EIN 93-0698327

Olalla Center

IRS 501(c) type
501(c)(3)
Num. employees
40
City
Toledo
State
Year formed
1978
Most recent tax filings
2022-06-01
Description
Olalla Center strengthens and heals children, families, and the community through innovative mental health programs in Toledo, OR.
Also known as...
Lincoln County Day Treatment Center; Olalla Center for Children and Families
Total revenues
$2,032,594
2022
Total expenses
$2,114,735
2022
Total assets
$2,132,550
2022
Num. employees
40
2022

Program areas at Olalla Center

The day treatment program begins with Center staff assessing how children and families are currently functioning along with their individual needs and strengths. Then a treatment plan is designed with the family to utilize their strengths while meeting their needs and remaining focused on their goals. By using a variety of traditional and innovative evidence-based treatment models, occf's staff help families achieve their goals, find connection to community and move beyond the need for professional support. The day treatment program is a therapeutic school alternative for children requiring a more restrictive environment than the public school system can offer. Overseen by a licensed child psychiatrist, the day treatment program offers children of 6-13 years old a structured setting that combines education and therapy and teaches such skills as mindfulness and meditation to reduce stress. Through development of these skills, participants explore new ways of slowing down their bodies and minds to decrease stress, broaden awareness and increase focus.
Walden project program is an innovative new program that combines traditional mental health services like individual, group and family therapy with a mentoring program, all of which is based in an outdoor setting on the beautiful Oregon coast. The vastness of the outdoors provides deep, meaningful experiences for children and their families while creating awareness and familiarity of the community in which they live. The program is expected to have a cumulative effect on children, teens, the foster care system, and the community as a whole. Therapy programs included in the walden project are the pegasus program; an equine-assisted therapy which teams a mental health professional and an equine specialist for individual, family or group sessions. The sessions focus on ground work with horses, no riding, with the horse supporting clients through the use of metaphor and skills. The program uses the egala model of equine-assisted therapy. Learning to fly; pegasus program girls group provides participants with the confidence and ability to work through a variety of life situations by building skills such as mindfulness, distress tolerance, emotion regulation and interpersonal effectiveness. Group sessions include hands on work with horses and an open discussion format where skills are introduced and practiced. A safe place; flexible 12 session group format that pairs nature based activities with storytelling and expressive arts approaches for children elementary to early middle school aged. The program strengthens coping skills and resilience in children who have endured stressors such as divorce, moving, illness, loss of family member, bullying, natural disasters and loss of home.
The outpatient program provides such services as individual therapy, family therapy, group therapy and skills training. Some outpatient groups are true strength; a compassion focused therapy group for adolescents which includes art-making and deals with difficult emotions such as anger through the use of cognitive behavioral therapy, affective neuroscience, and buddhist psychology. Clients are guided through the development of self-compassion and compassion for others using psychoeducation, mindfulness, compassionate imagery exercises, group processing, and homework to practice skills learned. Born brave; an lgbtq+process group intended to be a safe, welcoming, compassionate space for participants to explore feelings, topics, and questions about sexual orientation and gender identity. Improv for parents; uses the principles and techniques of improv comedy and theater to improve communication, increase parent flexibility in responding to youth behavior, improve collaborative problem solving skills, improve parent's/family's ability to respond to both changing child developmental stages and related changes in family life. The outpatient therapy bravery Center fosters bravery, empowerment, and advocacy within lgbtqia2s+ youth in our community. Created from the need to address the isolation, social rejection, and lack of resources facing rural lgbtqia2s+ youth, bravery Center strives to create safe space, promote visibility and acceptance, build equitable resources, and strengthen our community with courage and compassion.
The relief nursery program works to prevent the cycle of child abuse and neglect through early intervention programs that focus on building successful and resilient children, strengthening parenting skills of families, and preserving families by offering comprehensive, integrated early childhood therapeutic and family support services which are trauma- informed, non-stigmatizing, voluntary, strength-based, culturally appropriate, and designed to achieve appropriate early childhood development and healthy attached families. The program is replcated through and certified by the Oregon association of relief nurseries (oarn). The relief nursery program includes respite; a socialization program for children aged 3-13 that is operated most weekends of the year, to give parents and caregivers time without work and children to rejuvenate. Included in this other category of programs is the community health and outreach program that provides multicultural/multilingual community health and outreach services to assist vulnerable people with access to and navigation of healthcare and social service systems, food and housing resources, Oregon health plan, and other application processes, community health and education events, cultural adn language accessibility and development. Community outreach also provided covid-19 vaccination events.

Who funds Olalla Center

Grants from foundations and other nonprofits
GrantmakerDescriptionAmount
The Oregon Community FoundationMental Health and Substance Abuse$40,000
The Chicago Community TrustTo Support Olalla Center$25,000
The Roundhouse FoundationWalden Project Mentoring in Nature$20,000
...and 5 more grants received

Personnel at Olalla Center

NameTitleCompensation
Denise LeonardExecutive Director$76,410
Diana "Dee" RussoDevelopment Director
Beck JohnsonBravery Center Director They and Them and Theirs
Kimberly BittickRelief Nursery Manager / Bravery Center Director
Alex LlumiquingaOutreach Program Manager He and Health Information Management / Outpatient Director and Pegasus Program
...and 11 more key personnel

Financials for Olalla Center

RevenuesFYE 06/2022
Total grants, contributions, etc.$1,080,063
Program services$951,224
Investment income and dividends$146
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$0
Net income from sales of inventory$0
Miscellaneous revenues$1,161
Total revenues$2,032,594

Form 990s for Olalla Center

Fiscal year endingDate received by IRSFormPDF link
2020-062021-04-06990View PDF
2019-062020-01-10990View PDF
2018-062019-08-17990View PDF
2016-062017-03-27990View PDF
2015-062016-07-06990View PDF
...and 6 more Form 990s

Organizations like Olalla Center

OrganizationLocationRevenue
Crossroads Behavioral Health ServicesCreston, IA$2,112,076
Seward CountyLiberal, KS$2,324,483
HGI Counseling CenterHouston, TX$3,006,035
Samaritan Counseling Center of Southeast TexasPort Arthur, TX$816,560
Southeast Nassau Guidance Center (SNG)Seaford, NY$3,568,894
Family Support CenterWinnemucca, NV$625,682
Tillamook Family Counseling CenterTillamook, OR$6,725,907
Arcus Behavioral Health and WellnessChicago, IL$800,524
Alliance Child and Family SolutionsFort Worth, TX$896,170
New Horizons Community Mental Health CenterMiami, FL$8,850,107
Data update history
July 3, 2023
Updated personnel
Identified 1 new personnel
May 8, 2023
Received grants
Identified 1 new grant, including a grant for $20,000 from The Roundhouse Foundation
November 18, 2022
Used new vendors
Identified 3 new vendors, including , , and
August 4, 2022
Received grants
Identified 1 new grant, including a grant for $25,000 from OCF Joseph E Weston Public Foundation
May 25, 2022
Updated personnel
Identified 2 new personnel
Nonprofit Types
ClinicsMental health organizations
Issues
HealthMental health
Characteristics
State / local levelReceives government fundingTax deductible donations
General information
Address
PO Box 893
Toledo, OR 97391
County
Lincoln County, OR
Website URL
olallacenter.org/ 
Phone
(541) 336-2254
IRS details
EIN
93-0698327
Fiscal year end
June
Taxreturn type
Form 990
Year formed
1978
Eligible to receive tax-deductible contributions (Pub 78)
Yes
Categorization
NTEE code, primary
F32: Community Mental Health Center
NAICS code, primary
621: Outpatient Health Care Practitioners and Facilities
Parent/child status
Independent
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