BY: Caroline Phillips for the Ottawa Business Journal
Not a day goes by when Roger Greenberg isnโt planning, preparing and continually working on the largest and most ambitious fundraising campaign in our cityโs history to build a new hospital campus that he believes will revolutionize health care for Ottawa residents.
โI think about it all the time; I think about it, like, 24/7,โ said Greenberg of his ongoing efforts to drum up half a billion bucks for The Ottawa Hospitalโs $2.8-billion campus development on Carling Avenue, next to Dowโs Lake. โIโm working harder now at 66 than I ever have in my life.โ
About 80 per cent of the funding for the new campus is coming from the Ontario government, but that doesnโt mean Ottawa residents are off the hook; the city still has to dig deep into its own pockets to come up with its share.
Thatโs where Greenberg comes in. The Ottawa-born-and-raised businessman, with his decades of experience as a volunteer fundraiser and his deep roots in the community, is chairing the $500-million Campaign to Create Tomorrow. The campaign has already quietly raised $216 million toward its goal.
โItโs a big team effort,โ said Greenberg, who’s working closely with The Ottawa Hospital and its foundation staff and volunteer board members, along with the Campaign to Create Tomorrow executive made up of fellow community leaders.
โI have one focus, and itโs to raise $500 million,โ he said during an early morning interview at Sunset Grill, an all-day breakfast restaurant at Lansdowne. โWe think a $500-million goal is very realistic. Itโs the largest campaign in the cityโs history, but it is doable.โ
Greenberg has many leadership roles, including as executive chairman of The Minto Group, a family-owned, billion-dollar real-estate company based in Ottawa.
Minto Groupโs shareholders have stepped forward with a $25-million gift for the campaign, the single largest health-care gift in the history of the city.
The amount was announced earlier Tuesday at the launch of Campaign to Create Tomorrow, held at the future hospital campus site.ย
โThis community has been hugely important in our familyโs success and this gift is a way to give back,โ said Greenberg, who couldnโt be more proud of where the funds are being directed.
โThis is going to revolutionize health care in the City of Ottawa in every way. Itโs not just a question of drinking the Kool-Aid; I truly believe that this is going to be transformational for the City of Ottawa, in terms of how health care is going to be handled.โ
The new health-care hub, which will feature the largest academic research hospital in the country, is expected to open in 2028. It will replace the nearby Civic, originally built in 1924 and paid for by the community. Thatโs where Greenbergโs parents were born, followed by him and his five siblings, followed by two of his own three children. The streak could end there (his first grandchild is due to be born later next month in Toronto).
As for the Civic, itโs aging, outdated and has run its course, said Greenberg.ย
โItโs a fossil. We are trying to run the latest software on outdated hardware.โ
Greenberg was heavily involved with the hospital foundationโs turn-of-the-century $100-million Legacy Campaign and also served as honorary chair of its campaign to build a new cancer centre on the General campus. His philanthropic focus on health care comes, in part, from losing his father Gilbert to a heart attack at 57 and his mother Bessie (Levitan) to cancer at 59.
Greenberg has been working closely with Tim Kluke, president and CEO of The Ottawa Hospital Foundation, and Cameron Love, president and CEO of The Ottawa Hospital, just as he did in years past with their predecessors, Susan Doyle and Dr. Jack Kitts, respectively.
โThere was only one clear choice and that was Roger Greenberg to chair this campaign,โ said Kluke of a leader who has a high profile, the respect of the community, an affiliation with the hospital and a deep appreciation for and understanding of philanthropy. Greenberg is also executive chairman and managing partner of the Ottawa Sports and Entertainment Group and one of the business leaders who helped to redevelop Lansdowne Park.
โHe is the most engaged campaign volunteer that I have worked with in my career,โ said Kluke, who communicates daily with Greenberg about the campaign โ even on weekends.
Greenbergโs approach to fundraising is inspired by the late Barbara McInnes, who saw it as her role, when she was CEO of the Ottawa Community Foundation, to educate and inform the public.
โIโm not a high-pressure salesman; Iโm not selling anything,โ said Greenberg. โAll Iโm doing is bringing an opportunity to your attention. I donโt get a commission. Well, I might when I go Upstairs and The Big Man looks at my life and says, โHmm, you did really well with that campaign.โโ
Fundraising isnโt for everyone, he recognizes.
โThe toughest nine words for a canvasser to say are: โWeโd like you to consider a gift of ____ dollars.โโ
Since December 2019, Greenberg has been canvassing behind the scenes, asking donors to consider giving more than theyโve perhaps ever given before. Planning for the campaign began two years before that.ย
Greenberg prefers in-person meetings to Zoom and isnโt shy about asking for a specific amount, even if it sends the donor into โsticker shockโ. Donors arenโt pressured to make an immediate commitment; theyโre encouraged to take their time, to think things through. The campaign, said Greenberg, is designed to be flexible. Commitments can be made over years, until the end of 2029.
As well, modest gifts are welcome.
โI believe, fundamentally, in the concept of gifts of equal sacrifice,โ he said. โYes, itโs not going to get us to the goal of $500 million appreciably, but so what? Every gift counts.
โThis isnโt a hospital for the wealthy. This is a hospital for everybody.โ
So far, support for the new campus has been โincredible,โ said Greenberg, who expects to make his presentation โhundredsโ of times in his role as campaign chair. There have been 41 gifts of $1 million or higher made to date.
โI think there are a lot of people who feel as strongly as I do, and understand how transformational this will be for the people of Ottawa, and want to be part of it,โ he said.
One of his most memorable meetings involved Kingston businessman and philanthropist Britton โBritโ Smith, founder and executive chairman of Homestead Land Holdings, which owns apartment buildings across Ontario, including in Ottawa.
Smith, whoโs 102 years old, is a decorated Second World War hero. He took a shine to Greenberg after learning heโs an honorary colonel with the 30th Field Artillery Regiment. Smith was in the artillery.
Michael Runia, chair of the hospital foundationโs board, believes the secret to Greenbergโs fundraising success is twofold: heโs not afraid to ask for money and he understands the critical need for a new hospital facility.
โRoger is a community-minded individual; he lives and breathes this city,โ said Runia, whoโs also a partner and chief investment officer at Nautical Lands Group. โRoger knows how to lead; he knows how to galvanize people and really bring them to the task at hand. Heโs very results-oriented.โ
Runia is also a member of the campaignโs executive cabinet with Greenberg, former tech executive Rob Ashe, longtime hospital supporter Whitney Fox, health care CEO Katie Lafferty, serial entrepreneur Bruce Linton, CLV Group/InterRent REIT CEO Mike McGahan, Janet McKeage from RBC Wealth Management, prominent Indo-Canadian member Dr. Pradeep Merchant, lawyer Stephen Victor from Victor Vallance Blais LLP and Farm Boy partner Jeff York.
Greenbergโs involvement in his community comes down to a simple Jewish value:
โtikkun olamโ. It literally means โto repair the worldโ.
โMore broadly, it means you have an obligation to leave the world a better place than you found it,โ explained Greenberg, a member of the Order of Canada (incidentally, for his philanthropic activities). โThatโs been at the core of my philanthropic activities for 35 years, and itโs a really important family value that was transferred down to all of us from our parents.
โYou canโt just think about yourself; you have to think about the community that you live in, and to give back and help do things to make it better.โ
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