(if you have any comments or questions, please contact Denis 
 
  
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Rotary Club of
Patong Beach 
Phuket Thailand 
 
 
 
MEMBER EDITION 
 
                   Bulletin 614 Volume 15 - No. 4                      30th September 2020
 
Monthly Edition -  September 
 
      International President                   District 3330 Governor            President Patong Beach 
            Holger Knaack                          Chalermchat Chun-in                   Jonathan Russell  
       RC Herzogtum Lavernberg                 RC Kanachanaburi 
            Molin Germany   
   

            

 

 
 
 
  

                                              Meeting Information                                    We regret due to the COVID 19 epidemic,all meetings are virtual only.                    As soon as the epidemic is gone, meetings will return to the hotel. 

               Upcoming Events

October  

 

                                                         Tuesday 6th 

Tuesday 6th - District Governor Visit 

 

                                                        Wednesday 14th 

Fresca Kitchen’s & Deli
Rawai, Phuket

7pm - 9pm 

                                                       Tuesday 20th

                                          

                 

Saturday 24th 

 The establishment of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative (GPEI) happened in 1988, launched by the Rotary International and the WHO, when there were nearly 3,50,000 cases of polio across the world. As of date, several regions like the Americas, Europe, Southeast Asia, and Western Pacific have been declared polio-free. However, countries like Pakistan and Afghanistan still witness rare occurrences of this disease. World Polio Day, therefore, is the perfect occasion to spread awareness about the dangers of this disease, and the immense need to vaccinate babies as per schedule, so as to completely eradicate the virus.

 

  

                                  Tuesday 27th 

 

 

 

    Birthdays in October 

1st - Walter Wyler 
10th Karen Eidsvik-Moody 
 
 
 

 

 Board Meeting Minutes

 

            10 Aug 2020, 17:15 on Zoom
 
           In Attendance: P. Jonathan, OB, David, Johan, Dieter, Karen
           Apologies: Best, Sam
                                                               
  1. Call to order / Quorum                                                     Chairman
  2. Minutes of last meeting                                                                                                                                                                      Chairman
             Approved
  1. On-Line Approval Confirmation                                                                                                                                                         Chairman
                     None
  1. President’s update                                                                                                                                                                             Chairman
         Jonathan would like to establish a subcommittee to define a new “uniform” so we               can all be dressed alike for special events.  Jonathan to raise during club assembly.
        
           22nd of August is the District conference and awards night in Hat Yai. 
           Cost is 1,600thb. KE to check with Mummy and get details of timing. 
 
          Jonathan is proposing that the club pays the cost, the transport and one- night                          accommodation.  Discuss during the club assembly.
 
         Phuket Governor needs to be put into Clubrunner – KE to follow up.
        
         Jonathan shared photos from Barry’s food handout.  They are giving out 450                     packages  and cooked food every week.
  1. Membership                                                                                                                                                 Sam            No update.
  2. Foundation                                                                                                                                                  Sam           No update
  3. Treasurer’s report                                                                                                                                        David          Please see attached.
  4. Fundraising                               OB
Are there any other NGO’s with conflicts on the date.  If people can’t come in perhaps OB will have a fundraiser in Singapore and reach out to past donors to donate remotely.  Drop dead date September 1st for vendor deposits.         Perhaps a ZOOM fundraiser.  Johan to send OB more swim program photos.
  1. Secretary’s report                                                                                                                                          Karen          No report
  2. PR / Admin                                                                                                                                                  Dieter
         Dieter has set up list of who is organizing which meetings.                                               For discussion at tomorrow’s Club Assembly.
         Dieter working on marketing/PR strategy with a standard look and feel for all our               touch points.
         Donation module for the website is not possible for us yet.
  1. CSP                                                                                                                                                             Johan
         The CSP committee had a meeting on the weekend.  Johan reaching out to                       another school in the North of the island closer to him.  Larry will manage that                     program. 
         Looking into having a motorcycle adjusted to work for a man with no legs                        (who has been supported by an Australian couple for several years.)
         The Vachira Hospital prenatal ward needs some respirators incorporated into the              incubators. Up to 5 are needed.  Johan is getting the details regarding costs and                any other needs from the director of the hospital.  Johan will take a video to share              for fundraising.  Possibly a District Grant option.  Dieter noted that the source                    should be something not too exotic just to make sure that parts and maintenance              can be part of the current system.
         Arnaud has donated an additional 100,000 into the Feed Phuket program.
         The roof over the play area at the Kalim school was ripped off during the storm.                David has 2 quotes for both it and the water system.  He is awaiting third quotes.              The repair and maintenance of the water system has been approved by the                        committee. The CSP team also would like to make sure the playground itself is in              good shape before replacing the roof.  Perhaps someone from the committee could            work on the playground equipment.
  1. AOB                                            All
                                                                                None
  1. Wrap up and Adjourn
    1. Meeting closed at  18:35
    2. Next meeting date / time 24/08/2020
    3. Next meeting venue ZOOM

******************************************************************

Club News

Dinner Out - 1st September @ Day & Night Restaurant 

 

Rotary Dinner out at Day and Night Restaurant.
 
 This was a great chance for us to try this new restaurant in Phuket Town. 
 We had a large and convivial crowd come to join the dinner including many guests.
 
 There was a shared appetizer and then everyone could select one of three entrees and have     the total food bill remain at 500 baht.  People could also order whatever they liked from the   regular menu and pay accordingly.  
 The interior of Day and Night is spacious and beautiful with design touches that delight the   senses.   Even though we were a large crowd, the service was efficient and friendly. 
 The drinks were cold and the food was delicious, and the company even better!
 
 We closed with a brief talk by P Jonathan and PP David explaining what Rotary is about. 
 
 We also invited everyone to join us for the big event on 22 September at the Holiday Inn in   Patong where the Phuket Governor, the Head of the Phuket Health Department, and the Head   of  the Tourism Authority of Thailand Phuket branch will speak about re-opening Phuket to foreign   tourists and reviving the Phuket economy.
 
PP David Arell 
 
 thank you ed Denis 

 

 

 

       

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photos by Dieter Dratwa  - Thank you ed Denis 

 

 

Meeting 8th September 

ZOOM meeting chaired by Dr. Johan

A good discussion on the psychological effects on people from the COVID 19 epidemic     was shared by those whom attended 

 

Meeting 15th September 

@ the Ocean Rock Kalim - Phuket

How businesses deal with Covid19

The Rotary Club of Patong Beach meeting of 15 September 2020
Topic: Getting your business through Covid19 - What we did @ The Phuket News
 
The meeting was organized by the Rotary Club of Patong Beach to discuss with business owners and entrepreneurs the options of managing the Covid-19 crisis.
 
View from the restaurant of Patong Beach 
 
 
Rotarians and over 35 guests started the evening networking with a welcome drink and delicious snacks provided by the Ocean Rock Kalim. After watching the beautiful sunset over Patong the group moved into one of the impressively modern equipped apartments to listen to Jason Beavan’s (GM of The Phuket News) presentation and engage in an informative Q&A session to better deal with Covid’s impact as a business.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   Insights
 
Jason presented the various editions of “The Phuket News” print media (English, Thai, Russian), radio station and online presence with an insightful history overview on competition and business obstacles.
When Covid-19’s effects hit the market beginning of 2020, he had to swiftly adapt to the dramatically declining advertisement revenue by reducing the cost side. As a result, the print edition has been reduced in volume. Due to reduced editorial work and various adaptations (e.g., more home office and reduced commute), Jason managed to half the normal working hours for all of his 40 staff. This way he was and is continuing to be able to keep all employed on a 50% salary basis in a fair way     (the best strategy for experienced and specialized workforce).
 
On the revenue side he was able to monetize his strong website traffic with Google AdSense ads spaces and sustain many clients to continue their still very much needed advertisement campaigns by personal and flexible discussions.
 
The audience learned a lot about the media landscape in Phuket and the still very successful role of print media in advertisement for local businesses.
 
The Phuket News continues to be a valuable source for information for the island and we thank Jason for his impressive talk and superior management skills.
  

 

 

 Night report- Dieter Drawa, Photos by PP Best Wanamakok  

 - Thank you ed Denis

 

 

 

 

 

Meeting 22nd  September 

@ The Holiday Inn - Patong Beach 

Rotary leaders "Phuket Revival - Reopening Phuket"

 This meeting was organized by the Rotary Club of Patong Beach to discuss the revival of   Phuket. The guests were invited to enjoy delicious canapes prepared by the Holiday Inn and had   an excellent chance to mingle and network before the formal meeting started.

 
 
 All enjoyed the live music while networking.
 Over 100 guests then moved into the meeting room for the formal discussion.
 
 
 
 
 
 Guest speakers for the meeting were:
  •   The Honorable Rtn. Narong Woonciew – Governor of Phuket -
  •   Dr. Thanit Sermkaew – Chief of the Phuket Provincial Health Office -
  •   Mrs. Napasorn Kakai – Chief of Tourism Authority of Thailand Phuket Office -
  •   Police Lt. Col. Udom Thongchin – Deputy Superintendent Phuket Immigration
Governor
The governor opened with comments about the pandemic recovery plans.                        He advised that the government is working to balance the three competing views
  • Open right away; we need the tourists
  • Open in a limited fashion with restrictions and controls
  • Don’t open and keep locals safe
He is trying to make sure everyone understands the issues and has a chance to understand what the government is working to accomplish. 
He can not provide a date for reopening yet and is coordinating with the Central Government to help Phuket People and the Phuket Economy.
He is dedicated to helping everyone understand government policies and promoting peace and understanding during this challenging period. 
 
 
TAT
Special Tourist Visa
 
Visit: www.thailongstay.co.th or other tour companies and apply online with a copy of your passport. TAT offices abroad are also helping.  Then applicants need to pay the room in advance and then arrive and go into quarantine at Alternative State Quarantine (ASQ) or Alternative Local Quarantine (ALQ) approved hotels or hospitals for 15 days.  Travelers must then quarantine another 7 days to travel freely outside the province through the rest of Thailand.
Added requirements
Show that they have a place to stay after quarantine. 
Have a COVID-19 test 72 hours before flying
Have health insurance with coverage of at least US $ 100,000 for COVID
This Special Tourist Visa is not finalized yet and subject to change.
 
Health Department
Decisions made at the central government are communicated to the infectious disease committee in the province.   The provincial committee is preparing for how to handle tourists when they are allowed to return.  The committee is working on a 5T model. 
  • Target group (countries with low COVID %)
  • Testing (Fit to fly certificate, COVID test) and Check at Airport. Testing during quarantine in Thailand twice at 3-5 days and again at 11-13 days.                            If positive, guests are taken directly to the hospital.
  • Tracing – Contact tracing of any cases
  • Treatment – Hospitals can cope – Phuket has enough beds, enough ICU space.     And additional field hospital space can be activated if required.
  • Trust – Tourists feel safe, and locals feel safe.  There are controls in place, and communication to the public is clear. 
 
Alternative Local Quarantine – The Government is working with hotels, and 1,000 rooms are ready to welcome tourists.  Safety is the most significant consideration. 
 
The 26 September visa deadline – The deadline has been extended 3 times already. Immigration is working overtime and on Saturday to help foreigners before the deadline. Tourists need to get a letter from their embassy with a reason they need an extended stay for immigration to grant an additional extension. There may be new regulations from the central government, but right now, a 1-month extension to tourist visas can only be given with a supporting letter from the embassy. If a foreigner is sick, they can still show a doctor's letter for an extension.
 
Questions and Answers
 
Q - What does TAT think can be done to stop dual pricing of foreigners?
A - TAT has no influence on the national park fees – these are decided by the parks department. The feeling expressed by some is that Thai people are part owners of the parks and support the operation of the parks by their tax payments, so they should have an advantage.
 
Comment of thanks that Thailand government has kept us all safe and is one of the best in the world for control of COVID.
 
Q - Tracing and how it will be done?
 
 
                 Night report& Photos Dieter Dratwa
 
                                                                                     Thank you PP Denis editor 
 
 

Meeting 29th  September 

 

 

 

*******************************************************

 

 

What it’s like to survive through two pandemics

By Paul Engleman Illustrations by Fien Jorissen

Sixty-five years ago, in 1955, I was diagnosed with polio. I was two years old, so I was unaware of what it meant to have been infected with the poliovirus, but I became more aware of it in subtle ways as I got older. And at some point, I understood what my mother meant when she said I was “one of the lucky ones.”

My mother came from Jersey City, New Jersey, and she sounded like it all her life, aided and abetted by a daily regimen of unfiltered Kool cigarettes. She drove a supply truck as a civilian during World War II and delighted in telling a tale about a GI who tried to “get fresh” with her when she gave him a lift back to the base. When she told him she was married and her husband was deployed overseas, he said, “Baby, what’re you saving it for — the worms?”

She stopped the truck and told him, “Ride in back, buster!” I have no doubt that she used an expletive, although she never employed one in the retelling, Jersey accent notwithstanding. But she still thought “saving it for the worms” was the funniest line she had ever heard. She was a woman who could take things in stride, the quintessential “tough cookie.”

But there was one recollection that could unravel my mother like no other — the one that involved her youngest son being diagnosed with polio and the palpable fear that stalked parents across the country during the summers of the early 1950s. She could not stop her voice from cracking when she spoke about that time. That, along with her warnings about staying out of “polio puddles” after it rained, shaped my awareness of how frightening the epidemic had been.

Among my childhood memories, getting the oral polio vaccine is as vivid as the classroom drills that taught us to seek safety under our desks in case of a nuclear attack. While I can now joke about how sturdy school desks must have been back then, there’s no amusement in my recollection of lining up outside the local firehouse for the Sabin sugar cube — that was serious, important business. I knew it then, and I know it now.

My appreciation for having survived polio faded away over time, but returned in force about 12 years ago when I began writing for Rotary magazine. I had assumed polio had been eradicated — or, more accurately, I didn’t think about it. I have since had the opportunity to get to know, and be awed by, some of the Rotarian volunteers who are working to achieve that goal.

One of the lucky ones

Now, as the novel coronavirus makes its way across the world, I feel a renewed gratitude for what it means to be one of the lucky ones — and a deeper understanding of how terrifying life was for many people six decades ago. As a 67-year-old former smoker, I’m among those now considered vulnerable — I have two adult children to keep reminding me of that — but I’m also among the privileged. My wife and I are able to work from home, we live in a single-family house with creature comforts, and we can afford to practice social distancing with little sacrifice.

Although adults were not immune to polio — President Franklin D. Roosevelt famously contracted the disease at age 39 — most of its victims were young children. Today, COVID-19 appears to pose the most danger to people over 60 — that is, the same group that polio targeted 65 years ago. “There was a high level of fear in the country then, very similar to what we have now,” says Cort Vaughan, who is one of those volunteers I’m awed by. When we spoke in April, Vaughan and his wife, Tonya, had recently returned from participating in a polio vaccination campaign in India.

A member of the Rotary Club of Greater Bend, Oregon, and a past End Polio Now coordinator, Vaughan began his work on the polio front before he was even aware of it: He was a March of Dimes poster child in Riverside, California, when he was three years old. He still has a copy of an article from a local newspaper with a photo of him dressed as a cowboy guarding the spare change that people contributed during a fundraising drive in 1955.

Vaughan doesn’t remember contracting polio at age two in October 1954, but, he says, “I have clear memories of my parents relating stories about it, and I could feel the emotion in their voices about what they went through. For my mother, it was like she was reliving the fear and anxiety of having her child stricken with a potentially deadly disease. Their stories were so vivid, so palpable, they almost became my own memories.”

The darkest story starts with his mother discovering one morning that her toddler was suddenly unable to walk, calling the doctor, and rushing him to the hospital. “If you had to go to the hospital, there was a high probability of being crippled for life,” Vaughan says. “Once my parents took me there, it was out of their hands.” At that time, polio wards restricted visitors, and Vaughan’s mother was desperate to be with him. “She discovered a women’s group that was sending volunteers to hospitals. She joined the Junior League primarily to get to see me.”

Vaughan’s illness paralyzed his right leg from the knee down, requiring him to wear a brace and sentencing him to a childhood in which frequent trips to the hospital for physical therapy replaced playing outdoors with friends. “I didn’t feel lucky then, but looking back, now I do,” he says. He also believes that the knowledge that comes from living with the scars of polio has heightened his grasp of what is required to overcome the current pandemic. “I know what it’s like to face a hidden threat, and I understand the need for people to stay vigilant and work together to prevent the spread,” he says. “I was defending the stay-at-home order in Oregon early on, when friends and relatives were thinking it was not really serious.”

Breaking the silence around polio

If the term “tough cookie” ever makes it back into common parlance, Carol Ferguson could be its poster adult. It wasn’t until her late 40s that she realized the pain and muscle weakness she was experiencing were post-polio syndrome linked to contracting the virus four decades earlier. Six years ago, Ferguson enlisted the help of three other polio survivors and five friends to launch the Pennsylvania Polio Survivors Network, a volunteer advocacy organization that shares people’s stories, provides information about post-polio syndrome, and lobbies legislators to increase awareness of polio and of the need to prevent infectious diseases through immunization. Ferguson, a member of the Rotary Club of Doylestown, Pennsylvania, and District 7430 PolioPlus subcommittee chair, says the stories she began hearing at the start of the first wave of COVID-19 bear an eerie resemblance to those her fellow polio survivors tell: a girl hospitalized at age five who remembers weekly visits from her parents during which she could only wave to them through a window; a two-year-old boy who was turned away from a hospital because no beds were available.

Ferguson’s own story is revealing for what her parents didn’t tell her. “When I was two years old, I had the ‘summer grippe,’ which we now know to be polio,” she says. “Ten years later, a doctor examined me and said I had a ‘polio foot.’ That was the only time that word was mentioned. My mother lived to be 92, but she didn’t speak about polio until shortly before she died. My father died having never spoken the word. I realize now that this is a reflection of the fear that they felt.”

Ferguson feels no such need for silence. Earlier this year, she spearheaded an initiative, in partnership with the Pennsylvania Immunization Coalition and local Rotary clubs, to produce a vaccination information and resource card to distribute to new parents in the state.

When Jonas Salk announced the success of his historic vaccine trial in April 1955, there was widespread acceptance of the need for mass immunizations. At some point in the future, a modern-day Salk or Albert Sabin will emerge to announce a vaccine to control the spread of COVID-19. But it’s anyone’s guess how widely accepted that vaccine will be.

Although we now have the benefit of communications technology that people in the 1950s could hardly imagine, that technology can also allow misinformation — and disinformation — to spread as rapidly as a virus itself. Ferguson is hopeful that credible and accurate information about vaccines will prevail. Oh, do I hope she’s right.

• This story originally appeared in the September 2020 issue of Rotary magazine.

• Paul Engleman is a polio survivor and a frequent contributor to Rotary magazine.

 

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 The COVID19 has resulted in so much disruption throughout the World. I would like to think we can still have a sense of humor.
 
      
             
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
               Members  
   A space for your image ! 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
A woman went up to the bar in a quiet rural pub.... She gestured alluringly to the bartender who approached her immediately. She seductively signalled that he should bring his face closer to hers. As he did, she gently caressed his full beard. 
"Are you the manager?" she asked, softly stroking his face with both hands.
"Actually, no," he replied. 
"Can you get him for me? I need to speak to him," she said, running her hands beyond his beard and into his hair.
"I'm afraid I can't," breathed the bartender.. "Is there anything I can do?"
"Yes.. I need for you to give him a message," she continued, running her forefinger across the bartender's lip and slyly popping a couple of her fingers into his mouth and allowing him to suck them gently.
"What should I tell him?" the bartender managed to say.
"Tell him," she whispered, "There's no toilet paper, hand soap, or paper towels in the ladies room." 
 
 
 
 
 
You know the nursery rhyme
 
Old mother Hubbard went to the cupboard
 
 
The Joke Cupboard is bare  !!,
 
Pleese send me a few Jokes for inclusion in this section.
 
Also an article is always welcome for the Bulletin. 
 
 
 
 
   Please Note:  
   As Bulletin editor, I reserve the right to not publish anything considered               inappropriate in the Joke section or elsewhere in the Bulletin -    Ed Denis