Abandoned $2 billion small schools initiative after Gates publicly acknowledged 'unimpressive' results
The Gates Foundation spent more than $2 billion over a decade converting large underperforming high schools into smaller academies, only to abandon the program in 2010. In his 2009 annual letter, Gates admitted that many of the small schools the Foundation invested in did not improve students' achievement in any significant way and that results across Los Angeles, Oakland, North Carolina, Oregon, and Boston had been unimpressive. The failure became a widely cited cautionary tale about applying technology-industry thinking to complex social institutions.
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Met President Obama at the White House to discuss the Giving Pledge
Related Accomplishments
April 2026
Gates Foundation Announces External Governance Review and 20% Staff Reduction Amid Epstein Fallout
In April 2026, the Gates Foundation announced an independent external governance review led by former UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and two former US federal judges, tasked with examining Foundation oversight structures, donor transparency, and executive conduct policies. The Foundation simultaneously announced a 20% reduction in its global workforce — approximately 500 positions — citing the need to streamline operations. Foundation CEO Mark Suzman described the reductions as part of a 'strategic reset' unrelated to the Epstein scrutiny; critics and former staff disputed that characterization.
March 2026
US House Oversight Committee Issues Subpoena to Gates Foundation Over Epstein-Era Documents
In March 2026, the US House Committee on Oversight and Accountability issued a subpoena to the Gates Foundation demanding internal communications, grant records, and financial documents related to Jeffrey Epstein spanning 2010–2019. The committee gave the Foundation a 30-day compliance deadline. A Gates Foundation spokesperson said the organization was 'reviewing the request and committed to cooperating fully with legitimate oversight.' The subpoena focused specifically on whether Foundation grant decisions were influenced by Epstein and whether donor privacy obligations had been used to shield Epstein's involvement.
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