Program areas at JBAY
Education: jbay works to ensure access to higher education for Youth who have been in foster care or experienced homelessness. In 2022-23, jbay worked towards this goal by pursuing a range of strategies: college preparation: jbay created updated versions of educational planning guides for foster Youth and their supporters. Jbay also supported los angeles county child welfare to develop a range of tools to support foster Youth college preparation. Financial aid access: jbay conducted the California foster Youth fafsa challenge and the homeless Youth fafsa challenge, in collaboration with the California department of education and local education agencies. Jbay also advocated for changes to policies related to students ability to retain financial aid. Supporting foster Youth on campus: jbay provided technical assistance and training to expand campus support programs for foster Youth, which provide academic, financial and emotional support. Jbay also advocated for an expansion of financial aid for foster Youth. College student homelessness: jbay helped college campuses implement newly available public funding to reduce homelessness among college students.housing: jbay works to ensure Youth who have been in foster care or homeless have access to safe, affordable housing. In 2022-23, jbay worked toward this goal by pursuing the following strategies: jbay secured an annual investment in the state budget of $18.8 million to increase the monthly stipend provided to Youth in the most common foster care placement for yound adults. The increase was based on local rental costs in the county in which the Youth lives. Jbay provided technical assistance and training to 15 counties and their partner housing authorities to help them implement and/or access specialized housing choice vouchers for former foster Youth. Jbay provided technical assistance to housing providers to help them make successful applications to newly available state funding for housing development. Jbay works to ensure Youth have the opportunity to grow into economically secure adults. In 2022-23, jbay worked toward this goal by implementing the foster Youth tax credit to ensure it reaches all current and former foster Youth who are eligible. The 2023 tax year was the first year this credit became available, providing up to $1,083 to eligible young adults. Jbay provided extensive implementation support, including help establishing and supporting six volunteer income tax assistance sites for foster Youth, developing and disseminating resources such as a self-filing guide and a tax preparation guide. Jbay also trained stakeholders and vita volunteers on how to claim the new credit. In its first year of implementation, nearly 5,000 young adults received more than $5 million from the credit.critical needs and opportunity fund: jbay provided direct financial assistance to Youth who were in foster care or experienced homelessness by partnering up with 60 education institutions and direct service organizations to disbursed the funds to Youth in California. In 22-23, jbay provided assistance to over 1,600 Youth. The average amount of financial assistance provided per Youth was $ 292.
Who funds John Burton Advocates for Youth (JBAY)
Grants from foundations and other nonprofits
Grantmaker | Grantmaker tax period | Description | Amount |
---|
Stupski Foundation | 2022-12 | To Provide General Operating Support. | $500,000 |
Conrad N. Hilton Foundation | 2022-12 | To Reform Key Systems That Directly Impact Post-Secondary Education Access and Wellbeing for Foster Youth in Los Angeles County, Specifically the Housing & Homelessness Systems, K-12 Education System, Child Welfare System, and Post-Secondary Institutions | $500,000 |
Crankstart Foundation | 2022-12 | To Expand Access and Enrollment in Public Benefits and Tax Credits for California Foster Youth | $500,000 |
...and 35 more grants received totalling $3,106,719 |
Personnel at JBAY
Name | Title | Compensation | Date of data |
---|
Debbie Raucher | Chief Program Officer | $135,087 | 2024-09-30 |
Amy Lemley | Executive Director | $188,254 | 2024-09-30 |
Corrine Levy | Development Director | $128,332 | 2023-06-30 |
Simone Tureck Lee | HSG and Health Director | $138,262 | 2023-06-30 |
Jessica Petrass | Director of Education | $87,974 | 2024-09-30 |
...and 12 more key personnel |
Financials for JBAY
Revenues | FYE 06/2023 | FYE 06/2022 | % Change |
---|
Total grants, contributions, etc. | $4,202,233 | $4,949,845 | -15.1% |
Program services | $207,850 | $120,000 | 73.2% |
Investment income and dividends | $160,430 | $7,956 | 1916.5% |
Tax-exempt bond proceeds | $0 | $0 | - |
Royalty revenue | $0 | $0 | - |
Net rental income | $0 | $0 | - |
Net gain from sale of non-inventory assets | $0 | $0 | - |
Net income from fundraising events | $-173,743 | $-71,260 | -143.8% |
Net income from gaming activities | $0 | $0 | - |
Net income from sales of inventory | $0 | $0 | - |
Miscellaneous revenues | $262,603 | $9,890 | 2555.2% |
Total revenues | $4,659,373 | $5,016,431 | -7.1% |
Organizations like JBAY
Organization | Type | Location | Revenue |
---|
The Coalition for the Homeless | 501(c)(3) | Louisville, KY | $5,477,708 |
Services Immigrant Rights and Education Network (SIREN) | 501(c)(3) | San Jose, CA | $1,267,615 |
Center for Justice and Accountability | 501(c)(3) | San Francisco, CA | $3,198,908 |
Washington Office on Latin America (WOLA) | 501(c)(3) | Washington, DC | $1,997,326 |
CAIR-California | 501(c)(3) | Anaheim, CA | $9,000,702 |
American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Delaware | 501(c)(3) | Wilmington, DE | $1,561,891 |
Outfront Minnesota Community Services | 501(c)(3) | Saint Paul, MN | $1,217,982 |
Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law (LCCRUL) | 501(c)(3) | Washington, DC | $21,459,807 |
Tahirih Justice Center | 501(c)(3) | Falls Church, VA | $11,707,491 |
Safe and Sound (SFCAPC) | 501(c)(3) | San Francisco, CA | $11,083,733 |
Data update history
October 1, 2024
Updated personnel
Identified 10 new personnel
May 26, 2024
Posted financials
Added Form 990 for fiscal year 2023
May 19, 2024
Used new vendors
Identified 1 new vendor, including
May 18, 2024
Received grants
Identified 25 new grant, including a grant for $500,000 from Stupski Foundation Nonprofit Types
Grantmaking organizationsSocial advocacy organizationsHuman rights organizationsYouth development programsCharities
Issues
EducationHuman servicesHuman rightsChildrenHomelessness
Characteristics
Political advocacyLobbyingFundraising eventsState / local levelGala fundraisersTax deductible donationsAccepts online donations
General information
- Address
- 235 Montgomery St 1142
- San Francisco, CA 94104
- Metro area
- San Francisco-Oakland-Berkeley, CA
- County
- San Francisco County, CA
- Website URL
- jbay.org/Â
- Phone
- (415) 348-0011
- Facebook page
- JBAforYouthÂ
- Twitter profile
- @jbaforyouthÂ
IRS details
- EIN
- 81-2600695
- Fiscal year end
- June
- Taxreturn type
- Form 990
- Year formed
- 2016
- Eligible to receive tax-deductible contributions (Pub 78)
- Yes
Categorization
- NTEE code, primary
- O12: Youth Development Fund Raising and Fund Distribution
- NAICS code, primary
- 813311: Human Rights Organizations
- Parent/child status
- Independent
California AB-488 details
- AB 488 status
- May Operate or Solicit for Charitable Purposes
- Charity Registration status
- Current
- FTB status revoked
- Not revoked
- AG Registration Number
- CT0243377
- FTB Entity ID
- 3899875
- AB 488 data last updated ("as-of") date
- 2024-10-16
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