Tuesday, 26 March 2013

Health, Bullard & Sustainable Water Solutions in South America

The Rogues Gallery
Last Week
Last week was supposed to be a social meeting but ended up with more on the Rotary Health Days.  A good thing because there was not enough time to discuss it properly at our last meeting.  PDG Francis Callard also came to breakfast and he was able to fill in a few gaps on the Health Project.  It wasn't such a well attended meeting, however.


This Week
I trust this week will be better attended as Dave Bullard is our guest speaker.  He is relocating to the Wine-lands of the Cape.  I'm not sure what he is talking about but it will involve a lot of repartee!
It may be the last time we manage to get him here.


Social & Membership Braai Sunday 7th April
Don't forget to let Mike Vink know if you are going and your number of guests.



Engineering sustainable water solutions in Latin America



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Top: Tony Riggio, a member of the Rotary Club of Westport, Connecticut, USA. Bottom: Rotarians work with young people in the Builders Beyond Borders program to install pipes that will carry water to the mountain town.
Perched in the rugged mountains of central Ecuador, the village of Tingo Pucará seems an unlikely place for artistic inspiration to strike. But Tony Riggio never leaves his camera behind – and his photos from there illustrate what can happen when Rotarians and engineers team up on a water project.
Riggio, a watchmaker by trade, has been leading youth expeditions to Central and South America since 2001, when his daughter participated in a program of Builders Beyond Borders (B3), a nonprofit based in Connecticut, USA. Construction projects have included hurricane shelters in the Dominican Republic, bridges in Nicaragua, and day care centers and classrooms in Costa Rica. Water and sanitation are always primary components.
As a member of the Rotary Club of Westport, Riggio understands the global need for clean water and improved sanitation, one of Rotary’s six areas of focus. “People don’t believe what you tell them sometimes – that things are how they are in parts of Central and South America,” he says. “Water is such a precious commodity.”
In April 2011, Riggio traveled to Tingo Pucará – one of five B3 project sites across Ecuador that season – to build pipelines in a joint effort with the Peace Corps and Engineers Without Borders. The village stands at an altitude of 12,600 feet, with the nearest spring about 4,900 feet down a steep path. The engineers designed a pumping system to draw water from the spring-fed stream, and the B3 team, made up of high school students and adult advisers, worked with locals to install the pipes, which now bring running water to homes.

Shortage of running water

Historically, faced with a lack of potable water and arable land, the men of Tingo Pucará have headed to the lowlands to find work, leaving the women to transport water for cooking, washing, and drinking. Before the project was completed, the 26 village families had as little as 15 minutes of running water per month, sent from a neighboring area when available.
“When you talk to people in these communities, they are hoping you’re going to be the person who’s going to make this happen for them,” says Amy Schroeder-Riggio, executive director of Builders Beyond Borders and Riggio’s wife of 30 years, describing the review process for project proposals. “Their stories are so compelling. They talk about the health of their kids and why they need water, and the hardship” – especially for older women who must carry heavy buckets of water uphill.
Living and working alongside the community members, B3 students and advisers learn about service and living with less. They confronted an array of challenges in Tingo Pucará: cold nights, debilitating altitude, and a mile of pipeline trenches waiting to be dug.
“For our kids, that project was not very rewarding – until the last day, when we got to turn the water on,” Schroeder-Riggio says. “When you’re doing a water project, you are laying the pipe, you’re covering it over, and it doesn’t even look like you were there. But when they turn the water on and everybody’s crying, it’s an incredible moment.”
“That was the first time running water had been in that part of the village,” Riggio says. “Some of the children there had never seen water come out of a faucet.”

Other efforts

Riggio’s work with Builders Beyond Borders has also included larger sanitation efforts in Peru, as well as other South and Central American countries. B3 program manager Karen Meyer was a Peace Corps volunteer in Bernales when Riggio’s team arrived there in 2010. The group worked with Meyer and the Peace Corps to build 44 bathrooms in the densely populated and earthquake-ravaged community. Facilities ranged from standard sewer-connected toilets to pit latrines, composting toilets, and pour-flush toilets.
“People thought they had to have the best beautiful bathroom to be healthy, and they couldn’t afford it, so they would say, ‘I’m too poor to be healthy,’” Meyer recalls. “The two teams that came down made a huge impact.”
Collaborating with the worldwide networks of the Peace Corps and Rotary can boost credibility and facilitate relationships, Schroeder-Riggio says. In 2008, B3 built a school for hearing-impaired students in San Marcos, Guatemala, with help from a local Rotary club. This year, B3 teams will partner with the Rotary Club of Georgetown, Guyana, on five construction projects, including community centers and a sand bridge that will connect coastal islands to medical facilities.
“These organizations make the world go ’round,” Schroeder-Riggio says. “The heart of it is our kids. It’s about building character, their relationship with these leadership programs. It lines up nicely with Rotary.”

Monday, 18 March 2013

Kwanele Kwanele, a Braai and an RI Award

Eleanor Hough, Principal of McAuley House School spoke to us about the Kwanele Kwanele Campaign initiated by the school.  She spoke passionately about the problems of woman & child abuse in South Africa and what the campaign is all about.  She was looking for support from us and other schools.
Steve du Plessis also gave us the latest news on Rotary Health Days in May as part of an ongoing feed back process on our involvement.

New Dawn Election Braai 2011
Social Event

This is a reminder that the club has decided to hold a social event for members and partners/spouses/significant others on the first Sunday of April. This will double up as a membership drive and members are asked to invite potential new members along.

-          Date: Sunday, 7th April
-          Time: 12:30 onwards
-          Venue: 13 Surbiton Ave, Auckland Park
-          Eevnt: Braai. Food will be provided, but please bring a bottle or two of what you like to drink the most. Volunteers to do salads, side dishes and desserts, please contact Linda Vink at linda@aucklandlodge.co.za
-          RSVP: mike@aucklandlodge.co.za by Wednesday, 3rd April, stating number of people attending and the names of your guests.  
This Week:
We have been let down by our speaker so it will be a Social Meeting.  We always say we don't have enough of them!

British ophthalmologist, U.S. association to receive top Foundation alumni awards


 
 

Top: Dr. Harminder Singh Dua, recipient of the 2012-13 Rotary Foundation Global Alumni Service to Humanity Award Photo courtesy of Dr. Harminder Singh Dua Bottom: Members of The Rotary Foundation Alumni Association of District 6560, recipient of the 2012-13 Rotary Foundation Alumni Association of the Year Award. Photo courtesy of Susan Meskis




Dr. Harminder Singh Dua, an ophthalmologist in Nottingham, England, has been chosen by The Rotary Foundation Trustees as the recipient of the 2012-13 Rotary Foundation Global Alumni Service to Humanity Award. 
Sponsored by the Rotary Club of Nagpur South in Maharashtra, India (District 3030), Dua traveled as a member of a Group Study Exchange (GSE) team to Pennsylvania, USA (District 7300), in 1981. He will receive the award on 25 June at the 2013 RI Convention in Lisbon, Portugal. 
Dua, who is chair and professor of ophthalmology at the University of Nottingham, Queen’s Medical Centre, has treated patients in the United Kingdom, India, and the United States and has shared his skills with students and colleagues around the world. He is renowned as an authority on corneal disorders and performs advanced surgeries. 
While living in India, Dua conducted numerous free diagnostic eye clinics through Rotary and other nongovernmental organizations, performing thousands of free operations on poor patients who had cataracts and glaucoma. 
“The poverty and simple lives of the villagers and the huge difference [the] operations made to them and to the lives of children who had to spend time away from school to guide the people around was plain to see,” says Dua. “There was no escaping the enormity of their need and our [medical team’s] ability to fulfill some part of it.” 
Dua says he is thankful for the opportunity The Rotary Foundation provided him through GSE and its impact on his career.  
“If I were to point to the one life-changing event, the one turning point that brought me to where I am today, it was [my] selection as a GSE team member,” he says. “This was my first visit outside India, my window to the rest of the world.” 

U.S. alumni group recognized

The Rotary Foundation Alumni Association of District 6560 (Indiana, USA) has been selected to receive the 2012-13 Rotary Foundation Alumni Association of the Year Award. Chartered in 2007, the association focuses on connecting alumni with Rotary clubs. The group holds annual alumni gatherings; attends Rotary district conferences, RI conventions, and other events; and helps provide orientations for current program participants and alumni. 
Members of the association participate in a project called Water Is Life, including by raising funds. Sponsored by the Rotary Club of Fishers, Indiana, the effort has established more than 80 wells serving over 80,000 people in Sierra Leone. 
The association has also supported PolioPlus, and new members are invited to contribute during their orientation. 
Susan Meskis, president of the association and a member of the Fishers club, will be leading a vocational training team to Tanzania in April to share their expertise in nursing education with the faculty of Aga Khan University’s Advanced Nursing Program. The effort will be funded by a Rotary Foundation packaged grant
“This rare and extraordinary opportunity is a collaboration between The Rotary Foundation, Aga Khan University, and District 6560 and anticipates building lasting relationships between all partners to [expand] capacity in education and nursing professionals in developing nations,” says Meskis.

Monday, 11 March 2013

Welcome, Ike. Good Luck, Prisca. Health and mentoring via Skype

Welcome Ike(chukwu) Ezeuduji to the Rotary Club of Johannesburg New Dawn! President Amina Frense did the honours and Ike gave us a present at his Induction by introducing Prisca Lete.  She is one of his students and is representing Africa's Young Talent at the World Tourism Forum 2013 in Lausanne, Switzerland in April.
Members gave her useful feedback on her practise presentation and we are looking forward to having her back to talk to us about her experiences in Switzerland.

This Week
Steve du Plessis is talking about Rotary Health Week during May and how the Club will be involved....there will also be a surprise speaker!

ROTARY FAMILY HEALTH DAYS
MAY 9 – 11,  2013  –  SOUTH AFRICA
Great progress is being made by Rotary in South Africa leading up to the RFHD’s in May!
As you know, the South African Government, through the Department of Health, has entered into a formal partnership with RFHA and all 4 Rotary districts in South Africa to offer specific free health services into our communities.
Our challenge towards the end of last year was for the Rotary clubs to identify 180 sites throughout South Africa in all 9 provinces.  We achieved this!  In fact the response from Rotary clubs was so enthusiastic, that we had to have a cut-off point.  The sites were submitted to the Department of Health and all partners on the 30th November as per deadline.
Concurrently, meetings were held through 9 different levels and departments at the Department of Health, the CDC, USAID, Coca Cola and all 4 Rotary Steering Committee chairs.
Plans and timelines were discussed and the way forward established.
Then – South Africa went on holiday!
Once the working new year finally kicked off on the 12th January, a number of very exciting and fruitful meetings took place.  Marion Bunch, CEO of RFHA, was here over that week :
·         The first planning meeting with the National Department of Health (organised in November) involving the Deputy Director General and Heads of all relevant Departments.
·         Successful separate meetings with the Coca Cola Africa Foundation, Coca Cola Systems  and Coca Cola Fortune (one of the bottlers)
·         A dinner was hosted by the Director General, Precious Matsoso, of the Department of Health
·         An invitation was extended to fully brief  Minister Dr Aaron Motsoaledi at his office in Pretoria on Tuesday 22nd which turned out to be a two and a half hour meeting!  The Minister has given us his full support and endorsement and is indeed very excited about the public/private partnership.  He would like to elevate the Rotary Family Health Days to a Presidential level. 
·         Meetings were held with the CDC and USAID
·         PDG Shirley Downie (RI appointed Media/PR rep for Southern Africa) held a full briefing session around a National and Regional media plan and roll out with full concept and timelines.  President Kanthan Pillay of the Rotary Club of Morningside and CEO of YFM and Dr Sarah Britten are the professional advisors on the media campaign.
·         AG Steve Margo agreed to be the  RFHA/ Rotary advisor and consultant on all security matters around the sites
·         PDG Anton Meerkotter, RFHA’s Financial Advisor in South Africa, will control all finances with the relevant Steering Committee Financial counterparts in each District.



Wisconsin, USA, club launches tutoring program using Skype



 
 
 

The tutoring program, which uses Skype, launched last March with a pilot involving six students and five Rotarian mentors.
When Lee Breese’s granddaughter called, asking for tutoring in pre-algebra, Breese wanted to help, but they lived 50 miles apart.
A retired middle school math teacher, Breese knew that tutoring would be a chance to connect with the seventh grader, who had just earned a D after spending the last quarter of school focusing too much on boys and too little on graphing.
Breese, a member of the Rotary Club of West Allis, Wisconsin, USA, was mulling over the situation in her home office when her sister-in-law appeared on her computer through Skype, a free video calling service.
"I'm looking at her and thinking, 'This is face to face. I'll try it,'" Breese recalls.

Making it fun

She began tutoring over Skype and, after six weeks, her granddaughter had aced a retest, earned a spot in eighth-grade algebra, and inspired Breese to use the idea in her own community.
"After the tutoring was finished, I thought, 'This was fun for me, and it was fun for her,'" Breese says. "Twice she said, 'Do we have to stop already?' That doesn't happen with girls her age and math."
Breese found support in her Rotary club, including from the superintendent of her city's school district, who is also a club member. The tutoring program launched last March with a pilot involving six students and five Rotarian mentors, ranging from the former mayor to a retired professor to a leader of a local Boy Scout troop.
Mentors and students met for a half hour, twice every week, over Skype. Each had a copy of the textbook (the mentors had a teacher’s edition), a white board, a marker, and an eraser. The students used computers available during an after-school homework club, and the mentors used their own computers at home or work.
“Some of the kids have such a skewed vision of who’s in the community,” says Becky Schneider, the school district’s gifted and talented lead teacher. “It gives them an understanding that there are people in the community who may be good people.”

A different dynamic

Tutoring through Skype rather than traditional face-to-face methods shifted the typical mentor/student dynamic. The technology helped erase the chasm between adult experts and student learners, so both sides learned from each other.
“Because this was their thing – it’s their technology, not ours – they came into it with a certain degree of confidence,” Breese says. Other students thought it looked so fun, she adds, they asked to participate too.
Another advantage was that Skype allowed mentors to sense how students felt about the material they were working on. “You can see if they are starting to get frustrated, or if they are getting bored,” Schneider says. “Sitting there, they might not necessarily be as open to you. But over Skype, you can read them a little bit more when they don’t realize you can read them.”
The project expanded to two schools for the 2012-13 school year. At one of them, students use school-issued iPads, which allows for greater flexibility in meeting times.
“The big push right now is with 24/7 learning,” Schneider says. “We’re offering that to the kids because we’re working around their needs.”

Monday, 4 March 2013

Welcome, Martin. Farewell Don. Windpower, Tourism, Business & Rotary News from around the World

Welcome Martin van Heerden!



President Amina Frense, assisted by PP Graham Donet, inducted Martin as a member of our Club last Wednesday.  Congratulations, Martin, and welcome to New Dawn.

Farewell Don Lindsay
It was also a sad occasion....thought it certainly looks pretty cheerful in the photograph....saying goodbye to our Charter President Don Lindsay.  Don has done so much to get the Club started but now he and his partner Arthur Begley have emigrated to Brazil so we lose two loyal members.

Don has already been made a Paul Harris Fellow for his services to the Club and he wouldn't accept a present so we gave him a certificate instead....

 On the other hand we will certainly have a link with a Brazilian Rotary Club in the future.  Arthur is in Kazakhstan at the moment and he and Don are both in Brazil now, hopefully sitting at one of these tables in the street below their apartment.  Don & Arthur have donated a sum of money to the Club with the intention that it may be used for a project at Johannesburg Zoo.  More about this in due course.

Everyone who was at the meeting with Don and his certificate.  The photograph was taken by our Guest Speaker.....
Edward James-Smith who spoke to us on the pro's and con's of Windpower and gave us an interesting insight into electrical power requirements in South Africa and the way forward with renewable energy.  It was a very positive talk when so much comment on the Electrical Power Industry in South Africa tends to be negative.  He didn't mention tariffs, only costs, and how the overall costs could be reduced!

Business Meeting
This week's meeting is a Business Meeting but it is enlivened by a 10 minute talk by Prisca Lete allowing her to practise her presentation to the World Tourism Forum in Switzerland. The title of the presentation is: LINKING RESOURCES,CAPABILITIES AND COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE FOR BRAND POSITIONING: THE CASE OF SUN CITY.  She is a 21 year old, BTECH student at the University of Johannesburg, studying Tourism Management. She already has a National Diploma in Tourism Management. She has been selected as a Young Talent (the only one in Africa) by the World Tourism Forum 2013. WTF selected only 8 students studying Tourism, from across the world this year to participate in this programme. She is originally from the Democratic Republic of Congo, however her family has made South Africa their home. She is very active in Sports (Tennis, Karate, Chess, Netball), Drama, and had worked briefly as  a Model. She is presently working as a Tutor at the School of Tourism and Hospitality, University of Johannesburg under the tutorship of Dr Ike Ezeuduji......and we will induct him as a Club member at the same time!


Rotary news in brief from around

 the Globe


 
 

The Rotary Club of Manama, Bahrain, donated a mobile diabetes unit to help combat type 2 diabetes among the country's youth.Photo courtesy of the Rotary Club of Manama

TheRotary Club of Manama, Bahrain, donated a mobile diabetes unit to the Bahrain Diabetes Society as part of the club’s ongoing effort to combat type II diabetes among youth in the country, where the disease accounts for 12 percent of child and adult deaths.
The van, which cost US$111,400 to equip, travels to schools and neighborhoods across the nation to screen children for diabetes and educate families on prevention. The unit’s staff consists of volunteer doctors, nurses, and students from the Bahrain medical campus of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland.
Cameroun
Early last year, the Rotary Club of Fergus-Elora, Ont., Canada, worked with the Rotary Club of Bafoussam to install potable water systems in seven rural villages as part of Hand Up Cameroon, a project involving 34 clubs in Canada and the United States. One of the villages, called Bawouk, has 1,300 residents, who are mostly women and children; many of the working-age men have migrated to the nearby city of Bamenda to find work. The new water systems will benefit these families as well as the students and traders who come from neighboring villages for Bawouk’s primary school and market.
Canada
The 56 clubs in District 7070 (Ontario) set a new fundraising record in September for their annual Rotary Foundation Walk. More than 500 Rotarians, family members, and local residents helped bring in over $142,000 for the Foundation. District Governor Ted Koziel, Past District Governor Bob Wallace, and Rotary Foundation Trustee Chair Wilfrid J. Wilkinson attended the event. In 2011, the district raised a total of $848,000 for the Foundation.
Japan  
Twenty years ago, Grace Michiko Saito, of the Rotary Club of Tokyo Seijo Shin, founded Tokyo Grace, a charity that supports young musicians, children with disabilities, and the elderly. Since Saito began organizing biannual fundraising concerts for PolioPlus in 2002, Tokyo Grace has raised close to US$96,000 for polio eradication, disaster relief in Japan, and The Rotary Foundation. The concerts have featured distinguished vocalists, violinists, pianists, saxophonists, and flutists. The most recent event, held in November, raised more than $3,300.
Nicaragua
Every November, the Rotary Club of Waterloo, Iowa, USA, sends Rotarians and other volunteers to impoverished areas of Nicaragua with two semitrucks full of donated Christmas gifts. Churches, school groups, and Rotarians from Iowa and seven other states work year-round to collect the goods. Since 2001, they’ve shipped about 2,400 “shoeboxes” – packages loaded with clothing, school supplies, and toiletries for kids – 790 layette bags filled with supplies for new mothers, 100 bicycles, and 12 tons of food.
Taiwan
District 3500 had an all-time record number of Rotary Foundation Major Donors (individuals or couples whose cumulative donations to the Foundation total at least US$10,000) in the 2011-12 Rotary year. A ceremony at the district conference in April recognized 82 Major Donors, including three who decided to donate on the spot. Inspired by the generosity of his district, Tony Hung-Ming Chang, then district governor, declared his intention on stage at the ceremony to become a member of the Arch C. Klumph Society; he was inducted with his wife, Julia, on 26 October, along with three other couples and one individual from Taiwan who have donated $250,000 or more to the Foundation. The district’s total contribution exceeded $1.5 million in 2011-12, another district record.
USA
The Wekiva River Basin provides clean drinking water, habitats for indigenous plants and wildlife, and outdoor recreation venues across 380 square miles in central Florida, but excessive nitrates have degraded the water quality. To preserve the federally designated Wild and Scenic River and the local water supply, the Rotary Club of Seminole County South launched an initiative to promote river-friendly policies among homeowners and businesses. By signing on to the Wekiva River Promise, residents pledge to limit their use of fertilizer and pesticides, grow native plants, regularly inspect their septic tanks, and write letters to government officials in support of Wekiva River Basin conservation efforts.