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Jay S. Hennick

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jay S. Hennick
Born
Jay Stewart Hennick

(1957-01-20) January 20, 1957 (age 67)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
EducationYork University (B.A.)
University of Ottawa (LL.B.)
Occupation(s)Businessman, philanthropist
Known for
WebsiteJayHennick.com

Jay Stewart Hennick CM (born January 20, 1957) is a Canadian billionaire businessman and philanthropist.[1] He is the global chairman, CEO and controlling shareholder of Colliers,[2] and the founder, chairman and largest shareholder of FirstService Corporation.[3] Along with his wife, Barbara, he is the co-founder of The Jay and Barbara Hennick Family Foundation.[4] In 2022, Hennick was named to Forbes' annual list of the world's billionaires.[5]

Biography

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Hennick was born in 1957 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. His first job was a summer lifeguard at an apartment complex at age 15; it gave him the idea for his first company.[6] In 1972, at the age of 17 and while still a teenager in high school, Hennick borrowed $1,000 from his father Sam and founded a commercial swimming pool staffing and management business called Superior Pools, which subsequently employed hundreds of students throughout the Greater Toronto Area.[7]

After graduating from high school in 1975, Hennick went on to study economics at York University, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1978.[8] He then received a Bachelor of Laws degree from the University of Ottawa in 1981.[9] Hennick would later be awarded Honorary Doctorates of Laws from both York University and the University of Ottawa.[10]

Hennick has served as a member of the board of directors of Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto since 1998, Co-Chairman of the Mount Sinai Hospital Foundation from 2011 to 2013, and chairman of the board of directors of Mount Sinai Hospital from 2013 to 2016.[10] He is also a documentary film producer, having co-produced Made You Look: A True Story About Fake Art, a 2021 Netflix documentary on one of the largest art scams in U.S. history.[11] Hennick is the executive producer of the documentary ‘Born Hungry’ which follows the journey of Canadian chef Sash Simpson. It premiered at the Palm Springs International Festival in 2024.[12]

Career

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Hennick joined a predecessor to the law firm of Fogler, Rubinoff LLP and worked under the mentorship of Lloyd S.D. Fogler, Q.C. After four years as an associate, Hennick was promoted to the position of partner, the youngest partner to be admitted to the firm.[13] During his years in private practice, Hennick advised and executed a variety of corporate and business law transactions. He specialized in regulated financial institutions such as banks and trust companies.[14]

In 1989, while still working as a corporate lawyer, Hennick acquired the College Pro Painters franchise system and combined it with Superior Pools to form FirstService Corporation.[15] He was introduced to Peter Drucker, a well-known management consultant, educator, author and influential thinker on the subjects of business, management theory and practice in 1990.[16] By 1993, Hennick made the decision to take FirstService public and completed an initial public offering on the Toronto Stock Exchange. In 1995, its shares were listed on NASDAQ.[17] In 1996, Hennick intimately left his private law practice to focus on the expansion of FirstService as the company’s founder and chief executive officer. He was named Canada's Entrepreneur of the Year in 1998 and CEO of the Year from Canadian Business Magazine in 2001.[18]

In June 2015, FirstService completed a plan of arrangement to separate FirstService into two stand-alone publicly traded companies: Colliers International Group Inc. and FirstService Corporation.[19] Hennick became global chairman and chief executive officer of Colliers, and chairman and founder of FirstService.[20] The market capitalization of Colliers is more than US$5 billion and Hennick owns, directly and indirectly, more than 14 percent of the equity and 45 percent of the votes of the company.[21]

Hennick was the 2019 International Horatio Alger Award Recipient and became a member of the Order of Canada that same year.[22] Hennick was inducted into the Canadian Business Hall of Fame in 2024.[23]

The Jay and Barbara Hennick Family Foundation

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Hennick, along with his wife Barbara, co-founded The Jay and Barbara Hennick Family Foundation, which donates to causes focused on education, health care and the arts primarily in Canada. The following are some of the causes the foundation has supported: the Hennick Centre of Business and Law at York University, providing post-graduate studies for students in business or law;[24] the Jay S. Hennick Business and Community Leadership Program at the University of Ottawa, which provides financial support to JD law students who have been admitted into the MBA program at the Telfer School of Management as part of the combined JD-MBA program at the University of Ottawa;[25] the Hennick Family Wellness Centre, which opened at Mount Sinai Hospital in 2016 and houses the largest collection of the art works of iconic Canadian artist Sorel Etrog;[26] Yad Vashem in Israel named one of its entrance arches at the Yad Vashem Entrance Plaza after Barbara and Jay Hennick and Family.[27]

Sinai Health announced that the Hennick family donated $36 million in October 2021, the single largest donation in its history and resulting in renaming its facility the Hennick Bridgepoint Hospital.[28] In July 2022, The Jay and Barbara Hennick Family Foundation made a historic donation of $50 million to the Royal Ontario Museum in support of a multi-year revitalization plan. It represented the largest cash gift in the museum’s history.[29][30]

References

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  1. ^ "From Pool Boy to Billionaire".
  2. ^ "Jay Hennick". Bloomberg News.
  3. ^ "SEC Data First Service".
  4. ^ "Jay and Barbara Hennick Family Foundation".
  5. ^ "Jay Hennick". Forbes. 2022.
  6. ^ "Jay Hennick". Forbes. Retrieved 2023-10-21.
  7. ^ "Big Fish Small Pond: an Ocean of Opportunity". The Globe and Mail.
  8. ^ "Horatio Alger: Jay Hennick".
  9. ^ "Common Law History at the University of Ottawa" (PDF). p. 97.
  10. ^ a b "Jay S. Hennick, C.M."
  11. ^ "Made You Look: A True Story About Fake Art".
  12. ^ Avrich, Barry. "Born Hungry tells the remarkable story of Sash Simpson, a street kid from India who became a Canadian top chef". CBC.
  13. ^ English, Chuck; Lidsky, Mo (22 June 2015). The Philanthropic Mind. Dog Ear. ISBN 9781457533884.
  14. ^ "Jay Hennick".
  15. ^ Greg Meckbach (May 24, 2019). "This restoration contracting acquisition should close by summer".
  16. ^ "Drucker in Practice: An Interview with Jay Hennick, Founder and Chairman of FirstService Corporation, Part I".
  17. ^ "SEC Archives".
  18. ^ "York University to Honour Four Distinguished Citizens at Fall Convocation".
  19. ^ "Colliers splitting from parent to expand in commercial property". The Globe and Mail.
  20. ^ "Colliers to split from parent amid expansion plans".
  21. ^ "Colliers Completes Transaction to Settle Long-Term Incentive Arrangement and Establish Timeline for Orderly Elimination of Dual Class Voting Structure".
  22. ^ "Jay S. Hennick to receive the 2019 International Horatio Alger Award".
  23. ^ "Meet this year's Inductees to the Canadian Business Hall of Fame". Globe and Mail.
  24. ^ "Hennick Centre for Business and Law".
  25. ^ "Explore the Hennick Centre".
  26. ^ "Hennick Family Wellness Gallery".
  27. ^ "Yad Vashem, Volume 90, October 2019" (PDF).
  28. ^ "Hennick Bridgepoint Hospital Announcement, Globe & Mail, November 2021" (PDF).
  29. ^ "Royal Ontario Museum announces $50 million cash gift — largest in its history". thestar.com. 2022-06-23. Retrieved 2022-07-11.
  30. ^ "Hennick Family donates $50 million to advance ROM's strategic vision". Royal Ontario Museum. Retrieved 2022-07-11.
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