Tuesday 11 February 2014

A Business Meeting, Committees, Happy Valentine's Day & Polio Eradication.

Last week was a successful Business Meeting.  We got through quite a lot.  The Board was concerned that some of the sub committees don't seem to be meeting and Board Members agreed to ensure that their committees met before the end of February.  Everyone in the Club is on a committee so just make sure that you know what is going on.  President Joan is an ex officio member of all committees so just make sure that she knows when you are meeting so that she does have the option of attending.

This Week 
It's a social meeting as we our supply of speakers seems to have dried up.  There is one in the pipeline thanks to Lucille Blumberg.  Please approach people and let me know if you have a possible guest speaker.

Cycle Race 23rd February
At the last count it didn't seem that we would have enough volunteers to help with this.  Please contact Steve du Plessis if you can help.

St Valentine's Day, 14th February
Just to cheer you up here's a stained glass window of St Valentine.
Nobody knows anything about him other than he was martyred on the Flaminian Way on the 14th February near the Milvian Bridge.

He's not only the patron saint of engaged couples and happy marriages, love etc but also of bee keepers....I suppose it is the buzz!  he can be invoked against fainting, the plague and epilepsy......so now you know!



U.S. COMMITS $205 MILLION TO POLIO ERADICATION


A child is vaccinated against polio in Côte d’lvoire, which has been free of the disease since 2011. Ongoing immunization in every country is vital until polio is eradicated worldwide.
Photo Credit: Alyce Henson/Rotary International
President Barack Obama signed an omnibus appropriations bill in January that provides $205 million to support polio eradication in 2014, through the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and U. S. Agency for International Development.
The largest government donor to polio eradication, the U.S. has contributed more than $2.3 billion since the mid-1980s, when 125 countries were polio endemic and the disease afflicted 350,000 people annually. Today, only Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Nigeria are endemic, and in 2013, the combined incidence of polio in those countries fell to a record-low 157 cases. Last month , India reached a three-year milestone without polio, paving the way for the entire Southeast Asia region to be certified free of the disease.
"Eradicating polio will leave a lasting legacy of health care infrastructure, experience, and expertise that is already being used to benefit a broad range of global public health efforts," says James Lacy, chair of Rotary's Polio Eradication Advocacy Task Force for the United States and past president of Rotary International.
The task force leads Rotary's efforts to inform the U.S. government and other funding sources of the urgency and benefits of supporting the  (GPEI).
One of Rotary's chief responsibilities in the GPEI is advocacy. In addition to contributing more than $1.2 billion to the initiative, Rotary has helped secure over $9 billion from donor governments since the GPEI was launched in 1988.

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