax-exempt bond proceeds$0
Royalty revenue$0
Net rental income$42,382
Net gain from sale of non-inventory assets$-86,490
Net income from fundraising events$0
Net income from gaming activities$0
Net income from sales of inventory$0
Miscellaneous revenues$557,540
Total revenues$23,138,290

Form 990s for HomeRise

Fiscal year endingDate received by IRSFormPDF link
2022-122023-11-15990View PDF
2021-122022-11-14990View PDF
2020-122021-11-12990View PDF
2019-122021-10-18990View PDF
2019-062020-10-19990View PDF
...and 9 more Form 990s
Data update history
July 12, 2024
Received grants
Identified 6 new grant, including a grant for $600,000 from Tipping Point Community (TPC)
January 6, 2024
Posted financials
Added Form 990 for fiscal year 2022
January 5, 2024
Updated personnel
Identified 9 new personnel
December 26, 2023
Used new vendors
Identified 3 new vendors, including , , and
October 25, 2023
Received grants
Identified 8 new grant, including a grant for $773,900 from Tipping Point Community (TPC)
Nonprofit Types
Housing and shelter organizationsCharities
Issues
Human servicesHousingHomelessness
Characteristics
Political advocacyLobbyingState / local levelReceives government fundingManagement and technical assistanceTax deductible donationsAccepts online donations
General information
Address
PO Box 273
San Francisco, CA 94104
Metro area
San Francisco-Oakland-Berkeley, CA
County
San Francisco County, CA
Website URL
homerisesf.org/ 
Phone
(415) 852-5300
Facebook page
communityhousingpartnership 
Twitter profile
@chp_sf 
IRS details
EIN
94-3112338
Fiscal year end
December
Taxreturn type
Form 990
Year formed
1990
Eligible to receive tax-deductible contributions (Pub 78)
Yes
Categorization
NTEE code, primary
L21: Public Housing Facilities
NAICS code, primary
62422: Community Housing Services
Parent/child status
Independent
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