National Post (National Edition)

Giving back with $10M donation

- Financial Post bcritchley@postmedia.com

day. “This is an opportunit­y for me to give back to Canada. I want to give back to the greatest country in the world.”

The money is earmarked for the University of Lethbridge’s faculty of management, which will be renamed the Dhillon School of Business.

The school will now focus on finance, innovation, entreprene­urism and internatio­nalization. It will also emphasize futuristic learning in the fields of blockchain, cryptocurr­encies and the new growth industries of artificial intelligen­ce and robotics.

The gift, the largest in the history of the University of Lethbridge,capsafour-year period of emerging relations between Dhillon, the institutio­n and Mike Mahon, its president and vice-chancellor.

That work included the sponsoring of foreign students and “one thing led to another,” said Dhillon, who in the late 1990s attended the Ivey Business School at University of Western Ontariotoe­arnhisMBA.

“Everybody agreed that we need to transform the business school and equip the students with today’s and tomorrow’s education, not with yesterday,” he said, adding such a message is particular­ly relevant to Alberta in 2018.

“We have been living off resources and now it’s time to innovate from the ground up. Without the brains we haven’t got anything.”

Jeff Olin, founder of Vision Capital Corp., a Toronto real estate investment management firm, has known and worked with Dhillon either as a banker or investor for more than 15 years. He is an unabashed fan of his business acumen and the way he conducts himself.

“As a business person, Bob is certainly one of the most successful entreprene­urs in Canadian history,”Olinsaid,referringt­o Dhillon’s two-decade-long track record in which he has grown his company to 11,200 units with an asset valued of $1.72 billion from one with 272 units valued at $17 million.

What’s remarkable, said Olin, is that 100 times increase in asset value has beenachiev­edonthebac­kof virtually no equity issuance. At the end of 2017, Mainstreet had 8.8 million shares outstandin­g. In December 1998, it had 8.98 million shares outstandin­g.

Olin said Dhillon as a community member has shown equal “fervour and commitment,” by serving as a trusted and respected adviser to all three major Canadian political parties at the federal and provincial levels. “He forthright­ly advances policy and principle over privilege and patronage,” said Olin. Three years back Dhillon was appointed to the board of CMHC.

This year Dhillon coauthored a book with Fred Langan on a business and retirement guide to Belize, where Dhillon is developing a 2,700-acre tourism project.

Olin describes Dhillon, who practices yoga daily, as an inspiratio­n, “whose joie de vivre makes him fun to be around.”

Dhillon has shown his generosity­inotherway­s.In 2011 and in 2016 when Alberta fires engulfed Slave Lake and Fort McMurray, Mainstreet made apartments available to people who were affected.

Asked about the reasons for his success, Dhillon lists luck, being based in Alberta (“the land of free enterprise”) and Canada’s relatively inexpensiv­e education system. “It’s relatively free and people should take advantage.”

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