H2Optimist featured on RI Website

Meet Val Johnson, a member of
the Rotary Club of New Brighton/Mounds View, Minnesota who cofounded the
nonprofit H2O for Life, which gets students involved in fundraisers for clean water.  During a presentation at a recent club meeting, Johnson saw one Rotarian nudge his neighbor and whisper, “We’ve been outdone by a bunch of eighth graders.” Johnson chuckles as she recounts the story because those students were talking about a nonprofit she’d cofounded in 2007.

H2O for Life matches schools in
the United States with schools in developing nations without clean water and sanitation facilities. The students from Highview Middle

School in New Brighton, MN raised $13,000 to build a dam in the Kwa Kasolo region of Kenya.
The nonprofit helps students hold fundraisers such as water walks, which simulate the chore of fetching water, sometimes from miles away, that many children around the world perform every day.

So far, students have raised more than $1 million for projects at schools in 26 countries. Each effort requires a dollar-for-dollar match from the non-governmental organization responsible for implementing it.
In May, H2O for Life launched a pilot project with the Water and Sanitation Rotarian Action Group, Procter & Gamble, and Africare. The organization also provides resources to help teachers talk about water, conduct experiments, and teach students about the culture of the recipient country.

 

“We went into this thinking we were doing great things for people in developing nations,” says Johnson. “What we saw was how it was developing and changing our U.S. students – that middle school kids could say, ‘I made a difference and saved a life.’ They will grow up to be great philanthropists and great Rotarians.”

What is Rotary’s Future Vision Plan?

…..from RI News

The Rotary Foundation Future Vision Pilot is a three-year test of the new grant structure offered in the Foundation’s Future Vision Plan. One hundred pilot districts have a unique opportunity to help refine the new grant structure by providing input and receiving specialized Foundation support and service. Pilot districts will work with Rotary Foundation District Grants and Rotary Foundation Global Grants for three years of the pilot.

 

RI Foundation District Grants

District grants are block grants made to districts for up to 50% of their District Designated Fund (DDF). District grants offer the flexibility to respond quickly to
immediate needs or to plan projects with clubs locally or in other countries.
RI Foundation Global Grants

Global grants support large international projects with sustainable, high-impact
outcomes in the six Areas of Focus (see list at left) that correspond to the Foundation’s mission.
Areas of Focus

1. Peace and conflict prevention/ resolution

2. Disease prevention and treatment

3. Water and sanitation

4. Maternal and child health

5. Basic education and literacy

6. Economic and community development

To see a power point of Rotary’s Future Plan click here.

Business Integrity

Vocational Service promotes business integrity, professional development –RI News

Through vocational service, Rotarians contribute their professional expertise and skills to address societal problems and needs, and to promote high ethical standards in the workplace.
Rotarians can support vocational service by: Strengthening the emphasis on professional diversity in member recruitment; Identifying ways to emphasize professions in club activities; Placing a stronger emphasis on business networking with integrity at the club and district level — also is a means of attracting and mentoring the next generation

Emphasizing the connection between The Four-Way Test and the Declaration of Rotarians in Businesses and Professions, and their importance to the
values of Rotary.

5 Top Rotary Stories

from RI News

1. Tsunami strikes Japan

Rotary clubs and districts worldwide mobilized to bring aid to victims of the devastating earthquake and tsunami that struck Japan on 11 March. The Rotary Foundation established the Rotary Japan 2011 Disaster Recovery Fund, which has raised almost US$6 million for long-term recovery projects.

2. Rotary International theme

RI President Kalyan Banerjee unveiled the 2011-12 RI theme

Reach Within to Embrace Humanity, during the International Assembly in January. He urged Rotary leaders to harness their inner strength to achieve success in Rotary.
3. The fight against polio

India made great strides toward polio eradication in 2011, with only one case of the virus reported. Rotarians helped administer bivalent oral polio vaccine to more than 35 million children in India during a Subnational Immunization Day, and a team of Rotarians immunized children in a health camp in Meerut, Uttar Pradesh. Rotarians also worked to get out the mes-sage about polio eradication for World Polio Day in October.

4. 2011 Rotary International Convention

More than 16,000 Rotarians from around the world converged in May in New Orleans for the 2011 RI Convention. Rotaractors, Rotarians, and Rotary Foundation alumni participated in service projects to help families still recovering from damage caused by Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

5. Strategic partnerships

The Rotary Foundation Board of Trustees approved four strategic partner-ships to help Rotary broaden its impact by offering service opportunities to Rotarians through packaged global grants.

New Year’s message from RI President Banerjee

An article in the New England Journal of Medicine, “The Polio Endgame” outlined a strategy for a post-polio era, including managing post-eradication risks. Thirty years ago, such an article could never have been published. Today, it is a testament to the power of dedication, of persis-tence, and of combined effort.

My friends, the day that polio will be eradicated is close at hand. We have to be ready for it with a powerful Rotary – a Rotary of enthusiasm and confidence, of bold vision and clear ambitions.

It is time for us to prepare by taking an honest look at our clubs. Are our projects meaningful, sustainable, and relevant? Are our meetings productive and enjoyable? Are our clubs welcoming to new members, and are our schedules and events friendly to young families? Once people join us, do we welcome them properly and involve them enough? Do we make them a part of the family of Rotary quickly enough?

Now is the time to focus our energies on our clubs and on the way people see them. It is time to show our communities that the Rotary of today is not the Rotary of their preconceptions. Rotary is a way to connect, to do more, to be more – it is a way to take our idealism and our vision, and turn them into reality.

Kalyan
Banerjee,
RI
President 2011-12