Sunday, April 13, 2008

Division 76 Council Meeting April 12, 2008

We met at Wanda's in Coos Bay at 9:30 and had another fine breakfast. Unfortunately, the fairly minor cost of this seems to be too much for some clubs to absorb, as it has been the responsibility of each of the clubs in the Division in rotation, so we're going to start meeting at Umpqua Bank with continental breakfast funded by donations.

I'm going to run for Lieutenant Governor. I don't expect to be outstanding at the job, but nobody else wanted it and as publisher of Oregon Coast Magazine, I travel a lot through the division and it shouldn't be hard to make visits to other clubs.

A new Internet Kiwanis club is going to be formed. It seems that Dave Curry, the president of Kiwanis International, belongs to just the sort of club I have in mind. It's "located" in Virginia City MT, although it has no members who live there. It meets twice a month by Internet chat and has a single mission, which is to support an orphanage in Vietnam. Our club will draw most of its members from along the Oregon Coast and will support child care centers.

All six of the existing clubs plan to keep going. Gold Beach was down to a half dozen, but they're hanging in. We have lost the clubs in Brookings and Reedsport. It would seem that enough retired Kiwanians should be living around Brookings to establish at least a basic club, so that will be a goal. Reedsport is probably more of a challenge.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

Early Childhood Education

One of the problems with early childhood education in Oregon is that the state expects practitioners to have credentials, but those credentials cost money and the payoff in salaries is poor. The late John Gray was the developer who launched Salishan and Sunriver, among other projects. The John and Betty Gray Foundation has made a commitment that will continue for several more years, through which students taking early childhood education courses at Oregon community colleges can have their entire tuition paid for. At present, there is enough money to handle all applicants.

This still leave some costs to bear, including tuition for the general education courses that are required for most community college programs. This is an opportunity for Kiwanis to step forward and leverage the Gray money to provide full tuition coverage for these students. If it is true that one of the keys to success in early childhood education is the level of training of the providers, then nothing could be more cost-effective than this.

Another great thing for Division 76 is that Southwestern Oregon Community College (known generally as SWOCC although they are trying to change that to SOCC) has put its entire list of ECE classes online. To my knowledge, it's the only cc in Oregon to have done this. SWOCC's district almost exactly coincides with Division 76, except that Lane Community College covers Florence. The clubs in Division 76 could unite in supporting the SWOCC ECE program, which students in their communities could take classes either at SWOCC's Coos Bay campus or online, and could take the general ed classes the same way or through any of the satellite campuses which serve several other communities.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Kiwanis Club of Florence Oregon

The Kiwanis Club of Florence Oregon is a little more than a quarter century old. It meets every Wednesday at noon at the Elks Club. Club President is Rob Spooner. The real president-elect is Wendy Farley, who was planning to be president during the current year but got called to active military duty in late spring. Rob Spooner was moved ahead one year in the planned succession and Wendy will now follow him for the 2008-2009 year if all goes according to plan. Kathleen Margerum is now vice-president and will be president in 2009-2010.

The Florence club has a 501(c)(3)foundation which has accumulated a large amount of money by Kiwanis club standards. As a comparison, the Pacific NW district has a foundation with assets of about $50 per active member in the district. Florence has about $3000 for each active member in the club. One of the challenges facing the club is how best to use this money for the greatest good in the community.

Kiwanis Division 76 of the Pacific Northwest District

Kiwanis International is organized into districts. One of them is the Pacific Northwest, which includes Washington, Oregon, Alaska, British Columbia, and some bits and pieces. Division 76 consists of clubs on the Oregon Coast from Florence on the north to Gold Beach on the south. It would also include Brookings at the California border if there were a club there.

At the present time, the active clubs in Florence, North Bend, Coos Bay, Coquille, Bandon, and Gold Beach. The division lieutenant governor is Ken Hooton of the Coquille club.