Billion-dollar donation from Netflix’s Reed Hastings leads 2024’s list of biggest gifts

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The Chronicle’s annual list of the biggest charitable donations from individuals or their foundations totaled nearly $6 billion in 2024, with half of that coming from three contributions of $1 billion or more each. Two of those three gifts went to medical schools to provide financial aid. Altogether, four of the top donations on the list, totaling $2.3 billion, went to support financial aid.

Three contributions were made to donors’ own foundations, and those gifts totaled $2.3 billion as well. Three other donations supported medical research or treatment, and one gift each went to support civic engagement and arts and culture.

The list has 12 gifts, rather than 10, because of ties. Six of the donors are multibillionaires, and their combined net worth is an estimated $365 billion.

Topping the list is a gift from Netflix co-founder Reed Hastings, whose net worth Forbes estimates at more than $5 billion. Hastings and his wife, Patty Quillin, gave 2 million shares of Netflix stock valued at $1.1 billion in January to their Hastings Fund at the Silicon Valley Community Foundation.

The couple started their fund in 2016 and have primarily supported education organizations, a special focus for Hastings, who taught high school math when he was a Peace Corps volunteer in the 1980s and served as president of the California State Board of Education in the early 2000s.

Hastings co-founded the video streaming platform in 1995 as a DVD subscription service. It started streaming films and television series in 2007 and later began creating its own content. He stepped down as co-CEO last year and currently serves as the company’s chairman.

Medical school aid

Next on the list is the $1 billion Michael Bloomberg gave through his Bloomberg Philanthropies to Johns Hopkins University to make medical school free for most students and provide more financial aid to the university’s nursing and public health students.

Bloomberg, whose net worth Forbes pegs at roughly $105 billion, earned a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering from the university in 1964. He went on to found the Bloomberg financial-news empire and served as mayor of New York from 2002 to 2013. He has given his alma mater at least $3.5 billion since graduating 60 years ago.

Ruth Gottesman, a professor emerita of Albert Einstein College of Medicine’s Department of Pediatrics, had the same goal as Bloomberg. She gave her former employer $1 billion in February to support free tuition in perpetuity for Albert Einstein College of Medicine students.

Gottesman had a long career at the medical school. She joined the college’s Children’s Evaluation and Rehabilitation Center in 1968 and started the center’s adult-literacy program in the early 1990s. She was later named founding director of the Fisher Landau Center for the Treatment of Learning Disabilities.

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