Rotary International Theme 2024-2025




THE ROWEL

Rotary Club of Durham
 

Rotary International President:

Gordon McInally

Rotary District 5160 Governor:

Clair Roberts

Durham Rotary President: Peggi Whitman

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Editor: Phil Price

Publisher:  Jen Liu

 

May 27, 2025



 



Harvest Festival

 2025

will be held on

September 21, 2025






The Meeting Opening

We met at the Patrick Ranch.

President Peggi called the meeting to order at tables outside near the Master Garden.

She led the pledge to a small flag held by Steve Plume.

Larry Bradley to lead us in singing “Amazing Grace”. 

Peggi then asked President Elect Tom Knowles to recite the 4 Way Test, which he did, from memory.

As President Peggi emailed us on May 16th, Steve Plume received a call from Rev. Jim’s son that morning that Rev. Jim had passed away during his sleep while at Enloe Hospital having been admitted for other pains he was experiencing. 

So, rather than an invocation, we had a moment of silence for Rev. Jim.

Peggi announced that Rev. Jim’s memorial service is scheduled for Saturday, May 31, 2025, beginning at 10:00am.  The Memorial Service will be held at:

Aldersgate United Methodist Church 

2869 Cohasset Rd.

Chico



2025                                       Calendar for Durham Rotary

M
a
y




1 2 3
4 5 6
No Meeting
7 8 9 10
11
12 13
Meeting
80th Anniversary Celebration at Tom Knowles' Home at 9285 Sarah Ann Court in Durham
14 15 16 17
18 19 20
No Meeting
21 22 23 24
25 26 27
Meeting
Demostration Graden Tour at the Patrick Ranch
(Steve Hieithecker)
28 29 30 31
J
u
n
e
1 2 3
No Meeting
4 5 6 7
8 9
10
Meeting
Eric Miller, who will talk about garbage

(Mike Crump)
11
12
13 14
15
16
17
No Meeting
18
19
20
21
22 23 24
Demotion Party at BCCC
(Glenn Pulliam)
25 26 28 28
29 30




FUTURE MEETINGS: Meetings will be at the location noted, at 6:00 pm.

June 10th:  Mike Crump at BCCill present Eric Miller, who will talk about garbage

June 24th:  Glenn Pulliam will host the Demotion at BCCC.

July 8th: At BCCC

July 22nd: At BCCC

August 5:  At BCCC

August 19th: At BCCC

Other Matters

President Peggi wanted to recognize Glenn Pulliam for his birthday. But he was absent.

But she overlooked the following birthday:


Steve Plume announced that they had one opening left at Camp Venture and that a young man recently came to his attention that would like to go.  He is Jonathen Gore a junior at Durham High School.  Steve is working on getting him to Camp Venture.

Introduction of Visitors

The only visitor was my wife, Cindy.  She is a gardener, always interested in gardens.

Dinner

Dinner was sandwiches and an interesting salad, provided by Eric Hoiland.  Also some cookies for desert. 

The Program

The program tonight was all about the Master Garden at the Patrick Ranch.  The President of the Far West Heritage Association (the operator of the Patrick Ranch), Richard Bauman spoke to us briefly about the Ranch and the Garden then turned the program over to Kay Perkins, the vice president of the Association, and a Master Gardener.

Master Gardeners often become indispensable volunteers in their communities—creating gardens, conducting research, giving lectures, and contributing to other local horticultural efforts. Individuals must complete intensive horticultural training, typically available through universities in the U.S. and Canada, to become a certified Master Gardener.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

She talked about the Master Garden program at Patrick Ranch and walked us around the Master Garden, describing the various plantings in the Garden.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

Next Meeting

Our next meeting, on June 10th, will be at the Butte Creek Country Club.  Mike Crump will present Eric Miller, who will talk about garbage.   That is right “garbage”.

Note that there will be a Board meeting at 5:00 pm.

It was also announced that our annual Christmas Party will be in December 2nd.

Membership

Bring guests who you think you can interest in becoming a member.  Your dinner and your guest’s dinner will be paid for by the Club.  Also, bring a guest to one of our occasional social gatherings.

District 5160 Governor, Dan Geraldi is asking each club member to bring at least one guest toa meeting this year.

Go to the following Rotary International web site for information on membership development:  https://my.rotary.org/en/learning-reference/learn-topic/membership .  From this website there is access to membership development and other related information.

The Rotary Foundation Donations

You can make a difference in this world by helping people in need. Your gift can do some great things, from supplying filters that cleanpeople’s drinking water to empowering local entrepreneurs to grow through business development training.

The Rotary Foundation will use your gift to fund the life-changing work of Rotary members who provide sustainable solutions to their communities’ most pressing needs. But we need help from people like you who will take action and give the gift of Rotary to make these projects possible.

When every Rotarian gives every year, no challenge is too great for us to make a difference. The minimum gift to The Rotary Foundation is $25.00.   An annual $100.00 gift is a sustaining member.  Once your donations accumulate to $1,000 you become a Paul Harris Fellow.

If you have any questions, ask Steve Heithecker.

It is possible to learn more about The Rotary Foundation on the Rotary web site. 

Your gift can be made online or by sending Jessica Thorpe a check made out to The Rotary Foundation to Durham Rotary, P.O. Box 383, Durham, California 95958.

 

From District 5160

To: All Rotarians in District 5160

It's time to thank this year's Rotary Presidents and Leaders and Welcome their successors.  Please join us as our District Family comes together on Saturday, July 12, 2025, from 5:30 PM to 8:30 PM, for our annual Awards and Installation as District 5160.  The event will be held in Chico, at the beautiful Lakeside Pavilion, 2565 California Park Drive, Chico.  This event will celebrate the club's successes for 2024-2025 and ring in the new Rotary year through the installation of next year’s presidents.  Registration is now open. Please use this personal link to register for this event.
 
Register NOW for the District Awards and Installation Event. Do not forward this is personalizedjust for you.

Saturday, July 12, 2025
Lakeside Pavilion, 2565 California Park Drive, Chico, CA 95928
$50 per person
5:30PM-8:30PM
(5:30-6:15PM No Host Cocktails and Social Hour)

For questions please contact Awards and Installation Chair Rene Matsumoto at crmmats@gmail.com.

Thank you,
Dan Geraldi
District Governor 5160
2024-2025
Joy Alaidarous
District Governor 5160
2025-2026

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From Rotary International’s News and Features Website

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{Note that the following may not be the complete article.  See the complete articleon Rotary International’s web page.}i

2025 Council approves dues increase, smaller club charters

 

Rotary’s legislative body meets every three years to vote on proposals to move the organization forward

By Arnold R. Grahl

Representatives from Rotary districts around the world gathered for the 2025 Council on Legislation, voting after much debate to approve a dues increase and also deciding to allow clubs to be chartered with fewer members.

The Council, held 13-17 April in Chicago, Illinois, USA, is where Rotary members meet every three years to discuss and vote on proposals to move the organization forward.

By far the most-debated items this session were the dues increase, designed tokeep up with rising costs, and a proposal to make annual district conferences optional.

Rotary International President Stephanie A. Urchick set the tone for the Council on the opening day, stressing the cross-cultural and cooperative nature of Rotary.

“This Council represents the heart of Rotary’s democratic process and the best of our international spirit,” Urchick said to about 480 representatives and the Council observers. “The gathering is one of Rotary’s most powerful expressions of multiculturalism. Here, voices from every corner of the globe come together – not to compete, but to collaborate.”

Representatives approved a US$3.50 increase in the dues that every Rotary member pays to Rotary International, which means that dues will increase from US$82 for 2025-26 to US$85.50 for 2026-27. The dues would increase by another US$3.75 in each of the following two years.

A five-year financial forecast, presented to representatives at the beginning of each Council, projected that without any increase, RI would have a US$42 million deficit by 2029-30. The organization’s policies require it to have a balanced budget.

“Dues are the primary funding source for everything we do,” Trichur Narayan “Raju” Subramanian, a member of the RI Board of Directors, told the Council. “It provides essential services to your clubs, members, and districts. As inflation continues to drive costs up, we must make sure dues keep pace.”

“The world needs Rotary more than ever,” Subramanian concluded. “It’s in your hands to protect the future of our organization.”

Supporters of the dues increase also insisted that RI has and will continue to cut costs as the organization finds new ways to be efficient. The dues increase, which amounts to about 4% each year, is below the 2024 global rate of inflation.

But opponents said that dues increases discourage membership, which itself is the lifeblood of Rotary. Several also argued that the information RI has provided to representatives has not been detailed enough and said they want greater transparency.

“For the past 10 years, membership has been decreasing,” said Shobee Tone,representing District 2650 (Japan), who noted that a loss of members resulting from dues increases hurts smaller clubs the most. He said RI needs better efficiency, with fewer people on staff.

The dues increase prevailed after 45 minutes of debate and a failed attempt to postpone the decision for up to three months.

The Council also approved a measure that will allow clubs to be chartered with as few as 15 members, instead of 20. Supporters said the change will remove barriers to starting new clubs and help Rotary grow and expand its reach bytrying innovative club models.

Ken Schuppert, the Council chair, thanked the representatives for their hard work,saying the measures they approved will make Rotary stronger.

“They reviewed and voted on legislation that will change and lead Rotary into the future,” he said.”

In other action, the Council:

A Report of Action summarizing the legislation will be sent to clubs, which wil lhave at least two months to submit any opposition to the Council action. The Council’s adoption of legislation is suspended if there is opposition from clubs representing at least 5% of the possible club votes.

— April 2025

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The Rotary International web site is: www.rotary.org

District 5160 is: www.rotary5160.org

The Durham Rotary Club site is:  www.durhamrotary.org

The Rowel Editor may be contacted at: pbprice1784@gmail.com

The deadline for the Rowel 6:30 am on Wednesdays.

The Editor's photographs published in the Rowel are available, upon request, in their original file size.  Those published were substantially reduced in file size.