BCBusiness

November/December 2025 – The Entrepreneur of the Year Awards

With a mission to inform, empower, celebrate and advocate for British Columbia's current and aspiring business leaders, BCBusiness go behind the headlines and bring readers face to face with the key issues and people driving business in B.C.

Issue link: http://digital.canadawide.com/i/1540604

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 15 of 83

16 | BC B U S I N E SS NOVEM B ER/ D ECEM B ER 2025 You're four and a half years on the job. How's it going? I have the best job in B.C. I get to champion kids, be a partner with a really complex health system, work with extraordinary people—visionaries who are bringing ideas to life so kids can have better outcomes. How could you not love that? Your foundation is the top charity in B.C. by revenue—can you break that down? We have about $650 million invested, so we generate income from that. We have a lottery that nets about $15 million annually. And we raise about $80-plus million a year—roughly 20 percent from corporations, 45 percent from individuals and the balance from about Mighty Kids, Mighty Mission After Malcolm Berry's infant daughter passed away from blood cancer two decades ago, it inspired him to switch gears from teaching to fundraising for children's hospitals. Now president and CEO of BC Children's Hospital Foundation, the province's top-earning charity, he understands that modern philanthropy is about more than fundraising—it's about creating brand advocates and building ecosystems of empathy. In a candid sit down, Berry opens up about his ambitious plans to position B.C. as a global pediatric care leader.—By Darcy Matheson | THE CONVERSATION T H E B R I E F 100,000 people making gifts of $100 a year or $20 a month. The common alignment is belief and purpose: belief in B.C. children, belief in the power of what could be. The Crystal Ball is one of your biggest fundraisers, having raised more than $59 million since 1986. This year you're fundraising for a new 3T MRI for B.C.'s only pediatric research MRI site (a $10M cost). Why is this so important? This will be one of the highest fidelity MRI tools for kids in the country. We're going to be able to use children's brain scans to understand the impact of anxiety and depression in the moment, to then inform protocols to best care for kids. It will transform the way that we can treat mental health. You spearheaded the "Small Is Mighty" campaign that features some of the hospital's youngest patients. It's so visually impactful— to show how even small donations can fund research and technology for B.C. kids. How did that come about? We wanted a brand platform upon which campaigns sit. "Small Is Mighty" is the external rallying cry for our internal rallying cry, "power the possible." Whether you're a monthly donor making a $20 gift or you're seed-funding innovation in the lab—microbes in a Petri dish—these things are small, but they are mighty. How often do families who've been through the hospital become donors? Probably more than we realize. Everybody has a story. What we underappreciate is the healing power of giving. I've been there where you can't control your child's blood tests or results. But you can control pro- viding a mechanism for yourself or your community to be part of the healing journey. You're an avid North Shore biker and you have said both that it's really grounding and

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of BCBusiness - November/December 2025 – The Entrepreneur of the Year Awards