Eventually, the Fellowship Program was expanded to include top candidates for academic Jewish studies and the cantorate.
The Wexner Service Corps (2013) is a program designed to inspire and unite Columbus-area Jewish teens to engage in service-learning.
A select group of Corps members can return for a second year to join the Senior Leadership Cohort (SLC).
The Wexner Field Fellowship (2013) is a special opportunity to grow as a Jewish professional, deepen your leadership skills, and develop a rich network of colleagues to support your career.
The program prepares a select cohort each year to exercise collaborative leadership within and across organizations and sectors.
The Wexner Summits provide a space for Alumni and Network Members to work together to identify common goals and values.
Commitments and work that emerge from the Summits aim to strengthen our individual and collective efforts to provide answers for controversial issue in the Jewish world.
It was considered controversial since it was seen as a covert communication campaign for swaying the American public and showed a lack of good faith in resolving the conflict.
[15] The following day, it was reported that contrary to initial claims, the Wexner funds had been transferred to Barak while he may not have been a private person.
"[19] Still, an 18-page "independent" review conducted by the law firm Kegler, Brown — like Wexner's entities also based in Columbus, Ohio — stated that "Epstein Played No Meaningful Role in the Foundation’s Budget, Finances or Accounting Processes" and that "Epstein Played No Role in the Operation of the Foundation’s Fellowships or Other Programs.
"[19] This report raised its own separate yet interrelated questions about Wexner's and the foundation's leadership and oversight by alumni and graduates.
[20] If trustees such as Epstein "signed actions authorizing the appointment of Foundation officers and trustees" (according to Kegler),[19] was the foundation also questionably led in ways similar to how Wexner enabled (to use Yehuda Kurtzer's words) "many of the behaviors that we keep reading about that took place in some of the companies under Les' leadership"?