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CHANGE IN APOLOGY PROCESS PLEASE READ
MEETING @ THE GOLF CLUB THIS WEEK
6.00 pm:  Social 1/2 hour 
6.30 pm: Start
Golf Club Wanaka
12 Ballantyne Rd, Wanaka
TO LODGE AN APOLOGY OR GUESTS ATTENDING:
 Email wanaka.rotary@gmail.com by 5pm Monday
In an EMERGENCY Contact President George Scott   0272 010 470
 
 
Executives & Directors
President
 
Secretary
 
Past President
 
Treasurer
 
Fundraising
 
President Elect
 
Webmaster
 
Club Administration
 
Community Projects Chair
 
Rotary Foundation Chair
 
Club Membership Chair
 
Club Public Relations
 
Youth & Vocational
 
President Nominee
 
Club Activities
 
Birthdays
Member Birthdays
Douglas Lovell
January 1
 
Robbie Julius
January 2
 
Trevor Tattersfield
January 2
 
Margaret West
January 7
 
Maryanne McKenzie
January 9
 
Ray Newell
January 9
 
Don Irvine
January 11
 
Upcoming Events
Gibbston Valley Concert
Jan 19, 2019 – Jan 26, 2019
 
4Wheel Drive Rally Naseby Roxburgh
Feb 09, 2019
 
Wanaka Challenge
Feb 16, 2019
 
Michael Hill NZ PGA Golf
Feb 28, 2019 – Mar 03, 2019
 
Wanaka Show 2019
Mar 08, 2019 – Mar 09, 2019
 
Home Hosting Dinners - TBC
Mar 16, 2019
 
Bluff Oyster Festival
May 25, 2019
 
Visit Gore Country Music Weekend
May 31, 2019
 
Bulletin Editor:
Tabatha Wilson
Mob: 027 510 2840

Email: tabathaandjamie@hotmail.com
 
Please send through any stories,
photos, news
and information to Tabatha to
 include in the Bulletin.
 

REMINDER

JACK RABBIT at West Meadows

Casual Catch up for ALL members

5pm - 6pm

EVERY TUESDAY just before the Weekly Rotary Meeting

 

 
SPEAKERS WANTED!
 
Do you know someone with a great story or do you have a great story yourself?
 
Or a new business in town or something that you think people will want to hear?
 
Contact Tabatha today to book in your awesome speaker!
 

DEADLINE FOR THE BULLETIN IS THURSDAY PM.
we want communication so lets communicate.

Club Membership Fees Due Now!

You will have all received an invoice for the Rotary Club of Wanaka membership fees which are due now. You will see there is a discount if paid before the 20th of September 2018.

Many clubs around New Zealand have set their subs within the $200 to $240 range so this Club is in line with that.

We pay the Rotary International affiliation fees as soon as the new year begins – 1 July 2018. This is based on the number of members at the 1st July 2017 and is for six months. The second 6 months is invoiced in January 2018. Rotary International get their data for the invoice from Club Runner and will pick up that our Club will have increased its membership over the next six months (assuming all our new members are signed in!).

A couple of years ago I did some pie charts to show the breakdown of where membership fees are allocated. I intend to update this and will put it in the Bulletin in due course. In brief the fees you pay go towards District affiliation, Rotary International affiliation, Rotary Down Under magazine and towards the Club running costs such as Club Runner/website management, the PO Box for Charitable Trust applications, speaker meal and thank you costs.

To make sure you get the discount on offer why not pay now or set up an advance payment in your banking system so you don’t miss out! From the Treasurer – Margaret West


 
Tititea Lodge Working Bee - Weekend 22/23rd September 2018

 

The Rotary Club of Wanaka has been asked to assist with some general maintenance tasks for the weekend of 22/23rd September 2018 at Tititea Lodge. For those members attending, all food and accommodation will be provided. Assuming that we have a favourable weather forecast, the intention is to all meet up in the Roys Bay Car Park (start of Waterfall Creek Track) at 9.00am on Saturday, 22 September. A 4WD vehicle is recommended for the journey via Wanaka - Mt Aspiring Road and Cameron Flat Road, with the intention to carpool.

 

After a good breakfast and a general tidy up on the Sunday, we should be back in Wanaka around 1pm.

 

For newer members, Tititea Lodge is located in the East Matukituki Valley on the edge of Mount Aspiring National Park. It is approximately a 48 km drive from Wanaka. Access is across a river, which is provided by a tractor and trailer. Travelling time is around 1 hour.

 

The Lodge hosts comprehensive senior outdoor education programmes for college students, which is administered by Dunstan High School and Mount Aspiring College.

 

Tititea Lodge was established in 1969 (almost 50 years ago) and was previously the homestead for the Aspinall family, the owners of Mt Aspiring Station. The original building dates back to the 1920s. Over the years various modifications and extensions have been made, and the lodge now has accommodation for 42 people.

 

See John Huddleston for any further information.


District Projects

From: Russell Wallace 
Subject: District Projects
To: George Scott 

 
 
My role as District 9980 Chair of Projects is to help and encourage your club to take part in D9980 wide projects and events.
These projects assist our communities, the various groups in need of support and encouragement, lift Rotary profile and allow our members to do what they do best, help others.
 
This Rotary year we have a number of events coming up and we seek your involvement and support.
 
Firstly DG Andrew has a District wide plan for all clubs and now is a good time to start thinking about what you might do
He wants all clubs in D9980 to have a collaborative day whereby clubs work together or have a social day with another club sometime during the coming year. It could be a project, or some social time together, especially with a club you haven't worked with before. The idea is to think outside the box and create some awesome Rotary Fellowship and team building among the clubs in our District.
You will be hearing more from DG Andrew about this.
 
The District speech contest needs your support. It has been challenging to get our Secondary schools engaged with this excellent project over the past few years.
Lynne Guy needs you to get in touch with your local school to get them on board with this contest.
This is an excellent way to introduce young leaders to Rotary and the prizes alone are worth something.
There are copies of the forms and rules available on the District website
Please, ask someone in your club to lead this and help to give the Speech Contest a real lift.
 
Saturday September 8 is World Literacy Day. Do you have plan to take this into your community.?
This is a great way to engage with your primary schools and a simple and effective way which has worked in other clubs, involves Rotarians 'going back to school'. The activity they undertake is to read some of the students favourite books to the junior classes. Experience shows it goes down a treat and Rotarians get a buzz from it as well. Contact your local school and see if this may be a fit for your club to celebrate World Literacy day.
 
Friday September 28 is Red Nose Day which is the day where we all support the Cure Kids charity. You will know that Cure Kids was a Rotary initiative and is an amazing organisation helping our children in need. Please get in behind this and make it a success.
 
This year we will again be participating in the District wide Blood Pressure Campaign and is being coordinated by Drew Carruthers. It is planned for Saturday October 6 and will be held in conjunction with New World and St John.There has been some pushback from St John around asking their busy volunteers to help out with this campaign and we hope that this can be overcome this year. Drew will be in touch with you in the next few weeks to seek your support
 
Rotary's big push continues to be the demise of Polio. World Polio Day is Wednesday October 25. We really need you to again get out into your communities and tell them that the world is almost Polio free. We need to keep the momentum going and not 'drop the ball' as the consequences are not acceptable. Please keep the message in front of your club and help the get the job done.
 
Saturday November 10 needs to go in your dairy as our Assistant Governors are planning a fun social day in Cromwell for everyone in the District. I understand that it will involve among other things a visit to the Highlands Motorsport Park, where there will be some amazing things to do. More details to come, but suggest you book accomodation now and make this a "ripper of a day"
 
Please get on board with these important national and local projects working to improve the lives of others.
 
If I can help in any way or if you have any questions please do not hesitate to contact me.
 
Regards
Russell Wallace
District 9980 Projects
Rotary Club of Waimate
 

Hi Rotarians

I’m on the hunt for a warm caravan to borrow for a couple of months. 
We have our niece living with us at present while she completes her final few months at mount aspiring college before she heads off to do a nursing degree. 
We’re currently renting a small home while we complete our new build and space is very tight. 
Ideally we would like to borrow a small caravan to use until approx November, that we can park in our drive for my niece to use as a bedroom. 
Is there anything out there that we can use for a short term or until November?
I look forward to hearing from anyone on jarrod@willowridge.co.nz or 027 2512007.
Many thanks. 


Kind Regards
Jarrod Frazer 

 
I don't know whats happening here but I like it!
 

George & President of The Pascoe Vale Rotary Club
 

Rotary Winter Bowls 2018 wrap up report.

 

Organised by the Wanaka Bowling Club, their 15 week winter competition concluded on Thursday last.

Rotary has entered a team for a number of years and this year was no exception.

Our team consisted of eight players, three of whom were rostered by rotation to play on a weekly basis.

The team consisting of mostly non bowlers performed creditability throughout the season with an impressive record, culminating in the team for the last evening winning the event.

The camaraderie and sportsmanship of your representatives is a credit to the RCW.

Thankyou to all the players and reserves who participated and made a success of this years event.

 
 
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Tuesday 21 August 2018 - President George's Message:

On Thursday night I went to the Pascoe vale Rotary Club in Melbourne. I had met the President Steve at one of their fundraisers for drought affected farmers in New South Wales. It is one of the worst droughts to affect the region for a long time.

I was made to feel most welcome and they had a past member who had come from Wanaka whose family had owned the 4 Square store in Wanaka. They were a much smaller club that ours but still very active in the community.

Their speaker for the night was two past RYE students who were promoting youth exchanges and also hosting.

For our family exchange programmes have played a big part of our lives. First my wife Mary was on a Young Farmers exchange to New Zealand when we met in the Waikaka Pub...We hosted a number of young farmers exchange students during the first years of our Marriage.

When our children were in there early teens we began hosting AFS students and hosted 3 for a full year and a number for parts of the year. I became very involved in AFS and was first a president of our area and later a support co-coordinator. One year I was looking after 9 students from all over the world.

As our children left school we started employing IAEA and RENZ agriculture exchangees. In total we would have had over 20 exchangees from all over the world work on our farm for between 6 months and a year.

Many of these exchanges we are still in contact with today. We have had a number of the families come out and visit us and Mary and I have visited a number of them in their home counties. There is nothing like sitting around a barbeque enjoying a beer and talking about their families and their way of live. We have been fortunate to go to a number of weddings and receiving news from them the day something happens whether it is a new baby or the purchase of their first home or farm.

Anyway that is enough from me, look forward to seeing you on Tuesday with my arrival tax

 
 
CLUB DUTIES

2018

August September October

Attendance

Lloyd Mansfield Pam Brown Graeme Smart

Attendance 

Chris Tempest Clayton Hope Mathew Abraham

Introduction

Grant Parker Malcolm Baker Jo Briggs

Raffle

 Rosie Burridge Don Irvine Sylvia Little

Thanks

Catherine Little Trevor Tatterfield Deans Hudson

Sergeant

Pip Kidd Tony Brown Dave Evans

Meet&Greet

Noelene Pullar Maryanne Mckenzie Gavin Vize

Meet&Greet

Tony Parker Lois Haynes Derek Valentine

NEW APOLOGY PROCESS

Here is what Directors would like to trial:

* Apologies and Partner & Guest reservations are to be emailed to wanaka.rotary@gmail.com , the deadline is 5pm Monday (this is a temporary fix until ClubRunner completes some software changes to the Attendance module)

* A Rotary member will prepare the meal register and forward to the Golf Club by the specified time. Fran Tate will look after this duty until the end of August and will help the next person in line for the job.

* In the event of an emergency (circumstances beyond your control)

Contact President George 0272 010 470

In closing, it would be very much appreciated if everyone would endeavour to help streamline this procedure. The Golf Club Caterer Courtney Morgan will replace Ariana Mahia.

BOOK SALE HELP NEEDED
 
Help needed to sort the books for sale, every Tuesday and Thursday morning from 10 – 12. Access is down Gordon Road and look for the Wanaka Storage sign just before the Brewery, with plenty of parking available in the storage grounds rather than on the street.
Contact Mike Eliott or Richard Wallace for the keypad number for access.”
 

 
Guest Speakers Report 14 August
 
Noelene Pullar
 
Along with her husband Bill and her young family, Noelene came to Wanaka in 1971. She taught at Wanaka District High, Wanaka Area School, and Wanaka Primary [as the local school transisitioned to meet the growing community]
In 1989 Noelene moved to Tarras as Principal and became a valued and loved part of the Tarras community. The roll was 38 when Noelene took over the task, but with the changing nature of the rural community it dropped to lower numbers. The arrival of Shrek the hermit sheep gave Noelene and her pupils a way forward as they wrote two books about the sheep, which sold well and have given much needed funds to the school. As someone who was in the school on a weekly basis leading Bible-in-School classes, I was aware of the high standard and wonderful teaching and care the children were surrounded with, under Noelene's 'watch'.
When Noelene retired from teaching she and Bill were enjoying life in the wonderful house they had built up on Mt Iron, when son Shannon who was teaching overseas, said he would like to bring his family home to New Zealand. Great joy! but then Shannon said that he had bought the Rural delivery Service for the Upper Clutha, and as he and his family where still 18 months away from returning to New Zealand, could you, Mum and Dad, do the rural delivery for 18 months! Which they did--but it was hard work so they were quite glad to hand over the job.
Noelene still sorts junk mail for the RD service once a week, but now she runs a B and B which is proving a great success, even if her visitors arrive at the house rather shaken after driving up the road. The view from their room makes it all worth while! Noelene joined Wanaka Rotary in 1995 and has been a president of the Club. Thanks for the insight into your very useful and busy life. 
John Mclean
 
From the playing fields of Waitaki Boys High School Oamaru, to being arrested in Moscow during the cold war for not having the right papers,attending the Olympics in Mexico as an 'extra' in the rowing team, to being in Vietnam when the war was rageing -not as a soldier "but as a stupid young man" {John McLean's own words}...members  listened with great interest to some of John's story of an eventful and full life. He began his work life as a marketing management trainee with the Alliance Textile Company in Oamaru. This lead to travel and many experiences with breaks away from the Company which after 42 years John left and set up his own company which has operated with success. During one of the breaks away from the company John was a nickel miner in Canada!
 John joined Rotary in 1978. He acknowledged that his wife held the fort while the family were growing up. Even in retirement John's adventures continue---taking part in a yatch race from Auckland to Fiji. He recalled during his night watch, one night, that the yatch lost its sail which did not seem to trouble him much. However, when on another night watch during a calm spell, a flying fish hit him as it came aboard, John seemed more anxious! A most interesting insight into the life and adventures of one of our members.
 

 
Guest Speaker 21 August 
 
Calum Macleod Deputy Mayor QLDC

When Calum MacLeod opened the doors to Cinema Paradiso two decades ago, he owned four second-hand armchairs.

Now, countless chairs and couches later, he occupies one of 11 chairs around the Queenstown Lakes District Council table. 

The avid furniture recycler was born on Scotland's Isle of Arran and came to Wanaka in 1989 with his Kiwi wife, Andrea.

In November, he inherited the deputy mayor's mantle from a long line of Wanaka deputy mayors, including Lyal Cocks, Sally MIddleton and John Wilson.

Although Callum acknowledges his district-wide role, he has bold plans for the Wanaka ward as it grapples with the boom in tourism, construction and traffic.

Bring your partner and friends to hear what Calum has to say after nearly  2 years as Deputy Mayor.


 
ROTARY INTERNATIONAL
 
By Geoffrey Johnson 
 
When it comes to finding new members for his Minnesota Rotary club, Tom Gump doesn’t just walk the walk, he trots the trot: the turkey trot. Gump is a former president of the Rotary Club of Edina/Morningside, which makes boosting membership a priority. In fact, that’s the fourth item on a list of 10 tips to attract and retain members which has been prepared – and practiced – by the club. It’s tip No. 10 that finds Gump clad in a turkey suit. More on that shortly.
The tips work: During Gump’s 2016-17 stint as club president, Edina/Morningside added 31 members. Eleven of them were women; 10 were under 40 years old. With 94 members, the club “went from being classified as a medium-size club to being one of District 5950’s large clubs,” says Gump, who will be the 2020-21 district governor. “There were 13 clubs larger than our club in our district, and now there are only four.”
The tips have proven so effective that Gump has taken the Edina/Morningside show on the road, using a PowerPoint presentation to coach other clubs on specific ways they can expand their membership. “I have been called a good salesman,” says Gump (who, for the record, is a real estate lawyer and a developer). “But to me, recruiting new Rotary members is not really selling. It’s matching up potential members with what he or she wants in a club.” 
So if you’re looking to add members to your club, consider taking a page from the Edina/Morningside playbook. Read on for the club’s 10 tips, as well as five suggestions for increasing membership from other Rotarians and Rotary clubs.
 
Create a list of all the great things about your club
The point is not just growing your club, but boosting Rotary’s capacity to make a difference around the world.
List your star members, the advantages of your meeting location, how many members you have, the kinds of projects and events you host, and so on. The list can serve as a template when sending an email or letter to a potential member. Make sure to tailor any correspondence so it addresses the specific interests and wants of any potential member. For instance, if someone is interested in international work, your email or letter should focus on that.
 
Keep a list of potential members 
It doesn’t matter if it’s a paper list or if it’s kept on the desktop of your computer. Either way, it makes you think about those people who might be a fit for your club. Discuss the list at board meetings – not just the concept of bringing in new members, but the specific names and who’s going to contact them and when. And don’t overlook some obvious suspects, such as members’ spouses, Youth Exchange host parents – “they already have a taste of what Rotary is about” – and even former members. “We had two founding members rejoin recently,” Gump says. “Sometimes people need to leave for a reason and then later they have more time and just have to be asked to come back.”
 
Know your club’s strengths
Most things are strengths if you target the right audience. If you meet in the morning, you’re probably a good fit for someone working 9 to 5. Meet at noon and you’re more likely to appeal to retirees or parents of schoolchildren. “Not every club is right for every potential member,” Gump says. “If someone doesn’t fit your format, recommend them to another club.” Keep in mind that the point is not just growing your club, but boosting Rotary’s capacity to make a difference in communities around the world. And with any luck, that other club will send you a potential member one day. Gump points to one member who joined his club last year after a recommendation from the Rotary Club of Edina, which typically meets middays. “Morning meetings worked better for him than noon meetings,” Gump says. “He has already become a Paul Harris Society member, leads our beer tasting committee, and led our 100th anniversary celebration for The Rotary Foundation.”
 
Make membership growth your club’s top priority -
and make sure every member understands that. “I always tell presidents and presidents-elect that the best way to make their year as president easier is to bring in more members,” says Gump. New members bring new energy to a club, he explains, and mean more people to serve on committees, work on projects and events, and raise money for the Foundation.
 
Look to young Rotarians for fresh perspectives
Want some suggestions about attracting younger members? Look at what’s going on at the Roc City Rotary Club in Rochester, New York. “We are the next generation of Rotary,” proclaims its website. “The baton has been passed. It’s now our turn.”
Chartered in February (and a provisional club since June 2016), Roc City targets recent college graduates and young professionals by keeping dues low ($120 annually) and meetings infrequent. “We meet once a month and have a solid turnout at every meeting,” says Kristina Chartrand, who co-founded the club with her longtime friend Kelsey Christiansen (they met in 2005 as Interactors while in high school). “We want the game changers and move makers, people who are busy and thriving in their everyday lives. We attract young people who want to get involved but crave flexibility.” 
At press time, the club had 24 members, aged 21 to 33, as well as 20-plus “Friends of Roc City.” Members are recruited through word of mouth and social media; it helps that Roc City convenes during happy hour at a local pub. “So many people see us and what we’re doing and just stop by,” Chartrand says. The club plans service projects three months in advance so members can plan ahead, and it regularly schedules speakers for its Adulting 101 series (topics have included “Paying Off Debt” and “How to Buy a House”). “We want this to be something club members look forward to every month” – for years to come.
 
Appeal to local volunteers
In fall 2014, the Rotary Club of Evanston, Illinois, held its inaugural “Heads Up, Evanston!” an event that’s equal parts community outreach, game show, and, as one member puts it, “organizational speed dating.”
 “We encourage participants to connect with each other during and after the meeting and find new ways to collaborate and partner based on what they have heard each other say,” explains Past Club President Paul Larson. “We follow up by sending all participants a PDF with everyone’s contact information as an added convenience.”
The participants in this service-oriented dating game are local not-for-profit organizations, about 25 per annual session. Representatives from each organization get exactly two minutes to, as Larson puts it, “give a commercial or news item about themselves.” The time limit is rigidly enforced, albeit in a lighthearted manner. Talk too long and speakers are cut off by a “cheesy disco song from the ’70s,” Larson says. “This makes it fun since people do their best to finish before the dreaded sounds of an old Bee Gees tune or the theme from Rocky tells them time is up.” Finish your “commercial” in 90 seconds or less and the Rotary bell rings, meaning the speaker gets invited back for a free lunch with the club and another opportunity to speak. The “Heads Up” gathering includes a modestly priced lunch – which “organizations are happy to pay,” says Larson – and post-gathering mingling around tables laden with promotional materials.
 “While the event definitely has the potential to build membership in the long term, we use it strategically as a supplement to more direct recruiting efforts,” Larson says. But, he adds, it’s also a way for the club to provide “a service to the community – a way for us to offer unique value as a forum for leaders.” And because the club also presents its own “commercial,” he notes, it’s also an opportunity for “awareness building about what Rotary is and what we do.” Sounds like a love connection. 
 
Talk about Rotary wherever you go –
at work, family gatherings, neighborhood get-togethers, parties. You will be amazed how easy it is after you practice awhile. “Getting a lot of ‘nos’ helped build my confidence, because it didn’t hurt as bad as I thought it would,” Gump says. “And most people were happy I asked, even if they did have to decline.” And remember: It’s never not a good time to invite a potential member to a meeting. “People say it’s a bad time, for example, because it’s the holiday season,” says Gump. “Our club recruited and inducted three new members during the holiday season.” Nor is there a bad place to talk about Rotary: Gump landed one new member he met at Chipotle. “You never know where you will meet your next member,” he says. “And if you want younger members, hang out where they hang out.”
 
Make a list of club members’ responsibilities
It’s important to engage with potential members beforehand. They will want to know how they can fit in with your club and what opportunities there are for serving. The list should also include information about dues, attendance guidelines, and other club expectations – and it should emphasize the many benefits that come with being a Rotary member.
 
Realize there is no finish line
Even if your club is the optimum size, it’s no reason to stop recruiting. There are always reasons people leave. Of the 31 members who joined Edina/Morningside in 2016-17, eight eventually left the club: Three had a job transfer, one had a family issue, and two had conflicts with work. Only two people simply stopped participating. Among those who remained, 10 are now very active in leadership roles, and two are “on the presidential track.” What’s more, the club added 11 more members between July 2017 and April 2018. “You’re either growing or you’re dying as a club,” Gump says. 
 
Emphasize service
After attending a Rotary event with her mother, Fiona Bassett decided her town in the north of Wales needed another Rotary club – to complement the three it already had. 
To attract new members, the Rotary Club of Wrexham Glyndwr – Wrexham’s the town; Owain Glyndŵr was a legendary Welsh leader – puts the emphasis on projects rather than meetings. 
“We feel that having a meal and weekly meetings puts some people off joining,” says Bassett. “As a club, we believe that the money we would spend on food every week could be put to better use.” 
Members are encouraged to attend one meeting a month, where the mood is informal and parents may bring their children if the sitter’s unavailable. 
The tech-savvy club relies heavily on social media to promote itself, its projects, and Rotary: One post notched 42,000 views in 24 hours. It collaborates closely with other clubs in the district – the Rotary Club of Wrexham Yale helped Glyndwr get on its feet – and relies on high-wattage events to raise its profile. 
“We host a family fun event that’s going into its third year,” says Bassett. “It attracts between 3,000 and 4,000 people, and everything is branded so there’s no mistake who’s organizing it.” 
Last December, the club’s annual Christmas Lights Switch On drew about 10,000 people, thanks to promotional help from local celebrities, radio hosts, and the town council. “Everyone in Wrexham knows who we are,” says Bassett. “We gained six new members from our first Christmas event and three last year” – and the club raised money for End Polio Now and other charities.
 
Celebrate when you get a new member 
“You have to make potential members feel wanted,” Gump says. “Our club makes a poster of the individuals after they’ve been voted in, and we put it in the front of the room at our next meeting. They love it. Some ask if they can take the poster home. One wanted to mail it to his mother.” While celebrating new members, don’t forget that clubs also stay strong by retaining current members. If you ensure that they are having a good experience and realizing the full value of their membership, the club’s current members will be proud to invite a guest to a meeting – and those guests will want to join an attractive and welcoming club.
 
Be persistent 
At times, it will take more than one or two requests to get someone to attend a meeting. Keep asking. “It took my workout partner two years to convince me to come to a meeting,” says Gump, who joined the club in 2013 after attending just one meeting.
 
Be vibrant
If Gump’s fowl finery is any indication, this is a tip he takes to heart, dignity be damned. “The week before Thanksgiving, I contacted people on my recruitment list and told them I would be wearing a turkey suit to the next meeting and that they should come and see it,” he says. “A few took me up on the offer – and some of them joined. It’s all about making club meetings and events fun and vibrant. Other simple things we’ve done is make outrageous centerpieces for our meeting tables. It gets people talking. For example, at Easter we put baskets in the middle of the tables with plastic eggs, and inside the eggs were blue and gold M&Ms with the Rotary logo on them. At St. Patrick’s Day, we had shamrocks with members’ pictures on them; same thing at Christmas, but on foil trees. My club is so welcoming, sometimes it just takes getting a potential member to the first meeting and then they join. Balloons, posters, streamers – it all helps. It really does work.”
 
Embrace diversity
In February, Rotary welcomed its first LGBTQ club, the Rotary Club of San Francisco Castro. The initiative to form the club came from the top down after local Rotary leaders acknowledged that members of the LGBTQ community were underrepresented in District 5150, which encompasses San Francisco and other towns in Northern California.
 “We received a ton of support from our district,” says the club’s founding president, Lisa De Zordo. “It was invaluable.” She especially singled out two past district governors – Eric Schmautz (“he planted the seed”) and Leah Lambrecht – and lauded her former club, the Rotary Club of South San Francisco. “They were our sponsor club and our cheerleaders,” De Zordo says.
From De Zordo’s perspective, the formation of the new club recognized what was already a reality: Many members had already been participating in Rotary events and projects. “We did not let not being chartered get in the way of our service,” De Zordo says. Now the club is partnering with Larkin Street Youth Services and other local organizations to help at-risk youth, neglected seniors, and the homeless.
De Zordo thinks it’s essential that Rotary embrace diversity if it intends to grow. “Rotary has a real opportunity here,” she says. “We need to be open and affirming to everyone. If we’re interested in bringing peace to the world, that peace has to start with us.”
That process is well underway Down Under. According to Steven Aquilina, past president of the Rotary Club of Southbank (in Melbourne), Australia has a well-established LGBTQ Rotary network. And in June, Monica Mulholland completed her term as the first transgender president of the Rotary Club of Queenstown, New Zealand. During her tenure, the club hosted an LGBTQ “information night”; in a letter, then-RI President Ian H.S. Riseley endorsed the event and encouraged other clubs to welcome people of diverse backgrounds. 
 “At the core of it all is that we’re Rotarians who are LGBTQ,” De Zordo says. “The focus is always on Rotary.”
 
 Get them in the door
In April, at his induction ceremony into the Arch Klumph Society, Rustico “Chito” Recto Jr. explained how, almost against his will, he came to join Rotary in 1980 when he was 26 years old. “A close friend of mine had recently joined,” Recto explained, “and he attended the Rotary Convention in Chicago, the year Rotary was celebrating its 75th anniversary. Upon coming home to the Philippines, he was so upbeat about Rotary that he practically twisted my arm to attend a meeting.”
Initially, as Recto confessed after the ceremony, he did not share his friend’s enthusiasm. Not easily deterred, his friend picked him up for a lunch date one day. Unbeknownst to Recto, their destination was a Rotary meeting. “I was a little surprised,” he says today, but once introduced to the organization, he was hooked: “I became a member, and from there on, there was no stopping me.”
Recto went on to assume a number of leadership positions, including president of the Rotary Club of Lipa South and governor of District 3820 (Philippines). In addition to their generous contributions to The Rotary Foundation, Recto and his wife, Lydia Miral, have been Rotary Youth Exchange hosts, joined the fight to end polio, and helped provide aid to residents of Mindanao after Typhoon Haiyan in 2013, among other endeavors – all because a persistent friend “convinced” Recto to attend his first Rotary meeting.
 

 
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