The document provides information about Rotary International Foundation teams and committees for District 6970 in 2015-16. It lists the chairs and members of the Foundation Team, Share Committee, Stewardship Audit Committee, and Scholarship Committee. It also includes the district's Foundation report, which provides data on fundraising goals and awards. Specifically, it highlights the district's annual giving, per capita giving, and top fundraising clubs. Additionally, it outlines plans and targets for fundraising to end polio in 2016-17.
The document summarizes the annual meeting of the Montpelier Community Association. It includes the agenda which covers calling the meeting to order, reports from the secretary, president and board members, and guest speakers from local government. It also discusses past community events from the year, projects completed, the budget and financial report. The meeting aims to discuss old and new business and adjourn.
The Rotary Club of Lynnwood held its board meeting on September 17, 2014. Key discussion points included:
1) An issue with a participant who got a hole-in-one at the golf tournament not qualifying for the prize due to insurance policy details.
2) Approving a $13,500 grant request from the Edmonds Public Schools Alumni Foundation for a food program for homeless students.
3) Approving $2,000 from the budget for the Celebrate Lynnwood project.
4) A workshop on the club management software DACdb.
Second Harvest Food Bank of Central Florida operates food banks in Orlando, Daytona Beach, and West Melbourne that provide food to partner agencies across six counties. In the past year, it served over 732,000 different people, a 152% increase over the past four years, as the economic downturn led to increased food insecurity. Despite unprecedented need, the food bank was able to distribute enough food for 17 million meals thanks to increased community support. It continues working to address hunger in the region and leverage donations efficiently.
PFORR Grant J Resume CV. Word Current as at July 2015Grant Pforr
Grant Pforr has extensive experience in local government and community organizations. He served on Gold Coast City Council for 8 years, achieving outcomes like the Hope Island Masterplan. He was involved in the Commonwealth Games committee and various advisory committees. Through his company and as a volunteer, he has led numerous community projects in watersports, lifesaving, and youth programs. He has received several awards for his decades of community service.
Understand the role & responsibilities as your Club’s Treasurer. Understand critical deadlines for Rotary International dues, District dues and submission of annual IRS forms. Learn how to access your club’s electronic semi-annual dues invoice from RI and submit payment electronically.
This document provides tips for Rotary clubs to succeed on social media. It recommends using Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram to communicate club activities, encourage attendance, and attract potential members. Specific tips include determining your audience and strategy, posting photos that showcase your club positively, using hashtags, and tagging members to maximize exposure. The goal is to inform others of your club's service while also promoting fellowship and fun through your social media presence.
Maintain your club’s essential club records using DACdb club management software. The session will review key elements used to run your club’s administrative operations including how to setup a committee structure. Included during the session will be a review of the advance administrative options including club dues, accounting and RI data integration.
Re-invigorate your club with a New Generations program. Introduce Rotary to the next generation, reach their peers, parents and more...all potential Rotarians! Session also includes a discussion on transitioning Rotaractors into Rotary. Information you need to organize and build the infrastructure of your Next Generation committee including best practices for governance and operation. Session also includes a discussion on transitioning Rotaractors into Rotary.
The document summarizes the annual meeting of the Montpelier Community Association. It includes the agenda which covers calling the meeting to order, reports from the secretary, president and board members, and guest speakers from local government. It also discusses past community events from the year, projects completed, the budget and financial report. The meeting aims to discuss old and new business and adjourn.
The Rotary Club of Lynnwood held its board meeting on September 17, 2014. Key discussion points included:
1) An issue with a participant who got a hole-in-one at the golf tournament not qualifying for the prize due to insurance policy details.
2) Approving a $13,500 grant request from the Edmonds Public Schools Alumni Foundation for a food program for homeless students.
3) Approving $2,000 from the budget for the Celebrate Lynnwood project.
4) A workshop on the club management software DACdb.
Second Harvest Food Bank of Central Florida operates food banks in Orlando, Daytona Beach, and West Melbourne that provide food to partner agencies across six counties. In the past year, it served over 732,000 different people, a 152% increase over the past four years, as the economic downturn led to increased food insecurity. Despite unprecedented need, the food bank was able to distribute enough food for 17 million meals thanks to increased community support. It continues working to address hunger in the region and leverage donations efficiently.
PFORR Grant J Resume CV. Word Current as at July 2015Grant Pforr
Grant Pforr has extensive experience in local government and community organizations. He served on Gold Coast City Council for 8 years, achieving outcomes like the Hope Island Masterplan. He was involved in the Commonwealth Games committee and various advisory committees. Through his company and as a volunteer, he has led numerous community projects in watersports, lifesaving, and youth programs. He has received several awards for his decades of community service.
Understand the role & responsibilities as your Club’s Treasurer. Understand critical deadlines for Rotary International dues, District dues and submission of annual IRS forms. Learn how to access your club’s electronic semi-annual dues invoice from RI and submit payment electronically.
This document provides tips for Rotary clubs to succeed on social media. It recommends using Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram to communicate club activities, encourage attendance, and attract potential members. Specific tips include determining your audience and strategy, posting photos that showcase your club positively, using hashtags, and tagging members to maximize exposure. The goal is to inform others of your club's service while also promoting fellowship and fun through your social media presence.
Maintain your club’s essential club records using DACdb club management software. The session will review key elements used to run your club’s administrative operations including how to setup a committee structure. Included during the session will be a review of the advance administrative options including club dues, accounting and RI data integration.
Re-invigorate your club with a New Generations program. Introduce Rotary to the next generation, reach their peers, parents and more...all potential Rotarians! Session also includes a discussion on transitioning Rotaractors into Rotary. Information you need to organize and build the infrastructure of your Next Generation committee including best practices for governance and operation. Session also includes a discussion on transitioning Rotaractors into Rotary.
This document provides an overview of Rotary membership trends from the 1920s to present day. It discusses how each generation has become less civically engaged over time according to the "Bowling Alone" study. The document also notes that newer generations still want to volunteer but prefer shorter commitments and more flexibility. It emphasizes that clubs must adapt to changing needs by offering mentoring, engagement opportunities, and mixed online/in-person meetings. Survey results show satisfaction is highest when members feel welcomed, encouraged to participate, and that service is effective.
Rotary Youth Exchange (RYE)
Each year high school students participate in the Rotary Youth Exchange program worldwide, learning a new language and experiencing a new culture, through the efforts and dedication of Rotary volunteers.
Come and out how your club can participate and make a difference in a young person’s life, your community, your district and the world.
This document provides resources for Rotary clubs and districts, including contact information for various coordinators, the Club and District Support team, and a membership officer. It also lists online tools available for Rotary clubs and asks the reader to name additional district resources, highlighting the district website and Rotary Club Central. The final section notes that in the last Rotary year, 92% of clubs reached a membership plateau of 15 or more and all clubs posted between 1 and 15 members, encouraging an even better performance this year.
Review the process for planning a grant, applying for a grant and implementing a grant.
Mandatory attendance if your club has submitted a District Grant application or plans on submitting a Global Grant application for the 2016-2017 Rotary year.
The document announces upcoming Rotary Leadership Institute (RLI) leadership courses and events for District 6970. RLI offers four leadership courses - Parts I through III and a graduate course - that must be taken in order, focusing on individual Rotarians, Rotary clubs, and the Rotary journey. It provides the dates and locations for two upcoming RLI leadership schools on August 6, 2016 and February 18, 2017 in Flagler/Palm Coast and Orange Park, Florida respectively.
The document summarizes the Rotary Youth Exchange (RYE) program, which provides opportunities for high school students to spend an academic year studying abroad. It discusses the program's goals of international understanding and its operation by volunteer Rotarians. Details provided include current exchange countries and student numbers in Florida district 6970. The roles and commitments of host families, clubs, and counselors are outlined. Key upcoming dates are listed.
This program will outline the responsibilities for all Rotary Youth Exchange volunteers. Discussions
will review both Rotary International, as well as Department of State rules and regulations needed for a Rotary Club to host international students.
For those Rotary volunteer attendees, including Club level Youth Exchange Officer’s and Club Counselors, this session will meet necessary DOS and RI certification requirements.
Sunil Manohar Singh is a Deputy Manager at Engineers India Limited with over 8 years of experience in process design and engineering for oil and gas upstream and refinery units. He has extensive experience in areas such as process simulation, mass and heat balancing, equipment sizing, utility systems design, and commissioning assistance. Mr. Singh holds an MBA in Marketing and a B.Tech in Chemical Engineering and is proficient in software such as HYSYS, PRO-II, and Aspen FlareNet.
Shrawani Mandapati is a results-driven HR professional with over 4 years of experience handling all aspects of HR including recruitment, training, performance management, and employee relations. She currently works as an HR Executive at Prime KI Software Solutions, where her responsibilities include campus recruitment, onboarding, training, compensation planning, and maintaining HR systems and compliance. She has an MBA in HR and Marketing and is seeking new challenges where she can continue developing her skills and contributing to organizational goals.
Mobile ad hoc network (MANETs) is an emerging
area with practical applications. One such field concerns
mobile ad hoc networks (MANETs) in which mobile nodes
organize themselves in a network without the help of any
predefined infrastructure. Securing MANETs is an important
part of deploying and utilizing them, since them are often
used in critical applications where data and communications
integrity in important. Existing solutions for wireless
networks can be used to obtain a certain level of such security.
Nevertheless, these solutions may not always be sufficient, as
ad-hoc networks have their own vulnerabilities that cannot
be addressed by these solutions. To obtain an acceptable level
of security in such a context, traditional security solutions
should be coupled with an intrusion detection mechanism.
We propose using a quantitative method to detect intrusion in
MANETS with mobile nodes. Our method is a behavioral
anomaly based system, which makes it dynamic, scalable,
configurable and robust. Finally, we verify our method by
running ns2 simulations with mobile nodes using Ad-hoc ondemand
Distance Vector (AODV) routing. It is observed that
the malicious node detection rate is very good, and the false
positive detection rate is low
Radiance 2017 Credit and Accounts Receivable Innovation ConferenceElaine M. Nowak
This document provides an agenda for a conference taking place in Houston, Texas from February 20-22, 2017. The agenda lists sessions on various dates and times covering topics such as credit management, receivables automation, deductions management, and payments processing. Speakers are listed from companies like Starbucks, Adidas, McCormick, Procter & Gamble, and HighRadius. Social events include networking receptions and a 1980s themed happy hour with a live band. The document provides location details for sessions, meals, and other events held during the conference.
This document contains the resume of D.K. Gupta. It summarizes his contact information, objective, professional qualifications including an LL.B, PGCM in HR, and MBA in HR. It details his over 10 years of experience in HR roles in various industries. It lists his work experience at companies like Jakson Limited, A2Z Infrastructure Ltd, Viraj Group, and GGG Fashion Accessories Pvt Ltd. It outlines his areas of expertise and responsibilities including payroll management, statutory compliances, training, and industrial relations. It provides his academic qualifications and knowledge of software. It concludes with his expected salary package, fields of interest, and personal details.
This document appears to be a game of Jeopardy about Rotaract clubs that was presented to educate Rotaractors. It includes categories of information and clues about starting a Rotaract club, club committees, governance topics, Rotaract handbooks and policies, and other important details. Players were asked questions and prompted to provide specific details or names as the answers. The game aimed to inform Rotaractors about key aspects of successfully operating a Rotaract club.
This document provides an overview of Docker Swarm 1.12, including:
- Docker Swarm allows clustering of Docker engines into a single virtual engine for orchestrating services across nodes.
- In Swarm, an application consists of one or more services running on software defined networks, and each service can connect to multiple networks.
- Swarm has manager nodes that orchestrate tasks and worker nodes that execute tasks, and services are scaled through replicated or global tasks distributed across nodes.
- Key Swarm features include load balancing, high scalability, failover/availability, and flexible container scheduling policies.
- The document concludes with an example Swarm demo of creating a cluster and deploying/managing services.
This document provides an introduction and table of contents for a biography about Mohamed Hamad Satti, a pioneer in medical research in Sudan. It discusses Satti's early life and education, his career establishing laboratories and research institutions, and his major research expeditions studying diseases like leishmaniasis, fevers, and onchocerciasis. The biography will cover Satti's teaching initiatives, publications, recognition received, and contemporaries in the field of Sudanese medicine. It acknowledges those who contributed information about Satti and outlines the goals of documenting pioneers of Sudanese medicine through this series.
The document provides an overview of HighRadius Corporation and its products for automating SAP Financial Supply Chain Management (FSCM) modules. HighRadius specializes in accelerators and software-as-a-service solutions for cash application, collections, deductions, and credit management that fill gaps in SAP's FSCM offerings. Their products include dispute resolution, credit decisioning, cash application, and collections management tools that integrate with SAP modules. The document demonstrates some of these products' key features like credit scoring, workflow, dispute case processing, and collections management.
This document provides an overview and statistics related to tourism in Southwest Nova Scotia. Some key points:
- Visitation to Nova Scotia in 2013 was 1.1 million people, similar to 2012 levels.
- The top provinces/states that visitors to the region came from were Nova Scotia, Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, and the US.
- The Destination Southwest Nova Association (DSWNA) aims to grow tourism in the region by 1% through increasing length of stay, visitation, and spending.
- Marketing initiatives include improving the website, developing itineraries, and partnering with other organizations.
- A visitor satisfaction survey was completed with 469 respondents between May-October 2013. Most visitors
This document provides an overview of Rotary membership trends from the 1920s to present day. It discusses how each generation has become less civically engaged over time according to the "Bowling Alone" study. The document also notes that newer generations still want to volunteer but prefer shorter commitments and more flexibility. It emphasizes that clubs must adapt to changing needs by offering mentoring, engagement opportunities, and mixed online/in-person meetings. Survey results show satisfaction is highest when members feel welcomed, encouraged to participate, and that service is effective.
Rotary Youth Exchange (RYE)
Each year high school students participate in the Rotary Youth Exchange program worldwide, learning a new language and experiencing a new culture, through the efforts and dedication of Rotary volunteers.
Come and out how your club can participate and make a difference in a young person’s life, your community, your district and the world.
This document provides resources for Rotary clubs and districts, including contact information for various coordinators, the Club and District Support team, and a membership officer. It also lists online tools available for Rotary clubs and asks the reader to name additional district resources, highlighting the district website and Rotary Club Central. The final section notes that in the last Rotary year, 92% of clubs reached a membership plateau of 15 or more and all clubs posted between 1 and 15 members, encouraging an even better performance this year.
Review the process for planning a grant, applying for a grant and implementing a grant.
Mandatory attendance if your club has submitted a District Grant application or plans on submitting a Global Grant application for the 2016-2017 Rotary year.
The document announces upcoming Rotary Leadership Institute (RLI) leadership courses and events for District 6970. RLI offers four leadership courses - Parts I through III and a graduate course - that must be taken in order, focusing on individual Rotarians, Rotary clubs, and the Rotary journey. It provides the dates and locations for two upcoming RLI leadership schools on August 6, 2016 and February 18, 2017 in Flagler/Palm Coast and Orange Park, Florida respectively.
The document summarizes the Rotary Youth Exchange (RYE) program, which provides opportunities for high school students to spend an academic year studying abroad. It discusses the program's goals of international understanding and its operation by volunteer Rotarians. Details provided include current exchange countries and student numbers in Florida district 6970. The roles and commitments of host families, clubs, and counselors are outlined. Key upcoming dates are listed.
This program will outline the responsibilities for all Rotary Youth Exchange volunteers. Discussions
will review both Rotary International, as well as Department of State rules and regulations needed for a Rotary Club to host international students.
For those Rotary volunteer attendees, including Club level Youth Exchange Officer’s and Club Counselors, this session will meet necessary DOS and RI certification requirements.
Sunil Manohar Singh is a Deputy Manager at Engineers India Limited with over 8 years of experience in process design and engineering for oil and gas upstream and refinery units. He has extensive experience in areas such as process simulation, mass and heat balancing, equipment sizing, utility systems design, and commissioning assistance. Mr. Singh holds an MBA in Marketing and a B.Tech in Chemical Engineering and is proficient in software such as HYSYS, PRO-II, and Aspen FlareNet.
Shrawani Mandapati is a results-driven HR professional with over 4 years of experience handling all aspects of HR including recruitment, training, performance management, and employee relations. She currently works as an HR Executive at Prime KI Software Solutions, where her responsibilities include campus recruitment, onboarding, training, compensation planning, and maintaining HR systems and compliance. She has an MBA in HR and Marketing and is seeking new challenges where she can continue developing her skills and contributing to organizational goals.
Mobile ad hoc network (MANETs) is an emerging
area with practical applications. One such field concerns
mobile ad hoc networks (MANETs) in which mobile nodes
organize themselves in a network without the help of any
predefined infrastructure. Securing MANETs is an important
part of deploying and utilizing them, since them are often
used in critical applications where data and communications
integrity in important. Existing solutions for wireless
networks can be used to obtain a certain level of such security.
Nevertheless, these solutions may not always be sufficient, as
ad-hoc networks have their own vulnerabilities that cannot
be addressed by these solutions. To obtain an acceptable level
of security in such a context, traditional security solutions
should be coupled with an intrusion detection mechanism.
We propose using a quantitative method to detect intrusion in
MANETS with mobile nodes. Our method is a behavioral
anomaly based system, which makes it dynamic, scalable,
configurable and robust. Finally, we verify our method by
running ns2 simulations with mobile nodes using Ad-hoc ondemand
Distance Vector (AODV) routing. It is observed that
the malicious node detection rate is very good, and the false
positive detection rate is low
Radiance 2017 Credit and Accounts Receivable Innovation ConferenceElaine M. Nowak
This document provides an agenda for a conference taking place in Houston, Texas from February 20-22, 2017. The agenda lists sessions on various dates and times covering topics such as credit management, receivables automation, deductions management, and payments processing. Speakers are listed from companies like Starbucks, Adidas, McCormick, Procter & Gamble, and HighRadius. Social events include networking receptions and a 1980s themed happy hour with a live band. The document provides location details for sessions, meals, and other events held during the conference.
This document contains the resume of D.K. Gupta. It summarizes his contact information, objective, professional qualifications including an LL.B, PGCM in HR, and MBA in HR. It details his over 10 years of experience in HR roles in various industries. It lists his work experience at companies like Jakson Limited, A2Z Infrastructure Ltd, Viraj Group, and GGG Fashion Accessories Pvt Ltd. It outlines his areas of expertise and responsibilities including payroll management, statutory compliances, training, and industrial relations. It provides his academic qualifications and knowledge of software. It concludes with his expected salary package, fields of interest, and personal details.
This document appears to be a game of Jeopardy about Rotaract clubs that was presented to educate Rotaractors. It includes categories of information and clues about starting a Rotaract club, club committees, governance topics, Rotaract handbooks and policies, and other important details. Players were asked questions and prompted to provide specific details or names as the answers. The game aimed to inform Rotaractors about key aspects of successfully operating a Rotaract club.
This document provides an overview of Docker Swarm 1.12, including:
- Docker Swarm allows clustering of Docker engines into a single virtual engine for orchestrating services across nodes.
- In Swarm, an application consists of one or more services running on software defined networks, and each service can connect to multiple networks.
- Swarm has manager nodes that orchestrate tasks and worker nodes that execute tasks, and services are scaled through replicated or global tasks distributed across nodes.
- Key Swarm features include load balancing, high scalability, failover/availability, and flexible container scheduling policies.
- The document concludes with an example Swarm demo of creating a cluster and deploying/managing services.
This document provides an introduction and table of contents for a biography about Mohamed Hamad Satti, a pioneer in medical research in Sudan. It discusses Satti's early life and education, his career establishing laboratories and research institutions, and his major research expeditions studying diseases like leishmaniasis, fevers, and onchocerciasis. The biography will cover Satti's teaching initiatives, publications, recognition received, and contemporaries in the field of Sudanese medicine. It acknowledges those who contributed information about Satti and outlines the goals of documenting pioneers of Sudanese medicine through this series.
The document provides an overview of HighRadius Corporation and its products for automating SAP Financial Supply Chain Management (FSCM) modules. HighRadius specializes in accelerators and software-as-a-service solutions for cash application, collections, deductions, and credit management that fill gaps in SAP's FSCM offerings. Their products include dispute resolution, credit decisioning, cash application, and collections management tools that integrate with SAP modules. The document demonstrates some of these products' key features like credit scoring, workflow, dispute case processing, and collections management.
This document provides an overview and statistics related to tourism in Southwest Nova Scotia. Some key points:
- Visitation to Nova Scotia in 2013 was 1.1 million people, similar to 2012 levels.
- The top provinces/states that visitors to the region came from were Nova Scotia, Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, and the US.
- The Destination Southwest Nova Association (DSWNA) aims to grow tourism in the region by 1% through increasing length of stay, visitation, and spending.
- Marketing initiatives include improving the website, developing itineraries, and partnering with other organizations.
- A visitor satisfaction survey was completed with 469 respondents between May-October 2013. Most visitors
This document summarizes the annual meeting of the National Sea Grant Focus Teams held on October 14, 2010. It discusses the activities and accomplishments of the four focus teams over the past year: Safe and Sustainable Seafood Supply, Hazard Resilient Coastal Communities, Sustainable Coastal Development, and Healthy Coastal Ecosystems. It also reviews the operating procedures of the focus teams and recognizes some outstanding contributions. Finally, it presents an overview of the procedural manual for the focus teams regarding their roles, activities, membership, communication, and responsibilities in facilitating national planning within the Sea Grant network.
CO meeting 3rd july 2014 The Year It WasRCNelsonBay
This document summarizes the highlights and activities of the Rotary Club of Nelson Bay for the 2013-14 year. It notes that over $75,000 was raised, including over $30,000 in grants and donations. New members joined and scholarships were awarded. Various service projects were conducted including installing binoculars, charity golf days, foundation grants, and youth programs.
APWA Central FL Branch FEB 2014 NewsletterAmy Blaida
The Central Florida Branch newsletter provides information on upcoming events, member spotlights, project updates, and articles of interest to members. Key information includes:
- Upcoming events in February-July 2014, including an E-Week transportation summit, Give Kids the World landscape day, and the APWA Florida conference.
- Spotlights on members who have received awards or promotions.
- An update on the extreme village makeover project at Give Kids the World, including participation from APWA CFB members.
- A project spotlight on the Kissimmee Trail pedestrian bridge over John Young Parkway, highlighting its design and green features.
This document is a resume for Sydney Lindblad, who has over 5 years of experience in event planning, logistics, marketing, and customer service in parks and recreation and non-profit organizations. Currently, Sydney is the Beach Services Supervisor for St. Johns County Parks and Recreation, where she manages revenue programs and special events on 42 miles of beaches. Sydney is also a board member and project coordinator for Keepers of the Coast, a non-profit where she plans beach cleanups and an annual sea turtle festival.
This issue of East Side Living magazine highlights several neighborhood events and features for July 2016. It announces that an Alzheimer's Association auction raised funds for the Rhode Island chapter. It profiles Wendy Schiller, a professor and chair of the political science department at Brown University, as the "Meet Your Neighbor" feature. The publication also recaps a pre-Memorial Day celebration and debuts a new "Home of the Month" and "Living Spaces" section featuring local homes.
Print focused retail advertising and illustrationHermes Guzman
This document provides a summary of the 2013 annual report for the Northeast Region of the Boy Scouts of America. It includes statistics on membership numbers, councils that achieved Gold status or improved in the Journey to Excellence program, award recipients for camping, fundraising, and scholarships. It also honors two Scouts who earned the Honor Medal with Crossed Palms for risking their lives to save others.
Kiribati Agritourism Policy Setting Workshop 2019
Workshop Policy Setting for Improved Linkages Between Agriculture, Trade and Tourism: Strengthening the Local Agrifood sector and Promoting Healthy Food in Agritourism.
Workshop Programme Organised by the Government of Kiribati and Kiribati Chamber of Commerce and Industry
In collaboration with the Pacific Community, CTA, PIPSO and SPTO.
Tarawa, 15th -16th January 2019, Kiribati
Venue: RAK Boardroom, Antebuka
Municipal Budgets, Capital Improvements Planning & Public FundingShaun Wilson
This document summarizes a presentation on municipal budgeting and capital improvements planning. It discusses typical budget cycles and how they differ from public funding opportunities. Capital improvements are defined as investments over $5,000 with a lifespan over 3 years. The presentation recommends developing a 5-year capital plan through a committee process. It provides a case study of Viroqua, WI's plan, which prioritizes projects, estimates costs, and identifies funding sources like utility funds, borrowing, and grants to maintain affordable rates.
This document appears to be from a State of the Affiliated company event, recognizing top performing agents and teams from the past year. It lists various award categories for individual producer performance based on annual gross commission, as well as awards for rookie of the year, quality service, leadership, and foundation contributions. Several top producing individuals and teams are recognized in each category.
City of Gautier - State Of The City Presentation City of Gautier
This document provides an overview of the city of Gautier, Mississippi from the mayor. It discusses the city's quality of life which includes golf courses, parks, and recreation areas. It also outlines the city's education system including blue ribbon schools and a community college. A history of Gautier is presented discussing historic sites. Financial information is given for the general fund, water and sewer fund, and solid waste fund. Accomplishments under the current administration are highlighted such as open government initiatives and development projects. Future goals for the city are outlined.
The WDCEP, in partnership with Office of the Deputy Mayor for Planning & Economic Development and the Office of Planning, hosted a Start it in 7: Strategic Spaces Tour for retailers, restauranteurs and entrepreneurs to highlight the economic opportunities in Ward 7 (3/20/14).
Ottawa County is facing challenges of declining groundwater levels and increasing salt concentrations in its deep bedrock aquifer. To address this, the county has developed a guidebook outlining education, integration, and mitigation strategies. The education strategies include an outreach campaign using multimedia, maintaining an online groundwater resource website, developing youth education curriculum, and partnering with local colleges and libraries for additional education opportunities.
APWA FL Chapter Membership Report OCT 2014Amy Blaida
The document provides the membership committee report from the APWA Florida Chapter Executive Committee meeting in October 2014. It includes information on membership numbers, recruitment and retention efforts, branch activities, and young professionals group activities. The key points are:
- Total Florida chapter membership as of September 2014 was 1408, a 0.21% increase from June 2014.
- The Gold Coast branch won the branch competition in October for highest percentage of new members added.
- Recruitment and retention efforts will continue focusing on retention and branch/individual competitions.
- The young professionals group held 5 events in 2013-2014 and has 2 upcoming events planned.
- Continuing efforts are outlined to improve communication with
APWA Central FL Branch Summer 2013 NewsletterAmy Blaida
The City of Casselberry has begun taking a more rigorous approach to comprehensively assessing, maintaining, repairing and improving its 63 miles of roads and sidewalks over the past five years. In 2008, the City adopted the PASER program to evaluate pavement conditions, finding by 2009 that 75% of streets needed work ranging from preventative maintenance to reconstruction. The City is now implementing a multi-year pavement management plan focused on cost-effective preservation. It is also improving sidewalk and ADA accessibility through repairs and an ongoing assessment program. Overall the proactive approach has significantly extended the life of Casselberry's transportation infrastructure.
Barry Berejikian's presentation on Steelhead survival rates in Puget Sound, at the 2014 Nisqually Annual Program Review. Barry is a scientist for NOAA.
The Buffalo Olmsted Parks Conservancy secured over $1.5 million in grants and donations to fund projects updating its 21st Century Plan, including the MLK Jr. Pathways Project, renovations around Hoyt Lake, and stabilizing Soldiers Circle. Total cash gifts were $1.373 million with additional capital and unrestricted pledges of $1.475 million. Upcoming activities include securing funds for the 21st Century Plan, donor outreach, a new contract, and fall tree planting.
Ottawa County Parks annual report for fiscal year 2019 (10/1/2018-9/30/2019). Thank you to volunteer photographer Mike Lozon for providing many of the images used in this report.
Similar to 2016 Rotary Serving Humanity Lunch Presentation (20)
RFP for Reno's Community Assistance CenterThis Is Reno
Property appraisals completed in May for downtown Reno’s Community Assistance and Triage Centers (CAC) reveal that repairing the buildings to bring them back into service would cost an estimated $10.1 million—nearly four times the amount previously reported by city staff.
This report explores the significance of border towns and spaces for strengthening responses to young people on the move. In particular it explores the linkages of young people to local service centres with the aim of further developing service, protection, and support strategies for migrant children in border areas across the region. The report is based on a small-scale fieldwork study in the border towns of Chipata and Katete in Zambia conducted in July 2023. Border towns and spaces provide a rich source of information about issues related to the informal or irregular movement of young people across borders, including smuggling and trafficking. They can help build a picture of the nature and scope of the type of movement young migrants undertake and also the forms of protection available to them. Border towns and spaces also provide a lens through which we can better understand the vulnerabilities of young people on the move and, critically, the strategies they use to navigate challenges and access support.
The findings in this report highlight some of the key factors shaping the experiences and vulnerabilities of young people on the move – particularly their proximity to border spaces and how this affects the risks that they face. The report describes strategies that young people on the move employ to remain below the radar of visibility to state and non-state actors due to fear of arrest, detention, and deportation while also trying to keep themselves safe and access support in border towns. These strategies of (in)visibility provide a way to protect themselves yet at the same time also heighten some of the risks young people face as their vulnerabilities are not always recognised by those who could offer support.
In this report we show that the realities and challenges of life and migration in this region and in Zambia need to be better understood for support to be strengthened and tuned to meet the specific needs of young people on the move. This includes understanding the role of state and non-state stakeholders, the impact of laws and policies and, critically, the experiences of the young people themselves. We provide recommendations for immediate action, recommendations for programming to support young people on the move in the two towns that would reduce risk for young people in this area, and recommendations for longer term policy advocacy.
Food safety, prepare for the unexpected - So what can be done in order to be ready to address food safety, food Consumers, food producers and manufacturers, food transporters, food businesses, food retailers can ...
The Antyodaya Saral Haryana Portal is a pioneering initiative by the Government of Haryana aimed at providing citizens with seamless access to a wide range of government services
United Nations World Oceans Day 2024; June 8th " Awaken new dephts".Christina Parmionova
The program will expand our perspectives and appreciation for our blue planet, build new foundations for our relationship to the ocean, and ignite a wave of action toward necessary change.
Combined Illegal, Unregulated and Unreported (IUU) Vessel List.Christina Parmionova
The best available, up-to-date information on all fishing and related vessels that appear on the illegal, unregulated, and unreported (IUU) fishing vessel lists published by Regional Fisheries Management Organisations (RFMOs) and related organisations. The aim of the site is to improve the effectiveness of the original IUU lists as a tool for a wide variety of stakeholders to better understand and combat illegal fishing and broader fisheries crime.
To date, the following regional organisations maintain or share lists of vessels that have been found to carry out or support IUU fishing within their own or adjacent convention areas and/or species of competence:
Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR)
Commission for the Conservation of Southern Bluefin Tuna (CCSBT)
General Fisheries Commission for the Mediterranean (GFCM)
Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission (IATTC)
International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT)
Indian Ocean Tuna Commission (IOTC)
Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organisation (NAFO)
North East Atlantic Fisheries Commission (NEAFC)
North Pacific Fisheries Commission (NPFC)
South East Atlantic Fisheries Organisation (SEAFO)
South Pacific Regional Fisheries Management Organisation (SPRFMO)
Southern Indian Ocean Fisheries Agreement (SIOFA)
Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC)
The Combined IUU Fishing Vessel List merges all these sources into one list that provides a single reference point to identify whether a vessel is currently IUU listed. Vessels that have been IUU listed in the past and subsequently delisted (for example because of a change in ownership, or because the vessel is no longer in service) are also retained on the site, so that the site contains a full historic record of IUU listed fishing vessels.
Unlike the IUU lists published on individual RFMO websites, which may update vessel details infrequently or not at all, the Combined IUU Fishing Vessel List is kept up to date with the best available information regarding changes to vessel identity, flag state, ownership, location, and operations.
Jennifer Schaus and Associates hosts a complimentary webinar series on The FAR in 2024. Join the webinars on Wednesdays and Fridays at noon, eastern.
Recordings are on YouTube and the company website.
https://www.youtube.com/@jenniferschaus/videos
Working with data is a challenge for many organizations. Nonprofits in particular may need to collect and analyze sensitive, incomplete, and/or biased historical data about people. In this talk, Dr. Cori Faklaris of UNC Charlotte provides an overview of current AI capabilities and weaknesses to consider when integrating current AI technologies into the data workflow. The talk is organized around three takeaways: (1) For better or sometimes worse, AI provides you with “infinite interns.” (2) Give people permission & guardrails to learn what works with these “interns” and what doesn’t. (3) Create a roadmap for adding in more AI to assist nonprofit work, along with strategies for bias mitigation.
2. 2015-16 Foundation Team
DRFC 2013-17 – PDG Cynde Covington (Southpoint)
DRFC 2018-20 – PDG Art MacQueen (Flagler Beach)
District Grants Chair – Claudio Spiguel (Gainesville)
Annual Giving Chair – Art Shuster (Amelia Island Sunrise)
Endowment Fund Chair – Bruce Barber (Ponte Vedra Beach)
Paul Harris Society Chair – Rich Turnbull (Coastal St. Johns)
End Polio Now Chair – Steve Hole (New Smyrna Beach)
Alumni Chair – PDG Ken Baker (West Jacksonville)
Rotary Has Heart Chair – PDG John Thompson
Jaguars/Rotary Partnership – Theresa Smith (Amelia Island Sunrise)
The PLAYERS Partnership – Clare Berry (Ponte Vedra Beach)
TPC Charity of the Day – Meghan Hotchkiss (South Jacksonville Satellite)
DISTRICT 6970
3. 2015-16 Share Committee
District Grants Chair – Claudio Spiguel
2016-17 DG Marshall Butler
2017-18 DG Brent Coates
Elena Frasier – Gainesville
Michelle Baker – Jacksonville
Greg Bartholomew – Port Orange South Daytona
Sunil Misra – Orange Park Sunset
Joe Lowry – Downtown Gainesville
DISTRICT 6970
4. 2015-16 Stewardship Audit Committee
Chair – PDG Bill Griffin
Chris Eidson - Riverside
Chad King - Gainesville
Carolyn Mudgette – St. Augustine Sunrise
Jim Kotas – Port Orange South Daytona
Jared Dollar – Palatka Sunrise
Derek Mears – DeLand Breakfast
DISTRICT 6970
5. 2015-16 Scholarship Committee
Co-Chair – Wayne Smith (Gainesville Sunrise)
Co-Chair – Ram Nayar (Daytona Beach West)
Jeff Michelman (Past Chair) – Jacksonville Oceanside
Marilee Walsh – Flagler County
Gretchen Espinetti - Hastings
Jeff Abbott – New Smyrna Beach
DISTRICT 6970
7. TRF Zone Contribution Summary
Top Five Zones
For The Twelve Months Ended 30 June 2016
ZONES TOTAL
10 Section A: Southern part of Rep. of Korea; Section B: China, Macau, Mongolia, Taiwan 13,428,269
26 USA - Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada 10,381,029
9 Northern part of Rep. of Korea 9,989,740
24 Canada, Eastern Russia, St. Pierre & Miquelon, USA - Alaska, Maine, Michigan, New York, Washington 8,310,543
33 USA - District of Columbia, Delaware, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia 7,707,673
34 All of the Caribbean, Guyana, Puerto Rico, Suriname, USA - Florida, Georgia 7,316,415
ZONES ANNUAL FUND
10 Section A: Southern part of Rep. of Korea; Section B: China, Macau, Mongolia, Taiwan 9,158,120
9 Northern part of Rep. of Korea 8,931,418
33 USA - District of Columbia, Delaware, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia 5,653,646
34 All of the Caribbean, Guyana, Puerto Rico, Suriname, USA - Florida, Georgia 5,249,179
26 USA - Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada 4,973,949
ZONES
POLIOPLUS
FUND
24 Canada, Eastern Russia, St. Pierre & Miquelon, USA - Alaska, Maine, Michigan, New York, Washington 1,959,354
8 Australia, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Timor Leste 1,246,033
34 All of the Caribbean, Guyana, Puerto Rico, Suriname, USA - Florida, Georgia 1,227,283
33 USA - District of Columbia, Delaware, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia 1,209,741
26 USA - Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada 1,177,270
Zones
Per Capita
Contributions
9 Northern part of Rep. of Korea $223.24
26 USA - Arizona, California, Hawaii, Nevada $168.75
33 USA - District of Columbia, Delaware, Maryland, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, West $166.96
10 Section A: Southern part of Rep. of Korea; Section B: China, Macau, Mongolia, Taiwan $165.05
34 All of the Caribbean, Guyana, Puerto Rico, Suriname, USA - Florida, Georgia $161.86
8. Top Five Districts Zone 34
Zone District Total
Contribution
Location
34 6900 1,314,110 USA--(Georgia)
34 6960 1,143,663 USA--(Florida)
34 6970 750,088 USA--(Florida)
34 6910 616,705 USA--(Georgia)
34 6950 510,089 USA--(Florida)
9.
10. DISTRICT 6970
Annual Giving $477,356
Per Capita Giving $150.92
PolioPlus $243,621
Total Giving $750,088**Total Giving includes term gifts and funds to approved grants
Endowment $25,475
12. ANNUAL FUND
100% Foundation Giving
Baker County Fleming Island
E-Club of Northeast Florida
Jacksonville Oceanside
New Smyrna Beach St. Augustine Sunrise
St. Johns
EREY / 100% Sustaining
Greater Gainesville
DISTRICT 6970
13. ANNUAL FUND
EREY / 100% Sustaining & 100% Foundation Giving
Bartram Trail Crescent City
Deerwood Downtown DeLand
Downtown Gainesville East Arlington
Edgewater Flagler Beach
Interlachen / Lakes Area Ocala Sunset
Orange Park Sunrise Orange Park Sunset
Ormond Beach Palatka Sunrise
Ponte Vedra Beach San Jose
San Marco Southpoint
DISTRICT 6970
14. 2015-16 Foundation Awards
ANNUAL GIVING
# 3 West Jacksonville $18,810
#2 Jacksonville $53,710
#1 Gainesville $58,070
DISTRICT 6970
15. 2015-16 Foundation Awards
PER CAPITA ANNUAL GIVING
# 3 Southpoint $325.68
# 2 Downtown Gainesville $372.17
#1 Orange Park Sunset $782.21
DISTRICT 6970
16. 2015-16 Foundation Awards
TOTAL GIVING
# 3 Ponte Vedra Beach $52,231.15
#2 Jacksonville $72,790
#1 Gainesville $80,475.64
DISTRICT 6970
17. 2015-16 Foundation Awards
PER CAPITA TOTAL GIVING
#3 Ponte Vedra Beach $508.07
#2 Orange Park Sunset $782.21
#1 Southpoint $1,004.43
DISTRICT 6970
21. TITLE | 2 1
Polio Endgame & Strategic Plan
• Polio virus detection and interruption
• Introduce IPV, Withdraw OPV
• Certification
• Legacy Planning
22. TITLE | 2 2
tOPV Poliovirus can (Rarely) Regain Ability to Cause Paralysis
• Polioviruses in tOPV are attenuated wild polioviruses (WPVs)
• Attenuation results in:
– Less ability to cause paralysis than WPV
– Less capacity to pass from person to person than WPV
– Similar induction of antibodies as WPV
• tOPV polioviruses can rarely mutate during replication and
become vaccine derived polioviruses (VDPVs) able to spread and
cause paralysis
– Can occur in areas with low polio vaccine coverage
WILD
Poliovirus
VDPV
24. TITLE | 2 4
• IPV complements tOPV by increasing
immunity to all three types of polioviruses
• After the switch:
– IPV will provide protection against
paralysis from type 2 polioviruses
– IPV will provide a degree of population
immunity to infections with type 2
polioviruses
– IPV will be used in responses to type 2
poliovirus outbreaks alongside
monovalent OPV 2 (mOPV2)
Why Introduce IPV?
25. TITLE | 2 5
Transition
Planning
KEY COMPONENTS of LEGACY PLANNING
1
Source: 'Legacy Planning Process for the Global Polio Eradication Initiative" (Nov 2013)
Sharing
Lessons
Learned
2
Maintaining/
Mainstreaming
Polio Functions
3
27. TITLE | 2 7
Pakistan, Afghanistan
& Nigeria (45%)
30 + “at risk” countries
(55%)
Where the money goes*
Based on July 2014 GPEI Financial Resources Required, 2013-18
AREAS OF
CONFLICT
GEOGRAPHICAL
BARRIERS
POLITICAL
BARRIERS
POOR
INFRASTRUCTURE
28. TITLE | 2 8
Sustaining Gains = Reaching every child
33. TITLE | 3 3
FUNDRAISING TARGETS
• $1,500 per club to receive the Certificate of
Appreciation
• $2,650 per club as part of the possible
2016-17 Presidential Citation
• 20% or more of DDF from Districts
• Clubs should set PolioPlus Goal in Rotary
Club Central
34. TITLE | 3 4
WORLD POLIO DAY 2016 IS EVERYWHERE
37. Polio Plus - Large Clubs
#3 Port Orange – South Daytona $9,587
#2 Jacksonville $18,830
#1 Ponte Vedra Beach $37,497
Polio Plus - Small Clubs
#3 New Smyrna Beach $7,275
#2 Palatka Sunrise $8,007
#1 Southpoint $19,005
DISTRICT 6970
38. Polio Plus – Per Capita Large Clubs
#3 Jacksonville Oceanside $155.03
#2 Port Orange – South Daytona $264.84
#1 Ponte Vedra Beach $364.05
Polio Plus – Per Capita Small Clubs
#3 Bartram Trail $226.42
#2 Coastal St. Johns $227.40
#1 Southpoint $678.75
DISTRICT 6970
40. Arch Klumph Society
Foundation Circle
Walter *& Helene *Booth Daytona Beach
John * & Jean Evans West Jacksonville
Trustees Circle
Donald & LaVonne Blackburn Ponte Vedra Beach
Russell & Susan Miller Palatka Sunrise
Wayne & Delores Weaver Jacksonville (Honorary)
*Deceased
DISTRICT 6970
41. Major Donors
Major Donor Level 4
Robert* & Dorothy* Langley – Jacksonville/South Jacksonville
Wilford & Eleanor Lyon – Jacksonville
Dahyabhai & Angela Patel – Port Orange South Daytona
Gary & Peggy Seaman – Flagler Beach
Alfred* and Agnes* Watson – Keystone Heights
Major Donor Level 3
Barry & Cynthia Covington – South Jacksonville / Southpoint
Lee & Georgia* Ledbetter – Orange Park
Frieda* & Wilfred* Morgan – DeLand
Kathy & Robert Somers – Flagler Beach
Jessie Ball Dupont Fund – Jacksonville
The Kendale Foundation – West Jacksonville
Major Donor Level 2
Mohan J. Bhoola – Ormond Beach
Ben Campen - Gainesville
Hal & Cynthia Gerow – Daytona Beach West
Thomas & Becky Grimes – Jacksonville
William* & Bonnie Huntley* - Palatka
CarolAnn Jeronimo & Michael Merchant - Edgewater
James & Kathy Kotas – Port Orange South Daytona
Fran & Gloria Markette – Daytona Beach West
42. Major Donors
Major Donor Level 2 (continued)
Daniel & Catherine Martinez - Palatka
William Ray Sr.* – Ocala Silver Springs
Constance & Ben Rowe Jr. – Downtown Gainesville
Richard & Marie Turnbull – Coastal St. Johns
Brent* & Naomi Williams – Gainesville
Edna Sproull Williams Foundation – Jacksonville
Major Donor Level 1
Arlington Daytona Beach
Aubrey* & Christine Daniel Peter Brooker
Bruce Duggar Richard & Anne Brown
Paul & Caren Felker
Baxter & Rosia Luther
Frances & William* Moredock Sr. Daytona Beach West
Ballard Simmons* Eugene Boleslawski
William & Diane Griffin
Debary-Deltona-Orange City Richard & Consuelo Hartmann
Howard* & Gloria* Hinsch Judith Lane
Thomas McDermott
DeLand
Dale Batten
Edward Lacey DeLand Breakfast
Gery Walker Terry Medlin
43. Major Donors
Major Donor Level 1 (Continued)
Downtown Gainesville Fernandina Beach
Donald Frowick Gary & Johnelle Snyder
Skender & Marilyn Islam
Albert Losch Jr. Flager Beach
Robert Robar Wolfgang Hertweck
Sharon & James Skiles III Arthur & Gingie MacQueen
E-Club of Northeast Florida Flalger County
Sandra Hartley Thea Hein-Mathen
Gainesville Gainesville Sunrise
Richard Allen Wayne Smith & Mitzi Austin
John Brunner
Joseph Crevasse III Greater Gainesville
Tony & Lynn Domenech Geroge & Jayne-Ellen Elmore
Wesley & Marcie Eubank Hugh Puder
Charles Gatton
Jerry Painter Green Cove Springs
Lee Pinkoson Theodore* Wilson
Davis & Judith Rembert
Michael Singer Interlachen/Lakes Area
Susan Spain Danny Hemphill
E. Travis York Jr* & Vermelle York
44. Major Donors
Major Donor Level 1 (Continued)
Jacksonville
Henry Autrey Ronald Autrey
Steven & Peggy Bacalis Henry Baker
Henry Beckwith Bryan Cooksey Jr.
Howard Dale John Davis
O’Neal & Alice Douglas John Fryer Jr.
Adm. Jonathan & Harriett Howe Percy Rosenbloom III
Atul Shah Charles Towers Jr*
Lawrence Randall Towers Edward Witt Sr
Jacksonville Oceanside Keystone Heights
Fred Fel Lee Jr James Swarr
Norman & Suellen Reimer
Mandarin New Smyrna Beach
James M. Barker IV Carlos Giraldo
Cecil & Maryilyn Gibson
George & Elizabeth Robbins
Wilson & Jo Anne Smith Ocala Southwest
Francis Van Hee Jr.
Orange Park
David & Sandra Faraldo Ocala Silver Springs
William & Margie Hudson Bonnie & Warren E. Daniels Sr
Louis* & Mary* Huntley
Kenneth & Donna Smallwood Ormond Beach
Kenneth* Doodigian
45. Major Donors
Major Donor Level 1 (Continued)
Palatka Ponte Vedra Beach
Anand Kuruvilla Kathleen Fehling
John & Charlene Mikell Jame Hoener
James Sackett
Robert & Catherine Stursberg
James Van Horn
Ponte Vedra Beach Sunset
Michael & Dana Anderson
Port Orange South Daytona Riverside
Hewitt Dupont Mark Meatte
Patrick & Tracy Hukill Daniel* O’Leary III
William* & Lois Lister
Susan Knapp South Jacksonville
William Thompson John Callender
Michael & Nancy Darragh
Southpoint Ted & Teala Milton
Robert & Kandy Hoenshel
Clark Vargas West Jacksonville
Michael & Caroline Corrigan
St. Augustine Sunrise Clint & Lane Dawkins
Micahel Fegen William & Eloise Gay
Warren Martin Joseph Hayworth III
Scott Imray
Phil & Nancy Voss
46. Paul Harris Society Members
Pledge $1,000 per year
Benefactors
$1,000 - $9,999
Bequest Society Members
Level 1 $10,000 - $24,999
Level 2 $25,000 - $49,999
Level 3 $50,000 - $99,999
Level 4 $100,000 - $249,999
Level 5 $250,000 - $499,999
Level 6 $500,000 - $999,999
Level 7 $1,000,000