the rotary foundation and district 5580 - 2012

Post on 17-May-2015

148 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

An overview of The Rotary Foundation and Rotary International District 5580 projects and initiatives (created in 2012 for the Fargo-Moorhead AM Rotary Club)

TRANSCRIPT

Foundation

on PresentationAAnnual Giving

The Rotary

2011-12

EVERY ROTARIAN, EVERY YEAR

OUR ROTARY FOUNDATION

The RotaryFoundation

Enables Rotarians to:Advance world understanding

goodwill and peace through the improvement of health, the support of education and the alleviation of

poverty.

Rotary’sUS$200 Million

Challenge

National Immunization DayAgra, India

Children < 6 immunized 6x / yrROTARY & UNICEF with

Rotarians from District 5580, Northern Israel & Australia

How your donations

travelaround the

world

Investment EarningsInvestment Earnings

District Designated Fund(DDF)

District Designated Fund(DDF)

TRF Program Funding

TRF Program Funding

SHARESHARE

World FundWorld Fund

RotarianContributionsRotarianContributions

How Your Contributions Work to Support the Rotary Foundation

TRF Program Funding

TRF Program FundingRotarian

ContributionsRotarianContributions

Straight to fight polio ->

How Your Contributions Work to Support the Rotary Foundation

TRF Program Funding

TRF Program FundingRotarian

ContributionsRotarianContributions

Donation Held / Invested

How Your Contributions Work to Support the Rotary Foundation

TRF Program Funding

TRF Program FundingRotarian

ContributionsRotarianContributions

Annual Gifts to TRF

How Your Contributions Work to Support the Rotary Foundation

Investment EarningsInvestment Earnings

TRF Program Funding

TRF Program Funding

SHARESHARERotarianContributionsRotarianContributions

How Your Contributions Work to Support the Rotary Foundation

Investment EarningsInvestment Earnings

District Designated Fund(DDF)

District Designated Fund(DDF)

TRF Program Funding

TRF Program Funding

SHARESHARE

World FundWorld Fund

RotarianContributionsRotarianContributions

How Your Contributions Work to Support the Rotary Foundation

SHARESHARERotarianContributionsRotarianContributions

Your EREY & PHF contributions are held by TRF for 3 years

Annual Programs Fund

How Your Contributions Work to Support the Rotary Foundation

District Designated Fund(DDF)

District Designated Fund(DDF)

TRF Program Funding

TRF Program Funding

SHARESHARE

World FundWorld Fund

RotarianContributionsRotarianContributions

Your EREY & PHF contributions are held by TRF for 3 years

Annual Programs Fund

After 3 years, 50% goes to your District Designated Fund, and 50% goes to the World Fund

50%

50%

How Your Contributions Work to Support the Rotary Foundation

Future Vision Areas of Focus Selected by The Trustees for TRF Program Funding

• D5580 has had just 2 Peace Scholars ‘02/’03 & ‘04/’05

• Partnered with eight leading universities around the world, establishing 7 Rotary Centers

• To advance knowledge and world understanding among potential future leaders

Rotary Centers forInternational Studies

Rotary Centers forInternational Studies

Karla Berg from Walker, MN, 2002-03 Rotary Peace Scholar

now working in Africa

Steven Houghton, 2004-05 Rotary Peace Scholar for

District 5580

Rotary Centers forInternational Studies

• Provides travel grants for teams to exchange visits between paired areas in different countries

• A team consists of four non-Rotarian young professionals and one Rotarian who leads the group

• All Rotarians are eligible to apply as team leaders

Group StudyExchange

D5580 2000 GSE Team to Sweden

• Established in 1947 to further international understanding

• Among the world's largest privately funded international scholarship programs

• More than 39,760 scholars from over 115 countries have served as ambassadors of goodwill

AmbassadorialScholarships*

*not applicable to FV Pilot DistrictsGreg Tehven

District 5580 2012-2013

Rotary Ambassadorial

Scholars

Clint Schmidt, PhDSon of Herb and Bonnie

SchmidtFargo Moorhead AM

Rotary Club

• A District Simplified Grant (DSG) is a tool Rotary districts utilize to support short-term, humanitarian projects that benefit the community

• Funded thru District Designated Funds (DDF) to support projects locally or internationally

• D5580 requests $25,000 of their annual DDF in DSG funds

District

Grants*Simplified

*not applicable to FV Pilot Districts

May 17, 2007 Dedication Ceremony

The Fargo Park District built this facility in 2008 naming it the Rotary Shelter to honor the four Rotary clubs for their contribution to the community

Second Harvest Food Van sponsored by: Grand Rapids, Walker, Hibbing, International Falls, Virginia, Central Lakes Rotary Clubs DSG Project 09.1.03

International Falls Community Kitchen DSG 10.1.02 completed in 2010

Baudette Rotary’s Ambulance project – DSG 10.2.12

TRF Matching Grant of $15,500 for braces to help Congolese children affected by polio.

Go to www.StandProud.org to see more.

Stand ProudThe Rotary Clubs

of Fargo Moorhead

• Matches contributions raised by Rotary clubs and districts for international service projects involving Rotary clubs in two or more countries

• Over US$342 million spent on 30,560 grants in 199 countries since 1965

Grants*Matching

*not applicable to FV Pilot Districts

D5580 India projects since 2005:• 25 computers to Rajus College computer lab $14,640 -

06.2.04 MG • Desks & furnishing to Rajapalayam matriculation school

$19,512 - 07.3.03 MG • Desks & furnishings to Meenakshipuram school $18,605

- 09.2.08 MG • Classroom additions to Rajapalayam Matriculation

school (two additions) $26,062 - 10.1.05 WCS • Water supply to 10 schools in 20 Km radius of

Rajapalayam $17,660 - 11.1.01 MG • Furnish 1,000 desks to 57 schools in 40 Km radius of

Rajapalayam $41,500 - 12.2.04 MG

Rajapalayam, India

Project to furnish 25 computers for Rajus University

Rtn. Dan Ratnasamy powers up computer

Sweet Water Wells Guskara, India

Thunder Bay, Fort William & Guskara Clubs

3-H Grants*• Funds long-term, self-help

grassroots development projects too large for one club or district to implement on their own

• Since 1978, 340 projects have been funded at a cost of US$88 million

*not applicable to FV Pilot Districts

Choquechampi Agricultural Water Reservoir in Bolivia sponsored by Harbortown Rotary & partners (Duluth Club 25, Duluth Skyline, Superior and Walker Rotary).

Like most high country villages, Choquechampi,

Guatemala, receives 3 months of torrential rains and 9 months of

drought annually; thus the need for

a reservoir

Choquechampi Agricultural Water Reservoir in Bolivia sponsored by Harbortown Rotary & partners (Duluth Club 25, Duluth Skyline, Superior and Walker Rotary).

• The reservoir levee project involved construction of a 120’ high, 330 ‘ deep earthen levee which holds rain water that flows down surrounding mountains into a natural ravine.

• Built on public lands that belong to the community in clay and rock bottom terrain that will prevent water from seeping into the ground below.

• Water is released from the reservoir via a 12” pipe controlled by a valve.

• When full, the reservoir will hold 700,000 cu meters of water

• 4,800 inhabitants will benefit and 1,600 acres can be irrigated.

This project was completed in the fall of 2010

• Every club will set its APF & Permanent Fund goals

• Suggested Annual Programs Fund goals:– 100 % Member Participation – US$100 per capita– 10-15 % Increase

The RotaryFoundation

The RotaryFoundation

Enables Rotarians to:Advance world understanding

goodwill and peace Through the improvement of health,

the support of education and the alleviation of poverty.

•“What an impact this wonderful organization has had on my life! I can hold my head high and say... •I helped to …

– eliminate Polio; – educate thousands of students;– build numerous houses, schools,

medical clinics; – I am helping promote peace and

global understanding. •I am doing all of this because I am a Rotarian! “ - Mary Q. Garrison

Wilber Rotary Club District 5650

How D5580 spends its DDF:• Typically with 3,200 Rotarians, D5580 gives

$320,000 each year to TRF APF . . . 3 years later $160,000 is returned in the form of DDF

• Ambassadorial Scholarships @ $27,000 ea• Peace Scholarship funded by TRF World Fund• GSE Team @ $13,000/team roughly• Polio Plus commitment 20% = $32,000• District Simplified Grants @ $25,000/yr• Matching Grants (average $33,000/year) +

unspent funds carried over from previous years

• TOTAL = $160,000/yr

District 5580 WCS Grants

World Community Service Grants are exclusive to D5580• Adopted at the General Assembly of D5580

Presidents in May 1998 (Gary Nolte’s year as DG)• Funds raised for D5580’s WCS are strictly for

International “Bricks & Mortar” Projects.• Began with a $10/D5580 Rotarian annual dues,

thus raising roughly $33,000/year• In May 2009 at General Assembly (Minot), the

dues were raised to $15/Rotarian/year, thus raising approximately $48,000/year.

• Every club will set its APF & Permanent Fund goals

• Suggested Annual Programs Fund goals:– 100 % Member Participation – US$100 per capita– 10-15 % Increase

Gracias Amigos Rotary!

60% Indigenous Mayans

23 Mayan Languages

70% of rural population livesbelow the poverty level

Mission Goals

• Building schools (11 to date), school classroom additions, and school improvements

• Corn mill grinding machines (3 to date) and water projects (9 to date)

• Library books and instruction materials for classrooms (3 MG Projects to date through Wahpeton Rotary)

• Cultural Exchange• Fellowship

Guatemala Facts

• Average Life Expectancy – 66.85 yrs• Per capita income - $3,700• Infant Mortality Rate – 44.55/1,000 births• Literacy – 63.6% over age 15• 95% of Wealth is owned by 16 families• Population below poverty line – 60%• Inflation rate – 7.6%• Income – Adoption, Coffee & Tourism

District 5580 reaching out to District 4250 (Guatemala, Honduras & Belize)

Computer Lab building added to school in Zacualpa (highlands of Guatemala) through donation of Rotarian Rita Krank of Dickinson Rotary

School in Chixocol

2 story/4-classroom addition to Chixocol (4 Km from Zacualpa)

Repaint and Thin No More!!

Mas Café…1000 lbs.

Pack it up and take it home. With the proceeds, we’ll build another school.

Medical Clinic/Pharmacy 2003

Project Foreman Edwin (eth-ween’)

Grand Opening of the Clinic in May 2003

San Felipe la Tabla Clinic as it looks today

El Rodeo School - 2004

El Rodeo School - 2004

Dedication of the El Rodeo Escuela in August 2005

El Rodeo Escuela dedication ceremony (Aug ’05)

Lake Atitlan (from 2500 feet). The lake is 8 miles by 15 miles and it’s depth is 1,100 feet!

San JuanLa Laguna

Paul Embleton

The 1st Step was tro build a boat-ambulance dock

The 2011 WCS Project … the El Dormido School replacing a school destroyed in June 2010 by Pacific based Hurricane Agatha.

Gracias Amigos Rotary!

Very Muy Utz!

Rotary District 5580 in Guatemala

This Clinic was built in Cantar Gallo, Bolivia sponsored by Duluth Harbortown Rotary and partners working with the NGO Mano a Mano.

RAJAPALAYAM SCHOOL PROJECT ~ FARGO/MOORHEAD CLUBS / RAJAPALAYAM

RAJAPALAYAM SCHOOL PROJECTCAUTION : ROTARIANS AT WORK

RAJAPALAYAM SCHOOL PROJECT

INDIA PROJECTS FOR FUTURE CONSIDERATION ~MEENAKSHIPURAM SECONDARY SCHOOL

• The Meenakshipuram schoolbegan with 54 students in 1984, as of 2010 they had 866 students with classrooms sized for 450 maximum, so they run a double shift

• Cost of a new 8 classroom structure with administration offices and latrines is estimated at $108,000.

• The community of Meenakshipuram has pledged $33,000

• The Rajapalayam Rotary has pledged $10,000

• D5580 is hoping to raise the remaining $65,000 by 2013/2014 when Future Vision takes place for all districts world wide.

• A partnership with 5580 Rotary Clubs is formally requested.

ROTARYFacilitating Goodwill, Peace & Positive Change

in the World One Project at a Time“As Rotarians we must accept responsibility to address the problems faced by our community and other communities around the world. Rotary does not ask us to become heroes or do the impossible. Rotary is made up of ordinary people inclined to give selflessly. By giving a little of our time, a little of our goodwill and a little of our knowledge and expertise, Rotarians can make a difference. It may not be possible for us to wipe away all the tears in the world, but we can surely try.” Ajit Arom DG 3240 India

top related