Community Service

“Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better. It’s not. “
-Dr. Seuss

At its core, the Rotary Club of Denver is all about serving – our members and our communities – and the opportunities to serve are endless.  

As a club member you may choose to develop and share your leadership skills as a member of the board of directors.  Perhaps you’d like to help further the Club’s mission by serving on one of our many exciting committees. Or, maybe what really interests you is rolling up your sleeves alongside fellow Rotarians to support critical needs in our local or international communities. However you choose to serve, Rotary is here to help you make a meaningful difference. And with over 150 members in Club 31 alone, the impact you make is exponential!

Every Rotary Club is based on a foundation of service. For more than a century, the Rotary Club of Denver has made an impact in Denver by providing much needed financial and/or volunteer support to outside organizations, as well as our own club programs and projects. Through our Service Team committees, the club provides members with meaningful volunteer opportunities. Below is a list of organizations and programs we are proud to support and serve.

Our Programs & Organizations

  • Denver Kids

    Co-founded by Rotary Club of Denver in 1946, Denver Kids, Inc. (DKI) provides educational counseling and mentoring to K-12 students in Denver Public School (DPS). Each child receives support and guidance to best promote individual academic success. The program strives to help each student achieve his or her potential by offering encouragement and addressing the factors that promote healthy social, physical, and mental development.

    Volunteer opportunities include DKI’s One-on-One Mentoring Program. Volunteers must make a minimum commitment of one year and two in-person visits per month with the student and have at least monthly contact with DKI’s educational counselor.

  • COMMUNITY RESOURCES, Inc. (Youth Mentoring)

    Community Resources Inc. (CRI) serve the students, families, and staff of Denver Public Schools. They utilize the talents of community members to increase students’ knowledge, to strengthen partnerships among schools, families and businesses, and to provide opportunities for students to learn outside the school environment.

    The Denver Rotary Club Foundation’s annual grant specifically funds their Academic Mentors Program, a program that matches high achieving at-risk students in grades 4 - 8 with Rotarians and other community volunteers for short-term academic/career experiences. Club 31 members engage as student mentors and may also serve in other volunteer roles within the organization, such as classroom speakers, family night readers and science fair judges.

  • JUNIOR ACHIEVEMENT–ROCKY MOUNTAIN (JA)

    Members of Club 31 team up with students from the DCIS Interact Club to help K-12 students learn about money management and business ownership. Club 31 members choose to get involved with JA Finance Park or JA in a Day at Fairmont Elementary in Denver. JA Finance Park allows Rotarians to help DCIS students work through a hands-on financial literacy simulation. At the beginning of this experience, students receive a life situation (family, job, salary and education). They are challenged to assume adult responsibilities and create a budget that reflects their needs and wants.

    For JA in a Day at Fairmont Elementary, a group of 15 Rotarians partner with DCIS Interact Club students to implement JA programs at Fairmont Elementary School. JA programs are hands-on, interactive, and teach students to be financially literate, work ready and entrepreneurial. Learn more about Junior Achievement here.

  • ROTARY HIGH SCHOOL SCHOLARSHIPS & ACHIEVEMENT AWARDS

    Rotary’s High School Scholarship & Achievement Awards (HSSAA) program provides an excellent opportunity to interface with outstanding high school students. Through this initiative, the Denver Rotary Club Foundation provides grants annually to more than 30 economically disadvantaged Denver high school juniors and seniors. The objective of the grant is to provide financial assistance, as well as mentorship and emotional support to the recipients through regular contact with Rotary members.

    Rotary participants meet their scholarship recipients monthly for at least one hour to provide guidance as well as to deliver the scholarship check. Often this interaction develops into a mentoring relationship that lasts for years after the student graduates from high school.

  • ROTARIANS FOR MENTAL HEALTH (R4MH)

    Description goes hereR4MH is a multi-club effort serving the Colorado Front Range, with more than 30 local clubs at various stages of involvement. R4MH is also a participant in the newly formed international Rotary Action Group for Mental Health. The R4MH mission is to build stronger communities through involvement and education in order to raise awareness, foster compassion and develop broad-based support for those affected by mental health and substance use disorders.

  • SCHOLASTIC ART AWARDS OF COLORADO

    The Colorado Art Education Association and the Rotary Club of Denver work together to present the Scholastic Art Awards Colorado, part of the National Scholastic Arts and Writing Awards Program. The program gives talented students an opportunity to exhibit their work, be judged against their Colorado peers and to compete against peers on a national level.

    Club 31 members help secure funds for the project, expand participation of schools and Rotary Clubs statewide, and help hang and judge the annual exhibition.

  • Picture of smiling group holding certificates

    World Community Service Committee

    The World Community Service Committee actively pursues projects and coordinates with developing nations. More than 30 projects are ongoing annually in 20 countries. Projects include providing better health services for people in Nepal; new water and latrines in Burkina Faso, educating girls at risk for human trafficking in Bosnia, and providing medical equipment and supplies to Mexico and Kenya. This is a dynamic committee with a long history in the club and every member of the Service Team is involved in making these projects a success.

    Download the new project application form here.