Next week, we’ll welcome Julie Schaller-Schmidt and two special guests
from Kenya who will be here to talk about the Makini Kenya Initiative.
This is an international project that was funded by Rotary Shines proceeds and
is a program you won’t want to miss!
Thursday, September 25, 2014
ANNOUNCEMENTS
· The Theme committee
would like to announce that the Nobel Conference is October 6th and
you will return October 8th.
It is being held at Gustavus Adolphus College in St. Peter,
Minnesota. The cost for transportation,
lodging and meals is $300. If you would
like more information you can contact John Mielke, Karen Laws, Harry
Spiegelberg or Tom Williams.
· We still need a few
volunteers for Octoberfest Saturday, September 27th. If you are able to help please contact Meghan
at rotaryappleton@gmail.com or
Deborah at Deborah.wetter@appleton.org. We need people for the later shifts from 3-5.
· Please mark your
calendars for April 17th
for the Rotary Shines Annual Fundraiser!
· The World Service Committee
will meet at 11am Tuesday, September 30th.
· The Community Service
Committee has finalized our grant application materials and deadline for this
year. The application and instructions are attached, and the deadline this year
will be October 10.
ROTARY ON THE ROAD
Riverview Gardens- Meghan Warner
Riverview Gardens is a
financially self-sustaining social enterprise, focused on job training for
people in need, using urban farming and a park setting in downtown Appleton,
WI. Kelly Nutty presented to our
members how Riverview Gardens helps our community and gives individuals a
chance to change their lives for the better.
The program helps with poverty, homelessness and unemployment. A few ways on how they do this is by creating
a financial engine through the development of a thriving, market-based garden
enterprise, engage community leaders about new strategies for ending poverty,
homelessness and unemployment, provide transitional employment as people
prepare for permanent employment, work with schools to help at-risk youth
develop productive work ethics and to make healthy food accessible to all. ServiceWorks is Riverview Gardens’ job
training program. It serves adults and
high school youth who are unemployed or in need of positive social
interactions. Another great program
Riverview Gardens’ offers is the Earn-A-Bike program. Participants volunteer 15 hours with
Riverview Gardens in exchange for ownership of a bicycle, lock, light and
helmet. Once this is earned, a bicycle
can be brought back to Earn-A-Bike shop for repairs and tune-ups, if needed and
at no charge. Another great program that
we learned about was the Riverview Youth Service Corps program. This program gives high school students the
opportunity to develop leadership and mentorship skills while volunteering at
Riverview Gardens. Riverview Gardens
transformed a 72-acre course in downtown Appleton to the first urban farm,
gardens, hoop houses and perennial orchards grow fruit, vegetables, herbs and
nuts to feed hundreds of families. The
community has access to food production at Riverview Gardens through farmers’
markets, Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) shares, local groceries and
restaurants. Riverview Gardens produce
is sold primarily through their Community Supported Agriculture (CSA)
programs. These programs are
opportunities for individuals and households to purchase shares in Riverview’s
production. By purchasing a share you
are helping provide the financial resources needed to fulfill their
mission. A CSA box from Riverview
Gardens is a great way to fill your pantry and support your community!
Wastewater Treatment Plant-Jim Bowman
In 1883 when Appleton built its first
sanitary and storm sewer system, residents were not concerned with
environmental pollution. By 1937,
however, the Fox River was badly polluted and the city installed a Sewerage
Treatment Plant and Interceptor Sewer System.
Wastewater would be treated before being discharged into the Fox River.
Since the 1960s, public concern with unclean
water has grown, federal regulations have been issued, and the Wastewater Treatment
Plant has responded with new equipment and processes.
Currently, five billion gallons of wastewater
are transported from homes and industry to the facility each year through a
network of 300 miles of sewer pipes. The
plant’s processes separate solids from water.
The two egg-shaped digesters help to stabilize sludge. One outcome of the process is treated water
which is discharged into the Fox River.
The second outcome is a material called biosolids which is provided to
the agricultural community as fertilizer.
The facility recycles over 20,000 tons of biosolids to farms each year.
Outagamie County Recycling Center- Deborah Wetter
The facility, which opened in 2009, serves three
counties – Winnebago, Outagamie and Brown, 65 communities and over 200,000
households. Through the years they have steadily increased the service
area and tonnages. During 2010, the first full year of operation, they
processed 46,000 tons of recyclables. In 2013, more than 80,000 tons was
processed, a 74% increase in just three years. Increasing the business
service area has allowed the center to utilize the capital investment of the
facility by implementing a full-time second shift. The two shifts employ
nearly 60 people, many of them from Valley Packaging. Dos and Don’ts of Recycling: Do accept #1
plastic bottles such as water and soda bottles. #2 plastic bottles and
jugs such as milk jugs and laundry detergent bottles. Do not accept
plastic bags, wrap or film (they jam up the equipment), no motor oil bottles,
no Styrofoam (bad stuff, don’t use it if can avoid it). Remove all caps
and lids and discard (really important. If left on can keep the plastic
bottles from being recycled.), rinse bottles and jugs. Do accept aluminum
cans and bottles, steel, tin and bi-metal cans, empty aerosol cans (but none
that had pesticide or poison in them). Do not accept aluminum pans or
foil or any empty paint cans. Guidelines – rinse cans and bottles.
Discard plastic caps from aerosol cans. Do accept cardboard, paperboard (cereal
box), newspaper, junk mail and office paper, phone books, magazines, catalogs,
shredded paper (put in brown paper bag and staple shut). Do not accept
tissue paper or paper contaminated by food or grease. Flatten and cut
cardboard to no larger than 3’ x 3’. Do
accept food and beverage glass bottles and jars. Do not accept windows,
ceramics or china. Rinse bottles and jars, metal caps and lids should be
recycled. Discard plastic caps and lids.
Most of the paper that is recycled in the facility is sold to local
paper companies to reuse. Plastic bags can be recycled at your local
grocery store or Walmart. Recycling keeps an incredible amount of
material out of our landfill making our landfill last much longer and saving
money. The materials that are recycled by the Tri-County facility are
sold to companies to make into new products which conserves natural resources.
Fifty percent of the things we throw away could in fact be recycled.
Let’s all make an effort to increase the amount we are recycling to reduce the
amount of material that goes into our landfill. Its good business and
good for our communities.
Thursday, September 18, 2014
Community Service Grant Application-Deadline of October 10th
Community Service Funding from the Rotary Club of
Appleton
The Rotary Club of Appleton is pleased to make available grants
from Rotary Shines, our major spring fundraiser,
and from the Community Service Fund.
Grants from the Community Service Fund will total $3,363 this year. Rotary
Shines funds are estimated at $10,000 but will vary depending on the
success of our 2015 fundraiser. You are encouraged to apply for either source
of funding, or both. Both grants will support
local community needs.
Attached is a grant request form that must be completed and
returned to the Community Service Fund Committee Chair. To be
considered, your responses need to be kept to a two-page maximum.
The following guidelines will help you determine if you
qualify for funding from these sources:
·
Grants will be given to organizations designated
as 501(c)3.
·
The project must serve/benefit residents of the
Appleton area.
·
Funds may serve as seed money for projects.
·
Funds are committed for only one year at a time,
but may be awarded up to three consecutive years depending on future Rotary
Community Service Committee decisions.
·
Capital Projects (“bricks and mortar”) will not
be funded.
·
Annual campaigns will not be funded.
·
Please do not request funds for ongoing
operational expenses.
Requests
for both grants must be received by October 10, 2014. Rotary’s Community Service Committee will
determine recommended recipients of both grants at one meeting.
Requests
must be submitted on the “Rotary Request for Funding Form.” The signature of the agency director and
board chair is required on the Request for Funding Form.
The completed and signed form should be mailed or emailed to:
Rosie Cannizzo
Rotary Club of Appleton Community
Service Committee Chair
N1634 Prairie View Dr.
Greenville, WI 54942
Please note that our requests for funding will exceed funds
available. If you are turned down in
one grant cycle you can re-apply.
If
you are selected for either grant, we require you to recognize the Rotary Club
of Appleton in your project communications and promotions.
Thank you for your interest in our grant
program.
Request for Funding Form
Rotary Club of Appleton
Due Date: October 10, 2014
(Important: Responses over two pages
maximum will not be considered.)
·
Organization Name:
·
Organization has 501c3 Tax Exempt
Status: ___Yes (please attach)
·
Name and title of person requesting
funds:
·
Address:
·
Phone:
·
Email:
·
Amount Requested:
□ from Rotary Shines (about $10,000)
□ from Rotary Community Service Fund ($3,363 and less)
□ from Rotary Community Service Fund ($3,363 and less)
□ either
·
Briefly describe your organization (mission, history,
etc.)
·
Describe the project for which the funds are
being sought and who will benefit from the project.
·
How does this project fill a need that exists in
the community and/or improve the quality of life for Appleton-area residents?
·
What are the program measures and outcomes and what
are you hoping to achieve?
·
Is there a component of this project for which member
of the Rotary club could provide hands-on assistance?
·
What is the total budget for this project?
·
What other sources of funding do you have for
this project?
·
Has your organization previously received
funding from the Rotary Club of Appleton?
·
What is your organization’s annual budget? What
is your organization’s endowment?
Director of Agency Date
Agency Board Chair Date
Nomination Form Charles and Adele Heeter Outstanding Community Leadership Award
The nomination form is out for the Charles and Adele Heeter Outstanding Community Leadership Award. The due date for this form is December 15, 2014. To obtain this form please contact Meghan at rotaryappleton@gmail.com or at 920-205-5255. It was also attached to the Gusto sent out this week.
NEXT WEEKS MEETING- SEPTEMBER 30- DAVE SKOGEN-FESTIVAL FOODS
Dave Skogen is
Chairman of the Board of Skogen’s Festival Foods, a family-owned company
originally founded as Skogen’s IGA by his father and mother in 1946 in
Onalaska, Wis. In Boomerang!,
Dave Skogen offers a wealth of no-nonsense, battle-tested insights and lessons
that are the result of his experiences in leading Skogen’s Festival Foods, a
growing regional chain of supermarket stores. The book’s underlying idea is
“the boomerang theory,” the fundamental principle that has guided Dave and his
teammates in serving customers successfully.
This meeting will not be like our usual meeting, however there will be a
registration table for you to sign in and pay for your meals. If you have any questions please contact
Meghan at rotaryappleton@gmail.com.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
·
FAMILY
OF ROTARY invites you to attend An Historic Bus Tour of Neenah and Menasha on Wednesday, September 24. Local Historian Nancy Barker
will be our guide. Cost: $5 per person. Please sign up at the
Registration Table as you attend the weekly Rotary meetings. Bus departs the
parking lot on West College Avenue next to the McDonald's at 5:30 pm. Tour will conclude at 7pm.
Participants wishing to gather for dinner at a local restaurant are encouraged
to do so.
·
The
Theme committee would like to announce that the Nobel Conference is October 6th
and you will return October 8th. It is being held at Gustavus Adolphus College
in St. Peter, Minnesota. The cost for
transportation, lodging and meals is $300.
If you would like more information you can contact John Mielke, Karen
Laws, Harry Spiegelberg or Tom Williams.
·
We
have a fun opportunity for service. On Saturday, September 27 – which is
Appleton’s Octoberfest, the Downtown Kiwanis Club has offered to share the
volunteer opportunity with us in a cooperative effort to sell wrist bands and
drink tickets. They have agreed to split
the money earned with us – generally a total of $3,000 - $5,000 – which would
mean our Club would earn $1,500 - $2,500 toward the cost of redesigning our
website. This also gives us a wonderful
opportunity to increase our visibility in the community by wearing Rotary
attire like t-shirts or hats and a chance to get to know and work alongside
Downtown Kiwanis members. We see this as
the beginning of other cooperative projects with Kiwanis as well as with other
Rotary Clubs in our area. If you are
interest please contact Meghan at (rotaryappleton@gmail.com) or Deborah Wetter (deborah.wetter@appleton.org) or call Deborah at
920-832-2291. Family members are
welcome. Shifts are only 2 hours (9-11,
11-1, 1-3 and 3-5). Feel free to sign up
for more than one shift.
·
Please
mark your calendars for April 17th
for the Rotary Shines Annual Fundraiser!
·
The
World Service Committee will meet at 11am Tuesday, September 30th.
·
The
Community Service Committee has finalized our grant application materials and
deadline for this year. The application and instructions are attached, and the
deadline this year will be October 10.
·
We
had a moment of silence for Bob Brunken who passed away on September 9th. Bob was a member for almost 44 years and
wrote a lot of our club songs. Our
condolences to the family.
DISTRICT GOVERNOR- TOM BERKEDAL
Tom Berkedal, District Governor, has
been part of Rotary for the past 28 years.
His wife, Laurie, may not be a Rotarian but is a Paul Harris Fellow and
has been supportive of Tom from the beginning.
Tom and has wife were honored to attend the International Assembly in
San Diego in January of this year. This
is a gathering of all of the District Governor Elects throughout the
World. During the assembly the Rotary
International President, Gary Huang announced the 2014-2015 Rotary Theme which
is “Light Up Rotary.” The theme was
derived from this saying by Confucius, “It is better to light a single candle
than to sit and curse the darkness.”
Gary went to say that the Rotary way is the Confucius way. The Rotary way is to light a candle. I light
one, you light one, 1.2 million Rotarians light one and together we light up
the World! Tom then went on to talk
about heroes in our lives. The real
“Heroes” in our lives are those people who take an interest in us for whatever
reason to inspire, to mentor and to get us through difficult times in our
lives. He then asked us the question,
“How many of you believe that it’s possible to be a hero in the life of someone
that you never met”? Well he does and
here’s why: Rotarians with the help of
others are going to eradicate Polio from the face of the earth saving millions
of children from the effects of that crippling disease. Since 1985 Rotary members have helped
immunize more than 2 billion children against polio. Of course Rotary is not just about Polio.
Rotarians also promote peace through the Rotary Peace Fellowship Program. Since 2002 over 800 peace fellows from more
than 110 different countries have participated in the Peace Fellowship program
at a cost of more than 40 million dollars.
Throughout Rotary’s Global/Ambassadorial scholar program Rotarians
provide $30,000 scholarships to young people throughout the world who are
entering a field of study that reflects one of Rotary’s six areas of focus. Since 1947, the Foundation has given
scholarships to over 42,000 young people from over 130 countries at a cost of
over $575 million dollars. Since 1965, The Rotary Foundation has funded almost
40,000 projects in over 200 countries at a cost of more than $500 million
providing relief to refugees, low-cost health care, sanitation facilities,
rainwater harvesting, water wells, teacher training, literacy projects, food,
shelter and so much more. Add to that
the hundreds of thousands of local projects that Rotary Foundation has helped
support over the years. Tom believes
that it is appropriate to say that Rotarians who donate to the Rotary
Foundation are heroes in the lives of the children who have been immunized or
the young adults who received a scholarship or the beneficiaries of Rotary’s
global or local projects. Tom is looking
forward to the upcoming year for a lot of reasons. 2015 is the centennial year for our
district. To celebrate he is encouraging
all clubs to do something special in recognition of our 100 year anniversary
and the district itself has a great celebration planned. During
the weekend of May 15-17, 2015 we
are going to host a three district, district conference. We are calling it Tri-Con and the theme for
the conference is “Light up Rotary…100
years of service.” Our district, 6220, will be joined by district 6250
which is located on the western side of the state which includes cities such as
Madison, Lacrosse, Janesville, etc. and district 6270 located in the south central
part of Wisconsin such as Neenah/Menasha, Milwaukee, Racine and so forth. This is going to be a big party involving
most of the state of Wisconsin, the upper peninsula of Michigan and a small
piece of both Minnesota and Illinois.
The conference itself will be held at the Radisson Paper Valley Hotel. We expect to have about 900-1200 Rotarians
for this event. Tom has been working
hard on making this event affordable and accessible. Registration is $15 and there is no meal
plan. Also this is a family friendly
event. Tom encourages everyone to attend
and promises that the experience will change your perception of Rotary
forever. Registration began on September
1st so please plan on joining!
Friday, September 12, 2014
NEXT WEEKS MEETING- SEPTEMBER 23- ROTARY ON THE ROAD
September 23 our Rotary meeting hits the road. Take
in the beauty of the Riverview Community Gardens, visit the Outagamie County
Recycling Center, or “back by popular demand!” enjoy a stroll through a waste
water treatment plant.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
·
Rotary
on the Road sign up sheets are available at the sign in table at each
meeting. Make sure to sign up for which
facility you are interested in attending.
Rotary on the Road is September 23rd.
·
FAMILY
OF ROTARY invites you to attend An Historic Bus Tour of Neenah and Menasha on Wednesday, September 24. Local Historian Nancy Barker
will be our guide. Cost: $5 per person. Please sign up at the
Registration Table as you attend the weekly Rotary meetings. Bus departs the
parking lot on West College Avenue next to the McDonald's at 5:30 pm. Tour will conclude at 7pm.
Participants wishing to gather for dinner at a local restaurant are
encouraged to do so. WE RECEIVED GREAT FEEDBACK FROM LAST YEAR'S TOUR OF
DOWNTOWN APPLETON.
·
At
the September 2nd meeting there was a member who paid for their meal
and left their change at the check in table.
If you believe this is you, please contact Meghan at rotaryappleton@gmail.com or 920-205-5255.
·
The
Theme committee would like to announce that the Nobel Conference is October 6th
and you will return October 8th. It is being held at Gustavus Adolphus College
in St. Peter, Minnesota. The cost for
transportation, lodging and meals is $300.
If you would like more information you can contact John Mielke, Karen
Laws, Harry Spiegelberg or Tom Williams.
·
We
have a fun opportunity for service. On Saturday, September 27 – which is
Appleton’s Octoberfest, the Downtown Kiwanis Club has offered to share the
volunteer opportunity with us in a cooperative effort to sell wrist bands and
drink tickets. They have agreed to split
the money earned with us – generally a total of $3,000 - $5,000 – which would
mean our Club would earn $1,500 - $2,500 toward the cost of redesigning our
website. This also gives us a wonderful
opportunity to increase our visibility in the community by wearing Rotary
attire like t-shirts or hats and a chance to get to know and work alongside
Downtown Kiwanis members. We see this as
the beginning of other cooperative projects with Kiwanis as well as with other
Rotary Clubs in our area. There will be
a sign-up sheet at the Registration Table next week or you can email Meghan (rotaryappleton@gmail.com) or Deborah Wetter (deborah.wetter@appleton.org) or call Deborah at
920-832-2291 with the shift you would like.
Family members are welcome.
Shifts are only 2 hours (9-11, 11-1, 1-3 and 3-5) and we need 6 Rotarians
in the booth at all times. Feel free to
sign up for more than one shift. If you
don’t have Rotary attire and want to purchase it, please contact Meghan or
Deborah, and we’ll try to get it purchased and in your hands before
Octoberfest.
Thumbnail Jenni Eickelberg
You may notice a theme in this speech
that it ties to Rotary members. Jenni
was born in Appleton. Amazing parents
and amazing childhood. Jenni attended
school through the AASD. Schools she
attended were Jefferson, Wilson and Appleton West. A little known fact: Frank Rippl was her
elementary music teacher and Lee Allinger was her science teacher in 6th
grade. After high school Jenni attended
the University of Wisconsin- Stevens Point where she majored in Biology and
minored in Chemistry. Her intentions
were to enter in to veterinary medicine.
Jenni also has a Master’s in Business Administration (MBA) from UW
Oshkosh where Sridhar was her professor for International Business Class, one
of her favorite classes! Jenni met her
husband, Jeff, at UWSP and has been married for 16 years. They have 2 children
together. Joren, 9 and Edison, 6. Some of her hobbies include reading. She has been a member of a women’s book club
for close to 20 years. Jenni also mentioned
running as one of her newest hobbies and she will be running her first 5K in
just a few weeks. Something that most
people won’t know about Jenni is that she is a closet nerd. She loves science fiction, gaming and board
and card games. She actually owns over
100 games, probably close to 200. Jenni
is very involved in our community. She
is on the board of Emergency Shelter of the Fox Valley, newVoices (another tie
to Rotary with Mary Schmidt and Amy Flanders) and the Outagamie County Housing
Authority. She is also on many
committees and teams such as United Way Impact Area, INCLUDE, Race for a
Reason, Human Race and a wish granter for Make A Wish. Jenni has worked at Thrivent for 14 years and
9 ½ have been in Community Relations.
Her responsibilities include Grant making, Oversight of volunteer
program and Generosity programs, building relationships in community and
looking for ways that Thrivent can help in the Fox Cities. Jenni loves her job and her company because
she gets to incorporate her passion and love for her community. Jenni is very excited to join Rotary as it
aligns with her personal values and she glad to be a member.
Thumbnail-Mary Downs
The Top 10 things you should know about Mary
Downs....
1.She is the youngest
of 3 children. There are 2000 pictures
of her sister, 1000 of her brother, and 2 of her. 2. While
Mary was the yearbook editor at Appleton East, she learned to forge the
principal's signature, just in case there was some type of yearbook-deadline-emergency. She’s not telling if she ever actually used
it.... 3.While Mary was an undergraduate
at UW-Stevens Point, she majored in Managerial Accounting and played
competitive trivia with The Flying Zupan Brothers. That was before the internet - that was real
trivia! 4. She earned two graduate
degrees at UW-Oshkosh, in Educational Leadership and Counseling. Clearly, she’s still trying to figure out if
I am right or left-brained. 5. Mary
spent many years at AAL/Thrivent.
Highlights of her time there included being involved in the creation of
the child learning center, going to UNICEF to receive an award for our program
to support nursing mothers, and being at a volunteer event in Minot North
Dakota where several people just walked right into the pool at the Holiday
Inn. Fortunately someone from the North
Dakota Water Rescue team was sitting next to her. 6.
The highlight of her time at ThedaCare included working on the Community Mental
Health Summit, forming the NEW Mental Health Connection, and playing a key role
in the creation of Catalpa Health. 7.
Mary recently joined FVTC as the leader of the Foundation and Community
Relations. She needed to feed her soul
and focus on collaborating to improve people’s lives. 8. Mary is an only parent with two sons. “Only” is another way to
say Widow –her husband died two years ago after a 6 year battle with
cancer. She has 2 sons, one studying
strategic communications at TCU, the other at Appleton North. She also has a dog and a cat. At first, she thought she was a dog
person. Now she thinks she is a cat
person. But not a crazy cat lady. That’s entirely different. 9.
Mary loves to travel, she loves to buy jewelry, and she loves to buy jewelry
while traveling. She thought that
traveling would help her cross things off my bucket list, but it just makes her
want to add new items to it. 10. Her Volunteer/Service activities
include: CHAPs Academy board member, Leadership Fox Cities NAMI, Appleton North
and Wave Swim club events, and now, ROTARY!!
ROTARY FOUNDATION REPORT TO CLUB
The
Rotary Foundation Officers and Grants Review Committee Members for 2014/2015
are:
President
Nancy
Johnshoy
VP/Secretary
Donna
Kidder
Treasurer
Kevin
Loomans
Grants Review
Chair Curt
Detjen
Investment
Liaison
Jeff
Esker
Board Member At Large Matt
Rehbein
Club President Deborah
Wetter
Club President Elect B
Sridhar
Grants Review Committee Members Ron
Altenburg
Dennis Hietpas
Caroline
Lasecki
Kevin Loomans
The Foundations total assets as of our fiscal
year end on June 30, 2014 were $1,245,943.17.
We have 6 foundation funds totaling
$1,231,910 that are invested by the Community Foundation with a long-term
investment focus. Last year was very favorable
in terms of investment performance with an overall return of 15.7%, which means
that our investments increased almost $160,000 net of fees in the last fiscal
year. Included in this group are the Scholarship, Heeter, Groth, Art
Scholarship, Community Service and Helen Thom Roemer Funds. These funds are subject to an annual
distribution policy of 5% of the rolling 12 quarter average value. This approach helps to minimize annual
fluctuations due to market performance. Total distributions in the 2013/2014
fiscal year were $51,473.41. Since 2003
our Foundation Fund distributions have totaled $534,151.
The Scholarship Fund has a fund balance of $355,615. We currently award
two scholarships of $5,000 paid over a three-year period to seniors from the
five Appleton high schools. The fund also contributes to the U.W. Fox Valley
and Fox Valley Technical College Foundations for non-traditional student
scholarships. This year the two school
foundations received $2,481 each.
The
Charles Heeter Fund
has assets of $109,566. Last year $4,623
was transferred to Rotary International from for Paul Harris Fellowships on
behalf of the individuals who received the Charles and Adele Heeter Outstanding
Community Leadership Awards.
The Arts
Scholarship Fund
balance is $70,111. The fund supports individuals who seek educational
experiences in his/her art field. The
Art Scholarship Committee awarded scholarships last year in the amount of
$2,552.
The Paul
and Elaine Groth World Community Service Fund provides financial support for
international projects endorsed by the World Service Committee who approved
grants this year totaling $3,075. This funds yearend balance was $76,772.
The
Helen Thom Roemer Fund
provides support to projects that serve the needs of children with limited
physical abilities and cognitive deficits in the Appleton area. Last year, the Children with Disabilities
Committee approved requests totaling $23,053.
This is our largest single fund with a balance of $540,956.
The
Community Service Fund
was established to direct charitable donations to address local community
needs. The Community Service Committee
approved grants of $3,206 in the last year.
The Foundation also maintains pass-through
checking accounts for the Appleton Rotary Foundation and SAMP. These accounts
insure that your donation is tax deductible and that the beneficiaries have
ready access to that cash. At this time
we have approximately $14,033 in checking accounts.
Rotary Club members contribute to our
Foundation through annual gifts, memorials or bequests. The attached chart shows our annual gifting
totals to Foundation Funds for the last eleven fiscal years. In the last fiscal year our members donated
$6,657 to the six Foundation Funds listed here and an additional $1,710 to the
SAMP pass-thru fund. It is somewhat
concerning that our member contributions last year were significantly below the
average of the previous several years. I
think we do a good job of reminding Rotarians to donate to Rotary International
each year but Nancy would like to make a plug for our own Foundation and ask
you to keep us in your thoughts as you do your annual gifting and estate
planning.
A final thank you to the committees who
steward our funds and who continue the important work of Rotary in our
community and around the world.
Wednesday, September 10, 2014
Community Service Funding from the Rotary Club of Appleton
The Rotary Club of Appleton is pleased to make available grants
from Rotary Shines, our major spring fundraiser,
and from the Community Service Fund.
Grants from the Community Service Fund will total $3,363 this year. Rotary
Shines funds are estimated at $10,000 but will vary depending on the
success of our 2015 fundraiser. You are encouraged to apply for either source
of funding, or both. Both grants will support
local community needs.
Attached is a grant request form that must be completed and
returned to the Community Service Fund Committee Chair. To be
considered, your responses need to be kept to a two-page maximum.
The following guidelines will help you determine if you
qualify for funding from these sources:
·
Grants will be given to organizations designated
as 501(c)3.
·
The project must serve/benefit residents of the
Appleton area.
·
Funds may serve as seed money for projects.
·
Funds are committed for only one year at a time,
but may be awarded up to three consecutive years depending on future Rotary
Community Service Committee decisions.
·
Capital Projects (“bricks and mortar”) will not
be funded.
·
Annual campaigns will not be funded.
·
Please do not request funds for ongoing
operational expenses.
Requests
for both grants must be received by October 10, 2014. Rotary’s Community Service Committee will
determine recommended recipients of both grants at one meeting.
Requests
must be submitted on the “Rotary Request for Funding Form.” The signature of the agency director and
board chair is required on the Request for Funding Form.
The completed and signed form should be mailed or emailed to:
Rosie Cannizzo
Rotary Club of Appleton Community
Service Committee ChairN1634 Prairie View Dr.
Greenville, WI 54942
Email: cannizzr@lawrence.edu (Emails should use the subject line: Rotary Community Service Grant)
Please note that our requests for funding will exceed funds
available. If you are turned down in
one grant cycle you can re-apply.
If
you are selected for either grant, we require you to recognize the Rotary Club
of Appleton in your project communications and promotions.
Thank you for your interest in our grant
program.
Request for Funding Form
Rotary Club of Appleton
Due Date: October 10, 2014
(Important: Responses over two pages
maximum will not be considered.)
·
Organization Name:
·
Organization has 501c3 Tax Exempt
Status: ___Yes (please attach)
·
Name and title of person requesting
funds:
·
Address:
·
Phone:
·
Email:
·
Amount Requested:
□ from Rotary Shines (about $10,000)
□ from Rotary Community Service Fund ($3,363 and less)
□ from Rotary Community Service Fund ($3,363 and less)
□ either
·
Briefly describe your organization (mission, history,
etc.)
·
Describe the project for which the funds are
being sought and who will benefit from the project.
·
How does this project fill a need that exists in
the community and/or improve the quality of life for Appleton-area residents?
·
What are the program measures and outcomes and what
are you hoping to achieve?
·
Is there a component of this project for which member
of the Rotary club could provide hands-on assistance?
·
What is the total budget for this project?
·
What other sources of funding do you have for
this project?
·
Has your organization previously received
funding from the Rotary Club of Appleton?
·
What is your organization’s annual budget? What
is your organization’s endowment?
Director of Agency Date
Agency Board Chair Date
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