Community health, UH football, college access all benefit from $100M raised

VIDEO NEWS RELEASE

University of Hawaiʻi
Contact:
Margot Schrire, (808) 376-7818
AVP of Communications, UH Foundation
Kelli Abe Trifonovitch, (808) 228-8108
Chief Communications Officer, UH Office of Communications
Posted: Sep 29, 2021

John A. Burns School of Medicine students
John A. Burns School of Medicine students
Football game at Clarence T.C. Ching Athletics Complex.
Football game at Clarence T.C. Ching Athletics Complex.
Football game at Clarence T.C. Ching Athletics Complex.
Football game at Clarence T.C. Ching Athletics Complex.
Windward CC commencement caravan.
Windward CC commencement caravan.
Windward CC commencement caravan.
Windward CC commencement caravan.

Link to video and sound (details below): https://bit.ly/3u8so6R

The University of Hawai‘i Foundation raised $100.2 million from more than 19,000 donors in Fiscal Year 2021, funds that directly benefit students, faculty and research at UH’s 10 campuses.

From training doctors in innovative ways for the long-term health of our community, to retrofitting the Clarence T.C. Ching Athletics Complex in time for the first football game to be played under the lights at UH Mānoa, to helping more low-income and first-generation students enroll and succeed in college, transformational donors to the UH Foundation have impacted lives across the state.

“The generosity of our alumni and donors during such a challenging year is inspiring,” said Tim Dolan, UH vice president of advancement and CEO of the UH Foundation. “Mahalo to all the donors, alumni, faculty, staff and students who gave to support their university and the work being done to strengthen Hawai‘i as it works to emerge from the COVID-19 pandemic.”

Students were the largest beneficiary group of giving, with $32.3 million going directly to student aid, followed by faculty and academic support with $28.4 million.

“The resilience demonstrated by our students, faculty and staff over the past year and a half has been amazing, and this generous support from donors underscores the community’s appreciation of the critical importance of the University of Hawai‘i and their recognition of our effectiveness as one of the nation’s great public higher education systems,” said UH President David Lassner. “Their gifts help our faculty and students address the challenges and opportunities facing Hawaiʻi and the world, as we build a more thriving, healthy and sustainable future for our islands. We are forever grateful to everyone who has supported UH, especially now.”

The $100.2 million raised exceeded the fiscal year goal of $80 million by 25%, while the number of gifts (24,514) grew from the previous fiscal year by 16% and the number of donors increased by 10% to 19,141.

The areas that benefited from giving to the UH Foundation in FY 2021 included:

Healthcare

  • $5 million from the HMSA Foundation to establish the Learning Innovations Endowment to support the John A. Burns School of Medicine’s Learning Community program.

  •  $1 million from the HMSA Foundation to support the statewide expansion of Interprofessional Education (IPE) at UH and to establish the endowed HMSA Distinguished Professorship in IPE to provide the leadership, expertise and research needed to implement and advance the HIPE program. Anchored by the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Nancy Atmospera-Walch School of Nursing (formerly School of Nursing and Dental Hygiene)Translational Health Science Simulation Center (THSSC), the Hawaiʻi Interprofessional Education (HIPE) program prepares UH health sciences students for team-based practice to improve health care quality and value in Hawaiʻi.

  • $1 million from The Queen’s Health Systems to fund an endowed professorship at the Nancy Atmospera-Walch School of Nursing (formerly School of Nursing and Dental Hygiene).

  • $1.56 million from Barry and Virginia Weinman to fund 10 full-tuition scholarships at JABSOM.

  • $1.1 million to the Nancy Atmospera-Walch School of Nursing from retired Col. Stephanie A. Marshall, the school’s inaugural director for community partnerships, and her husband, retired Col. Dr. Charles F. Miller, to fund the Cols. Stephanie Marshall & Charles Miller Endowed Director of Community Partnerships.

Community Development

  • $2.3 million from the Harold K.L. Castle Foundation to help more low-income and first-generation Windward O‘ahu middle and high school students enroll and succeed in college.

  • $1.1 million from King’s Hawaiian and other foundations to the Culinary Institute of the Pacific at Diamond Head to support Phase 2 construction and staffing of the advanced, one-of-a-kind culinary campus, offering hands-on experiential learning, food innovation and entrepreneurial opportunities.

  • $1 million from an anonymous donor to fund the A Hua Maila Endowed Scholarship for full- and part-time students in any area of study at Hawaiʻi Community College and the E Huaka‘i Professional Development Endowment to support professional development for college faculty, staff and student leaders.

Agriculture

  • $2 million from American AgCredit to the College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources to support GoFarm Hawai‘i, one of the largest and most successful beginning farmer development programs in the U.S.

Economy

Athletics

Where the money goes

Donors choose where they want their gifts to go. While student aid received the largest share, many other areas of the university system benefitted, including research, faculty, chairs and professorships and athletics.  

Strength of individual giving

Gifts from alumni, parents, students, faculty and staff, along with other individuals, made up nearly half of the $100.2 million total, followed by foundations and corporations.

“This strength in fundraising underscores the commitment of the community, corporations and foundations to the university and to growing this pillar of Hawai‘i’s economy amid challenging times caused by the pandemic,” said Rich Wacker, chair of the UH Foundation board of trustees. “We are grateful for the donors who recognize and support the future of the University of Hawai‘i and thankful for the alumni, staff, faculty and students who have contributed to the foundation’s fundraising success.”

VIDEO:

BROLL: (2 minutes, 15 seconds)

0:00-0:30 - students training at the John A. Burns School of Medicine

0:30-0:56 - football game at the Clarence T. C. Ching Athletics Complex

0:56-1:26 - Windward CC 2020 Commencement Caravan

1:26-2:15 - Culinary Institute of the Pacific renderings and culinary arts students in the kitchen
 

SOUND:

Tim Dolan, UH Foundation CEO, UH VP of Advancement (6 seconds)

“Our philanthropists have the power and the vision to change society and what we noticed at the Foundation, UH Foundation has been extraordinary seeing that dream come true.”

Dolan (14 seconds)

“What it represents is support from the students, from the faculty, from our corporations, from our foundations, from our alumni, from our friends in areas across a diverse number of subjects.”

David Lassner, UH President (5 seconds)

“We are forever grateful to everyone who has supported UH, especially now.”

 

 

 

For more information, visit: http://www.uhfoundation.org