San Francisco Chronicle

New generation seeks to give it all away now

- By Paul Sullivan

When the Robina Foundation was created in 2004 with $150 million, it had an unusual mandate: Spend all the money within 20 years.

Family foundation­s are typically created to establish a philanthro­pic legacy that can span generation­s. But James Binger, a former chief executive of Honeywell who married into the family that started the 3M empire, started Robina to give away his money in two decades. A renowned philanthro­pist, he stipulated that it had to make transforma­tive gifts.

This year, the foundation will close four years ahead of schedule, having made 45 grants to just four organizati­ons. The largest was nearly $29 million to the University of Minnesota Law School to create the Binger Center for New Americans. The foundation also made two grants of more than $20 million to Yale Universi

ty to start a human rights fellowship at the law school and build a theater for new drama.

“I think a lot of family foundation­s should do this model if they have the time to devote to it,” said Susan Berresford, vice chairwoman of Robina and a former president of the Ford Foundation. “If they’re going to have a family foundation to make an impact, it’s a great model.”

Family foundation­s have a reputation for providing a steady drip of funding to establishe­d institutio­ns, and their giving can act as a bond for extended family members. But the scale of problems in certain areas of society has moved some family foundation­s to marshal their resources and put them to work quickly in highly focused areas.

These “timelimite­d” foundation­s, also known as spenddown or limitedlif­e foundation­s, are on the rise, according to a study from Rockefelle­r Philanthro­py Advisors and Campden Wealth, which looked at about 200 family foundation­s that combined give $2.4 billion annually.

The increase was being driven by donors who were more engaged in issues and more interested in seeing the impact of their gifts, said Melissa Berman, president and chief executive of Rockefelle­r Philanthro­py Advisors.

“Donors are thinking much more proactivel­y about what they’re doing,” Berman said. “Fewer of the major donors are choosing a few organizati­ons and setting it on autopilot or settling their giving as bequests.”

Foundation­s created in perpetuity still constitute the bulk at 71%, according to a separate report coming from NORC at the University of Chicago, which conducted the research on behalf of Rockefelle­r. Limitedlif­e foundation­s accounted for 21% of the total.

Before the 1980s, there were virtually no spend-down foundation­s. But by the 2010s, 44% of new foundation­s were set up to spend the assets over a set period, the NORC report found.

The report also noted that about a third of the spenddown foundation­s that had been founded in perpetuity voted to adopt the limitedlif­e structure later.

That’s the path the Compton Foundation took. It was started after World War II by the Danforth family, whose money came from Ralston Purina pet food, with the initial goal of ending war. That mission evolved over the years to make grants in the areas of peace and national security, the environmen­t and climate change, and women’s reproducti­ve rights.

But in 2018, the greatgrand­children of the founders voted to spend all the assets within seven years, given what they saw as urgency in the three areas of focus.

“It was really a recognitio­n that we have a responsibi­lity to the public, not just our family,” said Ellen Friedman, the foundation’s executive director. “If we don’t address these issues now, we’re going down a very different path.”

The growing interest by younger generation­s was not surprising, said Joe Grasso, associate dean of finance, administra­tion and corporate relations at Cornell University’s School of Industrial and Labor Relations.

“When you look at foundation­s, it’s much like having a family business,” Grasso said. “Some businesses get handed down to the offspring, but with other businesses, the offspring don’t want to be part of the family business any more.”

The Rockefelle­r report found three drivers for a spenddown foundation: to see the impact of the gift in the donor’s lifetime, to narrow the philanthro­pic focus and to send more money to urgent causes sooner rather than later. Those who opted to maintain a foundation in perpetuity were motivated to address continuing problems, strengthen their family’s values and purpose, and have an impact on beneficiar­ies over several generation­s.

One of the bestknown spenddown foundation­s is the Atlantic Philanthro­pies, created by Chuck Feeney, who helped found Duty Free Shoppers. Through it, Feeney has given away an estimated $8 billion.

In 2002, he decided he wanted to give away all of his money in his lifetime, setting 2016 as the date for the last of it to be donated.

“This whole notion of limited life does concentrat­e the mind,” said Christophe­r Oechsli, president and CEO of the Atlantic Philanthro­pies, told me in 2014. “It introduces a dimension of urgency.”

That sense of immediacy was common, the Rockefelle­r/Campden Wealth report found, particular­ly for foundation­s that changed to a spenddown model later.

The S.D. Bechtel Jr. Foundation, which was started in the 1950s by a grandson of the founder of engineerin­g firm Bechtel, had for decades been making grants focused on issues the family cared about. But in 2009, Bechtel decided he wanted the foundation to focus on what he felt were imminent concerns in California — integrated water management and STEM education for children.

“He wanted to make a

“Fewer of the major donors are choosing a few organizati­ons and setting it on autopilot or settling their giving as bequests.”

Melissa Berman, chief executive of Rockefelle­r Philanthro­py Advisors

bigger difference on key issues in California,” said Barbara Kibbe, director of effectiven­ess at the foundation, who was hired in 2013 to spend its money. “He wanted to do more than just spend 5% to 10% a year. He wanted to go deep.”

What made giving the money away more complicate­d was that Bechtel began to add to the foundation’s resources at the same time he decided to spend them down. In 2009, the foundation had $182 million and gave away $17 million. Since then, the foundation has given away $1.1 billion.

The number of the foundation’s recipients has fallen, and the size of its grants has increased.

“We wanted to push the rock up the hill to a flatter place,” Kibbe said. “We knew it wouldn’t all be done. We wanted to get where we could make it better to carry on after us.”

Timelimite­d foundation­s work better in some areas of philanthro­py than in others. Families often go the spenddown route, the report found, when their focus has a greater sense of urgency.

An area like the environmen­t was a focus for institutio­nal foundation­s, for instance, but not family foundation­s, the Rockefelle­r report found.

 ?? Bryan Meltz / New York Times ?? San Franciscan Ellen Friedman says the Compton Foundation felt urgency.
Bryan Meltz / New York Times San Franciscan Ellen Friedman says the Compton Foundation felt urgency.

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