Author: Admin

  • Catholic Charities Helps Refugees Put Down New Roots

    Denise Ogilvie from Catholic Charities of Northeast Kansas knows what refugees face when they are starting over their lives. The organization’s refugee and immigration services, which is qualified through the State Department, provides refugee resettlement and support.

    Ogilvie explained that their team is given 24 hours notice when a new refugee family will be arriving. Most refugees have been in a camp for 10 or more years. “Families come here with children that were born in a camp and are now college age. The children have never lived anywhere else.”

    The Catholic Charities team meets the families at the airport and takes them to an apartment outfitted with all the basics they will need to start their new life.

    With funding from the State Department, Catholic Charities works together with the families for six months to find employment and help them get settled. Thanks to the New Roots for Refugees program, support no longer ends there. New Roots builds on the strengths and experience that the refugees already possess, helping them start their own small farm businesses growing and selling vegetables. This means that refugee families can continue to support themselves and their families with the agricultural skills they gained in their native country.

    “For many, this was their sole source of income in their original country. With a plot to farm, they now grow food they may not have eaten before.” The program also provides resources on how to market the produce that is grown and how to manage their finance and business.

    The programs current plot in Juniper Gardens in KC Kansas provides everyone in the program with a one acre plot. Produce is sold in 27 farmers markets and restaurants. The program lasts for four years. Currently 85 percent of participants purchase a small plot of land to keep farming after completing the program.

    “We try to not only help people in the middle of crisis,” said Ogilvie. “We believe in order to give dignity we need to help people stand on their own two feet so they are self sufficient.”

  • Andy Rondon Makes the Case for Solar

    Andy-Rondon-from-Good-Energy-Solutions
    Andy Rondon from Good Energy Solutions

    The next time it’s overcast, you may think differently about the sun’s rays. Kansas is currently one of the top ten states for solar power, either “slightly above or below Florida, depending on who you ask,” says Andy Rondon from Good Energy Solutions.

    Rondon is living “every solar guy’s dream.” He was originally trained as a civil engineer and recently received his NABCEP certification, which is the solar industry’s leading recognition of technical sales expertise. He proudly drives a solar-powered car and nestles under his solar roof each night.

    Rondon’s work at Good Energy Solutions paves a way for residential and commercial clients to take advantage of solar energy. Good Energy Solutions, based out of Lawrence, was named one of the top 25 solar contractors nationwide by Solar Power World Magazine and installed the most solar in Kansas in 2017.

    Rondon explained that there are two types of energy production: Centralized and Distributed. Centralized energy production is the status quo, with large energy plants powering multiple cities. Solar breaks this model, with energy being made and used in the same area. “Creating energy where it is being used means you don’t need to have transmission lines as we have now. It changes the infrastructure that’s needed.”

    The core of solar technology has not changed significantly since 1989. “We’re just better at manufacturing it,” says Rondon. Instead, the majority of research and development dollars are being spent on improving battery technology. “Once we do batteries better, we don’t need coal or natural gas. When this happens the world is going to be a lot different,” says Rondon. “The amount of energy dumped on the planet is mind-boggling.”

    Solar modules last 20 years with a 30 to 40-year potential. Current rates mean it takes about 10 years for a customer to get their money back. New potential rates could push that to 15 years.

    That shouldn’t deter potential customers. To the question of “Why go solar now if there will be a new technology in the next five to 10 years, Rondon replied “If you are generating all or most of your own energy now, what is the benefit of the next technology? You already have that.”

  • Lawrence Fall Community Bike Ride Set for Sept 15th

    We’ve reserved the space, got the sponsors, now we need you to come out and enjoy our second 2018 Lawrence Community Bike Ride.

    Here’s what we’ve got on tap for this year’s event from 10:00-12:00 at the Haskell Indian Nations Stadium parking lot:

    • Family Friendly Bike Ride With Safety
    • Kids Helmet fitting
    • Safety Vest Giveaway
    • Training Wheel Takeoff Area
    • Bike Checkup & Maintenance area
    • Healthy Snack Zone provided by The Merc
    • The always popular Lawrence Kids Calendar Kids Inflatable Zone!

    The ride will be on Lawrence’s Burroughs Creek Trail which is a great, smooth concrete multi-use path that is wonderful for beginners as well as seasoned riders to have a safe place to ride and enjoy Lawrence’s Eastside.

    Thanks to all our sponsors these annual events just get better and better.

    All riders must fill out a release you can download one from this LINK.

    (We’ll have them on hand too.)

    Get this on your calendar! We look forward to seeing you!

     

  • Sister Cities Bridges Communities and Hearts

    Kelly Schultz, Megan Durner, and Joan Durner share the positive impact Sister Cities is making in Lawrence.

    Megan Durner, incoming Senior in Lawrence, discovered her love for cultural exchange as a Freshman. Through the Sister Cities program Durner’s family hosted a student from Germany. It was such a positive experience, the family hosted again the following summer.

    This summer Durner became the exchange student, traveling to Eutin, Germany, a Lawrence Sister City since 1989.

    “Being in Germany is the best thing that has ever happened to me,” said Durner. “I truly learned what it was like to live in someone else’s shoes. I relished learning the differences and similarities in how we live.”

    As soon as Durner received information about her Eutin host family, she started talking with her host sister. “By the time we met she felt like family.”

    The whole trip felt like “something out of the movies,” said Durner. The students went to class, on day trips, and took in the beauty of the small lake-side town. 

    2019 will mark the 30th year of Lawrence and Eutin’s history as Sister Cities. Kelly Schultz, from the Sister Cities Governing Board, shared an update on changes in the board’s structure.

    The City of Lawrence has recently restructured several of its boards in order to improve efficiency and combine like-efforts. Sister Cities is now managed by a Governing Board and will continue to benefit from financial support from the City for operating expenses. While this has reduced the board size from 14 to 9, the change has provided greater autonomy.

    Lawrence has three Sister Cities: Eutin, Germany, Hiratsuka, Japan, and Iniades, Greece. The goal of Sister Cities is to “Promote peace through mutual respect, understanding and cooperation — one individual, one community at a time.”

    Schultz thanked Lawrence Central Rotary for their support of Sister Cities programming. “The goal of good international relations is something Rotary is very interested in. It’s also a way to assist students with an incredible educational opportunity. Sister Cities combines these two goals.”

    Schultz encouraged the Club to send a Rotarian on the 2019 delegation to Eutin, celebrating the 30 year international friendship.

  • Rotarians Use Technology for Social Good

    Mandy Sheldon Lynn, Lieutenant Governor and District Executive for District 5710 joined Lawrence Central Rotary to demonstrate how to access and use Rotary’s various technology tools.

    Rotary District 5710’s website provides the information Members need to learn about:

    • District/Global grant applications and management
    • Rotary leadership contacts
    • Club information
    • Speaker ideas
    • …. and much more

    By logging in, Rotarians have access to even more, such as managing their profile and information, and directly contacting fellow Rotarians.

    Rotary has also gone mobile, with a ClubRunner App, making it easy for Rotarians to find Clubs to visit as they travel and directly contact members in their own Club. These tools make it easier for Members to communicate and partner on fulfilling the Club’s local mission and Rotary’s global priorities.