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Highlights of January 23 Meeting
President Chris Krueger opened the meeting asking Lolita Weisner to offer the invocation, and Jack Rosenberg to lead the Pledge of Allegiance.  Ray Smith led those present in singing "Oh Beautiful for Spacious Skies."  
 
Guests
Pam Cohen introduced Rick Busse from Soldotna Alaska and Lola McLain, a potential new member, who has volunteered to be our greeter next week.  Dr. Ron Thompson introduced Buey Ray Tut.  John Pennypacker introduced his son, Jay.  Ray Miller and Maria were visitors form Lolita Wiesner's club in Alaska.  Bill Crump was visiting from Sun Lakes Rotary and Tom Mellett was visiting from Farmington.
 
Drawings
Daryl Bethea's badge number was drawn in the weekly attendance drawing, but had to receive an I.O.U. for his winnings as Aubrey was absent.  Chuck Flint announced that the small pot in the weekly raffle would be $40.  If the ticket holder was additionally lucky enough to draw the ace of clubs from the shrinking deck, they would win $374.  Polly Schumacher was the holder of the winning ticket.  She was disappointed when she drew - just one card off - the king of clubs.  Chuck explained the Mesa West Buck Board for the benefit of our visitors, then circulated to sell some of the remaining squares to anyone present who was interested.
 
Happy Bucks
Many members contributed, happy about the good times enjoyed by all at the club's post-holiday celebration Saturday, January 9 at the home of Dan and Colleen Coons.  
 
Auction Item 
Polly Cady announced that she and Allan had a large bag of "good stuff" to auction from the Friendship Conference in Acapulco, their travels in Mexico and a trip to North Carolina.  The bidding started at $30 and was very competitive until Don Boucher intimidated the other bidders with his bid of $100.
It took Don quite a while to unpack his bag, but it was clear to all that his $100 was a good investment.  
 
Appeal for Host Families
John Pennypacker announced that he had heard from Colton Cagle, asking for help from the Mesa West Club in finding host families for an inbound Rotary Youth Exchange student for the 2019-20 academic year.  Colton has been selected as an outbound student, but one of the requirements is for him to find three host families to host an inbound student next year.  The families do not have to be Rotarians but do need to meet the screening requirements set by Rotary International.  The family does not need to live in the Westwood HS district.  The student will likely attend the high school nearest the first host family.  The benefits of being a host family are many.  You and your family have the opportunity to form a bond with someone from another culture.  Typically, those bonds last a lifetime.  Through programs like Youth Exchange, Rotary builds peace one person at a time.  If you would like more information contact Dan Coons, Mesa West's Youth Exchange Chair or Donna Goetzenberger, who is Youth Exchange Chair for our Rotary district.
 
Good News Report from Jim Crutcher
Don LaBarge announced that he had recently had a call from Jim Crutcher explaining why it has been some time since he has been able to attend our club meetings.  He has been swamped at work as they have processed an offer by Larry Miller to buy Berge Ford.  The offer was accepted.  The new owners have hired every Berge Ford employee and made Jim a partner.  The new business name will be Larry Miller Ford.  
 
New Member Inducted
After an induction ceremony led by Don LaBarge, Ryan Ellis was welcomed into Mesa West as our newest member.  Ryan is with the Valley of the Sun YMCA.  Ryan's sponsor was Daryl Bethea.  During the induction, Don challenged Ryan to come up with a community service project which Mesa West members could help him accomplish.  Ryan did not seem daunted by that challenge, so we all have something to look forward to that will help us get to know him.   
Program
Michael Shaw was introduced as our speaker.  Michael is with the Arizona Corporation Commission.  He was formerly an Assistant District Attorney in New York.  He is a former army officer.  He said he was invited to speak at another Rotary Club, but after he looked at both club's websites, chose to accept the invitation from Mesa West, because it looked like a club that actively did things.
 
Michael works in the Securities Division of the Corporation Commission in the regulation and compliance enforcement side.  He is a complaint investigator.  They do not target a certain group.  Securities include a wide range of investments including stock, real estate, and minerals.
 
In their department, they oversee the offer and sale of securities and investment advice.  They examine and register dealers' salesmen, investment advisers, and investment adviser representatives.  They bring legal action against persons when they find violations of the Arizona Securities Act or Investment Management Act.  They do not promise restitution, represent individuals or recommend investment products, people, or services.
 
In the State of Arizona, as of December, 2017, there were approximately 195,000 securities salespeople and 1,800 securities dealers registered.  There were over 600 investment advisory firms and nearly 8,800 investment adviser representatives licensed in Arizona.
 
Violations occur when someone offers or sells unregistered securities, when unregistered individuals offer securities for sale, when there are business conduct violations by registered persons, or if there is fraud in the offer or sale of securities.
 
Common enforcement concerns are transactions involving real estate and mortgage schemes, affinity fraud, mining and precious metals, ponzi schemes and insurance agents selling notes, unsuitable annuities, alternative investments, etc.
 
Consumers are urged to contact the Corporation Commission if they have questions about a securities offering, license or registration status or securities law or statute.  They should definitely contact their department if they wish to file a complaint regarding a security transaction or financial advice.  Their office can be contacted if someone wants to verify the license status of an investment salesperson or adviser, file a complaint about an investment promoter or professional or find information on enforcement actions and securities offerings.
 
Michael invited Rotarians and guests to visit their website:  www.azinvestor.gov, or e-mail them at info@azinvestor.gov.  They can be visited at 1300 W Washington, Phoenix, AZ 85007.  Their office is on the 3rd floor.  If you call (602) 542-0662, ask for the investigator on duty.  They also have a toll-free number within Arizona.  That number is 1-(866) VERIFY-9.
 
Sponsor Program
Allan Cady brough those present up-to-date on the sponsor program - see separate article in this Messenger.
Read more...
It Won't Be Over 'Til It's Over

β€œTo succeed by 2023”- extraordinary joint statement to polio eradicators everywhere.

This is an extraordinary joint statement by the Chairs of the main, independent, advisory and oversight committees of the GPEI - the Strategic Advisory Group of Experts on immunization (SAGE), the Independent Monitoring Board, the Emergency Committee of the International Health Regulations (IHR) Regarding International Spread of Poliovirus and the Global Commission for the Certification of the Eradication of Poliomyelitis (GCC). In this statement, the Chairs urge everyone involved in the GPEI to ensure polio will finally be assigned to the history books by 2023.


Dear Polio Eradicator,

The global polio eradication effort is 31 years old.
The world is tantalizingly close to being free of polio. From 350,000 wild poliovirus cases every year in 1988, in 2018 the world reported just 29 cases of this devastating disabling disease because of extraordinary global efforts. Wild poliovirus transmission is endemic in only a handful of districts worldwide. The aim of the 2013-2018 Endgame Plan had been to be finished with this job by end 2018. This is not the case, and the Plan has to now be revised and extended through 2023.

This is an effort that cannot be sustained indefinitely: 31 years is long enough. It is resource intensive. It is intensive on the countries affected. It is intensive on donors. It is intensive on health services. It is intensive on communities. Most of all, it is intensive on those children and their families who bear the burden of this terrible disease, needlessly.
There is no reason why polio should persist anywhere in the world.

To succeed by 2023, all involved in this effort must find ways to excel in their roles. If this happens, success will follow.
This means stepping up the level of performance even further. It means using the proven tools of eradication and building blocks that have been established in parts of the world that have been free of polio for years. The vaccines, the cold chains, the networks of vaccinators, the surveillance capacity, the governance, policy, financing and oversight structures must be
at peak levels of performance.

There must be an unrelenting focus to tighten the management of the effort at all levels.
It also means looking for opportunities to innovate, using local knowledge and insights to overcome obstacles that in the past have seemed insurmountable. It means looking at new and different ways to reach children. It means really understanding the views of parents, and communities, who are unwilling to accept the vaccine and finding ways to address their concerns and come together with them. It means more effectively engaging with communities and better serving their needs than we have been doing thus far.

Each person must dedicate themselves to one clear objective - to reach that very last child with polio vaccine.
Please commit to finding that very last child first, before the poliovirus does. Give the poliovirus nowhere to hide.
Whatever barrier to reaching that very last child, the programme has the expertise and experience to overcome it. Let everyone perfect what we know works. Let everyone free their mind to come up with new ideas and transformative solutions. We must all treat this as the public health emergency that it is.

As a global community, we have stood before where we stand today, with smallpox. The scourge of smallpox is gone, for which the world is a much better place. Let us make history again. It is time to finish the job of polio eradication now. The philosopher, poet and essayist Ralph Waldo Emerson said: β€œTo leave the world a bit better, whether by a healthy child, a garden patch or a redeemed social condition, to know even one life has breathed easier because you have lived – this is to have succeeded.”

Eradicate polio, and make the world a better place for future generations.

Thank you.

Ann Lee Hussey

Ann Lee Hussey is a member of the Rotary Club of Portland Sunrise, Maine -- Hussey has made her life's work the eradication of polio and the alleviation of suffering of people with polio. A polio survivor herself, she has led numerous Rotary volunteer teams to India, Nigeria, and other countries to immunize children and provide assistance to people disabled by polio.
 
CLICK HERE to view a video of an excellent 19-minute presentation by Ann Lee Hussey, from the perspective of a polio survivor, on the urgency of Rotary's continued focus on Polio eradication.
Sponsor Program Update
Chris Krueger asked Allan Cady to bring members up-to-date on the 2018-19 Mesa West Sponsorship Program at the January 23 club meeting.  She said there will again be a Steak and Bean celebration at the end of the sponsorship campaign, and that those who do not participate will be eating beans this year.
 
Allan had placed sponsorship brochures on the tables, as well as lists showing team assignments.  He said that the stated goal is $40,000 because we achieved that much last year, but he believes with better participation, we could easily raise $50,000.  We already have over $20,000 in donations received or already committed.  
 
In the brochure, there are several choices of specific programs donors can choose to support, but most donors last year chose "Undesignated (to be used where most needed)."  This choice allows us to respond to Rotary funds that are set up after major disasters in our state, nation, or the world, as well as respond to worthy requests for funds which would have been impossible to anticipate. 
 
Allan said that members have asked him how he was so successful last year, and already this year in securing donations or pledges.  He said when he reaches out to those he knows have the means to be generous, he spends some time on their existing relationship, catching up on what is happening in their family, their business, and their known hobbies.  Then he moves on to talk about some of the things he is passionate about, ending with the things he enjoys most about his involvement in Rotary.  It frequently results in the person he is talking to indicating that they are impressed with all that Rotary does and admire his involvement.  It is then easy to offer to share a brochure that tells about some things we, as Mesa West Rotarians, specifically do.  Some offer to make a donation on the spot.  Sometimes it is a pleasant surprise after-the-fact to see how much they mail in after looking the brochure over.  Some of his donors are family - others are long-time business associates or friends.  The people who are closest to us are the ones most likely to support what we care about.  CLICK HERE or on the image to download this year's Sponsorship Brochure.
 
Also on the table were ideas of people we might interact with regularly with whom we could have these relationship building conversations:  school associates, other professionals, adult friends of our young children, old business associates, people frequently seen or owners of our health club, old neighbors, children's school and PTA, spouse's friends, waiters/waitresses, church associates, cleaning establishments, civic activities, har/barber salon, insurance agent, previous job, real estate agents, bankers or credit union, doctor, dentist, restaurants, country club, neighbors, relatives, sports/hobbies, or accountant. 

TEAMS
 
Chuck Flint
Melodie Jackson, Aubrey Luma, Steve West, Sharon Spane, Ted Williams, Darl Andersen, Karen Chavez, and Immanuel Beeson
 
Frank Rosenberg
Rick Deponte, Dick Myren, Polly Schumacher, Daryl Bethea, Keith Deering, Robert LaBarge, and Kristen Klein
 
Steve Ross
Bob Jensen, Jim McGown, John Benedict, Donna Goetzenberger, Don LaBarge, Jim Crutcher, Bert Millett, and Mai Ly Duong
 
Tim Troy
Kevin Gustafson, Jack Rosenberg, Don Boucher, John Bethea, Brian Harvey, Mike Whalen, and Mike Polley
 
Dan Coons
Wendell & Carolyn Jones, Aaron Huber, Jim Schmidt, Ray Smith, Polly Cady, John Pennypacker, and Colleen Coons
 
Terry Diedrick
Kurt Klingenberg, Chris Krueger, Jeanie Morgan, Geoff White, Lucinda General, Wayne General, and Erica Williams
 
Bob Zarling
Pam Cohen, Ed Koeneman, Greg Okonowski, Alex Cohen, Shane Buntrock, Warren Williamson, and Ron Thompson
 
 
Today's Chuckle
Aqua Africa the change we can help effect
CLICK HERE or on the image to view a video that will create understanding about why our President, Chris Krueger is passionate about wanting to support Aqua Africa with a first-time Arizona awareness and fund-raising event during her presidential year.
January is Vocational Service Month
In Arizona, Rotarians have a unique way to do great Vocational Service in our local communities through The Rotary Vocational Fund of Arizona.  Individual members can support vocational education grants for the working poor and get a dollar for dollar credit for their donation as a deduction from their state income tax obligation.  Individual donors have until April 15 to make their tax credit donation for the 2018 tax year.  They can make their donations on line at donate.trvfa.org.  
 
Clubs also support TRVFA when they are approached by students who have applied for grants for club sponsorship of their application.  Clubs are urged to develop relationships with their sponsored scholars and include them in club projects and activities.  Some clubs choose to donate from their project budget to support the work of this find 
 
TRVFA  was incorporated by Rotarians as a 501(c)(3) public charity which is managed by a board made up entirely of Rotarian leaders.  It is an on-going multi-district project which was "blessed" by Rotary International in 1993.  For over 25 years, this organization was been a model of vocational service enabling the benefitting vocational scholars to move into well paying professions.  The Rotary equivalent of choosing to "teach a man to fish so he will be fed for a lifetime as opposed to giving him man a fish and feeding him for a day."
 
Even though TRVFA is a Rotary-organized, Rotarian managed charity, supporting TRVFA is not limited to Rotarians.  The tax credit donation opportunity is open to all Arizona residents who will have a state income tax obligation for 2018.  Share this opportunity with your family, friends, and associates.
Upcoming Events
Mesa West Rotary Weekly Meeting
Mesa Hilton
Jan 31, 2019 12:10 PM
 
Mesa West Rotary Weekly Meeting
Mesa Hilton
Feb 07, 2019 12:10 PM
 
Mesa West Rotary Weekly Meeting
Mesa Hilton
Feb 14, 2019 12:10 PM
 
Mesa West Rotary Board Meeting
Webinar
Feb 20, 2019
7:30 AM – 9:30 AM
 
Mesa West Rotary Weekly Meeting
Mesa Hilton
Feb 21, 2019 12:10 PM
 
Mesa West Rotary Weekly Meeting
Mesa Hilton
Feb 28, 2019 12:10 PM
 
Mesa West Rotary Weekly Meeting
Mesa Hilton
Mar 07, 2019 12:10 PM
 
Mesa West Rotary Weekly Meeting
Mesa Hilton
Mar 14, 2019 12:10 PM
 
Mesa West Rotary Board Meeting
Mesa Hilton
Mar 20, 2019
7:30 AM – 9:30 AM
 
Mesa West Rotary Weekly Meeting
Mesa Hilton
Mar 21, 2019 12:10 PM
 
Speakers
Jan 31, 2019
Global Health Innovations
Feb 07, 2019
Club Assembly
Feb 14, 2019
Feb 21, 2019
Foundation Day
Feb 28, 2019
Top 10 Tax Tips for Doing Our 2018 Taxes
Mar 07, 2019
ASU Hospitality and Tourism
Mar 14, 2019
The Mongolian Project
View entire list
Birthdays & Anniversaries
Member Birthdays
Ted L. Williams
January 3
 
Steve Ross
January 10
 
Andrea Murphy
January 19
 
Join Date
Carole Kralicek
January 1, 1991
28 years
 
Daniel Coons
January 1, 1993
26 years
 
Donna Goetzenberger
January 1, 2017
2 years
 
G. Bryan Goetzenberger
January 1, 2017
2 years
 
Pamela Cohen
January 1, 1992
27 years
 
Warren Williamson
January 1, 1990
29 years
 
Scott Morris
January 7, 2010
9 years
 
Greg Okonowski
January 22, 1998
21 years
 
Rotary District 5495 Links
District Links
Rotary Interact District 5495
Rotary District 5495
The Rotary Vocational Fund of Arizona (TRVFA)
Rotary Youth Exchange
Rotary Youth Leadership Awards - RYLA
RYLA Service Project Support
Executives & Directors
President
 
President Elect
 
Secretary
 
Treasurer
 
Club Service Director
 
Service Projects Director
 
The Rotary Foundation Director
 
Membership Director (480) 213-1617
 
Public Image Director
 
Executive Secretary
 
Bulletin Editor
Jeanie Morgan
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