Walter A. Dods Jr. makes $5M donation to RISE center

University of Hawaiʻi
Contact:
Margot Schrire, (808) 376-7818
AVP of Communications, UH Foundation
Marc Arakaki, (808) 829-0750
Spokesperson/Content Producer, UH Communications
Posted: Oct 8, 2023

Walter A. Dods Jr., Sandra Fujiyama and Tim Dolan at RISE
Walter A. Dods Jr., Sandra Fujiyama and Tim Dolan at RISE
RISE students gather in August during an opening reception
RISE students gather in August during an opening reception

Link to video and sound (details below): https://tinyurl.com/5x4rdn74

Link to Walter Dods headshots and renderings of new signage: https://tinyurl.com/762mbnr5

Honolulu philanthropist and former First Hawaiian Bank Chairman Walter A. Dods Jr. is donating $5 million to the University of Hawaiʻi’s new Residences for Innovative Student Entrepreneurs (RISE) at UH Mānoa. In recognition of this momentous gift, the building will be renamed the Walter Dods Jr. RISE Center.

Dods is an alumnus of UH Mānoa’s Shidler College of Business, a longtime donor to UH and former president of the UH Foundation’s Board of Trustees.

The student entrepreneurship and innovation center, with housing for 374 students, opened in August. Programs at RISE are operated by the Pacific Asian Center for Entrepreneurship (PACE) at the UH Mānoa Shidler College of Business. The historic new gift builds on Dods’ earlier gift to PACE announced in 2022.

“I’m honored to champion a program that’s growing new generations of critical thinkers and entrepreneurs who will create the businesses that grow Hawaiʻi’s economy,” said Dods. “I look forward to seeing the future these PACE at RISE students will create for themselves, our state and the world.”

Dods is one of the most influential businessmen and philanthropists in Hawaiʻi, and has been an active community volunteer and fundraiser since early in his career. He retired from First Hawaiian Bank in 2004 after a 36-year career there, the last 15 years as chairman and CEO. A recognized industry leader, Dods was the national president of the American Bankers Association in 1996.

“Walter Dods has embodied leadership, entrepreneurship and innovation over his long career at First Hawaiian Bank as well as through his expansive and generous service to the community,” said UH President David Lassner. “It is beyond appropriate to link the Dods name to the premier place and program that will nurture our future leaders who will drive Hawaiʻi’s economy, and we thank Walter for his forward-thinking and generous commitment to our students.”

“Walter’s incredible vision and generosity enables us to attract passionate students, cutting-edge professionals and faculty, and offer meaningful programming at RISE,” said Sandra Fujiyama, executive director of PACE. “It’s so exciting to see these students transform into the next generation of changemakers and problem-solvers to start their own businesses or join existing ones.”

Dods’ roots in Hawaiʻi, and his dedication to the community, run deep.

Born to a blue-collar, working-class family in Honolulu, he went to work after graduating from Saint Louis School, and later attended night classes at UH Mānoa while working full-time. Dods graduated in 1967 with a bachelor’s degree in business administration. In 1993, he was honored with the UH Distinguished Alumni Award.

Dods’ long history of support to UH

His philanthropic support of UH stretches back to 1975, when he was among the founders of UH Foundation’s President’s Club to encourage support for UH from alumni, friends and community leaders. He served on the UH Foundation Board of Trustees, was its president from 1978 to 1980 and chaired the 1998 UH Campaign for Hawaiʻi that raised $116 million for the university.

Dods and his late wife, Diane, established the Walter A. and Diane N. Dods Endowed Scholarship Fund with a gift of $1 million, for students who are immigrants or children of immigrants. He also helped raise $1.6 million to establish the Dan and Maggie Inouye Distinguished Chair in Democratic Ideals and co-chaired the committee to establish the Senator Daniel K. Akaka Regents Scholarship Endowment.

“Walter’s long dedication to community service and to UH is exceptional,” said Tim Dolan, UH vice president of advancement and UH Foundation CEO. “His exemplary leadership in business and philanthropy is inspiring and we couldn’t be more grateful for this special gift.”

In 2004, Dods was awarded the Order of the Rising Sun, with Gold and Silver Star, an imperial honor from the Government of Japan. Since retirement, he has served as the board chairman of Alexander & Baldwin, and later Matson. He was also a trustee of the Samuel Mills Damon Estate, and served as non-executive board chairman for Hawaiian Telcom and Mid Pac Petroleum. He is currently a director on the board of Par Pacific Hawaii.

RISE was built as the first public-private partnership between UH, UH Foundation and Hunt Development Group Hawaiʻi.

Read more about the UH Mānoa RISE center.

 

Link to video and sound (details below): https://tinyurl.com/5x4rdn74

Link to Walter Dods headshots and renderings of new signage:  https://tinyurl.com/762mbnr5

 

VIDEO: (1:36)

BROLL:

0:00-0:41 - Exterior and interior shots of RISE center

0:41-0:57 - RISE students at a gathering in August

0:57-1:36 - Walter Dods, Sandra Fujiyama and Tim Dolan in the RISE center

 

SOUNDBITES:

Walter A. Dods Jr., UH alumnus and longtime donor to UH

(0:13)

“The idea of this collaborative effort by a bunch of bright, young students getting together and creating new things, I think it’s a dynamite idea and I was blown away not only with the idea but how they carried it out.”

(0:23)

“In the beginning I pledged $250,000 because I liked the idea. But as I saw it advance, and Susan Yamada, Sandra Fujiyama, UH Foundation, how they put this together without any taxpayer dollars, I became really convinced that this was going to be a special project for the state of Hawaiʻi and I wanted to be part of it.”

Sandra Fujiyama, UH Mānoa Pacific Asian Center for Entrepreneurship Executive Director

(0:18)

“He came from humble beginnings, yet he rose up through the ranks and became the leader that we see here in Hawaiʻi. So the students can see that. They can identify with that and they can follow in his footsteps. That’s what we’re hoping to accomplish here at RISE is to create more Walters, to create more inspiring visionary leaders.”