Non-profit

Southern Coalition for Social Justice (SCSJ)

Website:

www.southerncoalition.org

Location:

DURHAM, NC

Tax ID:

26-0688375

Tax-Exempt Status:

501(c)(3)

Budget (2020):

Revenue: $8,888,698
Expenses: $3,033,203
Assets: $14,572,291

Formation:

2007 in Durham, North Carolina

Type:

Public Interest Law Nonprofit

Founder:

Anita Earls

Executive Director:

Anita Earls (2007-2017)

Kareem Crayton (2017-Present) 1

References

  1. Southern Coalition for Social Justice, IRS form 990, 2017. 2017 form accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.southerncoalition.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/TaxReturnPublic17scsj.pdf

Contact InfluenceWatch with suggested edits or tips for additional profiles.

The Southern Coalition for Social Justice (SCSJ) is a left-of-center public interest law group located in Durham, North Carolina. It was founded in 2007 and began operations in 2009. Anita Earls, SCSJ’s founder and first executive director, designed it as an organization to help communities and clients with legal assistance, media relations, policy research, and community organizing. Her ultimate objective was to replicate the business model of an organization such as the Southern Poverty Law Center. 1 As of early 2019 SCSJ has 19 employees, most of whom are attorneys. 2 Earls stepped down from her position at SCSJ at the end of 2017 to seek election to the North Carolina Supreme Court; she was elected in 2018 as a Democrat. 3

As a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, SCSJ takes funding from left-of-center foundations. These foundations, among them the Ford Foundation,4 the Foundation to Promote Open Society,5 and the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation,6 provided most of the $12.5 million in revenue SCSJ received from 2008 through 2016. 7 The Ford Foundation provided Earls the initial grant to assist in the creation of SCSJ. 8

 A major focus of SCSJ’s election law work has been challenging the congressional maps drawn by Republican state legislatures in North Carolina9 and other states. 10 In other recent election law cases SCSJ opposed implementation of a law that would require North Carolina voters to show a photo ID at polling places11 and sued a law firm for helping North Carolina Republicans file voter fraud complaints during the 2016 gubernatorial election recount/challenge. 12 The organization also represented convicted felons in North Carolina who were still serving out a sentence as they illegally cast ballots in the 2016 election. 13

Background

The Southern Coalition for Social Justice (SCSJ), located in Durham, North Carolina, was founded in 2007 and began operations in 2009 with a program to increase the count of low-income, homeless, and minority persons in North Carolina and other southern states by the 2010 U.S. Census. Founder Anita Earls has suggested that her ultimate objective was for SCSJ to replicate the business model of the Southern Poverty Law Center or the Southern Environmental Law Center. 14

The Census program began with funding from the Ford Foundation and the Open Society Institute – grants that Earls said allowed SCSJ to transfer the money as “mini grants” to local community groups who were “not necessarily organized into 501(c)(3) organizations” but could provide the Census assistance SCSJ sought. She considers the Census work to be SCSJ’s first “voting rights” project. 15

As of February 2019, the SCSJ website lists 19 employees. Excluding the executive director, ten of the remaining 18 are attorneys credited with working either voting rights or criminal justice. 16

Personnel

Anita Earls

Anita Earls is the founder of SCSJ, and from 2007 to 2017 was its first executive director. In November 2017, she announced as a candidate for the North Carolina Supreme Court,17 and stepped down from her position at SCSJ at the end of 2017. 18 She won the November 2018 judicial race, and serves on the North Carolina Supreme Court.

Her total compensation from SCSJ for 2017 (salary and other benefits) was reported as $138,694. 19
Prior to founding SCSJ, Earls was a deputy assistant attorney general for civil rights at the U.S. Justice Department during the Clinton administration and a law professor at the University of North Carolina, Duke University, and the University of Maryland. 20

Kareem Crayton

Kareem Crayton, Ph.D., became the interim executive director of SCSJ on January 1, 2018, after founder and executive director Anita Earls stepped down to seek a seat on the North Carolina Supreme Court. Crayton is an academic “whose work centers on the intersection of law, politics, and race.” Prior to his position with SCSJ, he managed a consulting firm and was on the faculty at Vanderbilt University Law School. 21

Allison Riggs

Allison Riggs joined SCSJ in 2009 and is the senior staff attorney and leader of the organization’s voting rights and redistricting practice. She argued a redistricting case before the United State Supreme Court in 2018. 22

Funding

Left-wing foundations have provided a majority of SCSJ’s funding. In a 2014 interview, SCSJ founder Anita Earls stated the organization’s funding had come “primarily” from foundations and that “we don’t have much funding from individuals.” She credited the Ford Foundation for providing an initial “planning” grant to assist in the creation of SCSJ. 23
SCSJ’s total revenue from 2008 to 2016 was slightly more than $12.5 million. 24 The left-wing Ford Foundation provided more than $4.4 million of the total (35 percent) during this period. 25

Eight other large, left-wing foundations provided more than $3.1 million (another 25 percent of total revenue) during the 2008-2016 period:

Also, in a July 2018 statement, NEO Philanthropy, a fiscal clearinghouse for left-of-center causes, listed SCSJ as a “grantee.”34

For 2017 the Southern Coalition for Social Justice took in nearly $3.4 million in total revenue – more than $2.9 million in contributions, plus a little more than $400,000 credited as revenue from “program services.” Total expenses for 2017 were slightly more than $2.1 million. This tied the best prior fundraising year for SCSJ: $2.9 million in contributions were also recorded for 2015. 35

In recent years SCSJ has represented clients in many high-profile election law cases, mostly in North Carolina, but in other southern states. Some examples are noted below.

Voter ID

An amendment to the North Carolina constitution that requires voters to present a photo ID when going to the polls was approved by 55.5 percent of North Carolina voters during the November 2018 midterm election. 36 By the end of that month a bi-partisan group of North Carolina state lawmakers had proposed legislation to implement the new constitutional provision, allowing any one of seven forms of photo identification (including military, veteran, and student IDs) to be used to satisfy the constitutional directive. 37 Lawmakers in both legislative chambers overwhelmingly approved the measure, and then in December supermajorities passed it into law after overriding a veto from North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper (D). 38

Within an hour of the override, SCSJ filed a lawsuit seeking to overturn the new law, arguing it discriminated against African-Americans and other minority groups. 39

Redistricting

SCSJ filed a lawsuit seeking to overturn and rewrite North Carolina’s U.S. House district map, alleging the map includes “partisan gerrymandering” favoring Republicans and illegally disadvantaging Democratic voters. The lawsuits were filed in partnership with the left-wing Campaign Legal Center, and on behalf of the North Carolina chapter of the left-of-center League of Women Voters and 12 individual voters in the state. The U.S. Supreme Court will hear arguments in the case beginning March 2019. 40

In 2018 and early 2019 SCSJ also participated in federal redistricting lawsuits involving Texas (regarding both the U.S. House and state legislative maps)41 and Virginia (regarding the maps for the House of Delegates). 42

Defending Alleged Illegal Voters

In April 2017 the North Carolina Board of Elections released a report showing 508 ineligible voters had voted during the 2016 U.S. presidential election, with 441 doing so while still serving felony sentences or on probation for same. Those with active felony convictions are not permitted to vote in North Carolina. State elections officials turned the 441 names over to local prosecutors for decisions regarding if charges would be filed. 43

Charges were filed in some jurisdictions, with the district attorney in Alamance County, North Carolina, deciding to prosecute 12 persons for illegally voting while still serving a felony sentence.  SCSJ defended five of the so-called “Alamance 12” – each was facing another felony conviction, and potential incarceration. The SCSJ clients ultimately accepted plea bargains in which they accepted misdemeanor convictions for obstruction of justice in exchange for the state dropping the felony charges against them. 44
Alamance County had initially been sent the names of 15 persons, but the prosecutor decided to file charges against only the 12. In 2012, the same prosecutor had declined to prosecute two non-citizens for illegally voting, stating there was insufficient evidence the individuals intended to commit a crime. 45

2016 Gubernatorial Election Suit

After the 2016 North Carolina gubernatorial election, four North Carolina citizens whose status as eligible voters during the election had been formally challenged filed a class-action defamation lawsuit against the McCrory Legal Defense Fund representing Republican Gov. Pat McCrory and Holtzman Vogel, a Virginia law firm that represented Republicans in the election challenge. 46 The four voters suing the McCrory defense fund and the law firm were represented by attorneys from the Southern Coalition for Social Justice. 47

The 2016 North Carolina gubernatorial election was won by Democrat Roy Cooper over McCrory by a margin of roughly 10,000 out of 4.7 million total votes. The Republican’s campaign contested the results of the close race, which initially (on election night) showed a Cooper lead of about 5,000 votes. 48 The McCrory challenges included requests for recounts of the vote tallies,49 challenges to the legality of specific voters (e.g.: asserting that 43 voters may have fraudulently submitted ballots),50 and assertions of potential fraudulent returns in several jurisdictions. 51

The challenges against the legality of some voters were mostly dismissed by county election boards. The recount changed the official tally by about 5,000 votes, but in the direction of adding to Cooper’s margin of victory, and McCrory conceded. 52

The SCSJ complaint on behalf of its clients asserted the four voters had been defamed by the formal accusation that they were not valid voters. Arguing in April 2018 that the case should be dismissed, a Holtzman Vogel attorney stated “You can’t actually challenge the outcome or results of an election unless you can challenge the ballots and whether they were cast lawfully.”53
In May 2018 a North Carolina judge ruled against the request for a dismissal and allowed the case to move forward. 54

Defending Vandals

SCSJ lawyers represented some of the protestors who participated in the August 2017 destruction of the Confederate Soldiers Monument outside the Durham County, North Carolina, courthouse. In February 2018 the Durham district attorney announced he would be dismissing charges against the protesters. 55

The monument, depicting a single, unnamed solider, and not a specific, historical person, had been a general memorial to Confederate soldiers who fought in the Civil War. 56 Following the dropping of charges against protesters who destroyed the memorial, the SCSJ attorney working the case stated: “The statue that was torn down was a symbol of white supremacy that has no place in front of the public buildings that represent our community… We need to make monuments to the ill-conceived project of white supremacy a thing of the past.”57

References

  1. Esther, Kim. “Anita Earls Oral History Transcription.” Duke University. March 3, 2014. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://library.duke.edu/digitalcollections/rl/media/videoforsocialchange/EarlsAnita_2014March03_transcript.pdf
  2. “Staff.” Southern Coalition for Social Justice. Accessed February 6, 2019. https://www.southerncoalition.org/about/staff-and-board-3/
  3. “Dr. Kareem Crayton Hired as Interim Director for the Southern Coalition for Social Justice.” Southern Coalition for Social Justice. December 13, 2017. Accessed February 6, 2019. https://www.southerncoalition.org/dr-kareem-crayton-hired-interim-director-southern-coalition-social-justice/
  4. Ford Foundation, IRS Forms 990, 2008-2016. Data compiled by FoundationSearch.com subscription service, a project of Metasoft Systems, Inc., from forms filed with the Internal Revenue Service. Queries conducted February 5, 2019.
  5. Foundation to Promote Open Society, IRS Forms 990, 2010-2012. Data compiled by FoundationSearch.com subscription service, a project of Metasoft Systems, Inc., from forms filed with the Internal Revenue Service. Queries conducted February 5, 2019.
  6. Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation, IRS Forms 990, 2008-2016; and Zachary Smith Reynolds Trust, IRS Forms 990, 2008-2016. Data compiled by FoundationSearch.com subscription service, a project of Metasoft Systems, Inc., from forms filed with the Internal Revenue Service. Queries conducted February 5, 2019.
  7. Southern Coalition for Social Justice, IRS Forms 990, 2008-2016.
  8. Esther, Kim. “Anita Earls Oral History Transcription.” Duke University. March 3, 2014. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://library.duke.edu/digitalcollections/rl/media/videoforsocialchange/EarlsAnita_2014March03_transcript.pdf
  9. “U.S. Supreme Court Will Hear North Carolina and Maryland Partisan Gerrymandering Challenges.” Southern Coalition for Social Justice. January 4, 2019. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.southerncoalition.org/u-s-supreme-court-will-hear-north-carolina-maryland-partisan-gerrymandering-challenges/
  10. “SCSJ at the U.S. Supreme Court.” Southern Coalition for Social Justice. April 26, 2018. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.southerncoalition.org/scsj-u-s-supreme-court/
  11. Boughton, Melissa. “Lawsuit filed as soon as voter ID becomes law in NC.” Progressive Pulse. December 19, 2018. Accessed February 5, 2019. http://pulse.ncpolicywatch.org/2018/12/19/lawsuit-filed-as-soon-as-voter-id-becomes-law-in-nc/
  12. Boughton, Melissa. “Judge considering whether to dismiss defamation suit involving voters falsely accused of election fraud.” Progressive Pulse. April 19, 2018. Accessed February 5, 2019. http://pulse.ncpolicywatch.org/2018/04/19/judge-considering-whether-to-dismiss-defamation-suit-involving-voters-falsely-accused-of-election-fraud/
  13. Bonner, Lynn. “Felony charges of illegal voting dismissed for five NC residents.” Raleigh News & Observer. August 13, 2018. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.newsobserver.com/news/politics-government/article216584335.html
  14. Esther, Kim. “Anita Earls Oral History Transcription.” Duke University. March 3, 2014. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://library.duke.edu/digitalcollections/rl/media/videoforsocialchange/EarlsAnita_2014March03_transcript.pdf
  15. Esther, Kim. “Anita Earls Oral History Transcription.” Duke University. March 3, 2014. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://library.duke.edu/digitalcollections/rl/media/videoforsocialchange/EarlsAnita_2014March03_transcript.pdf
  16. “Staff.” Southern Coalition for Social Justice. Accessed February 6, 2019. https://www.southerncoalition.org/about/staff-and-board-3/
  17. Boughton, Melissa. “SCSJ’s Anita Earls to run for NC Supreme Court seat in 2018 election.” Progressive Pulse. November 15, 2017. Accessed February 6, 2019. http://pulse.ncpolicywatch.org/2017/11/15/scsjs-anita-earls-run-nc-supreme-court-seat-2018-election/
  18. “Dr. Kareem Crayton Hired as Interim Director for the Southern Coalition for Social Justice.” Southern Coalition for Social Justice. December 13, 2017. Accessed February 6, 2019. https://www.southerncoalition.org/dr-kareem-crayton-hired-interim-director-southern-coalition-social-justice/
  19. Southern Coalition for Social Justice, IRS form 990, 2017. 2017 form accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.southerncoalition.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/TaxReturnPublic17scsj.pdf
  20. “Statement Regarding the Investiture of Anita Earls to the North Carolina Supreme Court.” Southern Coalition for Social Justice. January 3, 2018. Accessed February 6, 2019. https://www.southerncoalition.org/statement-regarding-investiture-anita-earls-north-carolina-supreme-court/
  21. “Dr. Kareem Crayton Hired as Interim Director for the Southern Coalition for Social Justice.” Southern Coalition for Social Justice. December 13, 2017. Accessed February 6, 2019. https://www.southerncoalition.org/dr-kareem-crayton-hired-interim-director-southern-coalition-social-justice/
  22. “Allison Riggs, Staff Attorney, Voting Rights.” Southern Coalition for Social Justice. Accessed February 6, 2019. http://www.southerncoalition.org/portfolio-item/allison-riggs-staff-attorney-voting-rights/
  23. Esther, Kim. “Anita Earls Oral History Transcription.” Duke University. March 3, 2014. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://library.duke.edu/digitalcollections/rl/media/videoforsocialchange/EarlsAnita_2014March03_transcript.pdf
  24. Southern Coalition for Social Justice, IRS Forms 990, 2008-2016.
  25. Ford Foundation, IRS Forms 990, 2008-2016. Data compiled by FoundationSearch.com subscription service, a project of Metasoft Systems, Inc., from forms filed with the Internal Revenue Service. Queries conducted February 5, 2019.
  26. Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation, IRS Forms 990, 2008-2016; and Zachary Smith Reynolds Trust, IRS Forms 990, 2008-2016. Data compiled by FoundationSearch.com subscription service, a project of Metasoft Systems, Inc., from forms filed with the Internal Revenue Service. Queries conducted February 5, 2019.
  27. Foundation to Promote Open Society, IRS Forms 990, 2010-2012. Data compiled by FoundationSearch.com subscription service, a project of Metasoft Systems, Inc., from forms filed with the Internal Revenue Service. Queries conducted February 5, 2019.
  28. W.K. Kellogg Foundation, IRS Forms 990, 2012-2013. Data compiled by FoundationSearch.com subscription service, a project of Metasoft Systems, Inc., from forms filed with the Internal Revenue Service. Queries conducted February 5, 2019.
  29. Rockefeller Brothers Fund, Inc., IRS Forms 990, 2015-2016. Data compiled by FoundationSearch.com subscription service, a project of Metasoft Systems, Inc., from forms filed with the Internal Revenue Service. Queries conducted February 5, 2019.
  30. Public Welfare Foundation, IRS Form 990, 2016. Data compiled by FoundationSearch.com subscription service, a project of Metasoft Systems, Inc., from forms filed with the Internal Revenue Service. Queries conducted February 5, 2019.
  31. Proteus Fund, IRS Form 990, 2015. Data compiled by FoundationSearch.com subscription service, a project of Metasoft Systems, Inc., from forms filed with the Internal Revenue Service. Queries conducted February 5, 2019.
  32. Park Foundation, IRS Forms 990, 2013-2014. Data compiled by FoundationSearch.com subscription service, a project of Metasoft Systems, Inc., from forms filed with the Internal Revenue Service. Queries conducted February 5, 2019.
  33. Bauman Family Foundation, IRS Forms 990, 2015. Data compiled by FoundationSearch.com subscription service, a project of Metasoft Systems, Inc., from forms filed with the Internal Revenue Service. Queries conducted February 5, 2019.
  34. Fenwick, Alexandra. “NEO Philanthropy’s State Infrastructure Fund Supports Seven Litigation Wins for Voter Rights.” NEO Philanthropy. July 31, 2018. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://neophilanthropy.org/neo-philanthropys-state-infrastructure-fund-supports-seven-litigation-wins-for-voter-rights/
  35. Southern Coalition for Social Justice, IRS Form 990, 2015; and Southern Coalition for Social Justice, IRS form 990, 2017. 2017 form accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.southerncoalition.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/TaxReturnPublic17scsj.pdf
  36. Boughton, Melissa. “NC voters pass 4 constitutional amendments; lame-duck session looming.” Progressive Pulse. November 7, 2018. Accessed February 5, 2019. http://pulse.ncpolicywatch.org/2018/11/07/nc-voters-pass-4-constitutional-amendments-lame-duck-session-looming/
  37. King, Steve. “New voter ID bill proposed in NC, supporters and opponents weigh in.” WXII-12.com. November 27, 2018. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.wxii12.com/article/new-voter-id-bill-proposed-in-nc-supporters-and-opponents-weigh-in/25326927
  38. Birnbaum, Emily. “North Carolina enacts voter ID law, overriding Dem governor’s veto.” The Hill. December 19, 2018. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/422183-north-carolina-enacts-voter-id-law-overriding-dem-governors-veto
  39. Boughton, Melissa. “Lawsuit filed as soon as voter ID becomes law in NC.” Progressive Pulse. December 19, 2018. Accessed February 5, 2019. http://pulse.ncpolicywatch.org/2018/12/19/lawsuit-filed-as-soon-as-voter-id-becomes-law-in-nc/
  40. “U.S. Supreme Court Will Hear North Carolina and Maryland Partisan Gerrymandering Challenges.” Southern Coalition for Social Justice. January 4, 2019. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.southerncoalition.org/u-s-supreme-court-will-hear-north-carolina-maryland-partisan-gerrymandering-challenges/
  41. “SCSJ at the U.S. Supreme Court.” Southern Coalition for Social Justice. April 26, 2018. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.southerncoalition.org/scsj-u-s-supreme-court/
  42. Moomaw, Graham. “After lengthy hearing, judges redrawing Virginia House map have lots of options. But not much time.” Richmond Times-Dispatch. January 10, 2019. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.richmond.com/news/virginia/government-politics/general-assembly/after-lengthy-hearing-judges-redrawing-virginia-house-map-have-lots/article_4db03ffd-2467-5e05-aa19-0732be24b808.html
  43. Campbell, Colin. “508 ineligible voters cast ballots in 2016, according to NC elections agency report.” Raleigh News & Observer. April 22, 2017. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.newsobserver.com/news/politics-government/state-politics/article145971264.html
  44. Bonner, Lynn. “Felony charges of illegal voting dismissed for five NC residents.” Raleigh News & Observer. August 13, 2018. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.newsobserver.com/news/politics-government/article216584335.html
  45. Groves, Isaac. “Alamance felon voting prosecutions make volunteers more cautions, but maybe not officials.” Burlington Times-News. October 20, 2018. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.thetimesnews.com/news/20181020/alamance-felon-voting-prosecutions-make-volunteers-more-cautions-but-maybe-not-officials
  46. Boughton, Melissa. “Judge considering whether to dismiss defamation suit involving voters falsely accused of election fraud.” Progressive Pulse. April 19, 2018. Accessed February 5, 2019. http://pulse.ncpolicywatch.org/2018/04/19/judge-considering-whether-to-dismiss-defamation-suit-involving-voters-falsely-accused-of-election-fraud/
  47. Fain, Travis. “Voting defamation suit seeks to widen net, accuses GOP attorneys of conspiracy.” WRAL.com. October 13, 2017. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.wral.com/voting-defamation-suit-seeks-to-widen-net-accuses-gop-attorneys-of-conspiracy/17014648/
  48. Robillard, Kevin. “McCrory concedes in North Carolina.” Politico. December 5, 2016. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.politico.com/story/2016/12/mccrory-concedes-in-north-carolina-232199
  49. Overton, Rodney. “McCrory’s team seeks Durham County recount 90,000 votes by hand.” CBS17.com. November 12, 2016. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.cbs17.com/news/mccrory-seeks-durham-county-recount-90000-votes-by-hand/1016985979
  50. Campbell, Colin. “NC GOP: ‘No apologies’ for voters mistakenly accused of fraud.” Raleigh News & Observer. November 28, 2016. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.newsobserver.com/news/politics-government/election/article117545708.html
  51. Jarvis, Craig. “Bladen County votes scrutinized.” Raleigh News & Observer. November 15, 2016. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.newsobserver.com/news/politics-government/state-politics/article115013278.html
  52. Robillard, Kevin. “McCrory concedes in North Carolina.” Politico. December 5, 2016. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.politico.com/story/2016/12/mccrory-concedes-in-north-carolina-232199
  53. Boughton, Melissa. “Judge considering whether to dismiss defamation suit involving voters falsely accused of election fraud.” Progressive Pulse. April 19, 2018. Accessed February 5, 2019. http://pulse.ncpolicywatch.org/2018/04/19/judge-considering-whether-to-dismiss-defamation-suit-involving-voters-falsely-accused-of-election-fraud/
  54. Dalesio, Emery P. “Judge: Libel case over double-voting accusations to continue.” Associated Press. May 1, 2018. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.apnews.com/903edf778faf4e3bbf9a48543f1877d3
  55. “Statement from the Southern Coalition for Social Justice Regarding the Dismissal of Charges for the Protesters Charged with Toppling Confederate Monument in Durham.” Southern Coalition for Social Justice. February 20, 2018. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.southerncoalition.org/statement-southern-coalition-social-justice-regarding-dismissal-charges-protesters-charged-toppling-confederate-monument-durham/
  56. “Commemorative Landscapes: Confederate Soldiers Monument, Durham.” University of North Carolina. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://docsouth.unc.edu/commland/monument/118/
  57. “Statement from the Southern Coalition for Social Justice Regarding the Dismissal of Charges for the Protesters Charged with Toppling Confederate Monument in Durham.” Southern Coalition for Social Justice. February 20, 2018. Accessed February 5, 2019. https://www.southerncoalition.org/statement-southern-coalition-social-justice-regarding-dismissal-charges-protesters-charged-toppling-confederate-monument-durham/
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Nonprofit Information

  • Accounting Period: December - November
  • Tax Exemption Received: September 1, 2007

  • Available Filings

    Period Form Type Total revenue Total functional expenses Total assets (EOY) Total liabilities (EOY) Unrelated business income? Total contributions Program service revenue Investment income Comp. of current officers, directors, etc. Form 990
    2020 Dec Form 990 $8,888,698 $3,033,203 $14,572,291 $449,950 N $8,823,411 $0 $41,574 $344,296
    2019 Dec Form 990 $6,645,336 $2,752,391 $8,344,210 $77,364 N $3,749,356 $2,799,860 $80,245 $204,936 PDF
    2018 Dec Form 990 $3,671,281 $2,467,326 $4,420,258 $97,966 N $2,795,408 $829,038 $30,536 $0 PDF
    2017 Dec Form 990 $3,377,251 $2,101,611 $3,204,830 $86,493 N $2,950,928 $407,281 $12,164 $138,649 PDF
    2016 Dec Form 990 $2,440,198 $2,419,420 $1,923,209 $80,512 N $2,425,271 $0 $0 $127,891
    2015 Dec Form 990 $2,918,692 $1,785,917 $1,899,737 $77,818 N $2,915,727 $0 $260 $132,234 PDF
    2014 Dec Form 990 $1,420,540 $1,274,788 $737,035 $47,891 N $1,401,641 $0 $1,130 $121,602 PDF
    2013 Dec Form 990 $346,912 $999,621 $567,449 $24,057 N $343,951 $0 $1,340 $120,216 PDF
    2012 Dec Form 990 $1,482,879 $908,623 $1,216,055 $19,954 N $1,426,552 $50,000 $1,193 $117,562 PDF
    2011 Dec Form 990 $744,345 $924,762 $640,811 $18,966 N $728,457 $6,330 $2,972 $115,654 PDF

    Additional Filings (PDFs)

    Southern Coalition for Social Justice (SCSJ)

    1415 WEST HIGHWAY 54 SUITE 101
    DURHAM, NC 27707-0000