EIN 52-0968521

Mental Health Association of Frederick County (MHA)

IRS 501(c) type
501(c)(3)
Num. employees
142
Year formed
1975
Most recent tax filings
2023-06-01
Description
MHA's mission is to build a strong foundation of emotional wellness through education, empowerment, advocacy and treatment for children, adults and families through a wide array of services.
Total revenues
$6,257,827
2023
Total expenses
$6,023,932
2023
Total assets
$4,935,038
2023
Num. employees
142
2023

Program areas at MHA

Preparing resilient children: child care provider training - trained 3,333 participants through 221 workshops, some available online, conducted or co-sponsored by ccc. We constantly examine the results of needs assessments and enrollment to determine the number of workshops offered based on demand. We also expand course topics when providers or regulatory agencies express a need. Ccc currently offers courses in all six core of knowledge areas recognized by maryland-child development, curriculum, Health, safety and nutrition; professionalism; special needs; and community. In addition, ccc offers coursework in first aid, cpr, emergency preparedness, and sids. Provided 651 hours of training. Technical assistance for child care providers - ccc assists regulated child care providers with technical assistance and support so they can enter or remain in the early care and education field. Ccc staff respond to questions on a variety of different subject areas-including child behavior, providing quality care for infants and toddlers, improving quality, curriculum and communication with parents. Ccc also supplies programs with statistical information pertinent to a child care business, such as the average cost of care in a particular school district or the average child care salaries in the County or the state. Ccc responded to 1,717 inquiries. Early childhood Mental Health - perks program works with early child care programs as well as individual children and families to promote the social/emotional development of young children while decreasing or preventing challenging behaviors. Served over 91 children, conducted 725 child care program site visits. Healthy families Frederick (hff) - hff is a program designed to support first-time parents through the provision of quality, strength-based, family-centered services and support, and access to community resources and agencies to help build stronger families, healthier children and a better community. Served 56 families and 48 children and completed 635 home visits (services begin prenatally). None of the families served required child protective services involvement.
Facing crises together: counseling services - provided professional outpatient Mental Health treatment on a sliding fee basis for individuals who have medicaid, medicare or no insurance. Supervised graduate-level psychology and counseling interns, helping them complete their requirements for graduation and attain their state licensure. Provided 7,929 sessions of therapy to 602 individuals, couples, children and adolescents. Call center - provided information and referral for human service and Mental Health needs, crisis intervention, suicide prevention, and listening support. Hotline/2-1-1 serves as the initial intake line for Frederick County mobile crisis services for both adults and child/adolescents. Hotline/2-1-1 provides suicide awareness and suicide intervention trainings. Our survivors of suicide support group served 16 participants (59 sessions) who have lost a loved one to suicide. Hotline received 2,714 calls about suicide and performed 5,292 suicide assessments. Our telephone reassurance program provided 2,452 scheduled outbound calls to 12 elderly and homebound residents enrolled in the program. The hotline operates 24/7/365 and answered 54,588 calls. Walk-in services - a free service where a crisis specialist will meet with a walk-in client to help resolve a current crisis or concern and assist with connections to ongoing support, including urgent medication appointments. Clients may be experiencing an emotional, Mental, family or relationship crisis, suicidal thoughts, anxiety, grief or depression. Walk-in services are available m-f 10 a.m.-10:00 p.m. and sat-sun 10:00 a.m.-6:00 p.m. for a total of 76 hours/week. 1,198 clients were seen for a total of 1,747 visits. 25% reported they would have gone to a hospital emergency room if this service was not available.
Securing vulnerable families: court appointed special advocates for children (casa) - 18 new volunteers were given 30 hours of training to prepare them to be sworn in by the court system as a court appointed special advocate to act as best interest advocates for children who have been abused or neglected. A total of 72 volunteers served on cases for 89 children, 46 in Frederick County and 43 in carroll County. Casa works with the circuit courts of Frederick and carroll counties, departments of social services, treatment facilities, group homes, schools, parents and other community resources. The goal of a casa volunteer is to help the court to secure a safe and permanent home for every child. Supervised visitation and monitored transfer - the visitation center offered a neutral setting for non-custodial parents to safely maintain a relationship with their child(ren). The center served 73 parents, guardians, and grandparents and 53 children for supervised visitation, 14 parents, guardians, and grandparents for monitored transfer, 20 families for therapeutic supervised visitation, and 17 families for parent coaching. The program provided 631 hours of visitation, 228 hours of parent coaching, and completed 60 exchanges of children. Systems navigation - 69 families with children with intensive needs received information and referral, advocacy and support through the systems navigation program. Trained professionals known as systems navigators, assisted families with identification of and access to supportive resources such as counseling, housing, financial and job assistance, and specialized services that best met their family's needs. Families impacted by incarceration program (fiip) - fiip is a program that worked to support the bond between parents, care-givers, or other family members impacted by incarceration, and helped to strengthen the parent/child relationship. Fiip works in partnership with children of incarcerated parents partnership to provide support in a variety of ways. The program provided parenting 201 workshops held in the community, which served 53 participants. One-on-one, individualized family advocacy was provided to 25 participants, and parenting from afar classes were provided to 80 participants.
All other programs in support of the organization's mission statement and exempt purpose.

Who funds Mental Health Association of Frederick County (MHA)

Grants from foundations and other nonprofits
GrantmakerDescriptionAmount
Maryland Family NetworkIn Support of Operating A Child Care Resource Center for Carroll Andfrederick Counties$871,514
Maryland Information Network 2-1-1 MarylandHealth and Human Services Information and Referral$454,895
Nora Roberts FoundationOperations$50,000
...and 11 more grants received

Personnel at MHA

NameTitleCompensation
Shannon AleshireChief Executive Officer$85,146
Alaina StrasburgChief Financial Officer$55,070
Rebecca LaymanDirector of Development and Marketing
Suzi BorgDirector of Crisis Services Division
Amy ThompsonDirector of Human Resources and Administration
...and 23 more key personnel

Financials for MHA

RevenuesFYE 06/2023
Total grants, contributions, etc.$543,272
Program services$5,740,477
Investment income and dividends$9,405
Tax-exempt bond proceeds$0
Royalty revenue$0
Net rental income$0
Net gain from sale of non-inventory assets$0
Net income from fundraising events$-35,327
Net income from gaming activities$0
Net income from sales of inventory$0
Miscellaneous revenues$0
Total revenues$6,257,827

Form 990s for MHA

Fiscal year endingDate received by IRSFormPDF link
2023-062024-05-15990View PDF
2022-062023-01-20990View PDF
2021-062022-05-16990View PDF
2020-062021-04-13990View PDF
2019-062020-08-20990View PDF
...and 9 more Form 990s
Data update history
August 10, 2024
Updated personnel
Identified 1 new personnel
July 17, 2024
Posted financials
Added Form 990 for fiscal year 2023
July 12, 2024
Received grants
Identified 8 new grant, including a grant for $50,000 from Nora Roberts Foundation
December 24, 2023
Received grants
Identified 2 new grant, including a grant for $10,000 from The Helen J Serini Foundation
June 27, 2023
Received grants
Identified 9 new grant, including a grant for $454,895 from Maryland Information Network 2-1-1 Maryland
Nonprofit Types
Mental health organizationsFamily service centersCharities
Issues
HealthMental health
Characteristics
Political advocacyLobbyingFundraising eventsState / local levelReceives government fundingCommunity engagement / volunteeringTax deductible donationsAccepts online donations
General information
Address
226 S Jefferson St
Frederick, MD 21701
Metro area
Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV
County
Frederick County, MD
Website URL
fcmha.org/ 
Phone
(301) 663-0011
IRS details
EIN
52-0968521
Fiscal year end
June
Taxreturn type
Form 990
Year formed
1975
Eligible to receive tax-deductible contributions (Pub 78)
Yes
Categorization
NTEE code, primary
F80: Mental Health Association
NAICS code, primary
624190: Individual and Family Services
Parent/child status
Independent
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