Quantcast

Chicago City Wire

Wednesday, September 24, 2025

State-funded Nonprofit Spotlight: Jewish United Fund of Metropolitan Chicago

Webp 2frwzfqcuznpu6hib4e6iuwo6lmi

Boaz Blumovitz, Chief Financial Officer at JUF | Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago

Boaz Blumovitz, Chief Financial Officer at JUF | Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago

Jewish United Fund of Metropolitan Chicago, a tax-exempt nonprofit that receives significant public funding to perform services also offered by the state, was approved to receive two grants totaling $300,000 in FY2024, according to passed legislation data extracted from the Illinois General Assembly’s FY2024 budget (Public Act 103-0006, Public Act 102-6 0698).

The listed appropriations included grants of $200,000 and $100,000 if two, each designated for programs or services funded by the State of Illinois.

These appropriations represent state-level funding authorized by lawmakers, reflecting what was approved in the budget, not necessarily disbursed. The funds cover only State of Illinois support and exclude federal, local, or other public sources.

Founded in 1900, Jewish United Fund of Metropolitan Chicago states that its mission is: “To provide essential health and human services and vital points of community and connection.”

You can learn more about the organization at its website.

In its most recent IRS Form 990 filing filing for tax year 2024, the organization reported $117,139,000 in total revenue. Of that, $453,557 came from government grants including federal, state, or local sources, making up 0.4% of total revenue.

The nonprofit listed $108,812,000 in contributions overall. It also reported $4,787,910 in non-cash contributions, such as donated goods or services, and $81,182,700 categorized under other contributions, which may include restricted donations, pledges, or bequests.

In terms of staffing, the organization spent $2,681,130 on salaries and reportable employee compensation in 2024, along with $1,289,300 in additional non-salary compensation such as retirement benefits, housing allowances, or travel stipends.

Combined, these totaled $3,970,430 in staff-related costs, which equates to 3.4% of total reported revenue.

At the beginning of 2024, Jewish United Fund of Metropolitan Chicago had $219,478,000 in assets. By the end of 2024, that figure had changed to $238,102,000, indicating an 8.5% growth in overall holdings.

However, a Chicago City Wire analysis found that IRS filings frequently contain discrepancies when compared with publicly disclosed government grant reports and budgets.

Jewish United Fund of Metropolitan Chicago is one of hundreds of nonprofits across Illinois that receive substantial support from state taxpayers while also fundraising privately.

In 2025, Illinois lawmakers introduced House Bill 1266, also known as the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) Act. The proposal would create a new oversight body within the Office of the Auditor General tasked with identifying cost-saving measures, reviewing agency performance, and advising on audit priorities. If passed, DOGE could bring additional scrutiny and performance evaluation to taxpayer-funded organizations.

According to ProPublica, Illinois has more than 78,000 active tax-exempt organizations, including nearly 60,000 classified as charitable nonprofits. In their most recent IRS filings, these groups reported a combined revenue exceeding $156 billion.

State of Illinois Approved Grants to Jewish United Fund of Metropolitan Chicago
Fiscal YearTotal Grants/ContractsTotal Taxpayer $$
20242$300,000
Jewish United Fund of Metropolitan Chicago 990 Filing – Key Officers
TermNameTitle
2024-2024James PinkstonVp Of Accounting
Jewish United Fund of Metropolitan Chicago Employee Roster (Most Recent Year Available)
YearNameTitleCompensation
2008Ariel J BerkowiczProgramming Assistant-

MORE NEWS