President Elect wins BBC Sussex Community Heroes Awards 2011- Updated 20/01/2012

BBC Sussex and BBC Surrey hosted its first awards ceremony in honour of the unsung heroes working in our community on Thursday (15th December 2011).
The potential winners were nominated by residents within the BBC Sussex and BBC Surrey area.

The winners, including a Special Recognition Award, were announced on BBC Sussex 95.3FM/ 104.5FM/ 104.8FM

Nicci Holliday, Managing editor of BBC Sussex, said, “We were absolutely delighted with the response to our first ever awards and the quality of entries made for a very tough judging process.

“Pretty much any of the nominees could have made it onto the shortlist, and they were all inspiring stories.”

Sport

Awarded to someone who has contributed to local sporting life, either by playing a sport or acting as a referee or official.

Nominees: Matt Eade & Scott Morgan, Graham Cridland, Clare Clarke, Peter Seymour.

We are pleased to announce that our very own Graham Cridland (President Elect) won the award.

Congratulations go to Graham from all members

 

Press Release 04/01/2012
Award Winning Academy WINS Again

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sophie Warner, Graham Cridland & Tim Durrans

 

BBC Sussex & BBC Surrey held their inaugural ‘Community Heroes ‘Awards at the K2 Leisure Centre in Crawley on the 15 December 2011. 9 awards and 2 special achievement awards were available to nominees from across Sussex, Surrey and North Hampshire. All the nominees were winners for being recognised in their respective categories. The judges had an almost impossible task to decide who the eventual winners were to be.

The ‘Community Heroes Award for Sport’ was announced by BBC Sussex & Surrey Sports presenter  Tim Durrans and awarded to Graham Cridland by Para Olympian Sophie Warner.  Graham Cridland who lives in Pound Hill, Crawley, is Managing Director and Chairman of West Sussex Angling Academy, FSB member, and is also President Elect of Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club.

Graham said ‘There were so many fantastic & deserving people at the awards; I was convinced I had not won, I am completely overwhelmed. I have to thank SR Technics, the owners and staff at Henfold Fishery, All my staff and volunteers, our clients for making a difference to their lives, and to my long suffering wife and family, who have had to put up with the last 31 yrs of me coaching with Rugby and now Fishing.  Thank you everyone’.

Graham has achieved all this while working nightshift for SR Technics, maintaining Easyjet’s fleet at Gatwick Airport.  The Academy based at Henfold Leisure Lakes, Henfold Lane, Newdigate, uses fishing to help disadvantaged young/adult people, schools, special needs schools, community groups, care homes and respite days for all members of the Armed Forces, to rebuild their confidence, self esteem and family cohesion.

Publicity in Crawley Happy Times 19th Jan 2012

PLEASE CLICK ON PICTURE BELOW

Knickers to Zambia

 

 

 

 

 

Chikumbi School is a community school catering for children whose parents are too poor to afford to send their children to the state schools. Although primary education is free, children need uniforms, school bags, books, etc to attend state school and many are unable to go to school for those reasons. This school has been set up in the local community so that those children can still get an education. The children at this school need clothes; the sponsors we have send children’s clothes but no-one ever sends underwear. The little girls have to be especially taught how to sit down so that they don’t expose themselves and lose their dignity. The boys too have problems since once the flies on their trousers stop working they can be in a rather embarrassing position too.

We have been asked to help with this Crawley based campaign called “Knickers to Zambia” asking for donations of either new or good as new used children’s knickers and underpants for the children aged 5-16. We also need money to pay for the cost of getting them to Zambia.

Please help us with this very worthwhile campaign for Girls and Boys aged 5 to 16

For more information please contact

Margaret Williamson, Secretary, Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club 01293-443675

email: margaretwilliamson@gatwickdiamondrotary.org

 

2011 Royal British Legion Poppy Appeal (our best so far)

 

The Royal British Legion celebrates its 90th anniversary in 2011.

 

The Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club are pleased to announce that we  exceeded last years record of £1616 by over 37%

The total amount raused by us this year was £2220 and we have been advised that this even exceeded the amount raised at Sainsbury’s.  Well done to all those Members who gave up their valuable time to help with this worthy cause.

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The Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club have been asked again to help The Royal British Legion Poppy Appeal.

The venue this year is the whole of the B&Q, Carpet Right & Matalan Car Park on the London Road in Crawley

The collections will take place between Saturday 29th October 2011 and Friday 11th November 2011 between 9am and 4pm

We are pleased to announce that through the efforts of the Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club over £1600 was raised during Last Years Poppy Appeal.

We are now drawing up a rota for this event and would ask you to all check your diaries to see if you can spare us some time.

If you are able to help please reply to Ernest Izard maltacross2002@yahoo.co.uk with dates, times available, your name and address (for the Royal British Legion) and car registration no (For a Car Park Waiver).

Could you please also send a copy email to margaretwilliamson@gatwickdiamondrotary.org

We are hoping to make this our best ever collection year for the Royal British Legion

In 2009 we raised £305

In 2010 we raised £1616

Please help us break last year’s figure

World Polio Day 24th October

 

Welcome to the World Polio Day Information

Please give generously.

 

 

With the Publics help, Rotary have made tremendous progress in the fight to eradicate Polio. We are at an historic moment — less than 1% away from the end of Polio forever. In honor of World Polio Day on 24 October 2011, we are asking for your help by Donating to The Rotary “END POLIO NOW” campaign and to ask you to pass on the word to all your friends about Rotary’s achievements in order to help them finish the job.

 If you would like to make an immediate contribution the details are as follows:

RBS Crawley, UK
Sort Code 16-17-25 Account No. 10133361
Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club. Charity Account

Please send us a confirmation email to margaretwilliamson@gatwickdiamondrotray.org with “END POLIO NOW in the header and the amount deposited so we can thank you for your support.

Every year, in October we commemorate the birth of Jonas Salk, developer of the first safe and effective polio vaccine.

On Monday, 24 October, 2011 it is World Polio Day – a perfect opportunity to join the fight to end the disease.

The goal of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative is to ensure that no child will ever again know the crippling effects of polio. The Global Polio Eradication Initiative is the largest public health initiative the world has ever known.

After 20 years of hard work, Rotary and its partners are on the brink of eradicating Polio, but a strong push is needed now to root it out once and for all. It is a window of opportunity of historic proportions.

Rotary’s US$200 Million Challenge is the Rotary Foundation’s response to the two grants totaling $355 million from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to help eradicate polio. Every dollar given to PolioPlus will be counted toward the $200 million match, which must be completed by 30 June 2012.

The resulting $555 million will directly support immunization campaigns in developing countries, where polio continues to infect and paralyze children, robbing them of their futures and compounding the hardships faced by their families.

Your contribution will help Rotary raise $200 million to match $355 million.

As long as polio threatens even one child anywhere in the world, children everywhere remain at risk. The stakes are that high.

“If we all have the fortitude to see this effort through to the end, then we will eradicate polio.” — Bill Gates, cochair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Since 1988, Rotary International and its partners in the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) — the World Health Organization, UNICEF, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention — have worked to wipe polio from the face of the earth. A volunteer service organization of 1.2 million men and women, Rotary began immunizing children against polio in 1985 and became a spearheading partner in the GPEI three years later.

Rotary’s main responsibilities are fundraising, advocacy, and volunteer recruitment. To date, Rotary has contributed more than US$900 million to the polio eradication effort.

With over 33,000 clubs in more than 200 countries and geographical areas, Rotary is able to reach out to national governments worldwide to generate crucial financial and technical support for polio eradication. Since 1995, the advocacy efforts of Rotary and its partners have helped raise more than $8 billion from donor governments.

Rotary clubs also provide “sweat equity” on the ground in polio-affected communities, which helps ensure that leaders at all levels remain focused on the eradication goal. Rotary club members have volunteered their time and personal resources to reach more than two billion children in 122 countries with the oral polio vaccine.

Thanks to Rotary and its partners, the world has seen polio cases plummet by more than 99 percent, preventing five million instances of child paralysis and 250,000 deaths. When Rotary began its eradication work, polio infected more than 350,000 children annually. In 2009, fewer than 1,700 cases were reported worldwide.

But the polio cases represented by that final 1 percent are the most difficult and expensive to prevent. Challenges include geographic isolation, worker fatigue, armed conflict, and cultural barriers.

That’s why it’s so important to generate the funding needed to End Polio Now. To fail is to invite a polio resurgence that would condemn millions of children to lifelong paralysis in the years ahead.

The bottom line is this: As long as polio threatens even one child anywhere in the world, all children — wherever they live — remain at risk.

 

 

Contributions will be accepted till the 30th June 2012

 

 

 

Press Release date:             24th October 2011

Media contact:          Geoff Williamson, 01293-885833, geoffwilliamson@gatwickdiamondrotary.org

Local Rotary clubs log on to support World Polio Day

Rotarians from the Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club and across Great Britain and Ireland are publicising World Polio Day, Monday 24th October, by harnessing the power of social media.

On this date, members will post polio stories to their social network sites, such as Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and so on, including the following hashtag phrase in their message:

#rotaryendpolio

The inclusion of this phrase in every post will help create an active online discussion which will draw attention to the drive to eradicate polio. Adding comments to online news sites will also help boost the discussion.

President of the Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club, Dr. Mansour Jumaa says everyone can be part of the activity: “This is a great way to help raise awareness of polio and support a fantastic cause. Just 30 seconds to post a message, tweet or comment on a polio story with the hashtag #rotaryendpolio will make a big difference.

“We want people to know how close we are to eradicating this terrible disease from the world and how much we need their help to wipe out that final 1 percent. Rotary, in partnership with other health organisations, has achieved a tremendous amount since starting the drive to end polio in 1985. Instead of thousands of cases a month across 125 endemic countries, there are now barely a thousand a year and four endemic countries. The lives of over two billion children have been saved thanks to the Rotary campaign, End Polio Now. Although great news, we are not complacent. The campaign will keep going until polio is gone for good.

“I am blogging, tweeting and putting messages on Facebook to keep this campaign in the spotlight. I urge everyone to log on and help #rotaryendpolio.”

Members of Rotary Clubs Worldwide are going out to India in November to help with a National Immunisation Day. They will be administering the polio vaccine to young children, to protect them from the virus. This is how committed Rotarians are to consigning the disease to the history books.

Join in the campaign by blogging, commenting and tweeting on social network sites, quoting #rotaryendpolio.

For more information, visit http://www.gatwickdiamondrotary.org/2011/10/world-polio-day-24th-october/

Discover your local Rotary club ( Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club ) and make new friends whilst improving the lives of others.

ENDS

NOTES FOR EDITORS

About Rotary

Rotary International in Great Britain & Ireland (RIBI), part of Rotary International, has 1845 clubs and more than 55,000 members.

Rotary International was founded in 1905 in Chicago and is now the world’s largest international service organisation with 1.2 million professional men and women as members. There are 33,000 clubs in 200 countries and geographical areas.

Rotary clubs are open to men and women of all ages who are business, professional or community leaders and who want to use their experience for the benefit of others.

Rotary initiates local and global projects to promote world understanding and peace and improve life conditions for people of all ages and cultures. To find out more, visit www.ribi.org. or www gatwickdiamondrotary.org

About polio

Since pledging in 1985 to eradicate polio, Rotary and other health organisations have
made tremendous strides. Where there were once 125 endemic countries, there are now just four: India, Pakistan, Nigeria and Afghanistan.

The campaign to fight polio is supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation which has donated $355m in challenge grants. Rotary will match their generous donations by raising $200m by June 2012. The generosity of Bill and Melinda Gates is very much appreciated.

Rotary is the largest private sector contributor to the Global Polio Eradication Initiative, with partners including the World Health Organisation and UNICEF, which battles against a number of difficulties including geographic isolation, armed conflict, cultural barriers, worker fatigue and poverty.

Rotary clubs in Great Britain and Ireland have donated more than £16.5 million (US$26.5 million) to polio immunisation initiatives. Rotary members worldwide have so far raised US $900 million to fund polio immunisation activities and every penny raised goes to the project. Rotarians all work on a purely voluntary basis so funds are not drained away in administration costs.

Money raised goes towards funding national immunisation drives for all children under age five in endemic and high risk countries, as well as tracking possible incidences of the disease, measures to control outbreaks and improving public health infrastructures.

Stroke and Health Awareness Day 2011

 

 

 

Date: Saturday 9th April 2011

Venue: The Bandstand, Queens Square, Crawley

10am to 4pm

 

 

2000 People at risk of a Stoke in Crawley

PRESS RELEASE 10/04/2011

2000 People at risk of a Stroke in Crawley

We were amazed at the response we received this year from our Third FREE Blood Pressure Check Held in Queens Square on 9th April 2011.

Our thanks go out to The South East Coast Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust (SECAmb) for their help with this Year’s Event.

The South East Coast Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust (SECAmb) Paramedic and Clinical Operations Manager for Crawley, Dave Atkins allocated us Off duty and On duty Paramedics, resulting in a continuous flow of Paramedics and Ambulances in Queens Square for the Event.

The high success rate would not have been achieved without their dedicated support.

Thanks also to Publicity in the Local Papers we had a 340% increase in Blood Pressure Checks over our 2010 Event. ( A total of 184 Checks averaging over 30 Checks an hour ). The number of people referred to their Doctors for further investigation was again a huge 20% which means that if we used the same Percentage at risk against Crawley’s Population a staggering 2000 Crawley Residents would be at risk of a stroke.

In our Second ‘Know Your Blood Pressure’ event on Saturday 17th April 2010. 54 men and woman of all ages had a blood pressure check carried out by the South East Coast Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust (SECAmb). Ten had higher than usual blood pressure and were encouraged to visit their GP for further checks. The percentage referred in 2010 was 20% a 25% increase on 2008.

In 2008 when we did our First event 35 men and woman of all ages had a blood pressure check carried out by medical professionals. Five had higher than usual blood pressure and were encouraged to visit their GP for further checks. This equates to nearly 15% of those tested.

Rotary Know Your Blood Pressure Day is run in partnership with The Stroke Association to help people better understand the relation between high blood pressure (hypertension) and stroke. It is estimated that 40% of the 150,000 strokes suffered by people in the U.K each year could be prevented.

This condition can easily be controlled.

It is better to be safe than sorry. Please have a Health Check with your Doctor before it is too late as you do not want to be one of the 20% at risk.

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Stroke and Health Awareness Day 2011

The event: Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club Stroke and Health Awareness Day

Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club have again joined forces with the South East Coast Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust (SECAmb) for this Year’s Event.

South East Coast Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust (SECAmb) paramedic and Clinical Operations Manager for Crawley, Dave Atkins said: “Strokes devastate the lives of thousands of people across our region every year and SECAmb are pleased to be able to support local awareness raising events. If someone suspects a person has suffered a stroke they should call 999 immediately. The sooner we get to someone who may have suffered a stroke the sooner we can get them to the specialist care they need”

High Blood Pressure can affect people of ALL AGES and most do not know they have a problem till it is TOO LATE.

It is better to be safe than sorry so please come along for your FREE Blood Pressure Test between 10am and 4pm.

In 2008 when we did the same event during the two hour event 35 men and woman of all ages had a blood pressure check carried out by medical professionals. Five had higher than usual blood pressure and were encouraged to visit their GP for further checks. This equates to nearly 15% of those tested.

We ran our second ‘Know Your Blood Pressure’ event on Saturday 17th April 2010 with alarming results. During the event 54 men and woman of all ages had a blood pressure check carried out by the South East Coast Ambulance Service NHS Foundation Trust (SECAmb). Ten had higher than usual blood pressure and were encouraged to visit their GP for further checks. The percentage referred in 2010 was 20% a 25% increase on 2008.

Drama unfurled towards the end of the 2010 event when a visitor from Coulsden dropped in for a routine check.
After making the necessary checks and an ECG phone calls then triggered an ambulance being called and the visitor being rushed to East Surrey Hospital in Redhill.

Rotary Know Your Blood Pressure Day 2011 will see over 400 Rotary clubs taking to the high streets to take the public’s blood pressure.

On average, the awareness day sees around 13,500 people step up to have their blood pressure taken, with just under 3,000 being advised to see their GP for more tests and a further 196 urged to seek medical advice immediately. It’s fair to say that over the years, this event has prevented thousands of people suffering the sometimes fatal and often disabling consequences of a stroke.

Rotary Know Your Blood Pressure Day is run in partnership with The Stroke Association to help people better understand the relation between high blood pressure (hypertension) and stroke. It is estimated that 40% of the 150,000 strokes suffered by people in the U.K each year could be prevented. This condition can easily be controlled.
Rotary recognises that one of the biggest challenges is to help people understand that strokes don’t just happen to other people. They can happen to anyone, at any age and the biggest single risk is high blood pressure. Rotarian volunteers play an invaluable role in reaching out to people, encouraging them to have regular checks and take action when needed.

Rotary clubs run their blood pressure check events in church halls, supermarkets, shopping centres, libraries and leisure centres, usually assisted by a small team of health professionals, perhaps a GP or practice nurse.

For more information on The Stroke Association

PLEASE CLICK ON PICTURE BELOW

For more information on Strokes

PLEASE CLICK ON PICTURE BELOW

 

 

 

Gatwick Diamond enters 3 into Rotary Young Citizen 2011 Competition

 

 

 

From :- Rotary International in Great Britain & Ireland
12th April 2011

 

 

 

To :- Rotarian Brenda Burgess

Rotary Club of Gatwick Diamond

Dear Rotarian

ROTARY YOUNG CITIZEN 2011 In association with BBC News

Thank you for your Rotary Club’s valued entry to the above competition this year.

We had 67 entries, this, the fifth year of the competition, and the judges had an extremely hard task identifying the eventual winners from an exceedingly strong field. However, I am writing to let you know that your club’s entries for Creasy’s Drive Youth/Children’s Centre, Isaac and Stuart Bayliss were, I’m afraid, not among the five awardees. However, in my view there are no losers and all nominees have demonstrated wonderful initiative, service, commitment and personal giving and this should be acknowledged. I sincerely hope that despite you and your nominee’s disappointment, you will continue to work with them to the ultimate benefit of your community and your community’s future.

Please find enclosed a certificate of participation to recognise the significance of your nominee’s contribution, and I would be grateful if you would arrange for this to be presented to Creasy’s Drive Youth/Children’s Centre, Isaac and Stuart Bayliss in the near future with the complements of the judges and officers of RIBI on their admirable work.

For your information the five winners were:

Ceri Cockram (Dursley)
Clitheroe Youth Forum (Ribblesdale)
Holly Watson (Sudbury Talbot)
Joe Keir (Biggleswade Ivel)
Studheart ‘Sumo’ Charles (Edgware & Stanmore)

The quality of entries was uniformly outstanding and made the selection of winners a very difficult task. Our event partners have filmed all winners and they will all be featured over coming weeks on the BBC in addition to the live News 24 broadcast from the Conference on the 16th April.

Thank you again to you and the Rotary Club of Gatwick Diamond for your participation in Rotary Young Citizen.

Yours in Rotary service

Jim Moulson, President 2010 -11
Rotary International in Great Britain & Ireland

Thanks for Life beats £1m polio challenge

 

 

Figures from this year’s Thanks for Life fundraiser event show that Rotary members have smashed through the £Imillion fundraising target. To date, £I,005,653 has been raised thanks to donations from the public.

 

 

To make your own contribution please follow the instructions at the bottom of the article.

This figure is expected to rise further as more donations pour in.

All across Great Britain and Ireland, during the week surrounding Rotary Day on the 23rd of February 20I0, Rotary club members worked with schools, held collections at Tesco stores, dressed empty shop windows with information about polio and reached into communities to raise awareness of and funds to eradicate polio.

The target of Elm was set to help meet the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation challenge. $355 million dollars is being pledged by the Foundation provided that Rotary can generate $200m.

President of Rotary International in Great Britain and Ireland, David Fowler, said: “This fantastic result not only shows how much Rotary members are willing to do to save lives, it clearly demonstrates how much the public cares for youngsters overseas. I am very grateful to everyone who has donated their money and their time to help get rid of polio.

“Every time we collect for the Thanks for Life campaign, we are one step nearer to saving more lives and preventing others from being affected by this cruel disease.

“It is easy to take for granted our own good health and protection from polio but not everyone is so fortunate. Seeing little children unable to walk never mind run and play is heartbreaking. What we are doing is providing a brighter and healthier future which everyone can contribute to.”

The 23rd of February saw thousands of Rotarians across Great Britain and Ireland embark on exciting activities as part of the campaign. From a double decker polio bus which toured primary schools in Scotland to the Welsh First Minister giving his support to ShelterBox, clubs pulled out all the stops to make the 23rd of February, a Rotary Day to remember.

Polio campaigner, Gautum Lewis, appeared on national BBC news to talk about his experiences as a polio survivor and why it is important for everyone to be involved in the push to wipe out the disease.

Plymouth Albion Rugby Club players wore their End Polio Now shirts which were later auctioned to raise money for the campaign. The Lord Mayor of Plymouth was particularly impressed with ShelterBox, which was on display in the Cotswold Camping Shop, and the Literacy in a Box project run by Rotary Club of Roborough. The Lady Mayoress, on the other hand, was touched by the polio campaign as her mother had suffered from polio as a child.

In Wales, Rotarians took the opportunity of the start of the Thanks for Life Campaign to present a showcase to Welsh Assembly Members and the public with a presence in the Senedd, the National Assembly Building on the waterfront in Cardiff Bay. Supported by Rotarians from District II50, II80 and Rotary Club of Monmouth, the display showed the importance of the Thanks for Life project and showed many of the other activities carried out by Rotary. The Rotarians were joined by Interactors from Dyffryn Taf School in Whitland who erected a ShelterBox tent and displayed the box contents on the concourse outside the Senedd.

The polio bus hit the roads in Scotland thanks to the Rotary clubs of Castle Douglas, Dalkeith and Kirkcudbright. Pupils in the area donated a pound to board the bus and learn all about polio. They were given purple wrist bands with the words: “End Polio Now, Thanks for Life”. In other schools, pupils wore purple clothing and put purple fingerprints on maps of the world.

Gloucester Cathedral caught the attention of the BBC when it was lit up with the End Polio Now logo, and a bravery award ought to be given to the Rotary Club of Winchester who defied the rain and cold to collect in the streets. This did not go unnoticed and BBC Radio Solent’s Jon Cuthill interviewed the club live on air.

Rotarian pens smash hit for Thanks for Life The cornerstone of the Thanks for Life programme at RC Elthorne Hillingdon was undoubtedly their 27th February Gala dinner followed by Royal Mistresses, a one-woman show written by Past President and Paul Harris Fellow Joan Greening. Joan, a noted author with published stage plays and TV sitcoms in her portfolio describes Royal Mistresses as her contribution towards the Gates Challenge: “As a club we wanted to make a real contribution to the Thanks for Life effort and as an individual Rotarian this was a vocational skill I could bring to bear”.

Starring TV and stage actor Jean Heard (pictured above)who generously gave her talents and time for the evening, the four vignettes that make up Royal Mistresses were woven with bawdy humour, unabashed vanity, heart-rending longing and carefree abandon around the stories of Nell Gwynne (Charles II), Mary Robinson (Regency Prince of Wales, later George IV), Dorothy Jordan (William IV), and Lillie Langtry (Edward VII).

The dinner for I20 generous patrons, raised a total of £2,I00, including a significant matching amount from Barclays Bank. Added to the efforts of the club at Tesco on the same day, and some additional donations, the club raised the magnificent total of £2,800, doubling the club’s target for the week.

When Southend United played Walsall at Roots Hall the home side wore purple shirts bearing the words ‘End Polio Now and the Rotary Wheel.

If you would like to make an immediate contribution the details are as follows:

RBS Crawley, UK
Sort Code 16-17-25 Account No. 10133361
Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club. Charity Account
Please send us a confirmation email (marked Polio) with the amount deposited so we can thank you

 

 

Santa comes to Maidenbower, Pound Hill and Worth 2010

 

Watch out between
6pm to 8pm 23rd to 26th Nov
and 6pm to 8pm 30th Nov to 3rd Dec

 

 

SantaQuad and Santa’s Squad will be coming to Maidenbower, Pound Hill and Worth

Christmas Collection Routes 2010

For SantaQuad and The Santa Squad
Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club
.

Please note these are planned routes. Time permitting all streets listed will be visited

Route 1 ( Tues 23rd Nov.)Area East of Oriel Roundabout
Meet at Maidenbower Shops at 1745 (5 45pm) RH10 7QH
Maidenbower Drive, Delfont Close, Benjamin Close, Shaftesbury Road, Redgrave Drive, Georgian Close, Bancroft Road.

Route 2 ( Wed 24th Nov). Pound Hill East Area
Meet at Unction of Blindley Road & Heathfield RH10 3NU 17:45 45 (5.45pm)
Heathfield, Wakehams Green Drive area

Route 3 ( Thu 25 Nov) Area North of Oriel Roundabout
Meet at junction of Billinton Drive and Haworth Drive at 1745 (5.45pm) RH10 7NF
Haworth Drive, Blackett Road, Craven Road, Walker Road, Cavell Way, Campell Road, Westminster Road, Seven Road, Fowler Close.

Route 4 ( Fri 26th Nov ) Worth North Area
Meet at Junction of Wentworth Drive and The Ridings at 1745 (5.45pm)
The Ridings, The Cackstones, The Grooms,Staceway, Lytton Drive, Sedgefield Close,Sissinghurst Close

Route 5 ( Tues 30th Nov) 1st Area South of Oriel Roundabout
Meet at Matthews Drive and Gates Close at 1745hrs RH10 7HH(5.45pm) RH10 7HH
Matthews Drive, Gates Close, Tullett Road, Gregory Close, Pallingham Drive, Harper Drive ( South side)

Cancelled due to Sheet Ice Route 6 ( Wed 1St Dec) Worth South Area
Meet outside school on Turners Hill Road and Church Rd at 1745 (5.45pm)
Chepstow Close, Kelso Close, Hexham Close, Hazelhurst Drive, Ashurst Drive, Church Road

Sorry again Snow Luck Tonight. Cancelled. 12inches of Snow and Growing
Route 7 (Thu 2nd Dec) 2nd Area South of Oriel Roundabout
Meet at junction of Pallingha Dr, and Stopham Road, at (1745 5.45pm)
Pallingham Drive Stopham Road, Moorland Road, Shoreham Road, Lucerne Drive (North side)

Sorry again Snow Luck Tonight. Event Cancelled.
Route 8 ( Fri 3rd Dec) Pound Hill West Area
Meet at Peterhouse Parade at 1745 (5.45) RH10 3BA
Grattons Drive, Leighlands, Pembroke Road, Somereville Drive, St. Catherines Road, Milton Mount Avenue.,

We have applied for an extension from the Council so keep checking this website

Monies raised over this period will all go to Local Charities

Santa’s Helpers Volunteers Needed

We are still looking for helpers for the Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club Santa Collections around Maidenbower, Pound Hill & Worth

The confirmed dates and times are 6pm to 8pm 23rd to 26th Nov and 6pm to 8pm 30th Nov to 3rd Dec.

If you can spare some time between 6pm and 8pm on the above dates please contact Ernest Izard on 07941-883075 or maltacross2002@yahoo.co.uk asap.

Poppy Appeal 2010 (Over £1600 raised by us)

 

We were collecting at the B & Q Car Park between 30th October and the 11th November inclusive.

 

We are pleased to announce that through the efforts of the Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club over £1600 was raised for This Years Poppy Appeal.

Crawley News printed or Press Release in 27th Oct edition

The Royal British Legion Poppy Appeal
We have been asked to help them over the period of the 30th October and the 11th November inclusive.

We were collecting at the B & Q Car Park in Crawley.between 8am and 4pm 30th October to 11th November for this very worthy cause

If you are unable to get there for a poppy please contact Ernest Izard on 07941-883075 or maltacross2002@yahoo.co.uk asap.

The Crawley News put our Press Releas in 27th October 2010 edition of Crawley News on page 15 see below.

Take a Break Hatrick

 

 

 

Gatwick Diamond Rotary Club in in a National magazine for the Third Year Running

 

 

 

We are pleased that our club has appeared on Page 49 of the Take a Break magazine 14 October 2010 Issue 41.

This is the third time our club has done the World Wide Wedding day Walk and the third time we have been publicised in the Take a Break Magazine

PLEASE CLICK ON PICTURE BELOW