NEXT MEETING: October 16, 2020

Steven Pignataro, Vitalant

Vitalant (“Vye-TAL-ent”) is the nation’s second largest community blood service provider, supplying comprehensive transfusion medicine services for nearly 1,000 hospitals and health care partners for patients in need across 40 states. Vitalant’s network of blood centers work in tandem, moving lifesaving donations throughout the system to help ensure blood is available when and where it is needed most. In the Bay Area, we support over 45 hospitals.

MEETING OF

Welcome

Announcements

  • Dave Brown announced that we exceeded our goal on the Peres Elementary School project and will roll the over funding to next year. Erle Brown was thrilled to complete this campaign and deliver the checks in time for the teacher’s virtual school meeting. Thanks to everyone who contributed!
  • Dave Brown noted that Mac Lingo made a generous donation to the Buy a Kid a Bike project. Thanks to his generosity, we have achieved our club matching amount and over 30 bikes can be purchased. Pam Jones thanked Nick Despota for putting the button on the website. Click here to make a donation.
  • Mariana Moore from the Coalition to End Poverty made a presentation about Measure X
  • If you haven’t paid your Rotary dues yet, please do so now! Visit our website and use the PayPal button in the lower right hand column. Thanks!

Recognitions

Happy and Sad Dollars

Norm’s Nonsense

PROGRAM

PREVIOUS PROGRAM

October 9th Program – District Governor 5160 Mark Roberts

President Stacey Street-Spight introduced our speaker, Mark Roberts

Mark started with a warm welcome to the Richmond club and thankful for the opportunity to join our virtual club meeting. He gave kudos to Jan Brown, for handling the club transition from in person meetings to Zoom meetings online during her presidency. Our district includes 75 clubs from Shasta to the South Bay, so he noted that it is difficult for him to attend club meetings in person.

Mark shared that his District Governor orientation included 530 new District Governors and that some of the spoken languages included Mandarin, Japanese, and Portuguese. At the orientation, the top goals identified were to focus on our membership, acknowledge our contributions and the difference we are making in our community.

Mark shared that our district has experienced a decrease in membership, down to 3,200 members. To address this, he encouraged a focus on our improving our contacts with young people, using established channels like Interact, and Camp Royal/Camp Venture, and encouraging college based clubs and community based clubs. In addition, the outreach goals are to specifically increase diversity and include community members who were historically not members of the local Rotary clubs. The objective is to change the image of Rotary as a social lunch club and instead showcase our service projects, starting with the incoming International President, changing the face of Rotary.

Mark encouraged each member to tell their Rotary story, consider the reasons why you keep coming back and participating in events and share your story far and wide. Ask friends and colleagues to join the club and increase our ability to build friendship and fellowship. Mark invited all club members to attend the 2021 conference in Sacramento.

During Q&A, Herb Cole shared asked about the status of the international conference in June in Taipei, Taiwan. Mark confirmed that 40 members from our district are registered and ready for travel. Stoney asked if Rotary had a mechanism or plans to share public health advice and information. Mark noted that there are no plans to make announcements.

Pierre asked if Mark had any updates on the status of the annual resolutions submitted for addition the ballot. Mark advised that he would check in with Candy Pierce, our rep to the council on resolutions, and follow up.

President Stacey
 asked if Mark had an update on the creation of a Diversity and Inclusion committee. Mark shared that a task force had been created with the intention of creating new clubs to add to the 73 existing clubs.

Stoney asked about the status of the Rotary project, the eradication of Polio. Mark was pleased to share that the continent of Africa has been cleared of the wild Polio virus, but work is still ongoing in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

President Stacey thanked Mark for meeting with our club and sharing his vision as the incoming District Governor and showcasing the impact of our Service projects on our local community.


NEXT MEETING: October 9, 2020

ROTARY DISTRICT 5160 UPDATES
District Governor, Mark Roberts

Please join us for a very special club meeting next week.

District Governor Mark Roberts will outline his vision and priorities for District 5160 during the 2020-21 Rotary Year.

He also wants to learn about Richmond Rotary’s concerns and goals. In an ever-changing environment, it is more important than ever that local Rotary clubs and the district work together and share challenges, solutions and ideas.


LINK TO THIS WEEK’S MEETING ON ZOOM
Click this link to join the Zoom Meeting:
https://zoom.us/j/94860047682

Date & Time: October 9, 12:30 PM
(please connect 5 minutes early to confirm Video and/or Audio)
12:15 — Informal Meet and Greet
12:30 — Traditional Meeting
12:45 — Program
1:15 — Recognitions and Happy/Sad Dollars
1:30 — Adjourn / After-meeting for those who want to linger

Meeting ID: 948 6004 7682
Dial in: +1 669 900 6833 US (San Jose)

For security reasons, we are now sending invitations to our members and those who specifically ask to be invited each week. The link above is now a recurring meeting link, which will work for each week. You are welcome to forward this information to anyone you would like to invite.
Please email or text the names of your guests to Stacey prior to the meeting (staceyrcf@gmail.com, 510-501-0030) so they can be admitted quickly through the waiting room.

MEETING OF

Welcome

Announcements

  • Pam Jones announced that the annual Buy a Kid a Bike project has partnered with Richmond City Rides this year. Click here to make a donation. They are working on flyers and have a goal of 100 bikes this year. Richmond City Rides will sponsor a workshop for kids. The committee is evaluating fundraising to purchase the additional 40 bicycle helmets needed to make this year’s program a success.
  • Tom Herriman thanked the Richmond Rotary Club for the generous grant towards acquiring a truck for the SOS Richmond mobile shower project. Our grant was combined with private donations and enabled the purchase of a truck to maintain this critical service to the community.
  • Our Peres Elementary School project is only $600 short of our goal, Erle Brown requested that we pull together and complete this campaign.
  • Norm Lundberg announced the next International Committee meeting will be held on Wednesday October 7th at 4pm and encouraged any interested members to send him an email to receive the Zoom meeting details.
  • Pierre Thompson donated a happy dollar to celebrate the upcoming harvest moon.
  • President Stacey Street-Spight reminded everyone that our fundraising events need to be evaluated and updated for 2020 and that a few of our new members have experience organizing and executing successful alternatives, for example: Crab Feed as drive thru
  • If you haven’t paid your Rotary dues yet, please do so now! Visit our website and use the PayPal button in the lower right hand column. Thanks!

Recognitions

Happy and Sad Dollars

Norm’s Nonsense

PROGRAM

October 2nd Program – The Parents’ Guide to Climate Revolution: Mary DeMocker

Pierre Thompson introduced our speaker, Mary DeMocker

Mary first shared her solidarity with the club on the impact of the fires and the smoke on our air quality.  She shared her journey joining the climate revolution and her personal perspective. As a mother of two small children, she started making lifestyle and dietary changes to minimize her impact on the environment but noticed that the focus on conservation was primarily on individuals, but not large commercial industries.

Mary decided that she needed to make an impact using the tools she had at hand. She began by writing letters by herself and then organized groups of people to write letters, eventually landing on art as a vehicle for her message. She started with small art projects in her front lawn, calling attention to the impact of climate change on human life.

Her big break came when she found out about a Canadian corporation that were planning to displace Oregon residents to accommodate an upcoming oil pipeline project. Mary collaborated with her neighbors and created a life-sized fake pipeline down her residential street, with her and her neighbors houses marked as condemned. This art installation and selfie spot resulted in educating many more people about the impact of the planned project and was picked up by a climate change activist. As a result, the project was shelved and the residents were not displaced.

Continuing on her journey, on the eve of the Paris Talks, Mary created a video with a heartfelt message about changing the paradigm and focusing on alternative energy systems. Her video was included with messages from other groups and shown to the world leaders in attendance.

The culmination of these efforts led to Mary writing her book to give other people ideas on how to participate and make a difference. Her book was written over 2 years ago, which allows for an evaluation of how we have progressed and what has changed. The climate analysis results identified that we have until 2030 to take specific action to change course. Mary shared the 3 steps identified to help:
1. Slash emissions in half by 2030
2. Plant a trillion trees
3. Change our agricultural process to sequestor carbon

Mary proposed that a conscious switch to alternative energy systems, wind and solar energy sources as a default, would align with the Sunrise Movement, the Green New Deal, and change the trajectory of the entire power industry. Combined with a strategy to manage our forests and coastlines, this process would create new careers and jobs.

Mary stated that the legacy of the climate crisis and its impacts connect directly to the quality of life for African and Latino people around the planet. However, the recent non-violent protests and restructure of society seen due to COVID-19 has also showed us the power of participation. Mary advised each club member to find an non-partisan organization, like MoveOn.org, to learn more and make sure their voice is heard by participating in the upcoming election.

During Q&A, Nick Despota shared his personal experience taking action after hearing Mary speak on NPR and purchasing her book. Nick shared that in addition to adopting a conservation lifestyle, he has also written over 350 letters. Mac noted that the Berkeley Rotary Club has a Climate Change committee, the Berkeley Rotary Climate Action Team (RCAT). The RCAT meets biweekly via Zoom on Thursdays at 1:00 pm. For meeting details, please contact Ignacio Franco, Berkeley Rotary.

Sidney shared an alternative perspective on the various types of human conservation practices around the world compared to the impact of the natural causes contributing to the climate changes.

Mary closed by acknowledging that we in the US have a choice to limit our impact on the planet as the largest polluter. We can choose to try and save and protect the earth.

President Stacey thanked Mary for showcasing the interconnectedness of climate change and racial justice and that we are a bipartisan club where all views are welcome.


NEXT MEETING: October 2, 2020

THE PARENTS’ GUIDE TO CLIMATE REVOLUTION
Mary DeMocker

Mary’s book, The Parents’ Guide to Climate Revolution: 100 Ways to Build a Fossil-Free Future, Raise Empowered Kids, and Still Get a Good Night’s Sleep (foreword by Bill McKibben) is a 2019 Oregon Book Award finalist and has been recommended on NPR and in The New York Times.

DeMocker is the co-founder and former creative director of 350 Eugene, with whom she designed and co-led youth-centered protests featured on PBS NewsHour, ArtCOP21 9 (the global climate art festival), and in an Avaaz video shown to world leaders at Paris climate talks. She has written about creative climate advocacy for The Sun, Sierra, Spirituality & Health, EcoWatch, The Oregonian, and Common Dreams.

For photos of the author’s public installations, including the block-long faux pipeline to protest Oregon’s proposed fracked-gas export pipeline, or to sign up for her newsletter, visit marydemocker.com.
DeMocker lives in Eugene, Oregon with her family.


LINK TO THIS WEEK’S MEETING ON ZOOM
Click this link to join the Zoom Meeting:
https://zoom.us/j/94860047682

Date & Time: October 2, 12:30 PM
(please connect 5 minutes early to confirm Video and/or Audio)
12:15 — Informal Meet and Greet
12:30 — Traditional Meeting
12:45 — Program
1:15 — Recognitions and Happy/Sad Dollars
1:30 — Adjourn / After-meeting for those who want to linger

Meeting ID: 948 6004 7682
Dial in: +1 669 900 6833 US (San Jose)

For security reasons, we are now sending invitations to our members and those who specifically ask to be invited each week. The link above is now a recurring meeting link, which will work for each week. You are welcome to forward this information to anyone you would like to invite.
Please email or text the names of your guests to Stacey prior to the meeting (staceyrcf@gmail.com, 510-501-0030) so they can be admitted quickly through the waiting room.

MEETING OF

Welcome

Announcements

  • Erle Brown thanked everyone who has already made a donation to Peres Elementary School and requested that we work together to fulfill this critical program by the end of next week
  • Dave Brown noted that Peres Elementary School has been added as a specific option on our Paypal Donate button and we have raised $1,100 so far.
  • Melinda McCrary gave an update on the Richmond Museum of History & Culture upcoming virtual events:
  • President Stacey Street-Spight announced the press release from Mayor Tom Butt’s office regarding the Richmond Rapid Response Fund. Funds are being raised to support the immediate financial needs of the community during the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond.
  • If you haven’t paid your Rotary dues yet, please do so now! Visit our website and use the PayPal button in the lower right hand column. Thanks!

Recognitions

Happy and Sad Dollars

Norm’s Nonsense

PROGRAM

September 25th Program – A World on the Move; Rev. Dr. David Vásquez-Levy, President, Pacific School of Religion

Jan Brown introduced our speaker, Rev. Dr. David Vásquez-Levy.

Rev. Dr. Vásquez-Levy shared that his father-in-law is a Rotarian and that his family visits always included collecting flags from the local Rotary clubs when he was living abroad. David talked about becoming a Lutheran minister while having a Jewish grandmother, and how his rich family history impacts his work at the Pacific School of Religion, the oldest seminary west of the Mississippi,

The education strategy of the seminary is focused on a commitment to higher education in a religious context, giving spiritual leaders from different faiths the tools to address the ancient/medieval type problems that our society is facing today.

Davis shared a short video, The Ants Trail, to demonstrate how the narrative shapes our perception of an event and the affected parties. In the video, the strategy that the ants employ to continuously identify food sources is used to compare/contrast the human quest for food and a safe environment in which to live.

David pointed out a series of biblical stories, the Book of Ruth, as an example of the collapse of a political system at the same time as an environmental crisis that leads to forced immigration and the displacement of people. He compared this to a recent modern example, the conflict in Syria that was triggered by a drought in the north of the region that was not addressed and the cascading impact on the local residents.

Next, we took a closer look at the California demographics and the immigration status of our residents: 27% of California residents are immigrants (compared to 22% in New York). That means that out of the estimated 45M immigrants in the US today, 11M reside in California. Within that group, 5M are already US citizens, 2.2M are eligible but have not applied, and approximately 2.9M are undocumented. Additionally, 55% of the successful billion dollar start up companies in the US were started by or managed by an immigrant.

Another perspective of these demographics is that 47% of children in California have at least 1 immigrant parent. This means that how their parents are treated will have a direct impact on the value sets and perspectives of these children on their own place in the world.

As a Lutheran minister, David regularly shares a variety of biblical stories to highlight other perspectives on the plight of displaced families and communities. Within each story, there is a narrative that drives the theme and how the events are framed.

Rev. Dr. Vásquez-Levy closed by asking the club to consider how we will describe the challenges facing our community and environment today and how this narrative will directly impact our effectiveness and ability to address and mitigate the socioeconomic conflicts.

During Q&A, club members shared their personal experiences with immigration issues and asked about hope for the future. David recommended reading the works of Langston Hughes and acknowledging the positive ways that people of African and Latino descent continue to contribute to society and expect inclusion.

President Stacey thanked the speaker for his timely presentation.