Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Wow! MacKenzie Scott Gifts $20M to Fresno Unified’s New Foundation
gvw_nancy_price
By Nancy Price, Multimedia Journalist
Published 2 years ago on
October 5, 2022

Share

 

Fresno Unified’s fledgling Foundation for Fresno Unified Schools got a huge boost with the unexpected — but highly welcome — donation of $20 million by billionaire philanthropist MacKenzie Scott.

Superintendent Bob Nelson announced the unrestricted gift at a news conference Wednesday morning.

The funding means that the district’s new nonprofit, founded decades after similar foundations in neighboring school districts and educational agencies, is now one of the best funded locally.

The State Center Community College District Foundation, founded in 1987, reported $21.8 million in assets in 2018, while the Foundation for Clovis Schools, also founded in 1987, reported $2.1 million in assets that year.

The district had previously announced that Amazon was a lead sponsor of Thursday’s State of Education Gala at Fresno Chaffee Zoo that will mark the foundation’s kickoff.

The Amazon gala sponsorship contribution was made locally and is unconnected to Scott’s gift, district spokeswoman Nikki Henry said.

Scott is the former wife of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and owns 4% of the company. She has vowed to commit much of her wealth in support of worthy projects and nonprofits.

‘Tool of Privilege’

Nelson, who was flanked at the news conference by members of the foundation’s board of directors, foundation president Wendy McCulley, and five of seven Fresno Unified trustees, said the district was slow to establish its own foundation for community fundraising in part because foundations are seen by some as a “tool of privilege” that is at odds with the high poverty levels of many Fresno Unified families, and also because of the negative self-image that many in Fresno have about the city and themselves.

That needs to change now, Nelson said. Fresno students, who are still among the lowest performing in the state and nation in reading and math, are improving at a faster rate but are still mired in negativity and lack of self-worth, he said.

“That mindset, that deep culture that weaves its way into our district and … into the hearts of our kids. And that’s what has to change, right? By the end of my term, whenever that should be, I have to have done everything I can do every single day to change the self-deprecating nature of what Fresno thinks about itself and about its children,” he said. “So not only is this foundation critical to having additional resources to supporting our kids, it’s absolutely critical for our own belief in ourselves.”

Fresno is often seen as the last at many things, but Scott’s donation may be her first to a K-12 district, he said. “So how good for Fresno to have a first? So Frenans, in this we were first.”

The New York Times reported in March that Scott, in an effort to be more transparent about her giving, planned to launch a website with a searchable database of the gifts she has made. There are no legal requirements for her to report them; the nonprofits receiving them have to file IRS tax reports.

Supporting Student Scholarship

Nelson said Scott’s gift comes without strings — it can be spent any way the foundation sees fit, and the entire $20 million has already arrived, in a wire transfer last Friday.

Student scholarships will be one focus, but there may be others, he said.

If the foundation spends just the annual interest earned on the $20 million on student scholarships, it would have $800,000 to support Fresno Unified grads in college — more than four times what the district’s in-house foundation, funded with employee and community contributions, has been able to provide for student scholarships, Nelson said.

It’s unclear why Scott chose the district’s new foundation for the large gift, as she is notoriously tight-lipped about why she chooses specific nonprofits for funding.

Nelson said it could be a number of factors: The district has been working on a dual enrollment program with Benedict College, one of the nation’s HCBUs, or historically black colleges and universities, and Scott has been a strong supporter of HCBUs; Gov. Gavin Newsom’s recent visit to McLane High School to talk about mental health services, which Scott also has supported; or the connection through Blue Meridian Partners, which has funded the Fresno Cradle to Career effort that Fresno Unified partners in.

Scott also tends to focus her funds on communities with high poverty rates and low rates of access to philanthropic capital, which describes Fresno.

Local Philanthropy Funds Scholarships

Trustee Valerie Davis thanked Scott for her generosity and then noted that the district had previously benefited from a gift that has resulted in student scholarships.

“Ten years ago, the Farber family took a tragedy in their family and turned it into investment for our children, and they prayed that someone would step up and follow in their footsteps,” Davis said. “So yesterday being Yom Kippur, their prayers were answered.”

Francine and Murray Farber created a scholarship program, Steve’s Scholars, at Tehipite Middle School from the estate of their late son. Tehipite students who have 95% cumulative attendance, maintain a 3.0 GPA, and graduate from a Fresno Unified high school after completing all A-G college course requirements are eligible for a $1,000 scholarship for their first two years of college.

The School Board last year voted to name the new Education Center in southeast Fresno for the Farbers.

Will a Fresno Unified facility or campus someday bear the name of MacKenzie Scott? Nelson said the trustees haven’t yet embarked on that conversation, since they only learned of the gift a few weeks ago.

“I think what might be even better is, I just need to capture images of all the kids who are directly supported by the gift, the philanthropic initiatives provided,” he said. “And then we’ll just share those stories, right? It’s really not my story. It’s all of our stories.”

DON'T MISS

Dems: We Will Save GOP Speaker Johnson’s Job if Republicans Try to Oust Him

DON'T MISS

Angels Star Mike Trout Needs Knee Surgery. Will He Return This Season?

DON'T MISS

Will Fresno Unified Voters Agree to Raise Their Taxes in November?

DON'T MISS

Politics Killed Deal for Vacant Fresno Building. Now, Who Wants to Move In?

DON'T MISS

Campaign to Build New California City Submits Signatures to Get on November Ballot

DON'T MISS

Scammers Stole More Than $3.4 Billion from Older Americans Last Year, an FBI Report Says

DON'T MISS

Principal Makes Case for Bullard High Fence: It Will Keep Students, Staff Safe

DON'T MISS

Mammograms Should Start at 40 to Address Rising Breast Cancer Rates at Younger Ages, Panel Says

DON'T MISS

4 Law Officers Serving Warrant Are Killed, 4 Wounded in Shootout at North Carolina Home, Police Say

DON'T MISS

Hush Money Trial Enters 3rd Week, Begins With Gag Order Ruling and $9K Fine for Trump

UP NEXT

Principal Makes Case for Bullard High Fence: It Will Keep Students, Staff Safe

UP NEXT

Why Is Fresno Unified Holding a Rare Wednesday Morning Special Meeting?

UP NEXT

This Fresno University Hopes to Cash in on $1.5 Million Matching Challenge

UP NEXT

Protesters Take Over Columbia University Building in Escalation of Israel-Hamas War Demonstrations

UP NEXT

More California High School Students Want Career Training. How the State Is Helping

UP NEXT

Clear Encampment or Face Suspension, Columbia University Tells Israel-Hamas War Protesters

UP NEXT

Ongoing Protests Force Cal Poly Humboldt to Close for the Semester

UP NEXT

California Charter School Battles Intensify as Education Finances Get Squeezed

UP NEXT

Campus Chaos: Students Across the US Rise Up Against Universities’ Ties to Israel-Hamas War

UP NEXT

‘IDEA’ Is the Latest Career-Oriented Campus on Fresno Unified’s Drawing Board

Nancy Price,
Multimedia Journalist
Nancy Price is a multimedia journalist for GV Wire. A longtime reporter and editor who has worked for newspapers in California, Florida, Alaska, Illinois and Kansas, Nancy joined GV Wire in July 2019. She previously worked as an assistant metro editor for 13 years at The Fresno Bee. Nancy earned her bachelor's and master's degrees in journalism at Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. Her hobbies include singing with the Fresno Master Chorale and volunteering with Fresno Filmworks. You can reach Nancy at 559-492-4087 or Send an Email

Politics Killed Deal for Vacant Fresno Building. Now, Who Wants to Move In?

5 hours ago

Campaign to Build New California City Submits Signatures to Get on November Ballot

6 hours ago

Scammers Stole More Than $3.4 Billion from Older Americans Last Year, an FBI Report Says

6 hours ago

Principal Makes Case for Bullard High Fence: It Will Keep Students, Staff Safe

6 hours ago

Mammograms Should Start at 40 to Address Rising Breast Cancer Rates at Younger Ages, Panel Says

6 hours ago

4 Law Officers Serving Warrant Are Killed, 4 Wounded in Shootout at North Carolina Home, Police Say

6 hours ago

Hush Money Trial Enters 3rd Week, Begins With Gag Order Ruling and $9K Fine for Trump

6 hours ago

EPA Bans Consumer Use of a Toxic Chemical Widely Used as a Paint Stripper but Known to Cause Cancer

6 hours ago

Is the ‘Scholasticide’ in Gaza Spreading to the United States?

6 hours ago

How Did Watchdog Respond to Arias Ethics Complaint on DA Smittcamp?

7 hours ago

Dems: We Will Save GOP Speaker Johnson’s Job if Republicans Try to Oust Him

WASHINGTON — House Democrats will vote to save Republican Speaker Mike Johnson’s job should some of his fellow Republican lawmakers seek to ...

3 hours ago

3 hours ago

Dems: We Will Save GOP Speaker Johnson’s Job if Republicans Try to Oust Him

Photo of Mike Trout
4 hours ago

Angels Star Mike Trout Needs Knee Surgery. Will He Return This Season?

4 hours ago

Will Fresno Unified Voters Agree to Raise Their Taxes in November?

5 hours ago

Politics Killed Deal for Vacant Fresno Building. Now, Who Wants to Move In?

6 hours ago

Campaign to Build New California City Submits Signatures to Get on November Ballot

6 hours ago

Scammers Stole More Than $3.4 Billion from Older Americans Last Year, an FBI Report Says

6 hours ago

Principal Makes Case for Bullard High Fence: It Will Keep Students, Staff Safe

6 hours ago

Mammograms Should Start at 40 to Address Rising Breast Cancer Rates at Younger Ages, Panel Says

MENU

CONNECT WITH US

Search

Send this to a friend