Full
disclosure: I worked for seven years for Wal-Mart, and was treated well, even
when they decided to cut me loose (they gave me a severance package that was
not legally required). And though someone once described founder Sam Walton as “the world’s
nicest guy until he gets down to putting you out of business”—well, why not?
This is business, guys, not a Sunday school class: do you think Macy’s isn’t going after
Bloomingdale’s?
There were
things I liked about Sam. He squeezed that dollar till the eagle squawked, once
picking up a muffler he found on the side of the road, since he was mufflerless
himself at the time. Did the guys at the shop sigh heavily, throw the damn
thing away, install a new one, and never tell Sam? Think that’s how that story
went….
There were
the reporters who asked why he was still riding around in the famous red truck,
which sits squarely in the Walton museum, or visitors’ center, or whatever it
is. “Get a decent car, for God’s sake, Sam!” His response? Something like where was he gonna put his four hunting dogs
in a Rolls Royce?
Well, I was
thinking about all this yesterday, when I read an article
Susan had sent me about the Walton Family Foundation. True, it’s from a website
called Liberal America,
which tells you right off the bat what song this choir will be singing,
but the question is: is it true? Because the headline reads:
New Report Suggests Walmart Heirs’ Foundation Is A Massive
Tax Dodge
Ouch!
And a further ouch when I read this:
An
analysis of 23 years of foundation tax returns revealed that Sam Walton’s heirs
only gave only 0.04 percent of their combined net worth to their own foundation–not
even a fraction of what other wealthy Americans give to charity.
The
article goes on to say that Bill
Gates and Warren
Buffett give over 36% and 27%, respectively, of their net worths to
charity. And Rob Walton?
You know, chairman of the board, Sam’s eldest son? He hasn’t given anything.
Sam Walton believed in the power of opportunity
to change individual lives and communities, and that anyone through hard work
and determination can achieve the American dream, something he personally
experienced. His wife, Helen, understood the importance of giving back. In
fact, one of her favorite sayings was “It’s not what you gather, but what you
scatter that tells what kind of life you have lived.” Their combined vision has
led the Walton family to contribute more than $5 billion to charitable
organizations and causes and continues today to drive the work of the Walton
Family Foundation.
In 2013, the foundation invested more than $325
million in K-12 education reform, freshwater and marine conservation and quality
of life initiatives in our home region. Family members carried forward a
philanthropic approach of sustained and focused giving, believing that it is
the key to achieving lasting change, and they continue to challenge the
foundation to find new, innovative solutions as well as measure impact from the
individual grant level to the effectiveness of overall strategies.
Here’s
a view from the middle, Forbes Magazine:
The Walton
family is America’s richest, worth some $140 billion between them and longtime
fixtures of the Forbes 400 list thanks to their approximate 50% ownership of
Walmart, the world’s largest retailer.
Their Walton
Family Foundation, established by the late Sam and Helen Walton in 1988, is
considered a heavyweight in the world of nonprofits with just under $2 billion
in assets.
Granted, the Forbes article was based, as was Liberal
America’s, on a report
by the Walmart 1%, which is a project of Making Change at Walmart, which
doesn’t sound rabidly pro-Walmart. But it’s still Forbes, which presumably vets
things….
All
right, how does the Walmart Family Foundation match up with other foundations? According
to Wikipedia, the world’s largest fund is something out of the Netherlands called
the Stichting
INGKA Foundation with a cool thirty-six billion. Next up are Bill and
Melinda's, with 34.6 billion. And the Walton Family Fund?
Not
on the list…
Yes,
that list only covers the top 31 (no idea why they chose that number…)
and number 31, with 3 billion—that’s a billion more than Walton—is the Kresge
Foundation.
Kresge?
Could
it be?
In
1924, with an initial gift of $1.6 million, Sebastian Kresge
established The Kresge Foundation in Detroit. Twelve years earlier, he and
partner John G. McCrory
opened the first 5-and-10-cent store, and parlayed the concept and operations
into a chain of stores that were incorporated as the S.S. Kresge Company. Many
years later the enterprise became known as Kmart.
What
would Sam think?