ROTARY GRAM
High
Noon Rotary
March
4, 2004
Patty
Burkholder called the meeting to order with the suggestion we all pray silently
for a moment, giving thanks for another wonderful day in paradise. The Pledge
of Allegiance followed.
Today’s
guests were:
Our
speaker, Gregory S. Hoch, Director, Planning and Community Development, City of
Durango and Eddie and Nancy Cheung of Newbury Park, Kenneth Walker of Ardmore,
OK, and Bob Geffe and Joy Mathis.
Marv
Collentine announced, with a little help from serenading friends, that he will
be attending a NASTAR alpine skiing competition in Utah. Marv modestly credits
the benefits of NASTAR’s age handicapping system (and his 71 years of life
experience) with his Gold Medal rating and invitation to this competition. Fresh
from his travels, John Marshall presented the flag of the Rotary Club of
GrandCayman Island.
G.
Steven Wheeldon gave a detailed recital of the adventures and participation of
Rotarians at Durango Mountain Resort during the Dave Spencer Ski Race, last
weekend, benefitting Adaptive Sports. An impressive amount of money was raised,
though the precise amount escaped my notetaking (however $40,000.00 seems to
ring a bell once Steve’s minute accountancy tallied all funds raised to benefit
Adaptive Sports).
Jeannie
Wheeldon spoke for five minutes during the “This is Your Life” portion of our
program. She gave perhaps the most-memorable and courageous biographical
presentation to date. Jeannie is a fourth-generation Durangoan. Her
great-grandparents arrived by covered wagon. Jeannie’s lifelong involvement in
the Strater Hotel and Diamond Circle Theater stem from her grandfather’s
purchase of the Strater and Jeannie holding down every conceivable job in those
establishments at some point during her life, including at age 7 being the
telephone operator. Following her
father’s example, Jeannie is a life long Rotarian. Involvement with horse and skiing began from her earliest years.
She began horse wrangling on pack trips at age 8. She learned to ski at
locations no longer in use (including Stoner) and remembers Purgatory from its
inception. In high school, she participated on the ski and tennis teams. She
once played an exhibition match with Arthur Ashe. After high school, she spent
one year touring with Up With People, then got her degree from Stanford
University. She became a hot air balloon pilot and flew at the Calgary Olympics
(as part of the festivities and merry making, not competition). She married
Steve Wheeldon in Hawaii on the beach and has kept “two studs on the property”
ever since, (horse breeding operations accounting for the second). Drawing what seemed her first breath from a
non-stop recital of activity, Jeannie paused
“for the hard part.” “My life has been so frantic because I am a
survivor of sexual abuse. I choose to overcome by being an overachiever.”
Jeannie tearfully recounted her abuse occurred at the hands of an older
neighborhood bully, while she was only 5 - 8 years old. She told us about this
event “to get it out and get it healed” after years of nightmares, depressions,
and memories. Jeannie’s courage met with open-hearted and complete acceptance
from Rotarians, who honored her with a standing ovation. We admire, respect and
appreciate Jeannie all the more for her honesty and this sharing of her
inner-most feelings. Jeannie, we thank you. You have earned our unqualified
love.
Our
meeting flipped from the soulful to the whimsical with Bud Deering’s reading of
a
humorous
story about how to get a cat and a dog to swallow a pill. Bud admonished March
birthday
Rotarians to ante up to the dictates of their conscience.
Greg
Hoch gave a program covering in detail the incredible number of projects,
issues, study groups, task forces, ordinances and agendas facing the City of
Durango’s Planning and Community Development office. Building and Planning
Activity reached record heights in 2003 with 320 building permits for dwelling
units (previous high = 211). There’s been significant building activity in
multiple subdivisions: Rivergate, Sky Ridge, Parkside Terrace, East Animas
Village, Valle de Verde, etc.
The
Mercy Hospital plan approval and coordination of transportation infrastructure
development with CDOT has been significant, with groundbreaking on the
immediate horizon. A Regional Traffic Study is underway, as well as Durango
Downtown Partnership. Intergovernmental
agreements with the county are underway for the Ewing Mesa plan. Code revisions
and Comprehensive Plan updates are in process.
Meeting adjourned late as Mr. Hoch’s presentation gave rise to many
questions from the
audience.