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Program for January 23
Cedar Falls Mayor Jim Brown will join us today!
Cedar Falls Mayor Jim Brown will give us an account of his First Year in office, and what is going on just upriver.
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Gary Norris now Governor Elect in Kansas
 
Former Waterloo Rotarrian Gary Norris moved to Salina, Kansas after retirement and continued his Rotary membership there.
 
Former Superintendent of Waterloo Community Schools Gary Norris is the governor elect in his new district and is attending the RI International Assembly this week in California. He reports on his Facebook page that, “Rotary International General Assembly just beginning in San Diego, California. I am privileged to be here along with 535 Governors Elect and their partners from nearly every country in the world. Looking forward to learning new ways to motivate other Rotarians to get involved and truly make a difference.”
 
At the opening session Monday Rotary President-elect Ian H.S. Riseley made the case that protecting the environment and curbing climate change are essential to Rotary’s goal of sustainable service.
Riseley, a member of the Rotary Club of Sandringham, Victoria, Australia, unveiled the 2017-18 presidential theme, Rotary: Making a Difference, to incoming district governors at Rotary’s International Assembly in San Diego, CA.
 
 
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Rotary announces $35 million to support a polio-free world
EVANSTON, Ill. (January, 17 2017) — Rotary has announced $35 million in grants to support the global effort to end polio, bringing the humanitarian service organization’s contribution to $140 million since January 2016.  
 
Nearly half of the funds ($16.15 million) will support the emergency response campaigns in Nigeria and the Lake Chad Basin (Chad, northern Cameroon, southern Niger and Central African Republic). Four cases of polio were detected in Nigeria in 2016, which had previously not seen a case since July 2014.
 

With these cases, funding is needed to support rapid response plans in Nigeria and surrounding countries to stop the outbreak.

While significant strides have been made against the paralyzing disease, with just 35 cases reported in 2016, polio remains a threat in hard-to-reach and underserved areas, and conflict zones. To sustain this progress, and protect all children from polio, experts say $1.5 billion is needed.

In addition to supporting the response in the Lake Chad Basin region, funding has been allocated to support polio eradication efforts in Afghanistan ($7.15 million), Pakistan ($4.2 million), Somalia ($4.64 million), and South Sudan ($2.19 million). A final grant in the amount of $666,845 will support technical assistance in UNICEF’s West and Central Africa Regional Office.

Rotary has contributed more than $1.6 billion, including matching funds from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and countless volunteer hours since launching its polio immunization program, PolioPlus, in 1985. In 1988, Rotary became a spearheading partner in the Global Polio Eradication Initiative with the World Health Organization (WHO), UNICEF, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and was later joined by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Since the initiative launched, the incidence of polio has plummeted by more than 99.9 percent, from about 350,000 cases a year to 35 confirmed in 2016, and no cases in 2017. 

Contact: Michelle Kloempken, (847) 866-3247, michelle.kloempken@rotary.org

 

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Russell Hampton
National Awards Services Inc.
Sage