Showing posts with label Rotary International. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rotary International. Show all posts

Monday, January 16, 2012

Celebrating the Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Holiday at St. Paul's UMC at 7 p.m. on Monday, January 16, 2012

The public is welcome at the 2012 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Celebration at St. Paul's UMC at 7 p.m. The 13Th annual Dr. Percy and Lileah Harris “Who Is My Neighbor?” award will be presented at the service. Everyone is urged to come to this celebration of the ideals of peace, justice and relationships with our neighbors.

Earlier on Monday, the MLK holiday in Cedar Rapids, a joint meeting of the United Way of East Central Iowa and the Rotary Club of Cedar Rapids celebrated the MLK holiday with the 26Th annual Remembering Martin Luncheon.

Washington High School's 'Slice of Jazz' provided the musical program, while the Honorable Romonda D. Belcher, District Associate Judge and first African-American female judge in the State of Iowa provided the keynote address. Also, 22 local high school and ninth graders were honored with student awards and a leadership conference in the afternoon.

Other news in the Cedar Rapids community on this MLK Holiday. As reported: "At the Wellington Heights Neighborhood Association, volunteers were also out using the day to serve others by caulking cracks in an effort to weatherize their building." - KGAN CBS2.

Monday, January 11, 2010

One week away from Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day ...


Monday, January 11, 2010 ...

One week from today, two celebration events in our community:

The "Remembering Martin Luther King Luncheon" is sponsored by the Rotary Club of Cedar Rapids and the United Way of East Central Iowa. This event will honor 20 area students at the annual Remembering Martin Luther King Luncheon. This event is at 11:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m on Monday, January 18, 2010.

Our Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day Celebration Event will be at 7 p.m. on Monday, January 18, 2010 at St. Paul's UMC at 1340 Third Avenue SE in Cedar Rapids, IA 52403. We invite everyone to attend this community event of music, our keynote speakers from our community, the teachings of Jesus and the words of Dr. King.

Who is my Neighbor?

peace

Friday, July 17, 2009

Diversity Focus: The Corridor's Diversity Climate


Hazel Pegues, Director of Diversity Focus in Cedar Rapids, spoke on Monday, July 13, 2009 to the Rotary Club of Cedar Rapids on the The Corridor’s Diversity Climate.

We are highlighting Hazel Pegues' presentation from Ripples from the Rapids, the weekly newsletter of the Rotary Club of Cedar Rapids.

Hazel Pegues joined Diversity Focus as Director in June 2008. On
Monday, she reported to Rotary the results of a Survey on Diversity based on
information gathered from September 15 to October 6, 2008 by Vernon Research
Group. The phone and Internet survey was conducted in Linn and Johnson
County. The study consisted of 600 respondents, aged 18-85 and with an
over-sampling of non-Caucasian subgroups. The margin of sampling error was
plus or minus 3.27%. The purpose of the study was to establish a baseline
measure of the community’s perception of diversity and inclusion and to
highlight issues that Diversity Focus needs to partner with the community to
improve. The intention is to survey again in three years for comparison to
the 2008 baseline.


In many of the questions, respondents were asked to rank factors on
a scale of 1-5. A mean rating of 3.5 or higher is considered minimally
acceptable. Overall diversity ratings (rating your community in terms of
embracing diversity) resulted in 54% of respondents ranking their community
“good” or “very good” with a mean diversity ranking of 3.5. Rankings in
Johnson County (3.79) were slightly higher than in Linn County (3.36).
Ratings were highest for Caucasian respondents and lowest for African-American
respondents. Non-Caucasians cited a large difference between the
importance of certain attributes and the community’s performance on these
attributes. Caucasians considered the “GAP” to be much smaller.


For example African-Americans considered the premise that diverse
populations are welcome and accepted to be the most important attribute of
community performance (4.85) compared to Caucasians (3.79). But
performance measurement on this particular attribute, perceived by
African-Americans, was only 3.36 compared to 3.79 by Caucasians. The
African-American GAP was 1.49 compared to a GAP of only 0.74 for Caucasians, a rather substantial perception difference of 0.75.


On the basic question of “What does diversity mean to you,”
73.5% of respondents said race or ethnicity and 23% said religion.
Socio-economic class was cited by 12%, age (10%), gender (9%), sexual
orientation (9%) and disability (2%).The majority of respondents said they were
either “very comfortable” or “comfortable” with people of diverse
populations. However, respondents were least comfortable in social
situations with people with disabilities, people of a different socio-economic
class or people of different sexual orientations, all classes that did not
register highly in response to the question of what diversity means. In
fact disability is not often seen as a dimension of diversity.The percentage of
survey respondents who have themselves felt discriminated against based on
intolerance of diversity ranged from 19% (law enforcement and child related) to
21% (employment) to 22% (at a store). An especially alarming rate was
discrimination involving law enforcement which was 46% in Linn County and 69% in Johnson County for African Americans surveyed.People of diverse backgrounds are reluctant to move to the Corridor and are less likely to remain in the area
long-term. A welcoming and accepting climate is an economic
imperative. We must foster diversity to develop a 21st-century workforce
and compete effectively in the global marketplace.

For more information on Diversity Focus and The Corridor's Diversity Climate, you are invited to visit their web site and download a PDF on the Executive Summary. If your group or company is interested in having someone speak on this subject, please contact Diversity Focus.