Here's a link on his Start Smart program, paying for back to school clothing and supplies for underprivileged kids in the San Diego area. Phil and Amy showed up at Walmart at 5:30 AM for the event. At the point this article was written, Phil had paid more than $1 million over 4 years. No doubt it's an ongoing phony gesture.
http://www.sdcoe.net/news/news_story.asp?NID=8Numerous other examples, including Phil paying for the full college education of Conrad Dobler's daughter after the Doblers were disabled and broke.
Here's an excellent column from a senior editor of Sports Illustrated, examining why so many people are determined to dislike Mickelson:
http://www.golf.com/golf/tours_news/article/0,28136,1981101,00.html"Here's what I can see about Phil Mickelson: He goes on and on being amiable. He signs autographs. He tips his cap. He is the nation's leading exporter of golf balls to little kids. He says goofy things like "Be right, honey!" when the ball is in the air rather than the more earthy "You suck! G--dammit!" that Tiger shouted on Saturday. He talks about his family. There are a thousand stories about random acts of kindness — a $200 tip here, a $100 purchase at a kid's lemonade stand there — and every now and then word leaks out about him doing something beyond kind, like the way he quietly helped the family of former NFL star Conrad Dobler, who has fallen on hard times both physically and financially. "Our guardian angel," Dobler calls Mickelson.
Still ... so many people, like my colleague and friend, remain convinced that it's an act, a ridiculous act, and that he's a phony. They will cling to various bits of circumstantial evidence: the Esquire story that named Mickelson one of the ten most hated athletes in America; the various quotes you can find from anonymous golfers who suggest Phil doesn't have friends on Tour; the direct line from Vijay Singh who, when asked on HBO a few years back why he didn't smile more like Phil, said with a bit of a sneer, "Is that the real Phil?" It is not hard to find golfers who, off the record, will say that Phil maintains a distance, that he isn't one of them, that he's just kind of strange, that he's not real."