banner
NEWS
Jon Bucks

Kingston North Kitsap Rotary Club’s Sept 16 meeting began with its usual flag salute.  The salute was preceded by Club President Walt Elliott’s image of, and story about, the Kitsap 9/11 Memorial in Bremerton’s Evergreen Rotary Park.  Elliott visited the site 9/11/2020.  He encouraged Club members to go see for themselves, the twisted steel from the World Trade Center, the limestone from the Pentagon, and the stories of four airliners on a tragic day in our nation’s history.  The park is at 1300 Park Ave, Bremerton. 

    Another meeting preliminary, Happy Bucks, was turned on its head.  Jon Bucks.  It was reported that longtime Club member Jon Sole passed away late last week.  He was 81.  According to former Club President Clint Boxman, “Jon was behind the scenes on just about every project we’ve done in the last ten years, including Village Green Pavilion, high school football field lights, signature gathering to create the Village Green Metropolitan Park District, and construction of the electronic reader-board in Kingston.”  When asked what charity “Jon Bucks” should go to, Jon’s wife, Kathy suggested the Kingston Rotary Foundation.  Many members pledged Jon Bucks, which should be sent, by check, payable to Kingston Rotary Foundation, to Foundation Treasurer, Shaun Stephenson, c/o Columbia Bank, 26563 Lindvog Road NE, Kingston, WA 98346.  

    The meeting featured a brief video of a Portland, OR Rotarian who suggested recruiting new Club members, too, should be turned on its head.  Rather than making a pitch based on altruistic reasons, members should consider recruiting members based on how serving the community makes you feel.  He cited the benefits of service, including good health, longevity, tranquility, friendship, and happiness.  And in the words of Kingston North Kitsap Rotarians,  FUN.    

    Members will want to attend the Sept 23 meeting.  That’s next Wednesday at noon.  The featured speaker will be North Kitsap Schools Superintendent, Dr. Laurynn Evans.

Read more...
Poulsbo Racial Justice and Equality Working Group

A Covid-19-era record nineteen Rotarians “Zoomed” into the Kingston North Kitsap Rotary Club’s Sept 9 meeting, including four visiting Rotarians from the Poulsbo Club. One of those visitors, Dan Weedin, was KNK Rotary’s meeting speaker.  Weedin, a twenty-seven year Rotarian, is the organizer of a  group in Poulsbo called the Racial Justice and Equality Working Group, which is made up mostly of Poulsbo Rotarians. 

    Weedin described how the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police impacted him.  He said his thirty-year old daughter asked “what are you going to do about it?  You should educate yourself.”  That was the genesis of the formation of the group, “to create a group of humans, not trying to solve anything,” said Weedin. The Poulsbo Club has about 130 members; “seventeen to twenty come to our every other week Working Group meetings.” The group’s first year goal is to “foster education and understanding,” according to Weedin.  

    At each meeting, the group talks about a different topic.  They listen to podcasts.  Read articles.  At one recent meeting, one of Poulsbo’s two black members was invited to share experiences.  The group welcomes everyone interested in coming to a safe place to learn.  Weedin said, “we don’t talk politics, we talk people.”  He said a long-term goal of the Working Group is for the Poulsbo Club to become more diverse, especially to get more Tribal involvement.  

    The next meeting of the Racial Justice and Equality Working Group is scheduled Sept 15 at 7 p.m.  For information on how to join the meeting contact Dan Weedin: 

dan@danweedin.com.  

 

    One other topic at the Kingston North Kitsap Rotary Club’s Sept 9 meeting was Rotary Youth Exchange Open Houses, “Zoom events” to inform interested kids about the possibility of becoming an exchange student in the 2021-2022 school year.  There must, of course, be a worldwide vaccine first.  The goal is to recruit sixteen students through the Open Houses and other outreach means.  The Open Houses are scheduled Sept 14 and 17, 6-8:30 p.m., and Sept 20, 1:30-4 p.m.  For more information go to Rotary District 5020’s website, Upcoming Events.

Read more...
Social Justice survey results

Survey results are in.  The Kingston North Kitsap Rotary Club’s committee to look into the possibility of a Club social justice statement conducted an anonymous Survey Monkey survey of Club members to determine their feelings whether the Club should have such a statement.  The one-question survey stated: “The Kingston North Kitsap Rotary Club should have a social justice statement.”  It was emailed to forty-one members; thirty-two responded, as follows:  Eight strongly agreed with the statement, while eight others agreed.  No one had no opinion.  Nine members disagreed with the statement, while seven strongly disagreed.  An almost perfect, inverted, bell-shaped curve.  Serving on the committee are Chris Gilbreath, Isaac Anderson, Ron Carter, Doug Hallock, and Jessica Jetter.

Read more...
Boys and Girls Club Meeting

At their weekly meeting Aug 12,  Kingston North Kitsap Rotarians received a presentation from Chelsea Tate, Unit Director, North Kitsap Boys and Girls Club.  The Club operates out of Village Green Community Center in Kingston, even under Covid-19 restrictions.  

Three to four-hundred youths are served every year there.  On a typical summer day they have sixty kids, more like seventy-five on a typical day during the school year.  Rotarians learned the Club has the capacity to serve more kids.  

    The Club strives to keep fees low - a typical before and after school tuition is $345 per month.  They are able to help in-need families with scholarships that reduce the monthly cost. 

Sixty percent of the Boys and Girls Club budget comes from fees paid by parents, but it does not cover food, arts and crafts materials, and janitorial services.  The remainder of the budget is supported by grants, donations, and fund-raising.

    Chelsea, the Director, shared the two common misconceptions about Boys and Girls Club.  First, that is is just childcare.  She explained it is childcare-plus.  The Club, with a staff of six, helps kids with homework, they focus on interpersonal skills and communication, they contribute in the community by doing community projects, such as cleaning up Village Green Park, and they explore a variety of arts and crafts, including photography and STEM activities.  The other major misconception is that Boys and Girls Club is free.  

    For more information, Google “Boys and Girls Club of North Kitsap.”

Read more...
ROTARY INTERNATIONAL NEWS

The Conversation:Jeanne GangA renowned Rotary alum affirms her commitment to environmentally sustainable architectureGrowing up in Belvidere, Illinois, a city 70 miles

 

Small scholarships help adults return to school and trade a job for a career - In a seemingly affluent Chicago suburb, poverty stops many adult students from affording classes to advance their skillsets. Local Rotary clubs are helping pay for school.

 

With help from a Rotary Foundation global grant, a group of women in rural Costa Rica are using ecotourism to enrich their families' futures.

 

These 10 workers put service above self when it counted most

 

Rotary and its GPEI partners celebrate a monumental achievement, say global eradication of wild polio is possible with the continued dedication and persistence of Rotarians

 
EXECUTIVES & DIRECTORS
President
 
President Elect
 
Secretary
 
Treasurer-club
 
Immediate Past President
 
Sergeant-at-Arms
 
Community Service
 
International Service
 
Electronic Communications
 
Membership
 
Foundation Treasurer
 
Board Director
 
Youth Services
 
Youth Exchange Officer
 
Youth Protection Officer
 
Interact Advisor
 
BIRTHDAYS AND ANNIVERSARIES
Member Birthdays
Isaac Anderson
September 7
 
Gale Kirsopp
September 13
 
Ron Carter
September 19
 
Walt Elliott
September 27
 
Join Date
Keith Beebe
September 13, 2017
3 years
 
Cynthia Martin
September 27, 2017
3 years
 
BULLETIN EDITOR
Ron Carter
To unsubscribe, click HERE.  We're sorry to see you go, and hope you come back soon...
Russell Hampton
ClubRunner
ClubRunner Mobile