Foundation, on whose board successor to Columbia provost as Social Science Research Council president, and a Russell Sage Foundation trustee, also sat in 2020. |
Columbia Provost and 2019-2020 Russell Sage Foundation “Olivia Sage Scholar” Ira Katznelson’s successor as Social Science Research Council president, former Columbia Professor of Sociology and “Dean of Social Science” Alondra Nelson, was also “tapped” to sit on the Russell Sage Foundation’s board of trustees (that Columbia Provost Katznelson sat on between 1992 and 2002) in June of 2020—less than 5 months after she was “tapped” to sit on the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation’s board of trustees in late January 2020.
In addition, besides sitting
next to Hall Capital Partners LLC Founder and Co-Chair Kathryn A. Hall, former
Tishman Speyer Senior Managing Director Katherine G. Farley, Canyon Partners
LLC Co-Founder, Co-Chairman and Co-CEO Joshua S. Friedman and Lone Pine Capital
Managing Director and Portfolio Manager Kelly Grant on the Mellon Foundation’s
board of trustees, Columbia Provost Katznelson’s successor as Social Science
Research Council president also sat next to Duke University President Emeritus
Richard H. Brodhead and Rutgers University President Jonathan Holloway on the
Mellon Foundation’s board.
And, coincidentally, like
institutionally racist and classist Columbia University, both “non-profit” Duke
University and “non-profit” Rutgers University have been given “charitable”
grants in recent years by the “philanthropic” Mellon Foundation—whose board
includes a Duke University president emeritus and the current president of
Rutgers University.
Between March 15, 2018 and
March 12, 2021, for example, the university that Mellon Foundation Trustee
Brodhead is president emeritus of, institutionally racist and classist Duke
University, was given 7 grants by the Mellon Foundation, totaling over $5.2
million, including: a “charitable” grant
of $698,000 on March 15, 2018 for “Summer Institute on Tenure and Professional
Advancement;” another “charitable” grant of $3 million ($3,000,000) on March
15, 2018 “to support the Humanities Unbounded Institute;” a “charitable” grant
of $630,000 on March 12, 2021 “to support an intergenerational project
archiving and documenting contemporary activism;” and another “charitable”
grant of $300,000 on March 12, 2021 “to support a New Directions Fellowship for
Tsitsi Jaji” (a Duke University Associate Professor of English), according to
the Mellon Foundation’s website.
And since 2018 the university
that Mellon Foundation Trustee Holloway is president of, institutionally racist
and classist Rutgers University, has been given over $21.2 million by the
“philanthropic” Mellon Foundation, including: a “charitable” grant of $300,000
on March 6, 2019 “to support a New Directions Fellowship for Susanna
Schellenberg,” a Rutgers University professor of philosophy and cognitive
science; and a “charitable grant of $15 million ($15,000,000) on Sept. 18, 2020,
“to support the establishment of an institute for the advanced study of race
and social justice”--which, according to the institutionally racist and
classist Mellon Foundation’s president, former Columbia University Wun Tsun Tam
Mellon Professor in the Humanities Elizabeth Alexander, purportedly “seeks to
resolve global racism and injustice through the power of humanistic inquiry,”
rather than through systematic revolutionary institutional change.
But, as a Sept. 24, 2020
Rutgers University press release indicated, this $15 million “charitable” grant
from the Mellon Foundation “will support and amplify the scholarship of
researchers who are based in the humanities” and “will provide opportunities
for Rutgers faculty” at a university whose president is, coincidentally, a
member of the “philanthropic” Mellon Foundation board of trustees.
The Manhattan-based
“non-profit” Mellon Foundation which, like the Upper West Side-based Columbia
University, still fails to pay a fair share of NYC, state and federal taxes in
2021, also paid total annual compensations to its executives in 2018 that were
a lot more than the total annual compensations most essential workers in NYC were paid in
2018.
According to its Form 990 financial filing for 2018, for example, between Jan. 1, 2018 and Dec. 31, 2018 the “non-profit” Mellon Foundation paid Mellon Foundation Senior Portfolio Manager Monica C. Spencer a total annual compensation of over $993,000 and paid Mellon Foundation Senior Portfolio Manager Karen Grieb Inal a total annual compensation of over $713,000.
In addition, Mellon Foundation Portfolio Manager
Abigail Archibald was paid a total annual compensation of over $581,000 and
Mellon Foundation CFO Thomas J. Sanders was paid a total annual compensation of
over $539,000 in 2018 by the Mellon Foundation. And Mellon Foundation Senior
Program Officer Diane S. Harris was paid a total annual compensation of over
$500,000 (including a $60,000 annual expense account) during this same period,
by the “non-profit” Mellon Foundation.
But although the Mellon
Foundation claims to be a “philanthropic” organization, much of the money it
utilizes to give “charitable” grants to Columbia, Duke and Rutgers and pay
generous salaries to its own executives is obtained from the interest and
dividends it receives each year from owning corporate stocks or corporate bonds
in corporations that exploit essential workers and consumers.
In 2019, for example, over $3.5 million worth of Wal-Mart corporate stock was owned by the Mellon Foundation—on whose board of trustees Columbia Provost and 2019-2020 Russell Sage “Olivia Sage Scholar” Katznelson’s successor as Social Science Research Council president, as well as a Russell Sage Foundation trustee in 2020, also sat in 2020.
(end of part 10. To Be continued). (This article was first posted on the Upper West Side Patch website).
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