Providing information about the Legal Aid office in Gwinnett County at the March 23 meeting of the Rotary Club of Lawrenceville was attorney Rachel Lazarus. Beginning with some basic history of Legal Aid in Georgia, she focused on the services offered by the five-member Gwinnett office. They serve individuals below the poverty line—defined as approximately $30,000/year for a family of four—and seek to provide equal access to justice. They strive to deliver high quality legal assistance to those who can’t afford legal fees. She organized her talk around the barriers that her clients experience: the expense of representation, work schedule complications when working on an hourly basis, child care arrangements, and the distrust the poor experience. Projects sponsored by Legal Aid are the Gwinnett Family Law Clinic, the Gwinnett Family Violence Project, and the Gwinnett Pro Bono Project, which has matched 150 volunteer lawyers with Legal Aid clients. Through their many programs they seek to help those with disabilities, grandparents raising children, children in hospitals, and seniors needing probate advice.
District Conference 2015
Jeff Ploussard: “Howard, Me, and Gerrymandering”
Guest speaker at the March 16 meeting of the Rotary Club of Lawrenceville was Jeff Ploussard, who spoke to the group about his experience working with Congressman Howard Wolpe during the Reagan administration and about the impact of gerrymandering on the American political system. He summarized Rep. Wolpe’s work with the House Foreign Affairs Committee and the Sub-committee on Africa. Wolpe was instrumental in getting the sanctions passed by Congress against South Africa during the days of apartheid. Ploussard maintained that a major reason for the current ineffectiveness of Congress is the practice of gerrymandering where voting district lines are drawn by the political party in power in a way to best serve the party. He is a proponent for independent commissions being appointed to draw the lines in a non-political way. He closed with comments about his association with Rotary, as a Rotary Foundation Scholar and Ambassador when he was a young man and as a judge for this year’s Laws of Life Essay Contest.
Senior Judge Robert W. Mock Sr.: Gwinnett County Changes
Senior Judge Robert W. Mock, Sr. spoke to the Rotary Club of Lawrenceville about his 28 years on the bench in Gwinnett County. He shared many changes that have occurred during those three decades, including a significant expansion of the need for courts and the speed of growth in Gwinnett County. He noted that the “law mall” built in Lawrenceville that was designed for long-term use is bursting at the seams, with courts having to move locations to accommodate demands. Jude Mock addressed the election of judges, including the fundraising required to run, as well as the different types of courts and the cases they hear. He showed an example of a contract written in Korean as an exhibit in a case he adjudicated and described the complications that arose from the intricacies of interpreting the meaning in various Korean dialects. The story was a clear example of the difficulties often faced by judges in providing equal access to courts and in making sound decisions. He also shared an amusing example of how a judge in Texas handled two warring lawyers in a case.
Bryan Ginn: “Georgia Campus–Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine (PCOM)”
Addressing the Rotary Club of Lawrenceville at its Monday, March 2, meeting was Bryan Ginn, the Chief Campus Officer of Georgia Campus—Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine (PCOM). He opened with personal reflections on being a third-generation Rotarian and having had a parent who was a polio victim. He then gave background information on PCOM and its major programs: Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine, Doctor of Pharmacy, and Master of Science in Biomedical Sciences. Their programs are designed to meet health needs in Georgia’s underserved areas. Founded in 2005 with a class of 80, they have grown to a total of 1,012 current students. They are funded primarily by tuition (78% of budget), and tuition is high, $44,000 a year. Students often leave with a debt of over $200,000. But competition is tough, with over 4,000 applicants for 135 slots in the Osteopathic program and over 1,000 for the 100 PharmD slots. He emphasized the positive impact of PCOM on the community, with its faculty payroll and its trained health care graduates.
FeFe Handy: “Page Turners Make Great Learners”
On February 23 members of the Rotary Club of Lawrenceville heard FeFe Handy speak about her non-profit literary organization Page Turners Make Great Learners. This group’s mission is “to expand children’s knowledge and understanding of the world, themselves and their unique possibilities through a love of reading.” The group grew out of her concern for her nine-year-old daughter, who didn’t like to read, and has grown by word of mouth into a multi-school and community program. They sponsor an after school book club which gives children in the 3rd-5th grades five books and one field trip. They host readathons, mostly in Title I elementary schools, where volunteers go into classes, talk about their professions and the value of reading, and read a book to the children. She characterized the experience as “bringing the dream to the child.” Emphasis is placed on the fun of reading and on the difference being a good reader makes in life.
Jennifer Reed: “Relay for Life”
Jennifer Reed is Office Manager for the Clerk of Superior, State and Magistrate Court, but she did not speak to the Rotary Club of Lawrenceville on Feb. 16 about that role. She is an active supporter and volunteer for the Gwinnett County Relay for Life program and spoke to the group about that upcoming event at the Gwinnett County Fairgrounds. Last year Gwinnett Country received the honor of being named #1 Relay in the World, and she seeks support for the May 8-9 event to make it as good as ever. She explained that the event runs from 6:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m. to symbolize that “Cancer never sleeps.” She first dispelled myths about the Relay for Life: it is NOT a relay, nor a race, and one doesn’t have to run. She provided information about the various activities of the American Cancer Society, which was founded in 1986 and which has become a world-wide activity with 5,000 communities in 20 different countries raising over $5 billion dollars. Services supported by the American Cancer Society include smoking counseling, diet and screening information, a 24/7 phone line, Hope Lodge to help families who have to travel for treatment, and transportation for those who need rides to appointments. Ways individuals can help are to form a team, join a team, register as a Survivor, raise funds and awareness, or volunteer on Relay days. Information is available at cancer.org.
Rotarians are Invited to Serve as Volunteer Essay Readers and Judges for Rotary’s Georgia Laws of Life High School Essay Contest
Like to read? Need meeting make-up credit? Then volunteer to read and judge essays submitted to Rotary’s Georgia Laws of Life Essay Contest, the largest character values and ethical literacy essay contest in North America. Nearly 40,000 high schools students write a short (500 – 700 word) values-based essay each year. You will be reading the top essays submitted by Georgia high schools, and helping select the 150+ school winners who will receive recognition and cash prizes.
The essays provide an eye-opening glimpse into the hopes, struggles and everyday lives of teenagers in our community. Serving as a Rotarian reader and judge is an excellent way to see how core values – such as those contained in Rotary’s Four-Way Test – are experienced by a younger generation.
There are two ways to volunteer:
- Essay reading sessions will be at the home ofSusan Mason, a Rotarian and the contest director. The required commitment for a meeting make-up credit is to read for at least 2 hours, on the following dates:
- Monday, Feb. 16(10 AM to 5:00 PM)
- Wednesday, Feb. 18 (9 AM to 5:00 PM)
- Wednesday, Feb. 19 (Noon to 5:00 PM)
- Tuesday, Feb. 24 (10 AM to 6 PM)
- Wednesday, Feb. 25 (9 AM to 5 PM)
To sign up for a time slot to read essays, contact Susan (georgialawsoflife@gmail.com; 404.367.9453). Location: 840 Woodley Drive, Atlanta, GA 30318, near Atlanta Memorial Park and Bobby Jones Golf Course. Rotarian spouses and friends are also welcome.
For additional information on Rotary’s Laws of Life Essay Contest, to watch a 4-minute contest video, or to read last year’s winning essays, visit the contest website at www.georgialawsoflife.org.
- Want to participate but can’t make these dates above? We also need two to fivesemi-finalist judges, who will help select the top statewide winners. These judges will receive approximately 15 essays via email on or about March 6, and will have 5 days to read the essays and return their rankings. Most semi-finalist judges take 2 to 3 hours ofat-home reading to complete the assignment. Please reply to Teresa Raetz at mailto:tkraetz@gmail.com if you would like to volunteer as a semi-finalist judge during the week of March 6.
Roy Whitehead: “Snellville’s Police Department”
At the February 9 meeting of the Rotary Club of Lawrenceville, Roy Whitehead, Snellville Chief of Police, gave a lively overview of the Snellville Police Department’s efforts to communicate with the community. They are active on Facebook where they share information about laws, with some humorous sidelines, and take comments from citizens. Criminals have been caught because of pictures on the site. He encouraged Rotarians to “like” and follow their Facebook page. Other community activities include volunteering in the Explorers program, sponsoring the Citizens’ Police Academy, visiting schools where they talk about texting and driving, and hosting an annual Halloween party for kids. He maintained that the perception that Snellville is crime ridden is unjustified. The media mistakenly locate crimes in Snellville that did not actually happen in Snellville, and he has appealed to media sources to be more accurate. He is proud of his department’s record in the past year when only 8 robberies, 11 aggravated assaults, two rapes, and no homicides occurred. Most of those crimes have been solved. Property crimes and shoplifting account for most of their work. He talked about profiling behaviors, the “CSI effect,” and the local Snellville Neighborhood Alert Program and recounted stories of how traffic stops, always dangerous, have led to the solution of major crimes.