Monday, March 30, 2009

End Polio Now Messages Beside the Highway and on TV


Three major media events will help spread the word about Rotary’s quest to End Polio Now as you engage in your club’s April End Polio Now activities.

The last of the three District 6440 billboards went up last week on I-290/55 between Irving Park Road and Thorndale/Elgin Expressway beside the northbound lanes. Our other two billboards were extended for an additional four-week display. This billboard contains an image of a child getting Polio drops.

The Final Inch, the Academy Award-nominated short documentary will premier on HBO2 Digital TV on Wednesday, April 1 at 7 p.m. Check your local listings for the station. It will repeat at 6:45 a.m. on Saturday, April 4 and again on Tuesday, April 7 at 6:15 p.m.

Finally, PDG David Waring will be one of the guests to appear on Comcast Newsmakers, which plays on CNN Headline News at 24 and 54 past the hour. His segment will alternate with others beginning Monday, April 20, and will run through the following Sunday. You can also watch his interview on YouTube at Waring.

Friday, March 27, 2009

District Avenue-of-Service Award

Our district will be recognizing significant accomplishments by clubs in the categories of Club Service, Community Service, International Service, and Vocational Service. The awards program will generate written case studies of successful club projects that can be shared with all clubs via the district website.

Your club may submit written reports of successful projects that have been completed within the past three years. Those reports are due by May 15, 2009. Winning clubs will receive patches, suitable for club banners, indicating that the club is a 2009 award winner. The reports will be posted to the district website and the awards will be listed in next year's District Conference program.

More information is available at Avenues-of-Service Awards.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Governor's Message

As our district begins the orderly transition from one leadership team to another I would like to invite any member of District 6440 to attend the Club Officers’ Training Seminar (COTS)/District Assembly on April 25th. One of the wonders of Rotary is that we change the leadership of our clubs, districts and international organization, yearly. Can you imagine if a corporation did this every year?!? It is critically important for outgoing and incoming leaders to have a sense of where the organization has been and where it is going. To that end also, the Club Visioning Workshops are still being offered for individual clubs and PDG Terry Mueller is chairing those efforts.

Water protection and conservation has been a focus for our district all of this Rotary year. Legislation has been proposed in the form of the Water for the World Act of 2009. Please take a moment to ready the one-page summary at Water Act.

If you have not made your contribution to The Rotary Foundation yet, the district will match contributions to the annual fund over $500. See Spring Fling for details. Thank you to each and every one of you for your dedication, time, efforts and all that you continue to do for Rotary.

Dundee Township Gets PR

The Rotary Club of Dundee Township received good newspaper coverage of its recent meeting honoring local fire and police chiefs. The Daily Herald even included a photo in its coverage of the event. When you're having a program that might have broad local interest, be sure to alert the local media in advance and invite a reporter or photographer to your meeting.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Welcome to New Rotarians

Clubs in our district have been pleased to welcome the following new members recently: Robert Taylor (Northbrook); Nancy Grange and Linda Vadnais (Libertyville Sunrise); Adam Schoenwald (Barrington); and Jason Risdon and Kelly Zima (Northbrook).

Birmingham Beckons

NO, not Alabama…The ’08-’09 Rotary International Convention will be held in BIRMINGHAM, U.K., June 21-24, 2009. Located in the beautiful and storied Midlands, it is the ideal backdrop for enjoying all facets of a global get-together - from inspirational plenary sessions to informative workshops, an exciting HOUSE OF FRIENDSHIP and the opportunity to share fellowship with Rotarians from 200 countries.

Both the RI and Host Organization Committee sponsored events will feature ‘headliners’ and unforgettable experiences. March 31 is the deadline for Convention pre-registration. Accommodations are still available at the District 6440 official hotel, JURY’S INN BIRMINGHAM. Contact Stan Sherman (847-498-3450 or fax 847-498-3945) for more information and reservations. Don’t miss this opportunity to be a part of history.

Monday, March 23, 2009

Fox Waterway Clean Up May 2nd

Rotarians and others from throughout District 6440 will gather to clean up the Chain-O-Lakes and Fox River. These efforts will clean and protect the busiest inland waterway per acre in the United States. Over 27,000 boats are registered to use it.

In conjunction with the Fox Waterway Advisory Board and the Fox Waterway Agency, Rotarians will meet at designated staging areas to clear debris from channels, shorelines, walking paths and beaches. Many of these spots are only accessible by boat, so Rotarians willing to use their boats for the effort will be appreciated.

Please contact Bob Schneider at rotarycsp@att.net for more information or to register to help with this important water project.

Friday, March 20, 2009

District Bowling Event April 26th

The popular District Bowling Event will be held at eScape Entertainment in Buffalo Grove from noon to 3 p.m. on Sunday, April 26th. Teams of four to six bowlers are welcome to compete. Spectators are also welcome. The $25 per person fee will cover pizza, pasta, salad, soft drinks and bowling. Please register with Wilma Evaristo (847-459-2575) by April 13th.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

USAID and Rotary Clubs Join to Provide Clean Water and Improved Sanitation Worldwide

The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) and Rotary International (RI) are teaming-up to save lives by bringing clean drinking water and basic sanitation to communities in the developing world. The partnership was announced today at the World Water Forum in Istanbul, Turkey, in celebration of the March 22nd observance of World Water Day. This collaboration merges Rotary's grassroots strength with USAID's technical expertise.

The public-private alliance will leverage the resources of both organizations to implement sustainable, long-term water supply, sanitation and hygiene projects in three countries: Dominican Republic, Ghana and the Philippines. Other countries will follow based on the success of these pilot experiences. Alliance activities in each country will be funded jointly by USAID and Rotary International with an expected minimum of $2 million per country in the initial phase.

USAID Acting Administrator Alonzo Fulgham noted, "The service ethic and commitment of Rotary clubs in these countries will be complemented by USAID's development expertise and technical leadership. This partnership will yield a significant, sustainable increase in water supply and sanitation coverage for the planet's poorest and most vulnerable populations."

Past RI President Bill Boyd, chair of the collaboration's steering committee, added: "We intend this joint effort to be a model for future alliances with other strategic partners and in this way to enhance our contribution to world understanding, goodwill and peace."

Worldwide more than one billion people lack access to reliable sources of safe water, and twice that many lack access to sanitary human waste disposal systems, creating an environment that allows the disease-poverty cycle to thrive. Each year more than 1.8 million people - most of them children - die of diarrhea alone. Economic development also suffers as women and girls forego education and occupations to spend hours every day fetching water for their families.

Rotary and USAID see the collaboration as an effective, resource-efficient way to contribute to the UN's Millenium Development Goals, which call for a 50 per cent reduction in the proportion of the world's population without access to safe water and basic sanitation by 2015.

For more information about USAID and other water projects, please visit: www.usaid.gov
For more information about Rotary water and sanitation projects, please visit: www.wasrag.org or contact info@wasrag.org.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Thank You to Guatemala Team

Our service team to Guatemala received the following:

First and foremost, I hope this e-mail finds you all in good health and condition after your time and travels to visit us down in Guatemala. Somehow I imagine back in the Chicago area, some of you might already be thinking about coming down for another week or two until the summer decides it is ready to hide itself away for good.

For a brief re-introduction, my name is Jesse Schauben-Fuerst. I am a volunteer who was fortuante to meet all of you at Ak'Tenamit during your trip. My current work is centered on teaching English and developing our educational model for the future.

For me, I must start with a personal thank you. The impact of people - who in the eyes of our students have so much - taking time out of their lives to give back was a truly special experience and sparked some wonderfully insightful conversation on their part. Many important seeds were planted during your trip in regards to service and I hope to be around long enough to watch them grow.

Throughout your week in Guatemala I was fortunate to speak with you all in a variety of capacities and contexts, and share both our stories and visions of the world. Doing a year of volunteer work with Ak'Tenamit has been one of the more rewarding experiences of my life. While I do not exactly know where my next stop on the journey will be, I am concentrating on the present, learning from the past, and envisioning the future. As each of you had mentioned to me in our conversations, it just might be that Rotary and I could work together to create some more positive change in the world.

However, this e-mail would not be just if I did not reiterate how much it meant to the entire Ak-Tenamit community (one that you too are a part of) the work, energy, and attitudes your entire group brought to us. It was a well needed reminder of how a small group of people can do so much with the right attitude and in turn inspire others to do the same.

My very best wishes to you all and safe journeys,

Jesse Schauben-Fuerst
Professor of English and International Development Advisor
Ak'Tenamit

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Birmingham Convention

The RI Convention is now only 15 weeks out. The website link for hotels in Birmingham is: hotels.

Birmingham continues to be a bargain. The pound has dropped as low as $1.27 and continues to fluctuate on the low side. This is down from almost $2.00; and the conventional (no pun) wisdom of the day is that it will continue its attractiveness right through the time of our convention. The exchange rates are approaching historical lows and provide an opportunity of a life time to visit, shop and tour the British Isles. Remember, Birmingham is the jewelry capital of Britain (you might recall the Brits’ ties to South African diamond mining), so this is definitely something not to be missed ...

The convention itself will be a very special event located in one of the most historic English-speaking countries in the world. There is so much to do and see that you will have pick and choose for the time available to you. It has become a bargain venue that is truly special with some of the best of England’s history at our beck and call -- from Shakespeare to Warwick Castle to whole of the British Isles: Scotland – Ireland – Wales.

President D. K. Lee has organized an entertaining and information-packed program including a Presidential Recognition Luncheon, to be held on Monday, June 22nd, for all current club presidents. This will be a very special event, so encourage your club president to attend.

This is a significant event for Rotarians to attend, sure to have an impact on you. Please visit www.rotary.org for more information.

This is our chance to turn the tables and invade England!!
We’re On to Birmingham -- see you there!

Rotary International's Best Cooperative Project Award

Every day, Rotary clubs work in concert with local governments, businesses, and other organizations to bring much needed improvements to people and communities both at home and abroad. In that spirit, Rotary International will recognize club service projects, done with other organizations, with the Best Cooperative Project Award. The award honors clubs that have increased awareness and understanding of Rotary by working with other organizations.

Eligible projects must be service activities that address a humanitarian need.

Winning projects will receive a special certificate and may be included in future Rotary publications or publicity materials.

Districts must submit applications to RI Headquarters in Evanston postmarked no later than 15 April 2009.

For more information please visit this site: http://www.rotary.org/en/Members/RunningAClub/Announcements/Pages/BestCooperativeProjectsAward.aspx

Download the application form and guidelines here:
http://www.rotary.org/en/Members/GeneralInformation/Awards/Pages/Awardsforclubs.aspx

For questions, please contact RI's External Relations Department at ers@rotary.org.

Humanitarian Mission

In January of 2009 three Rotarians from the Libertyville Sunrise Rotary Club traveled with Rotarians from Pasadena, California and a medical/humanitarian mission group from Libertyville to rural Umuagwo, Nigeria.

Our mission was to do three things. First, we were traveling as part of a 13-member medical team that would serve medical and dental needs for over 3,000 rural farmers and their families: the poorest of the poor. They have no easy access to medical or dental care, nor the means to pay for it. Ohaji Medical Center is located about an hour’s drive from the closest city, Owerri, where our team’s hotel was located. The members of this farming community are in desperate need of healthcare and the crowds we encountered were larger than anything the team had experienced previously. Hundreds of mothers with sick children, the elderly who were too weak to fight themselves to the head of the line, young people with HIV/AIDS, adults and children with skin infections, tumors, malaria, wounds of all kinds, diabetes, hypertension, goiter and deformities met us daily. Some slept on the hospital grounds for three days before they were seen. We brought with us 29 trunks of medical supplies and life-saving medicines, donated from various organizations in America. We used mission funds to buy antimalarial medicines and lumber for building projects. The weather was hot and the stories we heard were heartbreaking to Americans who are used to the finest healthcare in the world. We labored together to serve over 500 patients per day, and made lists of surgical candidates that would receive free surgery immediately as well as long after we were gone. All of our services and medicines were donated free of charge. Our hosts, Dr. and Mrs. Okechuckwu Elisha-Wigwe, were gracious and generous hosts who were very grateful for our services to their people. By far he most valuable thing we brought was hope and encouragement.

The second aim of our mission trip was to bring ways to stimulate the economy in this impoverished region. Jobs are scarce in this area, with over 30% of Nigerian college youth being unemployed. Most of our patients were subsistence farmers and their families. Just as our first goal targeted one of the millennial developmental goals of improving maternal/child health in the region, our second goal targeted poverty reduction. Making an impact in communities devastated by poverty and AIDS requires a multi faceted approach, which we have utilized on past mission ventures. This year, two Rotary sponsored projects were chosen from those shown at the 2008 Rotary International convention in Los Angeles. The first was a biomass project: converting trash and other biodegradable items indigenous to the region into useable fuel. Rotarian Bob Zamor taught local students at Imo State Polytechnic College how the Peterson Press trash compactor works and challenged them to develop a formula or recipe from this region that would provide an optimal fuel briquette that could be easily produced by individuals or groups. The college’s rector, Dr. Anderson Amadioha, was delighted with the project and students were very excited about the potential they saw in this innovative project. Professor Amadioha has invited Rotarians to return later this year to help develop their school’s training program, using research the students will develop over the coming months.

The second Rotary project was taught by team member Tom Rodriguez and Rotarian John Frykenberg from the Altadena Rotary Club in Pasadena. Glasses for Missions provides eyeglass making kits and training materials to help budding entrepreneurs make a pair of reading glasses for 45 cents out of bicycle spoke wire and Lucite lenses made in China. Eye problems are rampant in this region and the few dozen pair of glasses that our team brought with us went very quickly. Our missioners were able to demonstrate the process to both local students at Imo State Polytech as well as to government dignitaries, chiefs and tribal kings in Owerri.

The program was enthusiastically received and several groups have requested more formal training programs and additional kits to begin making these eyeglasses.

Besides helping Tom with the eyeglass training project, John also served as a sort of team ambassador to our host Rotary club: the Rotary Club of Owerri. He spoke at several meetings about the short and long term benefits of instituting small business training to the youth in the area. We were able to bring an expert, Dr Sunday Agang in from Kaduna state, where he had successfully helped to implement a similar program that was successfully piloted in Jos and is now being taught in many secondary schools in the area, giving local youth skills to start their own small businesses. The Altadena club sponsored this project several years ago and it has been an enormous success. Both this and our entrepreneurial projects were met with great interest in Owerri and the Ohaji community.

Rotarian and dentist Dr. Anthony Collins and his 11 year old daughter Shea were valuable members of our medical team. Tony was our team’s dentist and Shea was a pharmacy runner, dental assistant, errand girl and all around team encourager who made friends wherever she went. The weather was hot and the conditions difficult to work in, but Tony and Shea persevered enthusiastically and made many friends. When things got hot and frustrating for the adults, all we had to do was look at Shea to remind ourselves of why we were there. She kept her focus on loving others and it made us all smile every day. Her father performed over 200 dental procedures, mostly extractions. He and Tom had to build dental chairs and set up a dental clinic first, and later constructed a beautiful operating room table to replace the old one at Ohaji. The operating suite became half dental clinic, half OR and was the hub of nonstop activity daily. Many of the poor clients had never before seen a dentist. The Sunrise club had provided us with a suction machine that will make a big difference to Dr. Okey as he performs surgery in the future. Things that Americans take for granted every day are rare luxuries in rural Africa, and greatly appreciated. A set of basic surgical instruments donated in 2006 has saved many lives since it was received, most of whom were women and children.

My name is Teri Dreher and I was the team’s newest Rotarian, as well as Co-Leader of the trip, along with my dear friend Wendy Coulter. Wendy and I have been taking teams to Ohaji since 2006 and enjoy watching the changes that we’ve been privileged to help bring to this impoverished community. A new borehole was drilled in 2007, providing fresh water to thousands of residents who used to buy water from local water merchants, or drink contaminated water if they could not afford fresh. We’ve seen improvement in overall health and great reductions in diseases associated with contaminated drinking water since the well was drilled. A renovated doctor’s apartment, hospital bathrooms and showers, and a new generator for the well have brought about further improvements in healthcare delivery. The hospital has been painted, the roof repaired and mosquito screens provided in the past year as well. Small changes make a big difference in Africa and the gratitude our patients show us is touching beyond words. Instead of being irritated by long waits, when the elderly would finally make it into my office, many would be full of gratitude for medicines and care, praising God for our arrival. They brought us gifts of fresh fruit and vegetables every day to thank us.

The third goal of our mission was to build meaningful relationships with Rotarians and leaders in this region that will strengthen our efforts to further develop Ohaji Medical Center and bring improvements to this region. We are all about Making Dreams Real for impoverished African communities. Seeing the difference that Rotarians can make was truly an awe-inspiring experience. The Rotary Club of Owerri greeted us warmly and hosted a dinner meeting where we were guests. Rounds of applause and laughter greeted us when we showed up in traditional Nigerian dress (thanks to our generous hosts) and sang a well known song in their tribal language, Igbo. We were delighted to meet members who had helped us with a Rotary Volunteer Service Grant application a few months ago, and met leaders who showed interest in working together on future endeavors. Having a good working relationship with international partners is so important. We have truly been blessed in knowing Dr. Okey, Professor Amadioha and the Rotary Club of Owerri, Nigeria.

We’re grateful for all of our friends who have been helping us Make Dreams Real at Ohaji Medical Center. The dear people we have come to care about in Umuagwo have become like an extended family over the years and we’re anxious to continue the work that has begun. New construction at the hospital, medical equipment, food preparation areas and waste disposal facilities are their greatest needs at this time. We hope that future mission trips to this region will involve even more Rotarians, and we can bring even more hope to this region of Nigeria.

Sunday, March 1, 2009

Short-Term Youth Exchange

Needed: Short-term exchange partners for 20 German students, age 15 through 18, who would like to come to the U. S. this summer.

What is the Short-term Exchange Program (STEP)? It is a program that gives students age 15 to 19 the opportunity to experience a cultural exchange in a foreign country for a time period of four weeks to six months, instead of a whole year. This is preferably done on a reciprocal basis.

What is the Responsibility of the U. S. Club When Hosting a STEP Student? a) The hosting club needs to meet District (6440) and RI policy. b) The hosting club YEO has to visit, interview and qualify a host family and have them fill out the CSRYE Host Family Application Form (background check required). c) The hosting club enrolls the student into the school and the school lunch program, if the exchange takes place during the school year.

What is the Cost for the U. S. Club When Hosting a STEP Student? The cost for the hosting club is limited to school enrollment fees and school lunches, if the student is hosted when school is in session. It is strongly recommended to invite both the inbound and outbound student to a Rotary meeting for the club members getting to know them and to have them give a report about the exchange. All other expenses are paid by the student.

What is the Responsibility of the U. S. Club When Sending a STEP Student? The sending club has to make sure that the student that wants to go abroad fills out the R. I. short-term application. Then the youth exchange officer of the sending club has to interview and qualify the student for the exchange and forward the application to the Short-term Youth Exchange Chair.

What is the Cost for the Club When Sending a STEP Student? There is no cost for the sending club. All expenses are paid by the student.

What is the Cost for the Student? Students pay for the airline ticket and spending money and need to have adequate insurance. Processing fee for the application is $ 50.00.

Contact for More Information: Rick Kuehn, STYE Chair District 6440 (phone 847-356-2834 ; Cell : 847-417-5252 ; e-mail rickkuehn_stye@juno.com ).

Why is This Program So Attractive to Clubs and Host Families? The time commitment is much shorter for the clubs and for the families involved. There is little or no cost involved for the clubs.

Benefit of the Reciprocal Exchange: It simplifies the exchange. The outbound student’s family will be the hosting family for the inbound. It doubles the cultural experience, because the students of both countries are together for a longer period of time. It can be assumed that the host family in the other country will do for your child what they hope you will do for theirs. Lifelong international friendships are formed.