Every graduating student present at the May 16 commencement for the University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth (UMass) received an unexpected bonus when they got their degrees: a $1,000 cash gift from billionaire Robert Hale Jr, the founder and CEO of Granite Telecommunications.
There were two requirements though โ the student had to be there, in person, at the commencement ceremony to receive the money. They also had to give half of the gift away to a charitable organization.
However, not all graduates were present at the commencement ceremony.
A New York Times article published earlier this week noted that about 20% of the 1,200-person graduating class was absent and missed their chance to receive a $1,000 gift from Hale.
The cash in the unclaimed envelopes went toward a scholarship fund in Haleโs name, bringing his total donation to $1.2 million.
โThe message I want to be delivered for those who donโt attend by choice is, โHey, this is a celebration of four years of hard work, and youโve got to show up,'โ Hale told the Times.
Related: โWanted to Cry for Joyโ: MacKenzie Scott Donates $65M Gift to Housing Nonprofit
Each UMass graduate received two envelopes stuffed with cash: a โgiftโ envelope containing $500 for themselves and a โgiveโ envelope with another $500 for them to donate to people or charities in need.
โWe wanted to give [the graduates] a real gift to celebrate their perseverance, but also [encourage] giving to an organization or person who could use it to create that seed of philanthropy,โ Hale told People.
NEW: University of Massachusetts Dartmouth speaker Robert Hale Jr. gives out $1000 each to 1,200 students during their graduation.
The billionaire handed out $1.2 million in total to the graduates as they crossed the stage to get their degrees.
Hereโs the catch. The studentsโฆ pic.twitter.com/T76BPWk5hG
โ Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) May 18, 2024
Related: Melinda French Gates Announces Open Call for $250 Million Fund. Hereโs Who Can Apply.
This isnโt the first time Hale has adopted this โgiveโ and โgiftโ method of giving. He first initiated it four years ago as a way to reward graduates for their hard work at the commencement ceremony at Quincy College, when graduates were taking COVID-era precautions. He has since rewarded graduates of Roxbury Community College, and, for the past two years, graduates of the University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth, in the same way.
Hale says that in the past four years, gift recipients have donated money from their โgiveโ envelopes to local animal shelters and back to their colleges. One single mom with five kids even gave her children $100 each from the โgiveโ envelope, Hale told People.
Hale told the New York Times he plans to do another surprise giveaway soon at another school. Forbes lists his real-time net worth as $5.8 billion at the time of writing.
Related: โIโm Inspired By All the Ways People Investโ: MacKenzie Scott Has Donated Over $2 Billion This Year. Hereโs Where the Money Wentโand Why.