Civic Intelligence

Missionaryatheart

EIN 81-2922357 • 501(c)3 • Pell City, AL

Pub. 78 Eligible990-N Coverage

Profile

MISSIONARYATHEART provides charitable assistance to impoverished children and adults of the Dominican Republic. Our efforts include medical programs, feeding programs, and educational programs all while showing others the love of Jesus Christ. We provide care for many of the orphaned and abandoned children living in the streets including providing for their nutritional, hygiene, medical and clothing needs. We have a family assistance program to assist the impoverished families with housing repairs, clothing, hygiene and educational assistance. We have a medical assistance program to help families receive the medical care they desperately need but cannot afford. Our efforts are intended to improve lives by helping to meet each person's basic needs that they are unable to meet due to the extreme poverty they face. Our goal is to help the children and adults one at a time and we are continuing to see increased significant changes every year.

PO Box 218Pell City, AL 35125

dominicankids.com

Siviq Scores

Precomputed percentiles relative to similar nonprofits. These scores are descriptive rather than judgmental.

Liabilities / Assets

59th percentile

0.00x

Tied with the lowest-debt nonprofits in its peer group.

501(c)3 • <$500k nonprofits • Source year 2020

Liabilities / Revenue

61st percentile

0.00x

Tied with the lowest-debt nonprofits in its peer group.

501(c)3 • <$500k nonprofits • Source year 2020

Net Margin

19th percentile

-30%

Higher net margin than 19% of similar nonprofits.

501(c)3 • <$500k nonprofits • Source year 2020

Top Officer Pay

84th percentile

$0

Higher top officer pay than 84% of similar nonprofits.

Top officer pay equals 0.0% of source-year revenue.

501(c)3 • <$500k nonprofits • Source year 2018

Asset Growth

17th percentile

-52%

Faster asset growth than 17% of similar nonprofits.

501(c)3 • <$500k nonprofits • Annualized from 2019 to 2020

Revenue Growth

18th percentile

-45%

Faster revenue growth than 18% of similar nonprofits.

501(c)3 • <$500k nonprofits • Annualized from 2019 to 2020

Assets

Down

$7,567

Down $8,298 (-52%) from 2019

Liabilities

Flat

$0

Flat from 2019

Net Assets

Down

$7,567

Down $8,298 (-52%) from 2019

Revenue

Down

$32,701

Down $27,226 (-45%) from 2019

Expenses

Down

$42,448

Down $17,698 (-29%) from 2019

Net Income

Down

-$9,747

Down $9,528 (-4351%) from 2019

Trend Graphs

Balance Sheet Trend

Grouped bars show assets, liabilities, and net assets across loaded filings.

$20K$15K$10K$5.0K$0Assets 2017: $8,772Liabilities 2017: $0Net Assets 2017: $8,7722017Assets 2018: $16,084Liabilities 2018: $0Net Assets 2018: $16,0842018Assets 2019: $15,865Liabilities 2019: $0Net Assets 2019: $15,8652019Assets 2020: $7,567Liabilities 2020: $0Net Assets 2020: $7,5672020

Highlighted filing

2020

Assets$7,567
Liabilities$0
Net Assets$7,567

Operations Trend

Revenue, expenses, and net income by year, with the latest filing highlighted.

$80K$60K$40K$20K$0-$20KRevenue 2017: $69,248Expenses 2017: $60,476Net Income 2017: $8,7722017Revenue 2018: $58,131Expenses 2018: $56,738Net Income 2018: $1,3932018Revenue 2019: $59,927Expenses 2019: $60,146Net Income 2019: -$2192019Revenue 2020: $32,701Expenses 2020: $42,448Net Income 2020: -$9,7472020

Highlighted filing

2020

Revenue$32,701
Expenses$42,448
Net Income-$9,747

Filings

Latest Filing Detail
Jump To
Filing Snapshot
Filing Period
Jan 1, 2020 to Dec 31, 2020
Signed
Apr 25, 2021
Return Version
2020v4.0
Gross Receipts
$32,701
Mission and Program Overview

Mission

MISSIONARYATHEART provides charitable assistance to impoverished children and adults of the Dominican Republic. Our efforts include medical programs, feeding programs, and educational programs all while showing others the love of Jesus Christ. We provide care for many of the orphaned and abandoned children living in the streets including providing for their nutritional, hygiene, medical and clothing needs. We have a family assistance program to assist the impoverished families with housing repairs, clothing, hygiene and educational assistance. We have a medical assistance program to help families receive the medical care they desperately need but cannot afford. Our efforts are intended to improve lives by helping to meet each person's basic needs that they are unable to meet due to the extreme poverty they face. Our goal is to help the children and adults one at a time and we are continuing to see increased significant changes every year.

Program Services

DescriptionGrantsExpenses
We have a Family Assistance Program where we assist impoverished families and help them meet each family's particular need. Due to Covid-19 the needs were insurmountable and we had to make hard decisions on who we could help and who we could not based on their severity of need. We provide educational opportunities for the families to learn basic skills such as hygiene and safety among other things. We would take rice, beans eggs, oil etc. to certain families on a regular basis. These families typically have no income, multiple children and little or no food in the house. We also made repairs to houses and we helped install bathrooms and establish running water to houses or a particular village area. We also provide educational assistance for many of our children including the purchase of school uniforms, backpacks, notebooks, pencils, university tuition, books, and tutoring assistance. Many of the families are great families that simply face insurmountable odds in raising their children. Many of the children are exceptionally bright and simply need the opportunity to attend school to better their families. By our providing assistance, we enable these children to become educated, opportunistic, employed adults that are able to begin to break the cycle of poverty that has plagued their families for decades. Hygiene is nonexistent in many areas from a lack of clean water or water at all, rare bathroom facilities, and the children walking barefoot through streets filled with human waste, garbage and animal waste. These same factors contribute to the bad water supply through further contamination. If a child has housing they often live in a two room shanty. There are typically 8-15 people living in a shanty that may have two beds. Most of the children sleep on a floor that is either dirt or concrete. When it rains the children sleep on the floor in the mud. The shanty typically has a rusty tin roof and either rusty tin walls or walls made out of plastic tarps. When it rains the family's entire belongings are soaked or ruined including their beds and clothes. Once the floor and the bedding is soaked it becomes soiled or molded meaning the children sleep in that disease ridden environment, get sick and receive no medication because the family is so poor. For example, one family we provide assistance to has twelve children by the same mother living in a tin shanty with a dirt floor and only two beds. Six of the children sleep on the dirt floor on top of cardboard boxes with roaches and mice running free all night. Often times we have to treat the children for bites they have gotten during the night. The mother of the children works in the street market six days a week selling vegetables for 250 pesos a day or $5.20 U.S. dollars. With the $5.20 per day she must try and provide, food, water, clothing, medical assistance, housing and school uniforms for her 12 children which is an impossible task. The children may not eat on a particular day or receive medicine or clean water. When we first started providing assistance for this family the children had not eaten in two days. The children's bellies were swollen with parasites, they had on tattered rags for clothing and their house smelled of urine from the lack of a bathroom and running water. If she earns enough each day, the mother can hopefully provide the children rice and maybe beans or chicken for one meal. We provide assistance to this family and many others just like them by providing clothing, bedding, repairs, and weekly food along with the meals the children receive each day through our feeding program. In addition we assist in helping the children obtain school uniforms and school supplies. The family described above is one of approximately 150 families we provide assistance to in various forms. Without our assistance, many of the impoverished and malnourished children ar force to eat Yuca which is a root pulled from the ground. The root provides no nutrition but can be boiled or fried to fill the children's bellies. It is not uncommon for impoverished Dominican children to eat solely Yuca or rice for the entire week and as a result receive no nutrition. One additional problem caused by the mother working 12 plus hours a day is that her children then roam the streets during of the village they live in. The villages are filled with violence, drugs, alcoholism, sexual assaults and are a terrible environment for a young impressionable child to be raised in. As a result the time the children spend at the mission house may be the only time they can act as children. We are able to keep an eye on the children's needs and often times provide police assistance for a child that is being mistreated or abused. We are often able to provide the only voice that the children have.$0$12,020
First Program Service Accomplishments Description We have a feeding program where we provide daily meals to the children living in the streets and enable them to take showers, get clean clothes and play in a safe environment. We provide the only nutritional meal for many of the children that they receive each day. We typically provide food to around 150 children each day and take care of more than 300 children overall. Many of the children are forced to beg for money on the streets to earn hopefully enough money that day to buy rice or beans for their family. If the children are unable to find food many times their parent will boil a tree root called yuca to fill the children's bellies with something. Yuca provides no nutritional value but it serves to help a child with hunger pains. That is why our feeding program is critical for these children because in all likelihood it is the only good meal the children get all day. These children start begging for food as early as five years old. Many other children are forced to work selling peanuts or other items hoping they can make enough to provide assistance for their family for food for the night. As a result, many of the children are treated poorly by many adults who basically force them into slavery to make money for the adult and not the child's family. The children that are forced to work in the streets may or may not be able to come to us for food on a particular day so we arrange for plates of food to be taken to them each day. If a child lives on the streets here they typically sleep on the sidewalks or in the back of a bar that does not close until four in the morning. After a few hours of sleep the children are forced to wake up and start the begging all over again. These children have no opportunity for a shower or clean clothes and thus "look" like dirty homeless children further subjecting them to abuse and name calling by others. When these children come to our mission house they are able to play and act as children for a few hours, something they are unable to do living on the streets and having to maintain a "tough guy" persona. At the mission house they play basketball and other games, shower and change into clean clothes and underwear. In addition, the children participate in a Bible study and one of the children leads the group in prayer before lining up for food. After eating the children play until they leave to go back into the life of poverty they are forced to endure. The Dominican Republic has one of the highest sex trafficking averages in the world and many of the children are subject to being kidnapped because they do not even have any family that would even notice. Many of our children have stopped coming and we may not know if they moved or were kidnapped by a sex trafficker. As a result the time the children spend at the mission house may be the only time they can act as children. We are able to keep an eye on the children's needs and often times provide police assistance for a child that is being mistreated or abused. We are often able to provide the only voice that the children have. Our feeding program is by far the majority of the assistance we provide. The costs include the food, clothes, water, transportation, medical assistance, and other routine unexpected expenses a particular child may have. Our costs include transportation for children to and from mission house on motorcycle taxis, and food and materials for the children.$0$11,047
We have a medical assistance program where we help children and adults receceive the medical care they need but cannot afford. Even if medical care is available in certain regions, most people can not afford to pay for medicine, x rays, consultations, sonograms, filling prescriptions, obtaining vitamins etc. In addition, we are frequently asked to assist with transportation expenses for a person to travel to the capital three hours aware for specialized medical care.$0$1,341
Compensation and Service Providers

Employees

NameTitleFull / Part TimeBaseOtherTotal
Caroline RicheyPresidentPT$0--
Kaitlin BowmanSecretaryPT$0--
Tanner RicheyTreasurerPT$0--
Filing and Contact Details

Filer

Filer Name
Missionaryatheart
EIN
81-2922357
Phone
2058730760
Address
PO Box 218, Pell City, AL 35125

Signing Officer

Name
Caroline Wood
Title
President
Phone
2058730760
Signed
2021-04-25
Supplemental Narrative

Additional Explanations

Form 990-EZ, Part I, Line 16

Expenses Line 13. 269.16 Line 14 7371.28 Other listed below 34,807 Bank charges 34.91 Covid-19 family assistance 2096.82 Family assistance food and medicine 9018.34 Fees and charges banking 7413.90 Food for children and adults 8529.64 Homeless children transportation 311.29 Insurance INFOTEP 62.98 Mission trip 37.74 Medical 146.30 Mission house assistance 1341.85 Office supplies 185.48 PayPal fees 473.69 Street kids expenses clothes and food 2143.20 TSS insurance 392.46 Uncategorized expenses 758.47 Van expenses 1860.56

Form 990-EZ, Part I, Line 20

Corrected balance in year end expenses

Form 990-EZ, Part II, Line 24

Van 3717.00 carried over depreciation because of negative year end.

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IRS990EZ/PrimaryExemptPurposeTxt0MISSIONARYATHEART provides charitable assistance to impoverished children and adults of the Dominican Republic. Our efforts include medical programs, feeding programs, and educational programs all while showing others the love of Jesus Christ. We provide care for many of the orphaned and abandoned children living in the streets including providing for their nutritional, hygiene, medical and clothing needs. We have a family assistance program to assist the impoverished families with housing repairs, clothing, hygiene and educational assistance. We have a medical assistance program to help families receive the medical care they desperately need but cannot afford. Our efforts are intended to improve lives by helping to meet each person's basic needs that they are unable to meet due to the extreme poverty they face. Our goal is to help the children and adults one at a time and we are continuing to see increased significant changes every year.
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IRS990EZ/ProgramSrvcAccomplishmentGrp/DescriptionProgramSrvcAccomTxt0First Program Service Accomplishments Description We have a feeding program where we provide daily meals to the children living in the streets and enable them to take showers, get clean clothes and play in a safe environment. We provide the only nutritional meal for many of the children that they receive each day. We typically provide food to around 150 children each day and take care of more than 300 children overall. Many of the children are forced to beg for money on the streets to earn hopefully enough money that day to buy rice or beans for their family. If the children are unable to find food many times their parent will boil a tree root called yuca to fill the children's bellies with something. Yuca provides no nutritional value but it serves to help a child with hunger pains. That is why our feeding program is critical for these children because in all likelihood it is the only good meal the children get all day. These children start begging for food as early as five years old. Many other children are forced to work selling peanuts or other items hoping they can make enough to provide assistance for their family for food for the night. As a result, many of the children are treated poorly by many adults who basically force them into slavery to make money for the adult and not the child's family. The children that are forced to work in the streets may or may not be able to come to us for food on a particular day so we arrange for plates of food to be taken to them each day. If a child lives on the streets here they typically sleep on the sidewalks or in the back of a bar that does not close until four in the morning. After a few hours of sleep the children are forced to wake up and start the begging all over again. These children have no opportunity for a shower or clean clothes and thus "look" like dirty homeless children further subjecting them to abuse and name calling by others. When these children come to our mission house they are able to play and act as children for a few hours, something they are unable to do living on the streets and having to maintain a "tough guy" persona. At the mission house they play basketball and other games, shower and change into clean clothes and underwear. In addition, the children participate in a Bible study and one of the children leads the group in prayer before lining up for food. After eating the children play until they leave to go back into the life of poverty they are forced to endure. The Dominican Republic has one of the highest sex trafficking averages in the world and many of the children are subject to being kidnapped because they do not even have any family that would even notice. Many of our children have stopped coming and we may not know if they moved or were kidnapped by a sex trafficker. As a result the time the children spend at the mission house may be the only time they can act as children. We are able to keep an eye on the children's needs and often times provide police assistance for a child that is being mistreated or abused. We are often able to provide the only voice that the children have. Our feeding program is by far the majority of the assistance we provide. The costs include the food, clothes, water, transportation, medical assistance, and other routine unexpected expenses a particular child may have. Our costs include transportation for children to and from mission house on motorcycle taxis, and food and materials for the children.
IRS990EZ/ProgramSrvcAccomplishmentGrp/DescriptionProgramSrvcAccomTxt1We have a Family Assistance Program where we assist impoverished families and help them meet each family's particular need. Due to Covid-19 the needs were insurmountable and we had to make hard decisions on who we could help and who we could not based on their severity of need. We provide educational opportunities for the families to learn basic skills such as hygiene and safety among other things. We would take rice, beans eggs, oil etc. to certain families on a regular basis. These families typically have no income, multiple children and little or no food in the house. We also made repairs to houses and we helped install bathrooms and establish running water to houses or a particular village area. We also provide educational assistance for many of our children including the purchase of school uniforms, backpacks, notebooks, pencils, university tuition, books, and tutoring assistance. Many of the families are great families that simply face insurmountable odds in raising their children. Many of the children are exceptionally bright and simply need the opportunity to attend school to better their families. By our providing assistance, we enable these children to become educated, opportunistic, employed adults that are able to begin to break the cycle of poverty that has plagued their families for decades. Hygiene is nonexistent in many areas from a lack of clean water or water at all, rare bathroom facilities, and the children walking barefoot through streets filled with human waste, garbage and animal waste. These same factors contribute to the bad water supply through further contamination. If a child has housing they often live in a two room shanty. There are typically 8-15 people living in a shanty that may have two beds. Most of the children sleep on a floor that is either dirt or concrete. When it rains the children sleep on the floor in the mud. The shanty typically has a rusty tin roof and either rusty tin walls or walls made out of plastic tarps. When it rains the family's entire belongings are soaked or ruined including their beds and clothes. Once the floor and the bedding is soaked it becomes soiled or molded meaning the children sleep in that disease ridden environment, get sick and receive no medication because the family is so poor. For example, one family we provide assistance to has twelve children by the same mother living in a tin shanty with a dirt floor and only two beds. Six of the children sleep on the dirt floor on top of cardboard boxes with roaches and mice running free all night. Often times we have to treat the children for bites they have gotten during the night. The mother of the children works in the street market six days a week selling vegetables for 250 pesos a day or $5.20 U.S. dollars. With the $5.20 per day she must try and provide, food, water, clothing, medical assistance, housing and school uniforms for her 12 children which is an impossible task. The children may not eat on a particular day or receive medicine or clean water. When we first started providing assistance for this family the children had not eaten in two days. The children's bellies were swollen with parasites, they had on tattered rags for clothing and their house smelled of urine from the lack of a bathroom and running water. If she earns enough each day, the mother can hopefully provide the children rice and maybe beans or chicken for one meal. We provide assistance to this family and many others just like them by providing clothing, bedding, repairs, and weekly food along with the meals the children receive each day through our feeding program. In addition we assist in helping the children obtain school uniforms and school supplies. The family described above is one of approximately 150 families we provide assistance to in various forms. Without our assistance, many of the impoverished and malnourished children ar force to eat Yuca which is a root pulled from the ground. The root provides no nutrition but can be boiled
IRS990EZ/ProgramSrvcAccomplishmentGrp/DescriptionProgramSrvcAccomTxt2We have a medical assistance program where we help children and adults receceive the medical care they need but cannot afford. Even if medical care is available in certain regions, most people can not afford to pay for medicine, x rays, consultations, sonograms, filling prescriptions, obtaining vitamins etc. In addition, we are frequently asked to assist with transportation expenses for a person to travel to the capital three hours aware for specialized medical care.
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IRS990ScheduleB/ContributorInformationGrp/ContributorBusinessName/BusinessNameLine10RESTRICTED
IRS990ScheduleB/ContributorInformationGrp/ContributorNum0RESTRICTED
IRS990ScheduleB/ContributorInformationGrp/ContributorUSAddress/AddressLine10RESTRICTED
IRS990ScheduleB/ContributorInformationGrp/ContributorUSAddress/AddressLine20RESTRICTED
IRS990ScheduleB/ContributorInformationGrp/ContributorUSAddress/City0RESTRICTED
IRS990ScheduleB/ContributorInformationGrp/ContributorUSAddress/State0RESTRICTED
IRS990ScheduleB/ContributorInformationGrp/ContributorUSAddress/ZIPCode0RESTRICTED
IRS990ScheduleB/ContributorInformationGrp/TotalContributionsAmt0RESTRICTED
IRS990ScheduleO/SupplementalInformationDetail/ExplanationTxt0Expenses Line 13. 269.16 Line 14 7371.28 Other listed below 34,807 Bank charges 34.91 Covid-19 family assistance 2096.82 Family assistance food and medicine 9018.34 Fees and charges banking 7413.90 Food for children and adults 8529.64 Homeless children transportation 311.29 Insurance INFOTEP 62.98 Mission trip 37.74 Medical 146.30 Mission house assistance 1341.85 Office supplies 185.48 PayPal fees 473.69 Street kids expenses clothes and food 2143.20 TSS insurance 392.46 Uncategorized expenses 758.47 Van expenses 1860.56
IRS990ScheduleO/SupplementalInformationDetail/ExplanationTxt1Corrected balance in year end expenses
IRS990ScheduleO/SupplementalInformationDetail/ExplanationTxt2Van 3717.00 carried over depreciation because of negative year end.
IRS990ScheduleO/SupplementalInformationDetail/FormAndLineReferenceDesc0Form 990-EZ, Part I, Line 16
IRS990ScheduleO/SupplementalInformationDetail/FormAndLineReferenceDesc1Form 990-EZ, Part I, Line 20
IRS990ScheduleO/SupplementalInformationDetail/FormAndLineReferenceDesc2Form 990-EZ, Part II, Line 24
ReturnHeader/AdditionalFilerInformation/TrustedCustomerGrp/AuthenticationAssuranceLevelCd0AAL2
ReturnHeader/AdditionalFilerInformation/TrustedCustomerGrp/LastSubmissionRqrOOBCd00
ReturnHeader/AdditionalFilerInformation/TrustedCustomerGrp/OOBSecurityVerificationCd011
ReturnHeader/AdditionalFilerInformation/TrustedCustomerGrp/TrustedCustomerCd01
ReturnHeader/BuildTS02022-09-23 18:48:47Z
ReturnHeader/BusinessOfficerGrp/PersonNm0Caroline Wood
ReturnHeader/BusinessOfficerGrp/PersonTitleTxt0President
ReturnHeader/BusinessOfficerGrp/PhoneNum02058730760
ReturnHeader/BusinessOfficerGrp/SignatureDt02021-04-25
ReturnHeader/Filer/BusinessName/BusinessNameLine1Txt0MISSIONARYATHEART
ReturnHeader/Filer/BusinessNameControlTxt0MISS
ReturnHeader/Filer/EIN0812922357
ReturnHeader/Filer/PhoneNum02058730760
ReturnHeader/Filer/USAddress/AddressLine1Txt0PO Box 218
ReturnHeader/Filer/USAddress/CityNm0Pell City
ReturnHeader/Filer/USAddress/StateAbbreviationCd0AL
ReturnHeader/Filer/USAddress/ZIPCd035125
ReturnHeader/ReturnTs02021-04-25T14:40:11-07:00
ReturnHeader/ReturnTypeCd0990EZ
ReturnHeader/TaxPeriodBeginDt02020-01-01
ReturnHeader/TaxPeriodEndDt02020-12-31
ReturnHeader/TaxYr02020

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