An economist by training, Andrew began his career in financial services sales and marketing. Gareth and Andrew have been friends for several years and explored a number of ideas before identifying the unparalleled potential of Trust Stamp. Although Trust Stamp is Andrew’s first startup, he has immersed himself in the lean-startup environment by completing incubator programs through Founder’s Space in San Francisco, QC FinTech in Charlotte and NAR REach in Chicago. Each of these programs has provided a different perspective and honed a different set of startup skills.
in 1998, the two hospitals merged to form Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. In 2006, they merged with Hughes Spalding Children's Hospital;[4] the transaction was facilitated by a $20 million donation from philanthropist Diana Blank
Her son, Kenny Blank and his wife Nancy;[7][8] and her daughter Dena and her husband Josh Kimball, serve as directors of The Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation.
CareerRise was founded in 2011 through a grant from the National Fund for Workforce Solutions and local investors and is managed by the United Way of Greater Atlanta.
Diana Latow Blank (born September 13,[1] 1942)[2] is an American philanthropist who founded the Kendeda Fund and the former wife of The Home Depot co-founder, Arthur Blank.
Blank was raised in a middle class, Roman Catholic family.[1] Through her Kendeda Fund, founded in 1993,[3] Blank has historically donated anonymously to various Georgia-based causes including $4 million to the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra in the mid-1990s; and $20 million to Children's Healthcare of Atlanta to enable the purchase of Hughes Spalding Children's Hospital, a historically-black hospital in Atlanta,[1] in 2006.[4] In 2015, she was revealed as the person who provided a $30 million grant to Georgia Tech for their Living Building Challenge 3.0.[1] tasked with building the "most environmentally-sound building ever constructed in the Southeast."[5]
..Her daughter, Dena Blank Kimball, serves as the executive director of the Kendeda Fund..
In this LeaderStories program, speakers Joyce Adolwa, CARE's director for education programs, Dena Blank Kimball, executive director of The Kendeda Fund and Layli Miller-Muro, founder and CEO of the Tahirih Justice Center, will discuss the major social issues facing our world and how we can effect change.
Dena Kimball is the Executive Director of the Kendeda Fund. Formerly, she served as the Vice President of Network Support of Teach For All, the Vice President of Alumni Affairs and the Deputy Vice President of Admissions for Teach for America, and as the Executive Director of GirlVentures in San Francisco, a nonprofit organization with a mission to inspire adolescent girls to develop and express their strengths.
Dena holds a bachelor’s degree in political science from Emory University in 1993 and a master’s degree in public policy from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University in 1998. She has served as an associate director of development for Pacific Crest Outward Bound School and as program specialist at the National Economic Development and Law Center. Dena also has worked as an independent consultant, specializing in the curriculum development, management, strategic planning and development of nonprofit organizations focusing on youth.
Dena was the founding Chair of American Jewish World Service’s Global Circle. She is married to Josh Kimball and they have two daughters.
Helene D. Gayle (born August 16, 1955), is an American doctor who is the CEO of The Chicago Community Trust, one of the nation's leading community foundations. The Trust works with donors, nonprofits, community leaders and residents to lead and inspire philanthropic efforts that improve the quality of life for the residents of the Chicago region. She was president and CEO of McKinsey Social Initiative (now McKinsey.org) and the humanitarian organization CARE from 2006 to 2015.[1] Gayle previously directed the HIV, TB, and Reproductive Health Program at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, and spent 20 years at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), focusing primarily on HIV/AIDS.[2]
CARE (Cooperative for Assistance and Relief Everywhere, formerly Cooperative for American Remittances to Europe[1]) is a major international humanitarian agency delivering emergency relief and long-term international development projects. Founded in 1945..
Chair of the Supervisory Board: Madame Louise Fréchette
Arielle Malard de Rothschild is the President of the CARE France
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MercurysBall2 ago
On company website: https://truststamp.ai/TeamMembers.html
He rewteeted this: https://twitter.com/ATLUTD/status/1234630287092518915
The Atlanta United FC is owned by Arthur Blank of Home Depot : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Blank
Related voat post: A data dump for big pharma, ICMEC, genome projects and medical tourism
MercurysBall2 ago
Diana Blank https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diana_Blank
Tackling the Big Social Challenges of Our Time: A Discussion on How We Can Impact Global Issues - https://events.ajc.com/event/tackling-the-big-social-challenges-of-our-time-a-discussion-on-how-we-can-impact-global-issues58cc096d869d5
https://blankfoundation.org/trustee/dena-kimball/
MercurysBall2 ago
Former CEO of CARE : Helene D. Gayle https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helene_D._Gayle
CARE International https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Care_International
Arielle Malard de Rothschild is the President of the CARE France
wife of Édouard de Rothschild https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C3%89douard_de_Rothschild