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Category: Recreation and Sports

FRIENDS OF GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAIN NATIONAL PARK INC

AKA Friends of the Smokies

Kodak, TN

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FRIENDS OF GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAIN NATIONAL PARK INC

Also Known As:
Friends of the Smokies
Physical Address:
Kodak, TN 37764 7660
EIN:
62-1564782
Web URL:
www.friendsofthesmok...
Leadership:
Mr. James Hart, Chief Executive

Legitimacy Information

  • This organization is registered with the IRS.
  • This organization is required to file an IRS Form 990 or 990-EZ.

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Fiscal Year Starting: Jan 01, 2010
Fiscal Year Ending: Dec 31, 2010
Revenue
Total Revenue $3,229,524
Expenses
Total Expenses $1,445,526

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Basic Organization Information

FRIENDS OF GREAT SMOKY MOUNTAIN NATIONAL PARK INC

Also Known As:
Friends of the Smokies
Physical Address:
Kodak, TN 37764 7660
EIN:
62-1564782
Web URL:
www.friendsofthesmok... 
NTEE Category:
C Environmental Quality Protection, Beautification 
C12 Fund Raising and/or Fund Distribution 
W Public, Society Benefit 
W99 Public, Society Benefit - Multipurpose and Other N.E.C. 
C Environmental Quality Protection, Beautification 
C30 Natural Resource Conservation and Protection 
Year Founded:
1995 
Ruling Year:
1996 
How This Organization Is Funded:
2011 Tennessee & North Carolina Specialty License Plate Revenue - $843,731
Special Events & Memberships - $800,000
Donation Boxes - $250,000

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Mission Statement

While the National Park Service is charged with taking care of the core needs of the park's natural, cultural, and visitor resources, Friends of the Smokies helps the park do even more, catalyzing efforts to study, protect, and restore our natural heritage; expanding programs that benefit schoolchildren in surrounding communities; restoring and sharing the park's rich cultural history; improving opportunities for safe recreation in the backcountry; and acting on other timely opportunities to preserve and protect the Great Smoky Mountains. Working together, we make the Smokies even greater.

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Impact Statement

Each year, Friends of Great Smoky Mountains National Park provides more than $1 million to support education, historic preservation, trail maintenance, and wildlife, natural and cultural resource protection, and volunteerism in Great Smoky Mountains National Park.

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Revenue and Expenses

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Balance Sheet

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Financial SCAN

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Key Financial SCAN Features

  • Financial Health Dashboard: Highlights key financial trends and ratios for a selected nonprofit organization over a period of up to five years.
  • Peer Comparison Dashboard: Compares the organization's financials with up to five peer nonprofits that you select.
  • Graphical Analysis: Provides multi-year graphs and an interpretive guide in a format ready to present to your clients.
  • Printable PDF Report: Provides a complete analysis of the organization for your records. The full report tells you what to look for and why it matters.
  • Advanced Search: Allows you to search by EIN (Employer Identification Number), organization name, city, state, revenue, expenses, and assets.


Forms 990 Provided by the Nonprofit

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Financial Statements

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Annual Reports

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Organizational Statistics

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Chief Executive

Mr. James Hart

Term:

Since May 2002

Chief Executive Profile:

Spent 35 years in television station management.   Managed NBC stations in Winston-Salem, North Carolina and Cincinnati, Ohio, as well as WBIR-TV Channel 10 in Knoxville, 1981-1994. President of Multimedia Broadcasting.
Senior Vice President for Television- Scripps Howard Broadcasting 1995 until retirement in 2002.
Appointed Executive Director of Friends of Great Smoky Mountains National Park in May 2002. President of Friends of the Smokies since February 2005.

CEO/Executive Director Statement:

Our challenge is to keep moving forward and continue to emphasize Great Smoky Mountains National Park as a national, natural treasure that is worth preserving and protecting.  We are thankful for every faithful and generous gift of volunteer time and financial resources.- Jim Hart, President

Board Chair

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Board of Directors

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Officers for Fiscal Year

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Highest Paid Employees & Their Compensation

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Program: 2012 Parks As Classrooms Support

Budget:
$116,939
Category:
Education
Population Served:
Children Only (5 - 14 years)

Program Description:

The Parks as Classrooms program provides curriculum-based lessons for K-8th grade students from communities around the park in East Tennessee and Western North Carolina. These interdisciplinary programs reach 18,000+ schoolchildren and 3,000+ teachers, and utilize Great Smoky Mountains National Park as an outdoor classroom with a focus on natural and cultural resources.  This funding will add middle schoolers in Blount Co., TN to the PAC program and develop curriculum targeted to school system requirements.

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Program: 2012 Appalachian Trail Ridgerunner Support

Budget:
$33,100
Category:
Environment
Population Served:
Adults

Program Description:

Each year from March through October the Appalachian Trail Conference assigns one or more volunteers to spend weeks hiking the AT through the Smokies providing visitor information, conducting routine maintenance of the trails and trail privies. These ridge runners are also valuable in responding to emergencies reported on the AT.

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Program: 2012 Environmental Education Outreach Expansion

Budget:
$140,778
Category:
Education
Population Served:
Children and Youth (infants - 19 years.)

Program Description:

Additional funding for environmental education to expand the Parks as Classrooms program and the Smokies' Junior Ranger and Not-so-Junior Ranger programs.  This expansion also includes conducting science teacher workshops and hiring high school interns.  Toyota Motor Sales North America's $1 million education grant is the source of this funding!

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Program: 2012 Black Bear Conservation Programs

Budget:
$39,300
Category:
Animal-Related
Population Served:
General Public/Unspecified

Program Description:

$34,300 for seasonal staff to manage wildlife and safety issues, especially working traffic jams that result from bear sightings along park roadways for the protection of both black bears and park visitors
$10,000 to support the Appalachian Bear Rescue center in Townsend, TN which rehabilitates orphaned and injured black bears for reintroduction into their native habitat.
$4,000 to maintain black bear-resistant food storage hoisting systems at all backcountry campsites & shelters for the safety of hikers and bears
 
 

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Program: 2012 Student Conservation Interns for Science Activities & Resource Management

Budget:
$83,850
Category:
Employment
Population Served:
Young Adults (20-25 years) -- currently not in use

Program Description:

23 interns will spray for hemlock woolly adelgids, eradicate non-native plants, sample streams for brook trout, work on archaeological digs, and assist with research.  These interns get an enormous amount of valuable work experience while providing a huge amount of cost-effective labor.  A large proportion of the Park's later seasonal employees and many permanent staffers "cut their teeth" as interns.  This funding provides a small living allowance and Park housing to these young people who come from all over the U.S.

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Funding Needs

In order to reach our 2012 fundraising goal of providing more than $1 million in direct support to Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Friends of the Smokies relies on the generosity of individuals, foundations, and corporations who provide membership gifts, grants, and sponsorships throughout the year.


Volunteer Needs

Volunteers in the Parks (VIPs) work directly through the Park VIP Program in a variety of positions and services.  For more information and a list of identified volunteer needs, please call VIP Coordinator Dana Soehn at (865) 436-1265 or e-mail dana_soehn@nps.gov

To make a difference in the life of a trail as part of the Trails Forever crew, or to maintain a park trail or backcountry campsite as part of the Adopt-A-Trail or Adopt-A-Campsite (8-times a year) programs, please contact the Park’s Volunteer Coordinator for Trails & Facilities Christine Hoyer at Christine_Hoyer@nps.gov
or call her at (828) 497-1917.


Request for In-Kind Contributions

Restaurants donate food for special events. Computer consultants help manage our hardware and software. Artists, bed and breakfasts, bookstores, outfitters, and many others offer their products and services as items for our annual fundraising auctions. To discuss the possibilities, please call Kathryn Robertson, Office/Special Events Coordinator at (800) 845-5665.


News

Smokies Partners Renovate 15th Shelter
December 28, 2011

(Kodak, TN) – Hikers on the Appalachian Trail may never tell campfire stories about the renovation of all 15 backcountry shelters in the Smokies, but they benefit from some amazing partnerships after a hard day’s trek.

 
Joint efforts of labor and funding from Friends of the Smokies, the Appalachian Trail Conservancy, and the Smoky Mountains Hiking Club improved cooking and sleeping quarters for campers, while also reducing potential problems with black bears.
 
Reconstruction at Laurel Gap, the fifteenth and final shelter project, began in September, but weather prevented delivery of roofing materials by helicopter.  The volunteer crew returned the first week of December to finish roofing the shelter under the threat of winter snows.  Laurel Gap is located in North Carolina, near the intersection of the Sterling Ridge and Balsam Mountain Trails.  Twelve of the Park’s 15 backcountry shelters are located on the Appalachian Trail; Mt. LeConte, Laurel Gap and Kephart Prong are not.
 
“As with all of the shelter projects over the years, this one required a real team effort,” said Jim Hart, President of Friends of the Smokies. “We are very grateful to all the partners and donors, to project coordinator Phyllis Henry, and to all the great volunteers for pitching in yet again.”
 
Funds from Friends of the Smokies and the Appalachian Trail Conservancy furnished supplies and helicopter delivery of materials to the remote shelter locations. The Appalachian Trail Maintainers Committee of the Smoky Mountains Hiking Club provided the skilled volunteer labor necessary to rebuild each shelter; their work was supervised by staff from the Appalachian Trail Conservancy and Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
 
The Richard Haiman National Park Foundation contributed well over $100,000 to Friends of the Smokies since 1999 to support a dozen shelter projects, including Laurel Gap. Additional financial support came from Friends of the Smokies’ specialty license plate owners in Tennessee and North Carolina, Home Federal Bank, Maureen K. Wilder and William O. Young.
 
Architect Philip Royer of Knoxville, also a member of the Appalachian Trail Maintainers Committee, drew the basic blueprint for every shelter rehab project, incorporating improved natural lighting, a cooking area to separate food odors from the sleeping space, improved bunk access, new roofs and masonry repair, the removal of chain-link fences, and drainage improvements. With these changes, overnight hikers enjoy a much safer and much more inviting camping experience.
 
“The redesigned shelters look great, and they make overnight trips in the Smokies so much better for thousands of backpackers every year,” said Darren Haiman, a trustee of the Haiman Foundation, which was established by Darren’s father, Richard. “We’re very glad that we’ve had a chance to work with Friends of the Smokies over the years to make these improvements possible.”
 
Friends of the Smokies, an independent, 501(c)(3) non-profit organization, helps preserve and protect Great Smoky Mountains National Park by raising funds and public awareness and providing volunteers for needed projects. Since 1993, Friends of the Smokies has raised more than $34 million to help support conservation, education, recreation, and other park priorities.
 
To learn more, please visit:

            Friends of the Smokies - www.friendsofthesmokies.org

            Shelter Renovation Flickr Albums- http://www.flickr.com/photos/smokiesfriends

            Haiman Foundation - richardhaimannationalparksfoundation.org

            Appalachian Trail Conservancy - www.appalachiantrail.org

            Smoky Mountains Hiking Club - www.smhclub.org

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