The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Couple's $120M sets higher bar for HBCU donations

Morehouse, Spelman, United Negro College Fund to get $40M each.

- By Ty Tagami ttagami@ajc.com

The ongoing protests over police brutality and racial injustice have inspired the biggest donations in history to two private Atlanta historical­ly black colleges and to a national organizati­on that helps black students attend college.

The $120 million contributi­on from Netflix CEO Reed Hastings and his wife, philanthro­pist Patty Quillin, is being divided equally

among Spelman and Morehouse

colleges and the United Negro College Fund. It is the largest individual gift ever given toward scholarshi­ps for historical­ly black colleges and universiti­es.

The couple asked that the funding be used to give at least 400 incoming students over the next decade — 20 a year at each school — full-ride scholarshi­ps.

“They simply hope this inspires other high net worth individual­s to turn to HBCUs,” Spelman Pres

ident Mary Schmidt Campbell said.

A former dean at New York University, she said she found a “stark” difference in the ability to attract attention from wealthy donors there versus at a predominan­tly black college, a view confirmed by Morehouse President David A. Thomas.

“The vast majority of capital in this country is in the white community, and it flows to predominan­tly white institutio­ns,” he said.

Hastings said in an interview with “CBS This Morning” Wednesday that he and his wife originally planned to donate $20 million to each of the colleges but decided to double it as protests raged across the country.

“As wonderful as this gift is, it’s a drop in the bucket compared to the need,” he said.

The gifts grew out of a much smaller commitment a decade ago: a single annual contributi­on of $100,000 to the United Negro College Fund run by Michael L. Lomax.

At that point, Hastings and Lomax had been serving together for several years on the board of KIPP Public Charter Schools. The schools strive to prepare students from educationa­lly underserve­d communitie­s for college, but many of the students found they could not afford a historical­ly black college or university.

The couple decided they wanted to do more, and Lomax, who lives in Atlanta, arranged a tour of the Atlanta campuses last year. After visiting Spelman and Morehouse, Hastings and Quillin decided to give $1 million a year to each of them and to Lomax’s organizati­on.

Then George Floyd died and everything changed. The second $1 million installmen­t had already been paid when, on June 7, the couple sent Lomax an email saying they had decided to give $20 million to each college and to the UNCF. Two days later, Lomax awoke at 3 a.m. to another email, from Quillin: The couple wanted to double the amount.

Lomax said the money is already stirring interest from other donors. “I’m so excited by what Patti and Reed have done because they’ve set the bar so high,” he said, adding that they have been deeply troubled by the news about police brutality. The couple declined to have the scholarshi­ps in their names, preferring that they be used “to symbolize great black achievemen­t through the HBCUs.”

Though the size of the contributi­on is large for a black college, it is small relative to the support some other colleges see.

Last year, Emory University, Georgia’s largest private university, received $65 million for a third school of public health building from the O. Wayne Rollins Foundation. The year before that, the school got its largest gift ever from another local source when Atlanta’s Robert W. Woodruff Foundation gave $400 million for medical research.

That one contributi­on was more than double Morehouse’s current endowment of around $160 million.

Thomas said black colleges are relatively underfunde­d despite their academic contributi­ons.

“We’ve done as much as any small liberal arts college in the country, and most of those colleges have 10 times the endowment that Morehouse has,” he said.

Graduates of nearby Clark Atlanta University wondered on social media Wednesday why their alma mater was not included in this latest gift, especially given that filmmaker and Morehouse graduate Spike Lee studied his craft at Clark Atlanta, as did “Black-ish” creator Kenya Barris, and both have content on Netflix.

“Giving in general just seems to go to two or three institutio­ns,” Jamal Coleman, who graduated from Clark Atlanta in 1995, said referring to Spelman, Morehouse and Howard University. The entertainm­ent industry executive said his wife, a fellow Clark Atlanta graduate, knows Barris from college, and they remain friends. Coleman said he appreciate­s that Quillin and Hastings acknowledg­ed the importance of black colleges and universiti­es, “but it’s also important to dig a little bit deeper than what’s known on the surface.”

Clark Atlanta was actually in the running for money but suffered from unfortunat­e timing. It was between presidents when Quillin and Hastings visited Atlanta, and the couple wanted to meet the school leaders before committing their money. They had planned a return to visit new President George T. French Jr. this spring, but COVID-19 prevented it.

Lomax, a Morehouse graduate and former chairman of the Fulton County Commission, said he’s committed to finding “transforma­tional” donations for both Clark Atlanta and the nearby Interdenom­inational Theologica­l Center. He said he wants to do this for all of the roughly three dozen colleges and universiti­es that his organizati­on supports.

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... a drop in the bucket compared to the need,” said Netflix CEO Reed Hastings.
“This gift is ... a drop in the bucket compared to the need,” said Netflix CEO Reed Hastings.

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