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Santa
Breakfast - December 8 at Northshore Junior High School
. . . volunteer crews are needed from 8 to 10 a.m. and from
10 a.m. to noon to help with the distribution of coats to children
attending the annual event. The breakfast is a long-standing
project of Northshore Rotary and our fourth year at providing
coats through Operation Warm.
ABOVE, at
Bear Creek elementary
Rick Pisani, Gary Whitsell, Tana Baumler deliver dictionaries
to 3rd graders.
Rotary
International and Gates Foundation
together commit $200 million to eradicate polio
EVANSTON,
Ill., U.S.A. (Nov. 26, 2007) -- Rotary International today
announced a partnership with the Bill & Melinda Gates
Foundation that will inject a much-needed US$200 million into the
global campaign to eradicate polio, a crippling and sometimes
fatal disease that still paralyzes children in parts of Africa,
Asia and the Middle
East and threatens children everywhere.
The Rotary Foundation has received a $100-million
Gates Foundation grant, which Rotary will raise funds to match,
dollar-for-dollar, over three years. The Evanston-based volunteer
service organization will spend the initial $100 million within
one year in direct support of immunization activities carried out
by the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI), a partnership
spearheaded by the World Health Organization (WHO), Rotary
International, the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and UNICEF.
“The extraordinary dedication of Rotary members has
played a critical role in bringing polio to the brink of
eradication,” says Bill
Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
“Eradicating polio will be one of the most significant public
health accomplishments in history, and we are committed to helping
reach that goal.”
The polio eradication grant is one of the largest
challenge grants ever given by the Gates Foundation and the
largest grant received by Rotary in its 102-year history. Polio
eradication has been Rotary’s top priority since 1985. Since
then, Rotary has contributed $633 million to the eradication
effort.
“Rotary members worldwide have worked very
hard over the years to reach this point, and it is rewarding to
see our approach validated in such a significant way by the Bill
& Melinda Gates Foundation,” says Dr. Robert
Scott, who leads Rotary’s polio eradication effort and
chairs The Rotary Foundation, the not-for-profit charitable arm of
Rotary that will administer the grant. “We hope that this shared
commitment of Rotary and the Gates Foundation will challenge other
donors – including foundations, governments and non-governmental
organizations – to step up and make sure we have the resources
needed to rid the world of polio once and for all.”
The Gates Foundation grant comes at a crucial
juncture for the initiative, which urgently needs an infusion of
funds to reach the eradication goal. Although the GPEI has
succeeded in slashing the number of polio cases by 99 percent over
the past two decades, the wild poliovirus still persists in four
countries: Afghanistan,
India,
Nigeria
and Pakistan.
The polio cases represented by that final one percent are the most
costly to prevent due to such factors as geographical isolation,
worker fatigue, low coverage with the vaccine, armed conflict and
cultural barriers.
Last month, WHO released data confirming that all
four remaining polio-endemic countries are on track to achieve
eradication. In particular, significant progress has been made in
India and Nigeria,
which together account for 85 percent of the world’s polio
cases. Nigeria
has reported 226 cases so far this year, compared with 958 at the
same time last year. In both countries, more effective oral polio
vaccines have contributed to steady progress in reducing polio
cases.
WHO Director-General Dr. Margaret Chan says the Gates
Foundation grant reaffirms that polio eradication is both feasible
and achievable. “This investment is precisely the catalyst we
need as we intensify the push to finish polio,” said Chan. “We
have the technical tools to do it, and we can achieve a polio-free
world if the rest of our financial partners step up to meet the
challenge.”
Most of the initial $100 million will be spent in
support of mass immunization campaigns in polio-affected
countries, poliovirus surveillance activities and community
education and outreach. The grant will also support an expanded
research agenda on ways to halt the spread of the poliovirus.
Rotary will distribute the funds through grants to WHO and UNICEF.
“The funds made possible through the Gates
Foundation grant will help the Global Polio Eradication Initiative
scale up its efforts to provide oral polio vaccine to children in
those isolated locations where it’s most needed,” says UNICEF
Executive Director Ann
M. Veneman. “This important contribution will improve the
capacity to protect vulnerable children from this debilitating
disease.”
CDC Director Dr. Julie Gerberding says the
collaboration between Rotary and the Gates Foundation underscores
the importance of private sector involvement in major public
health efforts. “As a government agency, we think it’s
wonderful that our private-sector colleagues have taken a
leadership role in something as important as polio eradication.
Their participation is absolutely critical.”
Founded in Chicago
in 1905, Rotary is a worldwide organization of business and
professional leaders who provide humanitarian service and help to
build goodwill and peace in the world. Rotary’s global
membership is approximately 1.2 million men and women who belong
to more than 32,000 Rotary clubs in more than 200 countries and
geographical areas.
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