Jay Faison is an American entrepreneur and a conservative philanthropist from North Carolina. He was Founder and CEO of SnapAV. In 2013, he sold the vast majority of his shares in SnapAV and invested $175 million to start the ClearPath Foundation, with the mission of accelerating conservative clean energy solutions.
After business school Faison started and ran Blockbuster Portugal, which had 27 stores. After meeting his wife Olga, he then returned to the U.S. and bought a small home technology company, which grew to be the largest in the Charlotte region. Faison founded SnapAV six years later, in 2005. SnapAV designs and distributes audio-visual equipment to integrators, from speakers to surveillance system. In 2013, Faison was named the Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year for the Southeast.
Philanthropy
ClearPath Foundation
Faison decided to sell his majority-share in SnapAV, and donate most of that money, $175 million, to create the ClearPath Foundation. "I sold my business because I wanted to get into philanthropy during the prime of my career rather than the end of it. It was time to give back." His goal was to support conservative clean energy solutions. “I always felt a little alone out there as a Republican,” Faison said in an interview, “and so I started ClearPath to create a dialogue around this in a way that hadn’t been done before and sort of be part of the solution.” He runs the foundation as its Managing Partner. The ClearPath website displays its mission statement: “Accelerate conservative clean energy solutions.” ClearPath has expanded into three entities: The 501 ClearPath Foundation non-profit, ClearPath Action 501 lobbying arm and the ClearPath Action Fund super PAC. ClearPath specifically promotes nuclear, natural gas, carbon capturing technologies for gas and coal generation, hydropower and innovation. The organization's mantra is “more innovation, less regulation.”
Political donations
Faison has been a regular contributor to Republican political candidates. His ClearPath Action Fund spent more than $4.8 million for 15 endorsed Republican candidates in the 2016 election. Thirteen of those endorsements won reelection. He has also donated to many Republicans directly, from Mitch McConnell to Rob Portman to the National Republican Senatorial Committee, including a $500,000 donation to New Hampshire Senator Kelly Ayotte's SuperPAC.