RC West CDO's annual fundraiser on July 2012 at Pueblo de Oro Golf and Country Club

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Rotary District Conference: The Annual Reunion

ARTICLE FROM SUN STAR CAGAYAN DE ORO

By Rtn. Netnet O. Camomot
Chairperson of Public Relations Committee
Rotary Club of Kalayaan

FAMILIES have annual reunions; Rotary International (RI) districts have annual district conferences (discons).

The discon somehow serves as a reunion for Rotarians if one has been with the organization for quite some time. He gets to build long-term friendships there, provided he clicks with the group, for there’s still such a thing as camaraderie. Or maybe chemistry. If he’s the type who keeps the group united because they would all love to strangle him, he becomes the pariah that makes everyone else cringe. That’s why recruitment is very important. A club should recruit quality members and not merely to meet the membership rate increase promised to the district governor.

There are times when one has been with another organization for several years. Then, he gets invited to join the Rotary, and once he’s in, he recruits his friends from the other organization. There are many Rotarians whose decades-long friendships have been built through joining the many clubs that hanker for his membership and that’s probably the one main ingredient that can keep a club going and going and going like the Energizer bunny.

One can easily say no to commitments sought by a new acquaintance, but saying no to a long-time friend is difficult. That friend could already be his kumpare, kumare, their children have also become close friends or even married to each other, so how can he ignore the other’s SOS pleas for yet one more Rotary project?

Rotary International has noted that the membership hasn’t really increased worldwide. It has remained as is, at 1.2 million, for many years now, meaning, if one Rotarian is inducted, there’s one also lying low from his club. It’s merely offsetting, not increasing. With the economic crisis becoming the favorite excuse for all the ills in the world nowadays (who knows, swine flu would one day exclaim, Blame it on the crisis!), it has also become a eureka moment for some Rotarians to vanish from their clubs.

Commitment is a heavy word. It involves committing one’s time to the club and the organization. But it becomes light when he realizes how that time is spent. Rotarians work hard and play hard. Usually, it’s the “play” that non-Rotarians notice, since Rotary clubs forget to let the public know about their projects. The discon, for example, is one Rotary activity that’s getting a lot of publicity. And most probably people are now thinking that’s all the Rotary does—to meet annually and hobnob with the “rich and famous.” What they don’t see are the projects that each Rotary club commits to each year.

The discon is the district’s grand finale for the Rotary year. This is the “play” part. This is one way it keeps the music playing. If family reunions usually happen during the Christmas season, RI discons may be held whenever the district wishes, as long as it doesn’t conflict with other RI assemblies and doesn’t fall either eight days before or after the RI world convention. Since each Rotary year starts in July and ends in June, any weekends from March to May seem ideal to give the hosts enough time to prepare, and also to enable the clubs to make their annual reports to qualify for the district awards.

For the term of District Governor Rhia Rita Y. Abalos, her club the Rotary Club of West Cagayan is hosting Discon ‘09, with Past Pres. Eduardo Alaba as Discon chair. It will be held on May 15-17, 2009 at the Grand Caprice Restaurant, Lim Ket Kai Center, Cagayan de Oro.

For more details on Discon ’09, please visit DG Abalos’s website, www.dgrhia3870.com(Press release)

RC of West CDEO honors unsung heroes

ARTICLE FROM SUN STAR CAGAYAN DE ORO

April Argen Pat B. Marzon
MSU-Intern

THE Rotary Club of West Cagayan de Oro continues its distinctive mark of honoring unsung heroes in Northern Mindanao.

And this year, Exquil Bryan Aron from Iligan City East High School bagged the Most Outstanding Public School Teacher Award (MOPSTA), held annually by the club to honor public teachers around Northern Mindanao.

The 32-year-old teacher said the award has been unexpected, and that when it was given during the awarding ceremony last May 4, he originally intended to attend a doctorate class in Math Ed at Mindanao University of Science and Technology (MUST).

Aron has been teaching high school math for 10 years, and has been mixing Information Communication Technology (ICT) in his class to capture the students’ interest.

“I believe that education is now a lot different as in the last 20 years,” he said, adding that teachers should cope with the changing times and should teach the students to become globally competitive.

According to Court of Appeals Justice Romulo V. Borja, a Rotarian for 40 years, MOPSTA has been going on for 28 years, albeit there were gaps during the entire period. The award has been running for 12 years straight now.

“We are giving honors to our unsung heroes...and they are the teachers—the most underappreciated, underpaid, and overworked,” said Justice Borja, who heads the Gigi Borja Memorial Fund, the mother sponsor of MOPSTA.

MOPSTA, Borja said, is to inspire the teachers to abide by their code of excellence.

Rotary International District 3870 Governor Rita Abalos agreed.

“Awards like this make our teachers feel that they are valued, that they are recognized, even in our own little ways,” Governor Abalos said.

She added: “We are now professionals because we have caring teachers...and I’m very close to them because my mother is a classroom teacher, too.”

According to PP Eileen San Juan, the screening process lasted six months from the announcement in October 2008, selection of finalist by December 15, and screening by January.

The award carries with it a hefty purse of P50,000 prize and a PC set for the winner’s school. Other awardees include: Gresenia A. Rafols of Bugo Central School (1st runner-up) and Ma. Dulce F. Cuerquis of East City Central School (2nd runner up), who received P20,000 and P15,000 respectively.

They topped five other finalists: Delia D. Acle of Mahinog Elementary School, Camiguin; Jinky Arnejo, South City Central School, CDEO; Anna Liza Ocaya, Suntingon Elementray School, Bugo, CDEO; Patrocinia Menciano, West City Central School, CDEO; and Julieth Lacson, Bayabas National High School, CDEO. They all received P3,000 as consolation prize.

Six semi-finalists also received P1,000 cash prize.

The MOPSTA committee is headed by the indefatigable PP Adrian Pabayo. He is assisted in this task by PP Eileen San Juan, Teresa Elloso, Moshe Amir, PP Modesto Babaylan, Visminda Rabarra, President Armando Tarayao, Excelo Cabatbat, Rodelia Gaylo, Roy Villaro and Liezl Deloso.

Sponsors were the Gigi Borja Endowment Fund, heirs of the late Justiniano R. Borja; Cecilia Borja-Chiongbian; Christine Borja-Sagabarria; and Justice Romulo V. Borja; Sotelco thru past District Governor Narciso Nolasco and Lutt Nolasco; Luneta Dayta-Abellanosa; HP Philippines/Globalchips Technologies Inc. thru Rotarian William Y. Malagar; RC West Foundation Inc.; Pres. Adrian R. Co; Ma. Theresa Elloso; Adrian C. Pabayo and Armando A. Tarayao.

Rotary International