Liabilities / Assets
56th percentile
Tied with the lowest-debt nonprofits in its peer group.
Precomputed percentiles for this filing year versus similar nonprofits in the same peer cohort.
Liabilities / Assets
56th percentile
Tied with the lowest-debt nonprofits in its peer group.
Liabilities / Revenue
56th percentile
Tied with the lowest-debt nonprofits in its peer group.
Net Margin
67th percentile
Higher net margin than 67% of similar nonprofits.
Top Officer Pay
76th percentile
Higher top officer pay than 76% of similar nonprofits.
Top officer pay equals 0.0% of source-year revenue.
Asset Growth
Score unavailable
No earlier valid filing was available within the previous three public years.
Revenue Growth
Score unavailable
No earlier valid filing was available within the previous three public years.
Assets
$8,772
No earlier filing loaded for comparison.
Net Assets
$8,772
No earlier filing loaded for comparison.
Liabilities
$0
No earlier filing loaded for comparison.
Revenue
$69,248
No earlier filing loaded for comparison.
Expenses
$60,476
No earlier filing loaded for comparison.
Net Income
$8,772
No earlier filing loaded for comparison.
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.
MISSIONARYATHEART provides charitable assistance to the 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 on the streets including providing for their nutritional, hygiene, medical and clothing needs. We have a Feeding Program where in 2017 we served over 27,500 plates of food to the children. We have a Family Assistance program to assist the impoverished families with housing, 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. Our goal is to help the children and adults one at a time and we are beginning to see significant changes.
| Description | Grants | Expenses |
|---|---|---|
| MISSIONARYATHEART Feeding Program. We have established a feeding program where we care for and feed many of the abandoned and orphaned children living on the street or living in extreme poverty. We provide the only nutritional meal for many of the children that they receive each day. We typically provide food to around 120 children each day and take care of more than 300 children overall. During 2017, we served over 27,500 plates of food to the children. 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. In 2017, we increased the number of children eating each day from 35 to 120 each day Monday thru Friday and served over 27,500 plates of food. | $0 | $27,799 |
| MISSIONARYATHEART Family Assistance Program: We also provide assistance for many families to help them meet their most basic needs. This assistance ranges from housing repairs to financial assistance to being able to help them meet their family's particular need. We provide educational opportunities for the families to learn basic skills such as hygiene and safety among other things. In 2017, we helped replace leaking tin roofs, tin walls, and install concrete floors in place of a dirt floor. 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 is 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 we help 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. During 2017, we provided assistance to over 150 families. | $0 | $16,005 |
| MISSIONARYATHEART Medical Assistance Program: We also provide medical assistance at the mission house for wound care, nutritional assistance, and hospital assistance. The local medical care is basically nonexistent and even if there is care available, no one can afford medicines or gauze or any other medical care needs. Almost daily several people request our assistance in obtaining medical care, getting an X-ray or sonogram, filling a prescription at the pharmacy, obtaining vitamins, etc. In addition, we are frequently asked to assist families getting transportation to the capital three hours away so they can receive advanced medical care. The demands and requests are so frequent we have to prioritize the requests based on their severity and the available funds we have to help. Many times it is as simple as us being able to clean wounds and put on clean dressings to avoid further infection. An open wound, coupled with contaminated water often creates severe bacterial infections that left untreated may lead to amputations. We receive individuals who have allowed their infection to become so severe that the only option is amputation. There are no rehab facilities to assist after an amputation and the individual is forced to try and survive missing a leg, arm, foot or hand. In 2017, eight individuals we cared for received amputations all because they waited too long to come to us or seek medical care. Typically we are the only medical care many of the individuals may receive. Our costs involve obtaining medical supplies and medicines for the mission house, paying for medical care, prescriptions, tests, X-rays and travel to the capital for specialized care. In 2017, we helped over 65 families with medical assistance. | $0 | $4,672 |
| Name | Title | Full / Part Time | Base | Other | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caroline E Wood | President | FT | $0 | - | - |
| Kaitlin Bowman | Secretary | PT | $0 | - | - |
| Justin Taylor | Treasurer | PT | $0 | - | - |
“Description;Amount^Advertising and Marketing;208|Bank Charges;1625|Bank charges and fees;2369|Cleaning supplies;74|Fee debit Etsy;9|Family assistance;1143|Food homeless children;7462|Homeless children daily transportation;15453|July 2017 Mission Trip;7283|Legal and Professional Services;230|Medical pharmacy;996|Mission house assistance;10611|Office supplies and software;116|Other business expenses;479|Other miscellaneous expenses;49|PayPal fees;4057|Street kids expenses;819|Supplies;12|Travel missionaries and bag fees;2548|Uncategorized expenses;521|Laundry supplies;191|Mission house supplies and materials;846^Total;57101^”
This appendix keeps the raw XML leaves available for debugging and edge-case review. The human report above is the primary experience.
| Path | # | Value |
|---|---|---|
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| IRS990EZ/PrimaryExemptPurposeTxt | 0 | MISSIONARYATHEART provides charitable assistance to the 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 on the streets including providing for their nutritional, hygiene, medical and clothing needs. We have a Feeding Program where in 2017 we served over 27,500 plates of food to the children. We have a Family Assistance program to assist the impoverished families with housing, 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. Our goal is to help the children and adults one at a time and we are beginning to see significant changes. |
| IRS990EZ/PrintingPublicationsPostageAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990EZ/ProgramServiceRevenueAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990EZ/ProgramSrvcAccomplishmentGrp/DescriptionProgramSrvcAccomTxt | 0 | MISSIONARYATHEART Feeding Program. We have established a feeding program where we care for and feed many of the abandoned and orphaned children living on the street or living in extreme poverty. We provide the only nutritional meal for many of the children that they receive each day. We typically provide food to around 120 children each day and take care of more than 300 children overall. During 2017, we served over 27,500 plates of food to the children. 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. In 2017, we increased the number of children eating each day from 35 to 120 each day Monday thru Friday and served over 27,500 plates of food. |
| IRS990EZ/ProgramSrvcAccomplishmentGrp/DescriptionProgramSrvcAccomTxt | 1 | MISSIONARYATHEART Family Assistance Program: We also provide assistance for many families to help them meet their most basic needs. This assistance ranges from housing repairs to financial assistance to being able to help them meet their family's particular need. We provide educational opportunities for the families to learn basic skills such as hygiene and safety among other things. In 2017, we helped replace leaking tin roofs, tin walls, and install concrete floors in place of a dirt floor. 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 is 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 we help 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 ri |
| IRS990EZ/ProgramSrvcAccomplishmentGrp/DescriptionProgramSrvcAccomTxt | 2 | MISSIONARYATHEART Medical Assistance Program: We also provide medical assistance at the mission house for wound care, nutritional assistance, and hospital assistance. The local medical care is basically nonexistent and even if there is care available, no one can afford medicines or gauze or any other medical care needs. Almost daily several people request our assistance in obtaining medical care, getting an X-ray or sonogram, filling a prescription at the pharmacy, obtaining vitamins, etc. In addition, we are frequently asked to assist families getting transportation to the capital three hours away so they can receive advanced medical care. The demands and requests are so frequent we have to prioritize the requests based on their severity and the available funds we have to help. Many times it is as simple as us being able to clean wounds and put on clean dressings to avoid further infection. An open wound, coupled with contaminated water often creates severe bacterial infections that left untreated may lead to amputations. We receive individuals who have allowed their infection to become so severe that the only option is amputation. There are no rehab facilities to assist after an amputation and the individual is forced to try and survive missing a leg, arm, foot or hand. In 2017, eight individuals we cared for received amputations all because they waited too long to come to us or seek medical care. Typically we are the only medical care many of the individuals may receive. Our costs involve obtaining medical supplies and medicines for the mission house, paying for medical care, prescriptions, tests, X-rays and travel to the capital for specialized care. In 2017, we helped over 65 families with medical assistance. |
| IRS990EZ/ProgramSrvcAccomplishmentGrp/GrantsAndAllocationsAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990EZ/ProgramSrvcAccomplishmentGrp/GrantsAndAllocationsAmt | 1 | 0 |
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| IRS990EZ/ProgramSrvcAccomplishmentGrp/ProgramServiceExpensesAmt | 1 | 16005 |
| IRS990EZ/ProgramSrvcAccomplishmentGrp/ProgramServiceExpensesAmt | 2 | 4672 |
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| IRS990EZ/TaxReimbursedByOrganizationAmt | 0 | 0 |
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| IRS990EZ/TransactionWithControlEntInd | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990EZ/TrnsfrExmptNonChrtblRltdOrgInd | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990EZ/TypeOfOrganizationCorpInd | 0 | X |
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| IRS990ScheduleA/GiftsGrantsContriRcvd170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus1YearAmt | 0 | 8915 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/GiftsGrantsContriRcvd170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus2YearsAmt | 0 | 0 |
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| IRS990ScheduleA/GiftsGrantsContriRcvd170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus4YearsAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/GiftsGrantsContriRcvd170Grp/TotalAmt | 0 | 78163 |
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| IRS990ScheduleA/GovtFurnSrvcFcltsVl170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus3YearsAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/GovtFurnSrvcFcltsVl170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus4YearsAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/GovtFurnSrvcFcltsVl170Grp/TotalAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/GrossInvestmentIncome170Grp/CurrentTaxYearAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/GrossInvestmentIncome170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus1YearAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/GrossInvestmentIncome170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus2YearsAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/GrossInvestmentIncome170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus3YearsAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/GrossInvestmentIncome170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus4YearsAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/GrossInvestmentIncome170Grp/TotalAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/OtherIncome170Grp/CurrentTaxYearAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/OtherIncome170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus1YearAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/OtherIncome170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus2YearsAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/OtherIncome170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus3YearsAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/OtherIncome170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus4YearsAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/OtherIncome170Grp/TotalAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/PublicOrganization170Ind | 0 | X |
| IRS990ScheduleA/PublicSupportTotal170Amt | 0 | 46967 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/SubstantialContributorsTotAmt | 0 | 31196 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/TaxRevLeviedOrgnztnlBnft170Grp/CurrentTaxYearAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/TaxRevLeviedOrgnztnlBnft170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus1YearAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/TaxRevLeviedOrgnztnlBnft170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus2YearsAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/TaxRevLeviedOrgnztnlBnft170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus3YearsAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/TaxRevLeviedOrgnztnlBnft170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus4YearsAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/TaxRevLeviedOrgnztnlBnft170Grp/TotalAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/TotalCalendarYear170Grp/CurrentTaxYearAmt | 0 | 69248 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/TotalCalendarYear170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus1YearAmt | 0 | 8915 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/TotalCalendarYear170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus2YearsAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/TotalCalendarYear170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus3YearsAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/TotalCalendarYear170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus4YearsAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/TotalCalendarYear170Grp/TotalAmt | 0 | 78163 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/TotalSupportAmt | 0 | 78163 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/UnrelatedBusinessNetIncm170Grp/CurrentTaxYearAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/UnrelatedBusinessNetIncm170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus1YearAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/UnrelatedBusinessNetIncm170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus2YearsAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/UnrelatedBusinessNetIncm170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus3YearsAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/UnrelatedBusinessNetIncm170Grp/CurrentTaxYearMinus4YearsAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleA/UnrelatedBusinessNetIncm170Grp/TotalAmt | 0 | 0 |
| IRS990ScheduleO/SupplementalInformationDetail/ExplanationTxt | 0 | Description;Amount^Advertising and Marketing;208|Bank Charges;1625|Bank charges and fees;2369|Cleaning supplies;74|Fee debit Etsy;9|Family assistance;1143|Food homeless children;7462|Homeless children daily transportation;15453|July 2017 Mission Trip;7283|Legal and Professional Services;230|Medical pharmacy;996|Mission house assistance;10611|Office supplies and software;116|Other business expenses;479|Other miscellaneous expenses;49|PayPal fees;4057|Street kids expenses;819|Supplies;12|Travel missionaries and bag fees;2548|Uncategorized expenses;521|Laundry supplies;191|Mission house supplies and materials;846^Total;57101^ |
| IRS990ScheduleO/SupplementalInformationDetail/FormAndLineReferenceDesc | 0 | Form 990-EZ, Part I, Line 16 |
| ReturnHeader/BuildTS | 0 | 2018-06-14 16:35:46Z |
| ReturnHeader/BusinessOfficerGrp/PersonNm | 0 | Caroline Wood |
| ReturnHeader/BusinessOfficerGrp/PersonTitleTxt | 0 | President |
| ReturnHeader/BusinessOfficerGrp/PhoneNum | 0 | 2058730769 |
| ReturnHeader/BusinessOfficerGrp/SignatureDt | 0 | 2017-03-15 |
| ReturnHeader/Filer/BusinessName/BusinessNameLine1Txt | 0 | MISSIONARYATHEART |
| ReturnHeader/Filer/BusinessNameControlTxt | 0 | MISS |
| ReturnHeader/Filer/EIN | 0 | 812922357 |
| ReturnHeader/Filer/PhoneNum | 0 | 2058730760 |
| ReturnHeader/Filer/USAddress/AddressLine1Txt | 0 | 5022 Kelly Creek Street |
| ReturnHeader/Filer/USAddress/CityNm | 0 | Moody |
| ReturnHeader/Filer/USAddress/StateAbbreviationCd | 0 | AL |
| ReturnHeader/Filer/USAddress/ZIPCd | 0 | 35004 |
| ReturnHeader/FilingSecurityInformation/IPAddress/IPv4AddressTxt | 0 | 138.26.58.9 |
| ReturnHeader/ReturnTs | 0 | 2018-04-04T20:10:10-07:00 |
| ReturnHeader/ReturnTypeCd | 0 | 990EZ |
| ReturnHeader/TaxPeriodBeginDt | 0 | 2017-01-01 |
| ReturnHeader/TaxPeriodEndDt | 0 | 2017-12-31 |
| ReturnHeader/TaxYr | 0 | 2017 |
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Displayed year
2017 • Form 990EZDetailed filing. Detailed filing data is available for this year.