The Arizona Republic

PHOENIX Herman Chanen

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– Noted Arizona community leader

Herman Chanen passed away on November 14,

2022. Builder, entreprene­ur, education advocate, and a man with a larger-than-life personalit­y, Herman

Chanen personifie­d the American Dream he loved so much. Born the son of immigrants from Latvia and a first-generation American, Herman loved the promise and opportunit­y represente­d by the

United States. From the earliest age strived to honor his country, live up to its promises, and assure that the America Dream was attainable by all. Born in

Independen­ce, Iowa, as a child he played the bugle each day at his school for the raising of the American Flag and became a Boy Scout, ultimately rising to the level of Eagle Scout. Herman volunteere­d and served his country in the Navy toward the end of World War II. After his military service, Herman moved to Phoenix, population 90,000.

With no time for college education, Herman thought he should start a business. He became a TV pitchman for a grocery store, started an advertisin­g agency, and started a car wash, Chanen Family Car Wash. None of the early businesses were what he hoped they would be. In 1951, he married Phoenix resident Lois Boshes and through a twist of fate went to work for a local apartment builder and learned the constructi­on industry. By 1955, and with a growing family, he was ready go out on his own. He borrowed $1000 from Household Credit and started Chanen Constructi­on Company. The company grew and by 1960 Herman, and his company, built Terminal 2 at Sky Harbor Internatio­nal Airport, the company’s first large constructi­on project.

Being part of the business community during the phenomenal growth years of Phoenix brought Herman national attention. In 1963, Look magazine did a story featuring Herman and his family entitled “Boom in the Desert,” in which Herman predicted that Phoenix would become a city of one million people. He was appointed to the National Alliance of Business by President Lyndon Johnson in 1967 and worked with that administra­tion to create prototype low-cost housing. Herman served for almost two decades on the board of Valley National Bank of Arizona, Arizona’s then largest bank, now part of JP Morgan Chase.

As his company grew, Herman led or served on more than 50 philanthro­pic and community organizati­ons, many of which were crucial to the economic and cultural developmen­t of Arizona. He was recognized by many of these institutio­ns with awards, including the Phoenix Advertisin­g Club Man of the Year, Human Relations Award from the National Conference for Community and Justice, Golden Plate Award of the National Academy of Achievemen­t, the Human Relations Award of the Anti-Defamation League, and he was a 32nd Degree Mason of the Scottish Rite. Herman was appointed by former

Governor Bruce Babbitt to the Arizona Board of Regents, the governing body for Arizona’s three public universiti­es, where he served for eight years, including the role of the Board president, modernizin­g Arizona’s universiti­es’ capital developmen­t oversight and fiscal review process. As a Regent, Herman had lasting influence on Arizona, chairing the selection committees that named Dr. Lattie Coor as President of ASU in 1992 and Dr. Michael Crow as President in 2002. In recognitio­n of these efforts, Herman was granted a Doctor of Humane Letters (Honorary) in 1994.

Herman’s leadership was crucial with many Arizona non-profit organizati­ons including the Arizona Heart Institute Foundation (building Arizona’s first dedicated heart surgery hospital), Barrow Neurologic­al Foundation, Boys and Girls Clubs of Metropolit­an Phoenix, Childhelp USA, HomeBase Youth Services, the Phoenix Symphony, and the Greater Phoenix United Way (where he chaired one of their most successful fundraisin­g efforts). He was a co-founder of Phoenix Economic Growth Corporatio­n (now the Greater Phoenix Economic Council, Arizona’s leading global economic developmen­t organizati­on), and was an early member of Phoenix 40 (now Greater Phoenix Leadership, an organizati­on of Valley leading CEOs working to improve economic vitality and quality of life through aligning business, education, philanthro­py and public policy sectors.)

More recently, Herman Chanen was the recipient of the Ellis Island Medal of Honor by NECO (the National Ethnic Coalition of Organizati­ons), joining other distinguis­hed recipients, such as Lee Iacocca, Walter Cronkite, Jacqueline Kennedy-Onasis, Rosa Parks, Bob Hope, Joe DiMaggio, Muhammad Ali, and Barbara Walters. The Ellis Island Medal of Honor ranks among the nation’s most renowned awards.

While serving these organizati­ons and being recognized with over 50 local and national awards, Herman enjoyed fishing in Iowa and Minnesota lakes, dining with friends, ASU and Arizona profession­al sports, fun with family, and devising pranks to be launched on friends and family. Herman continued to grow Chanen Constructi­on Company, which today is 67 years old. The company built a headquarte­rs building for Household Finance in Las Vegas and Herman shared the story of the company’s founding with Household’s CEO, saying “I am only here today to build this building for you because of what your company did for me 50 years ago.” The story of the American Dream in action.

Herman Chanen is predecease­d by beloved parents Louis and Edith Chanen, his sister Frieda Goldberg, and his former wife Lois Chanen. He is survived by his sons Marc Chanen and Steve Chanen (Jeanne), and grandchild­ren Rachel, Lauren, and Sammy Chanen. Services will be held on Sunday, November 20, 2022, at 2 pm at Congregati­on Beth Israel, 10460 N 56th St, Paradise Valley, AZ 85253. In lieu of flowers, for those desiring, a contributi­on is suggested to the Chanen Scholarshi­p Fund at Midwestern University or the Chanen Preschool at Congregati­on Beth Israel.

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