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Philanthropy This Week

This newsletter featured a roundup of the most important news, opinion, tools, and resources of the week. The last issue ran on May 31, 2025 and was replaced by Need to Know This Week.

March 8, 2025
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From: Marilyn Dickey

Subject: Who Gives the Most to Charity: Our Annual Philanthropy 50

An illustration of some of the biggest donors last year, including from left, Michael Bloomberg, K. Lisa Yang, Richard and Nancy Kinder, and Melinda French Gates.
Illustration: Sean McCabe for The Chronicle. Images: Courtesy of Bloomberg Philanthropies; Caitlin Cunningham; Kinder Foundation; Jason Bell.

Good morning.

Michael Bloomberg took the top spot in our annual Philanthropy 50 ranking of the biggest donors of 2024 — the second year in a row he has led the list — giving $3.7 billion to support arts, education, the environment, public-health groups, and programs to improve city governments.

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An illustration of some of the biggest donors last year, including from left, Michael Bloomberg, K. Lisa Yang, Richard and Nancy Kinder, and Melinda French Gates.
Illustration: Sean McCabe for The Chronicle. Images: Courtesy of Bloomberg Philanthropies; Caitlin Cunningham; Kinder Foundation; Jason Bell.

Good morning.

Michael Bloomberg took the top spot in our annual Philanthropy 50 ranking of the biggest donors of 2024 — the second year in a row he has led the list — giving $3.7 billion to support arts, education, the environment, public-health groups, and programs to improve city governments.

Six other donors gave at least $1 billion to charities last year, including Netflix co-founder Reed Hastings and his wife, Patty Quillin, who contributed nearly $1.6 billion, primarily to education organizations.

Despite much discussion last year about MacKenzie Scott’s no-strings giving and debates over calls to stop funding some universities, donors for the most part held fast to the ways they’ve been practicing philanthropy.

Read the full report from Maria Di Mento and Jim Rendon or read a free condensed version.

You can see the full the list of donors — and search all 25 years of the Philanthropy 50 — in our interactive database. And explore the whole Philanthropy 50 package, including graphics and more details about the donors.

Other highlights from this week:

  • In our continuing coverage of the Trump administration’s impact on the nonprofit world, Sara Herschander looks at the similarities — and striking differences — between the Reagan and Trump administrations. And Stephanie Beasley reports on research that shows almost 70 percent of nonprofit leaders say their organizations have been hurt by Trump’s policies, and many nonprofits would collapse if they lost federal funding.
  • Many readers responded to our article last week about Trump’s DEI investigations and foundations. Our editor-in-chief Andrew Simon wrote a note about this story, and we’ve compiled some letters to the editor that reflect a range of viewpoints.
  • And in an advice piece, nonprofit strategy professional Leah Reisman offers tips to hire a consultant who will help rather than hurt your nonprofit. “While most are dedicated partners to their nonprofit clients,” she writes, “consultants too often operate on a set of assumptions that may prevent them from considering new and better practices for the organizations they advise.” Reisman offers three useful steps to help you find a good fit.

    — Marilyn Dickey, Senior Editor, Copy


    Webinars

    • 032025_actionable insights daf donors_COP_newsletter_Plain.jpg

      Today: March 20 at 2 p.m. ET | Register Now

      Donors funneled nearly $55 billion to nonprofits through donor-advised funds in 2023. To gain a better understanding of the people who hold these accounts, join us for Actionable Insights Into DAF Donors. We’ll share key findings from new research on DAF donors and proven tactics for attracting gifts from them, making it easy to give this way, and recognizing their support — so they’ll give more.

    Online Forums

    • P50 Logo

      March 11, at 2 p.m. ET | Register Now

      February 10, 2025
      Join us for the free online forum, Ultrawealthy Donors: How They Give and What’s Next, as we dig into exclusive data from the Philanthropy 50 — our annual ranking of the 50 most generous U.S. donors — and explore forces shaping big giving, such as the impact of MacKenzie Scott’s unrestricted giving, the advocacy philanthropy of Melinda French Gates, recent donor revolts, and growing dissatisfaction over wealth accumulation.

    More News, Advice, and Opinion

    • 1433741846
      Fundraising

      9 Tips for Thank-Yous That Make Donors Feel Valued

      By M.J. Prest
      While love languages have long been a fixture in pop psychology for improving romantic relationships, new science is emerging that learning to speak donors’ love languages forges lasting connections between nonprofits and their supporters.
    •  Understanding and Tapping Into Donor-Advised Funds 1
      Tool Kit

      Understanding and Tapping Into Donor-Advised Funds

      These accounts have become the preferred giving vehicle for many donors. Use this collection of articles and other resources to learn how to connect with those who hold DAFs.
    • 2028967888
      Opinion

      Grant Makers Don’t Understand Nonprofits’ A.I. Needs. Here’s How to Change That

      By Alethea Hannemann and Chantal Forster
      These four steps will help foundations support effective and ethical A.I. use among grantees — and their own staffs.
    • Flint resident Takisha Moller consoles her 3-year-old daughter Destinee Wilson in the middle of the protest on the steps of the Capitol Building during a rally on the five-year anniversary of the Flint water crisis on Thursday, April 25, 2019 in Lansing, Mich. Moller became pregnant with Desintee in 2014 before giving birth to her in 2015. Throughout her pregnancy, Moller drank unfiltered Flint tap water. "I boiled water to give her baths, and I boiled her bottles, not knowing that I was further poisoning her. And the result of that: She's three years old, she's the size of maybe a one-and-a-half-year-old," Moller said.
      Social Services

      Can GiveDirectly Show the Value of Universal Basic Income?

      By Stephanie Beasley
      GiveDirectly has delivered more than $800 million to over 1.6 million people, primarily in Sub-Saharan Africa. Now it is experimenting with, and learning from, cash payments to recipients in the United States.
    • icon of an envelope in a bright gradient on a black background.
      Letters to the Editor

      Philanthropies Staying ‘Silent’ Has Real Consequences

      Foundations’ inaction under Trump, as detailed in a recent article, will only hurt the marginalized people they serve.

    WHAT WE’RE READING ELSEWHERE

    Trump and Foreign Aid

    The Supreme Court has denied the Trump administration’s emergency request to stop almost $2 billion in foreign aid. The 5-4 ruling came with Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justice Amy Coney Barrett joining the three liberal members. Nonprofits and other recipients of the money filed suit after the administration froze the aid on January 20. The cutoff of funds threatened health-care delivery around the world, blocked food shipments, and risked spreading political instability, the groups argued. The ruling said the district judge “should clarify what obligations the government must fulfill.” (New York Times)

    Faith-based relief groups made their case for foreign aid in a meeting with administration officials this week. Typically allies of the Trump administration, they “artfully explained the benefits of foreign assistance,” one attendee said, along with the religious imperative to help and the cost to their organizations — World Vision reportedly faces layoffs in the thousands — if aid is not restored. In response, administration officials made clear they seek to transfer the provision of foreign aid to philanthropy and the private sector. (Washington Post)

    Among the nearly 10,000 foreign aid programs the administration axed last week were dozens to which the State Department had earlier issued waivers to continue life-saving work. They work to stop the spread of AIDS and Ebola and provide help for pregnant women with HIV, clean drinking water for refugees, and nutrition for starving children. The mass terminations appear to contradict the administration’s assurances in court that they are the result of a deliberative process, and they consign “untold numbers of the world’s poorest children, refugees, and other vulnerable people to death, according to several senior federal officials.” (ProPublica)

    As most foreign aid is shut down, the nonprofit International Rescue Committee is appealing directly to Americans for help, via a full-page ad in this past Sunday’s New York Times. Paid for by a private donor, the ad asks Americans to “meet the moment” with contributions after life-saving programs around the world were axed last week. “Preventable tragedies, like deaths from treatable diseases, will occur daily. This is a humanitarian catastrophe — a matter of life and death for people already in crisis,” the IRC said in a statement. (Reuters)

    More News

    A federal judge has blocked a Trump administration attempt to freeze federal funds for 22 states and the District of Columbia, saying it “fundamentally undermines the distinct constitutional roles of each branch of our government.” The administration sought to end congressionally appropriated funding for programs at odds with President Trump’s agenda, prompting a lawsuit by a coalition of the targeted states’ attorneys general. Disaster relief would have been Included in the freeze, and the judge has given the Federal Emergency Management Agency until March 14 “to detail steps it had taken to make funds available.” (New York Times)

    A public health clinic in New York City has begun requiring patients to provide proof of citizenship to receive care, according to an audio reviewed by Politico and two city lawmakers. In doing so, the Floating Hospital in Queens, which receives more than $4 million annually in federal grants, cited “an unspecified executive order by the Trump administration.” A trade organization said federal law requires public health clinics to treat all patients in their area. Various officials and spokespeople for the clinic did not respond to requests for comment. (Politico)

    The Trump administration is threatening to cut tens of millions of dollars in federal funding to Columbia University over claims that the school has not done enough to stop antisemitic harassment of Jewish and Israeli students on campus. Government grants and contracts make up more than $1.3 billion of Columbia’s $6.6 billion annual operating revenue. A multi-agency federal review “has already identified $51.4 million in contracts between Columbia and the federal government that could be subject to stop-work orders.” (New York Times)

    Thirty Black churches across the country have received $8.5 million in grants from the African American Cultural Heritage Action Fund. The grants, which range from $50,000 to $500,000, will help churches address “urgent preservation challenges such as demolition threats, deferred maintenance, and structural issues,” and plan for their long-term financial health. The action fund is part of the National Trust for Historic Preservation, and its $60 million Preserving Black Churches program is supported by Lilly Endowment Inc. (New York Times)

    The Justice Department is joining a challenge to an Illinois law requiring certain nonprofits to disclose demographic information about their directors and officers. The aggregate information includes race, gender, and sexual orientation, in an effort to nudge organizations to diversify their leadership. Edward Blum, whose American Alliance for Equal Rights won the 2023 Supreme Court case gutting affirmative action in college admissions, filed suit against the law, and the Justice Department is citing the 14th Amendment’s equal protection clause in its intervention. (Reuters)

    The smash musical “Hamilton” has pulled out of next year’s celebration of the country’s 250th anniversary at the Kennedy Center, with its creative team citing President Trump’s takeover of the national cultural center. Trump fired Democratic members of the center’s bipartisan board and installed himself as chairman. “It became untenable for us to participate in an organization that had become so deeply politicized,” lead producer Jeffrey Seller said. Richard Grenell, the center’s new president, accused “Hamilton” creator Lin-Manuel Miranda of being “intolerant of people who don’t agree with him politically.” Miranda and Seller said the show would play at a soon-to-be-announced alternative venue in Washington, D.C. (New York Times)

    NEW GRANT OPPORTUNITIES

    Your Chronicle subscription includes free access to GrantStation’s database of grant opportunities.

    Health Care: The McKesson Foundation’s mission is to remove barriers to quality healthcare across North America, especially for vulnerable and underserved communities. Grants are provided in the following areas: reducing the burden of cancer, including prevention, screening and treatment, and financial and logistical assistance; preparing tomorrow’s healthcare workforce, including oncology professionals, pharmacists and pharmacy technicians, and student engagement; and accelerating crisis response, including preparedness, disaster relief and recovery, and medicine and food. Funding requests above $25,000 are accepted from February 1 to April 30, annually. Funding requests up to $25,000 are accepted year-round.

    Youth Well-Being: The Imagine Learning Foundation (ILF) seeks to foster the well-being of learners and the people who support them at home and in their communities. ILF’s Imagine Signature Grant Program amplifies national or regional nonprofit organizations’ efforts that 1) foster the learning and well-being of youth and their families and educators at home and in the community, or 2) study the impacts of social, physical, mental, and emotional well-being on accelerating student achievement. For 2025, the priority is on organizations addressing or studying critical issues related to chronic absenteeism and student housing insecurity in K-12 learning environments. Grants range from $25,000 to $100,000; application deadline April 9.

    Marilyn Dickey
    Marilyn Dickey is senior editor for copy at the Chronicle of Philanthropy.
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