Volume XII, Issue 37: April 18, 2014

The Latest From Our Exchange Students
"We bad ...uh-huh ..."
Last Friday, we first heard from Alex Rialet, our Inbound Exchange Student from France. Alex said that he had participated in the Safe and Sober Fashion Show as a model. He and his co-models are sporting Harley-Davidson attire in the photo at left. Alex also auctioned off his services as a French tutor or French chef, earning $50 for the cause. President Jessica noted that the package would certainly sell for more at a Final Friday Foundation Auction. His week also included a trip to the mall with his host family (the Whites), and a track meet. He then cooked dinner for his host family, and Praj White reported that it was very good. This week, Arcata High has been on Spring Break, so we'll learn what filled his time at our next meeting!

Sylvie Neander is our Outbound Exchange Student for the 2014-2015 year. She is selling coffee to help bank some funds for excursions while she is in Belgium. She is already in contact with two of her host families. If I heard correctly (never a sure thing), her first host family was originally from Rwanda. I'm more certain that I heard her say that she leaves for Europe at the beginning of August.

Calendar Items and Announcements
President Jessica asked us to remember the families and friends of those who were lost in the recent accident involving a busload of prospective HSU students.

April 24  Mentorship/Membership Mixer at the Plaza Grill. All Sunrisers are welcome, and newer members are especially encouraged to attend.
April 26  The Fieldbrook Fire Department is holding an Open House from 11 to 3 to show off their new building. 
May 5-8  Fireside Meetings take the place of our regular Friday meeting this week. Be sure to take the opportunity to let President-Elect Barbara know your ideas for the coming year.
May 16-18  Celebrate President Jessica's Presidential Year at the District Conference. It will take place at the Doubletree Hotel in Rohnert Park. The theme for the Conference is "Rolling On The River".
June 1  We host young baseball players from throughout Humboldt County at "Kids, Crabs, & Rotary". We will need setup specialists, barbecuers, hot doggers, and watermelon sectioners. It's great fun, and you can run the bases with the kids if you want!

Board Reports
President Jessica shared the highlights of the April meetings of the Boards of Directors for the Club and for our Community Foundation.

Club Board:
  • Attendance was 71.7% for February, and 70.0% in March.
  • Brenda Bishop requested an extension of her leave of absence through May 1st, and Brandi Easter asked for a leave following her mother's passing.
  • President Jessica will reach out to those with poor attendance to see whether we can help them back into the fold.
  • The District has asked our Club to vote on a proposed change in the process for selecting our District Governors. The Board supports the current system, where the five most recent DGs nominate the DG Designate.
  • There was an overage for expenses for this year's PETS, and the Board voted to re-purpose $100 that was originally designated for attending the International Convention.
Community Foundation Board:
  • Although there is still some income that remains to be collected, the Spring Fundraiser outperformed budgeted revenue by approximately $4,500! President Jessica formally acknowledged the work of Dan Johnson, Ceva Courtemanche, and the rest of the Spring Fundraiser Committee for doing a fantastic job!
  • The Board has named Barbara Browning, Howard Stauffer, Susan Jansson, and several others to a committee that will plan the future of the Spring Fundraiser. With the Arcata Volunteer Fire Department stepping away from the event, we have an opportunity to reshape the event.
  • A savings instrument for housing our surplus funds is still being discussed.
Recognitions
Tomas Chavez handled the recognitions last Friday, and he showed us the cover of Bassiste No 52. The European magazine contained an article profiling the bass player for the reggae group "Groundation". His name is Ryan Newman, and the reason for this discussion is that he is the son of Sunrisers Janice and Craig Newman. Craig said that, although Ryan doesn't live in Europe, Groundation frequently tours there. Janice said that the article focused on an interview with Ryan, but another part of the piece described his equipment, which includes a custom "Ryan Newman Signature Bass". Craig said that Ryan is unique - "A bass player in a reggae band with no tattoos, no piercings."

Rebecca Crow recently took a trip to San Francisco with two friends. "They bussed us down," she said, "and we stopped at a winery on the way." The group saw the show "Mamma Mia", and they dressed for the occasion. "When we saw it up here, we dressed up." That means they dressed in character, as did the other attendees - but "up here" is the operative phrase. "Down there", however, Rebecca's trio were the only ones in costume. But it was great - they were asked to pose for photos with several of their fellow theatergoers in the lobby. They assured the others, "You know, we're not in the show." They had a great time, and there were a few shopping stops on the way home.

Praj White was asked about Logan's participation in the Vienna City Marathon. He said that Logan had been training with the help of an app on his phone. It would tell him when he had run twenty, and he was surprised to discover that he was able to cover the distance with relative ease. When he was on the course, he reached Kilometer 28, and he checked his phone. It indicated that he had already finished the race. OMG! He had been reading the units as miles, but it was reporting how many kilometers he had run! "So his training program had been just less than half of what he had been thinking." Somewhere early on, he passed someone who had polio, who was working his way through the course, and Logan carried that image with him throughout the race. He really hit the wall at about Kilometer 38 or 39, and he just fell to the ground. After he was helped up, his legs like rubber, "he puked everywhere". But somehow, he pushed through and made it all the way through. Praj is very proud of him, as are we!

Before ...
... and after.

Every 15 Minutes
Sunrisers Lori Breyer and Joyce Hinrichs were joined by Gillian Wadsworth of the Arcata Police Department and Gillian's daughter Gabrielle for a review of the Every 15 Minutes program which took place at Arcata High School on April 3rd. 

Lori said that planning for the event, which is staged every four years at the school, began in August. She said that Gillian did an amazing job coordinating it. So many people, businesses, and organizations contributed this year that Gillian said that it took two submissions to the Times-Standard to thank everyone. There were about 150 people involved, and 30 organizations and businesses.

This was our Club's fourth time sponsoring the two-day event, which begins with an assembly in front of the school. The students file into bleachers that overlook the scene of a car crash. Emergency crews respond to the scene to help those with a chance of being saved. The scene and the actions taken are as realistic as possible.

Throughout that first day, the Grim Reaper enters classrooms to take a "victim" from a classroom at 15 minute intervals. Each victim represents a teen who has lost his or her life to an incident involving an impaired driver.

On the second day, the student body reconvenes to attend a mock trial of the drunk driver. Joyce served as the judge, and she noted that a conviction is not preordained. She weighs the evidence presented, as she would in a real trial, to determine if it is sufficient to convict the defendant. 

Rotary Kid Kate Breyer played one of the victims in the staged car crash, and she told us that there was a lot of preparation involved. But one difficult part of the process was the letter she was asked to write to her parents and family. The letter included "what we wished we had told them" before they died. The second day also included a mock funeral, which was difficult for all involved. 

Gillian's daughter Gabrielle was involved in the proceedings as well, serving as one of the "walking dead". She said that at one point, she also got to wear goggles that simulate the vision of someone under the influence. While wearing the googles, she was asked to negotiate an obstacle course.

Check out the video below for highlights from the event:


Volume XII, Issue 36: April 11, 2014



Scott Heller Gets "The Call"


 


Alex's Week In Review
Is it a pizza or a burger?
Last Friday, Exchange Student Alex Rialet said that he was impressed by the Every 15 Minutes program that had taken place on Thursday and Friday of the previous week. Later, Alex went with his host Dad, Praj White, to visit a power plant. "A power plant?" Acting President Scott Heller asked Praj, "You took him to a nuclear power plant?" No - it was the biomass power plant in Blue Lake.There may have been some radiation involved at some point, however. Alex reported eating a mutant "Pizzaburger", which turned out to be a hamburger pizza. There must be a subtle difference there. Apparently there was no lettuce in the mix, but pickles were in there. That was followed a few days later by a quiche that Alex prepared for his host family. Alex also said that he was planning to participate in the Safe And Sober Fashion Show that was held over the weekend.

Announcements
  • April 18  Our meeting will feature a program about the "Every 15 Minutes" program mentioned above. The presentation will include the video shot by local photographer Matt Filar.
  • April 19  Mad River Work Day, followed by a hoe down at the Friends of the Dunes in Samoa. Our Club will meet at Stardough's in Blue Lake before heading for the river.
  • May 5-8  Fireside Meetings will take the place of our regular Friday meeting this week. This is your opportunity to give guidance to President-Elect Barbara Browning as she plans her presidential year.
  • May 16-18  The District Conference will be held at the Doubletree Hotel in Rohnert Park.
  • June 1  Our Club hosts young baseball players (and other young people) at the Arcata Ballpark for "Kids, Crabs, & Rotary".
  • In a non-calendar announcement, we learned that "It's a girl!" Our 2014-2015 Inbound Rotary Exchange Student will be coming to us from Brazil. We still need one more host family, so please let a member of the Youth Exchange Committee know if you would like more information.
History Day 2014
Each year, we honor students from local schools who have participated in the annual History Day competition. Colleen Toste, a Trustee for the Northern Humboldt Union High School District, noted that the local competition began in 1982. This year, students came from schools throughout the County to HSU on Saturday, February 7th to present their projects. These can take many forms - dramatic role-play, documentary videos, project boards, and essays, among many others. The theme uniting the projects this year was "Rights and Responsibilities". 

Colleen said that a total of over 100 judges reviewed about 400 entries in several categories: 
  • Two-Dimensional Displays
  • Historical Papers
  • Grade Exhibits
  • Live Performances
  • Documentaries
  • Historical Web Sites
60 students were offered the opportunity to move on to the state competition, which will take place next week, April 25-27 in Riverside. The Rising Stars Foundation offered to pay the $90 registration fee for those students who wanted to compete, and who participated in a coaching session last month. Colleen said that the organization was bowled over (pleasantly) when 53 of the 60 showed up. In addition, the Foundation provided travel scholarships for six of these top scholars. 

Our first presentation was by Arcata High School's Elijah Pasko, a Senior Division Individual Exhibit winner. His topic was "Dorothea Dix: Manumitter of the Mentally Impaired":



Janie Mendosa, a Rotary Kid who is also a student at Jacoby Creek School, was a Junior Division Champion for her paper "Working Women: Rights and Responsibilities of Women in World War II":



Our final presentation was the video, "Men of the Bomb", by Jacquelyn Opalach, who earned a Senior Division Individual Documentary award and a travel scholarship. [Editor's Note: Below is a video of Jacquelyn's video - not up to the quality of the original.]


Following the presentations, Acting President Scott and Julie Vaissade-Elcock presented a check representing our contribution toward travel for the three young scholars. Good luck in Riverside!

Scott Heller, Elijah Pasko, Janie Mendosa, Jacquelyn Opalach, and Julie Vaissade-Elcock


Volume XII, Issue 35: April 4, 2014

Exchange Student News
Alex Rialet, our Rotary Exchange Student from France, told us last week that he has successfully changed host families. He left Craig Reed's home to become part of Praj White's family, if only for a while. His time with Craig was not wasted - the "American Firsts" he experienced there included an official TV Dinner. President Jessica said, "They're terrible, aren't they?" But Alex said, "They're not so bad." And it was just one TV Dinner - a cultural exchange of sorts, with Salisbury Steak. He said that Craig prepared a barbecue for Alex's going-away dinner. The photo clearly shows that vegetables were a part of the festivities, and not just as decor!

On Wednesday of last week, Alex attended a Rotary Youth Camp meeting, and on Thursday, he attended the Every 15 Minutes assembly at Arcata High School. He thought it was "bizarre" at first, but he noted that as more students "died", it had a strong impact.

Our other Exchange Student this year is Logan White, who is representing us in Italy. President Jessica read portions of his blog posts from this year. His most recent post noted that he also recently changed host families - twice in the past month and a half. Logan is also training for the Vienna City Marathon, which will take place this Sunday (April 13).
Ultimate Sledding Time!!
Logan also wrote that he has taken up "Ultimate Sledding"with friends. (He also coined the term). This involves renting bobsleds, taking a lift to the top of the mountain, eating dinner, then sledding over a mile down the trail, using the lamps on their heads to make their way. (I hope the lights are attached to helmets!) He writes, "This, my friends, is the future of winter sports!" For more from Logan, click on the link to your right - "Logan White in Italy".

Finally, we received a visit from next year's Outbound Exchanger, Silvie Neander. In a few short months, she will be on her way to Belgium. She will be living in Morlanwelz-Mariemont, which was once a royal estate for Mary of Hungary, who was the Governor of the Netherlands during the 16th century. Silvie has been corresponding with her first host mother, who assured Silvie that she will be well cared for. 

She and another Outbounder have started selling Jitter Bean Coffee to raise money for excursions once they are overseas. Check in with Silvie when your caffeine supply is running short.

Every 15 Minutes
Not real ... this time
As Alex noted, our Every 15 Minutes Program was in full swing last week. The program is a two-day event that challenges high school students to think about the consequences of driving under the influence of alcohol or other drugs. Our Club sponsors Every 15 Minutes events on a four-year rotation with the cooperation of Arcata High School, the Highway Patrol, the City of Arcata, the Arcata Volunteer Fire Department, the Humboldt County Coroner's Office, and the HSU Theater Department.  We hope to dedicate one of our weekly programs to the event soon, but for now, here are a few links:
Calendar and Announcements
  • April 11  Our weekly program will feature award-winning History Day presentations
  • April 19  Our Club's "Green River Project" working to clean up the Mad River. Followed by a Hoe Down at the Friends of the Dunes HQ
  • May 5-9  Fireside Meetings will take the place of our May 9th morning meeting.
  • May 16-18  The District 5130 Conference will be held in Rohnert Park. Low room rates are available for Rotarians until April 19th.
Howard Stauffer recently dined with Kim Bauridel and other Rotarians who were hosting four visitors from Russia. You will remember that Kim has spearheaded the efforts of local Rotary to provide needed assistance in Siberia. The visitors were three medical doctors (a general practitioner, a pediatrician, and a cardiologist) and their interpreter. Howard said that they were "very nice, sophisticated, and charming - with great senses of humor". Visiting Rotarian Jon Sapper had also attended, and he agreed. The visit was a fact-finding mission for the doctors - they wanted to learn how we work with children who have learning disabilities or who are physically challenged. In Russia, such children are generally institutionalized. 

Recognitions 
Tomas Chavez once again led our recognition efforts, this time focusing on those Sunrisers associated with businesses which won Reader's Choice Awards for 2014 (information provided by Lori Breyer):
  • Bob Moore and Ed Christians are with Coast Central Credit Union, which won for Best Credit Union, Best Bank, Best Mortgage, Best Real Estate Lender, and Best Investment Firm
  • Bryan Plumley heads the Arcata branch of Edward Jones, which was selected as the Best Stock Brokerage
  • Dan Johnson's DANCO Group brings us Timber Ridge Senior Living, honored as the Best Retirement Home
  • The Best Independent Grocery Store was Murphy's Markets, and that is due in no small part to the efforts of our own Don Rosebrook
  • Ron Sharp's North Coast Co-op was cited as the Best Green Business
  • Terri Clark is with Hunter, Hunter, and Hunt. named as the Best Tax Service
  • HealthSPORT was declared the Best Health Club, which pleased Susan Jansson
Decade of Difference 20/20
Our Featured Speaker last Friday was Heidi Moore, who works for the Humboldt County Offfice of Education as the Coordinator for the Decade of Difference 20/20 initiative. The program was started with a $1.5 million investment by the Headwaters Fund as a way to provide the county with a "ready, willing, and capable workforce". As Heidi told us, "We're trying to change the quality of the workforce for you."

Heidi showed us a video which highlighted the successes of the Decade of Difference program. Click here to watch. She then noted that the program now begins to engage students before they reach high school. The goal is to get young people excited about the career opportunities available to them and to provide them with the tools they will need to achieve their goals. A workforce equipped with those tools also better serves local employers, and helps to stimulate the local economy.

The program goals (from the Decade of Difference website) include:
  • 100% of 4th grade students will demonstrate grade level mastery in Reading and Math,
  • 95% of entering high school students will graduate with a high school diploma, and
  • 90% of high school graduates will continue their education and enroll in a post-secondary educational program.
Heidi Moore
Heidi also talked with us about changes in funding for K-12 education in California. Currently, our state ranks 49th in per capita funding, spending $8,341 (adjusted for regional cost differences) per student annually. This is 70% of the national average. 

The Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF) was developed in California to help increase flexibility and accountability at local levels, to ensure that student needs are the primary concern for those allocating resources. The plan will be fully implemented by the 2020/2021 fiscal year.

The LCFF mandates that a base amount is provided to each public and charter school to support basic costs. The target base funding level will match the amounts received by schools in the 2007/2008 fiscal year. Additional funding assistance is available for schools with students who are identified as English learners, economically disadvantaged, and/or foster youth. In addition, assistance will be provided to help reduce class sizes in Kindergarten through Third Grade, and to help high schools provide career technical education.

Each school district, charter school, and county office of education is charged with creating a plan for local control and accountability. The plans must contain annual goals and a resource allocation scheme. County offices of education will review the plans for school districts and charter schools with their counties, while the Superintendent of Public Instruction's office will review plans adopted by the county offices.

For more information on the LCFF, visit the California Legislative Analyst's Office website.

President Jessica's Quote of the Week
Teen scores a 160 IQ which is the same as Albert Einstein . 
"If you cannot explain something SIMPLY, then you do not understand it enough."
-- Albert Einstein

Volume XII, Issue 34: March 28, 2014

Foundation Final Friday

The Latest From Alex!
Alex and Craig in Fern Canyon
At our meeting last Friday, we heard from our Exchange Student, Alex Rialet. He said that on the previous Saturday, he and his Arcata High JV Baseball teammates played a doubleheader against Eureka. Unfortunately, they lost both games. But later that day Alex attended JT Albright's birthday party, which included chess, cake, and ice cream. And the following day, the birthday crew traveled
up the 101 to Fern Canyon, for a day of hiking in the sunshine.

Alex said that he planned to move in with a new host family on Monday. His new hosts will be Praj and Alisa White and their family. (They have a little room to spare, with their son Logan currently on a Rotary Exchange to Italy.) Before Alex moved, however, Host Dad Craig Reed wanted to provide a true American experience - Alex ate his first ever TV dinner!

Announcements and Calendar Items
  • April 3 & 4  The hush-hush project with the code name "E-15". We'll hear more about this at our next meeting.
  • April 4 & 5  The not so hush-hush event known as the District 5130 Training Assembly. This will take place in Ukiah, and a Sunriser group will be convoying early Saturday morning, if you would like a ride.
  • April 11  The History Day scholarship winners will visit our Club to give their award-winning presentations. This is one you don't want to miss!
  • April 19  Mad River Work Day and Hoe Down
  • April 25  Eureka Rotary Club Barbecue and Dance to benefit Backpacks for Kids
Recognitions with Angelo
Angelo Bacigaluppi hosted our Recognitions Session last week. He asked Carol Vander Meer about the award recently won by her organization, Friends of the Dunes. She said that the Friends was named the Nonprofit of the Year for 2013 by the Arcata Chamber of Commerce. Carol told us that she was surprised and honored. Congratulations to Carol, along with her staff and supporters.

The goal of this Kickstarter is to help pay the balance due on our still currently being fabricated by Vendome Copper and Brass Works in KY! The finished product will look very similar to this beauty.
Neither Ocarina Nor Bong
Amy Bohner was on hand to talk about the start-up she is launching with her husband Steve. The project is the Alchemy Distillery, which will produce a fine craft spirit that is to be called "Boldt". Amy and Steve are trying to raise $60,000 via Kickstarter to move the copper still (right) from Kentucky to Arcata. As the Spirit went to press, the campaign was over halfway to its goal. There's "still" time to pledge to the project, which will bring you goodies. The amount of Boldt Swag you will receive is directly proportional to the funds pledged, so size counts! Visit Kickstarter for more information and more photos.

Angelo then led us in two sessions of "Liar, Liar", the game where we learn three things about a fellow Sunriser. Two are true, one is a whopper (and not the Burger King type). One "lucky" individual is asked to determine which claim can be put to shame. You are welcome to play along - the lies are identified at the bottom of this issue.

Our first liar was Ian Schatz, and Dustin Littlefield was tasked with guessing the lie lurking among these three statements:
  1. Ian completed the 100-mile Tour of the Unknown Coast on his mountain bike
  2. He can free dive down to 45 feet
  3. He climbed Mount Shasta
Dustin missed out by selecting a correct answer. Can you do better? 

Angelo then told us three things about Ron Sharp, but only two were true - Tami Camper got it right, how 'bout you??
  1.  Ron recently hiked from Yosemite Point all the way to Glacier Point
  2. He once hitchhiked to Reno to see a Johnny Cash concert
  3. He stayed up all night jamming with Vince Gill
Remember to check at the end of the Spirit for the incorrect answers!

Special Days
Cindy Sutcliffe and her husband Tim Theiss recently celebrated their 15th anniversary with a trip to the Benbow Inn. They had "a really good dinner and spent the night". 

Angelo recognized himself for his anniversary. His wife Michelle works for the accounting firm of Jackson & Eklund, so this time of year is always busy. Angelo said that Michelle left early from her tax preparation, to come home to a meal prepared by her husband of 14 years. "It was delicious, even if I do say so myself." 

The first birthday we heard about last week was Rotary Kid Mary Crow, who turned 10 that very day. Naturally, as all 10-year olds do, she celebrated by going to a Rotary Meeting. Anticlimactically, she had a party planned for after school.

Tami Camper's birthday was on March 4th, and she had a long day of fieldwork, followed by a basketball game with the kids. Following all that, she went to see the Blue Man Group at the Van Duzer Theatre. A full day!

Charlie Jordan shares a birthday with Mary Crow, so we were there for part of her party as well! She planned to go out to dinner with her husband Mark Ritz (who was Charlie's guest that morning), and enjoy the day!

Foundation Friday
To underscore our commitment to the Rotary Foundation, we watched a 12-minute video produced by the Sonoma State University (SSU) Rotaract Club about the fight to eradicate polio. The video is called "No Mo Po - A Call to End Polio", and you can watch it my clicking here.

Following that, we held our sorta-regular Foundation Friday Auction. All proceeds from the auction go directly to the Rotary Foundation, with the donor and the purchaser splitting the donation credit. Here is the list of items, donors, and winning bidders:
  • Would-be still operator Amy Bohner brought a basket of swag from Alchemy Distillery, including a decanter, Boldt stickers, and a coupon for a bottle of the real stuff once the distillery is in production. Congratulations to Cindy Sutcliffe for her purchase.
  • Joyce Hinrichs donated gift certificates worth $50. These were snapped up by Lori Breyer.
  • Mary Crow is working toward a second Paul Harris Fellowship, and she brought a plate of her famed Snickerdoodles for the auction. Julie Vaissade-Elcock was the winner.
  • Exchange Student Alex Rialet donated two bacon quiches. Two quiches means two winners, and they were Lori Breyer and Howard Stauffer.
  • Two tickets to the play "The Volcano" were provided by Rina Brodhag. These were won by Terri Clark.
  • Lynda Moore donated an outdoor dining set (it was too classy to say "picnic set"), which was purchased by Praj White.
  • Donnie Rosebrook brought in four bottles of fine wine, which went home with Lynda Moore.
  • A beautiful wooden poster for Moonstone Beach was offered by Dan Johnson. Tami Camper made off with that. (After paying, of course!)
  • Finally, Rob McBeth donated two gift certificates for the Plaza Grill/Abruzzi's. These were won by Lori Breyer and (I think) Sunriser-To-Be John Schermer.
Thanks to everyone who donated items and to those who purchased them (the items, that is). Together, we raised over $750 to support the Rotary Foundation's incredible work!