TOYS FOR TOTS DRIVE, 2023

We will again be doing a Toys For Tots drive this year.  The time to start is right now. Many of you have already started your Christmas shopping.  Just add a toy or toys to your Christmas shopping list.  All toys will be collected at the December 3 Holiday Party.  Remember, do not wrap your items!

Below are some instructions to help with your toy selection.

–Nancy Bolin

Most campaign sites are able to assist children up to age 12, but in many local communities, local support is such that the age limit may be extended to 14-16.

Toys for Tots does not publish a list of appropriate toys to donate.  If such a list were created, most would follow it, resulting in a limited selection of items to distribute in each community.  We would rather our donors consider what might be an appropriate gift for their own child/relative, purchase the item, and donate to Toys for Tots.

The Foundation does purchase supplemental toys/gifts for our campaign sites and focuses on these age groups.  In the past, items purchased for these groups have included, but are not limited to:  sporting equipment/bags/balls; books, backpacks, cosmetics, purses, watch/wallet gift sets, bath gift sets, board games, radio control cars/trucks, hand-held electronics, skateboards/helmets, curling irons, hair straighteners, and hair dryers.

Program: Chief Adrian Diaz, Seattle Police Department, “Leading in Challenging Times,” November 2, 2023

Join the University Sunrise Rotary Club for a program featuring Seattle Police Chief Adrian Diaz.

The program will be presented in person and on Zoom on Thursday morning with the Zoom line opening at 7:00 a.m.  The formal meeting including the program runs from 7:30-8:30 a.m.  No registration is required, and the program is free.

The in-person meeting will be at the Wedgwood Community Church at 8201 30th Ave NE, Seattle. Doors open at 7:00 a.m. and the program begins at 7:30 a.m.

The meeting will be available via Zoom. Click here to join the meeting Thursday morning.  The Zoom line will open shortly after 7:00 a.m.


Chief Adrian Diaz has been a dedicated member of the Seattle Police Department for more than two decades. His work building relationships that bridge race, ethnicity and every flavor of humanity can be seen across the Department and in every neighborhood in Seattle.

The Chief began his career in Patrol, the Mountain Bike Unit, and the Anti-Crime Team before joining Investigations. He’s a Master Defensive Tactics instructor, served as Assistant Chief of the Collaborative Policing Bureau, was named Deputy Chief, served as Interim Chief for over two years and currently serves as Chief of Police.

Chief Diaz holds a B.A. in criminal justice from Central Washington University and a Master’s in Public Administration from the University of Washington. He has completed the Major Cities Chiefs Associations Police Executive Leadership Institute, the Cascade Executive Program and the Senior Management Institute of Policing. Chief Diaz has authored numerous national publications in community policing, misdemeanor justice and juvenile justice.

Program: Maureen Kures, “Advance Care Planning–Start the Talk Now,” October 26, 2023

Join the University Sunrise Rotary Club for a program featuring Maureen Kures, CEO of Radiant Mourning.

The program will be presented on Zoom on Thursday morning with the Zoom line opening at 7:00 a.m.  The formal meeting including the program runs from 7:30-8:30 a.m.  No registration is required, and the program is free.

The meeting will also be available via Zoom. Click here to join the meeting Thursday morning.  The Zoom line will open shortly after 7:00 a.m.


Maureen Kures

Maureen Kures is the CEO and Founder of Radiant Mourning. She’s on a mission to guide families to decide, document, and discuss their final chapter plans to bring peace to those who live on. As an oncology, hospice, and ICU nurse for 35 years, she was privileged to provide end-of-life care for many. She saw the devastation that occurred when families hadn’t had candid conversations with their family members. Now she facilitates those conversations with families around the world and leads virtual group workshops to replace drama, trauma, and chaos with calm, ease, and peace.

Program: Maritza Rivera, Candidate for Seattle City Council, D4, October 19, 2023

Join the University Sunrise Rotary Club for a program featuring Seattle City Council Candidate Maritza Rivera.

The program will be presented in person and on Zoom on Thursday morning with the Zoom line opening at 7:00 a.m.  The formal meeting including the program runs from 7:30-8:30 a.m.  No registration is required, and the program is free.

The in-person meeting will be at the Wedgwood Community Church at 8201 30th Ave NE, Seattle. Doors open at 7:00 a.m. and the program begins at 7:30 a.m.

The meeting will also be available via Zoom. Click here to join the meeting Thursday morning.  The Zoom line will open shortly after 7:00 a.m.


A mom of two teenage daughters, Maritza Rivera will never forget the hours waiting and worrying outside Ingraham High School as her girls were in lockdown after a student was fatally shot inside.

At that moment, Maritza knew she had to take action. She never expected to run for political office, but Maritza is running for City Council to restore Seattle to the safe and vibrant city she moved to more than two decades ago.

Maritza’s parents moved from Puerto Rico to New York in search of a better life. Maritza grew up in a tough neighborhood in the Bronx, on the 5th floor of a five story no elevator building. Her dad was a welder and proud union member; her mom worked at a factory.

Maritza went to Bronx High School of Science, Skidmore College on a full-ride scholarship, then Fordham Law School.

Maritza went to work in the White House as President Clinton’s Hispanic liaison, later served as a Vice-President of the National Hispanic Chamber of Commerce where she worked closely with Hispanic small businesses from across the country.

In Seattle, Maritza has had the privilege of working at the ACLU post 9/11 to protect Muslim communities from xenophobia, at City Hall working for Former City Council Member Tom Rasmussen, for Mayor Durkan and now in the Harrell Administration, as Deputy Director of the Department of Arts & Culture.

Maritza is running to make restoring our public safety system a priority, because she knows from personal experience that failing to take public safety seriously harms low income and underserved communities the most. She won’t rest until we get to 5-minute response times for priority 911 calls, take home and car break-ins seriously, get guns off our streets and out of our schools and shut down open air fentanyl markets.

Maritza loves Seattle, the small businesses, food, arts, music and diverse populations that make up our city’s rich fabric. Maritza is committed to listening to everyone and working with everyone – to find real solutions to real challenges we cannot ignore any longer.

Program: Ron Davis, Candidate for Seattle City Council, D4, “Restoring Seattle’s Promise: A Discussion,” October 12, 2023


Ron Davis is a public school dad, Harvard Law grad, and tech entrepreneur. He serves on the boards of Futurewise, Seattle Subway, The Roosevelt Neighborhood Association, and the University YMCA. He is running to make Seattle equitable, affordable, safe, clean and just.

Ron with his family; two kids and wife.

Ron’s Story: My parents were teenagers when they found out I was coming. My dad took a pay cut from his job at a diner to work in a factory, with the hope it would turn into something more. Eventually my parents got a house and when I was about ten, and my dad started earning a family wage, so he didn’t have to work 60-70 hours a week anymore. 

In my teens I lived a more middle class life, with more stability and access to opportunity. I also got lucky a lot. I was the first in my immediate family to get a bachelor’s degree, and by my late twenties I ended up at Harvard Law School, where I graduated with honors. As you can imagine, that transformed my life and it catapulted me into the comfortable professional class.

Rather than practice law, I spun a company out of MIT that was focused on improving mental health for call center workers and tried to make the world better while I raised my two little boys with my kindhearted, brilliant, beautiful wife, who is a family doctor. 

Since I launched my startup, I’ve helped bring products and services to market that I believe serve the greater good. This includes everything from helping people age in place to getting underrepresented communities better access to clinical trials, helping progressive political campaigns with access to critical data, and reskilling workers as the job market turns lives upside down. 

We moved to Seattle ten years ago. I’d lived most of my life in the Portland area, and after grad school, we wanted to get home to the northwest, but into the big city. In 2013 we rented a one bedroom in U-District right next to Trader Joes, with our one year old, sleeping in the utility closet. When our second was born, we moved the bigger boy into the living room closet. We now own an older rowhouse right where Roosevelt, Ravenna and the U District come together.

Parenting and putting down roots turned my attention to local politics. I had been a progressive since 2001, but I hadn’t yet come to understand how local law is used to build walls around privilege. But I soon saw special interests hard at work shoring up these walls, and saw how much harder this made it for people with working class backgrounds like mine. Of course I also realized the walls were three times as high for people who don’t look like me. I saw how impossible it was for most people from most walks of life to get a toehold in neighborhoods with the kinds of schools, parks, and transit that provide upward mobility, or the kinds of services to help you when you fall flat.

So I rolled up my sleeves and got to work. I got involved in neighborhood improvement through local activism and the Roosevelt Neighborhood Association, and supporting kids, seniors and families through the YMCA; in transit advocacy through work with Sound Transit and Seattle Subway, and statewide environmental activism through Futurewise. I lobbied our businesses to take a more progressive view on taxes and labor and public safety. I showed up and testified, wrote opeds, organized and door knocked, and picketed and marched.

But it wasn’t enough. So I started thinking about what else I could do to help the people in our community. I’m running because I learned it takes too much luck to make it in America. I am one of the few that got lucky and I want to pay it forward so that the next person has a real shot, and to make sure we take good care of people who aren’t so lucky.

Seattle for Ron (seattle4ron.com)

Program: Emma Le Du, TINFA (Technology and Information for All), October 5, 2023


On October 5, we will reconnect with TINFA (Technology and Information for All) led by TINFA’s founder and Executive Director, Emma Le Dû.

Emma is the Executive Director of TINFA (www.tinfa.org). She has previously held positions at the Grameen Foundation as Senior Technical Program Manager. She has been in Information Technology for over 15 years, at Microsoft and Amazon.com in various positions in International and Program Management. Emma spent two years in Lao P.D.R, as a computer consultant to the European Union and UNDP. She holds an Engineering degree in Robotics and Electronics (ESIGELEC in Rouen France) and a Master of Public Administration from the Kennedy School at Harvard University with a focus on Leadership and International Development. Emma is TINFA’s co-founder.

TINFA’s mission is to empower teachers to bring 21st century skills to kids in underserved areas of developing countries. 

Our club has partnered with TINFA over the past nine years on multiple projects to provide computer equipment, teacher training and student scholarships.

“At the meeting, we plan to connect with a 4th grade class of our partner school San Isidro, Olintepeque District, in Guatemala. We will get an update on the TINFA program, as well as hear a summary of our joint efforts to date. “