Tỷ phú mang 220 triệu USD đến Việt Nam làm từ thiện
Theo Vietnamnet – 7 Dec 2014
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Chuck Feeney là người đồng sáng lập ra chuỗi cửa hàng mua sắm miễn thuế (DFS), chuỗi cửa hàng bán lẻ miễn thuế lớn nhất thế giới.
Năm 1988, ông đã được bình chọn là người còn sống giàu thứ 31 của nước Mỹ, với tổng tài sản là 1,3 tỷ USD. Tuy nhiên không giống như các tỷ phú khác “nổi đình nổi đám”, bởi Feeney có đời sống riêng tư rất bình lặng và đơn giản. Hiện nay, ông sống trong một căn hộ đi thuê bởi toàn bộ tài sản đã hiến tặng cho các tổ chức từ thiện. Các con ông cũng phải tự lăn lộn kiếm sống từ khi đến tuổi trưởng thành. Feeney cho biết, đây chính là cách để ông giáo dục các con biết quý trọng giá trị của đồng tiền.
Tỷ phú sống đời thầm lặng
Từ khi còn nhỏ, Chuck Feeney đã tỏ rõ là người có tố chất kinh doanh. Ông luôn nghĩ ra đủ mọi cách để kiếm tiền như đi gõ cửa từng nhà để bán thiệp Giáng sinh, dọn tuyết trên đường hay nhặt bóng trên sân golf… Năm 1958, sau khi tốt nghiệp đại học, ông cùng một người bạn bắt tay vào hoạt động kinh doanh hàng miễn thuế tại châu Âu và thành lập công ty với tên gọi DFS, dựa vào thực tế lúc đó là các thủy thủ và khách du lịch được phép gửi xe ô tô hay rượu về quê như một món hành lý và được miễn thuế. DFS sau đó đã phát triển nhanh chóng khi giành được quyền khai thác hàng miễn thuế tại sân bay quốc tế Honolulu. Đây chính là “con gà đẻ trứng vàng” cho DFS vì sự bùng nổ du lịch từ Nhật Bản đến Hawaii.
Năm 1964, năm diễn ra Thế vận hội Tokyo, Nhật Bản đã tuyên bố dỡ bỏ các hạn chế du lịch nước ngoài (những hạn chế này được ban hành sau Chiến tranh Thế giới thứ hai để xây dựng lại nền kinh tế), cho phép công dân nghỉ dưỡng ở nước ngoài. Khách du lịch Nhật Bản đã mang các khoản tiết kiệm khổng lồ của mình “rải” khắp thế giới. Hawaii và Hồng Kông là những điểm đến hàng đầu. Feeney cho biết: “Chúng tôi đã bán những chai rượu Johnnie Walker Scotch chỉ với giá 7 USD, trong khi ở Nhật nó có giá là 35 USD. Chúng tôi cũng bán các sản phẩm khác như nước hoa, đồ trang sức hoặc ô tô”. Không những vậy, Feeney đã thuê những cô gái Nhật Bản thông minh và xinh đẹp làm việc trong các cửa hàng bán rượu cô-nhăc, thuốc lá và túi da. Ông cũng trả lương cho các hướng dẫn viên du lịch nếu họ dẫn khách du lịch đến các cửa hàng của DFS trước khi họ có thể chi tiền ở bất cứ nơi nào khác.
Nhận ra tiềm năng chi tiêu của khách du lịch Nhật Bản, Feeney đã thuê các nhà phân tích để dự đoán các thành phố họ sẽ tới nghỉ dưỡng. Và các cửa hàng DFS đã mọc lên ở Anchorage, San Francisco và Guam. Thậm chí để thu hút khách du lịch Nhật Bản tới Saipan – một hòn đảo nhiệt đới nhỏ của Mỹ – DFS đã đầu tư 5 triệu USD để xây dựng một sân bay. Nhắc đến Feeney, Alan Parker (một cổ đông lớn trong DFS) luôn tỏ lòng ngưỡng mộ: “Feeney là người biết lo xa và có tầm nhìn rộng”. Còn Bob Matousek, một người làm việc lâu năm trong DFS chia sẻ: “Chúng tôi đã đạt doanh thu bán hàng 10 triệu USD mỗi năm tại sân bay. Còn doanh thu của các cửa hàng tại trung tâm thành phố ở Honululu là 1 triệu USD/ngày”. Tính tới năm 1964, DFS đã có hơn 200 nhân viên tại 27 quốc gia. Còn theo O’Clery, tiền cổ tức năm 1967 mà Feeney nhận được là 12.000 USD và con số này đã tăng lên gấp 10 trong năm 1968. Trong 10 năm tiếp theo, Feeney đã gửi ngân hàng gần 334 triệu đô la tiền cổ tức mà ông đã đầu tư khách sạn, cửa hàng bán lẻ, các công ty thời trang và các công ty khởi nghiệp về công nghệ.
Ấy vậy mà mãi tới năm 1988, thế giới mới biết đến sự giàu có của Feeney khi Forbes (một tạp chí nổi tiếng của Mỹ) đưa tin về sự thành công của DFS và sự giàu có của ông chủ của nó. Theo đánh giá của Forbes, “chiến lược gia Nhật Bản” đã đóng góp 200% vào giá vốn của DFS, 20% lợi nhuận và tăng doanh thu hàng năm của hãng thêm khoảng 1,6 tỷ USD. Dựa trên ước tính đó, Forbes đã xếp hạng Feeney là người giàu thứ 31 ở Mỹ, với khối tài sản trị giá khoảng 1,3 tỷ USD. Tuy nhiên, số tài sản thật mà ông sở hữu thì vẫn là một ẩn số. Khi công chúng cố gắng tìm hiểu về ông, họ lại càng kinh ngạc về cuộc sống giản dị và tiết kiệm tới mức tối đa của tỷ phú này.
Keo kiệt với bản thân, hào phóng với người dưng
Mặc dù sở hữu khối tài sản bạc tỷ nhưng Feeney luôn từ chối những món đồ xa xỉ. Feeney thường nói, ông quý trọng tiền bạc nhưng rất ghét phung phí nó. Quan niệm sống này, ông đã cố gắng truyền lại cho 5 người con ngay từ khi còn bé. Mặc dù có tiền, ông vẫn làm việc hết mình và không muốn con cái trở thành “những đứa con nhà giàu hư hỏng”. Ông yêu cầu con trai đi làm hầu bàn, con gái làm bồi phòng khách sạn hoặc thu ngân trong các kỳ nghỉ hè và phải tuân thủ các quy tắc chi tiêu nghiêm ngặt. Ông buộc con gái mình ở New York phải tự chi trả các chi phí để hiểu được giá trị của tiền bạc. Khi cô con gái gọi điện thoại quá nhiều với bạn trai ở châu Âu từ căn hộ Manhattan, ông đã tới thị trấn, ngắt kết nối điện thoại. Ông chỉ cho phép các con được gọi điện với bạn bè vào thứ 2 hàng tuần. Ông muốn con cái phải biết “keo kiệt” với chính bản thân mình, không được sống phung phí và trở thành những đứa trẻ nhà giàu biết tự lập. Ông cũng tự hào vì: “Không có đứa nào tỏ ra khó chịu khi tôi quyết định chúng phải đi làm thêm”. Ông nói: “Chúng tôi đã làm một việc đáng làm và đảm bảo rằng, gia đình vẫn còn đủ tiền để chi tiêu trong cuộc sống”. Leslie Feeney Baily, con gái đầu của Feeney, chia sẻ: “Cha đã giúp chúng tôi sống như những người bình thường khác”.
Feeney từng có 6 căn hộ sang trọng ở Côte d’Azur (Pháp), Mayfair và đại lộ Park (New York). Ông đã bán tất cả và giờ đây thuê lại một căn hộ nhỏ chỉ có hai phòng ở San Francisco để sống cùng với Helga, người vợ thứ hai và nguyên là thư ký riêng của ông. Người vợ trước của ông sau khi ly dị được ông chia 7 căn nhà và 60 triệu USD. Các con ông hiện tại cũng sống trong những căn nhà hết sức bình thường. Nhìn cuộc sống hiện tại của Feeney, có lẽ người ta sẽ cho rằng ông là một lão già cổ hủ, tiết kiệm từng xu. Nhưng ít ai biết rằng trong suốt 30 năm qua, ông đã đi khắp thế giới để trao tặng số tài sản 7,5 tỉ USD. Quỹ từ thiện Atlantic Philanthropies do ông sáng lập đến nay đã rót 6,2 tỉ USD vào giáo dục, khoa học, chăm sóc y tế… tại Mỹ, Úc, Việt Nam, Nam Phi và Ireland. 1,3 tỉ USD còn lại sẽ được chi hết vào năm 2016 và Quỹ sẽ đóng cửa vào năm 2020.
Atlantic bắt đầu đầu tư cho Việt Nam chỉ vài năm sau khi chiến tranh kết thúc. Feeney bắt đầu từ miền Trung Việt Nam, vùng chịu ảnh hưởng nhiều nhất từ chiến tranh. Atlantic đã tài trợ để xây dựng trường Đại học Đà Nẵng. Từ năm 1998 đến 2006, Atlantic đã tài trợ 220 triệu đô la cho các chương trình xã hội có ý nghĩa tại Việt Nam. Feeney luôn đề cao nguyên tắc “tối đa hóa hiệu quả từng đồng vốn”, nghĩa là chỉ tài trợ cho các dự án, chương trình đạt được hiệu quả cao nhất của từng đồng vốn bỏ ra. Ông buộc các tổ chức, quỹ từ thiện phải cạnh tranh nhau để được nhận tài trợ. Ông yêu cầu họ trình kế hoạch kinh doanh chi tiết với các cột mốc rõ ràng và công khai. Nếu một dự án đi chệch hướng so với ban đầu, ông sẽ cắt mọi khoản viện trợ. Tiếp tục tâm nguyện làm từ thiện của Feeney, hai người con gái của ông Diane Feeney và Juliette Feeney-Timsit đều là các Chủ tịch và thành viên của FACT – một tổ chức hỗ trợ xây dựng năng lực cho phát triển tiềm năng cho các học sinh tại châu Âu. Ngoài ra, Diane cũng là Chủ tịch của tổ chức từ thiện của gia đình mình với tài sản là 43 triệu đô la.
Theo Vietnamnet
Billionaire Who Is Trying To Go Broke
By: Steven Bertoni – Forbes – 8 Oct 2012
On a cool summer afternoon at Dublin’s Heuston Station, Chuck Feeney, 81, gingerly stepped off a train on his journey back from the University of Limerick, a 12,000-student college he willed into existence with his vision, his influence and nearly $170 million in grants, and hobbled toward the turnstiles on sore knees. No commuter even glanced twice at the short New Jersey native, one hand holding a plastic bag of newspapers, the other grasping an iron fence for support. The man who arguably has done more for Ireland than anyone since Saint Patrick slowly limped out of the station completely unnoticed. And that’s just how Feeney likes it.
Chuck Feeney is the James Bond of philanthropy. Over the last 30 years he’s crisscrossed the globe conducting a clandestine operation to give away a $7.5 billion fortune derived from hawking cognac, perfume and cigarettes in his empire of duty-free shops. His foundation, the Atlantic Philanthropies, has funneled $6.2 billion into education, science, health care, aging and civil rights in the U.S., Australia, Vietnam, Bermuda, South Africa and Ireland. Few living people have given away more, and no one at his wealth level has ever given their fortune away so completely during their lifetime. The remaining $1.3 billion will be spent by 2016, and the foundation will be shuttered in 2020. While the business world’s titans obsess over piling up as many riches as possible, Feeney is working double time to die broke.
Feeney embarked on this mission in 1984, in the middle of a decade marked by wealth creation–and conspicuous consumption–when he slyly transferred his entire 38.75% ownership stake in Duty Free Shoppers to what became the Atlantic Philanthropies. “I concluded that if you hung on to a piece of the action for yourself you’d always be worrying about that piece,” says Feeney, who estimates his current net worth at $2 million (with an “m”). “People used to ask me how I got my jollies, and I guess I’m happy when what I’m doing is helping people and unhappy when what I’m doing isn’t helping people.”
What Feeney does is give big money to big problems–whether bringing peace to Northern Ireland, modernizing Vietnam’s health care system or seeding $350 million to turn New York’s long-neglected Roosevelt Island into a technology hub. He’s not waiting to grant gifts after he’s gone nor to set up a legacy fund that annually tosses pennies at a $10 problem. He hunts for causes where he can have dramatic impact and goes all-in. “Chuck Feeney is a remarkable role model,” Bill Gates tells FORBES, “and the ultimate example of giving while living.”
For the first 15 years of this mission Feeney obsessively hid the type of donations that other tycoons employ publicists to plaster across newspapers. Many charities had no idea where the piles of money were coming from. Those that did were sworn to secrecy. “I had to convince the board of trustees that it was on the level, that there was nothing disreputable and this wasn’t Mafia money,” says Frank Rhodes, the former president of Cornell University who later chaired Atlantic Philanthropies. “That was difficult.” Eventually Feeney was outed ( in part due to FORBES), but his fervent desire for anonymity remained (until this year he had done about five interviews in his life). Now that his quest to give until nearly broke is coming to its conclusion, he’s opening up a bit. What emerges is one of strangest, most impactful lives of all time.
Feeney prefers showing to telling. In Dublin he sends me on a three-hour tour of Trinity College to witness everything from the library gift shop he designed to his genetics complex and department of neuroscience, complete with lab rats with electrodes implanted in their heads. The next day he endures the six-hour round-trip to the University of Limerick to personally walk me through its Irish World Academy of Music & Dance, its new medical school and its new sports center (now home to Ireland’s Munster rugby team), where hundreds of young kids were playing soccer on the all-weather turf. Rather than walk me through his life story, he invites Conor O’Clery , the author of the Feeney biography , The Billionaire Who Wasn’t (PublicAffairs, 2007), to dinner in Dublin’s Peploe’s Bistro. At dinner Feeney sits quietly in a frayed navy blazer, sipping chardonnay that he dilutes with a splash of water, occasionally throwing in a point for emphasis or, more often, a witty, self-deprecating joke.
The story that emerges is this: Feeney grew up in an Irish-American neighborhood in the blue-collar town of Elizabeth, N.J., coming of age in the Great Depression. He served in the Air Force during the Korean War before attending the Cornell School of Hotel Administration on the GI Bill. After graduation in 1956 he traveled to France to take more college classes and later got involved in the business of following the U.S. Navy’s Atlantic fleet, selling tax-free booze to sailors. Competition was intense, but he got ahead by using his military experience to talk his way directly onto ships and gathering intelligence on the fleet’s next destination by chatting up local prostitutes.
He brought fellow Cornell alum Bob Miller into the business, and the pair started selling cars, perfume and jewelry to servicemen and tourists. They later added tax lawyer Tony Pilaro and accountant Alan Parker as owners to help manage the bootstrapped business more professionally. By 1964 their Duty Free Shoppers had 200 employees in 27 countries.
It was a nice little business, but soon the Japanese economic boom would transform the scrappy operation into one of the most profitable retailers in history. In 1964, the same year as the Tokyo Olympics, Japan lifted foreign travel restrictions (enacted after World War II to rebuild the economy), allowing citizens to vacation abroad. Japanese tourists, along with their massive store of pent-up savings, surged across the globe. Hawaii and Hong Kong were top destinations. Feeney, who had picked up some Japanese language and customs while in the Air Force, hired smart, pretty Japanese girls to work the stores and filled his shelves with cognac, cigarettes and leather bags that gift-crazy Japanese snatched up for co-workers and friends. Soon Feeney and company had tour guides on the payroll who herded tourists to DFS stores before they had even checked into the hotel so they couldn’t spend money anywhere else first.
The Japanese were such lucrative customers that Feeney hired analysts to predict which cities they’d flock to next. DFS shops sprung up in Anchorage, San Francisco and Guam. Another target was Saipan, a tiny tropical island just a short flight from Japan that he predicted could become a hot beach spot for Tokyo residents. There was a catch: The island lacked an airport. So in 1976 DFS invested $5 million to have one built.
The aggressive growth strategy placed DFS in the perfect position for the subsequent Japanese economic explosion. Feeney received annual dividend payouts worth $12,000 in 1967, according to O’Clery. His payout in 1977? Twelve million dollars. Over the next decade Feeney banked nearly $334 million in dividends that he plowed into hotels, retail shops, clothing companies and, later, tech startups. He remained obsessively secretive and low key, but the money was now too big to ignore.
In 1988 The Forbes 400 issue included a four-page feature that exposed the success of DFS and the vast wealth of its four owners. The story by Andrew Tanzer and Marc Beauchamp, and the subsequent attention, was so jarring to Feeney that O’Clery devoted an entire chapter of his biography to the episode. The article pulled back the curtain on how DFS operated: its Japan strategy, the 200% markups, the 20% margins and blistering annual sales of roughly $1.6 billion. FORBES estimated that Feeney’s Waikiki shop annually generated $20,000 of revenue per square foot–$38,700 in current dollars, more than seven times Apple’s current average of $5,000. “My reaction was, ?Well, there goes our cover, ‘ ” says Feeney. “ We tried to figure out if it did us any damage but concluded no, the info was in the public domain.” The piece identified Feeney as the 31st-richest person in America, worth an estimated $1.3 billion. His secret was out.
But FORBES had made two mistakes: First, the fortune was worth substantially more. And second, it no longer belonged to Feeney.
Only a close inner circle knew of the latter: that Feeney himself was worth at most a few million dollars and didn’t even own a car. Feeney’s team contemplated a secret meeting with Malcolm Forbes to see how they could set the record straight but in the end decided to let the issue go. Feeney would be listed on The Forbes 400 until 1996.
Although he had shifted his ownership to Atlantic via a complex Bahamas-based asset swap to minimize disclosure and taxes, Feeney continued to aggressively expand DFS, traveling the globe to conquer new markets, expand margins and outmaneuver rivals. He loved making money but had no need for it once it was made. Feeney was happy with simple things. He had grown up in a humble, hardworking house and watched his parents constantly help others. In an oft-told story, each morning his mother, Madaline, a nurse, would jump in the car and conveniently drive by a disabled neighbor as he walked to the bus just to give him a ride. This tradition of charity was not extended to business rivals. “I’m a competitive type of person whether it’s playing a game of basketball or playing business games,” says Feeney. “I don’t dislike money, but there’s only so much money you can use.”
The money was how Feeney kept score, and while it no longer flowed into his pocket, he helped rake in as much as possible as an active DFS board member throughout the 1990s. Since his foundation’s wealth was built on the illiquid stake in DFS, his grants lived and died on the cash dividends the company paid out–a major problem when the Gulf war and subsequent dive in global tourism restricted the once gushing cash flow to a trickle. Even as the economy recovered, a desire for the freedom of a cash pile, plus a gut instinct that DFS’ best days were behind it (Japan was clearly slowing down), motivated Feeney to push his three other partners to start looking for a suitor to buy DFS. There were few companies big enough to absorb and run the global operation. The French luxury powerhouse LVMH, helmed by billionaire Bernard Arnault, was the clear favorite. Feeney got owner Alan Parker on his side early. Pilaro and Miller would prove harder to convince.
For two years the four owners battled with themselves and Arnault over prices and deal terms. Each player brought their own high-powered attorneys into the scrum. “Every time I’d see a new a lawyer I’d say, ‘Holy Christ, how much are we paying this guy?’” Feeney laughs.
Feeney’s philanthropic secret ended in 1997, after he (along with Pilaro and Parker) sold their share of DFS to LVMH, and the world learned Feeney’s $1.6 billion cut belonged not to the man but to his foundation. Through the sale he reluctantly gave up his anonymity but in the process gained a better tool for good: a powerful following. Two of the world’s richest men, Bill Gates and Warren Buffett, credit Feeney as a major inspiration for both the $30 billion-strong Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Giving Pledge, which has enlisted more than 90 of the world’s richest to (eventually) grant half their wealth to charity. “Chuck is fond of saying that none of us has all the answers,” says Gates, “but I know that Melinda and I have learned a great deal from him in the time we’ve spent together.”
Part of the kindred spirit that Feeney and Gates share stems from their entrepreneurial backgrounds and how they apply them to giving back. In many ways Atlantic was the forerunner to the Gates Foundation, practicing high-margin philanthropy: choosing causes that will maximize the impact of each dollar pledged, whether it’s $250,000 for Haiti earthquake relief or $290 million to build a new medical campus for the University of California, San Francisco.
He forces charities to compete for his cash, requesting detailed business plans with clear milestones and full transparency. If a project runs off course, Feeney cuts funding. He chooses programs that promise exponential returns that will allow people to lift themselves up. He pumps billions into university research in places like Ireland and Australia because he believes it creates a skilled workforce and attracts top talent, setting the table for high-tech industry and foreign direct investment. Operation Smile, a charity that corrects cleft palates in children from poor nations, is a classic Feeney cause: a one-time $250 investment to cover the cost of a simple surgery that will markedly improve every day of the patient’s life. He’s given $19.5 million there.
To further maximize return, Feeney leverages every dollar the foundation gives–using the promise of substantial gifts to force governments and other donors to match. In one famous example, in 1997 he proposed pledging roughly $100 million to Ireland’s universities but only if the cash-strapped government matched the amount. It did. (A total of $226 million in Atlantic grants have leveraged $1.3 billion of government money to its university system.) He works the same tactic with other wealthy people and development offices. Feeney never slaps his name on a library or hospital, since he can collect additional money for the project from more egocentric tycoons who gladly pay millions for the privilege.
Casual observers categorize Feeney as frugal, but that’s a simplistic diagnosis. On the spending side Feeney obsesses over value, and on the cost side, he loathes waste. Atlantic’s president and CEO, Chris Oechsli, recalls staying in a Vietnam hostel with him on one business trip but adds that Feeney also once sent him back to the U.S. on the Concorde because he understood the need to get him home in time for the holidays. As for Feeney, he flew millions of miles in coach because first class didn’t get him to his destination any faster. He wears a rubber Casio watch because it keeps time like a Rolex. During our train back from Limerick he would curse and shake his head each time we passed one of many abandoned housing developments (ghost estates) left over from the country’s real estate bust. “I’m always the first guy to ask how much is that or what does it cost?” Feeney says about living the high life. “I never tried it because I knew I wouldn’t like it.” Feeney rarely owned a car because they were difficult to park in cities–although he admits briefly owning a used Jaguar when he lived in Hong Kong. No yacht? “I guess the answer to that is I get seasick easy.”
Although he raised his family in multimillion-dollar mansions (his ex-wife and five children later split $140 million of the DFS fortune), today Feeney lives out of three foundation-owned apartments in Dublin, Brisbane and San Francisco, and crashes in his daughter’s apartment while in New York. Atlantic’s Irish operations are housed in a stately town house in the posh district off St. Stephen’s Green–Feeney and wife Helga (his former secretary) live in a small stone mews apartment out back. Even Feeney’s taxes underscore how he thinks: He has aggressively tried to avoid taxes at every stage in his career–from setting up his early business in Lichtenstein, incorporating his holding company in Bermuda and listing it under the name of his then wife Danielle, a French citizen–despite gaining no personal advantage in his later years. Eventually, less taxes meant that he could give away more.
This waste/value mind-set explains how a frenetic penny-pincher is also completely comfortable deploying massive amounts of cash on projects where he sees the chance of a high return. Take his recent $350 million pledge that helped Cornell, along with Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, win the bid to build a $2 billion technology institute on Roosevelt Island. This Silicon Valley East will attract the best engineers and students to the region. Feeney is betting top tech firms and new startups will follow, eventually producing thousands of jobs and billions of revenue for the region. “The visionary gift will pay dividends not just for Cornell but for New York City,” says Mayor Michael Bloomberg. It’s a textbook Atlantic investment, including leverage in the form of $100 million plus land courtesy of New York City taxpayers. Feeney’s only regret is that the opportunity came late for him and he won’t live to see the project completed.
That’s a lesson he wants to teach the new class of philanthropists: Don’t wait to give your money away when you’re old or, even worse, dead. Instead, make substantial donations while you still have the energy, connections and influence to make waves. “People who have money have an obligation,” says Feeney. “I wouldn’t say I’m entitled to tell them what to do with it but to use it wisely.” That’s why that man who obsessively guarded his privacy for decades has participated in the biography, spent three days with me and on Sept. 6 publicly accepted an honorary doctorate of law granted jointly from every university on the island of Ireland–the first time such an award has been given.
Feeney might soon gain access to the biggest megaphone of all: Hollywood. George Clooney has reportedly considered adapting Feeney’s story for the silver screen. Who should play him in the film? Feeney thinks deeply on our way back from Limerick and chuckles before sharing his answer: “Probably Danny DeVito.”
How do you give away $7.5 billion? Follow timeline below of the Atlantic Philanthropies’ greatest hits.
1982: Makes first grant of $7 million to Cornell. Total gifts will reach $937 million.
1984: Transfers his 38.75% DFS ownership to Atlantic.
1988: Gives $142,000 to support the Cancer Research Institute.? Worldwide cancer grants will hit $370 million.
1990: Atlantic makes its first grant to University of Limerick to construct advanced research, conference and cultural facilities. Lifetime grants: $170 million.
1991: Funds peace-building and reconciliation in Northern Ireland.
1997: Feeney goes public about his charity activities.
1999: Invests in Vietnam in the areas of higher education and health care.?
2001: Funds biomedical research at Australia’s Queensland U. of Technology; Total Aussie medical grants: $320 million.
2002: Makes grant for South Africa AIDS relief: has invested over $117 million in South African health care.
2004: Begins funding efforts to abolish the death penalty in the U .S. –has invested $28 million to date.
2006: Starts efforts to ensure health coverage for the almost 8 million uninsured children in the U .S.
2008: Makes $125 million grant for medical center at the University of California, San Francisco Mission Bay campus. Total UCSF grants: $290.5 million.
2012: With a $350 million investment, supports Cornell’s winning bid to develop NYC Tech Campus on Roosevelt Island.
2016: Will complete $1.3 billion worth of grants.
2020: The Atlantic Philanthropies will close.
By: Steven Bertoni
http://www.gocnhinalan.com/bai-tieng-anh/ty-phu-muon-tang-het-tai-san-1-6-ty-cho-thien-nguyen-truoc-2020.html
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