in the late 1970s Blum had a strong interest in
Tibet and
Tibetan Buddhism, and in 1981 he attempted to climb
Mount Everest from the Tibetan side with
Sir Edmund Hillary. He was the chairman and founder of the apolitical
American Himalayan Foundation (AHF), which has given millions of dollars to build hospitals and schools in
Tibet and
Nepal, but refrained from political involvement with the Chinese control of Tibet. Blum was at various times a trustee of
The Carter Center; co-chairman of
The World Conference of Religions for Peace; and a member of the board of trustees of the Richard C. Blum Center for Developing Economies at the
University of California, Berkeley. He contributed $15 million toward the establishment of the center, which addresses extreme poverty and disease in the developing world. In 2019, Blum provided an additional $12 million to endow a chair at the center. He donated to the University of California at San Francisco (UCSF), Merced and Los Angeles (UCLA) and
Sonoma State University, as well as
Macalester College. He pledged $1.25 million to the
University of San Francisco (USF) in 2007, and another $1.5 million to USF for "global education" in 2019. He was awarded the
UCSF medal in 2012. He served on many other boards, including the
Seva Foundation and as chairman of the Himalayan Foundation. In the arts and culture, he made grants to the Creative Visions Foundation, the
Daniel Pearl Foundation, San Francisco's
Asian Art Museum, the
San Francisco Conservatory of Music, and the
Geffen Playhouse in Los Angeles. He was hospitalized in September 2021 for an undisclosed reason. He died from cancer at his home in San Francisco on February 27, 2022, at the age of 86.
Controversy Blum's wife,
US Senator Dianne Feinstein, was criticized over Blum's government contracts and business dealings with the
People's Republic of China and her past votes on trade agreements with that country. Blum denied any wrongdoing. Blum and Feinstein were also criticized for having a 75% stake in
Tutor Perini, a building contractor which received military contracts for projects in
Iraq and
Afghanistan during the U.S. occupation of those countries. In 2008, during the
sub-prime mortgage crisis, Feinstein contacted the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation with a proposal to fund the FDIC's foreclosed-property dealings through the US government's general budget. Not long afterward, Blum's real estate firm, CB Richard Ellis, won a lucrative contract with the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to sell foreclosed properties. In 2020, Blum was discovered to have written letters on behalf of unqualified applicants to various UC campus chancellors. The applicants were admitted through student athletics programs, even though, according to a state audit “they possessed little athletic talent.” The audit described Blum's actions as "particularly problematic" as University Regents should not influence admissions decisions. == As author ==