The Rotary Club is Lawrenceville is participating in a matching grant project to fund the development of a new septic system for a hospital in Haiti. This project is one of the District 6910 International Service projects coordinated through the District Office (Brian Heimbigner, D6910 International Chair). With Board approval, the Rotary Club of Lawrenceville donated $2,000 toward the project and these funds will be leveraged, along with funds from other District 6910 clubs, through the Rotary Foundation. The Rotary Club of Pignon is the local host club.
As outlined in the grant application, there is an urgent need to completely replace an aging and outdated septic system for Hospital Bienfaisance De Pignon. An engineering study has determined the feasibility and cost of replacing the existing system with a new, gravity-fed, lagoon septic system, including updated latrines for the hospital. Once the local funding is secured and the grant project approved, the project is expected to take less than one year to complete.
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Gwinnett County Public Health, 10/22/12
On Monday, October 22nd, the Rotary Club of Lawrenceville welcomed food safety specialists Joseph Sternberg and Alana Sulka. After being introduced by Health Director, Dr. Lloyd Hoger, Sternberg and Sulka presented power point slides which provided information about the sources of foodborne pathogens and outlined the measures taken by the USDA and FDA to prevent contamination of food sources. They provided particular examples from Gwinnett County to clarify the nature of food-related health problems and the steps taken by their agency in areas of education, surveillance and regulation. They shared some photos of some gross offenders and described the standards met to keep a food service business open. Sternberg assured the group that most places scored well but gave a contact number for reports of any food establishment complaints: 770-339-4BUG.
https://vimeo.com/51966846
Alfie Meek Dir Economic Analysis Div for Gwtt County
The second program was presented by economist Dr. Alfie Meek, Director of Community Innovation Services. Dr. Meek cited statistics about the U.S. economy, ranging from the percentage of people currently at the poverty level to economic trends over the last several decades. He tracked the jobless situation on the national, state, and county level and compared the impact of recessions in the last century. He pointed out that Gwinnett County has experienced a growth in low wage jobs in the last decade. In the late 90s the wealth index was high in the county, but that is not the case now. He tracked building permits and gave a digest of net taxes over time. He forecast another recession in the future and expressed pessimism about the ability of the country to get out of debt.
https://vimeo.com/51511757
MEALS ON WHEELS GARY GALLOWAY
https://vimeo.com/51017433
Great Days of Service – 2012
State Senator Renee Unterman
Throughout her service of 22 years as a public servant on the local and state government level, she has focused on health and social law, consumer issues, and has given special attention to the young and vulnerable, as well as the elderly citizens of Georgia. With each legislative session, Sen. Unterman has championed legislation that has sought to end the sexual exploitation of minors. She continues to fight for a change in Georgia law that will view those children forced into prostitution as the victim and not a criminal.“The Commercial Exploitation of Children”
Young girls, 10, 11, 12 years old, are being inducted into the sex trade, not in Thailand or New York or Miami, but in Atlanta and in Gwinnett County. Senator Renee Unterman of the 45th District has taken on the personal mission of educating the public about this reality. She spoke at the noon meeting of the Rotary Club of Lawrenceville on Monday, Oct. 1, and shared the information she has gleaned about the growth of this problem in our area.
The issue was brought to her attention several years ago by a downtown Atlanta pastor who found children soliciting on the corner in front of his cathedral, and she has pushed to have actions taken by lawmakers in the legislature to deal with this reality.
She reported that runaways come to the bus station or to the airport from all over the southeast, where pimps gather them in to service men wanting to have sex with young girls. Orders can be placed on the internet, and pimps deliver the girls to the men.
Unterman was instrumental in getting a Study Committee appointed in the Legislature and the issue brought before her party’s caucus. She said that it was tough to talk to her male colleagues about men having sex with children, but she has felt driven to get this issue out into the open so that something can be done about it. The Study Committee gathered data and research which demonstrated that 400 children a month are prostituted and that boys as well as girls are targeted.
She has had some success with legislation. Mandatory Reporting laws have become stricter. It is illegal for anyone not to report on a situation where a child is suspected of being used in the sex trade. House Bill 200 imposed more stringent punishments on pimps. They now can have all their goods confiscated and even get life imprisonment. Unterman was happy to say Georgia was leading the nation in addressing this problem, but it is still very serious.
Rehabilitation for these children is a slow process, often taking over a year. Through the Governor’s Office, a rehabilitation program has been developed which provides trained professionals to care for the rescued children. Also, a consortium of over 80 churches have organized Street Grace, an interfaith, non-profit group designed to help.
A video of Senator’s Unterman’s talk can be accessed on the Rotary Club of Lawrenceville’s website, www.lawrencevillerotary.org.
https://vimeo.com/50563868
https://vimeo.com/50566125
https://vimeo.com/50566340
Bill Myers GC Fuire Chief
https://vimeo.com/50133024
Congressman Rob Woodall 9-24-2012
https://vimeo.com/50115672
Health Care System Reform Update
Tom Shepherd, the Senior Vice President-Planning and Business Development for Gwinnett Health System, spoke to the group about Health Care System Reform. He gave a brief summary of the Health Reform Law as it currently exists and speculated on the effects the law will have on individuals and on small and large businesses.
https://vimeo.com/49868951
Canine Pet Rescue
https://vimeo.com/47892183
https://vimeo.com/47892294