EIN 95-4538450

Special Olympics Southern California

IRS 501(c) type
501(c)(3)
Num. employees
65
Year formed
1995
Most recent tax filings
2022-12-01
Description
Year-round sports training and athletic competition for individuals with intellectual disabilities to enable better lives through sports.
Total revenues
$26,174,927
2022
Total expenses
$9,472,035
2022
Total assets
$37,505,831
2022
Num. employees
65
2022

Program areas at Special Olympics Southern California

Sports and health programs:special Olympics Southern California provides sports training and competitions in 12 sports, health and wellness programs, and leadership training to people with intellectual disabilities. Athletes have opportunities to compete locally throughout the year and could even compete nationally and internationally.in 2022, sosc began its return to sports training and competition in community programs. Through august, athletes participated in sports skills training, as they had during most of the pandemic, but the fall featured a traditional season of sports training and competitions, including the fall games championships. In the winter, we kicked off a new sport: floorball. This sport replaced floor hockey and will allow athletes to have more opportunities to compete at usa games and world games. Sosc's impact is as strong as ever. We continued to build upon our current programming in 2022. We added virtual programming, such as the healthy lifestyle challenge; increased the number of medfests we host; prepared to expand unified sports to community programs in 2023; and more. The results from sosc's sports and beyond sports programming are proven. It improves the quality of health in people with intellectual disabilities, empowers the athletes to live more fulfilling lives, and creates more inclusive communities.
Special Olympics Southern California's other program costs include:public education sosc communicates strategically to build on Special Olympics strong brand recognition, with the goal of better educating the public on our programs and mission. Sosc promotes its mission and programs through a variety of marketing channels, including direct mail, printed and digital graphics, email marketing, social media, traditional media outreach, content creation, and more. The current focus has been on cultivating sosc's current database of supporters (athletes, volunteers, donors, and sponsors) and new audiences to reach our fundraising, sports & programs, and volunteer goals. Athlete leadership Special Olympics Southern California's athlete leadership gives athletes opportunities beyond sports training and competition. Athletes can become coaches, officials, team captains, spokespeople, board of directors, and committee members. Athletes help guide the direction of the movement and are advocates of acceptance and inclusion for all.professional development for staff, including staff conferences part of sosc's success is through building a strong team culture and encouraging employees to grow so they are equipped with the tools to advance sosc's sports, wellness, and leadership programs. This support of employees includes year-round professional development opportunities and an annual staff conference to develop strategic plans, create consistency within program implementation, provide professional development, and build team morale. Recruitment volunteers to empower athletes to reach their goals on and off the sports field, we need to become a staff lead, volunteer driven organization. The devastating impact of covid-19 has affected volunteer participation in sosc's programming. To reach more people with intellectual disabilities, schools, and communities, we need more coaches and ongoing volunteers. Employees are developing and implementing a strategic volunteer engagement plan, which includes increasing the amount of skilled and capacity-building roles for volunteers within sports, wellness, and leadership programming and building resources to empower volunteers. With more volunteers supporting the mission, we know we can continue to grow and serve more athletes.
Unified champion schools program:special Olympics Southern California's unified champion schools program (ucs) is shaping a generation of young people who will lead us into a future of inclusion. The program spreads acceptance, inclusion, and an active lifestyle for students with and without intellectual disabilities; reduces bullying by 94% in hundreds of schools in Southern California; and builds healthy habits.in 2022, we had 75 schools make a commitment to creating a more inclusive and accepting environment for all students, particularly those with intellectual disabilities. This includes three components:1. Unified sports is a program in which people with intellectual disabilities (athletes) and those without (partners) train and compete together on sports teams. It is inspired by a simple principle: playing together is a quick path to friendship and understanding.2. Inclusive youth leadership - students with and without intellectual disabilities work together to lead and plan advocacy, awareness, and other inclusive activities throughout the school year.3. Whole school engagement incorporates awareness and education activities that promote inclusion, reach the entire school, and align with the unified champion schools mission.these components provide the most opportunity for creating positive school climates. Through their commitment to inclusion and awareness, unified champion schools ensure that all students, particularly those with intellectual disabilities, become part of the school's social fabric.

Who funds Special Olympics Southern California

Grants from foundations and other nonprofits
GrantmakerDescriptionAmount
Special OlympicsProgram Assistance$1,586,928
Fidelity Investments Charitable Gift FundFor Grant Recipient's Exempt Purposes$785,637
The Larry and Helen Hoag FoundationCommunity Programs$300,000
...and 65 more grants received totalling $3,525,204

Personnel at Special Olympics Southern California

NameTitleCompensation
Bill ShumardBoard Member
Kelly PondExecutive Vice President , Chief Operating Officer / Executive Vice President , Chief Operations / Chief Operating Officer / Executive Vice President , Development and Communications$97,193
Laura MayoChief Operating Officer$102,742
Janet RoseChief Financial Officer$123,921
Caren RobersonInterim Vice President , Marketing and Communications$0
...and 16 more key personnel

Financials for Special Olympics Southern California

RevenuesFYE 12/2022
Total grants, contributions, etc.$23,767,191
Program services$0
Investment income and dividends$245,070
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$0
Net income from gaming activities$2,160,744
Net income from sales of inventory$896
Miscellaneous revenues$1,026
Total revenues$26,174,927

Form 990s for Special Olympics Southern California

Fiscal year endingDate received by IRSFormPDF link
2022-122023-10-03990View PDF
2021-122022-09-28990View PDF
2020-122021-08-27990View PDF
2019-122021-02-17990View PDF
2018-122019-12-04990View PDF
...and 9 more Form 990s

Organizations like Special Olympics Southern California

OrganizationLocationRevenue
Special Olympics Michigan (SOMI)Mount Pleasant, MI$10,928,476
Special Olympics FloridaClermont, FL$15,453,218
Special Olympics VirginiaRichmond, VA$6,911,807
Special Olympics New YorkAlbany, NY$10,383,699
Special Olympics Northern CaliforniaPleasant Hill, CA$26,413,746
Special Olympics Minnesota (SOMN)Minneapolis, MN$10,481,322
Special Olympics TexasSan Antonio, TX$11,162,538
Special Olympics MarylandBaltimore, MD$7,036,227
Special Olympics Illinois (SOILL)Normal, IL$17,739,289
Special Olympics Arizona (SOAZ)Goodyear, AZ$9,056,365
Data update history
February 4, 2024
Received grants
Identified 19 new grant, including a grant for $1,586,928 from Special Olympics
November 28, 2023
Posted financials
Added Form 990 for fiscal year 2022
November 28, 2023
Updated personnel
Identified 1 new personnel
November 26, 2023
Used new vendors
Identified 2 new vendors, including , and
October 26, 2023
Received grants
Identified 8 new grant, including a grant for $300,000 from The Larry and Helen Hoag Foundation
Nonprofit Types
Sports competitionsSports organizationsHeadquarter / parent organizationsCharities
Issues
Human servicesSports
Characteristics
LobbyingFundraising eventsState / local levelReceives government fundingEndowed supportCommunity engagement / volunteeringTax deductible donations
General information
Address
1600 Forbes Way 200
Long Beach, CA 90810
Metro area
Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, CA
Website URL
sosc.org/ 
Phone
(562) 502-1100
Facebook page
specialolympics.socal 
Twitter profile
@sosocal 
IRS details
EIN
95-4538450
Fiscal year end
December
Taxreturn type
Form 990
Year formed
1995
Eligible to receive tax-deductible contributions (Pub 78)
Yes
Categorization
NTEE code, primary
N70: Amateur Sports Competitions
NAICS code, primary
713990: Amateur Sports, Youth Sports, and Recreational Services
Parent/child status
Independent
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