Organizations Filed Purposes:
GARDEN CITY HARVEST'S MISSION IS TO PLANT SEEDS AND GROW TOGETHER TO CREATE A HEALTHY COMMUNITY.
GARDEN CITY HARVEST WAS ESTABLISHED IN 1996 AS THE COMMUNITY'S ONLY PROACTIVE SOLUTION TO FOOD INSECURITY TO ENSURE PEOPLE COULD MEET THEIR BASIC NEEDS FOR NUTRITIOUS FOOD. THE FARMING AND GARDENING NONPROFIT NOW MANAGES 20 FARMS, COMMUNITY GARDENS, AND SCHOOL GARDENS THROUGHOUT MISSOULA, MONTANA'S URBAN CORE. ITS MISSION IS TO PLANT SEEDS AND GROW TOGETHER TO CREATE A HEALTHY MISSOULA, WHICH IS CARRIED OUT THROUGH FOUR PROGRAMS THAT IMPACT 20,000 COMMUNITY MEMBERS ANNUALLY.THE COMMUNITY GARDENS PROGRAM OFFERS COMMUNITY MEMBERS THE OPPORTUNITY TO AFFORDABLY GROW FOOD TO FEED THEIR OWN FAMILIES. ROUGHLY 65% OF PARTICIPANTS LIVE IN LOW TO MODERATE-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS WHERE BUDGETS ARE TIGHT. GARDEN CITY HARVEST PROVIDES THE INDIVIDUAL GARDEN PLOTS, TOOLS, WATER, COMPOST, AND THE KNOWLEDGE AND GUIDANCE OF OTHERS TO ENSURE GARDENERS' SUCCESS. IN 2019, THE ORGANIZATION RENTED 380 GARDEN PLOTS AT 10 GARDEN LOCATIONS, PRIMARILY IN HIGH DENSITY, LOW TO MODERATE INCOME NEIGHBORHOODS.GARDEN CITY HARVEST'S FARM TO SCHOOL PROGRAM PROVIDES EXPERIENTIAL, HANDS-ON LEARNING OPPORTUNITIES TO STUDENTS, K-12. STUDENTS ARE ENCOURAGED TO EXPLORE CONNECTIONS BETWEEN FARMING AND THE FOOD THEY EAT. FARM TO SCHOOL STAFF MEMBERS MANAGE SEVEN SCHOOL GARDENS, PROMOTE AND GROW LOCAL FOOD FOR SCHOOL LUNCHES, OFFER IN-CLASS LESSONS DURING THE SCHOOL YEAR, AND EDUCATIONAL FARM FIELD TRIPS AND GARDEN LESSONS DURING THE GROWING SEASON. THIS PROGRAM SERVES ROUGHLY 6,500 STUDENTS PER YEAR.THE NEIGHBORHOOD FARMS PROGRAM GROWS TONS OF FRESH PRODUCE AT FOUR URBAN FARMS, MAKING IT ACCESSIBLE TO EVERYONE IN THE COMMUNITY. MISSOULA'S MOST VULNERABLE CITIZENS ARE ABLE TO ACCESS THIS FOOD THROUGH INTENTIONAL PARTNERSHIPS WITH SEVERAL LOCAL SERVICE AGENCIES. GARDEN CITY HARVEST PROMOTES ORGANIC AND SUSTAINABLE FARMING PRACTICES AT ALL OF ITS SITES, WHICH HELPS TO LESSEN THE EFFECTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE.GARDEN CITY HARVEST'S YOUTH DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM OFFERS EMPLOYMENT AND VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITIES FOR ROUGHLY 50 TEENS ANNUALLY ON TWO OF ITS FARMS. THE TEENS, WHO ARE STRUGGLING WITH OVERWHELMING PERSONAL CHALLENGES, LEARN JOB AND LIFE SKILLS, BUILD MEANINGFUL RELATIONSHIPS WITH OTHERS, AND GAIN SELF-CONFIDENCE. THROUGH THIS WORK, THEY GAIN THE TOOLS TO BECOME PRODUCTIVE MEMBERS OF THE COMMUNITY.
Executives Listed on Filing
Total Salary includes financial earnings, benefits, and all related organization earnings listed on tax filing
Name | Title | Hours Per Week | Total Salary |
Jean Zosel | EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR | 40 | $70,000 |
Nat Sturgis | BOARD MEMBER | 1.5 | $0 |
Virginia Tribe | BOARD MEMBER | 1.5 | $0 |
Seth Swanson | BOARD MEMBER | 1.5 | $0 |
Geoff Peddicord | BOARD MEMBER | 1.5 | $0 |
Martha Newell | BOARD MEMBER | 1.5 | $0 |
Heather Mcmilin | BOARD MEMBER | 1.5 | $0 |
Tom Boone | BOARD MEMBER | 1.5 | $0 |
Blake Bentley | BOARD MEMBER | 1.5 | $0 |
Winona Batemen | BOARD MEMBER | 1.5 | $0 |
Donna Erickson | SECRETARY | 1.5 | $0 |
John Boyle | TREASURER | 1.5 | $0 |
Olleke Rappe-Daniels | VICE PRESIDENT | 1.5 | $0 |
Stephen Hiro | PRESIDENT | 1.5 | $0 |
Data for this page was sourced from XML published by IRS (
public 990 form dataset) from:
https://s3.amazonaws.com/irs-form-990/202021349349301932_public.xml