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March 26, 2026 |
With the traditional ringing of the bell we bring this meeting to order!
Club member's attendance is recorded by logging in.
YOUR donation for making up with us helps fund our service projects!
Visitors are always welcome to browse and register without obligation.
Our club offers the flexibility of ROTARY ON YOUR TIME!
and an opportunity to remain connected with Rotary!

Welcome to this week’s meeting of the eClub of the State of Jefferson.
Hello eClub Members, welcome to this week’s weekly meeting.
So very sorry for my absence. The best part is that I belong to the State of Jefferson Rotary eClub, and I can attend a meeting or Coffee Chat wherever I am!
I hope you all enjoy this week’s meeting, and if you don’t hear from me for a couple of weeks, it just means I am enjoying family and friends.
Yours in Rotary,
Jackie

Jackie Oakley
2025-2026 Club President
The Four-Way Test
The Four-Way Test is a nonpartisan and nonsectarian ethical guide for Rotarians to use for their personal and professional relationships.
The test has been translated into more than 100 languages, and Rotarians recite it at club meetings:
Of the things we think, say or do
- Is it the TRUTH?
- Is it FAIR to all concerned?
- Will it build GOODWILL and BETTER FRIENDSHIPS?
- Will it be BENEFICIAL to all concerned?
email president@StateOfJeffersonRotary.org

Club Learning Assembly Registration opens in DACdb!
Saturday, April 11th 8:00am-3:30pm
Cottage Grove High School
Please join me and Chief Learning Officer Aimee Walsh and our special guest Zone Director-Elect, John Chase, on Saturday, April 11th 2026
for an opportunity to learn many areas of focus for Rotary Clubs.
This is not just a President-Elect event, we will be offering breakout sessions for any Rotarian that wishes to learn more about Rotary, which will include membership, grants, leadership, succession planning, and many other topics, so check out our registration at DACdb, which offers a complete line of options.
And don't forget our Fellowship Social Friday night at El Tapation Mexican Restaurant in Cottage Grove for appetizers and a no-host bar!
Looking forward to meeting all of you that can attend this amazing Rotary Event!
Bruce W Allen
District Governor 5110 2026/27
Rotary Club of Greater Albany
DGBruce2627@gmail.com
541-971-3007
The Vision of Rotary
"Together, we see a world where people unite and take action to create
lasting change across the globe, in our communities and in ourselves"
District Conference – Early Registration Is Now Open!
Registration is officially open for our District Conference, in Eugene at the Valley River Inn, May 15–17 — and this is one weekend you won’t want to miss.
This year’s theme, “Rotary, Take a Look. We’re More Than You Think,” invites us to rediscover the depth, creativity, and impact of Rotary. From inspiring keynote speakers to meaningful conversations and fresh ideas, the conference is designed to energize you and strengthen the connections that make our district thrive.
Early registration runs through March 31. Secure your spot now and help us build a vibrant, dynamic weekend.
Register Here (register as a guest if you don’t remember your DACdb login information.)
Weekly eClub "Coffee Chat" Zoom meetings
Tuesday at 12:00 PM PDT
These “fellowship” meetings are informal opportunities to get acquainted with each other. If it fits your schedule, we look forward to “seeing” you at the meetings. Enjoy talking about "stuff" like water witching/dowsing, green flashes at sunset, Christmas in Pakistan, and much much more.
March is Water and Sanitation Month
March is Water and Sanitation Month Clean water, sanitation, and hygiene education are basic necessities for a healthy environment and a productive life.
When people have access to clean water and sanitation, waterborne diseases decrease, children stay healthier and attend school more regularly, and mothers can spend less time carrying water and more time helping their families.
How Rotary makes help happen
Through water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) programs, Rotary’s people of action mobilize resources, form partnerships, and invest in infrastructure and training that yield long-term change.
Access to toilets in the Philippines
Rotary clubs and partners built 222 toilets, six rainwater collectors, seven communal handwashing stations, and 20 biosand filters. The project provided more than 1,000 people with access to proper toilet facilities and almost 600 people with a regular supply of clean water.Water for a community
Rotary clubs partnered with local organizations to install a rainwater harvesting and distribution center for 4,000 people in Papua New Guinea. They also delivered training programs for women in the community and students in 35 schools.
Turning crutches into connection

Volunteers unload mobility devices in Zambia as part of the Crutches 4 Africa initiative.
By Janet and Lonny Stormo, Rotary Club of Stillwater Sunrise, Minnesota, USA
When a simple set of crutches lands in the hands of someone in need, it can change a life. When thousands are collected, shipped, and distributed across the globe through Rotary collaboration, it becomes a movement.
Our Rotary club launched and spearheaded a district grant project in partnership with Crutches 4 Africa that not only collected crutches but created community. The project united more than 150 members from 15 Rotary clubs in District 5960 (Minnesota, Wisconsin, USA) who gathered, sorted, and shipped 3,681 mobility devices — including crutches, walkers, wheelchairs, canes, and other adaptive equipment — to people in Zambia who lack affordable access to these life-transforming tools.
This project, which provided US$1.4 million worth of medical devices to those in need, became a catalyst for public awareness, member engagement, and a way to engage thousands of community members to participate in a Rotary service project.
Why mobility matters
Polio, age-related disabilities, and injuries leave many in sub-Saharan Africa without access to mobility devices. The result? Isolation, unemployment, and loss of dignity. Through Crutches 4 Africa, these barriers are lifted. With mobility restored, individuals can return to school, find work, care for family, and reenter society with newfound independence.
A blueprint for engagement
Projects like Crutches 4 Africa demonstrate how the Rotary Action Plan comes to life. We saw alignment with all four pillars: increasing our impact, expanding our reach, enhancing participant engagement, and increasing our ability to adapt.
We built local partnerships to source devices from hospitals, physical therapy providers, nursing homes, and individuals. Volunteers across the district donated items, counted and prepped items, and finally packed thousands of items for shipment. The collection and coordination process became a dynamic, inclusive experience — open to everyone, not just Rotarians.
We engaged 14 non-Rotarians who were so inspired by the project that they joined us in hands-on service. A few have already expressed interest in joining their local clubs.
Visibility with a purpose
The project generated powerful visibility for Rotary — not through advertising, but through authentic, visible action. Social media posts reached over 17,000 viewers. Seven news stories showcased our work in print and online. Thousands of community members donated the items that went to positively impact the recipients, and they saw Rotary clubs doing this service work. The image of Rotarians loading a container full of life-changing devices spoke louder than words. This kind of image reframes Rotary in the minds of community members — from an organization that meets to one that moves. And it encourages potential members to step forward and ask, “How can I help?”
Lessons for other clubs
You don’t need to ship a container overseas to replicate our success. Any project that meets a clear human need, invites broad participation, and tells a story can become a platform for growth.
Here’s what worked for us:
- Start with purpose: We weren’t just collecting crutches. We were restoring dignity.
- Make it tangible: Devices stacked in a warehouse are a powerful visual. Use photos and stories to bring your impact to life.
- Invite everyone: This was an easy “yes” for people of all ages and backgrounds. It didn’t require special skills, just heart and hands.
- Tell your story: We intentionally shared progress in local news outlets, on social media, and at club meetings. Visibility built momentum.
- Celebrate together: When the shipping container doors closed, we did not stop. It wasn’t just an ending. It was the beginning of what comes next. Our clubs and sponsors were thanked and we kicked off next year’s collection.
The Rotary multiplier
With more than 11,000 lives touched in Zambia, 11,000 pounds of waste diverted from U.S. landfills, and countless community conversations sparked here at home, Crutches 4 Africa proved the multiplying power of Rotary. Service, when paired with collaboration, storytelling, and vision, transforms not only recipients but those who serve.
We were proud to have led this effort. But we’re even prouder of how many others joined us. If you’d like help starting your own mobility device collection, or to learn more about building impactful district-level projects, contact us at Stillwater Sunrise Rotary Club.
Learn more about Crutches 4 Africa and its founder, Rotary member and polio survivor Dave Talbot.
Here’s what you need to know about polio before you travel The CDC’s travel advisory includes the United Kingdom, Germany, Pakistan and 27 other countries. How concerned should you be? By Kathleen Felton The CDC originally issued a polio-related global travel notice in 2022, but recently updated it to include the latest affected countries. The notice currently covers 30 destinations where poliovirus has been found within the past 13 months, either in reported cases in humans or in environmental samples — like wastewater — including in Europe (the United Kingdom, Germany, Poland), Africa (Tanzania, Chad, Somalia), South Asia (Afghanistan, Pakistan), Southeast Asia and Oceania (Laos, Papua New Guinea), the Middle East (Israel, Yemen) and others. Keep in mind that “the risk of infection is low in all countries with continued high coverage of polio vaccination and strong sanitation and safe water supplies,” said David Heymann, a professor of infectious disease epidemiology at London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. For example, in the United Kingdom, which is on the advisory list, there have been no confirmed cases of paralysis caused by polio caught in the U.K. since 1984. But as long as polio continues to circulate in some parts of the world, Heymann said, “there is a risk to all countries.” It’s a good reminder that being up-to-date on the polio vaccine is essential for everyone, even if you don’t have any upcoming travel plans — and especially if you do plan to visit a place where the virus could be circulating. In countries on this advisory, “people who travel there, if they’re not fully immune to polio, are at risk of contracting polio, and we don’t want that to happen,” said Art Reingold, a professor of epidemiology at University of California at Berkeley School of Public Health. Here’s what to know if you’re planning a trip and wondering if there’s anything you should do to stay safe. Before vaccines were available, “polio was a ubiquitous infection, pretty much everybody was infected,” said Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Center and an attending physician in the Division of Infectious Diseases at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. In the mid-20th century, polio paralyzed or killed up to half a million people each year, many of them young children. Some people infected with poliovirus are asymptomatic or have mild symptoms like a sore throat, fever or nausea. “But there is a small percentage of people who experience very severe outcomes,” said Marlene Wolfe, an epidemiologist and assistant professor at Emory University and co-principal investigator at WastewaterSCAN. Those complications include meningitis and paralysis — the latter can affect muscles that support breathing, and polio patients sometimes could survive only if they used iron lung devices. (For example, one man lived for over seven decades in an iron lung.) Other survivors — between 25 and 40 percent — experience post-polio syndrome, which can cause decades of health problems such as muscle weakness, joint pain and fatigue. Today, the inactivated polio vaccine, or IPV, is given to children in the U.S. in a four-dose series starting at 2 months old. The full series provides at least 99 percent protection against the disease. Though no longer licensed in the U.S., some parts of the world still use the oral polio vaccine (OPV), a live-attenuated vaccine (meaning it contains a weakened virus) given by drops into the mouth. The OPV is cheaper and easier to administer, and it is extremely effective. The downside is that, very rarely, the weakened virus used in OPV can mutate over time and cause a form of vaccine-derived polio that causes paralysis in unvaccinated people, said Heymann. This can happen in specific situations such as in overcrowded communities with poor sanitation where vaccination coverage is low or incomplete, which provides the OPV variant an opportunity to circulate in people and have enough time to mutate and cause infection in the unvaccinated. (Vaccination protects you from both types.) In 1988, the World Health Assembly announced a resolution to eradicate polio, hoping to reduce the disease to zero, as smallpox had been in the 1970s. But while polio was successfully eliminated in many regions, it’s been nearly impossible to vaccinate enough people in certain areas of the world, because of ongoing civil unrest or other obstacles to immunization. As a result, a few types of polio have continued to circulate, including wild poliovirus type 1 and vaccine-derived paralytic polio, said Reingold. The CDC’s travel advisory includes a list of countries where poliovirus has been either detected in humans or in environmental samples. But the advisory did not include specific criteria used to make its recommendations, so it’s difficult to know exactly what your risk might be in each of these locations. (The CDC did not respond to requests for more information.) Only two countries on this list, Afghanistan and Pakistan, have endemic polio, meaning wild poliovirus type 1 continues to circulate consistently. It’s possible that the other countries listed may have had cases of poliovirus or the virus was detected in environmental samples, such as sewage. Environmental or wastewater monitoring is an important way to reveal disease outbreaks in a community even if cases have not been reported, said Wolfe. A person infected with polio may not have symptoms or may only experience milder, flu-like ones, but the virus is still “shed abundantly in feces, so it’s going to end up in waste streams,” she said. Regardless of whether you’re planning to visit countries included in the recent travel advisory, vaccination is the best way to protect yourself and your children from polio. The inactivated polio vaccine is safe, offers long-term protection and carries no risk of giving a person polio. “If you were vaccinated as a child, you should be protected against polio for the rest of your life,” said Offit. If you never received a polio vaccine, the CDC recommends three IPV doses; if you weren’t fully vaccinated, you should get the remaining one or two doses. If your child has missed any of their scheduled shots — given at 2 months, 4 months, between 6 and 18 months and between 4 and 6 years — talk to their pediatrician about catching up. If you’re planning to travel to a place where polio is circulating but your child has not yet completed the vaccine series, consult your pediatrician or a travel medicine clinic; some doctors might administer vaccinations early depending on the circumstances. They may also advise you to postpone your trip, depending on where you are traveling to. “I think for travel that is unessential, people with very young infants or infants who are not fully vaccinated yet should think about the pros and cons and the risks,” Reingold said. Some fully vaccinated adults may benefit from one booster dose if they are at increased risk for polio, such as those traveling to countries where polio is endemic, health care workers who handle poliovirus specimens and anyone exposed to a current outbreak. Up-to-date vaccination is all the more important because vaccination coverage has decreased recently. This means that even in the U.S., unvaccinated people are vulnerable, Offit said, especially in pockets with lower vaccination rates, where reduced herd immunity can allow the virus to circulate more easily. In 2022, an unvaccinated adult was diagnosed with polio in a New York county that had low coverage. Some Zip codes in this area reported IPV vaccination rates of just 37 percent for children under age 2, “so therefore the virus had an opportunity to infect him and others,” Offit said. A continued drop in vaccination rates would put more people at risk. A simulation model published in the medical journal JAMA found that if there were a 50 percent decrease in routine childhood vaccinations, there could be 4.3 million cases of polio over a 25-year period. Polio “really is a frightening disease,” Reingold said. “We don’t want any child in the world coming down with polio at this point.”Thanks to an incredibly successful vaccination program, wild poliovirus has been eliminated in the United States since 1979. For this reason, it’s not a disease that you hear about often in the U.S. However, if you’ve got upcoming travel plans, it might be on your radar: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) updated a travel advisory earlier this month that recommends travelers take extra precautions when visiting certain countries where polio is circulating.
Why is polio still a global health concern?
Polio is a highly contagious disease that can spread through respiratory droplets, such as when someone sneezes or coughs, as well as through contact with an infected person’s feces, which is how it ends up in wastewater.
Why is there an updated advisory for polio right now?
What can you do to stay safe?



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