this week at rotary . . . monday, july 29, 2019 vol. 91 no. 5 · 2019-07-25 · results. the past 3...

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ConƟnued on Page 3 By: Lois Elrich President Jean Maychack called the meeting to order at 12:10 pm. She informed the group that Clarence Bittner lost his daughter last week and asked everyone to keep him and his family in their thoughts and prayers. Bill Nance was invit- ed to give an invocation, 4-Way Test, Pledge to the Flag and News of the Day. The news focused on the Art of Painting and how it applied to the way the Rotary Group serves. Additional news was the foolish attempt of Roger Yost and his accomplice who tried to steal a 500# safe from a Moose Lodge but was unable to transport the safe because their mode of transportation was bicycles. Katie Klain noted that there were no visiting Rotarians and welcomed the day's guests. Neil Feldman, Lorna Dawes, Linda Groover, Troy Erbes, and Will Couts each intro- duced their respective guests. Katie then turned the podium over to Secretary Kim Bramlage. Secretary Kim reminded everyone of the Back to School initiative with Crayons to Classrooms that ends August 19th. She gave another friendly reminder of the clubs Dayton Dragons outing on August 10th at 7. $6 of every $12 ticket goes to the foundation. Kim also reminded us of the im- portance of supporting the Tour De Gem. She announced the birthday of 2 celebrants in attend- ance; Lisa Grigsby and Kelly Lehman and shared with us a True of False fact for each. Day-Tens began. The following members contributed to the THIS WEEK AT ROTARY . . . Monday, July 29, 2019 This Happened Last Monday . . . The meeting of August 5 will be held at the Sinclair Community College Earley Auditorium 12:00 Noon VOL. 91 NO. 5 Rotary Calendar July 24 Rotary Foundation Meeting 4:00 p.m. July 25 Board of Directors Meeting 12 Noon August 5 TBD August 10 Rotary District 6670 Night at the Dragons August 12 Randolph Russell, American History and Civics Literacy August 19 Richard Stock, University of Dayton August 22 Board of Directors Meeting 12 Noon August 26 John Heitmann, University of Dayton "Zen and the Art of Doing Automotive History Fast and Furiously." September 2 NO MEETING—LABOR DAY HOLIDAY September 9 Bridgette Federspiel, “Vietnam 50 Years Later” September 16 Ohio Treasurer Robert Sprague September 23 Lela Klein, Gem City Market September 26 Board of Directors Meeting 12 Noon LOOKING AHEAD . . . Speakers: A Panel of Restaurateurs Eric Soller-Old Scratch Pizza, Peter Wiley, Hot Head Burrito’s/Rapid Fired Pizza Karen Wick, Coco’s Bistro Liz Valenti, Wheat Penny Oven and Bar An enlightening discussion with local restaurant owners looking at changes and trends in the industry, the rise of fine casual dining, farm-to-table trends, staffing challeng- es, the effects of Yelp and online reviews, changing de- mographics of diners and the desire for experience driv- en dinners. Chair of the Day: Lisa Grigsby Today’s Meeting Assignments Invocation: Bill Nance News: Bill Nance Welcome Visitors: Lois Elrich SMILE: Cory Paul Badge Board: Mike Pabst Sergeant-at-Arms: Brad Roediger Nora Vondrell Greeters Mike Pabst Katie Klein Ty Sutton Kate Vriner

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Page 1: THIS WEEK AT ROTARY . . . Monday, July 29, 2019 VOL. 91 NO. 5 · 2019-07-25 · results. The past 3 years, we’ve ranked in the bottom cortile. Not all children receive the same

Con nued on Page 3

By: Lois Elrich President Jean Maychack called the meeting to order at 12:10 pm. She informed the group that Clarence Bittner lost his daughter last week and asked everyone to keep him and his family in their thoughts and prayers. Bill Nance was invit-ed to give an invocation, 4-Way Test, Pledge to the Flag and News of the Day. The news focused on the Art of Painting and how it applied to the way the Rotary Group serves. Additional news was the foolish attempt of Roger Yost and his accomplice who tried to steal a 500# safe from a Moose Lodge but was unable to transport the safe because their mode of transportation was bicycles. Katie Klain noted that there were no visiting Rotarians and welcomed the day's guests. Neil Feldman, Lorna Dawes, Linda Groover, Troy Erbes, and Will Couts each intro-duced their respective guests. Katie then turned the podium over to Secretary Kim Bramlage. Secretary Kim reminded everyone of the Back to School initiative with Crayons to Classrooms that ends August 19th. She gave another friendly reminder of the clubs Dayton Dragons outing on August 10th at 7. $6 of every $12 ticket goes to the foundation. Kim also reminded us of the im-portance of supporting the Tour De Gem. She announced the birthday of 2 celebrants in attend-ance; Lisa Grigsby and Kelly Lehman and shared with us a True of False fact for each. Day-Tens began. The following members contributed to the  

THIS WEEK AT ROTARY . . . Monday, July 29, 2019

  This Happened Last Monday . . .

     

   LOOKING      AHEAD . . . 

 

The meeting of August 5 will be held at the

Sinclair Community College Earley Auditorium

12:00 Noon

VOL. 91 NO. 5

Rotary Calendar

July 24 Rotary Foundation Meeting 4:00 p.m. July 25 Board of Directors Meeting 12 Noon August 5 TBD August 10 Rotary District 6670 Night at the Dragons August 12 Randolph Russell, American History and Civics Literacy August 19 Richard Stock, University of Dayton August 22 Board of Directors Meeting 12 Noon August 26 John Heitmann, University of Dayton "Zen and the Art of Doing Automotive History Fast and Furiously." September 2 NO MEETING—LABOR DAY HOLIDAY September 9 Bridgette Federspiel, “Vietnam 50 Years Later” September 16 Ohio Treasurer Robert Sprague September 23 Lela Klein, Gem City Market September 26 Board of Directors Meeting 12 Noon

  LOOKING AHEAD . . .

Speakers: A Panel of Restaurateurs Eric Soller-Old Scratch Pizza, Peter Wiley, Hot Head Burrito’s/Rapid Fired Pizza Karen Wick, Coco’s Bistro Liz Valenti, Wheat Penny Oven and Bar An enlightening discussion with local restaurant owners looking at changes and trends in the industry, the rise of fine casual dining, farm-to-table trends, staffing challeng-es, the effects of Yelp and online reviews, changing de-mographics of diners and the desire for experience driv-en dinners.

Chair of the Day: Lisa Grigsby

Today’s Meeting Assignments

Invocation: Bill Nance News: Bill Nance Welcome Visitors: Lois Elrich SMILE: Cory Paul Badge Board: Mike Pabst

Sergeant-at-Arms: Brad Roediger Nora Vondrell Greeters Mike Pabst Katie Klein Ty Sutton Kate Vriner

Page 2: THIS WEEK AT ROTARY . . . Monday, July 29, 2019 VOL. 91 NO. 5 · 2019-07-25 · results. The past 3 years, we’ve ranked in the bottom cortile. Not all children receive the same

Rotary Interna onal Theme   2019‐2020 

          

   

   

   

Sigrid Solomon District Governor 6670

Rotary Club of Wilmington AM   

The Mission of Rotary International  

To support its member clubs in fulfilling the Object of Rotary by:

Fostering unity among member clubs; Strengthening and expanding Rotary around the world; Communicating worldwide the work of Rotary; and providing a system of international administration.

  

The Mission of Dayton Rotary  

The Rotary Club of Dayton is a fellowship of diverse business and professional leaders who commit their time and talent to staying informed and serving the

club, the community and the world.  

 

Rotary Club of Dayton, Ohio 40 South Perry Street Suite 110

Dayton, Ohio 45402  

Phone: (937) 228-3331 Fax: (937) 331-5406

Email: [email protected] Website: www.daytonrotary.com

  

2019-2020 Officers and Directors  

Jean Maychack President Brian Martin President-Elect TBD Vice-President Kim Bramlage Secretary Randy Domigan Treasurer Rick Wegmann Immediate Past President Frank Scott Director (2020) Glenn Costie Director (2020) Shaun Yu Director (2021) Becky Benná Director (2021) Walt Hibner Director (2021) Laura E. Erbaugh Executive Director  

 PAGE 2 SMILE

Think about being asked to complete a writing assignment without having a pen or pencil.

Many children in our community face this situation every day when they go to school!

ROTARY CLUB OF DAYTON IS PARTNERING WITH

TO HOST A BACK-TO-

SCHOOL SUPPLY DRIVE!

Now through August 19th, you may bring your donations of basic school sup-plies to the Monday Rotary meetings

or drop them off at the Dayton Rotary Office. Please consider helping students in need as they head back to school this fall! Most requested items include:

Items collected through this supply drive will be placed on the shelves of Crayons to Classrooms, Dayton’s only teacher resource center—a “free store” for Dayton-area teachers to supply local classrooms in need. Teachers that qualify can visit Crayons to Classrooms, “shop” for supplies, and return them to their classrooms and students at no cost. Thanks for your participation!

Crayons (24-count)  Pens 

Colored Pencils  Pencils 

Filler Paper  Glue Sticks 

Notebooks  Rulers 

Pocket Folders  Washable Markers 

Construction Paper  Scissors 

Page 3: THIS WEEK AT ROTARY . . . Monday, July 29, 2019 VOL. 91 NO. 5 · 2019-07-25 · results. The past 3 years, we’ve ranked in the bottom cortile. Not all children receive the same

Day-Tens. Jimmy Leach – Day $10 – announced he is the new music director for St. Paul’s Episcopal Church. Luke Dennis – Day $20 – announced the collection Voices for Veterans – Story Corps. Lisa Grigsby– Day $100 for Paul Harris for her birthday and invited the group to beer tasting at The Greene. Kelly Lehman – Day $100 for her birthday and moving back to 45402 after purchasing a home in the Wright Dunbar Area. Steve Naas – Day 23 – son received his 1st job in his field at Reynoldsburg Middle School. Greg Birkemeyer—Day $52 x 3 – reminded the group about eradicating Polio; there are 52 cases this year. DeNeal Feldman – Day 10 – celebrating 66 years of marriage. Jean Maychack– Day $20 – her stepson, Brad Ratliff received position at UD and is now a ten-ured professor.

Secretary Kim turned the podium over to President Jean, who reminded the group to sign up for a com-mittee – service is what we are all about – serve your community and your world. She turned the podium over to Shannon Isom who introduced new Rotary member Jena Pado. Holly Wiggins, Chair of the Day, introduced speaker Debbie Feldman, President and CEO, Dayton Chil-dren’s Hospital. In 2012 Debbie joined the hospital as the 4th president. She serves on many boards includ-ing, but not limited to, the Dayton Chamber of Com-merce and Dayton Art Institute.

Debbie spoke about the State of Children’s Health referring to the fundamental issue overall of the health of the children in our community. Research is show-ing that childhood conditions are turning into adult chronic diseases. HPIO think tank in Columbus focus-es on the health for the state. Our outcomes are de-clining, and costs are increasing. We are spending more dollars now on health cared and getting worse results. The past 3 years, we’ve ranked in the bottom cortile. Not all children receive the same healthcare. Debbie shared many statics. Some, but not all, were 42 out of 44 African Americans children receive less than white children. Half of children ages 0 – 11 are obese; 15% of children experience adverse childhood experiences. Brain research shows a direct relation-ship of adverse childhood experiences into adult health conditions and disease and effecting mental health as well. 1 in 6 children need mental health services. Suicide is the 2nd cause of death among children. 14% of children will create a plan to commit suicide and 7% of those children will attempt to do it. That means 9000 of our children in our community plan to attempt suicide.

Dayton Children’s Hospital has 3 main focuses: 1. Mental and physical health, 2. Chronic disease, 3. Maternal and infant health. Doctors and Hospital (what happens in the walls of their facilities) have a 20% impact on improving these areas for children. The conditions of housing, greenspace, adult behavior impact 80% of their overall mental and behavioral health; all the influences outside the walls impacts these children. The hospitals new vision is to have a relentless pursuit for optimal health for all children in our community. ...continued on page 4

  This Happened

Last Monday . . .

 PAGE 3 SMILE

 

 

 

       

Phil Parks Joe Zehenny Jenny Lewis 513-916-0020 297-6869 208-2247 July 30 July 30 August 1

Dick Hattershire 431-4356 August 3

Our Sympathy Our sympathy to Rotarian Charlie Simms and his family on the recent loss of his mother. If you would like to send Charlie a note of sympa-thy you may do so to their home address. 2785 Orchard Run Rd, Dayton Ohio 45449

 

Tuesday, September 17, 2019

6:00 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. At the Home of Rotarian Becky Benná

8 Fairwood Drive Miamisburg 45342 (Pipestone Golf Course)

Refreshments will be Served

This is a ROTARIANS ONLY - FREE EVENT. Limited to 25 Rotarians

Reservations to [email protected]

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 PAGE 4 SMILE

 PAGE 4 SMILE

Rotary Book Club Our next book...

The Deepest Well Healing the Long-Term Effects of Childhood

Adversity By: Dr. Nadine Burke Harris

A pioneering physician reveals how childhood stress can lead to lifelong health problems and shows us what we can do

to break the cycle. Two-thirds of us have experienced at least one adverse childhood experience, or ACE, such as abuse, neglect, parental substance dependence, or mental illness. Even though these events may

have occurred long ago, they have the power to haunt us long into adulthood, and now we have found that they may even contribute to

ifelong illness. Dr. Nadine Burke Harris, the founder/CEO of the Center for Youth Wellness and recipient of the Arnold P. Gold Foundation

Humanism in Medicine Award, expands on similar topics as in her popular TED talk as she demystifies the connection between adversity and ill

health. After surveying more than 17,000 adult patients, she found that the higher a person's ACE score, the worse their health. This lead Burke Harris to an astonishing breakthrough - childhood stress changes our

neural systems, and its impact lasts a lifetime.

Please join us at our next meeting Tuesday, September 10, 2019, 6:00 - 8:00 PM

at Flyboys Deli—2515 Far Hills Avenue

Queen of Hearts Raffle

 

weekly at Monday Meetings to benefit the

Dayton Rotary Foundation $1 per ticket/$5 for 6 tickets

Weekly winner draws a card from the deck if they draw the Queen of Hearts then winner takes ½ the

pot. If the card is not the Queen of Hearts card then the card is destroyed & we try again next week. Meanwhile the pot continues to grow.

See Secretary Kim for more information.

Current Pot = $400

This Happened Last Monday Continued They are reinventing the path by opening the new Child Health Pavilion which houses unique programs, expanding primary care and it doubled the size of the pediatric service. Debbie stated that doctors are now ask-ing questions. Some of the focus areas are to ensure the children and parents have a safe place to sleep, have food, adequate housing, heat-ing and after school care. These are a few of the services being provid-ed at the CHP. Families are being paired with a family resource to help them get connected to these services. There is a Food Pharm at the pavilion where families get a box of healthy food; there is a demonstra-tion kitchen as well where families can learn to prepare healthy meals. There is also a dental clinic on site. She also noted that Asthma aspira-tion is the #1 reason children miss school. Debbie stated that they are helping children find the healthy version of themselves. She shared the story of Kylie, whose mother died of an overdose and lives with her grandmother. Kylie can receive pediatric care, family support, care clos-et and food pharm. The need for mental and behavioral services has tripled in the past 5 years. Families are now able to receive an assess-ment over the phone. They are assigned a social worker who connects them with resources and follows up with the families regularly to ensure they are using the resources and if not, create a plan to make it work better for them. Ten days ago, a new inpatient unit was opened with 24 beds with private rooms. Every room is filled. They are the only hospital in the region to offer this for kids. They are also the 1st in all North America to include a large digital board for communication. Debbie went on to share that social media is creating stress for children because they are not having human, face- to – face interactions. There is also a de-cline in kinship helping with children. Debbie’s presentation was con-cluded with questions and comments from Rotarians. One Rotary mem-ber asked how do we get over the stigma on mental health. Debbie be-lieves that things are beginning to change and it starts with the children and then moves to the adults. They are creating a campaign initiative to help remove the stigma on mental behavioral health. Over 50% feel that when kids get counseling things get better. Another Rotarian mentioned the “Deepest Well” book that the book club is reading. It relates to the science behind what Debbie shared. One Rotarian wanted to know what was being done to increase access on the west side. Debbie stated that they are a committed partner with the Hope Center and are creating a satellite center with a 5-star child care center and other services as well. The meeting concluded with the "Queen of Hearts" raffle; the winner drew a King of Diamonds therefore the pot continues to grow. President Maychack adjourned Rotary Luncheon for 7/22/19.

New Member Profile Jena Pado has over 19 years of fundraising experience and currently serves as the Exec-utive Director for Dayton Children’s Hospital Foundation. Jena has been a part of the foundation team at Dayton Children’s for the last 15 years. After successful completion of the $12 million Be a Hero for Children Capital Campaign, Jena was promoted to Director of Major Gifts where she led the efforts for ex-ceeding the $5.3 million campaign to expand

the Soin Pediatric Trauma & Emergency Center. She also lead the $2.3 million building campaign to fund a new home for CARE House, Montgomery County’s Child Advocacy Center for abused kids. In 2017, she led the reorganization of Dayton Children’s Hospital Foundation and was appointed as the Executive Director. Jena has actively volunteered with the Dayton Ballet, Generation Dayton and the Dayton Public School Foundation. In 2015, she was invited to participate in Leadership Dayton. Jena has also served on the board of the Association of Fundraising Profession-als, Greater Dayton Region Chapter for seven years and held several positions including National Philanthropy Day Chair, Com-munications Chair and a two-year term as Chapter President. She currently serves on the board of the YWCA Dayton where she chairs the Marketing and Development Committee. She serves on a national level by spearheading a mentorship program for Chil-dren’s Miracle Network Hospitals. Jena earned a Bachelor of Science, Political Science from Moravian College and obtained her Certified Fundraising Executive (CFRE) in 2007. She was selected for the DBJ’s 40 Under 40 award in 2008 and named Top 25 Women to Watch by the Women in Business Networking (WiBN) in 2013. In 2016, she was honored at National Philan-thropy Day as the Outstanding Fundraising Executive by the AFP Greater Dayton Region Chapter. Jena lives in Beavercreek with her husband, Joe, and their two children, Jake and Emma. Jena Pado Dayton Children’s Hospital One Children’s Plaza Dayton, Ohio 45404 937-641-3045 [email protected] Jena was sponsored for membership by Shannon Isom.