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May 28, 2026 |
With the traditional ringing of the bell we bring this meeting to order!
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Welcome to this week’s meeting of the eClub of the State of Jefferson.
Hello, eClub Members! Welcome to our weekly meeting.
My apologies for not keeping up with all that has been going on these past six months. I have been traveling a lot from late September until the end of November 2025.
It all started when my son moved to Texas, and since I didn’t have any close relatives near me, I decided to box up all my belongings and put them in storage. I then hired a rental agency to rent and manage my house while I was gone.
I then flew to (my hometown) Bend, OR to visit all my friends there, and while there looked around at houses for sale. YIKES, not at those prices! After almost three weeks, I then flew down to San Antonio, TX to visit family for two weeks, and then flew to Las Vegas to visit my sister Lea and her husband (PDG) John for a visit. My friend Alan joined me there and we all celebrated my birthday down at the strip. Lea and I decided to ride that old rickety roller coaster, something I will never do again! I then flew to Santa Barbara, CA to visit my other sister, and after three weeks, I flew down to Mazatlán, Mexico. Alan joined me there, and we spent a wonderful four months, and I’m now back in the Santa Barbara area. It’s been so nice to belong to an e-club, where it doesn’t matter where you live if you have Internet.
A lot has been going on with our eClub these past six months, especially with our ongoing projects: Uganda Literacy Project, Flood Relief in Pakistan, and the Chinle Planting Hope Bookmobile. With your help, our eClub Foundation was able to give a substantial amount of donations to each of these projects. Thank you club members for your support!
We are now in the process of writing a new District Grant application in hopes that they will help provide new sewing machines in Pakistan and solar lights to our ongoing Navajo Solar Lights Project.
I'm currently in Southern California, and planning to stay here for the next couple of months to work on my 2025 taxes (after placing an extension) and scheduling annual medical appointments.
In the meantime, enjoy today’s program and tech support, and don’t forget about attending our Coffee Chats every Tuesday at noon (Pacific Time).
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

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.
May is Youth Service MonthRotary believes in developing the next generation of leaders. Our programs help younger leaders build leadership skills, expand education and learn the value of service.
Interact clubs
Interact clubs bring together young people ages 12-18 to develop leadership skills and learn about the world through service projects and activities.
Rotary Youth Leadership Awards
RYLA is a leadership development program for young people who want to learn new skills, build their confidence, and have fun. Events range from one-day seminars to weeklong camps.
Rotary Youth Exchange
Rotary Youth Exchange builds peace one young person at a time. Students learn a new language, discover another culture, and truly become global citizens. Exchanges for students ages 15-19 are sponsored by Rotary clubs in more than 100 countries.
How can you get involved?
All of our youth programs are connected to a Rotary club. To get involved, contact the Rotary club in your area.
How a fifth-grader and our Rotary club helped fight hunger

Families in Arlington, Texas, USA, pack non-perishable meals for those facing hunger.
By Derrick Kinney, Rotary Club of Arlington, Texas, USA
I got a call in November that immediately got my attention. It was from our district community service chair, Victoria Farrar-Myers. She shared an idea, “What if our Rotary club partnered with a fifth-grader to fight hunger?” I remember thinking, well, that’s a first.
Our club president, Randy Hendricks, set up a meeting in a coffee shop for a few of our members to talk it through. That’s when we met Leighton and her dad. Within minutes, it was obvious this wasn’t just a “cute idea.” There was a sincerity in how she talked. I could tell she cared and had thought it through. Without hesitation, I was in.
Leighton attended the same school — Oakridge School in Arlington, Texas — as Victoria’s son. The year before, Leighton had worked with an organization called Meals of Hope to raise money and pack non-perishable meals for people facing hunger. Leighton figured that with our Rotary club’s help, she could go even bigger (and she was right).
Victoria first talked with Leighton’s dad about the idea, and when he brought it up with his daughter, she was excited and ready. The meals could be assembled quickly and donated locally, without worrying about spoilage or logistics getting in the way.
As she explained the idea, something clicked for me.
The problem we were trying to solve
I’ve helped organize a lot of good service projects through Rotary, but this felt different. This wasn’t polished or overthought and it wasn’t even a “Rotary program.” It was a student with a passion and plan. Honestly, I’d been looking for something like this.
I wanted a sustainable, scalable way for our club to address food insecurity — not just another item on the calendar. Our district governor had made reducing food insecurity a major priority and we took that seriously. But we kept struggling with how to create a service project that would actually bring the whole community together.
We didn’t want something that was just Rotary planning it, talking about it, and running it. There’s nothing wrong with that per se. But sometimes our projects become too contained and internal. We wanted something bigger that people outside our club would feel connected to and excited about. That’s when the right leader showed up. And yes, she was a fifth-grader.
Why it worked, how it grew
Leighton wasn’t asking Rotary to take over her project. She was asking us to support it and that difference matters. Her idea already had everything a successful service project needs: a student leader who cared, a school ready to engage, and a proven partner in Meals of Hope. Rotary didn’t need to be the star, but we could provide members who were willing to show up and help activate the community to participate and not just observe. We could be the support system that helped it grow, and that’s when we are at our best.
Leighton set a goal to raise $7,000. That’s a big goal for anyone, especially a student. I admired the courage behind that number, and I knew we could help.
Our board came up with the simple idea of donating $1,000 in seed money and matching every dollar Leighton raised up to $7,000. If she hit her goal, the total impact would be $15,000. Over the years, I’ve learned that people don’t just respond to need, they respond to momentum. With a match, a donation multiplies.
One of my favorite parts of this experience was helping Leighton think about how to share her message. At first, she just asked for donations. But I told her something I truly believe: being young is a superpower. It’s hard to say no to a motivated fifth-grader with a plan. We helped her craft her ask to “I set a crazy goal to raise $7,000. Will you help me?” That small shift changed everything. She wasn’t begging; she was leading. And people didn’t just donate; they joined her.
The day everything came together
Momentum built quickly. Our club shared the event internally. Leighton promoted it at Oakridge. We shared it on Facebook and with local media. Partnerships, in addition to our club, included Oakridge School, the Oakridge Black Students Association, and The Girl Scouts. The Black Students Association helped lead artwork, music, and coordinate volunteers. Students were creating the experience.
We held the event on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, which felt like the right way to honor his belief that everybody can be great because everybody can serve. From 10 a.m. to noon, the Oakridge School gym was packed with families, students, Rotary members, and 140 volunteers working side-by-side. In just two hours, we packed more than 43,000 meals for people in need.
I remember standing there for a moment, just taking it all in. Then came the part that still blows my mind. Leighton raised the full $7,000. With our match, the total was $15,000, raised by a fifth-grader.
What I learned (again)
If you’re part of a Rotary club, or any organization trying to create meaningful impact: a compelling story beats a perfect plan. Matching funds motivate. And Rotary doesn’t have to own the event to be the reason it succeeds. Sometimes the best role is simply being the fuel behind someone else’s mission.
Leighton didn’t need us to take over her vision. She needed us to believe in it. This day wasn’t just about food insecurity. It was about what happens when a student decides to lead.
Thank you, Victoria Farrar-Myers, for making the connection, and club president Randy Hendricks for saying, “Let’s make this happen.” And thank you to every volunteer who packed meals, donated, served, and showed up. This is the kind of day you don’t forget, because it proves the heart of the community is still there.
The way you make Rotary even better isn’t by doing more as Rotary. It’s by inviting more people who want to make the community better to do it with you.
Chance encounter inspires new commitment to End Polio

Strategic placement of End Polio Now stickers can help promote Rotary’s polio eradication effort
s.
Habiba Bennani
By Habiba Bennani, assistant Rotary public image coordinator and a member of the Rotary Club of Tunis La Paix, Tunisia
We often wear our Rotary pins or display our logos out of habit, or a quiet pride. But sometimes, a simple sticker becomes a bridge between two lives.
A few weeks ago, I was in a lounge waiting for my flight when I opened my laptop to get some work done. On the cover is my End Polio Now sticker. A gentleman approached me, intrigued by the logo. What could have been a brief moment of curiosity turned into one of the most moving testimonies I have ever heard.
He told me the story of his father — who contracted polio at the age of three in Brooklyn, New York. Driven by an iron will as an adult, his father wanted to join the army to serve his country, but was turned down for active combat duty because of the physical after-effects of the disease.
Nevertheless, he accepted a position as a mechanic with the army. It was a life of hard, physical labor. He had a permanent limp, but served with resilience and dignity. He would not let a virus define his limits. And he passed down to his son both the will to overcome adversity and the importance of showing compassion to all people, whoever they are and whatever their life situation may be.
Listening to this son speak about his father with such raw emotion, I suddenly saw faces, struggles, and destinies behind the word “eradication.”I have been a member of Rotary for four years. I’ve seen the charts, read the brochures, and attended the meetings. But it took this chance encounter — this human “spark” — to truly feel the absolute urgency of our mission.
When I got home, I made my first personal donation to the Polio Plus fund (I’m far from the Major Donor level, but this first step was a personal milestone).It was no longer just a figure in an annual report. It was for that father, the mechanic. It was so that no other child would ever have their dreams limited by a preventable disease.
Sometimes, the biggest inspiration and motivation for ending polio isn’t found in our meetings, but in the people we meet and their heart-felt stories.




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