Rotary District 6290
Monthly e-Bulletin
   

Volume 1 | Issue 6

 
Stories
New Beginnings of Lemonade
Rotary International District Governor, Jon Catlin
 
New Beginnings of Lemonade
 
July 1 – Happy Canada Day, July 4th Happy Independence Day, July 12 Happy Birthday to our very own rock star and Chief Administrative Officer, Kathy Hegedus and also Rotary International First Lady Susanne Knaack.
 
July 1st in the Rotary Year is a new year, a new start, and therefore a new beginning. Welcome to 2020-2021 Rotary Year where Rotary Opens Opportunities. I love the theme, it has personal meaning to me.  As Rotary International President Holger Knaack stated “Everything we do opens another opportunity for someone, somewhere.” Through the many kind interactions, invitations, and friendships I am humbled to be the District Governor for this year.
 
RI President Knaack, has stated for this year he would love to see clubs take on three initiatives:
  1. Sometime this year to have a Strategic Meeting and determine what you would like your Club to look like in 3-5 years and then plan on how to get to that point.
  2. Engagement of Members- Instead of always looking at adding members to meet numbers, look at the current members and how do we engage them more with the Club. Also, anytime you add a new member make sure that they are a good fit for the Club and will be an engaged member!
  3. End Polio – We are so close (imagine my hand up with my thumb and pointer finger just a few millimeters away from each other). We have made a promise to the world and we must fulfill our promise of a Polio free world for the children of the world.
I agree with President Knaack and believe that he has Rotary’s short term and long term best interest at heart. We all need to look inwardly at the Club level from time to time and make sure we have a vision and purpose that we can get behind. We all want Club members that volunteer readily for the meetings, activities and projects and I believe that everyone would agree that getting rid of Polio would be a wonderful, historic opportunity for mankind!
 
This year in Rotary we are still reeling from the effect of COVID-19 in our daily lives. We have been given a bunch of lemons over the last four or five months. Our world has been turned upside down, we have been given a new normal, although we don’t know where that will end up yet. Rotarians have risen to the challenge. Or as my mom and dad taught me, have made lemonade out of lemons. I have been impressed in my few Governor visits so far of the people that while still practicing social distancing have been able to do projects in their communities, fundraising is still happening and Club meetings are slowly starting to return to in person meeting. Whether it is at a park, a pavilion, or back to the place where your Club normally meets, it was wonderful to see Rotarians sharing fellowship again. Not all Clubs are doing that yet, some are still in Zoom meetings and that is fine also! Everyone needs to feel comfortable in moving forward. I truly believe that for this Rotary year and behind most Clubs will have an in-person component as well as a virtual component. We have been able to remain engaged with our members that were snowbirds, that were housebound, that did not feel comfortable going outside.
 
I hope that all of you are able to spend time outside this summer enjoying the sunshine, the flowers, the beautiful nature and fresh water that surrounds us in a safe manner. This is a time for us to recharge our batteries and enjoy where we choose to live and volunteer to make a better place in the world. As for me I am going to go have a glass of lemonade. J
 

 

Meet Rotarian Diane Marshall
 
Meet a retired educator who has turned to volunteer work - and plenty of it
Feb 11, 2020 12:30 PM By: Zaafina Naqvi
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Diane Marshall was one of the first local women invited to join Rotary
 
 
This June will mark Diane Marshall’s 30th year as a Rotary club member, and she has had a number of memorable experiences during her time so far.
Marshall — a retired school superintendent and educator — was asked to join the Rotary club in 1990.
 
“At that time they were just beginning to invite women to join,” Marshall said. “There were four of us that were inducted and I am the only one remaining of those four. They left for various reasons, one moved away and the other two resigned, but I’ve continued on.”
Marshall says that the club’s motto of 'Service Above Self' is foremost in her mind while working on projects both within the community and throughout the world.
 
“We help children with physical difficulties and disabilities, so we are a strong supporter of Thrive, the rehab centre for children on Johnson Avenue. A major project has been the playground at Bellevue Park, which allows physically disabled children to enjoy the equipment as well. The sensory section continues to be especially popular for the younger children. So we were the ones that initiated that and carried through with that. There’s so many others that we’re involved in within the community. They’re wonderful projects to work for,” she said.
Marshall has not only been a part of local projects, but international projects as well.
 
“Right now one of our top priorities is the elimination of polio,” Marshall told SooToday. “We’re almost there, we just have a couple of countries that are giving us some problems because of the political situations there. Once we’ve eliminated the disease and the world remains free of the virus for 3 years, we’ll be then able to declare victory over polio. But we’ve been working diligently on that program since the 80s and we’re getting close but we haven’t quite made it yet. The other projects are water, sanitation and literacy.”
A few of the assignments that she has participated in have stood out in her memory.
 
“I’ve had the wonderful opportunity to take part in the immunization program in India. So I went to India and took part in that, just to assist the people working in the various centers there. There was a group of us and we did that in the year 2000. I also went on a water project to Honduras and we put water filtration systems within a mountain village there,” Marshall said. “Then in 2010 I led a group of young female professionals and we were assigned the country of Norway, and spent a month there with various Rotary clubs. So I’ve had some wonderful experiences at the international level.”
“Now, and for the last four years, I’ve been Assistant Governor for the Great Northern Region of District #6290, which includes the two clubs in Sault Ste. Marie, two clubs in Soo Michigan plus The Wawa Rotary Club and Blind River Club,” she said.
 
Aside from her work with the Rotary Club, Marshall is the Christmas Cheer convener and has done that since 2004. She is chair of her church council at Central United Church, serves on the Emergency Department’s Patient and Family Advisory Council for Sault Area Hospital, and is on the Fundraising Committee for Habitat for Humanity.
 
Marshall is continuing to leave her mark on the city of Sault Ste. Marie and the world. “I just feel blessed that I am able to contribute to our community and beyond.”
ClubRunner and Club Administration Training with CAO, Kathy Hegedus
 
Starting January 14, 2020 at 7:00 p.m., I will be offering monthly ClubRunner and Club Administration training via Zoom.  This will be an interactive session for any and all Rotarians but specifically, club secretaries ,club administrators and anyone considering a leadership position in your club.  In January we will be covering the My ClubRunner area.  
 
 My ClubRunner
Edit My Profile
Change My Password
Upload My Photo
My Commitments
My New Member Activities 
My Friends
View Club Directory
View Club Photo Directory
eDirectory Reports 2.0
View Printable Mailing Labels 
Email Message Centre 
View Club Documents
My Attendance
My Committees
My Billing Account Balance
 
 
For those of you that are interested, please contact me at the district office to reserve your place.  I am looking forward to this fun and informative training session in the comfort of your homes.  
 
kathyh@ridistrict6290.org  Office:  616-935-9559
 
 
Rotaract policy changes, what you should know

Recent Rotaract policy updates

The 2019 Council on Legislation amended the constitutional documents of Rotary International to include Rotaract clubs as a membership type. After this landmark decision in April, RI president Mark Maloney appointed the Elevate Rotaract Task Force, composed of Rotaractors and Rotarians, to recommend updates to policies to better reflect Rotaract’s newly elevated status. At every stage of the Task Force’s discussions, the critical goals were to learn what Rotaractors want from their membership and to give them every opportunity to shape these important policy decisions through surveys and focus groups.

To continue reading CLICK HERE

December is Disease Prevention and Treatment 
Disease Prevention & Treatment is the Rotary International Theme for the Month of December. To learn more about what is being done and what you can do, CLICK HERE             

 

December is Disease Prevention and Treatment Month

As you know, every month is dedicated to one of the major themes of our Rotary lives; this month the theme is that which RI is perhaps best known for, at least among non-Rotarians.
 
The eradication of polio has of course been Rotary International's s major worldwide, corporate effort since the early 1980’s.  And remarkable progress has been made.  The job is not finished however and you can rest assured that we will not, cannot, set this torch down until that job is finished.
 
Disease prevention and treatment is one of the Rotary Foundation Areas of Focus.  And for good reason.  The health and vitality of a person, a family and a community can be seriously impaired by what in many cases is a preventable disease.  Disease prevention is really a keystone to progress in other areas as well because of the interplay with other areas of focus like Water and Sanitation and Maternal & Child Health.
 
What can you do? 
See what Rotarians are doing in Disease Prevention and Treatment
Learn more about our efforts to End Polio
Check out the Water and Sanitation Rotarian Action Group (WASRAG). 
Browse Rotary Showcase for member projects helping to fight disease and see what other Rotarians and Clubs are doing. 
Or you can find a project to sponsor on Rotary Ideas.
 
You’re a Rotarian.  You’re a Difference Maker!
 
Thank you for all you do as we go forward this year and every year as we fulfill the goal and " Be the Inspiration "
November 2019 Convention News
 
 
      NOVEMBER 2019 CONVENTION NEWS
Hello to everyone who plans to join us at the Rotary International Convention in Honolulu, Hawaii, USA, 6-10 June 2020.

To help you plan your visit, this message has information about our convention program, tips about transportation, and more.

And don’t forget: 15 December is the last day for the early registration discount. Remind friends from your club to register soon so they don’t miss out!

Transportation
Rotary International is pleased to have United Airlines as our partner for air travel to the convention. Find out more.

In Honolulu, Rotary will provide a free, scheduled shuttle to and from official venues. Visit the Local Transportation page of riconvention.org to find other ways to get around Honolulu. It also has information about renting mobility scooters and wheelchairs.

Become a sponsor
Build awareness of your brand at the Rotary International Convention. We offer sponsorship and promotional opportunities at various levels that can be customized to your needs Learn more.

Look for messages in January and March for more details about what you’ll experience at the convention.
 
 
 
Hawaiian Concert at the Waikiki Shell
Celebrate Hawaiian culture and share in our Aloha by attending a concert at the historic Waikiki Shell on 9 June at 17:00. Performers include Hawaii’s own Nā Hōkū Hanohano award-winning musicians, like the Mākaha Sons and more, accompanied by hula dancers from the world-renown Merry Monarch Festival. Enjoy Hawaiian music and dancing during an enchanted evening under the stars.