Harman Patil (Editor)

W. K. Kellogg Foundation

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Focus
  
A number of topics

Method
  
Grants and programs

Location
  
Battle Creek, Michigan

Founder
  
Will Keith Kellogg

Area served
  
Worldwide

Website
  
www.wkkf.org

Endowment
  
7.3 billion USD

Founded
  
June 1930

W. K. Kellogg Foundation httpslh4googleusercontentcomfJekwdYUgWUAAA

Formerly called
  
W.K. Kellogg Child Welfare Foundation

CEO
  
La June Montgomery Tabron (1 Jan 2014–)

Headquarters
  
Battle Creek, Michigan, United States

Similar
  
Ford Foundation, The Kresge Foundation, David and Lucile Packard, John D and Catherine, Tides

Profiles

Story of change the w k kellogg foundation


The W.K. Kellogg Foundation was founded in June 1930 as the W.K. Kellogg Child Welfare Foundation by breakfast cereal pioneer Will Keith Kellogg. In 1934, Kellogg donated more than $66 million in Kellogg Company stock and other investments to the W.K. Kellogg Trust ($7.0 billion in 2015 dollars). As with other endowments, the yearly income from this trust funds the foundation.

Contents


In the early 21st century, the foundation is the seventh largest philanthropic foundation in the U.S. In 2005, the foundation reported that the total assets of the foundation and its trust were US$7.3 billion; about US$5.5 billion of this was in Kellogg Company stock. The foundation funded US$243 million in grants and programs in its 2005 fiscal year. 82% of this was spent in the United States; 9% in southern Africa; and 9% in Latin America and the Caribbean.

In 1996, it supplied a multi-year grant worth $750,000 ($1.39 million in 2015 dollars) to start mass salt fluoridation programs which were then carried out by the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), covering 350 million people in Bolivia, Dominican Republic, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, and Venezuela. The project was part of a multi-year plan launched by PAHO in 1994 to “fluoridate the entire Region of the Americas”. More recently, they have provided funding for HealthCorps to prevent childhood obesity by encouraging students to take personal responsibility for their health and wellness.

Grants

The foundation provides a number of grants to organizations across the United States and other countries on a number of topics.

In 2016, the Kellogg Foundation was funding more than 40 projects in Indian country, with a total value of more than $30 million in open grants. According to the non-profit’s website, the foundation has funded 380 Native American projects since 2008. Many grants are for health, education and language programs for children and youths. In 2009 it granted the third-highest amount of money to Native American projects, after the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Ford Foundation.

Early childhood

One grantee is the Birth to Five Policy Alliance, whose mission is to increase public and private support so young children, particularly those facing the most challenges, get the high-quality services they need to be successful.

Education

The foundation has made grants to prominent educational institutions, including:

  • Cal Poly Pomona in Pomona, California
  • Michigan State University in East Lansing, Michigan
  • Kellogg College, Oxford, a constituent college of the University of Oxford, United Kingdom
  • Programs

    The foundation supports multiple programs for optimal child development.

    It supports oral hygiene. In 2010, the W.K. Kellogg Foundation started a dental therapy program in five states to educate children and their families about the importance of healthy teeth. Mobile dental vans travel to rural areas to give families access to dental care. Additionally, the foundation gives grants to help minorities attend school for dentistry.

    Perception

    The philanthropy expert Waldemar A. Nielsen said that the Kellogg Foundation "is substantially better than it is generally seen to be".

    References

    W. K. Kellogg Foundation Wikipedia