District 9500 Directory 2012-13 - ClubRunner
ROTARY INTERNATIONAL
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DISTRICT 9500 Inc.
ABN 37 613 705 121
2012 - 2013 DIRECTORY
DISTRICT GOVERNOR
Marie Dorrington
Telephone: - Home: 08 269 3398
Mobile: 0417 863 316
Email: mdorring@.au
25 Flora Terrace
Prospect
South Australia 5082
|AUTHORISED USE OF THIS DIRECTORY IS RESTRICTED TO ROTARIANS, AND IT IS NOT TO BE USED FOR ANY COMMERCIAL |
|MAILING |
Website:-
The Structure Of Rotary
The Structure of Rotary International, Rotary Districts & Rotary Clubs (for Information & Communication):
ROTARY INTERNATIONAL (RI)
Rotary International is the association of Rotary Clubs worldwide. The administration of Rotary International is managed by Officers, Directors and Committees from Rotary Clubs throughout the world. Annually, Rotary International holds a Convention in different countries to stimulate, inspire and inform all Rotarians at an international level and to motivate them to develop Rotary at the Club and District levels.
ROTARY DISTRICTS
Rotary International groups Clubs into Districts to support the administration of Clubs and to make local administration easier. There are 22 Districts in Australia and 530 Districts throughout the world, with each District being led by a Governor assisted by appointed officers. The District Governor (DG) is an officer of Rotary International and is directly responsible to Rotary International, and also to the Clubs, for the effective administration of the District. Other than the office of District Governor, all District appointments are made by the District Governor for the Governor’s term of office.
ROTARY CLUBS
There are over 1.2 million Rotarians working in some 33,300 Rotary Clubs in 208 countries worldwide. There are 33,800 Rotarians in 1153 Clubs in Australia and about 1324 Rotarians in 48 Clubs in District 9500.
In summary, Rotarians belong to Rotary Clubs and Rotary Clubs belong to Rotary International which groups Clubs into Districts.
This Directory is arranged into 3 sections to reflect that structure:-
1. Rotary International:
2. Rotary District 9500:
3. Rotary Clubs:
An Alphabetical Index of the Contents appears at the end of the Directory, after the Listing of Committee Member Contact Details.
Table Of Contents
1. Rotary International 7
The Founder of Rotary - Paul P. Harris 1868 - 1947 8
What is Rotary? & The Four Way Test 9
The Object of Rotary 10
Declaration of Rotarians in Businesses and Professions: 10
2012-2013 Rotary Theme 10
President, Rotary International 2012 - 2013 11
Rotary International 2012-13 Strategic Plan 12
2013 International Lisbon Convention 13
RI Zone 8 Director 14
Use of The Rotary Name and Emblem 15
RI Awards and Recognition Programs 16
RI South Pacific and Philippines Office (SPPO) 19
Rotary Down Under (RDU) 20
2. Rotary District 9500 21
District Governor 21
District Governor Elect/Nominee 22
Past District Governors 23
Brief History 24
Geography 25
Boundary Description of District 9500 26
District 9500 Peace Through Service 27
District 9520 Officers 27
Insurance 28
District Governor’s Club Visits 2012 - 2013 29
Charter of Clubs 31
Diary Dates 33
District 9500 Website 9500- 35
Bendigo Conference Committee - 36 .au 36
Bendigo Conference 36 EMAIL:learnmore@.au 36
Organisation Chart 37
District Management Committee 39
District Finance Committee 39
Nominating Committee for District Governor 39
District Support Personnel 40
District Training Committee - 2012/13 40
Assistant Governor Liaison 41
Assistant Governors 41
District Committee Chairs 43
table of contents (Contd)
Membership Development Committee 44
District 9500 Membership Steering Committee 44
Family of Rotary 44
Membership Reports - RI 44
District 9500 Attendance Reports 44
Club Bulletins Judge 44
District 9500 The Rotary Foundation Alumni 45
Marketing & Promotions Committee 46
The Voice of Rotary 46
DG’s Newsletter 46
RDU Chair 46
RDU Group Representative: (Districts 9500 & 9520): 46
The Rotary Foundation - Under The Future Vision Plan 47
District Rotary Foundation Committee 47
1. District Fundraising Sub-Committee: 48
Annual Programmes Fund & The Permanent Fund 48
EREY District 9500 Centurion Club 48
Paul Harris Fellow 49
Paul Harris Society 49
2. District Grants Sub Committee: 49
Vocational Team Training (VTT) and Group Study Exchange (GSE) 50
Scholarships 50
The Peter Sutton Memorial GSE Safari Fund 50
3. District PolioPlus Sub-Committee 50
Service Programs - Club Administration Committee 53
District Insurance and Risk Management Officer 53
e-Comms Committee 53
District Resolutions Committee 53
RI and District Awards Committee 53
RI Convention 2013 - Lisbon 53
District Property Officer 54
District Photographer 54
District History and Records 54
Club Visioning Facilitators 54
Rotary Leadership Institute Faculty (RLI) 54
table of contents (Contd)
Service Programs - New Generations 55
Youth Exchange Program (YEP) 55
Child Protection Advisor 56
Rotaract and Interact Committee 56
Rotary Youth Leadership Awards RYLA 56
Rotary District 9500 Youth Program and Enrichment RYPEN 56
RYLA and RYPEN Committee 57
Rotary District 9500-9520 Youth Wellbeing RYWELL 57
National Youth Science Forum (NYSF) 57
The Science Experience (TSE) 57
Rotary District 9500 Youth Driver Awareness (RYDA) 57
SA Science and Engineering Challenge 58
Family of Rotary Recorder - Youth 58
Service Programs - Vocational Service 59
Student Journalism Competition 59
Integrity Seminars 59
Pride of Workmanship Award 59
Vocational Visits 59
Vocational Excellence 59
Trade and Professional Associations 59
Mock Interviews at Schools 59
Share other ideas from clubs 59
Service Programs - Community Service 60
Australian Rotary Health (ARH) 60
ARH Bowel Scan Resource Personnel 60
ARH Indigenous Health Scholarships 61
Probus 61
Environmental Projects: 62
Preserve Planet Earth PPE 62
Australian Campaign for Rabbit Eradication (ACRE) 62
Rotary’s Native Bird Nestbox (ROBIN) 62
Disaster Recovery Committee 63
ACSO - Association of Community Service Organisations 63
The Peter Nelson Leukaemia Research Fund 63
Foodbank (SA) Committee 63
Inner Wheel 63
Australian Medic Alert Foundation 63
Emergency Medical Information Book 64
Table Of Contents (Contd)
Service Programs - International Service 65
Rotary Australia World Community Service Ltd. (RAWCS Ltd) 65
National Officers of RAWCS 65
Central Region Promotion (CRP) 65
Project Volunteers (PV - formerly FAIM) 66
Donations in Kind (DIK) 66
Rotarians Against Malaria (RAM) 66
Safe Water Saves Lives (SWSL) 67
Rotary Oceania Medical Aid for Children (ROMAC) 67
Rotary Friendship Exchange 67
Concentrated Language Encounter (CLE) 68
Interplast 68
ShelterBox Australia 68
Global Networking Groups 68
District 9500 Awards 70
3. Rotary Clubs 73
Induction of Club President 73
Induction for a New Rotarian 74
CLUB PAGES 75
District Committee Member 2012-13 Contact Details 127
Rotary Acronyms 136
Alphabetical Index of Contents 139
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1. Rotary International
The Founder Of Rotary - Paul P. Harris 1868 - 1947
During the first Rotary Club meeting on 23 February 1905 in Chicago, Paul Harris, Gustavus Loehr, Hiram Shorey, and Silvester Schiele met to talk about their personal experiences. Harris then unfolded his general plan for their Club meetings.
This was the simple beginning of the world’s first service Club, the Rotary Club of Chicago. It was created because of Harris’ wish to capture in a professional Club the same friendly spirit he had felt in the small towns of his youth. The title “Rotary” developed from the founding members rotating the meeting amongst members’ offices.
By 1910, sixteen Rotary Clubs had linked up as an organisation called the National Association of Rotary Clubs. As more Clubs were organised in the United States, the movement became international, first to Canada, then to England, Ireland and Scotland. In 1922 the name of the organisation became Rotary International.
Rotarians continue to take pride in their history. In honor of that first Club, Rotarians have preserved its original meeting place, Room 711 in Chicago’s Unity Building, by re-creating the office as it existed in 1905. For several years, the Paul Harris 711 Club maintained the room as a shrine for visiting Rotarians. In 1989, when the building was scheduled to be demolished, the Club carefully dismantled the office and salvaged the interior, including doors and radiators. In 1993, the RI Board of Directors set aside a permanent home for the restored Room 711 at RI World Headquarters in the Chicago suburb of Evanston.
For more historical information about Rotary, visit Rotary History and Archives Website:- history
or Rotary Global History Fellowship Website:-
1. Rotary International
WHAT IS ROTARY?
Rotary is an organisation for business and professional men and women who are prepared to give of their time and expertise to help those less fortunate than ourselves. Its scope extends from the local community to some of the most impoverished people on earth. At the same time we believe in having some fun, so that service and fellowship are the two pillars upon which Rotary stands.
ROTARY is non-sectarian and non-political and is growing in numbers. Each Club shares the common principals of Rotary but each is autonomous and free to prepare its own programs and control its destiny.
ROTARY started in 1905 when a small group of businessmen in Chicago began meeting to learn from one another and to enhance their business relationships. While making business contacts is still a useful facet of Rotary, the focus quickly moved to include doing good deeds in the community and helping those less fortunate.
ROTARIANS throughout the world encourage high ethical standards in their vocation, conduct humanitarian projects and work towards world peace and understanding.
THE FOUR WAY TEST
Since its introduction by Herbert Taylor in 1932, Rotarians have been using the 4-Way Test as a practical yardstick in their business, community, and personal affairs. The 4-Way Test, you will note, does not provide answers. It asks questions which the user must answer.
Thousands of Rotarians have used it and shared it with others. Millions of copies have been distributed to students and business associates. The Test has been carved into granite monuments, displayed on billboards, written into labour contracts, printed on wrapping paper and has been the theme of countless addresses.
“Of the things we think, say or do
Is it the TRUTH?
Is it FAIR to all concerned?
Will it build GOODWILL and BETTER FRIENDSHIPS?
Will it be BENEFICIAL to all concerned?”
ROTARY INTERNATIONAL WEBSITE
1. Rotary International
THE OBJECT OF ROTARY
The object of Rotary is to encourage and foster the ideal of service as a basis of worthy enterprise and, in particular, to encourage and foster:
First: The development of acquaintance as an opportunity for service.
Second: High ethical standards in business and professions, the recognition of the worthiness of all useful occupations, and the dignifying of each Rotarian’s occupation as an opportunity to serve society.
Third: The application of the ideal of service in each Rotarian’s personal, business and community life.
Fourth: The advancement of international understanding, goodwill and peace through a world fellowship of business and professional persons united in the ideal of service.
Declaration of Rotarians in Businesses and Professions:
As a Rotarian engaged in a business or profession, I am expected to:
• Consider my vocation to be another opportunity to serve;
• Be faithful to the letter and to the spirit of the ethical codes of my vocation, to the laws of my country, and to the moral standards of my community;
• Do all in my power to dignify my vocation and to promote the highest ethical standards in my chosen vocation;
• Be fair to my employer, employees, associates, competitors, customers, the public and all those with whom I have a business or professional relationship;
• Recognise the honor and respect due to all occupations which are useful to society;
• Offer my vocational talents: to provide opportunities for young people, to work for the relief of the special needs of others, and to improve the quality of life in my community;
• Adhere to honesty in my advertising and in all representations to the public concerning my business or profession;
• Neither seek from nor grant to a fellow Rotarian a privilege or advantage not normally accorded others in a business or professional relationship.
2012-2013 ROTARY THEME
"In Rotary, our business is not profit. Our business is peace. Our reward is not financial but the happiness and satisfaction of seeing a better, more peaceful world, one that we have achieved through our own efforts.”
PEACE THROUGH SERVICE
Sakuji Tanaka, RI President, 2012-13
1. Rotary International
PRESIDENT, ROTARY INTERNATIONAL 2012 - 2013
Sakuji Tanaka – Yashio, Saitama, Japan
RI President-elect, 2011-12
Chaired 2009 Birmingham Convention Committee
Trustee of The Rotary Foundation, 2006-10
Director, Rotary International, 2003-05
District Governor, 1994-95
Sakuji Tanaka was President for 32 years of Tanaka Company Ltd, a wholesale firm that went public in 1995 and later merged with other leading wholesalers in Japan. Currently he serves as vice president of the Yashio City Chamber of Commerce and adviser to Arata Co. Ltd. An animal feed and pet food wholesaler, he also chaired the National Household Papers Distribution Association of Japan for 8 years. Sakuji studied business at Nihon Management Daigakuin and Tokyo Management Daigakuin.
Sakuji has served Rotary as an RI Director, regional Rotary Foundation coordinator, district governor and member of the Polio Eradication Advocacy Task Force, the Permanent Fund Committee for Japan and the Future Vision Committee.
Sakuji established an endowed Rotary Peace Fellowship and he and his wife, Kyoko are Paul Harris Fellows, Benefactors of the Permanent Fund and Major Donors.
Sakuji has received the RI Service Above Self Award and The Rotary Foundation’s Citation for Meritorious Service and Distinguished Service Award.
Sakuji and Kyoko live in Yashio and have three children and five grandchildren. They have been married since 1963.
Sakuji would like to see Rotary “continue its vital work as the force to improve our communities”. To do this work Rotary needs active, involved clubs. He pointed out that the RI Strategic Plan has been revised and will help build strong clubs that are vibrant, action-oriented and relevant in the changing world.
1. Rotary International
STRATEGIC PLAN 2012 - 2013
Refer strategicplan
1. Rotary International
2013 INTERNATIONAL LISBON CONVENTION
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1. Rotary International
RI ZONE 8 DIRECTOR
John Boag
RI Director 2012-13
Rotary Club of Tamworth North
New South Wales
Australia
John practices as a Solicitor in Tamworth NSW Australia and is a Director with five others in the Solicitor Corporation of Everingham Solomons. His main areas of practice are Property Law, Wills and Estates Law, Estate Planning and Pension Law. He is an Accredited Specialist in Property Law. He is a member of his local, regional and state Law Societies.
In the community, he has been a member of the Board of the Tamworth Base Hospital & Health Service (1989-1995), Tamworth Family Support Service (1980-1995), Tamworth & District Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Tamworth Business Enterprise Centre and Tamworth Development Corporation. He is presently a member of the Calrossy Anglican School Council. He is honorary solicitor to various community groups.
John joined the Tamworth North Rotary Club in District 9650 in July 1980. Prior to that, his involvement with Rotary was as a member of Interact, attending RYLA and as a GSE team member.
John’s Rotary service includes District Governor, International Assembly Training Leader, Regional Rotary Foundation Co-ordinator and member of the Constitution and Bylaws Committee. He was the Vice Chairman of the 2007 and 2010 Council on Legislation.
He is a Paul Harris Fellow, Paul Harris Sustaining Member and Benefactor of the Rotary Foundation. He has received the Rotary Foundation District Service Award and Citation for Meritorious Service.
John is married to Diana and they have six children – Katie (deceased), John (24), Hayley (23), James (20) and Christina and Carly (19). They live approximately 18 kilometres from Tamworth on a rural property.
1. Rotary International
USE OF THE ROTARY NAME AND EMBLEM
The “Rotary” name and gearwheel emblem, including the emblems and logos of Rotary International and The Rotary Foundation programs and projects are known collectively as the Rotary Marks. These Rotary Marks are covered by a trademark owned by Rotary International which is protected throughout the world.
Clubs, Districts and Rotary entities are welcome to use the Rotary emblem, in association with your Club or District projects. To maintain the value and integrity of the Rotary Marks, the RI Board of Directors has created guidelines to govern the use of the Rotary Marks on all merchandise, promotional materials and publications.
ROTARY NAME
• Use of the "Rotary" or “Foundation” name must include the name of a Rotary Club, a Rotary District or other Rotary Entity except where it refers to an authorised program under the exclusive control of RI.
• No alterations, obstructions or modifications of "Rotary" are permitted. No abbreviations, prefixes or suffixes of "Rotary," such as "Rota," are permitted.
• Clubs and District Domain names should comply with the naming guidelines outlined in the Manual of Procedure. Rotary Entities are encouraged, before registering domain names, to check with their Club and District Administration representative at the South Pacific and Philippines Office to ensure their proposed domain name complies with Board policy.
• The naming of any project or program that does not conform to the guidelines must receive specific RI Board approval.
ROTARY EMBLEM
• The Rotary Emblem, like the Rotary name, represents Rotary International.
• Whenever the Rotary Emblem is used for a project, program or activity not under the exclusive control of Rotary International or The Rotary Foundation, the name of the participating Club(s), District(s) or other Rotary Entity should also be used in addition to the Emblem, should appear directly adjacent to the Emblem, and be of a size of equal prominence to the Emblem.
• Any reproduction of the Rotary Emblem must meet Rotary International's proper Emblem specifications. No alterations, modifications or obstructions of the Rotary Emblem are permitted. The Emblem must be faithfully reproduced and always appear in its entirety.
• The RI Bylaws discourage any joint use of the RI Emblem with the emblem or logo of another organisation for any commercial purpose.
For further information, refer to Manual of Procedure, Chapter 17 or download from the Website:- RIdocuments/en_pdf/547en.pdf (3Mb)
1. Rotary International
RI AWARDS AND RECOGNITION PROGRAMS
Rotary International offers awards to recognise the efforts and contributions of Rotarians, Rotary Clubs and non-Rotarians. Eligible nominators may submit nominations according to each award’s criteria and guidelines.
ROTARIANS
Avenues of Service Citation This citation program provides a way for Rotary clubs to personally recognise one club member for his or her outstanding efforts in the five Avenues of Service. A club member must have demonstrated support of the Object of Rotary through active participation in each of the five Avenues of Service: Club, Vocational, Community, International, and New Generations. A nominee must be an active Rotarian and can only receive the award once.
Club Builder Award This award recognises Rotarians who have made a significant impact in supporting and strengthening their Rotary clubs. District governors may nominate one candidate from their district each year.
Each Rotarian: Reach One, Keep One Award This award allows Rotary club presidents to nominate and recognise individuals for sponsoring new members while focusing on retention. There are several award categories:
• Gold pin and certificate: for Rotarians bringing 25 members into any Rotary club, with 20 still active after six years
• Silver pin and certificate: for Rotarians bringing 10 members into any Rotary club, with 8 still active after four years
• Bronze pin and certificate: for Rotarians bringing five members into any Rotary club, with four still active after two years
Certificates and pins may be purchased through Rotary International.
RI Service Above Self Award
As Rotary’s highest honour for individual Rotarians, this award recognises up to 150 Rotarians annually who have demonstrated exemplary humanitarian service, with an emphasis on personal volunteer efforts and active involvement in helping others through Rotary. Current district governors, directors, and past directors may nominate up to three candidates by 1 September each year.
RI Vocational Service Leadership Award
This award recognises Rotarians who have made a significant impact on advancing vocational service. District governors may nominate one candidate from their district each year.
The Rotary Foundation Citation for Meritorious Service
This award recognises Rotarians who have demonstrated active service to The Rotary Foundation for more than one year.
The Rotary Foundation Distinguished Service Award
Four complete Rotary years after receiving the Citation for Meritorious Service, a Rotarian becomes eligible for the Distinguished Service Award. Because this is the Foundation’s highest service recognition, a recipient’s exemplary service to the Foundation must extend beyond the district level and occur over an extended period of time.
The Rotary Foundation District Service Award
Because so many Rotarians serve humanity through Foundation programs, The Rotary Foundation created the District Service Award to recognise their efforts. Each recipient is given a certificate, awarded at the district level. District governors may obtain up to 20 blank certificates at no cost to their district.
Service Award for a Polio-Free World
This award was established by the Trustees of the Rotary Foundation in order to recognise outstanding contributions to the effort by Rotarians and thereby to encourage final efforts. In geographic areas coinciding with WHO regions, up to ten regional service awards per region are given annually. These awards recognise outstanding service in polio eradication. International Awards, for broad service to the cause of polio eradication, are also made annually, not to exceed ten individuals.
ROTARY CLUBS
Presidential Citation
The Presidential Citation will recognise achievements related to membership development and contributing to The Rotary Foundation. Each qualifying club will receive an award certificate.
Significant Achievement Award
Presidential recognition of a club activity which addresses a significant problem or need in the community. A district selects one project and submits nomination to RI. A president-appointed selection committee evaluates nominations.
Recognition of Smaller Club Membership Growth
This district-level award offers an incentive to clubs that fall below the charter requirement of 20 members by recognising the challenges and achievements of small clubs.
RI Membership Development and Extension Award -- MDEA
This district-level certificate program recognises membership growth in existing clubs, retention of current club members, and the organisation of new clubs. Districts that meet their membership goals are also recognised.
Cont…
RI Recognition of Membership Development Initiatives -- MDI
This district-level certificate recognises clubs for the development and implementation of a creative plan or strategy to support one of the three primary foundations of membership growth and development: retention, recruitment of qualified new members, or the organisation of new Rotary clubs.
NON-ROTARIANS
Family and Community Service Award
This award is a certificate that Rotary clubs may confer on individuals or organisations for outstanding service to families and communities, or in recognition of the positive contributions to individual Rotary clubs made by spouses or family members of Rotarians. It is a good way for clubs to celebrate Family Month in December, recognise members of the family of Rotary, and promote Rotary in the community.
The Rotary Foundation Global Alumni Service to Humanity Award
This award honours outstanding Rotary Foundation alumni who have contributed to greater understanding and peace through service to humanity, and whose significant achievements have enriched their profession or vocation.
The Rotary Foundation Alumni Associations of the Year Award
The Rotary Foundation Alumni Association of the Year Award recognises an alumni association that has increased awareness of the contributions and impact alumni have made on Foundation programs. The winning association receives a plaque or banner, recognition in Rotary media, and the opportunity to present its work at the Rotary Alumni Celebration at the RI Convention.
Website: en/Members/GeneralInformation/Awards/pages
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Website:- en/serviceandfellowship/polio
or - endpolio
2. Rotary District 9500
RI SOUTH PACIFIC AND PHILIPPINES OFFICE (SPPO)
|Mail |Street Address |
|Rotary International |Rotary Centre |
|South Pacific & Philippines Office |Suite 101, Level 2 |
|PO Box 1415 |60 Philip Street |
|Parramatta NSW 2124 |Parramatta NSW 2150 |
|Australia |Phone +61 2 8894 9800 |
| |Fax +61 2 8894 9899 |
| |Office hours |
| |8.30 am to 5.00 pm, Monday to Friday |
| |Except on Australian and NSW Public Holidays |
|Regional Head |Frank Pezzimenti |frank.pezzimenti@ |
|Admin Coordinator |Michelle Fuller |michelle.fuller@ |
|Admin/Support/Reception |Amanda Kahlon |iobha.kahlon@ |
|Admin handle all inquiries about Rotary International & The Rotary Foundation, literature, videos and |
|CDs/DVDs |
| | | |
|Club & District Support |
|Manager |Joy Walker |joy.walker@ |
|Coordinator |Barbara Mifsud |Barbara.mifsud@ |
|Correspondent |Mary Jayne Desmond |maryjayne.desmond@ |
|Handle new Club admittance, changes to existing Club details, use of Rotary logos and marks, assist DGs, |
|Clubs and Rotarians in communications with RI, member access guidance tutorial – in |
|E-learning centre |
| | | |
|Finance | | |
|Financial Supervisor |Grace Ramirez |grace.ramirez@ |
|Coordinator (Aust & NZ) |John Jiang |xiang.jiang@ |
|Coordinator (Philippines) |Rachel Hernandez |iobha.hernandez@ |
|Acting Finance Coordinator |Melissa Asanza (TRF Finance) |iobhan.asanza@ |
|Collect per capita fees and other payments to RI, assist Clubs with financial matters, process TRF |
|contributions, process travelling payments |
|The Rotary Foundation |
|Manager |PDG Bruce Allen |bruce.allen@ |
|Fund Development Officer |Siobhan Moran |iobhan.moran@ |
|TRF Admin |Krissy Aure-Canson |kristenne.aurecanson@ |
|Fund development, PHF recognition, benefactor recognition, TRF inquiries. |
2. Rotary District 9500
ROTARY DOWN UNDER (RDU)
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Official Rotary Magazine for Australia and New Zealand Based Districts
RDU is circulated monthly throughout Australia, New Zealand and the South-West Pacific region to over 50,000 Rotarians. The Rotary Down Under organisation publishes the RDU Magazine, sponsors the Rotarnet Web site and is the official supplier of Rotary and Probus Merchandise and Australian souvenirs in the region.
Rotary Down Under House
Address: Level 3, 43 Hunter St (PO Box 779) Parramatta, NSW 2124 Aus
Ph: +61 2 9633 4888; Fax +61 2 9891 5984
E: enquiries@.au
Website: .au
Editor: Mark Wallace Associate Editor: Meagan Jones
Executive Director: Bob Aitken Finance Manager: Barry Antees
Administration Manager: Frances Campbell
Office hours: 9.00 am – 5.00 pm Monday – Friday (Except public holidays)
Manages all matters relating to the Regional Magazine and the administration of Rotary Down Under House.
RDU Merchandise and Promotions – please note supplies address
Licensed supplier of Rotary International emblem merchandise
Location: Unit 16 45 Powers Road Seven Hills NSW 2147 Aus
Postal address: PO Box 244, Toongabbie NSW 2146 Aus
Phone: +61 2 9674 6855 Fax: +61 2 9624 2148
E: supplies@.au
Director: Barry Antees Corporate Sales Manager: Paul Reid
Staff: Judy Donovan, Lyndee Xuereb, Mim Amble, Pauline Lane
Visit the RDU website catalogue for safe and secure ordering of merchandise – .au
Your RDU Group Representative - PDG Peter Sandercock
H: 8295 7734 • M: 0416 153 577 • E: ppsandy@.au
Your RDU 9500 Representative – Graham Fussen
H: 8395 0722 • M: 0412 964 461 • E: gfussen@.au
2. Rotary District 9500
DISTRICT GOVERNOR
Marie Dorrington (Ken)
Home 08 8269 3398
Mobile 0417 863 316
Email mdorring@.au
Marie was born in South Australia where she has spent most of her life. Educated at secondary, tertiary and post graduate level in Adelaide, she has been involved in teaching and educational leadership since that time.
In 1986, she became Principal of St Mary’s College, a role she had for more than 18 years. This passion for learning has continued with a part-time consultancy in education which has enabled her to travel widely.
A member of the Rotary Club of Adelaide West since 1997 when she became a member in response to the involvement of the club in supporting St Mary’s College, Marie has been President of the Club (2001-2002) and has enjoyed being involved in a range of activities within it.
At District level, Marie has been involved in a number of roles, including chairing the Group Study Exchange Committee for two years, District Secretary in 2008-09 and Assistant Governor Group 1 for 2009-10 and 2010-11. Marie was also Host Counsellor for an Ambassadorial Scholar from Japan in 2009 and 2010, and she is a Club Visioning Facilitator.
Marie and Ken have two wonderful children (and a wonderful daughter-in-law and son-in-law) and are grandparents of Alexander, Emma and Hamish, with whom they love spending time. They also share an interest in reading, travel, football and gardening.
Long passionate about ensuring that an opportunity is given to all people of all ages, cultures and geographical areas to be healthy, active, cared for and creative members of a peaceful, sustainable and productive society, Marie hopes that she is able to continue to contribute to the wonderful work of Rotary to help bring this closer for all.
2. Rotary District 9500
DISTRICT GOVERNOR ELECT
Barbara Wheatcroft
Phone 08 8358 1625 Mobile 0413 511 243
Email: barbara.wheatcroft@
Barbara was born in Adelaide and lived in McLaren Vale for seven years before moving to a small farm near Horsham. After 3 years the family returned to Adelaide. Barbara attended Marion High School and on leaving joined the ES&A Bank (now ANZ) for several years before marrying and having 3 children, 2 boys and a girl. She then moved to Yorke Peninsula and lived on a farm north of Ardrossan for many years where her 3rd son was born.
Barbara became very involved with sport, in particular Calisthenics, and this led to the opportunity to move back to Adelaide when Kirsti was selected as a member of the Junior State team in 1982. Barbara joined the Apple & Pear Growers Association of SA Inc in 1988 and worked with the Association for almost 20 years.
Barbara became involved in Rotary as a ‘guest’ for many years, and was inducted into the Rotary Club of Hindmarsh in October 2004. She held the office of President in 2006-07 and 2008-09, as well as Treasurer in 2007-08. She has also been a member of the District GSE committee and Chair in 2009-10, and Dist Secretary in 2010-2011.
In 2009, the RC of Hindmarsh handed back their Charter and along with 4 other members Barbara became a member of the RC of Adelaide Parks.
Her other interests include reading, dressmaking and 4 beautiful grandchildren.
DISTRICT GOVERNOR NOMINEE
John Campbell (Julie)
Phone 08 8267 7788 Mobile 0408 847 757
Email johncampbell@.au
John was born in Adelaide, and grew up in Prospect. Since leaving school, he has always worked in the Financial Services industry, initially with Elders Trustee then in 1977 commenced as a self- employed Insurance Agent with AMP in Adelaide, then Port Pirie 1985 – 2005 before returning to Adelaide to run his financial planning business. John is an active member of the financial adviser associations including the AFA (he was a National Finalist - AFA Adviser of the Year in 2009), the Financial Planning Association and gained the CFP designation in 1997, and is a Qualifying & Life Member of the Million Dollar Round Table, serving as the SA Chair 2004-2009, and the Australian Chair 2010–2012.
John’s first involvement with Rotary was as an Interact Club member at Adelaide Boys High School. In 1971, when the first Rotaract Club in District 250 was formed, John became a member and held positions of Director, Vice President, President and Conference Chair, District positions of Membership Chair & RITSE Committee member which organised the first 2 Rotaract exchanges with New Zealand and India.
As a member of the Rotary Club of Adelaide Light since 2000, he has held the positions of Treasurer (2 consecutive years), Sergeant for 2 years, Director Club Administration, Club Visioning Facilitator and President.
John and Julie enjoy gardening, golf and travel and are keen supporters of the Adelaide Crows. They have 2 daughters who live in Brisbane and London.
2. Rotary District 9500
PAST DISTRICT GOVERNORS
Formerly Districts 65, 64, 33, 250, 950
DISTRICT YEAR HOME CLUB
65 1927-28 G. Fred Birks Sydney
65 1928-29 G. Fred Birks Sydney
65 1929-30 Alfred C. Holtz Melbourne
65 1930-31 Leonard J. Mitchell Melbourne
65 1931-32 Harry M. Cummins Hobart
65 1932-33 Sinclair McGibbon Perth
65 1933-34 Alfred Pittard Ballarat
65 1934-35 Angus Mitchell Melbourne
65 1935-36 Ern Short Adelaide
65 1936-37 Arthur Bolton Bendigo
65 1937-38 J. Burgess Watt Hobart
65 1938-39 Angus Mitchell Melbourne
65 1939-40 Lovis O. Bayer Colac
65 1940-41 Walter Sims Unley
65 1941-42 Stanley Perry Perth
65 1942-43 Stanley Perry Perth
65 1943-44 J. Burgess Watt Hobart
65 1944-45 J. Burgess Watt Hobart
65 1945-46 H. Holmes Warrnambool
64 1946-47 John Edgar Essendon
64 1947-48 John Edgar Essendon
64 1948-49 J. Eric Cuthbertson Hobart
33 1949-50 Reg Etherington Mildura
33 1950-51 Victor Webb Perth
33 1951-52 Len Clarkson Adelaide
33 1952-53 Alan Drayton Colac
33 1953-54 Leslie North Ballarat
33 1954-55 Arthur Hart Unley
33 1955-56 John Kneebone Hamilton
33 1956-57 Stewart Brown Horsham
250 1957-58 Arthur Sampson Adelaide
250 1958-59 David Clarkson Woodville
250 1959-60 Frederick Claridge Unley
250 1960-61 Arch Ramsay Mildura
250 1961-62 Leo DeGaris Naracoorte
250 1962-63 Herbert Cartledge Adelaide
250 1963-64 Fred Bennett Warrnambool
250 1964-65 John McArthur Ararat
250 1965-66 Lionel Catt Victor Harbor
250 1966-67 Fergus Ballantyne Unley
250 1967-68 William C. Kay Pt Adelaide
250 1968-69 Phillip Kearns Adelaide
250 1969-70 Allen Hosking Mitcham
District Year Home Club
250 1970-71 Ross Irvine Tailem Bend
250 1971-72 Fred Stewart St. Peters
250 1972-73 Alan Clarkson Unley
250 1973-74 Alan Williams Edwardstown
250 1974-75 Geoff Evans Port Pirie
250 1975-76 John Evans Barossa Valley
250 1976-77 Alan Green Edwardstown
250 1977 Ross Irvine Noarlunga East
950 1977-78 Jack Turner Adelaide West
950 1978-79 Clair Rogers Adelaide
950 1979-80 Reg Correll Kadina
950 1980-81 John May * Henley Beach
950 1981-82 Bob Perryman Adelaide East
950 1982-83 Roly Day Gawler
950 1983-84 Alan Smith * Adelaide West
950 1984-85 Max Smith Prospect
950 1985-86 Dean Whiteford Henley Beach
950 1986-87 Bill McFarlane Adelaide East
950 1987-88 Graeme Higginson Adelaide
950 1988-89 Dick Milner * Tea Tree Gully
950 1989-90 Murray Norton * Whyalla
950 1990-91 Don Sarah * Hindmarsh
9500 1991-92 Norm Temby North Haven
9500 1992 Murray Norton * Whyalla
9500 1992-93 Keith Healey * Prospect
9500 1993-94 Tony Reade * Adelaide Light
9500 1994-95 Trevor Graske * Tea Tree Gully
9500 1995-96 Neil Jackson Adelaide
9500 1996-97 John Downing Elizabeth
9500 1997-98 Peter Thomas * Barossa Valley
9500 1998-99 Geoff Schahinger * Hindmarsh
9500 1999-2000 Allan Wilson * Walkerville
9500 2000-01 Glen Eden * Whyalla
9500 2001-02 Robert Brookes * Clare
9500 2002-03 Peter Rostron * Tea Tree Gully
9500 2003-04 David Moore Gawler
9500 2004-05 Katina Jones * Adelaide Light
9500 2005-05 Colin Thorn * Largs Bay
9500 2006-07 John Rowe * Port Pirie
9500 2007-08 Kerry Brandt-Wilson North Adelaide
9500 2008-09 Roberta Waterman * Woodville
9500 2009-10 Alun Hughes * Elizabeth
9500 2010-2011 Ed King* Kidman Park
9500 2011-2012 Eric Russell* Adelaide Parks
* denotes Council of Past District Governors.
2. Rotary District 9500
BRIEF HISTORY
Rotary started in South Australia with the formation of the Rotary Club of Adelaide on the 24th August 1923 and the official recognition by Charter on the 4th February 1924. At this time there were only four other Clubs in Australia, Melbourne, Sydney, Brisbane and Newcastle.
The then International Association of Rotary Clubs, soon to become Rotary International, appointed two Extension Commissioners, Professor Osborne of the Rotary Club of Melbourne, to foster the growth of Rotary in the Southern States of Victoria, Tasmania, South Australia and Western Australia and Sir Henry Braddon of the Rotary Club of Sydney for New South Wales and Queensland.
Although there were “unofficial” Conferences held for the Clubs in 1926 and 1927 there was no District in Australia until the 15th September 1927 when District 65 was formed for the whole of Australia, which then had 17 Clubs. The first District Governor was Fred Birks (Drugs Retailing) of the Rotary Club of Sydney and he served two years.
Over the years, new Districts have been formed from the original District 65, as the number of Clubs increased. As far as our District 9500 is concerned, we have been a part of Districts 64, 33, 250 and 950 in its evolution. Major changes to the District have occurred in 1946, 1951, 1956 and 1977. The 1950s saw our District grow from 31 Clubs in July 1954 to 51 Clubs in May 1960. During this period of rapid expansion it is interesting to note that the District Attendance records reveal monthly average attendances around the 83-84% mark. Early South Australian Clubs, apart from Adelaide, were Mount Gambier 1928, Unley 1935, Port Adelaide 1946, Victor Harbor 1947 and Port Lincoln 1949.
On the 1st July 1977 the large District 250 was divided into Districts 950 and 952, with District 950 consisting of the major western part of South Australia including Adelaide and Alice Springs/Yulara plus Kangaroo Island, whilst District 952 consisted of the remaining eastern part of South Australia, and south of Adelaide plus the Riverland, Riverina and Broken Hill. In 2008, our eastern boundary of District 9500 with District 9520 was consolidated to longitude 139o 21’E down to the Walker Flat to Mt Pleasant Road, then following the road & River Torrens to just east then south of Adelaide. The late Jack Turner from the Rotary Club of Adelaide West became the first District Governor of District 950, when there were 32 Clubs and 1505 members. His District Conference was held at Kadina. A re-numbering brought into existence the present District 9500 on the 1st July 1991, when there were 51 Clubs and approximately 1870 members. At March 2012 there were 48 clubs and 1324 members.
In recent times two Rotary Clubs, Makin EDGE Tea Tree Gully and Roxby District have been Chartered, as well as the Rotaract Club for Global Peace at the Thebarton Senior College . The Interact Club at the Adelaide High School, which was chartered in the mid 1960s, through the RC of Adelaide, is still an active and busy Club.
Original Research by the late Colin Brideson – District Historian – Feb 2009
2. Rotary District 9500
GEOGRAPHY
District 9500 embraces most of South Australia and half of the Northern Territory. It covers 1,700,000 square kilometres and stretches from the Southern Ocean, Kangaroo Island and Adelaide in the south to beyond Alice Springs in the north, extending to the Western Australia/South Australia border in the west.
South Australia’s population is 1.6 million, of which 1 million live in the area covered by District 9500. Currently there are about 1324 Rotarians in 48 Clubs. Most of the population live in a narrow coastal belt including near the Capital city, Adelaide (population 1,200,000). The other part of South Australia is largely covered by our neighbouring District, District 9520. The economy of South Australia is centred on industry, commerce, sheep, wheat, cattle, wine, fruit, fishing and tourism. The southern half of the Northern Territory relies on tourism and cattle.
The District is predominantly semi-arid or arid with spectacular scenery – Ayers Rock (Uluru), wild flowers in profusion after rains, an abundance of native animals and birds, and extensive saltbush grazing lands. The population is sparse and tourism is important to the District’s economy.
District 9500 is the home of the longest straight line of railway in the world (478 km) and contains the largest lead smelter in the world. The opal fields of Coober Pedy produce some of the world’s best opals. The great white shark roams South Australia’s waters and the tuna and lobster industries are an important export commodity.
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Rotary Districts of Australia, NZ, Timor Leste, PNG & South West Pacific Islands)
2. Rotary District 9500
BOUNDARY DESCRIPTION OF DISTRICT 9500
AUSTRALIA – That part of SOUTH AUSTRALIA west of longitude 139° 21’E from the Queensland/South Australian border to the main road from Walker Flat to Mt Pleasant and north of a line consisting of:- this road west through Angas Valley, Mt Pleasant, Birdwood, Gumeracha to Gorge Road south-west along Gorge Road through Cudlee Creek and Castambul to the eastern boundary of the City of Campbelltown, north along that boundary to the River Torrens, south-west along the River Torrens to Hackney Road, south along Hackney Road, Dequetteville Terrace and Fullarton Road to Greenhill Road, west along Greenhill Road to Anzac Highway, south-west along Anzac Highway to the Sturt River, north-west along the Sturt River to Anderson Avenue, west along Anderson Avenue extended to the Gulf of St Vincent; plus Kangaroo Island and that part of the NORTHERN TERRITORY south of the 21st degree of latitude south.
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Based on Clubs, District 9500 extends from Adelaide to Alice Springs, Port Lincoln to the Barossa Valley and includes Kangaroo Island.
Around Adelaide, District 9500 extends north of Anzac Highway, around the South and East Parklands then north of the River Torrens.
Pages 24-26 updated by Keith Rendell 2012.
Detailed maps are available on the District Website –
2. Rotary District 9500
Peace Through Service in DISTRICT 9500
The theme for the 2012-13 Rotary year is Peace Through Service and RI President Sakuji Tanaka says that peace will be ‘our focus and our goal’. He asks all Rotarians to actively work for Peace Through Service, beginning with every individual, family, club, district, region and nation.
However, RI President Sakuji Tanaka also asks all Rotary clubs to focus on the three priorities of the RI Strategic Plan: to support and strengthen cubs, to focus and increase humanitarian service, and to enhance public image and awareness.
This focus on peace, as Rotarians work with the RI Strategic Plan as a guide, should promote strong programs as well as giving cohesion to how we can contribute to a more peaceful world: it may be to bring a greater sense of peace to members of our own communities through mentoring and support; it may be to assist members of our communities in practical ways; or it may be to provide basic necessities to those overseas who do not have them.
Peace is something that we can find and that we can achieve, every day and in so many simple ways.
DISTRICT 9520 OFFICERS
District Governor Roy Armstrong (Marilyn) Marion
Ph: (08) 8294 5751 M: 0407 610 904 Mob: 0407 610 904
1 Moore Street, Somerton Park SA 5044
E: rarmstrong@.au
District Secretary Jerry Casburn (Briony Lyon) Mobilong
Ph: (08) 8295 8227 M: 0407 646 396
1/71 Walkers Road Somerton Park SA 5044 E: jerry@.au
Governor Elect Wendy Gaborit (John Jury) Unley
Ph: (08) 8532 2872, M: 0418 852 717
PO Box 892, Murray Bridge, SA 5253
E: wendygaborit@
District 9520 Website:- District9520
2. Rotary District 9500
INSURANCE
INSURANCE SUMMARY
Rotary’s Australian Insurance Programme has been arranged through International Insurance Brokers, Aon in Brisbane. Mandatory Policies include Industrial Special Risks, Public Liability, Office Bearer’s Liability, Personal Accident and Travel. An optional Trailer/Caravan policy is also available.
Day to day enquiries, or if a ‘Certificate of Currency’ is required for a Rotary function, contact the District Insurance Officer, Henry Rzemieniuk on
H: 8353 7474; M: 0412 797 452; E: henry@.
Aon Contact is Alex Dimitrijevic : Toll Free: 1800 786 682
Direct Line 07 3223 7456 Fax: 07 3223 7529
E: alex.dimitrijevic@.au
The Policy document is available on the Rotary Down Under Website:-
The Policies of Insurance cover:
2. INDUSTRIAL SPECIAL RISKS - Maximum Cover
Section 1 - $500,000 any one loss Section 2 - $25,000 any one loss
(1) Art Works – limit: $100,000 (2) Burglary & Theft – limit: $50,000
(3) Property in Transit (Aust) – limit: $50,000 (4) Others – limit: Various
2. PERSONAL ACCIDENT AND TRAVEL
Participants in all non-excluded Rotary activities (for their respective rights and interests). Exclusions include:
• Flying in aircraft or other aerial device other than as a passenger in an aircraft licensed to carry passengers;
• Engaging in training or engaging in professional sports of any kind, motor cycling (either as driver or passenger), racing of any motor propelled conveyance of any kind, polo, underwater activities, hang gliding, water skiing, tow gliding, ski jumping, competitive snow or ice sports;
• Persons over 95 years of age.
Benefits are divided into categories and different rates apply. A wide range of cover is available for participants travelling on Rotary business, including pre-paid Conference Registration and Accommodation costs (should a journey be cancelled due to unforseen circumstances outside an insured person’s control). 24hr Claims – Ace Assist: 02 8907 5995. Please note conditions and exclusions at Section 6 of the policy which can be found on the RDU website.
3. PUBLIC LIABILITY: Cover is world-wide, with a Limit of $50 million for any one occurrence or series of occurrences arising from one event. It does not cover participants in Rodeo events. Where THIRD PARTIES need confirmation, obtain a Certificate of Currency from Aon.
4. ASSOCIATION LIABILITY ( Office Bearers )
Indemnity against loss arising from a claim by reason of any Wrongful Act:
Limit $2,000,000 Exclusions are nominated.
** Note: The figures shown are subject to change. Check with the District Insurance Officer, Henry Rzemieniuk.
2. Rotary District 9500
DISTRICT GOVERNOR’S CLUB VISITS 2012 – 2013
While dates are correct at time of printing, changes may occur in consultation with Clubs. Times shown are Meeting START Times; however DG Marie Dorrington wishes to meet with Club Boards 1½ hours prior or as negotiated with the Club President (eg for Breakfast Clubs).
|July 2012 |
|Wed 11 |Prospect Sunrise |7.15 am |
|Mon 16 |Woodville |6.30 pm |
|Mon 23 |Clare |6.15 pm |
|Tues 24 |Mawson Lakes |6.30 pm |
|Wed 25 |Playford |7.30 am |
|Wed 25 |Adelaide Parks |6.15 pm |
|Mon 30 |Kapunda |6.45 pm |
|Tues 31 |Pt Lincoln |6.30 pm |
| |
|August 2012 |
|Thurs 2 |Adelaide West |1.00 pm |
|Mon 6 |Salisbury |6.30 pm |
|Tues 7 |Adelaide East |1.00 pm |
|Tues 7 |Golden Grove |7.00 pm |
|Wed 8 |Walkerville |6.30 pm |
|Mon 13 |ChasSturt/Grange |6.30 pm |
|Tue 14 |Gawler Light |7.00 pm |
|Mon 20 |Alice Sp.Mbantua |7.00 am |
|Mon 27 |Adelaide Edge |6.30 pm |
|Tue 28 |Nthn. Yorke Pen. |6.15 pm |
|Wed 29 |Maitland |6.30 pm |
|Thur 30 |Barossa Valley |6.20 pm |
| |
|September 2012 |
|Mon 3 |Modbury |12.30 pm |
|Mon 3 |Makin Edge |7.00 pm |
|Tue 4 |Largs Bay |6.30 pm |
|September 2012 cont |
|Wed 5 |Prospect |6.15 pm |
|Thur 6 |Adelaide Light |7.15 am |
|Fri 7 |Adelaide South |1.00 pm |
|Mon 10 |Kangaroo Island |6.30 pm |
|Wed 12 |Henley Beach |6.30 pm |
|Mon 17 |North Adelaide |1.00 pm |
|Tue 18 |Kidman Park |6.30 pm |
|Wed 19 |Tea Tree Gully |6.45 pm |
|Tue 25 |Munno Para |6.45 pm |
|Wed 26 |Peterborough |7.00 pm |
| |
|October 2012 |
|Tue 2 |West Torrens |6.30 pm |
|Mon 8 |Gawler |6.30 pm |
|Tue 9 |Regency Park |6.15 pm |
|Wed 10 |Adelaide |1.00 pm |
|Mon 15 |Whyalla Norrie |7.00 pm |
|Tue 16 |Whyalla |6.30 pm |
|Wed 17 |Pt Augusta |6.30 pm |
|Thur 18 |Pt Pirie |6.15 pm |
|Mon 22 |Elizabeth |6.45 pm |
|Thur 25 |Pt Adelaide |1.00 pm |
|Tues 30 |Stuart Alice Sp. |6.45 pm |
|Wed 31 |Alice Springs |6.45 pm |
| |
|November 2012 |
|Mon 5 |Roxby District |6.30 pm |
|Mon 12 |Barossa District |6.45 pm |
|Tues 13 |West Lakes |6.30 pm |
2. Rotary District 9500
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2. Rotary District 9500
CHARTER OF CLUBS
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2. Rotary District 9500
DIARY DATES 2012 - 13
|Jul 2012 |“Peace Through Service” Theme for 2012-13 |
|Sun 1 |District Governor Marie Dorrington’s Changeover for 2012-13 |
|Sun 1 |Entries open for ACSO awards |
|Fri 6 |5.30 pm District Finance Committee Meeting* |
| |6.00 pm – District Management Committee Meeting* |
|Sat 14-Fri 20 |RYLA Camp |
|Fri 27- Sun 29 |RI Director’s Briefing weekend |
|Sat 28 |Accounts sent for District & Insurance Dues |
|Aug 2012 |Membership And Extension Month |
|Fri 3 |RAWCS Committee Meeting & AGM |
|Sat 4 |Rotary Leadership Institute Part 1 |
|Thu 9 |6.00 pm District Chairs Meeting* |
|Sun 12 |9.30 am Assistant Governors Meeting* |
|Sep 2012 |New Generations Month |
|Sat 8 |Rotary Leadership Institute Part 2 |
|Fri 14 |5.30 pm District Finance Mtg – 6.00 pm District Management Mtg* |
|Oct 2012 |Vocational Service Month |
|Fri 5 |RAWCS Committee Meeting |
|Sat 6 |Rotary Leadership Institute Part 3 |
|Thu 11 |6.00 pm District Chairs Meeting* |
|Fri 12 |Hat Day |
|Mon 22 |ACSO Award Presentations |
|Sun 28 |District Leadership (AG’s, District Chairs, Committees & Club Leaders) |
|Nov 2012 |Rotary Foundation Month |
|Sun 4 |Foundation Seminar |
|Fri 9 |5.30 pm District Finance Mtg – 6.00 pm District Management Mtg* |
|Sat 10 |Happy 30th Birthday Rotary Club of Munno Para |
|Tue 27-Sun 2 |Rotary International Institute – Adelaide 2012 |
|Thu 29-Sun 2 |Training and Zone Institute |
|Dec 2012 |The Family of Rotary Month |
|Fri 7 |RAWCS Committee Meeting |
|Thu 13 |6.00 pm District Chairs Meeting* |
|Sun 9 |9.30 am Assistant Governors Meeting* |
|DIARY DATES 2012 - 13 cont |
| | |
|Jan 2013 |Rotary Awareness Month |
|Fri 11 |5.30 pm District Finance Mtg – 6.00 pm District Management Mtg* |
|Sun 20 |Closing day for District Awards |
|Sun 27 |Founders Day (Anniversary of the Death of Paul Harris) |
|Feb 2013 |World Understanding Month |
|Sat 9 |Council of Governors Meeting |
|Sun 10 |9.30 am Assistant Governors Meeting* |
|Thu 14 |6.00 pm District Chairs Meeting* |
|Sun 17 |AG’s and District Chairs Training |
|Sat 23 |Rotary’s 107th Anniversary–Combined Districts Peace Forum & Dinner |
|Mar 2013 |Literacy Month |
|Fri 8 |5.30 pm District Finance Mtg – 6.00 pm District Management Mtg* |
|Thu14-Sun17 |District 9500 Conference in Bendigo |
|Sun 31 |Presidential Citations forms to be lodged with DG |
|Apr 2013 |Magazine Month |
|Fri 5 – Sun 7 |RYPEN Camp |
|Sat 6 |PETS (Presidents Elect, Presidents Nominee) | |
|Sun 7 |District Assembly (PE’s, Club Leaders, AG’s, District Chairs | |
|Thu 11 |6.00 pm District Chairs Meeting* |
|Sun 14 |9.30 am Assistant Governors Meeting* |
| Sun 21 |PETS and DA in Whyalla |
|May 2013 |Australian Rotary Health Month |
|Sun 5 |Planning Day PE’s & PN’s & Club members |
|Fri 10 |5.30 pm District Finance Mtg – 6.00 pm District Management Mtg* |
|June 2013 |Recreational Fellowship Month |
|Sun 11 |9.30 am Assistant Governors Meeting* |
|Thu 13 |5.30 pm District Finance Mtg – 6.00 pm District Management Mtg* |
| |6.00 pm District Chairs Meeting* |
|Sun23-Wed 26 |International Convention Lisbon |
|Sun 30 |Induction of District Governor Barbara Wheatcroft for 2013-2014 |
|Jul 2013 | |
|Sat 20-Fri 26 |RYLA Camp |
* NOTE: District Finance Meetings, District Management Meetings, Meetings of District Chairs, Assistant Governors Meetings – All of these meetings to be held at Blackfriars Priory School, Prospect Road, Prospect
2. Rotary District 9500
DISTRICT 9500 WEBSITE –
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Your District Website is a great resource for all Rotary information.
The menu tabs provide a direct link to Rotary International WEB Site, Rotary Down Under – Parramatta and The Rotary Foundation.
An extensive information resource includes many downloads for district and club and includes current DG’s Newsletter and archive newsletters, and current and archive ‘Weekly Dispatch’ is available to all Rotarians.
All District Events are listed and under the Districts & Clubs menu button you can notify the webmaster for listing a Club Event.
Locate information on District and Club programs, seminars and activities.
You can find a selection of valuable Rotary information on your District Website:-
♦ RI Manual of Procedure, Information on ‘The Future Vision Plan’ of TRF, Application Form for PHF
♦ District Strategic Plan, District & Club Constitution and Bylaws, District Administration Handbook, Planning Guide for Effective Rotary Clubs
♦ Links to Club Websites and Club locations, and Conference WEB Site
Clubs can maintain their own ‘Club Member Page’ in the secure section of the Website. This is only available to members via a login – if you have forgotten your ‘Username’ please email the Webmaster. Your ‘password’ will then be emailed to your listed email that has been entered in the members profile database. Webmaster Email is: webmaster@
RI Member Access & Club Runner (District WEB Site) Database Integration
Clubs can elect to enable ‘RI and Club Runner Database Integration’ by selecting the Integration Button on the District WEB Site and then accepting the Integration on the RI Members Access WEB Site. To find out how:-
District 9500 WEB Site >Districts & Clubs >Rotary International Information >RI Members Access.
2. Rotary District 9500
DISTRICT 9500 BENDIGO CONFERENCE COMMITTEE
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Please support our Sponsors
District Conference website:.au
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2. Rotary District 9500
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Acronyms listed in full at the end of this Directory
2. Rotary District 9500
DISTRICT MANAGEMENT COMMITTEE
District Governor (Chair) Marie Dorrington (Ken) Adelaide West
H: 8269 3398 M: 0417 863 316
25 Flora Tce Prospect SA 5082 mdorring@.au
District Governor Elect Barbara Wheatcroft Adelaide Parks
H: 8358 1625 M: 0413 511 243
5/6 Parson Street Sturt SA 5047 Barbara.wheatcroft@
IPDG: Eric Russell (Julie) Adelaide Parks
H: 8357 8898 M: 0402 315 292
3 Foundry Street Goodwood SA 5034 ericrussell@.au
District Secretary John Pohl (Elizabeth) Walkerville
H: 8269 3936 M: 0412 956 177
5 Branston Court Vale Park SA 5081 jemp@.au
District Treasurer Colin Davies (Helen) Pt Augusta
H: (08)8665 2080 M: 0428 627 950
PO Box 307 Jamestown SA 5491 cjdavies@.au
PDG Ed King (Sheena) Kidman Park
PDG Don Sarah (Meredyth) Adelaide
PDG John Rowe (Lynne) Port Pirie
PP Stephen Knight (Wendy) Modbury
DGN (observer) John Campbell (Julie) Adelaide Light
DISTRICT FINANCE COMMITTEE
District Treasurer (Chair) Colin Davies Pt Augusta
District Governor Marie Dorrington Adelaide West
Imm Past District Governor Eric Russell Adelaide Parks
District Governor Elect Barbara Wheatcroft Adelaide Parks
District Secretary John Pohl Walkerville
Committee PDG Ed King Kidman Park
.
NOMINATING COMMITTEE FOR DISTRICT GOVERNOR
District Governor (Convenor) Marie Dorrington Adelaide West
Imm Past District Governor Eric Russell Adelaide Parks
Past District Governor Ed King Kidman Park
Past District Governor Alun Hughes Elizabeth
Past District Governor Roberta Waterman Woodville
Past District Governor John Rowe Port Pirie
2. Rotary District 9500
DISTRICT SUPPORT PERSONNEL
District Information Officer John Pohl (Elizabeth) Walkerville
H: 8269 3936 M: 0412 956 177
5 Branston Court Vale Park SA 5081 E: jemp@.au
District Conference Chair Ashleigh Lorraine (Carolyn) Adelaide West
H: 8277 9222 M: 0418 759 904
105 Eliza Place Panorama SA 5041 E: exe.rent@.au
District Child Protection Advisor Tony Rankine (Denise) West Lakes
H: 8242 7790 M: 0401 123 457
22 Bali Court West Lakes SA 5021 E: rankar@.au
DG's Newsletter Editor Elizabeth Pohl (John) Walkerville
H: 8269 3936 M: 0437 155 394
5 Branston Court Vale Park SA 5081 E: e.pohl@
District Insurance and Risk Management Officer
Henry Rzemieniuk (Verna) West Lakes
H: 8353 7474 M: 0412 797 452
116 North St, Henley Beach SA 5022 E: henry@
District Auditor Dean Crook (Grant Thornton)
1/67 Greenhill Rd. Wayville SA 5034 E: dcrook@.au
District Property Officer Keith Rendell (Marion) Modbury
H: 8251 56 38 E: fibonacci@.au
District Trainer 2012/13 PDG Roberta Waterman (Geoff) Woodville
H: 8269 7329 B: 8345 3731 M: 0411 110 446
1a Willyama Avenue, Medindie SA 5081 willyama@.au
District Training Committee - 2012/13
DG Marie Dorrington Adelaide West Ro Forgan Barossa District
DGE Barbara Wheatcroft Adelaide Parks Stephen Knight Modbury
District Trainer 2013/14 PDG Roberta Waterman (Geoff) Woodville
H: 8269 7329 B: 8345 3731 M: 0411 110 446
Training dates 2013: PETS 6 & DA 7 April in Whyalla 21 April
DISTRICT 9500 website –
Conference website - .au
2. Rotary District 9500
ASSISTANT GOVERNOR LIAISON
Stephen Knight Modbury
H: 8337 9894 M: 0403 031 439
E: stephen@.au
ASSISTANT GOVERNORS
Group 1
John Campbell(1) (Julie) Adelaide Light
H: 8357 8975 W: 8267 7788 M: 0408 847 757
E:johncampbell@.au
3 Cambridge Tce Unley SA 5061
Clubs: Adelaide, Adelaide East, Adelaide Light, Adelaide Parks, Adelaide South, Adelaide West
Group 2
Warren Hobbs(2) (Helen) Kidman Park
H: 8443 9795 W: 8179 1111 M: 0411 744 740
E:whobbs@.au
5a Miranda Avenue Lockleys SA 5032
Clubs: Henley Beach, Kangaroo Is, Kidman Park, West Torrens
Group 3
Ken Parcell(1) (Dianne) West Lakes
H: 8353 0041 M: 0418 853 490
E: ken.parcell@
10 Malibu Drive West Beach 5024
Clubs: Charles Sturt Grange, Largs Bay,
Port Adelaide, West Lakes, Woodville
Group 4
Elizabeth Adamson(2) (David) Elizabeth
H: 8264 6861 B: 8302 3029 M: 0421 202 813
E: libadamson@
171 Hancock Road Tea Tree Gully SA 5091
Clubs: Elizabeth, Munno Para, Playford, Salisbury,
Mawson Lakes
Group 5
Jon Harmer(2) Prospect
H: 8267 2426 M: 0408 672 426
E: jharmer@.au
196 Archer Street North Adelaide SA 5006
Clubs: Adelaide EDGE, North Adelaide, Prospect, Prospect Sunrise, Regency Park, Walkerville
Group 6
Denise McCann(2) Golden Grove
H: 8289 6610 M: 0407 610 008
E: Denise.mccann@.au
34 Lake Fortesque Avenue Greenwith SA 5125
Clubs: Golden Grove, Makin EDGE - Tea Tree Gully,
Modbury, Tea Tree Gully
Group 7
Helen Davies(1) (Colin) Peterborough
H: 08 8665 2080 M: 0427 196 991
E: hjdavies@.au
PO Box 307 Jamestown SA 5491
Clubs: Maitland, Northern Yorke Peninsula,
Peterborough, Port Pirie
Group 8
Tim Clements(3) (Sue) Whyalla
H: 8645 1356 M: 0427 674 866
timandsue@internode.
52 Gowrie Ave, Whyalla Playford SA 5680
Clubs: Port Augusta, Port Lincoln, Roxby District, Whyalla, Whyalla Norrie
Group 9
Ted Buck(1) (Joanne) Barossa Valley
H: 8563 2043 M: 0438 632 043
E: service203@.au
12 Hobbs Street Tanunda SA 5352
Clubs: Barossa District, Barossa Valley, Clare, Gawler,
Gawler Light, Kapunda
2. Rotary District 9500
DISTRICT COMMITTEE CHAIRS
MEMBERSHIP DEVELOPMENT: PDG Alun Hughes(3) Elizabeth
H: 8258 4034 B: 8202 4681 M: 0438 228 654
14 Naperian Road, Salisbury North SA 5108 alunhughes@
MARKETING & PROMOTIONS: Geoff Ellershaw(3) Woodville
H: 8269 7329 W: 8231 5005 M: 0438 892 230
1A Willyama Ave, Medindie SA 5081 geoffellershaw1@.au
THE ROTARY FOUNDATION(TRF): PDG John Rowe(3) Port Pirie
H: 8634 2234 F: 8634 2214 M: 0417 101 858
PO Box 245, Port Pirie, SA. 5540 E:broughtonrg@.au
SERVICE PROGRAMS CHAIRS:-
Club Administration: Keith Rendell(2) Modbury
H: 8251 5638
PO Box 204, Surrey Downs SA 5126 fibonacci@.au
New Generations: Steve McLachlan(1) Gawler Light
H: 8254 9649 M: 0419 036 869
71 Forrestall Road, Elizabeth Downs, SA 5113 E: avagess@.au
Vocational Service: Barry Grear(3) Adelaide Light
H: 8337 0361 M: 0418 803 334
6 Koonunga Ave, Rostrevor SA 5073 E: bjgrear@.au
Community Service: Jeff Cluse(3) Prospect
H: 8344 1534 W: 8371 2511 M: 0418 804 445
7 Glenview Ave, Blair Athol SA 5084 E: jakcs@.au
International Service: PDG Roberta Waterman(1) Woodville
H: 8269 7329 W: 8345 3731 M: 0411 110 446
1A Willyama Avenue, Medindie SA 5081 E: willyama@.au
TERM ON DISTRICT COMMITTEES: -
The number by each name is the years that that this person will have been in this position (incl. 2012-13) (0) represents an orientation year (YEP and VTT only).
2. Rotary District 9500
MEMBERSHIP DEVELOPMENT COMMITTEE
Responsible for promoting District membership goals and for providing assistance to all Clubs in initiating and implementing membership development programs with a special emphasis on retention.
Website:- en/Members or -
.au/gettinginvolved.php
Chair:- PDG Alun Hughes(1) Elizabeth
District 9500 Membership Steering Committee
PDG Alun Hughes(1) Elizabeth
Graham Fussen(1) Tea Tree Gully
Scott Mason(1) Adelaide Parks Sharka Byrne Salisbury
Support is also available from the Assistant Governors
Zone Membership Coordinator: PDG Rob Wylie D9600
Family of Rotary
Friendship was the foundation, the rock on which Rotary service was built. Clubs are encouraged to care for Rotarians, their families, and members of the larger Rotary family, including past members and spouses, thereby strengthening Clubs and instilling a sense of integrity, tolerance, and unselfishness.
Dennis Underwood Salisbury
David Prince Adelaide South
Membership Reports - RI
Reporting New Members, Membership Termination, and Change of Data can be completed by the Secretary on the Member Access of the RI website, OR the original copy of the ‘Membership Data Form’ is available for download at:-
Website:- Ridocuments/en_pdf/memb_data_form.pdf
This should be sent to:- The RI South Pacific and Philippines Office at Parramatta, and also to RDU. Duplicate copies of these forms should be sent to the District Governor, in order to keep the District records up to date.
Club Bulletins Judge
Clubs are encouraged to share their Bulletins with their Assistant Governor and Clubs in their Group. If you wish to enter the ‘Club Bulletin Award’ - for hard copy or electronic version, then please forward a copy to the DGE’s Bulletin Judge.
For Judging Criteria, refer to District Awards section of this Directory.
DGE Barbara Wheatcroft Adelaide Parks
District 9500 The Rotary Foundation Alumni
All past participants in Programs of The Rotary Foundation are members of the Rotary Foundation Alumni. They include returned Ambassadorial or Peace Scholars, GSE Team Members or Leaders and TRF Project Volunteers. All are recorded in a TRF Alumni database. This Committee encourages Alumni members to be involved in Rotary activities and programs. Clubs are encouraged to make contact and utilise our database for future membership and guest speakers, or check the website for how you can get involved.
Website:- alumni
Zone TRF Alumni Coordinator & TRF Alumni Advisory Committee Member :
PDG Sylvia Byers (Mosman Park D 9640)
Jim Davies(1) Chair Adelaide Parks
Catherine Logue(2) Adelaide West
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2. Rotary District 9500
MARKETING & PROMOTIONS COMMITTEE
Raising Rotary’s public image is essential to a Clubs ultimate success. Marketing and Promotion can greatly enhance the impact of Club activities ranging from membership recruitment to community service. This Committee will advise Clubs on effective means of promoting the objectives of Rotary and its community involvement.
Chair:- Geoff Ellershaw(3) Woodville
Marketing and Promotions Committee
Geoff Ellershaw(3) Content Control over public sites Woodville
Bill Marles(2) Graphics/Web Design/SEO/Strategy Advisor Adel West
David Ellis(1) Social Media Advertising Prospect Sunrise
Peter Baur(2) Country Regions Co-ordinator Port Pirie
The Committee meets jointly with District 9520 with Bob Brigden (Norwood) as Chair.
Chair PR Australia: Philip Archer D9800
Tel: 03 9690 7979 M: 0448 999 555 E: parcher@.au
RI Web:- en/members/runningaclub/InformingTheCommunity
The Voice of Rotary
A radio program of 30 minutes duration, the Voice of Rotary program can be heard on RPH 1197 Adelaide AM band, every Tuesday evening from 7.30 pm to 8.00 pm. Listen on-line at .au
Chris Hughes Burnside D9520
John Cox North Adelaide
DG’s Newsletter
Articles for publication in the DG’s Newsletter need to be forwarded by the last Friday in the month for publication in the next newsletter. Items to be sent to:-
Elizabeth Pohl (John) Walkerville
H: 8269 3936 M: 0437 155 394
5 Branston Court Vale Park SA 5081 E: e.pohl@
RDU Representative
Graham Fussen Tea Tree Gully
RDU Group Representative: (Districts 9500 & 9520):
PDG Peter Sandercock Holdfast Bay
2. Rotary District 9500
THE ROTARY FOUNDATION - UNDER THE FUTURE VISION PLAN
The Rotary Foundation (TRF) of Rotary International was established by Arch Klumph “to do good in the World”. Its mission is to enable Rotarians to advance world understanding, goodwill, and peace through the improvement of health, the support of education, and the alleviation of poverty. Our Foundation is our own Charity to nourish and support. Website:- en/AboutUs/TheRotaryFoundation
District Rotary Foundation Chair:-PDG John Rowe(2) Port Pirie
Regional Rotary Foundation Chair: PDG Peter Ochota D 9520
Assistant Regional Rotary Foundation Coordinator and Australian Rotary Foundation Trust Trustee: PDG Peter Rostron Tea Tree Gully
DISTRICT ROTARY FOUNDATION COMMITTEE
PDG John Rowe Chair Port Pirie
Andy Hern Grants Port Pirie
Elizabeth Briggs PolioPlus Gawler
Terry Lewis VTT/GSE/Scholarships Walkerville
Jon Harmer Foundation Treasurer Prospect
PDG Ed King Kidman Park
District 9500 has been selected as a Future Vision Pilot District.
The Future Vision Plan updates the Foundation’s mission and creates a more effective and efficient way to help Rotarians develop diverse projects with greater impact and sustainable outcomes. The Future Vision Plan is designed to:-
• Simplify Foundation programs and processes consistent with the mission
• Focus Rotarian service efforts where they will have the greatest impact by addressing priority world needs that are relevant to Rotarians
• Offer program options to help achieve both global and local goals
• Increase the sense of ownership at the district and club levels by transferring more decisions to the districts
• Focus on significant and sustainable outcomes for projects
• Gain greater understanding of the work of TRF, enhance Rotary’s public image and be recognised as first-choice partner for global projects
For further information, check the Website at futurevision or contact PDG John Rowe or a Foundation Committee member.
The major features under the Future Visions Plan are:-
District Grants - Districts will be able to draw up to 50% of DDF for humanitarian and educational projects and decisions on usage will be determined and administered by the District.
Global Grants will be funded from the World Fund and at least 50% of SHARE, and these projects will be larger than the previous Matched Grants we have been involved in. Global grants will be centred on six ‘Areas of Focus’ - Peace and Conflict Prevention/Resolution - Disease Prevention and treatment - Water and Sanitation; Maternal and Child health - Basic Education and Literacy - Economic and Community Development.
The Rotary Foundation requires the District to have three main Sub-Committees :- Fundraising - Grants - PolioPlus.
1. DISTRICT FUNDRAISING SUB-COMMITTEE:
Funding is sought from Clubs in addition to regular contributions, personal donations or endowments, and Major Donors, Bequests and Benefactors.
PDG Eric Russell(1) Chair Adelaide Parks
John Pohl(2) Centurion Club Chair Walkerville
Brian Alford(4e) Database Manager non Rotarian
There are two types of Funds;
Annual Programs Fund & The Permanent Fund
Supporting today’s Programs Securing tomorrow’s programs
EREY District 9500 Centurion Club
The Centurion Club is a convenient and personal way to support the humanitarian work of The Rotary Foundation to alleviate poverty, educate the illiterate and relieve disease by donating A$100 or more every year, for as long as you are able. These contributions are paid into The Australian Rotary Foundation Trust and are Tax deductible.
John Pohl(2) Chair Walkerville
All donations should be forwarded to: PP John Pohl, Team Centurion
c/- PO Box 399, Walkerville SA 5081
Website - >TRF>Centurian Club Application Form
Paul Harris Fellow
Anyone who contributes - or in whose name is contributed - a gift of US$1,000 or more to the Annual Programs Fund or Polio Eradication may become a Paul Harris Fellow. Each new Paul Harris Fellow receives a commemorative certificate and a Paul Harris Fellow pin. Donors are eligible for Paul Harris Fellow recognition when their cumulative giving reaches US$1,000.
It is a ‘recognition’, not an ‘Award’.
For additional gifts totalling US$1,000 or more, a Paul Harris Fellow:
• is recognised as a Multiple Paul Harris Fellow
• may also choose to honour someone else as a Paul Harris Fellow with their Foundation Recognition Points, formerly called “available credit”
• is eligible to receive a Multiple Paul Harris Fellow pin with additional stones.
Website:- en/Contribute/DonorRecognition
Contribution Form:- RIdocuments/en_pdf/123en_write.pdf
The Form and Alternative scripts for use in presenting Paul Harris Fellow Recognition are also displayed on the District Website -
Paul Harris Society
Anyone who contributes US$1000 per year is eligible to be recognised as a member of the District’s Paul Harris Society. Contact PDG Robert Brookes or PDG John Rowe for details.
“No one can tell us what Rotary will be tomorrow, but one thing is certain: What Rotary will be tomorrow depends upon what we Rotarians do today.”
- Arch Klumph, founder of The Rotary Foundation
2. GRANTS SUB COMMITTEE:
Under the Future Vision Plan there are two types of Grants:-
District Grants – are available for humanitarian and educational projects and the funds are administered by the District. Application forms are available from Andy Hern and John Rowe and will be listed on district website. Applications are called in January for the following Rotary Year.
Andy Hern(3) Chair Port Pirie Port Pirie
Jon Harmer(3) Prospect P Prospect Prospec
Colin Davies(1) Port Augusta
Barry Allison(1) Port Adelaide
PDG Ed King(1) Kidman Park
PDG John Rowe(3) Pt Pirie
Graham Fussen TTG
Global Grants - are jointly funded from the World Fund, the District Designated Fund (DDF) and/or club contributions. Projects need to have a min budget of US$30,000. Global Grants need to be centered on six ‘Areas of Focus.’ Applications are via the internet. Contact PDG John Rowe.
Vocational Team Training (VTT) Group Study Exchange (GSE) and Scholarships
The Vocational Team Training and Group Study Exchange programs offer a unique opportunity to develop leadership skills, work on team building, and increase self-confidence. The programs are designed to have an invaluable impact on the career of a young professional in the global workplace by creating networking opportunities and lifelong friendships. Individuals who participate in this rewarding, once-in-a-lifetime experience will broaden their cultural perspective.
Find out more from the Website at:- gse
Rotary Foundation Scholarships further International understanding and Peace through the exchange of people internationally.
Terry Lewis Chair Walkerville
Elizabeth Adamson Elizabeth Peter Shaw West Lakes
Lynn Jones Adelaide South Doug Layng Prospect
Ro Forgan Barossa Districts Terry George Pt Adelaide
John Wotherspoon Adelaide Light
DISTRICT POLIOPLUS SUB-COMMITTEE
After 20 years of hard work, Rotary and its partners are on the brink of eradicating this tenacious disease, but a strong push is needed now to root it out once and for all. It is a window of opportunity of historic proportions. The Districts Goal is for every club to run a minimum of one fundraising activity in 2010-2011.
Elizabeth Briggs(3) Chair Gawler
Julie Johnson(2) Prospect
Bev Clark(1) Adelaide South
Personal donations to The Australian Rotary Foundation Trust (Polio Plus) are tax deductible. Donations attract PHF recognition points.
The Peter Sutton Memorial GSE Safari Fund
This is an Independent Trust Fund, which Rotarians/Clubs may wish to support, that was established to commemorate the death of the late Peter Sutton and has been used to assist incoming GSE Teams to visit the Outback during their time to Australia. The purpose statement will be under review during the Future Vision Pilot period. Trustees are appointed by the District Governor.
Jim Davies Trustee Adelaide Parks
PDG Robert Brookes Trustee Barossa Valley
Merv Nancarrow Trustee Adelaide West
PUT RYDA ADVERT HERE
Shelter Box Australia
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2. Rotary District 9500
CLUB ADMINISTRATION COMMITTEE
Rotary’s first avenue of Service is directed towards maintaining the health and vigour of the Club and involves supporting Club Officers to enable them to make their Club function successfully.
Chair:- Keith Rendell(3) Modbury
District Insurance and Risk Management Officer
Henry Rzemieniuk(3) (Verna) West Lakes
e-Comms Committee
This committee maintains the District member website and is available to advise Clubs on their use of information technology. The committee also maintains the District database and ensures the security of the District’s intellectual property, access to which will be determined by the DG.
Jon Harmer(1) Chair Prospect
Graham Fussen Consultant TTG Ian Chase(3) Salisbury
John Pohl Consultant Walkerville Kevin Woods(1) Adelaide East
District Resolutions Committee
This committee informs Clubs and District Committees of their right to present items of concern for consideration at the District Conference and District Assembly and the time by which they must be submitted.
The Committee will manage and conduct any duly convened meeting at which resolutions are considered, including at the District Conference.
PDG Peter Rostron(3) Tea Tree Gully PDG Geoff Schahinger(3) Adelaide Park
PDG Ed King(1) District Public Officer Kidman Park
RI and District Awards Committee
Assists the DG in the administration of RI Awards and District Awards presented each year at the District Conference.
Vocational Chair: Barry Grear(3) Community Chair: Jeff Cluse(3)
New Generations Chair: Steve McLachlan(1) TRF Chair: PDG John Rowe(1)
Membership Chair: PDG Alun Hughes(1) PR Chair: Geoff Ellershaw(3)
International Chair: PDG Roberta Waterman(1) DGE: Barbara Wheatcroft
RI Convention 2013 – Lisbon, Portugal
2014 - Sydney, Australia: 2015 Sao Paulo, Brazil
To promote the annual Rotary International Convention and encourage participation by Rotarians of the District.
PDG Ed King(1) Kidman Park
District Property Officer
Is responsible for the care and maintenance of District Property and keep an up-to-date inventory of all items of equipment, furniture and decorations.
Keith Rendell Modbury
District Photographer
Henk de Weerd(1) Adelaide West
Heather Sloan(1) Adelaide West
Ken Dorrington(1) non-Rotarian
District History and Records
Selects and preserves appropriate records of District and Club activities as the District’s archives.
Keith Rendell(3) Modbury
David Cockshell(1) Gawler Light
Club Visioning Facilitators
A panel of trained facilitators providing an opportunity for individual clubs to work through the Club Vision process to develop long term goals and plans.
Keith Rendell (Chair) Modbury
Facilitators:
PDG Ed King Kidman Park PDG Alun Hughes Elizabeth
DG Marie Dorrington Adelaide West Denise McCann Golden Grove
Rotary Leadership Institute Faculty (RLI)
A faculty which provides ongoing Rotary education and training to Rotarians who wish to develop and expand their knowledge of Rotary.
PDG Geoff Schahinger(3) Adelaide
RI Zone 8 Coordinator PDG Noel Trevaskis
D9500/D9520 Assistant Coordinator PDG Malcolm Lindquist
[pic]Rotary International Convention
Lisbon Portugal
23-26 June 2013
2. Rotary District 9500
SERVICE PROGRAMS - NEW GENERATIONS
All Rotarians and Rotary Clubs are encouraged to prepare our New Generations (young people up to the age of 30 years) by improving their life skills to ensure a better future, while recognising the diversity of their needs.
Visit 9500 youth web: .au
Chair:- Steve McLachlan(1) Gawler Light
Zone Youth Coordinator: PDG Rob Wylie D9600
Youth Exchange Program (YEP)
For Long Term Youth Exchange, a student spends up to a year living with host families and attending school in a different country. They learn a new way of living, a great deal about themselves, and maybe even a new language. They are an ambassador, teaching people about our country, culture, and ideas. It is one way to help bring the world closer - and make some good friends in the process. Applications to a Rotary Club are due by end March; selections by end April; student’s year abroad starts late January.
Short-term exchanges are available to qualified students and vary in length from several days to several weeks. Although participants in short-term exchanges generally don’t attend school in their host country, they may be able to tailor their exchange to match their interests or to include tours of specific places or regions.
Website:- .au
David Johnston(1) Chairman Port Lincoln
Jean Mailey(2) Secretary West Lakes
Justin Biggs(2) Treasurer and Insurance Adelaide EDGE
John Clements(3) Outbound Coordinator Mawson Lakes
Louise Clements(3) Outbound Coordinator Mawson Lakes
David Johnston(1) Scandinavian Coordinator Port Lincoln
Greg Patterson(2) Youth Protection Officer Port Lincoln
Rhys Madigan Zone Youth Program Coordinator Rotex
Raphaela Oest(2) Inbound Coordinator and
European Coordinator Adelaide EDGE
Julie Ward(3) North and South American and
Japanese Coordinator Kangaroo Island
Patrick Trimboli(2) Short Term Coordinator Mawson Lakes
Child Protection Advisor
Rotary International has a policy to ensure the safety and welfare of all youth who participate in Rotary Programs. It is mandatory that all Clubs involved have a Child Protection Officer and for all Rotarians (and any other persons) directly involved with youth to have obtained a Police Clearance Certificate.
Further Details available on District Website -
Tony Rankine West Lakes
Rotaract
Rotaract is a Rotary-sponsored Service Club for young men and women ages 18 to 30. Rotaract Clubs are either community or university based, and they’re sponsored by a local Rotary Club. This makes them true "partners in service" and key members of the family of Rotary. Rotaract meets fortnightly.
Website:- Rotaract
Current Clubs: Rotaract Club for Global Peace (Thebarton); Rotaract Club of Adelaide University (Adelaide).
Interact
Interact is Rotary International’s Service Club for young people aged 14 to 18, enabling them to work together in a world fellowship, dedicated to service and international understanding. Interact Clubs are sponsored by individual Rotary Clubs from the student body of a single school or from two or more schools. Interact meets fortnightly. Current Club: Adelaide High School (Adelaide).
Website:- Interact
Rotaract and Interact Committee
Steve McLachlan(1) Gawler Light
Anthea Walker(5e) Salisbury
David Adamson(5e) Elizabeth
Rotary Youth Leadership Awards (RYLA)
The RYLA program offers the chance to help develop leaders by providing the opportunity for young 18-25 year old people to refine skills, explore pertinent topics with their peers and elders and share valuable expertise. This is a six-day experience for young people.
RYLA
Rotary District 9500 Youth Program of Enrichment (RYPEN)
RYPEN aims to provide young people aged 15 to 17 years with the opportunity to develop their leadership potential, and gain experiences in problem solving and take control of their future. Two and a half day program.
.au/RYPEN
RYLA and RYPEN Committee
Di Casey(4e) Chair Adelaide Light
Alan Logue(4e) Treasurer Adelaide Parks
Reg Hutchinson Secretary Adelaide
Lawrie Lewis(1) Adelaide West Pat Christie(1) Adelaide
Rob Eley(1) Gawler Light Rick Henke(1) Salisbury
Team Leaders from Previous RYLA Programs may also attend Committee
RYWELL - Rotary District 9500/9520 Youth Wellbeing
Organises activities and programs for children and youth that are in full time Residential Care in District 9500 and 9520.
Elaine Frederick(2) Prospect Sunrise
ROTARY SUPPORTED PROGRAMS
National Youth Science Forum (NYSF)
A 12 day program for students thinking of a career in science, engineering and technology. Also achieved is a network of friends, colleagues and support groups throughout Australia which will be of value to participants for the whole of their lives. Website:- nysf.edu.au
Paul Bahr Chair Tea Tree Gully
Bruce McDonald Treasurer Adelaide Light
Helen Nicholls Adelaide East Don Blackmore Prospect Sunrise
Karin Heinen Adelaide
3 or 4 past NYSF attendees also attend Committee
The Science Experience (TSE)
To provide students who have an interest in science with an opportunity to engage in a wide range of fascinating science activities under the guidance of scientists who love their work.
Website:- .au
David Adamson Chair Elizabeth
Don Blackmore Treasurer Prospect Sunrise
Bernie Boxer Hyde Park
John Oswald Adelaide
Errin Fagan-Jeffries Representative of Young Scientist Aust Adel Chapter
Rotary District 9500 Youth Driver Awareness (RYDA)
RYDA has developed a program to help educate young people about Road Safety as they approach the period in their life when they start driving a car and ride as a passenger in a car driven by one of their peers. Details Page 56.
Craig & Jan Rogasch Coordinator Barossa Valley
Darylin Cowling Kidman Park
Carolyn Wigg Adelaide Light
John Magee Salisbury
ROTARY CLUB PROGRAMS
SA Science and Engineering Challenge
‘The Challenge’ generates excitement about science, and engineering as a career path. Students gain an understanding of the value of team work, thinking outside the square, creativity and innovation. Website:- newcastle.edu.au/group/challenge
Ollie Clark Chair Adelaide
John Agnew Adelaide
Brian Brooks Adelaide
Chris Michelmore Adelaide
John Oswald Adelaide
Family of Rotary Recorder - Youth
A record is kept of past participants in Rotary programs, including RYLA, RYPEN and Youth Exchange. (Ambassadorial Scholars, GSE Team Members, and Rotary Volunteers are separately included in the record of Rotary Foundation Alumni).
Keith Rendell Modbury
Also refer to The Rotary Foundation Alumni Committee under Membership
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2. Rotary District 9500
SERVICE PROGRAMS - VOCATIONAL SERVICE
Vocational Service is a description of the opportunities each Rotarian has to represent to fellow members the dignity and usefulness of his or her occupation. It also encompasses the obligation of each Rotarian to foster in his or her occupation the adoption and practice of high ethical standards and the dignifying of all useful occupations.
Chair:- Barry Grear(3) Adelaide Light
PDG Alun Hughes(1) Elizabeth
PDG Katina Jones(1) Adelaide Light
There is an emphasis on Vocational Service and it is anticipated that the AG’s will assist in promoting the listed functions for this Committee:-
VOCATIONAL will cover:
Student Journalism Competition
Integrity Seminars
ROTARY CLUB ACTIVITIES
Pride of Workmanship Award
Vocational Visits
Vocational Excellence
Trade and Professional Associations
Mock Interviews at Schools
Share other ideas from clubs
2. Rotary District 9500
SERVICE PROGRAMS - COMMUNITY SERVICE
Community Service provides opportunity for Rotarians and Clubs to be involved in and improve the quality of life for those who live in the community.
Chair:- Jeff Cluse(3) Prospect
Australian Rotary Health (ARH)
Australian Rotary Health was established to make continuing worthwhile contributions to community health in Australia.
Website: - .au
ARH District 9500 and 9520 Director: Dick Wilson Stirling
PO Box 174 Summertown SA 5141 E: dickandlizwilson@internode.
ARH District 9500 Committee
PDG Colin Thorn(3) Chair Barossa District
Joy Thorn(3) Barossa District Graham Lee(5e) Adelaide
Fran Wilson(3) Walkerville Jenny Latte(1) Adelaide EDGE
Kay Dowling(1) Adelaide East Brett McMutrie(4) Adelaide
Kevin Hickmott(5e) Alice Springs Mbantua PDG Allan Wilson Walkerville
Val Kirk (3) Indigenous Health Scholarships Walkerville
Bowel Scan – supported by Australian Rotary Health
Bowelscan is a Rotary program supported by ARH to generate public awareness of the Colorectal Screening program and to increase community knowledge of bowel cancer and its symptoms with a view to its earlier diagnosis. Website:- .au
Resource Contacts:
4 groups involved in District 9500 -
Joy Thorn Barossa District
John Capper Alice Springs
Shirley Wright Largs Bay
Clubs from Maitland, Northern Yorke Peninsula, Peterborough, Port Pirie, Port Augusta, Roxby Downs, Whyalla and Port Lincoln have been funded by a Foundation Matching Grant given to Port Pirie
PDG John Rowe Port Pirie
Bowel Scan
ARH Indigenous Health Scholarships
The object of this program is to provide scholarships to assist Indigenous students while they undertake a course in a wide range of health related professions, which will in turn enable them to use this education for the benefit of other Indigenous people. Website:- .au
John Sandham Chair Coromandel Valley
Val Kirk(3) Walkerville Les Dennis(3) Regency Park
Geoff Bailey(2) Mitcham Dennis Underwood(4e) Salisbury
Margaret Blake(3) Hyde Park Geoff Thwaites(2) Adelaide East
David Jones(1) Mitcham Peter Salamon(6e) Salisbury
Probus
Probus is an association of active senior members of the community.
Website:- .au
John Semmler(3) District Chair Barossa Valley
Veronica Semmler(3) National Board Member Barossa District
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROJECTS
Environmental Board (inc Calpurnum Station (CS) Committee): -
Bob Arnold Chair & Chair of ROBIN & CS Blackwood
Jeff Cluse D/Chair Prospect
Board Members:
Les Dennis Chair of PPE Regency Park
Neville Sharpe Chair of ACRE North Adelaide
David Gooley (CS) – Mitcham PDG Roberta Waterman (CS) – Woodville
Yvette Reade (CS) – Adelaide Light
Preserve Planet Earth
This initiative underscores global environment concerns already evident in a wide range of Rotary Club projects.
Les Dennis(3) Chair Regency Park Blackwood
Otto Baumgartner(1) Modbury Bob Arnold(3) Blackwood
Russell Green(3) Walkerville Bob Grant(3) Brownhill Creek
Allan Scott(3) Glenelg Paulo Castro(1) Mawson Lakes
Roshi Thattengat(1) Prospect Ian Carman(1) Magill Sunrise
Australian Campaign for Rabbit Eradication (ACRE)
ACRE is committed to educating the community about the destruction rabbits cause to the environment and seeks to support rabbit eradication projects with donations from Rotary Clubs.
Neville Sharpe(4e) Chair North Adelaide
Barry Barratt Advisor
PDG Don Sarah AM(4e) Adelaide Bill Hall Playford
Robert Roocke(1) Prospect PDG Glen Eden(1) Whyalla
Mark Williams Advisor Kevin Jaeschke Advisor
Richard Downward Advisor
Rotary’s Native Bird Nestbox (ROBIN)
Rotary promotes breeding habitats of endangered bird species by supplying nest boxes which play an important role in the recovery of several species threatened by predators or environmental changes.
Website:environment..au/data/press/nest_box_cockies.pdf
Bob Arnold Chair Blackwood
Bruce McKinnon Secretary/Treasurer Advisor
Barry Barratt Advisor Brian Brooks(3) Adelaide
Clint Garrett(3) Whyalla David Gooley Mitcham
Bryan Pointon(3) Mitcham PDG Don Sarah AM(6e) Adelaide
Roger Trethewey(3) Coromandel Valley Prof Rob Morrison Advisor
PDG Roberta Waterman(3) Woodville Dean Riddle Advisor
The District Governors & DGE’s are ex-officio members of these Committees.
Disaster Recovery Committee
Encourages support for the District 9500 Disaster Recovery Fund from Clubs and Rotarians. The Disaster Recovery Committee operates under a ‘Memorandum of Understanding’ with the Department for Families and Communities as part of District 9500’s “Disaster Support Plan” with Rotary as a participating agency in the SA Government’s Community Services Functional Plan. Rotary’s role includes:-
1. Provision of Evacuation and Recovery Centre equipment resources;
2. Coordination of the waiting area in the Recovery Centre;
3. Supplementary roles within the capacity and capability of Rotary Clubs within RI District 9500.
Dept Families/Communities:- dfc..au/pub/default.aspx?tabid=196
Disaster Relief Rotarian Action Group Website:-
Geof Irish(4e) Chair Playford
PDG Allan Wilson(4e) Advisor Walkerville
Reg Hutchinson Adelaide
Malcolm Schluter(3) Port Lincoln Liaison Port Lincoln
Ian Parsons(2) District 9520 Committee Noarlunga East
ROTARY SUPPORTED PROGRAMS
ACSO - Association of Community Service Organisations
Forum representing Kiwanis, Lions, APEX, Rotary, Soroptimists and Zonta aiming to foster mutual goodwill, co-operation and understanding. ACSO co-ordinates the Annual Premier’s Community Service Awards.
Jeff Cluse(2) Prospect
The Peter Nelson Leukaemia Research Fund
Former SA Governor, Marjorie Jackson-Nelson enlisted the aid of Rotary to establish this fund, to raise money for research to overcome leukaemia, which took the life of her husband, Peter (a then member of the Unley Club), in 1975. From 2011, all personal and club donations should now be sent direct to the fund name c/- Cancer Council, 202 Greenhill Road, Eastwood (PO Box 929 UNLEY SA 5061) Ph: 8291 4111.
.au/aspx/peter_nelson_leukaemia_research_fellowship_fund.aspx
Foodbank (SA)
Provides emergency food assistance to those people in SA experiencing severe hardship. Website:- .au
Vic Isbester Regency Park
Inner Wheel
Website:- .au
District A70 Chairperson: Andra Hein
Australian Medic Alert Foundation
Website:- .au
MedicAlert CEO Sandra Turner
ROTARY CLUB PROGRAMS
Emergency Medical Information Book
This book, distributed to those who may need to call an ambulance, holds specific information in relation to the person’s medical history, medications or allergies and personal details, allowing Paramedics to quickly identify a person’s condition. Website:- .au
PDG Peter Rostron Chairman Tea Tree Gully
Derek Stow (Treas) Golden Grove Margaret White (Sec) TTG
Graham Fussen Tea Tree Gully Arthur Jeffries non Rotarian
Bernie Donohue Lions Rep Ary van Kleef Modbury
THIS BOOK COULD SAVE A LIFE
Who should have one of these books?
- Elderly people living on their own;
- Children & adults with significant medical
conditions.
Create a worthwhile ‘Community Project for your Club!
Contact the EMIB Chairman or visit the
Website:- .au
Order a minimum quantity of 250 Books and your Club’s name will be on the cover;
Distribute the Books to Aged Care Homes and at Club activities;
Seek a gold coin donation if you wish.
|[pic] |Children like Asi, left, who had an eight hour |
|[pic] |operation to remove his frontal encephalocele by a|
| |team of 11 doctors. Thanks to ROMAC, Asi is now |
| |living a normal life. Asi is one of over 350 |
| |underprivileged and deserving children that ROMAC |
| |has proudly treated for dignity restoring and life|
| |saving operations. ROMAC is run by volunteer |
| |Rotarians, community spirited hospitals |
| |dramatically reduce costs and compassionate |
| |surgeons donate their expertise. |
|Please consider donating $1,000, more if you’re able. |
|ROMAC District 9500 - PO Box 779 Parramatta NSW 2124 |
|Website: .au |
|[pic] |
2. Rotary District 9500
SERVICE PROGRAMS - INTERNATIONAL SERVICE
Encompasses actions to expand Rotary’s humanitarian reach around the globe and promote world understanding, goodwill and peace. The volunteerism exemplified by Rotarians through the International Service Projects of Rotary, is an engine for renewal and change in every society and it is that same volunteer spirit, based on a profound sense of responsibility to our fellow human beings, which offers so much hope for the future.
Chair:- PDG Roberta Waterman(1) Woodville
Rotary Australia World Community Service Ltd. (RAWCS Ltd)
RAWCS Ltd was established as a public company in 1987 to coordinate the activities of Australia’s various World Community Service programmes. Central Region combines representatives from District 9500 and District 9520. Clubs are encouraged to send volunteers to developing countries to provide assistance principally in health and education areas. Donations made out to the “Rotary Overseas Aid Fund” are tax deductible.
Website:- .au
Central Region RAWCS Committee
PDG Roberta Waterman(2) Chair Woodville
Roger Dennis(2) Salisbury
Elizabeth Pohl(1) Secretary Walkerville
Geof Irish(1) Treasurer Playford
Marilyn Shaw(1) CRP Chair Encounter Bay
Robert Cesana PV Chair Hyde Park
David Cockshell DIK Chair Gawler Light
Suren Krishnan RAM Chair Prospect
PDG Peter Thomas National RAM Adviser Barossa Valley
Chris Hughes HGH Burnside
National Officers of RAWCS
PDG Roberta Waterman RAWCS Ltd Board Member
Peter Geer Deputy National Co-ordinator, Project Volunteers
PDG Peter Thomas Sol. Island Coordinator for RAM
PDG John McLaren National Chair RAWCS
Central Region Promotion (CRP)
This Committee has the role of promoting the activities of the RAWCS Central Region Committees to Clubs of District 9500 and 9520.
Marilyn Shaw Chair Encounter Bay
Project Volunteers (PV - formerly FAIM)
Encourages and facilitates teams of volunteers to visit developing countries to work on projects in health, education and/or sanitation. Volunteers live and work with local people, becoming acquainted with their lifestyle and culture while providing a wide variety of skills and training, especially in building and construction trades.
Robert Cesana Chair Hyde Park
Les Burgemeister Deputy Chair Loxton
Joe Geue Mount Barker Kevin Obst Prospect
Malcolm Langmaid Coromandel Valley John Lawler Barossa Valley
Donations in Kind (DIK)
DIK is a major Rotary project that covers the whole of South Australia. Surplus goods are donated to the project from businesses, organisations and individuals and distributed to needy communities locally, nationally and internationally. These goods include medical, dental and hospital equipment, computers, books, toys and school furniture. These goods are stored on a temporary basis at warehouse facilities at Edinburgh Parks where they are checked and cleaned. South Australian Rotary clubs and other organisations link with other clubs around the world to identify goods specifically needd in communities. Funds are raised for freight costs to get container loads of these goods to these needy communities. The goods are loaded into shipping containers and delivered to specified recipients at the destination end for dispersal to the needy community.
David Cockshell(3) Chair Gawler Light
Wayne Goedecke(5e) Woodville Joan Tingey(3) Gawler Light
Derek Burcham(3) Munno Para Gordon Brice(3) Onkaparinga
Graham Holcroft(2) Magill Sunrise Norm O’Flaherty(1) Morialta
Greg Lang(1) Holdfast Bay David Lloyd(1) Morialta
Tony Rutten(1) Noarlunga
Rotarians Against Malaria (RAM)
To coordinate major bed netting and education programmes in Papua New Guinea and Solomon Islands. To support anti-malaria projects in selected countries in the near Asia Pacific Region. To raise funds (tax deductible) for RAM Projects. To transfer knowledge of malaria prevention and control to communities. To support medical research in Australia. Websites:- ram
.pg (for PNG) & .sb (for Sol Is.)
Suren Krishnan(4e) Chair Prospect
Milton Lewis Campbelltown Catherine Lawler Barossa Valley
PDG Peter Thomas Solomon Islands Coordinator Barossa Valley
Safe Water Saves Lives (SWSL)
Through volunteers and/or funding, to supply potable water and sanitation facilities to communities in developing countries.
Website:- safewater-.au
Gordon Wilkinson(3) Chair Hyde Park
Malcolm Langmaid(1) Coromandel V John Banfield(7e) Adel South
Robert Koehne(1) Stirling Bryan Harris(1) Adelaide
Brian Goodall(1) Salisbury
Rotary Oceania Medical Aid for Children (ROMAC)
Provides restorative medical treatment for children from developing countries. The Central Region Committee promotes this Rotary program to Clubs and manages the arrival, home hospitality and medical arrangements for patients and families participating in the program. Website:- .au
Oleh Bilyk(2) Chair Brownhill Creek
Bruce Tasker Treasurer Adelaide
Ken Jureidini National Medical Director Burnside
Alan McKinnon Central Region Medical Director Burnside
Adrian Fitzgerald Burnside Dennis Nelson Hallett Cove
Vivienne Valladares Elizabeth Kay Barrie Edwardstown
Linley Shine(1) Port Augusta PDG Alun Hughes(1) Elizabeth
Helen Davies(1) Port Augusta
Rotary Friendship Exchange
Friendship Exchange provides participants the opportunity to experience other cultures by staying in the homes of Rotarians in other countries. There are three types of Friendship Exchange:-
• The ‘Visitor Program’, involving a Rotarian and their family;
• The ‘Team Program’ includes a group of 4 to 6 Rotarian couples;
• The ‘Uni-vocational Program’ same occupation Rotarians.
en/ServiceAndFellowship/Fellowship/RotaryFriendshipExchange
PDG Colin Thorn(2) Barossa District Joy Thorn(2) Barossa District
Jim Dahl(1) Gawler Lynn Bott(1) Barossa District
Peter Shaw West Lakes Barry Bott(1) Barossa District
Graham Fricker(4e) Adelaide East
Rotary Global Networking Groups
Global Networking Groups are groups of individual Rotarians from several countries who join together to focus on shared topics of interest. There are two types of Global Networking Groups:-
Rotary Fellowships offer Rotarians the opportunity to make friends with others in Rotary who share a common vocation, hobby or recreational interest.
Rotarian Action Groups conduct international service projects that enhance the Object of Rotary.
The full list of Rotary Fellowships and Rotary Action Groups and contact details for each are listed on the Website:- en/ServiceAndFellowship/Fellowship
Zone Coordinator: PDG Rob Wylie D9600
Rotary Supported Projects
Concentrated Language Encounter (CLE)
1. To provide a means for Rotary to promote and publicise its campaign to alleviate mass illiteracy across the developing world.
2. To explain the nature of CLE literacy programs, and the Lighthouse Literacy Strategies that are being used to develop and spread them.
3. To enable interested people, within and outside Rotary, to find out about and perhaps become involved in Rotary literacy projects in developing countries. Website:- index.htm
PDG John Rowe Resource Person E: jrowe6@ Port Pirie
Literacy Resource Group Area Coordinator: PDG Ian Yarker D 9640
Interplast
Promotes the work of Interplast within the Clubs. Interplast Australia sends volunteer medical teams overseas to undertake surgery and training of local staff in areas where trained medical staff are not yet available. Website:- .au
Elizabeth Briggs Gawler
Bev Clark Adelaide South
ShelterBox Australia – Rotary International Project
National Board (Secretary) Tim Klar Kidman Park
ShelterBox 9500 Committee
Tim Klar(1) Chair Kidman Park
Peter Perkins(2) Barossa Valley John Rowe(3) Port Pirie
Sally Melvaine(4) Prospect Conrad Melvaine(4) Prospect
Rotary Oceania Medical Aid for Children (ROMAC)
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2. Rotary District 9500
DISTRICT 9500 AWARDS
The following perpetual Awards are provided for competition between Clubs of the District to encourage their participation in the various programs and activities of Rotary. The performances are judged for activity during the Rotary Year. Where submissions for awards are required the submission should be concise and be detailed on only one A4 page. The judges will contact Clubs if they require further information or detail. The District Governor may co-opt others to assist with judging or may appoint others to judge in his place if he or she wishes.
By a decision of a District Conference there will be no more than 14 awards provided and if a new award is provided it will be at the expense of one existing Award.
1. Club Performance Award - Initiated by the Rotary Club of Henley Beach to commemorate the services of the late PP Merv Croxton and presented to the Club for the best Club Activity and accomplishments; display of Club Fellowship and/or demonstration of the most significant “Service Above Self” in their Community.
2. Rotary Foundation Award - Initiated by the late PDG Bob Perryman of the Rotary Club of Adelaide East and presented for the best Club involvement in all facets of the Foundation including funding and participation in Club Centurion, with the size of the Club being taken into account. A concise statement should be sent to the District Rotary Foundation Chairman. (Only Clubs who have made financial contribution to the Foundation are eligible.)
3. ARH Perpetual District Trophy - Presented by Australian Rotary Health (ARH), this trophy will be awarded by the District Governor and presented at the District Conference to the Club that has rendered the most significant assistance to ARH for its work in Research and Mental Health in the current Rotary Year. Such assistance may take the form of:-
• per capita donations in the current year;
• innovative projects which maximise District fund raising;
• effective public relations which raise community awareness of the ARH specific activity which translates Research results into local projects.
The decision of the District Governor in awarding the Trophy will be final.
4. Public Relations Award - Initiated by the late PDG Dean Whiteford of the Rotary Club of Henley Beach and presented to the Club considered by the District Marketing and Promotions Committee, in conjunction with the District Governor, to have planned and initiated a successful program of Marketing and Promotion, or to have achieved this through an innovative or special Rotary project. Consideration will be given to the level of awareness created within the geographic region of the Club.
5. Conservation Award - Initiated by PDG Don Sarah of the Rotary Club of Hindmarsh and presented to the Club considered by the District Governor to have achieved the greatest success in one or more "Preserve Planet Earth" projects or to have actively participated in Conservation Plans aimed at a better quality of life and environment.
6. Youth Activities Award - Presented to the Club considered by the District Governor to have the best overall Club involvement in Youth Activities. A concise statement of Club action in activities involving youth should be forwarded to the District Governor.
7. Club History Award - Initiated by the late PP Colin Brideson of the Rotary Club of Adelaide and presented to the Club considered by the District History and Records Committee, in conjunction with the District Governor, to have made the most significant progress during the year in the areas of: preservation of their Club’s history; and making the Club members aware of their Club's history.
8. World Community Service (International) Award - Incorporates the former International Service Award presented by the late PDG John Evans of the Rotary Club of Barossa Valley and is presented to the Club undertaking the best International or Rotary Australia World Community Service activity. A concise statement of Club activities should be submitted to the District Governor. Supporting evidence will be provided by the Central Region RAWCS Committee Chairman.
9. Community Service Award - Initiated by the late PDG Phil Kearns of the Rotary Club of Adelaide and presented for the best Community Service program undertaken by a Club. A concise outline of Community Service for your Club should be sent to the Chairman, District Community Service Committee.
10. Vocational Service Programme Award - Initiated by the late PDG Clair Rogers of the Rotary Club of Adelaide and presented to the Club undertaking the best Vocational Service program. A concise statement of Club activities in Vocational Service activities should be submitted to the District Governor.
11. Interact/Rotaract Club Performance Award - Initiated by the Rotary Club of Woodville to acknowledge their PP Michael Reith and presented for the best overall performance and accomplishments of a Rotaract or Interact Club in the District.
12. Club Attendance Award - Initiated by PP Brian Croucher of the Rotary Club of Enfield and presented to the Club having the highest percentage attendance at Club meetings, taking into account the variable sizes of Clubs. No action required by Clubs as this will be calculated from attendance figures
13. Club Bulletin Award - initiated by the late PDG Jack Turner of the Rotary Club of Adelaide West and presented to the Club that is judged to have the best Bulletin for the year (Printed or Electronic version).
• Criteria: an introduction that gives details of the Club, District Governor and RI President; the contents should include information on Club activities, District activities and matters of general Rotary Information and important dates in the Club, District and RI calendar; it should provide for members' opinion on Rotary matters; it should include personal information on Club members; it should be well presented and easy to read; it should contain some humour but not of a type that would be offensive to the principles of Rotary, that is non-religious, non-sexist, non-racist, non-political or of a type offensive to the majority of members.
• Judging will be carried out by a Committee set up by the District Governor Elect. In addition to the District Governor, Clubs should forward a copy of their bulletin to the District Governor Elect.
14. Club Membership Improvement Award - Presented by the Rotary Club of Adelaide West to the Club showing greatest membership improvement. Formula for calculation will include two factors - the number of new members and the percentage increase in Club membership. Clubs chartered during the year will be considered on membership growth from charter night onwards. No action required for entry.
3. Rotary Clubs 9500
Induction of Club President
President Elect, ……………. You have been chosen by your fellow Rotarians to be President of the Rotary Club of ……………….. for the ensuing year.
This appointment is not made lightly for it is the highest honour within the powers of the Club to bestow and it is made in recognition of your service to Rotary in general and to this Club in particular.
With the Presidency you are assuming new duties, new obligations and new responsibilities, which will make severe demands upon your thoughts, time and energy. We are confident you will carry out your tasks with the same zeal you have always shown in Rotary and you are assured of the utmost cooperation from every one of your members.
Rotary’s Object, with its five avenues of service, will, I know, be your constant guide, and you will always be sustained by the fellowship and esteem of us all.
With this collar, which bears the names of all the Presidents of this Club, including your own, I induct you as President of the Rotary Club of ………………… for the year …………/…………
The pendant to the collar is a Rotary Wheel with the word “President” inscribed. This is the badge of your office.
I also present you with your President’s lapel pin and badge.
On behalf of the members of your Club and all who are here tonight, I congratulate you and wish you a happy and rewarding year in office.
Guests and fellow Rotarians, I present to you the new President of the Rotary Club of ……….. President………………..
Induction for a Former Rotarian
Thank you...............................for accepting the invitation of the members of this Club to re-join us in the worldwide fellowship and service work of Rotary. This invitation was extended to you because we believe that your leadership qualities are allied to those qualities, which fit you to interpret and impart the message of Rotary to your fellow man.
The principles and practices of Rotary, the privileges and obligations of a Rotarian are already well known to you through your active membership of the Rotary Club of...............................
We would hope that you will give this Club the benefits of your previous Rotary experience to further strengthen the fellowship of this Club, to help us to serve even more effectively this community and the wider fields of Rotary service.
I am proud to present to you this Rotary badge. I also hand you your name plaque and some literature relative to Rotary and the activities of our Club.
You have been appointed to the ...........................Committee under the chairmanship of .........................and we look forward with confidence to your participation in and contribution to our Club’s programs, projects and activities.
Much is expected from you in help and inspiration to enable us to serve society better. I congratulate you and offer you the right hand of Rotary fellowship.
Rotarians, join me in extending a warm welcome to our new member Rotarian.
3. Rotary Clubs 9500
Induction for a New Rotarian
……......, you have been chosen for membership of the Rotary Club of ……… because of your standing in your vocation and in the community and because of your personal qualities which we believe will make you a good Rotarian.
By joining the Rotary Club of …........ today, you become part of a world-wide organisation of business and professional leaders who are united in fellowship to provide humanitarian service, to encourage high ethical standards in all vocations and to create goodwill and achieve peace throughout the world.
We accept you as a member because we believe you will adopt these high principles of Rotary as your own, and that you will do everything in your power to fulfil your membership obligations as these become better known to you.
There are, of course, many privileges of membership and I think you will quickly find that one of the most important of these will be your regular enjoyment of the fellowship of like-minded individuals in a non-competitive and egalitarian atmosphere, not only in this Club, but anywhere in the world where Rotarians gather.
Your proposer, Rotarian …............ will now present you with your Rotary emblem, which should be worn at all times. This will identify you as a Rotarian and will assure you of a warm welcome in the more than 32000 Rotary Clubs in 200 countries and regions around the world; also your name plaque which shows your classification as well as your name. This is very important as it signifies the vocation you represent within the Club and to which you are an ambassador from Rotary.
Rotarian…............., we expect much from you in the way of fellowship and Rotary service and we in turn pledge to do all in our power to make you welcome in the Club and to assist you to grow in Rotary knowledge. I particularly charge you to contact me personally if you experience any problems in your assimilation into the Club or if you believe you possess talents of value to Rotary that we appear to be overlooking.
It is with pleasure that I now extend to you the right hand of Rotary fellowship and give you a hearty welcome as a member of the Rotary Club of …………
Rotarians, would you all now rise. I present to you our new member, Rotarian…..., to be known in the Club as …....... Would you please make yourself known to him/her at the first possible opportunity to confirm in person the official welcome I have just given him/her and which I now ask you to support by acclamation.
3. Rotary Clubs 9500
CLUB PAGES
The following pages (75-122) list the club officers of the 48 D9500 Rotary Clubs.
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This Directory was compiled by the 2012-2013 District Directory Committee:
PDG Marie Dorrington Chair Adelaide West
Elizabeth Pohl Walkerville John Pohl Walkerville
Cover design and graphic support Bill Marles
and club page structure Mike Stevens
At the time of going to print, the information contained in this Directory is a true and accurate record of the details which were provided by Committees, Clubs and Rotarians.
The first four Rotarians: (left to right) Silvester Schiele, Paul Harris, Hiram Shorey and Gustavus Loehr.
9520
9500
CONFERENCE COMMITTEE
Ashleigh Lorraine - Conference Chair
Geof Irish - Treasurer
Kay Dowling - Secretary
Bill Marles - Registration & Public Relations
Kym Green - Sponsorship & Stage Management
Pam Roberts - Kits & Meals
Bob Congdon - Speakers & Exhibits
Geoff Ellershaw - Marketing
Group 10
Roger Ahwah(1) (Brenda) Alice Springs
H: 08 8953 1507 M: 0427 863 316
E: ahwah@.au
159 Cromwell Drive Alice Springs NT0870
Clubs: Alice Springs, Alice Springs-Mbantua, Stuart-Alice Springs
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Pride of Workmanship Award
Identifies individuals whose exemplary contributions to their vocations are worthy of public acknowledgement.
Bowelscan project developed in 1982 in District 9640 and now conducted in many Rotary clubs. Kits are available for all people regardless of age.
Early detection can save lives – maybe yours.
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New Award for 2012-13 - District Peace Awards
Hold a peace activity on 23 February 2013 in your Club or District.
This may include:
• A forum in your community and invite non-Rotarians to discuss
o Urban peace by discussing opportunities or conflict and mediation and resolution
o Marginalised groups in your community to forge new friendships and partnerships
o Collaboration with local organisations on a joint project to promote peace and conflict prevention in the community
o -,01CDEGIOPZ[\øðåÝÖ˽¯?¯??qaTaTFa8Challenges for young people to promote peace in their everyday lives – include Rotaractors, Interactors, Youth Exchange students and RYLA participants
o Strategies to help young people deal with common sources of conflict such as gang violence and bullying
• Or, organise an event to recognise immigrants who have made a difference in your community
• Or, sponsor a Rotary Peace Fellow
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