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Peacebuilder Clubs create momentum for peace within communities
By Reem Ghunaim and Mike Green, February 13, 2019, Published in Rotary International
We launched our Peacebuilder Clubs Program at the Rotary International Convention in Toronto. Peacebuilder Clubs were pioneered eight years ago by past Rotarian Action Group for Peace (RAGFP) Board Member and Past District 5100 Governor Mike Caruso as a way of building support for the six Rotary Peace Centers around the world. With the support of RAGFP, District 5100 registered 21 Peacebuilder Clubs in Oregon and Washington, USA. Last year our RAGFP leadership team was determined to champion this program in Rotary clubs worldwide as an essential call to action for Rotarian peacebuilders.
 
2018 - 2019 Sunrise Board
 
President
Matthew Seales
 

President Elect
Pat Steward
 
1st Vice President
TBA
 
2nd Vice President
Winston Connolly
 
Immediate Past President
Deirdre McFarlane
 
Secretary
Hazel Brown
 
Treasurer
Dawn Cummings
 
Director - Membership
Nanalie Cover

Director - Communication
Andrea Whittaker
 
Director - Club Administration
TBA
 
Co-Directors - Youth Service
Ferlyn Heyne
Dean Heyne
 
Director - Literacy
Hendrik-Jan van Genderen
 
Co-Directors - Community Service
Sharon Buckley-Omier
Jenna Mungall
 
Director - International Service
Pat Steward
 
Director - Fundraising
TBA
 
Director - Rotary Foundation/Grants
Andrea Bryan
 
Chair - Fellowship
Jacqueline Golding-McDonald
 
Well-being Officer
Alison Shirlaw
 
Sergeant At Arms
Winston Connolly
 
Disaster Recovery Chair
Barbara Anley
 
 
Upcoming Events
Weekly Meeting
George Town Yacht Club
Jun 12, 2019
7:00 AM – 8:00 AM
 
JOINT BOARD HANDOVER MEETING
Governor's Square Boardroom
Jun 18, 2019
6:00 PM – 7:30 PM
 
Weekly Meeting
George Town Yacht Club
Jun 19, 2019
7:00 AM – 8:00 AM
 
Rotary Sunrise Changeover 2019/20
Bacaro
Jun 23, 2019
12:00 PM – 3:00 PM
 
View entire list
ClubRunner

Value of Rotary Volunteering

A special report prepared for Rotary International by the Johns Hopkins Center for Civil Society Studies estimated the value of Rotary member volunteer hours at $850 million a year.

 

That Rotary members log a lot of volunteer hours should come as no surprise to anyone familiar with the organization. But a new report just released by Johns Hopkins University provides a powerful look at the impact of all those volunteer hours.

The special report prepared for Rotary International by the Johns Hopkins Center for Civil Society Studies found that Rotary members had volunteered a total of 5.8 million hours within a four-week survey period. Extrapolating those results over an entire year, the report gave a conservative estimate of nearly 47 million hours of volunteer effort generated by Rotary members in a typical year.

The report then analyzed the economic impact of all those hours and estimated the value conservatively at $850 million a year, if communities had to pay for the services that Rotary volunteers provide.

Rotary, with the help of Johns Hopkins University, is the first global service organization to conduct an empirical analysis of its volunteer’s impact using an internationally sanctioned definition of volunteer work. The authors of the report noted in their conclusion that at each stop, the analysis had chosen the most conservative estimates.

“This makes the results reported here all the more remarkable,” the authors noted. “Translated into economic terms, Rotary is annually generating a scale of social and economic problem-solving effort that is worth nearly nine times more than it costs the organization to produce.”

Rotary General Secretary John Hewko said the figure doesn't even include the in-kind contributions and the money that Rotary clubs and the Rotary Foundation raise every year. In addition, the figure doesn’t include the volunteer work of the many relatives and friends of Rotary that members often involve in a project, or that of members of Rotaract, Interact, or the Community Corps, that would easily double the estimate of Rotary’s economic impact.

To Learn more about the impact Rotary has on the world visit: https://www.rotary.org/en

 


Games Night

To wrap up Child Month in May, Rotary Sunrise sponsored Trivia Night at George Town, Town Hall. The event was organized by the Department of Children and Family Services and attended by children from the local area and Sunrise volunteers. The attendees had a fun night playing board games, musical chairs and doing arts and crafts.

 

 
Make-Up Opportunities
 
Make-Ups: In addition to make-up opportunities at Rotary Sunrise, you can make up absences at another club in Grand Cayman. The meeting times and places for the other clubs are as follows:
 
Rotaract Blue:
Wednesdays 6 pm at Royal Palms Beach Club Restaurant
 
Rotaract Club of Grand Cayman: 
Thursdays 7 a.m. at The Greenhouse, 72 North Church St. 
(Next to Digicel Office, near waterfront)
 
Rotary Club of Grand Cayman
Thursdays 12:30pm, The Westin Ballroom
 
Rotary Club Cayman Central
Tuesdays 7:30pm, Grand Old House
 
Rotary E-Club of the Caribbean 7020: Online meetings anytime. Visit the new e-club platform at
http://portal.clubrunner.ca/9515/Stories/welcome-to-rotary-e-club-of-the-caribbean-7020