Immediately after selling his popular internet social-network company GeoCities to Yahoo! in 1999, David Bohnett turned his attention to activism. He created the David Bohnett Foundation, "a nonprofit grant-making organization focused on providing resources for organizations pursuing societal change and social justice through activism", with an initial endowment of $32million. According to the Los Angeles Times Magazine, he "invests where he can actually improve lives, empower individuals and build viable communities in meaningful ways". To serve as executive director and strategist for his foundation he hired Michael Fleming, who had been a media leader for the American Civil Liberties Union. In 2000, the foundation's first full year, it donated $2 million to LGBT organizations, AIDS services, gun control programs, and voter registration initiatives. Bohnett's initial grants included large donations to GLAAD, the Family Equality Council, and the Human Rights Campaign. A prime aim for Bohnett is to "create an environment which destigmatizes homosexuality", and to that end he has funded both national gayrights organizations and also local LGBT organizations and centers across the U.S. The nationwide LGBT centers he has funded and created include numerous LGBT CyberCenters – safe-haven internet cafes where LGBT young people and seniors, and disadvantaged, troubled, or closeted gays, can find support and resources, including computers and internet access. Bohnett created the first CyberCenter in 1998, and as of 2020 there are over 60 David Bohnett CyberCenters in the U.S.
The David Bohnett Foundation Fund for Los Angeles provides support to local organizations that are working to better the civic and cultural lives of people living in Los Angeles. These grants are made under the initiative of either David Bohnett or the David Bohnett Foundation. As of 2020, the foundation has disbursed over $70,324,000 to recipients of funding from the Fund for Los Angeles.
Fund for Los Angeles grant recipients
A selection of fund for Los Angeles grant recipients includes:
The David Bohnett Foundation supports organizations and projects using social activism to advance the rights of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender community. The foundation also assists and promoted philanthropic organizations that foster positive portrayals of lesbians and gay men in the media. As of 2020, the foundation has disbursed over $23,406,000 to groups and organizations that strive to provide equal rights and protections for all LGBT people.
LGBT community grant recipients
A selection of LGBT-community grant recipients includes:
CyberCenters
The David Bohnett Foundation has sponsored CyberCenters since 1998, with the first one established at the Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Center. Now there are CyberCenters across the United States, in locations like Atlanta, Tulsa, Orlando, San Francisco and New York City. The David Bohnett CyberCenters are another major undertaking—numbering more than 60 locations nationwide, they offer business, educational, research, and recreational opportunities to underserved LGBT communities via computer equipment and access to the Internet. As of 2020, the foundation has disbursed over $4,183,254 to recipients providing CyberCenters.
CyberCenter grant recipients
A selection of CyberCenter grant recipients includes:
LGBT leadership
The foundation has been a major and long-term supporter of the Gay & Lesbian Victory Fund, especially its LGBT Leadership Fellows aimed at training LGBT leaders for state and local governments; as of 2020 the Bohnett Leaders Fellowship at the Victory Institute has sent over 150 LGBT leaders to the Harvard Kennedy School’s Senior Executives in State and Local Government program since 2002. The David Bohnett LGBTQ Leaders Fellowship alumni have included Kyrsten Sinema, the first openly bisexual U.S. congressperson, and Annise Parker, one of the first openly gay mayors of a major U.S. city.
Leadership initiatives and voter education
The Bohnett foundation supports the development of the next generation of municipal leaders, through a variety of initiatives and grants. As of 2020, the foundation has disbursed over $8,243,588 to recipients and programs in its leadership initiatives.
Leadership initiatives
David Bohnett Foundation leadership programs
The foundation supports advances in public policy through David Bohnett Leadership Fellows programs at universities. It funds graduate-school civic internship and leadership programs at:
In other grants, in Detroit, New York City, and Los Angeles, graduate students receive positions in the mayor's office, and the stipends and tuition of these David Bohnett fellows are paid for by the Bohnett Foundation. These paid student interns have been involved in policy analysis and implementation, assisting speech writing, evaluating department heads, reducing homelessness, and other initiatives. Several former Bohnett mayoral fellows occupy management positions in the cities where they had interned, and in 2014 Stephanie Chang, a Bohnett fellow from the University of Michigan, became the first Asian-American woman elected to the Michigan state legislature.
The David Bohnett Foundation supports safe and secure elections, both during the voting process and after. They provide funding to projects that work to ensure fair elections, protect voting rights, and raise the level of political discourse among all Americans, regardless of age, gender identity, political party or other diversities. The foundation supports projects working at local, state and national levels on a wide range of voter registration initiatives, from preventing polling-place irregularities to research that helps assess obstacles that keep certain populations from having their votes counted. As of 2014, the foundation had disbursed over $4,500,000 exclusively to recipients working on voter education.
Voter education grant recipients
A selection of voter education recipients includes:
The David Bohnett Foundation works with public policy makers, advocates and activists to reduce gun violence and promote gun violence prevention policies. Funding is provided to groups and institutions that educate and advocate on the effects of guns and solutions to reduce gun violence. As of 2020, the foundation has disbursed over $4,870,654 to recipients working on gun violence prevention.
Gun violence prevention grant recipients
A selection of gun violence prevention grant recipients includes, but is not limited to:
Animal language research
The David Bohnett Foundation supports animal language research, funding of service animals and eliminating the trade of endangered species. As of 2020, the foundation has disbursed over $2,046,188 to recipients working on animal language research.
Animal language research grant recipients
A selection of animal language research grant recipients includes: