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Program for Sept 25

 

Tim Combs

Executive Director,
Americans for Independent Living
 

Tim has been in the construction business for 35 years. He has worked on projects from highways to city streets, commercial building projects, and the entire process of residential home building. He started his own company in 1998 and has remained self-employed. He also partners in a Real Estate Investing business of buying, fixing and flipping single family housing.

Because of a yearning to do more for others, he founded Americans for Independent Living in 2015.  He felt veterans deserved more support than what has been available.  He will advocate in the community to make others aware of how important it is to recognize, celebrate and support our veterans.

Americans for Independent Living's impact in the community will be from public awareness of the need for more accessible living areas for disabled veterans and transitional housing for Veterans who are homeless or at risk of homelessness.

“Being an advocate for your community and volunteering are both key components in creating change within the community.  We need to understand the social problem of homeless veterans, which many people face and are affected by daily.   Everyday there are people in our community who are affected by the issues non-profit organizations battle for or against.  Once communities realize how people oriented things like advocacy and outreach are, I believe people will realize their impact in their community and their potential to really affect change.” –Tim Combs

Networking Events!
Upcoming opportunities to Network with Rotarians from around the Cedar Valley!  Presented by Rotary Club of the Cedar Valley Social team.
Weds, Sept 27 - Networking with a Purpose, Horny Toad's Cedar Falls.  5:30 PM to whenever.  This is our monthly networking effort in combination with the Cedar Valley and Cedar Falls clubs, no program, just socializing with other Rotarians from around the Cedar Valley.
October End Polio Now events:
Sunday, Oct 8 - small wine tasting, commissions donated to The Rotary Foundation Polio efforts.  Contact Philip.d.nash@wellsfargo.com for more details.  Hosted by Jessica Rucker
Saturday, Oct 14 - Freeze Out Polio with the Waterloo Black Hawks, more information to follow
Tuesday, Oct 24 (World Polio Day) - Annual Dine Out to End Polio event, restaurant list coming
Read more...
Upcoming Programs
We have some great programs coming up that many of your friends and associates would be interested in...reach out to them and make plans to offer a complimentary lunch and peek inside our club!
 
October 2: Jeff Olson – CF Public Safety
October 9: Molly McLaughlin – Outbound Exchange experience
October 16: Megan Yturriaga, Executive Director - Alternatives Pregnancy
October 23: Waterloo Candidate Forum
October 30:  District Governor Ralph Smith
November 6: Football Banquet
November 13: Volleyball Banquet
November 20: No Meeting – Happy Thanksgiving Week!
November 27: Rev. Fr. Emmanuel Nakhle Ghorr - The Conflict with Fundamentalist Islam in Iraq and Syria and its Consequence
December 4: Michelle Bell – Rotary Foundation
December 11: Rotary Membership Drive
December 18: Christmas Program
December 25: No Meeting 
 
 
5 things you might not know about ending polio
The road to eradicating polio has been a long and difficult one, with Rotary leading the fight since 1985. Going from nearly 350,000 cases in 1988 to just 10 so far this year has required time, money, dedication, and innovation from thousands of people who are working to end the disease. 
 
1. Ice cream factories in Syria are helping by freezing the ice packs that health workers use to keep the polio vaccine cold during immunization campaigns.
 

2. Celebrities have become ambassadors in our fight to end the disease. They include WWE wrestling superstar John Cena, actress Kristen Bell, action-movie star Jackie Chan, golf legend Jack Nicklaus, Grammy Award-winning singers Angelique Kidjo and Ziggy Marley, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Desmond Tutu, anthropologist Dr. Jane Goodall, co-founder of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Bill Gates, and world-renowned violinist and polio survivor Itzhak Perlman.

3. Health workers and Rotary volunteers have climbed mountains, crossed deserts, and sailed to remote islands, risking their lives to vaccinate children against this disease. Rotary has funded more than 1,500 motorbikes and 6,700 other vehicles, as well as 17 boats, to make those journeys. Vaccinators have even traveled on the backs of elephants, donkeys, and camels to immunize children in remote areas.

4. In Pakistan, the polio program emphasizes hiring local female vaccinators and monitors. More than 21,000 vaccinators, 83 percent of whom are women, are achieving the highest immunization coverage rates in the country’s history.

5. Thanks to the efforts of Rotary and its partners, more than 16 million people who otherwise might have been paralyzed are walking today. In all, more than 2.5 billion children have been vaccinated since 1988.

Get ready for the 5th annual World Polio Day event, co-hosted with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Streaming live from Gates Foundation headquarters in Seattle, the event will bring together more than 50,000 viewers around the world. Join global health experts and celebrities sharing the progress on the road to polio eradication.

 

 

Russell Hampton
National Awards Services Inc.
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