The Orange County Bankruptcy Forum
Donate to
The Orange County Bankruptcy Forum

Events of
The Orange County Bankruptcy Forum

Shop to support
The Orange County Bankruptcy Forum
Tote bag
Hoodie
Mug
The Orange County Bankruptcy Forum
‘s
Programs & Services

Professional Development Meetings
Bi-monthly meetings for members to discuss current matters relevant to the Southern California bankruptcy professional community, featuring speakers addressing various issues.

About
The Orange County Bankruptcy Forum


Founded in
1990
EIN
33-0356127
IRS 501(C) Type
501(c)()
Category/Type
Advocacy & Rights
Address
6789 QUAIL HILL PARKWAY 204 IRVINE, CA 92603-4233 United States
Website
https://www.ocbf.org/
Phone
(949)-681-8676
Email address
About
The Orange County Bankruptcy Forum is a non-profit in Orange County, CA. For over 30 years, OCBF has provided services and education to its members and the legal community in Southern California, enhancing the community of practitioners and professionals in insolvency. They provide information, public service, and education in the area of insolvency.
Mission
The Orange County Bankruptcy Forum promotes and enhances the bankruptcy system in California by uniting professionals from various disciplines. They provide educational programs and facilitate the exchange of information to improve bankruptcy practice and procedure.

Looking for other organizations in
California, United States
?
{Similar 1}
Helps young people develop critical thinking, debate skills, and civic engagement through workshops and educational programs.}
City
State

What it means when a nonprofit is
“Verified by Zeffy”
- 100% of your donation goes directly to the nonprofit’s mission, not to the fundraising platform
- You’re giving through a platform that believes nonprofits shouldn’t have to pay to fundraise
- Verified nonprofits have access to top-tier fundraising tools at no cost because we believe every dollar should power impact
Every $50,000 raised on other platforms = $2,100 lost to fees.
With Zeffy, you keep 100%. Always.
What $2,100 could fund instead:
