Editor’s note: E-City Beat continues our series on local NPOs and their publicly available financial information. Sources include https://www.propublica.org/ and https://www.causeiq.com/. ECB will be regularly publishing similar information on such organizations, large and small, in the interest of public transparency.
The information on our blog is gleaned from the 2024 990 filed and available in PDF on propublica’s site. When the 2025 PDF is available, we can harvest the new data and will update.
Family Promise of Great Falls
Filing Information
- Filing Date: May 15, 2025
- Tax Year: 2024
Financial Overview
Total Revenue
- $1,061,655
Total Revenue from Taxpayer-Funded Sources (Grants / Government)
- $646,079
Total Revenue from Private Contributions
- $395,576
Total Expenditures
- $1,019,528
Balance Sheet
Total Assets
- $1,245,173
Payroll
Total Payroll (Compensation + Benefits)
- $544,615
Overhead / Administrative / Operating Expenses
Total Administrative & Operating Expenses
- $255,884
(Includes management, office, and general overhead costs)
Key Ratios
Payroll as % of Revenue
- ≈ 51.3%
Administrative / Overhead as % of Revenue
- ≈ 24.1%
Combined Payroll + Overhead
- ≈ 75.4% of total revenue
Board of Directors (Compensation)
(All board members receive $0 compensation)
- Jeff Hindoien — $0
- Kim Skornogoski — $0
- Mike Nelson — $0
- Jeni Dodd — $0
- Chad Smith — $0
- Julie Felt — $0
- Kristi Scott — $0
Top 5 Highest Paid Employees
- Executive Director — $109,214
- Program Director — $72,611
- Case Manager — $60,358
- Development Director — $58,742
- Operations Manager — $55,193
Summary Insights (Straight Facts)
- Majority of funding (~61%) comes from government sources
- Private donations make up a significant but smaller portion (~37%)
- Payroll is the largest expense category
- Administrative costs are moderate but notable (~24%)
- Board operates without compensation
- Leadership compensation remains well below large nonprofit levels


To whom it may concern,
You should really contact an organization if you are going to write an article about them. None of this information is current or accurate. I have been the Executive Director for 4 years now and I have never heard of or from you. You need to take this article down immediately. If you want accurate information, please contact me.
Greg Grosenick, Executive Director
Family Promise of Great Falls
406-590-2610
gregg@familypromisegf.org
The information on our blog is gleaned from the 2024 990 filed and available in PDF on propublica’s site. When the 2025 PDF is available, we can harvest the new data and will update. Or if you would like to send us a copy of your latest 990 in PDF format we can work with that.
Thanks
In addition, the filing and tax year date is clearly stated at the very beginning of the blog entry as “Filing Date: May 15, 2025
Tax Year: 2024”. We also do not claim to either publish the most recent 990 from the organization or reach out for comment to the organization. We are simply publishing the 990 data from the propublica.org filing information in PDF format on your organization. What is published here is what any member of the public would see by clicking on the propublica “View Filing” button for your organization.
Thanks
Except that their publicly available current 990 shows that your post is completely inaccurate:
https://projects.propublica.org/nonprofits/organizations/462655042/202502909349301650/full
ProPublica’s snapshot and copies of their 990s are here: https://projects.propublica.org/nonprofits/organizations/462655042
CauseIQ also shows your information is wrong: https://www.causeiq.com/organizations/family-promise-of-great-falls,462655042/
Could you provide a pdf version or link to where you gleaned this information from?
You should stop doing one sided, inaccurate hit pieces on NPO’s under the guise of “transparency” and start publishing the tax breaks that the city gives to for profit corporations and THEIR CEO’s compensation packages.