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Jun 28, 2016
 
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Happy Birthday!
Member Birthdays
Jon C. Cieslak
June 3
 
Michelle McManus
June 6
 
Bob Cardinal
June 7
 
Blake S. Davis
June 17
 
Kenneth W. Crabb, M.D.
June 17
 
Edward H. Cook
June 18
 
Annette Kuyper
June 19
 
Clyde D. Nelson
June 19
 
Jason Bradshaw
June 24
 
Michael W. Anderson
June 24
 
Thomas Farnham
June 25
 
Russell Hampton
National Awards Services Inc.
Sage
JUNE 21, 2016 ROTARY IN REVIEW:
Tim Marx

On a day that would have been perfect for outdoor fellowship (them's the breaks!), 80 Rotarians gathered at the Intercontinental Hotel for fellowship and a dynamic speaker. Club members drew random tables numbers as they were greeted to "mix up" the seating and get members talking.

Carla Hauge called the meeting to order at 12:15.

Song Leader Michael-jon Pease suggested we sing “We Are Family” by Sister Sledge or “Somewhere Over the Rainbow” in honor of Gay Pride weekend, but in the absence of both an accompanist and a disco ball, he chose “God Bless America.”

Erika Schwichtenberg offered inspirational thoughts from Albert Einstein, reminding us all to unlock the our own potential.

Lively fellowship at the tables ensued in lieu of formal introductions.

Thanks to our meeting volunteers: Scott Van, Nancy McKillips and John Chandler (greeters) and Michael-jon Pease (scribe).

Rotarians in the news: Arne Bockstruck and Howard Guthmann were featured in the Pioneer Press in an article about the friendship club Innijiska – founded in 1958.

Next week is the changing of the guard, when we welcome our incoming board members and officers.

Please sign up to work the Rotary booth at Twin Cities Pride in Loring Park this weekend.

Carley Stuber kicked off the recognition of new members: Deborah Lee, Cynthia Sheily, Sophie Rupp, Nancy Brady, Mary Pucel, Matt Halley, Brianna Vujovich, Heather Christopherson, Michelle McManus, Laura Nichols-Endres, Cindy Dupont & Bob Stephenson. Chuck Whitaker will  distribute cases of beer from Summit Brewing to each new member and to their sponsors.

Jim Kosmo announced our newest Century Scholarship winner Chloe Peterson. Chloe is moving to China next year to learn Mandarin with the State Department. After her return, she’ll  begin her college career at Stanford in 2017.

John Chandler reported on the rainy Fellowship Day at the White Bear Yacht Club. The golf winner was Roger Bonfe. Winning a heated tennis match was John Chandler himself. Thanks to Chuck Whitaker and Dan McKeown for hosting the group at the WBYC!

100 special happy dollars was given by Gerry Meigs in honor of his 50 years with our club! Doug Bruce slipped in $15 in honor of Carla Hauge’s great run as President!

Program

Jay Pfaender introduced our speaker Tim Marx, President and CEO of Catholic Charities.

First off, it’s District Energy tearing up old 6th street in front of the new Dorothy Day Center, not Catholic Charities!

Catholic Charities works with those most in need, regardless of faith, background or circumstance. CC is now the largest human service organization in the area, serving more than 1 MM meals and directly impacting nearly 30,000 citizens. They are a standalone nonprofit,

The Dorothy Day Center was founded 35 years ago and serves nearly 6,000 people per year, serving over 300,000 meals. It was never envisioned as a shelter, only a day center. Due to need, it has been allowing people to sleep on mats during the winter, then year around. In 2011, they had to turn away people for the first time. Camps sprung up outside the center, sleeping in tents and cars (in the summer).

In December this year, the new Center will open to serve more homeless people and serve them with more dignity in keeping with Catholic Charities’ high level of care. Older people and women make up a significant percentage of the homeless population.

Homelessness is decreasing. Catholic Charities’ “Higher Ground” model (the first was in Minneapolis) is a proven solution. It is mixed use, with permanent apartment homes as well as shelter units. The Opportunity Center provides job skills.

The vision for the new Dorothy Day Center is a focus on pathways to permanent housing. Phase II will be under construction soon to provide mental health and job training services. 172 permanent housing units will be added in Phase II.

This is a $100 MM project, with 60% public funds, and 40% from a private capital campaign. Phase II was in the bonding bills that the legislature didn’t pass last session.

This project may well be the largest public-private human resources effort in state history. More than $32 MM have been raised from private sources – only $8 MM to go!

Two of the organization’s innovations are “pay for stay” ($42/week that CC saves to help build up the funds they will need to pay their first month’s rent and “medical respite.” Medical respite is a program to work with hospitals who are releasing homeless citizens from the ER, but who are still vulnerable and in need of some care. By providing dedicated medical respite beds, CC has saved the health care system hundreds of thousands of dollars.

St. Paul Rotarians are encouraged to volunteer, serve as an advocate at the capital, or donate to help make this effort successful.

Carla Hauge closed the meeting with the Four Way Test.

Respectfully submitted,

Michael-jon Pease

JUNE 21, 2016 MEETING:
New Vision for the Dorothy Day Center

In 1981, Catholic Charities of St Paul and Minneapolis opened the Dorothy Day Center as a drop-in center for meals, serving approximately 30-50 people per day. Over time, due to increasing homelessness, it was forced to become a 24 / 7 / 365 overnight shelter-something it was never designed or intended to do. And it reached a tipping point in 2011 when, for the first time, Catholic Charities had to turn people away.  In partnership with a task force of community leaders convened by Mayor Chris Coleman, a solution was developed. 

The new vision for the Dorothy Day Center-which is supported by what is likely the largest public-private partnership in state history-will consist of a two-building campus designed to prevent and end homelessness. It will focus on two key components which do not exist sufficiently today:  more permanent homes and dedicated self-sufficiency services that will create true pathways out of poverty and homelessness. The location for this new vision-in the shadow of our Capitol, the Cathedral and the commercial and entertainment center of our community-will be a beacon of hope and opportunity.

Tim Marx, President and Chief Executive Officer, Catholic Charities of St. Paul and Minneapolis, works with the dedicated board of directors, talented executive leadership, and hard working staff to establish the strategic direction of Catholic Charities and to oversee its implementation. Tim works extensively with faith, civic, and public policy leaders, community partners, donors and volunteers to advance the vision of a community where there is poverty for no one and opportunity for everyone.

The values of Catholic Social Teaching— including human dignity, a preference for the poor and vulnerable, promotion of the community and the common good—provide the foundation for the work of Catholic Charities and Tim’s leadership. Tim brings to Catholic Charities his experience as a practicing lawyer, public official (city attorney then deputy mayor of Saint Paul and Minnesota Housing Finance Agency commissioner), nonprofit leadership (executive director of Breaking Ground in New York City), and significant civic involvement including board service with HealthEast, the Minneapolis Downtown Council, National Alliance to End Homelessness and the United Way Systems Change and Innovations Committee.

Tim is a graduate of St. John’s University in Collegeville, MN, the University of Minnesota Law School and the Humphrey School of Public Affairs.

JUNE 14, 2016 ROTARY IN REVIEW:
Fellowship Day
On an overcast day determined Rotarians and guests travelled to the White Bear Yacht Club for our annual fellowship day on Tuesday, June 14. Special thanks to WBYC members Dan McKeown and Chuck Whitaker for making this possible. Approximately 40 lunch and 20 dinner attendees enjoyed outstanding meals from their new chef.

Four Rotarians squeezed in some tennis. John Chandler was the declared winner. Golf ended early also so there were no scramble winners but Roger Bonfe outclassed 15 golfers. No one biked. Smart decision. And Chuck’s annual boat cruise was cancelled due to rain. A couple Rotarians played cards.

The weather couldn’t dampen the spirits and camaraderie prevailed. Plan on attending next year’s fellowship day in early June.

Respectfully Submitted,

John Chandler

JUNE 25-26, Rotaract & Rotary at Pride:
Sign-up Today!

TC Rotaract along with St. Paul Rotary, Minneapolis Rotary, and South Metro Rotary clubs will be tabling at PRIDE! Help us share the message of Service Above Self and reach out to the GLBTQA community to make our clubs stronger and more diverse. 

There will be a sign-up sheet at the July 21 meeting. Otherwise, please email Chelsea Holub to register.

View open shifts here: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/10Qe90_8ckGLMjtlld9d39csElE-0nF0htvMdPaqFgw8/edit#gid=681740080

Volunteer for Rotary Meeting Teams!

Thanks to a recommendation from Jodi, I have used Volunteer Spot to set up all of the volunteer opportunities for our upcoming meetings. So the answer to "how do I get to help out at the meeting?" is "follow this link and sign up."
 
http://vols.pt/hd7EGu

Or call me at 651.767.8497 (for those of you who prefer the phone).

You do not need to create yet another login and there are no passwords to remember! Just follow the link, confirm your email and start signing up for meeting teams. Volunteer Spot will send you reminders, and will let me know where the needs are for upcoming meetings. Attention new members: serving as a greeter and taking the microphone, either to offer the inspirational moment or to introduce guests and visiting Rotarians, is an excellent way to network and get your face in front of the club!
 
We are in particular need of scribes (note takers). There are three simple steps to taking the notes:
1) use the word document agenda you'll receive as your template - half of the information is already there!
2) Fill in a paragraph or two on the speaker and
3) email your notes to Jodi by end of day Wednesday.
 
(And you thought I was making it look like hard work!)
 
Thank you for whatever you can do to to make our weekly meetings a great experience!

For more news and background: http://saintpaulrotary.org