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Bulletin Editor
Max Bridges
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Meeting Responsibilities
Presiding At Meeting
Randolph, Rich
 
Greeter
Gray, Jim
 
Thought of the Day
Behr, Marty
 
Pledge Leader
O'Rear, Paul
 
Sunshine Committee
Girard, MJ
 
Web Site Editor
Lorenzen, Dave
 
Bulletin Editor
Bridges, Max
 
Bulletin Notes
Shureen, Doug
 
Bulletin Notes
Tamanaha, Dicksie
 
Photographer
Smith, Warren
 
Speakers
Jan 03, 2019
The Latest Changes to the Tax Code and Tax Strategies for 2019
The Latest Changes to the Tax Code and Tax Strategies for 2019
Jan 10, 2019
Santa Rosa Symphony
Jan 17, 2019
State of the Club
Jan 24, 2019
President, Santa Rosa Cycling Club
Jan 31, 2019
Chess For Kids
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Upcoming Events
SCARC Santa Rosa Sunrise
May 30, 2019
 
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Marina Gachet
December 16
 
Harry Coffey
December 18
 
Steve Herron
December 20
 
Roy Johnston
December 23
 
Jennifer Hembd
December 29
 
Leroy Carlenzoli
December 29
 
Spouse Birthdays
Sheena Gray
December 2
 
Susan Davis
December 19
 
Susan Kirkbride
December 22
 
Anniversaries
Peter Banks
Mary Stewart
December 28
 
Join Date
Leroy Carlenzoli
December 1, 1987
31 years
 
Jim Gray
December 2, 2010
8 years
 
Carmen Fuentes Gutierrez
December 4, 2014
4 years
 
Michael Riel
December 8, 2011
7 years
 
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The program for January 3rd

Penny Millar, CPA

The Latest Changes to the Tax Code and Tax Strategies for 2019

My topic is a brief overview of the new tax law, and how it will impact your 2018 and 2019 tax returns.  Not only is the look of the form substantially different, but the deductions you are accustomed to have changed quite a bit as well.  The tax rates have gone down, but will that be enough to offset the changes in deductions?  For some people the new tax law will be great, and not so good for others.  Come find out how it may impact you.I am a partner with the CPA firm of Dillwood Burkel & Millar, LLP.

 

 

Photo of the Week

Photo of the Week 

 

On a regular basis, our resident photo pro Warren Smith  submit pictures of what is going on at the weekly meetings. You can always find the most recent pictures at the websites photo journal called "Meeting Sighting" Please note that all the meeting photos for the entire Rotary year are at this location with the most recent on the last page.

Thanks for all the great pictures Warren! Link to Meeting Sightings. The most recent are on the last page!

Additional photos may be found on the SR Sunrise Facebook Page.
 
 
President's Pen

President's Pen

Holiday spirit inspired and shared!!

Above, Past President Merle Hayes poses with the Valley of the Moon Children's Home Coordinator  (and utterly bovine maid) with the treasure trove of gifts assembled by Elsie Allen High School Interactors for the children at the home.  Merle's narrative follows:

Just delivered our shopping results.  We had $2900 donated.  We spent $1500 on clothes for 15 pre teens and teenagers. We also provided gifts for the children for Xmas and items for blue bags for children on there way to foster care.  The balance of the money will be used throughout the year for children that will process thru the center.  

There were 12 interact students that helped make the selections after the club Xmas party at  Faculty Advisor Doug Gibson's home.  

Though their faces may not be obvious, their  Holiday Spirit of sharing and concern for peers less fortunate glowed from within as they prepared the gifts.

Thank you Merle and Doug for your leadership with Elsie Allen Interact!!

Their annual tradition is an inspiration to me!

 

Gratefully,

President Rich

 
 
News From "The Rotarian"
20 Years of ‘Service Beyond Borders’
Former RI president helps send hundreds of volunteers around the world to perform 67,000 surgeries, examine 250,000 patients
In the 20 years since that first trip to Uganda, they’ve sent more than 500 volunteers to 43 countries, performed 67,000 surgeries, examined 250,000 patients, and received $2.4 million in grants
When Rajendra Saboo finished his term as president of Rotary International in 1992, he started thinking about how he could continue to help people. And by 1998, after serving as Rotary Foundation trustee chair, he knew he wanted to do something hands-on.
“When I was Rotary president, my theme was Look Beyond Yourself,” says Saboo, a member of the Rotary Club of Chandigarh, India. “I was thinking about service beyond borders. So I thought, ‘Is there anything that India can give?’ I realized that medical science in India is fairly advanced, and there are doctors — Rotarian doctors — who could give something to Africa, where the medical needs are tremendous.”
During a 2016 mission to Kigali, Rwanda, Saboo demonstrated that he had overcome his discomfort with blood to become an effective member of the medical team.
Saboo talked to Nandlal Parekh, a fellow Rotarian and a physician who had worked in Uganda before being forced out by dictator Idi Amin. Parekh thought Uganda, even though it was still in the midst of a civil war, would be an excellent place for a medical mission. The trip that Saboo organized in 1998 was the start of 20 years of medical missions and over 67,000 surgeries.
To accompany him on that first trip, Saboo assembled a team of surgeons with experience performing corrective surgery on patients with polio, as well as a team of ophthalmologists. Then, a few days before they were scheduled to depart, terrorists bombed the U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania, killing hundreds of people. A third attack, in the Ugandan capital of Kampala, was foiled.
“We were terrified,” he says. “The doctors were also saying, ‘Should we go? Will we be safe?’”
Then Saboo’s wife, Usha, talked to a woman who had returned from volunteering to help people wounded in the war in the former Yugoslavia. Usha asked her if she had been afraid.
“You die only once,” the woman replied. “And it is the way you die that matters. I did not find any fear at the time, because I was serving humanity.”
“That answer hit Usha,” recalls Saboo. “She told me about it. Then we called a meeting where she recounted her conversation. The doctors and the volunteers said, ‘We are ready to go.’”
They arrived three days after the bombings. From Kampala, one team took a bus four hours east to Masaka, while another went north to Gulu to perform eye surgery. The local hospital hadn’t seen an ophthalmologist in seven years. Some of the old women danced after their eye surgery because they had never seen their grandchildren.
Saboo, who has no medical training himself, got squeamish when he saw blood. But the team needed all the volunteers to pitch in — by washing the dirty feet of children in preparation for surgery, loading patients on stretchers, helping to start the IV drips, and doing anything else that needed to be done.
“Madhav Borate, who was the leader of our medical mission, said, ‘Raja, change your clothes and come to the operating theater. You have to hold the patient’s wrist while we are operating and monitor the pulse,’ ” Saboo recalls. “I said, ‘Madhav, are you mad? I can’t even stand seeing someone receiving an injection. I can’t stand the sight of blood. I would faint.’ ”
Borate recalls that day too. “The operating rooms were lacking in monitoring equipment, including a device called a pulse oximeter,” he says. “So we decided to train three Rotarians to feel the pulse of the patients and inform the anesthetist if it became too fast or too slow. We started referring to the volunteers as our pulse meters.”
“I saw blood,” says Saboo. “I saw everything, and nothing happened to me. That changed me totally.”
In 2015, Rajendra Saboo and his wife, Usha, were inducted into the Arch Klumph Society.
Immediately upon their return to India, the team members started planning their next trip, this time to Ethiopia, with additional specialists. The third year they went to Nigeria. In the 20 years since that first trip to Uganda, they’ve sent more than 500 volunteers to 43 countries, performed 67,000 surgeries, examined 250,000 patients, and received $2.4 million in grants from The Rotary Foundation and from districts in Japan, Korea, Taiwan, and other countries. They’ve arranged for patients in Africa with complicated medical problems to be flown to India for treatment, and have conducted missions within India itself.
Last year, for the mission’s 20th anniversary, the team returned to Uganda. The country is wealthier and more peaceful now but still has many needs.
“The infrastructure and facilities at the hospital were much better, and the nursing staff was cooperative and helpful,” says Borate. “But there was still a severe shortage of supplies, instruments, and equipment even for routine operations.”
Nonetheless, with the help of Rotarians and doctors from Uganda, the team performed 1,100 surgeries, including 440 eye operations, 452 dental procedures, 25 reconstructive surgeries, and 84 general surgeries.
“It is the greatest impact I have seen in my 22 years as a Rotarian,” says Emmanuel Katongole, past governor of District 9211 (Tanzania and Uganda). “To see so many people with such complex problems, queuing for days for operations, and to see the happiness on their faces. We’re still getting calls asking, ‘Where are the Indian doctors? Can they come back?’ ”
For 2019, Saboo has an even bigger goal. “Sam Owori, who was selected to be the 2018-19 RI president but who passed away in 2017, said to me, ‘Raja, during my year as president, I would like you to arrange a team of medical doctors to go to every district of Africa.’ I said, ‘I’ll try,’ ” he says.
“After Sam died, President Barry Rassin said to me, ‘Raja, let us see if we can fulfill the dream that Sam had.’ So now we are planning on that.”
— Frank Bures
• Read more stories from The Rotarian
RI President's Message

RI President's Message

January 2019

 

Barry Rassin

President 2018-19

Vocational service can be hard to define, but it is easy to describe: It is simply the point where our Rotary lives and our professional lives intersect. When we put our Rotary ideals to work through our work, that is vocational service.

When I returned to the Bahamas after many years working in health care administration abroad, I realized that my country badly needed a modern health care facility. The resources we had at the time were out of date and inadequate, and people who were unable to travel abroad for care often did not receive the care they needed. Without the experience I had gained in the United States, I could have done nothing to change the status quo. But since I did have that experience, I was in a unique position to have an impact. I knew I could turn my professional path to good and make a career out of improving Bahamian health care.

As Rotary became part of my journey, I discovered that the words of Paul Harris that became the basis of Rotary — that shared effort knows no limitations — were also true for my vocation. I could not bring modern health care to the Bahamas alone. But through partnership, both with the doctors who eventually became my partners in Doctors Hospital and with all the dedicated staff members who worked in the hospital over the years, we could change everything. My goal became a shared goal — and then it became reality.

Rotary emphasizes the dignity of every vocation and the worth of every calling. Remember that the four founding members included no doctors or peacemakers — just an attorney, a mining engineer, a coal dealer, and a printer. From the beginning, the diversity of those vocations gave Rotary a special strength. And that diversity is reflected in our classification system, which aims to ensure that each club represents the full range of businesses and professions that serve each community.

Paul Harris put it this way: "Each Rotarian is the connecting link between the idealism of Rotary and his trade or profession." It was true when he said it and should be equally true now. We only spend an hour or two a week at our Rotary meetings, but most of us spend most of our waking time at work. Through Rotary, those hours are also an opportunity for service: a chance to Be the Inspiration to those we work with, those who work for us, and the communities we serve.

 

 

Message from the Foundation Trustee Chair

Message from the Foundation Trustee Chair

January 2019

Ron D. Burton

Trustee Chair 2018-19

I would be willing to bet that most Rotarians remember the person who sponsored them into their Rotary club. It's a person we will never forget and to whom we will always be grateful for sharing with us such a life-changing opportunity. Having said that, I'm not really sure most of us can pinpoint exactly when our Foundation became so important to us. It's not quite as simple as someone inviting you to a meeting. But I have to think there was some seminal event, project, or happening — whether in your club or district, or internationally — that turned on that light for you.

Since 1905, Rotary clubs have provided the outlet that allows Rotarians to be people of action in their communities. Our local clubs are where we live, work, and make lifelong friends, and where and how we have the most direct, visible impact on the place we call home. I firmly believe that when most Rotarians hear "Rotary International," they think of their Rotary club.

On the other hand, when Rotarians hear "The Rotary Foundation," they think of the myriad humanitarian and educational projects and programs that have made the Foundation the premier foundation in our world today. It is truly the magic that brings Rotary to life for them, makes their community the world, and allows them to be global people of action.

As we begin the new calendar year and think about the many things we would like to get done, many of us make New Year's resolutions. I hope one of yours is greater involvement and participation in our Rotary Foundation. Let's each make our Foundation our charity of choice. If we do that, we can make this Rotary year the very best in our incredible history. Please join me and make Rotary's legacy your promise!

 

 

 

Rotary Club of Santa Rosa Sunrise - Founded June 30, 1986