Category: Service

  • Lawrence Central Rotary helps out with Octoginta

    It was a chilly Sunday fall morning and the riders were out in force.

    Known as one of the best rides in the Midwest, the Octoginta is always a great end-of-season ride. The Lawrence Bicycle Club prides itself in going the extra mile to provide the best SAGs and support along with the gorgeous fall foliage that combined for a great ride.

    Here’s some pix of the SAG stopped our members staffed that morning. Thanks to Qualseths, Huesemanns, and the Brenners! 

  • Lawrence Central Rotary Club set to Unveil New Bike Racks at Van Go, Inc.

     

    Van Go, Inc. is this year’s recipient of an artfully designed bike rack sponsored by the Lawrence Central Rotary Club. The ribbon cutting for the bike rack will be held Thursday, September 27 at 4 pm at Van Go, 715 New Jersey.

    The rack, funded by LiveWell Lawrence, was designed by Rockhill and Associates and was envisioned to complement the building’s architecture. The racks include concrete bases with steel tops with to secure the bicycles. The design was fabricated over the summer and was installed in August.

    The new rack will be highly used by the Van Go’s teens, which frequently use bikes for transportation to and from their work at Van Go. Biking gives the teens independence as well as helping to instill healthy living habits.

    This is event is free and open to the public.

    More information available at:

    https://lawrencecentralrotary.org/

    http://www.van-go.org

  • LCR issues ShelterBox Number

    LCR Shelterbox Tracking

    Earlier this summer Lawrence Central raised the funds for our first Shelterbox.  Well, we’ve received our tracking number and are now waiting to see where it will be deployed.  Lawrence Central’s box is #021404 and we can check to see where it’s been deployed here:  http://www.shelterboxusa.org/trackbox.php
    ShelterBox is a global humanitarian aid organization that provides shelter and life-saving equipment to people affected by disaster – such as earthquakes, volcanos, floods, hurricanes, cyclones, tsunamis or conflict by delivering aid to the world’s most vulnerable.  We work closely with other aid agencies to fill the gap. Other aid organizations have told us that our green box stands out as a symbol of hope in a landscape of disarray. In many cases, our boxes make the difference between life and death.
    When disasters strike, ShelterBox works to ensure emergency shelter reaches those locations as quickly as possible, thanks to the generous support of people like you, who are truly making a difference.  ShelterBox has firmly established itself at the forefront of international disaster relief, providing aid to survivors of over 170 disasters in nearly 80 countries.
    ShelterBox relies significantly on donations like yours. Every dollar goes toward supporting our mission—to provide humanitarian aid in the form of shelter, warmth and dignity to people displaced by disasters.

    So What’s in a Shelterbox anyway?
     
    Shelter

    At the heart of every ShelterBox is a disaster relief tent for an extended family. It is custom made for ShelterBox by Vango, one of the world’s leading tent manufacturers, and is designed to withstand extreme temperatures, high winds and heavy rainfall. Internally, each tent has privacy partitions that allow recipients to divide the space as they see fit.


    Warmth and protection

    In addition to the tent, there is a range of other survival equipment including thermal blankets and insulated ground sheets, essential in areas where temperatures plummet at nightfall. Where malaria is prevalent, mosquito nets are supplied, as well as life-saving means of water purification
    Water supplies often become contaminated after a major disaster, as infrastructure and sanitation systems are destroyed. This presents a secondary but no less dangerous threat to survivors than the initial disaster itself. Our water purification equipment, the LifeStraw pictured below, can provide a typical family up to three years worth of clean and safe water. 
    Self sufficiency
    A basic tool kit containing a hammer, axe, saw, trenching shovel, hoe head, pliers and wire cutters enables survivors to improve their immediate environment by chopping firewood or digging a latrine, for example, then when it is possible, to start repairing or rebuilding the home they were forced to leave.





    Fit for purpose

    Every item is durable, practical and brand new. The box itself is lightweight and waterproof and has been used for a variety of purposes in the past – from water and food storage containers to a cot for a newborn baby.





    A heart to the home

    Key items are either a wood burning or multi-fuel stove. The multi-fuel stove can burn anything from diesel to old paint. Some boxes also contain our specially designed wood burning Frontier Stove, pictured below. This provides the heart of the new home where water is boiled, food is cooked, and families congregate. In addition, there are pans, utensils, bowls, mugs and water storage containers.


    A smile
    A children’s pack containing drawing books, crayons and other supplies. For children who have lost most if not all their possessions, these small gifts are treasured.


    Adaptability

    We keep a broad range of equipment in stock so we can adapt the contents of a box to a specific disaster. For example, following the Javanese earthquake in 2006, when some resources were available locally or could be salvaged from buildings, the overwhelming need was for shelter – so we just sent tents, packing two in each box.




    ShelterBox USA is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization dedicated to providing shelter, warmth and dignity to survivors of disaster worldwide. 
  • Lawrence Central Rotary Donates Shelterbox

    Dr. Lynn O’Neal presents Club Treasurer with the last of funds to donate our first Shelterbox.

    In July of 2011, the Lawrence Central Rotary Club elected to begin a fund drive to raise $1000 to purchase a Shelter Box from ShelterBox USA. George Brenner and Lynn O’Neal, MD were the first contributors to the fund.

    Over the course of the the year, at each weekly club meeting, a raffle was held to raise funds for the Shelter Box drive.

    The winner of each raffle was allowed to donate her or his winnings to the fund. Thanks to the winners who donated their profits back to the club, we were able to raise approximately $80 per month.

    Lawrence Central Rotary looks forward to monitoring the location and use of our shelter box and we hope our small contribution will help a family to survive during a time of crisis.

    If you are unaware, ShelterBox is an international aid organization that provides emergency shelter and life-saving equipment following disasters such as earthquake, volcano, flood, hurricane, cyclone, tsunami or conflict.

    More than a decade ago, ShelterBox founder, Tom Henderson asked himself what his family would need to survive if they lost their home. His question became a quest to provide a compact, universal tool kit to families displaced by disasters. ShelterBox would afford dignity, self-sufficiency and most importantly, human survival in the chaotic weeks following an earthquake, tsunami, landslide, flood or other disaster.

    The top priority of many aid organizations is to provide food, water and medical care to help people survive the immediate aftermath of a disaster. Without protection from the elements, survivors are at a higher risk as they await nourishment or medical attention. We recognized that little or no assistance was given in terms of proper shelter to help them through the first few days, weeks and months as they tried to rebuild their lives. In response, ShelterBox developed a solution to help disaster survivors during the critical period following a disaster but preceding reconstruction.
    Each box supplies an extended family with a tent and life-saving equipment to use while they are displaced or homeless.   The contents are tailored depending on the nature and location of the disaster, with great care taken sourcing every item to ensure it is robust enough to be of lasting value.

    The donation amount to sponsor each box is $1,000, which includes delivery direct to those who need it. Each box bears its own unique number so as a donor, you can track your box all the way to its recipient country via the web site.

    Highly trained ShelterBox Response Teams distribute boxes on the ground, working closely with local organizations, international aid agencies and a global network of volunteers.

    Since its inception in 2000, ShelterBox has firmly established itself at the forefront of international disaster relief, providing emergency shelter for people who need it most following more than 180 disasters in over 80 countries.

    They rely on public donations and could not operate without the generosity of people the world over. Shelterbox’s supporters constantly go the extra mile to help make a difference to the lives of families who survive disasters.

  • Lawrence’s 2012 Community Bike Ride

    Below is a reprint from a RideLawrence.com story.

    It was a nice 70 degrees at 7AM when we arrived to set up at the Rotary Arboretum.  In the middle of one of the hottest summers in memory, a small army coordinated Lawrence Central Rotary’s Steve Lane and George Brenner descended to set up registration tables, tents for safety, first aid, complimentary bike check outs, an up on top of a gentle hill an area for the training wheel take-off staff.

    The back of a rented truck has dozens of water coolers filled with liquids and ice to stave off the oncoming midday heat.

    Once ready registrants signed up, got their complimentary t-shirt and other goodies from local bike clubs and at 8AM the first batch of riders took out on the 10 mile ride – 5 miles up to the 6th Street underpass and back.  We has a SAG (support and gear) stop at the underpass which was mainly a bunch of iced water, but thanks to the local bike clubs if anyone encountered trouble tools and help were readily on hand.

    For safety along the way, volunteers were at the major intersection crossings to make sure traffic was not a problem, for peace of mile for the less seasoned riders.

    2012 Lawrence Community Bike RideAt 9Am the next larger, group set out to ride a mile and a half out to the Clinton Park Lake overlook and back.  It included a lot of the people who had ridden up and back on the 10 mile already too, it was amazing to see the pack of bikes head off down the trail.

    Interspersed the entire morning were toddlers and younger kids taking advantage of the 1 mile closed loop course.  Kids that did not have helmets and even those will ill fitting ones were set up with a nice new helmet and given a lesson on how to wear it and be safe.

    Walking a quarter of the way around the training wheel take-off station was set up.. staffers removed wheels and coached kids running alongside them down the gentle incline until the centrifugal force and a little balance kept them upright.  It was amazing to see the big smiles on faces when they realized they were actually riding a two-wheeler!

    After each ride or lap around the Arboretum pond the fine people from the Merc had healthy snacks set up for a little post ride energy or in some cases a celebratory granola treat for riding a two-wheeler bike for the first time.

    From all of us at Ride Lawrence, Lawrence Central Rotary we want to thank all the sponsors and supporters below – without them this wouldn’t have been possible.

    We plan to keep this yearly tradition going and growing, and thanks to everyone involved it looks like we’ll be able to do that!

    Below is a gallery of pics from the event taken by Chris Ralston of GP VeloTek.  If you have any you’d like to add please email them to us and we can get them posted!