1 / 77

The Rotary Foundation 2013 CLTS

The Rotary Foundation 2013 CLTS. Outline. TRF Giving Administrative Tools Recognition TRF Programs TRF Calendar. Why The Rotary Foundation?. Our name is Rotary International Rotary Club monitor “on the ground” Tough reporting and checking system

missy
Download Presentation

The Rotary Foundation 2013 CLTS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Rotary Foundation2013 CLTS

  2. Outline • TRF Giving • Administrative Tools • Recognition • TRF Programs • TRF Calendar

  3. Why The Rotary Foundation? • Our name is Rotary International • Rotary Club monitor “on the ground” • Tough reporting and checking system • Charity Navigator’s highest (4-star) rating

  4. Annual Programs Fund Earnings pay for TRF administration YEAR 1 YEAR 2 YEAR 3 50% 50% SHARE District Designated Fund (DDF) World Fund

  5. Annual Programs Giving • Unrestricted • Determines club per capita, EREY, and Sustaining Member status • Determines availability of funds for TRF programs 3 years hence • Tips for making giving easy • Recurring/automated giving: ROTARY DIRECT • Promoting giving by club dues option

  6. Annual Programs Giving • Education • Foundation Thoughts • September District Foundation Seminar • November is Foundation Month—Plan Now • Speakers and Club Programs • District Foundation Newsletters

  7. Questions PDG Donna Phillips District Annual Giving Chair Rotary Club of Rappahannock-Fredericksburg ziarkowd@yahoo.com

  8. Questions PDG D. R. Butler District Major Gifts Chair Rotary Club of Mount Vernon dbutle64@aol.com

  9. Paul Harris Society: What is it? • Recognizes individual donors who pledge $1,000 to Annual Fund-SHARE each year they are financially able • Certificate and PHS “wings” to each donor • Clubs with 4 or more PHS members receive a PHS banner • 180 PHS members now • Goal: 250 members

  10. Growing PHS Members in Your Club • Lead by example—most people want to follow a leader who walks the walk • Educate members where the money goes—100% to support our Service Above Self • Approach other club leaders and ask them to join with you • Announce to the club & seek the buy-in of other members

  11. PHS Resources • District 7610 PHS web page: http://www.rotary7610.org/2012PHS.html • PHS Brochure • Membership Declaration

  12. Questions DGN-D Scott Mills District Paul Harris Society Chair Rotary Club of Great Falls smills@eblg.com 703.282.5725

  13. Endowment Fund • Formerly known as the Permanent Fund • Principal never spent; only the earnings • Outright Gifts (cash, securities, real estate, tangible personal property) • Life Income Agreements (annuities, trusts) • Bequests (specific, residual, contingent)

  14. Questions Steve Gresham District Endowment Fund Chair Rotary Club of Alexandria SGresham@nilesbolton.com

  15. Administrative Tools • Member Access—RI Website • Monthly Contribution Report (MCR) • Club Recognition Summary (CRS) • EREY Eligibility Report • Donor History Report

  16. Administrative Tools • Global Contribution Form (Form 123-EN) • Recognition Transfer Form (Form 102-EN) • Multiple Donor Form (Form 094-EN) • Rotary Direct Form (Form 712-EN)

  17. Administrative Tools • Member Access—RI Website • Go to www.rotary.org and click on “Member Access” at top right • Enter your user name (e-mail address) and password (if you do not have one or forgot it, click the appropriate box and a password will be sent to your e-mail address within a few minutes) • Click “Sign-in”

  18. Administrative Tools Monthly Contribution Report (MCR)

  19. Administrative Tools Club Recognition Summary (CRS)

  20. Administrative Tools EREY Eligibility Report

  21. Administrative Tools Donor History Report • In Member Access—”View Your Contribution History”, then “Individual Reports” • Donor Overview • Recognition (MD, BS, PHF, PHS Eligible, EREY, SM) • Gifts (APF, Polio, Permanent Fund cash, Other Restricted, pie chart) • Bequest Society, Benefactor Commitments • Transaction Detail • Contributions/Transfers

  22. Administrative Tools Contribution Form (Form 123-EN)

  23. Administrative Tools Recognition Transfer Form (Form 102-EN)

  24. Administrative Tools Multiple Donor Form (Form 094-EN)

  25. Administrative Tools Rotary Direct Form (Form 712-EN)

  26. Individual Recognition (TRF) Paul Harris Fellow - $1,000+ Major Donor - $10,000+

  27. Individual Recognition (TRF) Benefactor - $1,000+ Bequest Society - $10,000+

  28. Individual Recognition (District) Triple Crown • Paul Harris Fellow • RF Sustaining Member • Benefactor Paul Harris Society - $1,000+/year to APF

  29. Recognition Points • Purpose: Allow one person to give, but another to be recognized • One point earned for each dollar given • “Recognition Level”: Can be mixture of your dollars and another’s points to you • Shows in column 4 of your Club Recognition Summary (CRS) • PHF multiple level based on this mixture • Only dollars count toward Major Donor status

  30. Club Recognition 100% EREY Club • $100+ Club Per Capita • 100% Members Give Something to APF as of June 30 100% Sustaining Member Club • $100+ Club Per Capita • 100% Members Give $100+ to • APF as of June 30 100% Paul Harris Fellow Club • 100% Members are Paul Harris Fellows as of Any Given Date

  31. Club Recognition Top 3 Per Capita Giving Clubs

  32. Membership Impact • “Start” number (July 1 membership) • Never changes during year • Used to determine club’s per capita giving • “End” number (June 30 membership) • TRF makes name-by-name check • Used to determine 100% EREY and 100% Sustaining Member clubs (see EREY Eligibility Report for club status) • Pitfalls abound! Keep donations current with new members

  33. Club Recognition • TRF Elements in 2013-14 RI Presidential Citation (do 4 activities from the list of 9 below; do 5 for the Citation with Distinction) (March 31 deadline) • (required) Participate in a service project related to one of the Areas of Focus • Submit Foundation goals to Rotary Club Central • Support PolioPlus by a community fund raiser, OR by a public awareness campaign • Be a 100% EREY club on March 31

  34. Club Recognition • TRF Elements in 2013-14 RI Presidential Citation (continued) (March 31 deadline) • Be a 100% Sustaining Member club on March 31 • Have at least one member contribute to the Endowment Fund • Have at least 10% of members enroll in ROTARY DIRECT • Participate in a Global or Packaged Grant • Sponsor or support a Rotary Peace Fellow

  35. Club Recognition • TRF Elements in 2013-14 Governor’s Citation (do 3 activities from the list of 4 below; do all 4 for the Citation with Distinction) (May 31 deadline) • Achieve $200 per capita APF; all contribute • Contribute at least $2000 to PolioPlus • Contribute at least $500 to Rotary Peace Centers, OR at least one member attends Rotary Peace Center Conference • At least 10% of members attend District’s Rotary Foundation Seminar

  36. TRF Programs • Humanitarian • District Grants (DG) • Global Grants (GG) • PolioPlus • Educational • Vocational Training Teams (VTT) • Rotary Peace Fellowships • Global/District Scholarships

  37. Areas of Focus Peace and Conflict Resolution/Prevention • Disease Prevention and Treatment • Water and Sanitation • Maternal and Child Health • Basic Education and Literacy • Economic and Community Development

  38. TRF Programs District Grants • Formerly known as District Simplified Grants • 2012-13: 17 projects approved involving 35 clubs; typically $1000 per club • Total DSG amount disbursed, $44,696 • Total club contributions, $9,300 • Total other contributions, $15,520

  39. TRF Programs District Grants • District Grants fund smaller, short-term activities that address needs in both local community and communities worldwide. • To apply for a District Grant, submit your funding request directly to district (not TRF; see district website for details). • Districts may use up to 50 % of their District Designated Funds to receive one “block” District Grant annually.

  40. TRF Programs District Grants • 2013-14: 25 projects submitted from 44 clubs; typically $2000 per club • Total requested amount, $74,000 • Only one application per club allowed • Clubs often partner to increase overall grant size

  41. Questions Joe Akkara District Grants Chair Rotary Club of Falls Church jaakkara@aol.com

  42. TRF Programs Global Grants • Formerly known as Matching Grants • Foundation matches club (0.5 to 1) and/or district (1 to 1) funds for project • Requires international partner (host club) • 2012-13: 13 projects approved or pending; window closed March 31 • 2013-14: grant sizes increase; budgets must exceed $30,000

  43. Action Items for Global Grants • Determine if your project meets one of the six Areas of Focus • Locate, contact, and confirm a quality international Rotary club (host club) • Establish funding procedures (breakdown of how grant will be paid for); talk to international district AND club to determine their ability to contribute (host district DDF?) • Establish multiple points of contact within the responsible host club for redundancy

  44. Due Diligence for Global Grants • Keep Rotary International and District informed • Keep reports up to date • Keep lines of communication between all parties open • Due Diligence – may require traveling to project sites • Review NGO or third party work and credibility if they are participants

  45. Questions Andrew Wade Global Grants Chair Rotary Club of Dulles International Airport andrewdwade@gmail.com

  46. TRF Programs PolioPlus • Gates grant match complete, but eradication isn’t finished • “We’re this close!” • Still endemic in three countries: Pakistan, Afghanistan, Nigeria • India polio-free! • Clubs still have polio goal to finish job

  47. Finish the Fight • PolioPlus Contributions: Support distribution of vaccine and community awareness of immunization benefits. • The Problem: • In past years, clubs were inspired to contribute to the PolioPlus campaign. • Incoming club presidents concerned that members won’t contribute at same levels. • How can clubs build on 2012-13 momentum to encourage contributions next year?

  48. Wild Poliovirus Cases

More Related