Global disasters stress ShelterBox; we need you

 Well, we have trouble. Big time trouble, in every quarter of the globe, and it is putting a tremendous strain on one of the best non-governmental organizations (NGOs) operating as a disaster relief agency. Your help is needed.

“I’ve regularly reported on the rapid, life-sustaining aid ShelterBox has provided around the globe to people in regions ravaged by earthquakes, tsunamis, fires, typhoons, warfare, floods, and other natural and manmade disasters. Now, we have a heavily-populated region hit by several of those extremes at once, while we are being stressed to help victim in numerous countries simultaneously,” says Bill Dowd, SRC’s ShelterBox liaison officer.

What he is referring to is the 7.5 magnitude earthquake and resulting tsunami that recently devastated the populous Indonesian island of Sulawesi, where as of today more than 400 people have perished — and hundreds more may, where tens of thousands been made homeless, and where more than $20 billion in damages to infrastructure and buildings has been identified.

ShelterBox was among the very first non-governmental organizations (NGOs) to be on the scene with emergency tent-housing, tools, water purification and first-aid equipment, basic lighting devices, and more items necessary to human survival when infrastructure is destroyed.

Sulawesi, which has a population of about 18 million, is the world’s 11th largest island, and anthropologists estimate it has been inhabited since about 30,000 B.C.

At the same time, ShelterBox has issued a winter appeal for support for its efforts at sustaining life for the many thousands of refugees from the internecine fighting in Syria.

But, those are not the only people ShelterBox has been helping, with your contributions directly making an impact. The global Rotary-affiliated aid agency estimates that right now there are nearly 85 million people around the world who have been made homeless by natural disaster and conflict and remain in dire need of ongoing assistance merely to stay alive.

“That means almost 85 million people without a place to call home; without a hope for the future. Our ShelterBoxes and ShelterKits are an emergency response, a tool, a practical solution and, in the midst of disaster, nothing less than a miracle,” ShelterBox officials say. “Please donate today to help us deliver the first glimpse of help and hope to a desperate family.”

Southern Rensselaer County Rotary Club traditionally has been honored as an exemplary financial supporter of ShelterBox, both as an organization and from individual contributions. Proceeds from our Clynk beverage container redemption program, for example, helps support our club contributions, and a certain number of individuals have chipped in major grants.

At this time of unprecedented need, we are asking SRC members to step up to support a humanitarian effort for ShelterBox’s global efforts. Anything you can contribute, from as little as $5 to as much as $50 to $500 or more would go toward the purchase of ShelterBoxes, which for years has been able to freeze the per-unit cost at just $1,000 for years. You may even want to enlist of your family, neighbors, friends, church, synagogue, or mosque colleagues to contribute small amounts toward creating a powerful whole.

To kickstart the SRC effort, April and Bill Dowd again have pledged $1,000 each toward this effort as they have done annually for a number of years. However, we can’t stress enough that you please do not regard this as putting any pressure on individual SRC Rotarians to make major contributions. What we are looking for is the cumulative power of small donations. If you can help, please let Bill know by the end of October, and he’ll detail how you can be involved.

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Marker shows location of Sulwesi, Indonesia. (Google map)

 

 

Terry Brewer-led member growth wins award

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As most of you know, SRC’s own Terry Brewer has been serving as chair of the District 7190 Membership Committee. What you may not know is that under he and now-Past District Governor Fred Daniels the district just received a third-place award for achieving the highest growth percentage of female Rotarians in Zone 29 for the 2017-18 Rotary Year.

OK, so how big a deal is that? Look at the map below. You can see our district, 7190, at the top right, and it and the other colored areas constitute Zone 29, which is huge. So, too, is the honor.

Well done Terry, Fred, and all others who put in the time and effort to bring so many newcomers to Rotary.

(Thanks to current DG Tammy Heckenberg for sharing this news from the Zone 28-29 Governors-elect Training Seminar in Erie, PA.)

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Meeting Clipboard: 9/27/18

SRC ClipboardThose of you who regularly access the meeting minutes on this website will notice a change in the format since we resumed weekly meetings this month. Because our club secretary no longer is keeping minutes of the proceedings, we’ve switched to this format, written primarily in less-detailed note form, so we still will have a record for the club archive.


Members Attending (13, quorum): Andy Leyhane, Murray Forth, Kevin Leyhane, Bill Dowd, Debbie Rodriguez, Carol Orvis, Phil Kellerman, Jim Leyhane, Dick Drumm, Dean Calamaras, Doris Calamaras, Ray Hannan, Roberto Martinez.

Guests: None.


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Dean Calamaras presented tonight’s program — a travelogue on “Adventures In Greece.”

President Andy Leyhane reported that about 170 tickets have been sold for the Wine Dinner for 12 @ Cafe Capriccio raffle. Time is short for additional sales since the drawing is scheduled for next Thursday’s dinner meeting at Quigley’s. Members are urged to make a final sales push in the next few days. A.J. Amato has stepped up as a corporate sponsor for the event, so the A.J. Amato Wealth Management logo has been added to the official event flyer. … The Haiti Water Project, whose local representative Courtney Moore of the Schenectady Rotary Club visited us last week, is looking for an SRC representative to sit on its board. Phil Kellerman expressed interest in taking that role, and President Andy said he would contact Courtney about it. …

… Debbie Rodriguez said she and the other SRC liaisons to the Danes Rotaract Club met with the incoming students at the UAlbany School of Public Health who are organizing for the 2018-19 year. Lindsey Ribach is the acting president. Rotaract donated $286 to the Freedom From Fistula Foundation. The club also is looking into the possibility of awarding two scholarships to members each academic year. It also has invited SRC to participate in a World Polio Day (Wednesday, October 24) event it is organizing, with details to come. … Bill Dowd still is awaiting word from any SRC member who wishes to attend the annual Rotary Leadership Institute (RLI), scheduled for Saturday, October 20, at the UAlbany School of Public Health. The club will pay the registration fee for all. … The next SRC Recycling Day has been set for Saturday, November 3, 2018, from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., at the Wainschaf Associates Construction facilities. Bill Dowd has created the official flyer (see below). We’ll be needing volunteers, so please see coordinator Murray Forth.


2018 Recycling Flyer revised


Time is short for selling dinner raffle tickets

SRC Dinner Ad AJWe’re getting ever-closer to the October 4 meeting at which we will draw the winning ticket for the “Dinner for 12 @ Cafe Capriccio” grand prize.

This is a major fundraiser for our youth programs that are of such benefit to the community at large, thus we need to sell as many tickets as possible. We capped the number of tickets at 300, and have sold roughly 100 at this point, so anyone who purchases a ticket has a very good statistical chance to win.

Please share this revised flyer (note the addition of a corporate sponsor) on your social media accounts, via e-mail to friends, family, and associates, posting on bulletin boards, or any other way you can think of to get out the word.


 

 

Bargain time to stock up on food pantry items

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We’re soon entering the autumn/holiday part of the year when local food pantries will be asking for donations for their busiest time.

Since SRC members and families have a history of generosity toward those service organizations, here’s an idea from April Dowd on how to make such generosity very affordable.

Price Chopper/Market 32/Market Bistro this week has a lot of 10-for-$10 sale offers of non-perishable items (see flyer above). If you afford just $10, or if you can afford more, now would be a great time to stock up on such items and store them until we are called upon to donate to such food pantries as The Anchor, Doors of Hope, etc. Just browse the aisles to find the bargains.

Please bear in mind that while the pantries can use virtually any kinds of non-perishable food items (boxed, canned, jarred, etc.), they frequently also have a strong demand for personal hygiene items for their clients as well. Some of those are part of the sale offer.


 

Meeting Clipboard: 9/20/18

SRC ClipboardThose of you who regularly access the meeting minutes on this website will notice a change in the format since we resumed weekly meetings this month. Because our club secretary no longer is keeping minutes of the proceedings, we’ve switched to this format, written primarily in less-detailed note form, so we still will have a record for the club archive.


Members Attending (14, quorum achieved): Andy Leyhane, Pat Bailey, Terry Brewer, Debbie Brown, Peter Brown, Dean Calamaras, Doris Calamaras, Dick Drumm, Murray Forth, Phil Kellerman, Debbie Rodriguez, Carole Spencer, Roberto Martinez, Jim Leyhane.

Guests (5): Courtney Moore, Dave Hennel, Sylvia Kaminsky, Louis Singer, Peter Slavin.


We currently have 200 tickets in circulation for the raffle offering dinner for 12 at Cafe Capriccio in Albany (scroll down to see the event flyer for details). To date, 90 tickets have been sold at $20 each, or $1,800 worth. We need members to make a major push in advance of the October 4 drawing. … The annual Rotary Leadership Institute (RLI) workshop is scheduled for Saturday, October 20, at  the UAlbany School of Public Health. The club will pay the registration fee for any members interested in participating, and will pay the discounted rate for up to 10 Rotaract members. Click here for details of the program, and see Bill Dowd if you are interested; he is handling registration for the club. … Auggie, the therapy dog at Bell Top Elementary School who SRC has helped finance, has his own blog. Click here to keep up with Auggie and his school friends. …

… Our International Committee (Jim Leyhane, Bill Dowd, Roberto Martinez, Peter Brown, Dick Drumm) is working on creation of the Rotary Trail 10K, a running event and festival to be held October 19, 2019, at Schodack Island State Park. They met this week with staff from the Albany Running Exchange, an event management organization, to rough out plans, and previously met with park management. The event will be a major fundraiser for ShelterBox and Gift of Life. … Our next recycling day has been scheduled for 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, November 3, at the Wainschaf Associates warehouse and offices in Rensselaer. Volunteers will be needed to staff the event in shifts. …

… RC had two foursomes entered in the recent Gift of Life Golf Tournament, and also sponsored the happy hour. … The 2018-19 Rotary Youth Leadership Awards (RYLA) training series will begin on Friday with “Introducing Leadership,” at The Edge Climbing Gym, 1544 Route 9, Clifton Park. … The program for the Thursday, September 27, dinner meeting at Quigley’s will be Dean and Doris Calamaras sharing “Adventures In Greece,” a pictorial travelogue.

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Past District Governor Dave Hennel and Courtney Moore, both of the Schenectady Rotary Club, visited the club to discuss Rotary’s “Haiti Clean Water Project.”

 

SRC website getting out the word


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Visitors to the SRC website from late August through today.

How is the SRC website doing as far as visitors? As the chart above shows, quite well since we resumed our regular schedule after the summer doldrums, aflow that follows our performance history.

In addition to hosting visitors from throughout District 7190 and many other states, we have visitors from such diverse parts of the globe as Canada, Mexico, Ireland, England, Namibia, Myanmar, Ecuador, and Italy.

Please remember to share our SRCrotary.org address on your social media accounts. That’s how we build followings and spread the word about Rotary in general and SRC specifically.


Why we ask you to be involved, not just attend

Screen Shot 2018-09-20 at 2.38.54 PMThere actually is a reason we try to get our club members involved in at least some aspect of what we do as a service organization — fundraisers, program assignments, committee work, member recruitment, etc. — rather than limiting themselves to thinking of Rotary only as a weekly dinner or monthly breakfast club.

These Chinese characters —

不闻不若闻之,闻之不若见之;见之不若知之,知之不若行之;学至于行而止矣。

— translate from the writings of the Confucian philosopher Xun Zi (circa 312–230 B.C.) to say:

Tell me and I will forget.

Show me and I may remember.

Involve me and I will understand.

That is why we ask you to “Be a Rotarian,” not just “a member of Rotary.”