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Russell Hampton
National Awards Services Inc.
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Speakers
Apr 09, 2019
Apr 16, 2019
Annual Blood Drive, fellowship and box lunch in Rickhouse.
Apr 23, 2019
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Prayer. Almighty God, whose springtime creative activity is being revealed in the natural world, and whose loe and mercy ae continuously revealed in the experiencesof our lives, we thank you for life and all its components, both good and adverse, because through both we are strengthened.

Bless now our fellowship and the food prepared for us. Through us speak to others of good and noble things. Amen.

The following is from Matt Monsour, Club Director - Service Projects:

"Mark your calendars in a different way for Tuesday, April 16.

This is the date for our Club’s annual blood drive. On that date, the Mississippi Blood Services “BUS” will be parked in front of The Rickhouse to make it convenient for us to make a blood donation. The “Bus” will be there from 9 AM to 3 PM." We will not have a regular meeting or speaker that day. The Rickhouse will have box lunches available starting at 10 AM. Members who donate before lunch can take their box lunch with them or eat it at The Rickhouse.
 
Not having a normal meeting and program creates an opportunity to come at your normal Tuesday noon meeting time and have an expanded time of unstructured fellowship. A blood donation is encouraged if you can donate, but certainly not required.  
 
Since the Blood Drive is a club service project every member who donates or attempts to donate will receive a makeup attendance credit in addition to being marked present for our Tuesday meeting on the 16th.
 
For those who can donate, starting Tuesday, April 2, there will be a signup sheet on the table so you can schedule a time to donate that best fits your schedule."

Birthdays And Anniversaries.

Birthdays:

  • Jon Turner                                         April 11
Anniversaries
  • None
Membership Anniversaries
  • Dorsey Carson                     5 years, April 09
This week’s Rotary Foundation Thought is about Rotary Clubs coming together to fight the Opioid Crisis.
 

Rotary clubs harness international connections to tackle U.S. opioid crisis

Clubs in Mexico, India, and Canada help members in New York launch community project

By 

New York Rotary members used support from inter- national partners to help them fight a major U.S. problem: opioid addiction. 

After attending a wrenching funeral for a young man who died from an opioid overdose, Lana K. Rouff, a member of the Rotary Club of Binghamton, New York, USA, knew she had to do something. 

“It was awful,” says Rouff. “I was so shaken by the shock and sadness at the funeral. The experience really stuck with me but also sparked me to do something.”

Rouff immediately talked with her fellow members, as well as other local clubs, about how they could alleviate the crisis in their communities in central and southern New York. 

After months of doing research and consulting with health officials, substance abuse experts, educators, and media professionals, they had a plan: a Rotary Foundation global grant project, totaling more than $107,000. 

The project’s initiatives would support those directly affected by the epidemic, educate communities about preventing and treating opioid addiction, and prevent drug abuse among local young people by training them in leadership skills and healthy decision making. 

  • 130 people die every day from opioid-related drug overdoses in the U.S.
  • 11  mil people abused prescription opioids in 2016
  • 47,000 people died from overdosing on opioids in 2017 
  • 9,000  + people died in Canada between 2016-18 from opioid-related deaths

But they still needed one more thing to meet The Rotary Foundation’s requirements and secure the funding — international partners.

Rouff again turned to Rotary's 1.2 million members in 35,000 clubs around the world. She found the support they needed. 

A Rotary club in Mexico was the first to volunteer, and then a Rotary club in Canada. Also, the Rotary clubs of Coimbatore Central and Madras Coromandel of India donated significant funds to keep the project going. 

Harnessing international support

Finding people outside of the U.S. to help with a predominantly American problem wasn’t easy, says Rouff.

“It wasn’t out of indifference to a problem in the U.S.,” says Rouff. “There just isn’t a strong understanding outside the country of how bad the opioid crisis really is.”

It took six months of searching before Rouff’s club connected with the Rotary Club of Tijuana Oeste, Baja California, Mexico. Sofia Sotomayor Magana rallied her fellow members to be the project’s international sponsor because she believed it was important to show support for their northern neighbors. 

Some in the Mexican club were hesitant, telling Sotomayor Magana that their resources and money should be allocated to local issues such as poverty and poor health care. But Sotomayor Magana persuaded them that it’s sometimes better to give than to receive. 

“We have an opportunity to help clubs in the U.S. make an impact on this horrible epidemic,” she says. “We know that this crisis can happen anywhere and can devastate any community. We see how bad it’s gotten. I’m proud we were able to get this important project off the ground.” 

The Rotary Club of Mississauga-Meadowvale, Ontario, Canada, also contributed funds and support to the project. Member Claudine LaRochelle says that the opioid crisis isn’t confined to the U.S.; provinces in Canada are also affected. Opioid-related overdoses killed 9,000 Canadians from 2016 to 2018. These overdoses are now the leading cause of death among Canadians ages 30-39. 

“When thinking of international assistance, we often think of countries far away from us, but help is also well-used when the crisis hits close to home,” says LaRochelle. 

Providing information and tools

Today’s opioid crisis is the deadliest drug epidemic in U.S. history. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that each day more than 130 people die from opioid-related drug overdoses, and millions more struggle with addiction. Since 2011, drug deaths in the U.S. have outpaced those caused by firearms, motor vehicle crashes, suicide, or homicide. In New York, it’s the leading cause of accidental deaths. 

Children and teens are not exempt from the crisis — nearly a quarter of U.S. high school seniors have had some exposure to prescription opioids — but they are the best targets for education and prevention, Rouff says. 

Over the past year and a half, the global grant funded a series of weekend seminars that brought together nearly 50 high school students from 11 schools. They gathered at the Heart of New York Teen Institute in Syracuse, New York, to gain the knowledge and confidence that will help them lead drug-free lives and the leadership skills to educate their peers about the dangers of drugs and alcohol. 

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"It gives me hope that projects like this can happen across the country. Rotary has the resources and know-how to tackle this problem. Nothing is too big for us." — Jo Ann Wickman, Rotary Club of Cortland, New York, USA

Hope for the future 

In their research for the project, Rouff and Wickman went on a “listening tour” across central and southern New York, visiting Rotary members who have been affected by opioids. 

The first lesson from the harrowing stories they heard: The epidemic affects families of every ethnic background and socio-economic standing. “Rich or poor, we saw it all,” says Rouff.

“I must admit that this hasn’t been my favorite experience,” Wickman says. “We worked with folks who have lost children and other family members. It was really heartbreaking.”

The two project leaders did some talking, too, recruiting members to get involved with their initiatives. Given the stigma associated with drug use, Wickman expected to encounter some resistance. “But just the opposite is happening,” she says. “They are eager and willing to get involved. It gives me hope that projects like this can happen across the country. Rotary has the resources and know-how to tackle this problem. Nothing is too big for us.”

Rouff acknowledges that the opioid addiction epidemic has no simple solutions. “But if the project can save one life, it’s worth it.”

 

Stories
Mississippi Business Group on Health Executive Director Speaks to Rotary Club of North Jackson
 

Murray Harber, Executive Director of the Mississippi Business Group on Health (MBGH) spoke to the Rotary Club of North Jackson at the Club’s April 2, 2019, meeting. The subject of Mr. Harber’s presentation was "Employer Health Management", i.e. workplace wellness and health. He cited data which conclude that 50% of a person’s lifetime health is determined by lifestyle. Family history is a 20% determiner, and environment 10%. The balance is chemicals, substance abuse, etc. He discussed the wellness program implemented by Southern Farm Bureau Life Insurance which included factors such as a healthy cafeteria, a Farmers' Market, incentives to live a healthy lifestyle, including workstation ergonomics, an active lifestyle, healthy eating and reduced sedentary times. The result has been reduced health benefit costs from the trend on which the company was embarked.

We thank Mr. Harber for his presentation and for his work on behalf of Mississippi companies and their employees. He is shown in the following photo with Club Member Marisa Davidson who introduced him.

 

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Christopher F. “Chris” Brantley Inducted into the Rotary Club of North Jackson

Christopher F. “Chris” Brantley was inducted into the Rotary Club of North Jackson at the Club’s March 26, 2019, meeting. Chris is the son of Club member Chris Brantley, who proposed him for membership. He is a Trust officer with Trustmark Bank and is Vice President/ President-Elect of the Estate Planning Council of Mississippi. He is a graduate of the University of Mississippi. He and his wife, Reynolds, have one son, George, and live in Northeast Jackson. Chris (center)  is shown in the following photo with his father (right) and his sponsor, Past President Kevin Russell (left).

We welcome Chris to our Club.

 

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“End it For Good” Founder Speaks to Rotary Club of North Jackson

Christina Dent, founder of End it for Good, a non-profit dedicated to ending the "War on Drugs", spoke to the Rotary Club of North Jackson at the Club’s March 26, 2019, meeting. Ms. Dent is the daughter-in-law of Club member Tommy Dent and the wife of former Club member Thomas Dent who spoke to the Club earlier in March about Child Protective Services. She is also the mother of three children and is a self-professed Conservative Christian. She graduated from Belhaven University with a degree in Bible Studies.

 

The essence of her talk is that the “War on Drugs” being conducted by our country is a dismal failure like its predecessor action the passage of the Prohibition of Alcohol. She said that she came to this conclusion only after extensively studying the results of the "War on Drugs." She began that study as a strong proponent of the "War on Drugs", but her position was changed as a result of those studies.

 

Both prohibitions have only succeeded in lowering the quality of the products they have made illegal and made both consumers and vendors of the products criminals. She cited the experience of Portugal which eliminated the criminalization of drug use. The result was a significant reduction in deaths due to drug use and in the use of the drugs and in drug-related crimes. Both injection drug use and addiction decreased significantly. In addition, the decriminalization of drugs in Portugal resulted in 6  drug overdose deaths per million people compared to 185 drug overdose deaths per million in the US.

 

Additionally, Portugal has been able to reduce its enforcement effort to the point that 90% of the cost is now focused on treatment and prevention compared with the US where 90% of the cost is in enforcement and 10% is for treatment and prevention.

 

Ms. Dent presented a Vicious Circle that exists in the US now where drug use leads to incarceration, disconnection from family and society, and ultimately to lifelong employment difficulty and a traumatic life. She cited the figures that Mississippi now has 3807 nonviolent offenders imprisoned at an annual cost of $68 million annually. Her bottom line was that if she wanted to design a system to keep addiction going on a massive scale, she would design the present War on Drugs.

 

We thank Ms. Dent for her presentation and for her work on behalf of Mississippi. She is shown in the following photo with her father-in-law Club member Tommy Dent and Club President Anna Powers (right).




 
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Pct. 4 Officers of the Quarter Recognized by Rotary Club of North Jackson
 

JPD officers Longino and Jefferson were honored as the Pct. 4 Officers of the Quarter by the Rotary Club of North Jackson at the Club’s March 19, 2019, meeting. They were honored for their pursuit and capture of three culprits that robbed a gasoline station/ convenience store in Northeast Jackson. The culprits fired on the officers who returned the fire and captured them.

 

Officers Longino (2nd from left) and Jefferson are shown with Club Past President Edley Jones (left) who chairs the Club’s Pct. 4 Officer of the Quarter Committee and Rotarian Steven O’Neill (right)in the following photo

 

Officers Longino and Jefferson are shown with Officer Longino’s mother Betty Longino in the next photo.

 

We thank them for their service to the citizens of Jackson and congratulate them on their recognition.

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EastGroup Properties founder, former Chairman Speaks to Rotary Club of North Jackson
 

Mr. Leland Speed founder, former chairman, and CEO of EastGroup Properties, a real estate investment organization with in excess of $1.0 billion in assets, and former Executive director of the Mississippi Development Authority spoke to the Rotary Club of North Jackson about charter schools at the Club’s March 19, 2019 meeting. He described the success of charter schools in increasing test scores, improving students’ behavior, and providing students with life skills. He also discussed the value of keeping fathers in homes to mold young people. He is shown preceding his talk with Club Past President Wyatt Emmerich, who introduced him and with Club Vice President and President-Elect Greg Campbell following his talk. We thank Mr. Speed for his talk and for his contributions to the State of Mississippi and its citizens.

 

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Club Vice President Speaks to Rotary Club of North Jackson

Greg Campbell, Club Vice President, and President-Elect spoke to the Rotary Club of North Jackson about his January trip to Guadalajara, Mexico as part of a District 6820 service project. He showed photos of the children they assisted, the hospital and organizations they served, and of the City of Guadalajara. His key point that trips like this are the reason Rotary exists, to serve others. He is already planning to return on the next service trip in February 2020. He also said that our club should host a Rotary Exchange student in 2020. Greg is shown in the following photo with Club President Anna Powers following his presentation.

We thank Greg for his presentation, for his passionate service to others, and for his service to our club.


 
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