Send us a text What if the most powerful community work wasn’t a gala or a grant, but a cake mix, a can of Sprite, and a room full of volunteers with sleeves rolled up? We shine a light on the Rotary Club of Lake Arrowhead and the way Jeri Simpson and Teri Ostlie turned modest ideas into durable systems that serve real people, spark member joy, and invite the wider community to participate. We start with Little Blessings, a monthly micro‑giving engine designed to touch “little lives” with precision: care packages for Blue Star Moms, supplies for Mountain Pregnancy Center, and a crowd‑favorite birthday box packed with a pan, mix, icing, candles, plates, balloons, and Sprite to make a cake without eggs or oil. The twist is the format—projects happen during regular meetings—so even busy members can contribute, connect, and see their impact in an hour. That same practical compassion fuels holiday gift bags for homeless and at‑risk high school students, each item individually wrapped to restore the joy of opening a present. It’s a dignity-first service that resonates far beyond the room. We also get tactical about growth. By posting stories on local Facebook groups—not just Rotary pages—the club reached thousands of neighbors and converted awareness into visitors and new members. Then we dive into two scalable funding pillars: the Polar Rotary Bear Plunge, an early‑February spectacle that splits proceeds between the club foundation and each team’s chosen charity, and a high‑end community thrift shop that shares revenue based on volunteer hours. Together, these models bring in reliable funds without heavy logistics, while deepening ties with partner nonprofits, Interact, and nearby clubs. Looking to energize your club, attract new volunteers, and raise money without burning out your team? Steal these playbook pages: make service the meeting, tell your story where your neighbors are, run a shared‑revenue event that others want to champion, and collaborate through volunteer‑powered retail. If this sparked ideas, subscribe, share with your board, and leave a review with the one small project you’ll start this month. Support the show