TX 501(c)(3)
CHILDREN AT RISK INC
I72Z: Crime, Legal-Related
$4,703,561 budget
Filed 2023
Verified profile
Children At Risk serves as a catalyst for change to improve the quality of life for children.
Total received from foundations
$8.6M
205 grants from 93 funders
· 2016–2025
Annual revenue
$3,450,516
Annual expenses
$4,703,561
Total assets
$2,330,583
Months of operating reserves
5.9
assets / monthly burn
Funding history · IRS 990-PF public records
Who funds CHILDREN AT RISK INC
$8.6M
Total received
93
Distinct funders
205
Grants on record
2016–2025
Span of records
Top funders by cumulative giving
-
1
$2.41Mcumulative
-
2
$1.45Mcumulative
-
3
$665Kcumulative
-
4
$450Kcumulative
-
5
$400Kcumulative
-
6
$325Kcumulative
-
7
$218Kcumulative
-
8
$165Kcumulative
-
9
$150Kcumulative
-
10
$130Kcumulative
-
11
$128Kcumulative
-
12
$121Kcumulative
Where the money came from (United States)
Texas counties the money came from
9 TX counties with funders on record
- 1 Harris
- 2 Dallas
- 3 El Paso
- 4 Tarrant
- 5 McLennan
- 6 Travis
- 7 Jefferson
- 8 Bexar
- 9 Collin
For grant reviewers
Filing and contact details Data quality: 80%
Officer
Dr Robert Sanborn
President and CEO
Contact email
Last 990 filed
2023
most recent IRS filing
Year founded
1992
IRS ruling year
EIN
760360533
NTEE classification
I72Z
Crime, Legal-Related
From Form 990
Programs and activities
C@R established the Center for Parenting and Family Well-Being (CPFWB) in 2011. In its first phase, CPFWB took an inventory of the current network of parenting services in Houston, and found that there is a strong need for evidence-based parent education that is not punitive. Through a partnership including organizations that provide parent education services, pediatricians, academics, and public health practitioners, CPFWB determined that the community should move forward with developing structure to implement the Positive Parenting Program (Triple P). During its second phase, the CPFWB is cr
Through its unique Food in Schools Initiative, C@R continues to raise awareness and advocate for the implementation of Universal School Breakfast (UFSB) and other school meal programs in schools with high poverty levels. Our annual School Food rankings highlight top-performing districts with school food programs and highlight innovations and best practices adopted by top districts. Through our Childhood Immunization Project, C@R also collaborated with key partners to help maintain current code that establishes immunization requirements for Texas elementary and secondary schools and ensure equi
C@R established the Center to End the Trafficking and Exploitation of Children (CETEC) in 2007 to launch a broad educational and outreach program to combat human trafficking. C@R continued to grow the Cities Empowered Against Sexual Exploitation (CEASE) Texas project and convened nonprofits, state agencies, law enforcement and local governments in a statewide Anti-Demand Coalition to share knowledge, best practices and lessons learned. C@R also developed critical research around opportunity youth (youth ages 16-24 who are neither in school nor in the workforce), highlighting policies that can
Other programs were juvenile justice and mental health related.
Data provenance
About this profile
Built from the IRS Business Master File, Form 990 and 990-EZ filings, and public website enrichment. Funding history is derived from IRS Form 990-PF Schedule I grant records for private foundations. Data accuracy depends on how recently the organization filed. The data-quality score reflects how many fields are populated.
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