EIN 93-0728816

Central City Concern (CCC)

IRS 501(c) type
501(c)(3)
Num. employees
1,553
State
Year formed
1979
Most recent tax filings
2023-06-01
Description
Central City Concern serves approximately 13,000 individuals and families in the Portland area yearly with affordable housing, addiction treatment and recovery services, primary and mental health care, affordable housing and employment development.
Total revenues
$154,302,580
2023
Total expenses
$126,969,165
2023
Total assets
$247,821,049
2023
Num. employees
1,553
2023

Program areas at CCC

Central City Concern maintains healthcare and recovery services, integrated with agency housing, to meet the primary and behavioral healthcare and drug and alcohol treatment and recovery needs of low income or chronically homeless clients in the portland metropolitan area. In 2022, ccc served 9,283 health patients across 12 federally qualified health center sites. Services ranged from integrated primary and behavioral health care, community mental health services, subacute detoxification, inpatient and outpatient recovery services, acupuncture and naturopathic treatments, to pharmacy. The recovery mentor program provides housing and an assigned mentor to help clients adhere to a recovery plan of action. The community engagement program (cep) provides housing and services to people with long histories of homelessness, addiction and mental health challenges. Central City Concern provides housing, supportive services and alternatives to these individuals. The hooper detoxification stabilization center provides drug and alcohol detox services provides a public safety function in portland. The letty owings center is a residential drug and alcohol treatment program for low-income, chemically dependent women who are pregnant or newly parenting. The old town clinic (otc) is a healthcare clinic for a patient base of homeless and low-income individuals. Puentes is a linguistically and culturally appropriate substance abuse treatment and mental health services program for spanish speaking families. Recuperative care program (rcp) provides transitional housing, recuperative healthcare services and daily case management for low-income and homeless individuals following hospitalization. The benefit and entitlement specialist team (best) provides expedited assistance with ssi/ssd and medicaid applications for referred homeless individuals. Family alcohol and drug free community housing network (fan) is a collaborative program that serves families recovering from the effects of drug and alcohol addiction. It provides services in case services, rent subsidy, and alcohol/drug free community housing.
Employment and social enterprises include:clean start a six-month homeless to work job training and mentorship program that fills cleaning and maintenance needs throughout portland., - Central City bed - sells a durable, sustainable, contemporary, bed bug resistant furniture line highly suited for affordable housing developments, shelters, and dormitories.central City staffing is a training program providing valuable work experience for formerly homeless while also meeting the need for 24/7 front desk coverage at ccc buildings.this business offers employment opportunities to people living on no or very low incomes. All have multiple barriers to employment such as homelessness, or chemical dependency. This enterprise provides on-the-job training that increases job skills and employability, leading to better-than-minimum wage incomes and helping people move from dependency to self-sufficiency. Employment access center is a job resource center with specialized programs to assist homeless individuals, or those at risk of becoming homeless, achieve self-sufficiency by teaching the vocational and social skills needed to find and sustain full-time employment.
Central City Concern housing provides a variety of affordable housing options where persons, who otherwise might be homeless, may live comfortably, securely, and safely. We own, lease, or manage 29 buildings providing nearly 2,186 units of housing throughout the portland metropolitan area. This housing is available to single adults and families, is both transitional and permanent, market rate and subsidized, serves people in recovery, living with hiv/aids, living with mental illness, living on social security and disability incomes, and/or people gaining employment skills and/or returning to work. Of the nearly 2,186 units of housing, more than 50% are alcohol and drug free community (adfc) housing for adults; 88 units are adfc units for families in recovery.

Grants made by CCC

GranteeGrant descriptionAmount
Transition ProjectsPass-Through of Federal Funds Under Federal Assistance Listing Number 14.267, Multifamily Housing Service Coordinators Continuum of Care Program.$463,709
Cascadia HealthcarePass-Through of Federal Funds Under Federal Assistance Listing Number 14.267, Multifamily Housing Service Coordinators Continuum of Care Program.$421,986
Native American Rehabilitation Association of the NorthwestPass-Through of Federal Funds Under Federal Assistance Listing Number 14.267, Multifamily Housing Service Coordinators Continuum of Care Program.$387,765
...and 1 more grant made

Who funds Central City Concern (CCC)

Grants from foundations and other nonprofits
GrantmakerDescriptionAmount
CCC Eastside QalicbStipulated in the New Market Tax Credit Agreement.$2,971,863
CareOregonRiver Haven/karibu Grant Agreement$1,655,494
WorksystemsProvision of Workforce Development$1,085,876
...and 42 more grants received totalling $7,121,851

Personnel at CCC

NameTitleCompensation
Andy MendenhallPresident and Chief Executive Officer$352,076
Peter BeyerChief Financial Officer$252,431
Wayne HaddadChief Information Officer
Oscar CardonaChief People Officer$266,716
Kim LeathleyVice President and Chief of Health Services
...and 18 more key personnel

Financials for CCC

RevenuesFYE 06/2023
Total grants, contributions, etc.$67,646,275
Program services$85,443,932
Investment income and dividends$981,873
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$230,500
Net income from gaming activities$0
Net income from sales of inventory$0
Miscellaneous revenues$0
Total revenues$154,302,580

Form 990s for CCC

Fiscal year endingDate received by IRSFormPDF link
2023-062024-04-11990View PDF
2022-062023-04-07990View PDF
2021-062022-04-14990View PDF
2020-062021-05-26990View PDF
2019-062021-01-21990View PDF
...and 9 more Form 990s
Data update history
May 20, 2024
Updated personnel
Identified 6 new personnel
May 18, 2024
Used new vendors
Identified 5 new vendors, including , , , , and
May 18, 2024
Received grants
Identified 4 new grant, including a grant for $2,971,863 from CCC Eastside Qalicb
February 3, 2024
Received grants
Identified 1 new grant, including a grant for $10,000 from McGRAW FAMILY FOUNDATION
January 26, 2024
Updated personnel
Identified 2 new personnel
Nonprofit Types
ClinicsHuman service organizationsFederally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs)Headquarter / parent organizations
Issues
HealthMental healthHuman servicesHomelessness
Characteristics
Fundraising eventsNational levelReceives government fundingTax deductible donations
General information
Address
232 NW 6th Ave
Portland, OR 97209
Metro area
Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro, OR-WA
County
Multnomah County, OR
Website URL
centralcityconcern.org/ 
Phone
(503) 294-1681
Facebook page
cccportland 
Twitter profile
@cccportland 
IRS details
EIN
93-0728816
Fiscal year end
June
Taxreturn type
Form 990
Year formed
1979
Eligible to receive tax-deductible contributions (Pub 78)
Yes
Categorization
NTEE code, primary
P85: Homeless Persons Centers and Services
NAICS code, primary
621: Outpatient Health Care Practitioners and Facilities
Parent/child status
Central organization
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