rotary club of flushing, michigan member orientation
DESCRIPTION
Rotary Club of Flushing, Michigan Member Orientation. District 6330 Area 7 www.flushingmirotary.org. Things You Should Know About the Structure of Rotary. 1.2 million members in 200 countries 34 Zones – We are in Zone 24 531 Districts – We are in District 6330 - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Rotary Club of Flushing, Michigan
Member Orientation District 6330
Area 7www.flushingmirotary.org
Flushing Rotary Orientation2
Things You Should Know About the Structure of
Rotary• 1.2 million members in 200 countries• 34 Zones – We are in Zone 24• 531 Districts – We are in District 6330• Currently over 34,000 clubs worldwide• District 6330 includes 19 Michigan clubs
and 41 Canadian clubs in Ontario • Rotary year is July-June
Flushing Rotary Orientation3
Things You Should Know About the Structure of
Rotary• Rotary International (RI)
– President – Gary C. K. Huang, Taiwan
• Zone 24 – 16 districts, 883 clubs– Canada, Eastern Russia, St. Pierre &
Miquelon, USA: Alaska, Maine, Michigan, New York, Washington
• District 6330 – Canada/US (8 Areas)– District Governor –Don Moore, Walkerton,
Ontario Canada
Flushing Rotary Orientation4
Things You Should Know About the Structure of
Rotary
• Area 7 – Genesee/Lapeer County Clubs – Rob Jewell, Assistant District Governor, Flint
Club
• Club #28634 – Rotary Club of Flushing Michigan– President – Dave Hendry – [email protected]
Flushing Rotary Orientation5
Things You Should Know About the Structure of
Rotary
Flushing Rotary Orientation6
Things You Should Know About Our Club
• Chartered in April, 1992• Weekly meetings
– Meetings promote fellowship, learning and embody the Rotary tradition
– 60% minimum attendance requirement• Make ups at other clubs or Flushing Rotary
Committees
• Dues - RI membership/magazine, district dues, breakfast
– Quarterly dues of $135 are invoiced– Voluntary Annual Foundation gift of $25 may be
included in July dues invoice or voluntarily sign up for additional $25/quarter to become a Sustaining Member contributing $100 annually
Rotary Club of Flushing
• $2.00 a week for 50/50 drawing of which 50% earmarked for the Club operation budget
• “Happy Bucks” are voluntary contributions from members contributed to Rotary International Foundation.
Flushing Rotary Orientation7
Flushing Rotary Orientation8
The Four-Way Test
• Followed by Rotarians world-wide in their business and professional lives, The Four-Way Test, was created in 1932 by Rotarian Herbert J. Taylor (who later served as RI president) when he was asked to take charge of a company that was facing bankruptcy. It has been translated into hundreds of languages. It asks the following four questions:
"Of the things we think, say or do:1.Is it the TRUTH?2.Is it FAIR to all concerned?3.Will it build GOODWILL and BETTER
FRIENDSHIPS?4.Will it be BENEFICIAL to all concerned?"
Flushing Rotary Orientation9
Object of Rotary
• The Object of Rotary is to encourage and foster the ideal of service as a basis of worthy enterprise and, in particular, to encourage and foster:– FIRST. The development of acquaintance as an
opportunity for service;– SECOND. High ethical standards in business and
professions, the recognition of the worthiness of all useful occupations, and the dignifying of each Rotarian's occupation as an opportunity to serve society;
– THIRD. The application of the ideal of service in each Rotarian's personal, business, and community life;
– FOURTH. The advancement of international understanding, goodwill, and peace through a world fellowship of business and professional persons united in the ideal of service.
Flushing Rotary Orientation10
Four Avenues of Service
• Based on the Object of Rotary, the Four Avenues of Service are Rotary's philosophical cornerstone and the foundation on which club activity is based:– Club Service focuses on strengthening fellowship
and ensuring the effective functioning of the club. – Vocational Service encourages Rotarians to serve
others through their vocations and to practice high ethical standards.
– Community Service covers the projects and activities the club undertakes to improve life in its community.
– International Service encompasses actions taken to expand Rotary's humanitarian reach around the globe and to promote world understanding and peace.
Flushing Rotary Orientation11
Getting Started with the Club and Website
• Log onto website home page: http://www.flushingmirotary.org
• Initial username and password– First initial, last name all lower case
(e.g., jdoe)– Password: speakeasy
• Username and password can be edited after initial log in
Flushing Rotary Orientation12
Opportunities to Learn About Rotary
• Weekly meetings• Join a Club Committee – dates/times vary• Attend Board meetings
– 1st Tuesday each month 7 AM @ Elbow Room • District Assembly held in the Spring each year
• District Conference– May or June of each year– Location varies based on the home club of the
current District Governor
• Rotary International Website: www.rotary.org
Flushing Rotary Orientation13
Opportunities for Fellowship
• Club Assembly - first Thursday of month• Euchre Card Parties• Spring, Fall Theme Parties• Holiday Party• Fundraisers and Community Projects• Rotary Family breakfast (partner/spouse
children invited – December)
Flushing Rotary Orientation14
• Paul Harris Fellow (PHF) Recognition– Personal contribution achievement - Donate $1,000 to Rotary
Foundation’s Annual Fund– Club recognition -Two members are recognized by the Club as
PHF each year at Pass the Gavel dinner for exemplary club, community and international service contributions
• Sustaining Member – $100 or more/year given to Rotary Foundation Annual Fund
• Foundation Benefactor– Members bequeathing $1000 or more to Rotary Foundation
Permanent Fund in estate plan/will www.rotary.org
• “Tommy Award” – Annual awarding of the “precious jems”, named for charter
member Tom McNally, in recognition of club/community service. Selected by prior Tommy Award recipients. The Club’s most prestigious award.
Rotary Recognition
Opportunities to Serve
Club Service• Fellowship; plan or host a social event• Recruit a new member• Identify a speaker for a weekly meeting• Volunteer for a service project• Sell Duckie tickets or be a Sponsor – major
fundraising event held each year• Be a leader; consider joining the Board or
chairing a committee
Flushing Rotary Orientation15
Service to the Community
• S’mores at Candlewalk; ; help with prep work, volunteer for a shift at Candlewalk in early December
• Rotary Readers; volunteer to read to a classroom of students at Springview elementary
• Student of the Month; monthly recognition given to a student and their parents from Flushing High School
• Summerfest Parade; Rotarians walk in the Parade distributing t-shirts promoting the Duckie Race
• Scholarship selection committee; Rotary Club of Flushing annually selects 2-3 deserving students to receive $1,000 scholarships from this endowed fund
• Riverview Park project; the Club supported a $10,000 design for a makeover of the Riverview Park. The first project , completed in 2013, was replacement of the bench seats with stadium seats. Estimated at $170,000 for seating project. Additional phases are planned.
Flushing Rotary Orientation16
Service to the Community
Vocational Service:• Ethics panel; Club members participate in the annual ethics discussion with
students from Flushing High School• Seminar for Tomorrow’s Leaders; the Club sponsors local youth to attend this
special leadership training opportunity• Service Above Self Award; the Club annually recognizes a non-Rotarian in our
community for their outstanding service
International Service:• Group Study Exchange; young adults from another country visit our District
needing host families. Club members help with providing access to professional learning opportunities
• Rotary International Special Programs; Polio Plus is an example of an initiative every club was asked to support to eradicate polio. A Rotary priority since 1985. www.rotary.org
• World Community Service; the Club contributes financially to the Preventable Blindness project in Mexico conducted by Dr. Brad Habermehl, Burton Rotary Club.
Flushing Rotary Orientation17
Flushing Rotary Orientation18
Opportunities to Network and make up meetings!
Burton – Thursday 12:15 PMIMA Brookwood Golf Course Clubhouse 6045 Davison Road Burton MI, 48509
Clio – Tuesday 7:15 AMRogers Lodge 219 Rogers Lodge Drive Clio, MI 48420
Fenton – Tuesday 7:15 AMSpring Meadows Country Club1129 Ripley RoadLinden MI, 48451
Grand Blanc - Tuesday 7:15 AMSophia's Kitchen Restaurant11395 S. Saginaw St. Grand Blanc, MI 48439
Genesee Valley –Tuesday 12:15 PMRedwood Lodge5304 Gateway Centre Dr. Flint, MI
Columbiaville – Tuesday 6:30 PMRotary Bldg. 4422 First StreetColumbiaville, MI 48421
Greater Flint Sunrise – Wednesday 7 AMRTC Building – Mott Community College 138 Kensington Ave. RM 1301Flint MI, 48503
Flint – Friday 12 Noon Flint Golf Club3100 Lakewood DriveFlint MI, 48507
Flushing Rotary Orientation19
Contributions and Accomplishments of Rotary
Club of Flushing
• Flushing River/NatureTrail benches for rest areas, installed signage and plantings
• Riverview Park project master plan commissioned
• Instrumental in leading community adoption of the Riverview Park master plan
• Stadium seats installed in Riverview Park in 2013
• College Scholarship awards given to 39 students totaling $39,000 between1999 and 2014
Flushing Rotary Orientation20
Contributions and Accomplishments of Rotary
Club of Flushing
• Special Recognition in 2004 as “Service Club of the Year” from Flushing Chamber of Commerce
• Numerous Rotary Presidential Citations since 2000
• Annual giving/sustaining member per capita among highest in District 6330 for Rotary Foundation
• Numerous Literacy Awards in RI Zone 22 and District 6330 for literacy projects
Rotary Club of Flushing
• A hard working club, invested in our community, region, district and world, with a reputation for getting things done, but also having fun!
Flushing Rotary Orientation21