Category Archives: Rotary Club of Madison Guest Speaker

December 4: Superintendent Joe Gothard’s Vision for MMSD

–submitted by Kevin Hoffman

Madison original, District alumnus, Rotary Club of Madison member, and now School District Superintendent Joe Gothard gave a wide ranging and comprehensive overview of the challenges and opportunities facing the district as it seeks to continue and improve upon the history of excellence of education in Madison. People Purpose Pride are the themes he uses to frame his vision for MMSD’s future. Education is a shared and collective effort among many stakeholders to provide opportunities to uplift students and achieve their highest potential. For Joe, being back in Madison and leading the MMSD is deeply personal. He expressed his pride in being from Madison and his goal of making Madison schools an educational destination of choice.

If you missed our meeting last week, you can watch it here: https://youtu.be/Q1PR8P10Rjk.

November 20: Volunteering is Good for You!

–submitted by Rich Leffler

November 20 was our annual Manfred E. Swarsensky Humanitarian Service Award presentation. Fellow Rotarian Oscar Mireles, who has done so much for the Madison community, was the recipient of the award. Our speaker was fellow Rotarian Renee Moe, President and CEO of United Way of Dane County. She spoke to us of “The Importance of Volunteering.” When Renee was 28, former Rotarian Dr. Suresh Chandra, himself a Swarsensky Award recipient, explained to her the benefits of volunteering. It inspired her. She inspired us with the knowledge that volunteering can bring us personal happiness as we help our community. United Way helps people find opportunities to help others.

If you missed our meeting last week, you can watch it here: https://youtu.be/mpQ-BzJcG0g.

November 6: Badger Honor Flight

–submitted by Rich Leffler

Steven Bartlett and fellow Rotarian Gary Peterson spoke to the Club about Honor Flight, which is solely engaged in flying military veterans to Washington, D.C., so that they may tour and engage with the memorials created in their honor.

All veterans, whether they served in wartime or not, are eligible. All expenses are paid for. It’s an emotional and fulfilling experience for the vets, one of whom, in a short video, referred to it as “A Dream Trip.”

Gary described the welcome he received in Washington as “unbelievable.” He urged all veterans to sign up.

If you missed our meeting this week, you can watch it here: https://youtu.be/-gS8m_JaBMg.

October 30: Zach Brandon Delivers Greater Madison Storyline to 2050

–submitted by Ellsworth Brown

Zach Brandon opened his presentation by giving a snapshot of Greater Madison in 1999 and then made some comparisons to where things stand in 2024 before ultimately projecting out to 2050.

He delivered a master statistical, fast-passed, data-driven storyline that mapped fifty years of actual and projected changes.

As an example, a house in Madison was advertised for $173,000. The same house today is listed at $461,000. Epic’s MyChart was in development. Epic’s current annual revenue is valued at $5 billion in 16 countries and MyChart is now the dominant entry point for all medical records.

Madison now ranks third in concentration of software developers and was one of 12 places to receive funding through the Regional Technology and Innovation Hubs program. Coincidentally, its housing market, even inadequate, and Madison’s amenities help rank the city among the top 20 best places to live that are also technology hubs—no wildfires, hurricanes, or major flooding. It is well-positioned with respect to current climate changes. New rapid transit buses help linear expansion throughout Dane County. Moreover, the addition of key jobs creates a multiplier of complementary services and additional residents.

And so to “Outsight: 2050” . . . For work and living, Millennials’ influx has been followed by Gen Z. Madison ranked 9th in the country, according to data released in 2023, in Gen Z net migration. Brandon uses an estimated projection for Madison Metropolitan Statistical Area 2050 population at 1,000,000, a potential increase of 300,000.

Brandon’s presentation is complex but easily followed in the video recording: https://youtu.be/PFzrZ_WjTU4.

October 23: Tom Loftus: Ambassador to Norway

–submitted by Ellsworth Brown

We had the pleasure of spending time with Tom Loftus, advisor to the World Health Organization; member of the University of Wisconsin Board of Regents; and the Democratic gubernatorial candidate for Governor of Wisconsin, defeated by Tommy Thompson.

We were in the company of this Sun Prairie man’s service as United States Ambassador to Norway between 1993 and 1997.

Loftus reviewed the old order, now past:  USSR’s government had collapsed; the Berlin Wall was down; Nelson Mandela shared the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1993; Oslo Accords 1 and 2 regarding Israel and Palestine were signed in 1993 and 1995 respectively.  Among other things, Loftus negotiated with the Russians regarding safe disposal of their submarines’ liquid nuclear waste at sea.

Loftus shared lighter stories too:  his introductory presentation to King Harald V of Norway, who later visited the United States; hosting and feeding Governor Thompson’s impromptu trade mission visit to Norway; and  Norwegian immigrants to Wisconsin and their links to Wisconsin mayors.

Ambassador Loftus was highly articulate, self-effacing, and very funny.  Watch the video (https://youtu.be/ubjQQoLfz8A) if you missed the meeting, or buy his book, Mission to Oslo, published last month.  It would be a rewarding experience.

October 2: Madison’s Passenger Rail Station Identification Study

–submitted by Ellsworth Brown

Liz Callin, City of Madison senior transportation planner and specialist in transit, passenger rail, public engagement and policy work, spoke about Madison’s Passenger Rail Station Identification Study that is fitting and necessary for the state Capital, the University and associated research, tourism, Madison’s new transit system, and linkage to the city’s biotech hub.

The goal is to provide two round trips per day between Milwaukee and Minneapolis-St. Paul while linking several Wisconsin cities associated with the new Borealis line, as well as the Hiawatha line.

Possible Madison station sites being studied: somewhere downtown (probably preferred), First Street corridor and the Oscar Mayer corridor. The best would contain associated space for development of lodging, businesses, and public functions.

A site could be identified in 2025-2026. Completion of planning, design, and construction could occur by 2031.

The benefits would include accommodation of 300,000 new Madison-Dane County residents by 2050; and more efficient, safer, cleaner and environmentally friendly city linkages.

Now the project needs federal leadership and a supporting coalition of potential benefactors in Madison and along related rail routes.

If you missed our meeting this week, you can watch it here: https://youtu.be/ckc1Es-u0hM.