Gerald W. Schwartz, OC (born 1941) is the founder, chairman and CEO of Onex Corporation. Schwartz has a net worth of US$1.5 billion, according to Forbes.[1]
Schwartz has been a director of Scotiabank since 1999. In 2021, Schwartz's net worth was estimated at US$1.5 billion, making him one of the wealthiest people in Canada.[1] As of 2015, he was the highest paid CEO in Canada.[4]
Personal life
In 1982, Schwartz married Heather Reisman, chief executive of Indigo Books and Music.[5][6] Schwartz has two children from his first marriage and two stepchildren from his marriage to Heather Reisman.[7] The couple are members of the Reform synagogue, Holy Blossom Temple in Toronto.[7] Schwartz and Reisman own the most expensive house in Toronto, valued at $28 million.[8]
Schwartz is the co-founder of the Heseg Foundation for Lone Soldiers alongside his wife, Heather Reisman.[10] The organization provides millions of dollars of support in the form of scholarships, a living wage and career development opportunities as a reward for military service with the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) every year to non-Israeli Jews who volunteered to join the Israeli military and to some Israeli soldiers as well. [11] In 2006, he made a donation to University of Waterloo for an exchange program between University of Waterloo and the University of Haifa.[12]
Mount Sinai Hospital announced in December 2013 that a transformational $15 million gift from Schwartz and Reisman would be used to "reshape emergency medicine" at the facility.[13][14]
The Gerald Schwartz and Heather Reisman Foundation donated $5.3 million to St. Francis Xavier University in Antigonish, Nova Scotia in late 2018 to create scholarships, bursaries and increased recruitment of business students.[15]
In March 2019, University of Toronto announced that Schwartz and Reisman were giving the university $100 million to build a 750,000-square foot innovation centre through The Gerald Schwartz & Heather Reisman Foundation. According to Reisman, the Schwartz Reisman Innovation Centre will be used to improve technology, particularly Artificial intelligence, and how the public can relate to it. One of the two towers will house the Schwartz Reisman Institute for Technology and Society and the Vector Institute for Artificial Intelligence while the other will include labs for research in regenerative medicine, genetics and precision medicine.[16][17]
^"Behind a bittersweet industry". CBC. 25 March 2019. Retrieved 27 March 2019. University president Meric Gertler said the donation "will enable a deeper examination of how technology shapes our daily lives."