Monday, january 15, 2024

Rotary International asks us to Serve to Change Lives through its Focus Areas

January is Vocational Service Month

This month Rotary International asks us to Serve to Change Lives by helping everyone learn skills that will allow them to become economically self sufficientExplore the possibilities with us at our meeting Wednesday at noon at Wick Park or virtually via Zoom. 

http://www.youngstownrotaryevent.com

The  Zoom ID is: 3567145262

This Week's Meeting

Gerri Jenkins will lead the Club Assembly at Wick Park Pavilion. Officers and committee chairs will give updates on the club’s many activities at the halfway point of the Rotary year.

Rotary Last Week

Speed Networking was great fun! As Vocational Service Month continues, President Deanna Rossi devoted the meeting to increasing understanding of Rotarians’ occupations. Members were paired up for 1 minute at a time to trade their elevator speeches about their businesses or organizations. New members discovered the workforce diversity with the club; even longtime members learned new facts about their fellow Rotarians’ activities. 

 

Congratulations to Mike Latessa, interim executive director of The Rich Center for Autism, for being recognized as an Emerging Leader by the Business Journal. Mike was lauded for the impact he has made as a volunteer, coach and educator. “Mike leads our team with a calm, collected and professional demeanor and truly brings out the best of those around him,” said Jake Ellis, a colleague at the Rich Center.

INTERACT FOOD COLLECTION

Rotarians are encouraged to support the Ursuline High School Interact Club during its breakfast food collection for the Saint Angela Merici Parish food pantry on the East Side. The collection will end during the week of Jan. 21, which will be Catholic Schools Week. Cereal, pancake/waffle mixes, breakfast bars and toaster pastries are requested. Bring your contributions (cash or goods) to RCY weekly meetings on Jan. 17 or 24. See Troy Rhoades for details. The Ursuline Interact Club adviser is Carolyn Korenic, a former RCY member.

ON TAP AT BEERFEST

The sixth annual Groundhog Craft Beerfest will be on Saturday, Feb. 3, at Stambaugh Auditorium. Fundraising is fun at Beerfest! Here is how to get involved:

 
  1. Sponsors are still being sought, whether they come from within the club or outside. Click here for the sponsor packet. Josh Prest and Shannon Tirone can guide you or answer questions.

  2. Contact Kevin Chiu (kytc@zoominternet.net) to sign up for a Beerfest shift.

  3. Each member is asked to sell four tickets. See Dominick Brown if you need additional tickets.

  4. Keep reposting Beerfest social media messages on your pages and walls.

 

How to Choose Bird-Friendly Coffee

By Benji Jones

When it comes to caffeinating responsibly, especially if you care about wildlife, selecting the right brew can be confusing. The impact of these choices can be significant. Last year, for example, the world consumed nearly 21 billion pounds of coffee, grown across 27 million acres in the tropical forest belt, a mecca for birds and other wildlife.

“Organic” and “shade-grown” are important distinctions for those who want to caffeinate responsibly. The good news: coffee tends to have a lower impact on birds than most other export commodities grown in biodiversity-rich areas of the tropics, such as palm oil (often used in donuts, coffee’s sidekick). 

Generally, farms that look like forests (“agroforests” for their mix of coffee shrubs and stands of trees), typically house higher bird diversity than monoculture farms that have little or no natural canopy cover. This guide should help.

 

Look for Sustainable Beans 

Look for beans that are certified shade-grown, stamped with seals such as “Rainforest Alliance Certified” or “Bird Friendly.” Both certifications require farmers to maintain or restore some level of canopy cover— a proxy for “forest-like”— and prohibit harmful pesticides, which limit prey for birds. 

Coffees with sustainable seals often also have a seal certifying them as organic (“Bird Friendly” has to be both). Of the two, organic is a better option. It has no requirement for canopy cover, but it bans the use of synthetic pesticides, which indirectly harm birds by reducing their source of food (like the larvae of the coffee borer). 

 

Support ‘Relationship’ Coffee Roasters

These small roasters in the U.S. who form ties with smallholder coffee communities to develop their product. These communities produce most of the sustainably grown beans.

 

Know the Differences Between Arabica and Robusta Beans

Arabica is most likely the species you know and love — with perceived greater quality and sweeter flavor. Robusta is considered lower-quality, and is often used to make instant coffee. Arabica is more commonly grown under at least partial shade, whereas robusta, a more sun and heat tolerant plant, is typically grown with little canopy cover — a worse environment for most wildlife. (If robusta is shade-grown, however, research shows that it can support a near-equal diversity of birds, relative to arabica.)

 

As a Last Resort, Consider the Country of Origin

In Brazil and Vietnam, the two largest global producers, the vast majority of coffee is grown under high-intensity, full-sun conditions – farms that don’t look like forests. But in countries like India, Ecuador, and Peru, the majority of coffee is grown under a canopy – better for birds. Keep in mind, a country’s coffee growing conditions can turn on a dime based on political or economic changes.

 

So there you have it. If you want to help birds through your personal coffee choices, select coffee that's certified sustainable or from a relationship roaster—or better yet, choose brews that meet both. Also consider the coffee species and where it’s grown. Head to small roasters or major retailers that serve certified brews, like Caribou Coffee, which serves 100 percent Rainforest Alliance Certified coffee. Visit the website of Rainforest Alliance or Bird Friendly to see where you can buy their products.

THIS WEEK IN ROTARY HISTORY

January 19, 1968; Youngstown Rotarians approved funding for a Classroom on Wheels in the amount of $13,000.

 
CAUSE FOR CELEBRATION
 
 
Birthdays:
 
Edna Edmonds 1/16
 
Gavin Switzer 1/17
 
Brandon Oliver 1/20
 
 
Anniversaries:
 
Dionne Dowdy 1/20 
3 years
 
Justin Froelich 1/20
3 years
 
 
 
NEW MEMBERS
 

Jaismin Morris

Executive Director

Amya Marie Foundation

Classification: Nonprofit Management
 

Sponsor: Dionne Dowdy

 

An entrepreneur, Jaismin is CEO of Bounce House Palace, a party rental company. After witnessing the traumatic death of her 15-year-old daughter Amya last April, she established the Amya Marie Foundation to help persons who have lost loved ones to gun violence, with an emphasis on children and siblings. Her family includes spouse Jawon Ferrell and children Amira, Jeremiah and Journee. Jasmine also coaches basketball, mentors clients at United Returning Citizens, and enjoys crafting.

 

 

Jeremy Batchelor

Superintendent

Youngstown City School District

Classification: Education

 

Jeremy is a former member of the Rotary Club of Austintown. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree at John Carroll University and a Master of Science at YSU, where he also is completing the Doctor of Education program. His other memberships include World Fellowship Interdenominational Church and Omega Psi Phi fraternity. He and his wife, Sukanya, have three children, MaShama, Joshua and Isaiah.

 


 

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Club Information

Welcome to Youngstown Rotary

Service Above Self

Wednesdays at 12:00 PM
Wick Park Pavilion
260 Park Avenue
Youngstown, OH 44504
United States of America
Phone:
(330) 743-8630
Connect through Zoom: http://www.youngstownrotaryevent.com/
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