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Competitor Summary. See how Bauer Family Resources compares to its main competitors:

  • The oldest company is Leake and Watts Services Inc., founded in 1831.
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Bauer Family Resources vs competitors

CompanyFounding dateZippia scoreHeadquarters# of LocationsRevenueEmployees
1929
3.5
Lafayette, IN1$10.0M50
2009
3.2
Omaha, NE1$17.0M282
1890
3.5
San Francisco, CA1$5.0M50
1850
3.0
Milwaukee, WI1$50.0M297
1851
4.0
Dobbs Ferry, NY4$49.9M644
Boys Town
2007
4.1
--$8.4M-
Bethany Children's Home
1863
3.3
Womelsdorf, PA1$280,0007
2001
3.7
Victorville, CA1$3.0M35
Central Texas Opp
1965
3.3
Coleman, TX1$10.0M6
1837
4.0
Rochester, NY1$29.0M2,298
1911
3.3
Columbus, OH1$8.1M200
Pressley Ridge
1832
3.4
Pittsburgh, PA21$1.3M12
1968
3.7
Milwaukee, WI1$3.0M48
1978
4.0
San Marcos, CA2$9.7M50
1882
3.0
Council Bluffs, IA1$8.5M75
1887
3.8
Albany, NY1$21.0M350
1965
3.6
Little Falls, MN1$10.0M50
1890
4.1
Buffalo, NY1$50.0M246
The Nurturing Center
1978
3.6
Kalispell, MT1$5.0M19
1944
3.1
Baltimore, MD1$770,00050
1831
4.0
Yonkers, NY1$110.0M7,500

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Bauer Family Resources salaries vs competitors

Compare Bauer Family Resources salaries vs competitors

CompanyAverage salaryHourly salarySalary score
Bauer Family Resources
$50,603$24.33-

Compare Bauer Family Resources job title salaries vs competitors

CompanyHighest salaryHourly salary
Bauer Family Resources
$53,195$25.57
Telegraph Hill Neighborhood Association
$70,287$33.79
St. Francis Children's Center
$64,862$31.18
Boys Town
$61,655$29.64
The Children's Village
$61,179$29.41
Hillside Family of Agencies
$60,015$28.85
Tri County Community Action
$58,844$28.29
The Nurturing Center
$58,452$28.10
Bethany Children's Home
$58,241$28.00
St. Anne Institute
$57,711$27.75
UMCH Family Services
$57,679$27.73
Children's Square USA
$56,274$27.06
Pressley Ridge
$55,738$26.80
Sainta
$55,118$26.50
Gateway Longview
$54,762$26.33
Leake and Watts Services Inc.
$54,289$26.10
Central Texas Opp
$54,108$26.01
PromiseShip
$53,474$25.71
Board Of Child Care
$52,189$25.09
Lakeside Academy
$50,987$24.51

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Bauer Family Resources demographics vs competitors

Compare gender at Bauer Family Resources vs competitors

Job titleMaleFemale
St. Francis Children's Center17%83%
Bethany Children's Home31%69%
Pressley Ridge37%63%
Hillside Family of Agencies39%61%
Gateway Longview42%58%
Bauer Family Resources--
Male
Female
100%
75%
50%
25%
0%

Bauer Family Resources

Pressley Ridge

Bethany Children's Home

0%
25%
50%
75%
100%

Compare race at Bauer Family Resources vs competitors

CompanyWhiteHispanic or LatinoBlack or African AmericanAsianUnknownDiversity score
62%15%13%6%3%
9.6
63%14%14%6%3%
8.0
Pressley Ridge
73%9%10%6%2%
7.8
Bethany Children's Home
64%17%9%6%3%
7.8
75%8%9%6%2%
8.2

Bauer Family Resources and similar companies CEOs

CEOBio
Jeremy C. Kohomban
The Children's Village

Dr. Jeremy Christopher Kohomban is the President and CEO of The Children’s Village and the President of Harlem Dowling. The Children’s Village, founded in 1851, and Harlem Dowling, founded in 1831, provide a broad continuum of residential and community-embedded programs, serving 15,000 children and families each year. Dr. Kohomban is an author, sometimes an activist, and always a pragmatic leader. He has played a lead role in the family support and residential treatment reforms that are transforming children’s care. Dr. Kohomban is driven by the belief that every child, regardless of age, deserves a family, and he is outspoken in his recognition of the social justice antecedents that drive child welfare and juvenile justice. Under his leadership, The Children’s Village, the nation’s oldest and once the largest children’s residential treatment center, has been transformed into a national model for community-embedded family support. The Children’s Village is the Gold Prize winner of the New York Community Trust-New York Magazine’s Nonprofit Excellence Awards, the US Congressional Coalition Angels in Adoption award, the Child Welfare League of America Exemplary Innovative Leadership Award and the Alliance for Strong Families and Communities, Samuel Gerson Nordlinger Leadership Award. Dr. Kohomban’s contributions are noted in the Congressional Record and successes recognized by many, including The New York Times, The Washington Post, Fox Business, and NPR. City Limits magazine identified him as a leader with a “clear vision for the future”; David Tobis, in his book, From Pariahs to Partners, How Parents and their Allies Changed New York City’s Child Welfare System, describes him as “one of the most parent-focused, reform-minded, and effective administrators in the field.” Dr. Kohomban testified before the US Senate Finance Committee on the need for finance reform that supports children, families and communities and, in March of 2018, with the passage of the Family First Prevention Services Act (FFPSA), The Chronicle of Social Change noted that Dr. Kohomban was one of the most important off-the-Hill boosters of the FFPSA, described as the “biggest federal overhaul of foster care in decades.” He is chair of the Human Services Council of New York, the national co-chair of the Children Need Amazing Parents (CHAMPS) campaign, and a Trustee of Save the Children. He is a graduate of Emporia State University, Kansas, and holds a Masters from Long Island University, New York, a PhD from the School for Business and Leadership at Regent University, Virginia, and a LittD (Honorary Doctor of Letters) from Mercy College, New York.

Richard Hucke
St. Anne Institute

Carolyne Raglow-Defranco
Gateway Longview

Tamara Myers
Casa de Amparo

Laurie Anne Spagnola
Board Of Child Care

Joseph Birli
Bethany Children's Home

Ann Grove
Sainta

Hanna Adams
Central Texas Opp

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