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Meet a Key<br />
Clubber<br />
Endowment<br />
Fund<br />
Trick-or-Treat<br />
For UNICEF<br />
1
In this issue...<br />
Content Page<br />
Editor’s Message 3<br />
Governor’s Message 4<br />
Key Goes Green 5<br />
Your Executive Committee 6<br />
District Updates 7<br />
Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF 8-9<br />
Service Spotlight<br />
Manatee High Key Club<br />
10-15<br />
14-15<br />
Meet a Key Clubber<br />
Rustic Pathways<br />
16-17<br />
17<br />
Working Together 18<br />
FLOF/YOF 19<br />
Endowment Fund 20-21<br />
DCON Promotion 22<br />
Kiwanis DCON Recap 23<br />
A Few Key Points 26-27<br />
Contact Information 28<br />
Page 17<br />
Page 7<br />
Page 18<br />
Page 15<br />
Page 5<br />
Page 10<br />
2
Editor’s Message<br />
Hi, Florida District!<br />
I hope you all have had a spectacular start to your school year! If you aren’t already,<br />
please be sure to follow the Florida District on social media and to create<br />
accounts for your own clubs in order to show your club’s impact and to document<br />
the service you do. Please do your best to implement the hashtags<br />
#KeyGoesGreen for the Governor’s Project (page 5), #BeTheKey, #Elimin8 for The<br />
Eliminate Project, or #FLKeyClub. (page 11)<br />
Additionally, some of my responsibilities entail assisting club editors, managing the<br />
Florida District’s social media accounts, creating and editing newsletters, and designing<br />
this bimonthly publication, The Sunshine Source. If you haven’t received<br />
any monthly emails from me and you are a club president, editor, faculty advisor,<br />
or Kiwanis advisor, then make sure your OIF is up to date! If you ever find yourself in<br />
need of help, feel free to contact me; I’d love to help any way I can.<br />
Also keep in mind that you have the opportunity to send me any pictures of Key<br />
Club service that your and your club may do. Everyone has the opportunity to be<br />
featured in The Sunshine Source, and I’m always looking<br />
for new material!<br />
Yours in friendship and service,<br />
Carly Berthiaume<br />
District Editor<br />
Florida District of Key Club International<br />
Editor@FloridaKeyClub.org<br />
561.445.9119<br />
3
4
Mater Academy<br />
Charter Key Club<br />
built a garden<br />
using old tires as<br />
planters.<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
Organize a recycling program at your school<br />
-Caps of Love<br />
Collect trash during lunch<br />
Hold a bag/box drive: donate them to local charities, organizations, or<br />
supermarkets to reuse for their own purposes<br />
Do a beach/park cleanup<br />
Create and maintain a community/school garden<br />
Build birdhouses or bird feeders<br />
Establish a butterfly garden<br />
-On your school campus<br />
-At an assisted living facility<br />
Support environmental awareness programs<br />
Educate elementary/middle school students about environmental conservation<br />
Team up with a local Circle K to eliminate any invasive plant species<br />
NOTE: Volunteering at animal shelters is NOT a Key Goes Green project!<br />
5
Your Executiv<br />
Governor<br />
Secretary<br />
Treasurer<br />
Shane Meagher<br />
Webmaster<br />
Jose Leoncio<br />
Editor<br />
Palak Shah<br />
Executive Assistant<br />
Caleb Neale<br />
DCON Chair<br />
Carly Berthiaume<br />
District Administrator<br />
Gabriela Charlot<br />
Assistant D.A.<br />
Matthew Bonachea<br />
Donna Parton<br />
David McCampbell<br />
6
e Committee<br />
What’s new with the District Board?<br />
The District Board of Trustees voted at the August Board Meeting in Orlando to update<br />
the previous District logo with new logos. While there, the Board met Florida’s<br />
International Trustee, Amy Jiang, heard committee updates, attended workshops,<br />
and bonded with each other. The Board also participated in a Key Goes Green project<br />
in which used T-shirts were ripped apart and braided together to make dog<br />
toys, which were later donated to the Tampa Humane Society. (See photos below.)<br />
New Logos<br />
Old Logo<br />
August Board Meeting<br />
7
Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF<br />
WHAT IS THE ELIMINATE PROJECT?<br />
As part of the Kiwanis Family we work together with UNICEF in order to<br />
completely eliminate maternal/neonatal tetanus.<br />
Maternal/neonatal tetanus is a disease contracted during childbirth as a result<br />
of unsanitary births to unvaccinated mothers.<br />
It is easily preventable with only contributing $1.80.<br />
The Kiwanis Family helps provide necessary health education and vaccinations.<br />
All funds from Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF will go directly to The Eliminate<br />
Project.<br />
WHAT IS TRICK-OR-TREAT FOR UNICEF?<br />
A fundraiser to raise money for The Eliminate Project.<br />
It spreads awareness about The Eliminate Project while having fun!<br />
HOW TO GET INVOLVED:<br />
Order collection boxes<br />
Hold fundraisers<br />
Participate in Trick-or-Treat for UNIICEF week<br />
Partner with your local Kiwanis club to get involved<br />
FLORIDA DISTRICT RAISED LAST YEAR:<br />
$84,526 for The Eliminate Project<br />
AWARDS:<br />
Club banner patch: for each club that raises at least $250+ by December 31 st<br />
Elimindallion: for individuals who donate $625+ within 1 year<br />
PROJECT IDEAS:<br />
Haunted House<br />
Pie Eating Contests<br />
Pumpkin Decorating Contests<br />
Class Contests (which class raises the most money wins)<br />
FOR MORE INFORMATION LOG ONTO:<br />
http://floridakeyclub.org/the-eliminate-project/<br />
http://www.keyclub.org/service/TheEliminateProject.aspx<br />
By Alyssa Frank<br />
8
Connection is Key<br />
Follow the social media accounts below in order to stay up to date on what’s<br />
going in Key Club and with The Eliminate Project! Also, consider creating social<br />
media accounts for your own clubs! Remember hashtags, too! (#FLKeyClub,<br />
#Elimin8, #BeTheKey, #KeyGoesGreen)<br />
International: @KeyClubInt<br />
Florida: @FLKeyClub<br />
International: Key Club International<br />
Florida: Florida District of Key Club<br />
International<br />
Eliminate: The Eliminate Project<br />
International: @KeyClub<br />
Florida: @FLKeyClub<br />
Eliminate: @EliminateMNT<br />
International: Key Club International<br />
Florida: FLKeyClub<br />
Eliminate: The Eliminate Project<br />
More Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF Fundraising<br />
A full list of fundraising options is available at this website, but here are a few<br />
ideas:<br />
<br />
Car wash<br />
<br />
Trunk-Or-Treat<br />
<br />
Dodgeball tournament<br />
<br />
Organize a walk/run<br />
<br />
Bake sale<br />
<br />
Scavenger hunt<br />
<br />
Costume contest<br />
<br />
Penny Wars<br />
<br />
Organize pumpkin donation for Pumpkin Smash<br />
9
As a Key Club member, you have an infinite variety of service and fundraising<br />
opportunities to consider. Here are some of the Florida District’s best examples<br />
of leadership through service; hopefully, you may find a project that your own<br />
club would be interested in!<br />
Share your own service experiences with the District by completing all of your<br />
pride reports and using #FLKeyClub on your social media accounts!<br />
Club: Hialeah High School<br />
Division: 25A<br />
Zone: K25<br />
This Key Club organized a school beautification<br />
project and campus clean-up;<br />
they raked out the old dirt, leaves, and<br />
weeds, then spread mulch.<br />
Club: Mater Academy Charter<br />
Division: 25A<br />
Zone: K25<br />
This Key Club planted a garden on campus using old<br />
tires; they also implemented an Elkay water bottle filling<br />
station in order to reuse bottles and reduce waste.<br />
10
Club: Boyd Anderson High School<br />
Division: 23B<br />
Zone: J<br />
This Key Club organized several recycling projects<br />
for items like bottle caps for Caps of Love, aluminum<br />
cans, plastic bottles, and soda can tabs.<br />
Club: Leon High School<br />
Division: 3<br />
Zone: B<br />
This Key Club created Cyber Senior, an event at the Tallahassee Senior<br />
Center where a presentation was held focusing on the use of new technology<br />
today. High schoolers sat down with the elders took the time to answer<br />
any questions about phones, tablets, or any other devices by the seniors,<br />
as well as hashtags and social media.<br />
Club: Everglades High School<br />
Division: 24B<br />
Zone: J<br />
This Key Club set up a table at their<br />
school’s freshman orientation and publicized<br />
their Key Club. They handed out<br />
flyers and encouraged the new students<br />
to join.<br />
11
Club: Somerset Academy Central<br />
Miramar<br />
Division: 24B<br />
Zone: J<br />
This Key Club repainted their school’s elementary<br />
school playground.<br />
Club: Mulberry High School<br />
Division: 15A<br />
Zone: F<br />
This Key Club repainted all of the paw prints<br />
(from their school mascot, the Panther) in their<br />
school.<br />
Club: Trinity P reparatory School<br />
of Florida<br />
Division: 10A<br />
Zone: D<br />
This Key Club sorted over 7,000 items<br />
to donate to homeless children in<br />
schools within the Seminole County<br />
area for the Families in Transition<br />
Clothing Drive.<br />
12
Club: South Plantation High School<br />
Division: 24A<br />
Zone: J<br />
This Key Club sold art before the showcase at Nova<br />
Southeastern University. Members also assisted<br />
someone from the Ann Stork Center with selling<br />
raffles and concessions.<br />
Club: Bishop McLaughlin Catholic High<br />
School<br />
Division: 12<br />
Zone: E<br />
This Key Club collected over 30 backpacks<br />
that were stuffed with supplies for children<br />
in need at Lewis Elementary School.<br />
A Message from the Editor<br />
Thank you to these outstanding clubs; keep up the amazing work! Continue<br />
including pictures in your pride reports, and I might just include them in<br />
the next issue of The Sunshine Source.<br />
The next two pages of the Service Spotlight have been dedicated to<br />
Manatee High School Key Club, which went above and beyond expectations<br />
to build a playground for handicapped children. I highly encourage you to<br />
read it! It’s a very inspiring story and is sure to brighten your day.<br />
13
By Manatee High School Key Club Editor Sydney Johnson<br />
[BRADENTON, FL] – On Wednesday, September<br />
9, Manatee High Key Clubbers came<br />
together at the Bradenton Riverwalk to host<br />
their Equal Play Playground’s grand opening<br />
and dedication ceremony. This wheelchair accessible<br />
pirate ship is the city’s one and only<br />
playset for handicapped children.<br />
“Several years ago, we were doing a project with<br />
Miracle League – an organization that helps<br />
handicapped children play baseball,” says Kendall Mackey, one of the project managers.<br />
“We asked them, what is one thing that you don’t have access to? And they said, a playground<br />
for our children in wheelchairs.”<br />
Andre Sanchez, now a former Manatee High student, came up with the idea to build a<br />
playground for just that reason. Sanchez graduated before the project truly began, so he<br />
passed the idea and all its potential down to Kris Gerry, current Key Club president at<br />
MHS, and Kendall Mackey.<br />
Since 2014, the amount of dedication and hard work put into this project has never<br />
ceased. Students met with Joe Miller – an ADA equipment specialist, the Downtown<br />
Development Authority, and an artist who all helped choose equipment for and sketch<br />
the playground’s layout, as well as locate a construction site. The site chosen is adjacent<br />
to the existing playground at Riverwalk.<br />
“What I like about this project is that it’s being built right next to the other playground,”<br />
says Charlie Mills, Manatee High’s Key Club Advisor. “Wheelchair-bound<br />
kids can come and play alongside their friends as equals.”<br />
14
The group presented their plans to the Bradenton city council, where it was unanimously<br />
received. With the city’s approval, fundraising the $35,000 to cover project expenses<br />
began. Manatee High’s Key Club reached out to members and family for donations<br />
and sought out sponsors throughout the community. John Vita, the club’s Kiwanis<br />
Advisor, spoke with fellow Kiwanians for further funding. Well over 60 individuals<br />
stepped forward with their support, including major sponsors. These contributors were<br />
honored with a plaque that was secured to the playset after construction was completed<br />
this past August.<br />
Joe Miller (left) and Mayor Poster (right)<br />
shake hands at dedication ceremony.<br />
When asked about why this project meant so much to<br />
the community, President Kris Gerry said, “In order<br />
to build this playground, our members, our families,<br />
and our community had to come together as one. Together<br />
we chose to make a difference, and because of<br />
that we have bettered the lives of so many children.”<br />
Members of the Manatee High Key Club were<br />
joined by Bay News 9, METV, Kiwanians, Bradenton<br />
Herald reporters, a Pittsburgh Pirates representative,<br />
and many more for the playground’s dedication<br />
ceremony on September 9. A $31,834.53<br />
check was presented to Mayor Poston and the city of<br />
Bradenton, and the ribbon was cut.<br />
Manatee HS Key Club attending the<br />
ribbon-cutting ceremony.<br />
15
Meet a Key Clubber<br />
Sam Gallahan<br />
Meet Samantha Gallahan, a junior at<br />
Pine View School and avid Key Clubber. She<br />
joined the organization after serving as vice president<br />
of her Builder’s Club in middle school<br />
and has been a member since her freshman<br />
year, now serving as Club Secretary. She decided<br />
to take her love for volunteering to the next level:<br />
specifically, to the Dominican Republic with<br />
Key Club International’s co-sponsor Rustic<br />
Pathways on their nine-day Mountain Air and<br />
Village Service trip.<br />
“I first heard about Rustic Pathways at<br />
DCON and immediately knew I wanted to get<br />
more involved. I had never been out of the<br />
country,” she said, “and doing community service<br />
in another country sounded like such an<br />
amazing experience.”<br />
While abroad, she and the other students<br />
stayed in a ranch house that served as a<br />
home base for their day-to-day operations, aside<br />
from one night spent in a beachside hotel. During<br />
their free time, they swam near waterfalls,<br />
travelled into town for ice cream, visited a beach<br />
in Sosua, toured Santo Domingo, and went<br />
white water rafting.<br />
Much of the trip was primarily centered<br />
on community service, though. The first project<br />
they worked on was a black water treatment system<br />
at a local environmental college. First, they<br />
constructed a filter system for sewage water so<br />
that contaminated water couldn’t run back into<br />
the rivers and pollute them. The treatment system<br />
consisted of layers of rocks and stones covered<br />
in certain plants that filtered out bacteria.<br />
They worked for about six hours each day moving<br />
rocks, gravel, sand, and planting at the end.<br />
Gallahan also participated in several other<br />
projects like constructing an aqueduct system<br />
to benefit a local village called Manabao. They<br />
dug trenches, lay down pipes, then buried<br />
them; these aqueducts will now provide clean<br />
water to a town of over 1,000 people. They also<br />
organized and ran a one-day summer camp for<br />
around 40 kids from a local town. The volunteers<br />
did different activities with them such as<br />
teaching English, coloring, sports, and games.<br />
She said that though the service was challenging<br />
both physically and mentally, it was immensely<br />
rewarding.<br />
16
“This trip was my first time out of the<br />
country and now I cannot wait to travel more. I<br />
have to say this was definitely the best experience<br />
of my life. It was so fun, eye-opening, and<br />
rewarding... I learned that happiness is really<br />
not dependent on what you have,” she said,<br />
“but rather what you are thankful for. I also<br />
learned that you can do anything with the right<br />
attitude.”<br />
She believes that her experiences in the<br />
Dominican Republic have altered her for the<br />
better and have given her a new perspective on<br />
hands-on, impactful service that she can now<br />
bring back to her home Key Club. She strongly<br />
encourages others to travel abroad with Rustic<br />
Pathways.<br />
“Rustic really embodies the same values<br />
that Key Club does, and travelling with them is<br />
a great way to learn about a totally new culture,<br />
do really meaningful service, and meet some<br />
amazing people. I plan on doing another Rustic<br />
trip next summer, and I cannot wait,” she<br />
said.<br />
How can you get involved with Rustic Pathways?<br />
Visit this site for more information about Key Club’s relationship with Rustic<br />
Pathways and how YOU and your club can get involved with service abroad.<br />
To learn more about the trip Sam Gallahan chose, visit this website, or<br />
email her at samanthagallahan@gmail.com to talk about the program.<br />
17
Key Club would not be where it is today, with over 270,000 members<br />
worldwide, or have the great impact it does without the help of some<br />
key organizations. Key Club International’s preferred charities (UNICEF,<br />
March of Dimes, and Children’s Miracle Network), vision partners<br />
(Nickelodeon and Landscape Structures Inc.), and co-sponsors (Rustic<br />
Pathways and the U.S. Army) have played instrumental roles in all that we<br />
do. We are truly thankful to all of these organizations and look forward to<br />
changing even more lives for the better with your help!<br />
A Message from the Service and Major Emphasis Committee<br />
The Service and Major Emphasis page has been updated! This means<br />
that the 2015- 2016 Service Directory is available as a resource. It provides<br />
links and ways to get involved with service as a whole. Another resource<br />
is the 9 steps to a successful fundraiser, which breaks down the easiest<br />
way to hold a great fundraiser. The page also includes the updated flyers<br />
for Every Child a Swimmer (ECAS) and Preferred Charities including methods<br />
for getting involved with the preferred charities and focus on Kiwanis’<br />
motto: "Children- their future, our focus".<br />
18
Florida Opportunity Fund (FLOF)<br />
Divisions 18 & 19 – Meals of Hope<br />
Jesuit High School – Habitat for Humanity Build<br />
The Florida Opportunity Fund (FLOF) is a grant for service projects available only<br />
in the Florida District of Key Club International. FLOF can give clubs up to 2/3 the<br />
money necessary for service projects; however, schools must provide 1/3 of the<br />
amount they wish to receive. The amount of money you can get ranges from<br />
$100 to $1,000.<br />
Your club must be in good standing, meaning they have submitted most Pride<br />
Reports on time, completed the OIF, paid dues, and are active in service projects<br />
and divisional/district events. Above are two FLOF service grant recipients.<br />
Youth Opportunity Fund (YOF)<br />
The Youth Opportunity Fund (YOF) is Key Club International’s grant program for<br />
service projects. You can receive funding for projects between $100 to $2,000<br />
once a year.<br />
Applicants must have an adult advisor, and divisional projects are not eligible<br />
to receive a YOF Grant. Applications are due by October 15th.<br />
Additional Information<br />
For more information regarding service grants, contact District Treasurer Palak Shah at<br />
Treasurer@FloridaKeyClub.org, or visit this website. Also, you can contact the FLOF Committee<br />
at FLOF@FloridaKeyClub.org for any FLOF-related questions.<br />
19
20
21
A Message from DCON Chair Matthew Bonachea<br />
Attend your KCKC to be<br />
some of the first to hear the<br />
theme for #FLDCON16! Last<br />
year’s theme was Stars of<br />
Service.<br />
For 77 years, the Florida District has held an annual conference where<br />
Key Clubbers from all over Florida and the Cayman Islands come together<br />
to celebrate a year of service, make friends from all over the District,<br />
learn better ways to serve their homes, schools, and communities, and<br />
elect the District’s leadership for the coming year. Attendees get to<br />
spend three nights in a four-star hotel, attend two dances and spiritfilled<br />
general sessions, enjoy professional entertainment, hear from a<br />
riveting keynote speaker, and complete the weekend with an elegant formal<br />
banquet. An experience like this is truly unique to Key Club – no<br />
other high school organization offers an equivalent experience.<br />
Start planning to attend one of the most exciting<br />
events of high school, the 78th Annual District Education<br />
and Leadership Conference, now! Contact me<br />
or your Lt. Governor for more information.<br />
Yours in service,<br />
Matthew Bonachea<br />
District Conference Chair<br />
DCONChair@FloridaKeyClub.org<br />
22
Kiwanis DCON Recap<br />
By Division 18 Lieutenant Governor Mira Chauhan<br />
From Aug.13-16, Kiwanians hosted their 98th Annual District<br />
Convention. The convention, which was located at the<br />
Sandestin Golf and Beach Resort up in the panhandle, attracted<br />
Kiwanians from all over Florida to come together to<br />
learn more about Kiwanis and the Kiwanis Family.<br />
Representing Key Club were 8 district board members: District<br />
Governor Shane Meagher, District Secretary Jose Leoncio,<br />
DCON Chair Matthew Bonachea, Lieutenant Governor of<br />
Division 1 Sophie Kline, Lieutenant Governor of Division 2B<br />
Daniel Wyatt, Lieutenant Governor of Division 11 Sabrina<br />
Spotts, Lieutenant Governor of Division 18 Mira Chauhan,<br />
and Lieutenant Governor of Division 22 Samantha Varela. Also<br />
present at the convention were several district representatives from Circle K International,<br />
including Governor Jessica Cook.<br />
Throughout the convention there were several workshops designed to teach Kiwanians<br />
about a variety of different topics including their Service Leadership Programs<br />
(e.g., Key Club or Builders Club), how to effectively run their clubs, and The<br />
Eliminate Project. District Administrator Donna Parton and District Governor Shane<br />
Meagher hosted a workshop about Key Club. Assistant District Administrator David<br />
McCampbell also hosted a workshop to teach Kiwanians how to speak with young<br />
people. The Key Clubbers who were present recounted positive and negative experiences<br />
they had with Kiwanians.<br />
Describing her own interactions with Kiwanians at the convention, Lieutenant Governor<br />
Sabrina Spotts said, "Kiwanians just want to get to know us, help us and<br />
learn from us."<br />
On Saturday morning, Kiwanians attended the House of Delegates. During the session,<br />
Kiwanians voted for their District Treasurer for the coming year, C. Todd<br />
Smith, and their Governor-Elect, Gary Frechette who served as District Treasurer<br />
this past year. That evening, Kiwanis International Trustee Dewey Smith installed<br />
the new board for the 2015-2016 year was officially installed. This included District<br />
Chairs, Lieutenant Governors and the new District Governor, Dr. Celia Earle, who is<br />
taking the place of Governor Chuck Gugliuzza. The new board will officially take<br />
over on October 1.<br />
Kiwanians, Key Clubbers, and Circle Kiwanis International members all left the<br />
convention with a greater motivation to pursue service and inspired to work more<br />
with the Kiwanis Family. Key Club District Governor Shane said, "If we work together<br />
as the Kiwanis Family, we can accomplish so much more and learn from our<br />
different life experiences. We are not all separate organizations, but one made of<br />
many pieces."<br />
23
A Few Ke<br />
Key Club is the world’s largest and oldest student-led organization, with<br />
over 270,000 members in 36 nations worldwide. It originated in Sacramento,<br />
California, in 1925. Two Kiwanians, who were also administrators,<br />
chose to establish a club to develop leadership in 11 of<br />
the school’s “key boys,” hence the name “Key Club.”<br />
Key Club is one of the branches of the Kiwanis International<br />
Family, in addition to Aktion Club, Circle K International,<br />
Builders’ Club, and Kiwanis Kids. However, Key Club<br />
remains the largest of the organizations.<br />
OFFICER INFORMATION FORMS (OIFs) are to be filled out by the secretary as<br />
soon as possible and should be updated throughout the year. They allow the<br />
lieutenant governor and Executive Committee members to contact club officers<br />
and send information regarding divisional, district, and international news.<br />
PRIDE REPORTS are monthly online reports detailing each club’s service, meeting<br />
attendance, and more. They are to be filled out by the Club Secretary on<br />
the 10th of each month. These reports allow Lieutenant Governors and district<br />
executive officers to track the club’s involvement.<br />
Visit this website to fill out your OIF and Pride Reports:<br />
http://opr.floridakeyclub.com/opr/opr_login.asp<br />
Secretaries and clubs who fill out all Pride Reports are eligible for<br />
awards and recognition at the District Education and Leadership<br />
Conference (DCON) in April!<br />
24
y Points<br />
I pledge, on my honor, to uphold the Objects<br />
of Key Club International; to build my<br />
home, school and community; to serve my<br />
nation and God; and combat all forces<br />
which tend to undermine these institutions.<br />
Caring– Our Way of Life<br />
Key Club is an international, student-led<br />
organization providing its members with<br />
opportunities to perform service, build<br />
character and develop leadership.<br />
Leadership. Character building.<br />
Caring. Inclusiveness.<br />
We are caring and competent servant leaders<br />
transforming communities worldwide.<br />
Learn more about Key Club’s history at: http://keyclub.org/discover/historytimeline.aspx<br />
25
District Governor<br />
Shane Meagher<br />
Blake High School<br />
governorshane@floridakeyclub.org<br />
District Secretary<br />
Jose Leoncio<br />
TERRA Environmental Research<br />
Institute<br />
secretary@floridakeyclub.org<br />
District Webmaster<br />
Caleb Neale<br />
Cooper City High School<br />
webmaster@floridakeyclub.org<br />
District Editor<br />
Carly Berthiaume<br />
Boca Raton Community High<br />
School<br />
editor@floridakeyclub.org<br />
District Treasurer<br />
Palak Shah<br />
Palm Beach Central High School<br />
treasurer@floridakeyclub.org<br />
District Administrator<br />
Donna Parton<br />
admindonna@floridakeyclub.org<br />
Executive Assistant<br />
Gabriela Charlot<br />
Somerset Academy<br />
executiveassistant@floridakeyclub.org<br />
DCON Chair<br />
Matthew Bonachea<br />
Somerset Academy<br />
dconchair@floridakeyclub.org<br />
Contact information for all board members, including Lt. Governors and Zone<br />
Administrators, is available at this website.<br />
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