Sponsor - Zonta Club of Sanibel and Captiva

Transcription

Sponsor - Zonta Club of Sanibel and Captiva
Welcome Peekers
Please say thank you
Whether this is your first or 15th tour, we are so pleased that you are
here.
When you can, please read this program to learn more about Zonta’s
mission of empowering women through service, advocacy and funding.
The money spent to buy tickets for this tour and chance prizes, as well
as all sponsor and benefactor donations, goes to support these vital
needs.
If, after reading this program, you are inspired to help Zonta help
others, whether by joining Zonta as an active member or by making
a tax deductible contribution, please contact us through our website
www.zontasancap.com.
As always, thanks so very much to our homeowners, our sponsors,
our benefactors, our volunteers, our members, and most of all, to you,
Peekers, for your attendance here today and your support of Zonta.
Barbara Beran and Robyn Moran
Co-Chairs 2016 A PEEK AT THE UNIQUE
Zonta Club of Sanibel-Captiva, Inc.
Zonta Foundation of Southwest Florida, Inc.
P.O. Box 1244, Sanibel, FL 33957
A special Zonta thank you to;
Sanibel Community Church • Dolphin Transportation
Bob’s Island Graphics • Floral Artistry
Island Sun • Santiva Chronicle
Islander and Island Reporter • The wizard JT
Marla Manning, our program cover artist
pa g e 2
pa g e 3
Zonta
Zonta International:
Founded in 1919, Zonta International (ZI) promotes and protects the
human rights of all women and girls, annually combining thousands
of hours of advocacy and service worldwide with millions of dollars
to achieve its goals:
•Improve the legal, political, economic, educational, and health
status of women worldwide;
•Reduce the incidence of violence against women.
Since 1923, Zonta has provided more than $13 million to help fund
projects benefiting women in 36 countries. Working with agencies of
the United Nations and other recognized non-governmental organizations, ZI supports such programs as:
•Elimination of obstetric fistula and reduction of maternal and
newborn mortality in Liberia;
•Creation of an HIV-free generation along with prevention of
gender-based violence in Rwanda;
•A pilot model for gender-responsive schools.
The successful world-wide “Zonta Says No” awareness campaign,
launched in 2013, has helped spread the word that violence against
women must end.
Zonta
Zonta’s mission to empower women is always front-and-center
in the club’s choice of service projects and service organizations.
Our members give generously of their time to hands-on service
and advocacy, logging hundreds of hours each year. Six times in
recent years the club has received the prestigious Zonta District 11
Governor’s Cup, given for service, advocacy, fund-raising, and
member relations, in competition with more than 40 other Zonta
clubs in the district.
Each club member is also a member of the Zonta Foundation of
Southwest Florida, Inc., a registered 501(c)(3), established to raise
and distribute funds to organizations that empower women. Our
FEIN is 65-0584445.
The club values friendship and collaboration, drawing on the unique
talents and experiences of nearly 70 members. What is your talent?
Professionals and community leaders who live or work on Sanibel
or Captiva and who support Zonta’s mission are eligible to join:
consider adding a special level of meaning and purpose to your life by
becoming a part of Zonta and have some fun while doing so.
For information visit www.zontasancap.com
ZI also provides annual scholastic awards to women in the traditionally male-dominated fields of aerospace,
engineering, business and public affairs.
Zonta Club of
Sanibel-Captiva, Inc.
The Sanibel-Captiva chapter, founded
in 1987,ww is in its 29th year, providing
service, advocacy and funding on the
islands, in Lee County and around the
world through Zonta International.
pa g e 4
pa g e 5
How can YOU help
Why Empower Women
In early human communities, women were primary food providers,
leaders, artisans and healers, as well as creators of life -- we are
connected to these women and find our roots in them. Zonta seeks
to empower ALL women and girls because:
Visit our website (www.zontasancap.com) and Facebook page
Ask a Zontian to invite you to a meeting so you can learn more
Join a local Zonta club and become an active member
Spread the word of the Zonta mission in your community
Women influence families:
• When women earn, they reinvest 90% of income into their
families vs. only 30-40% for men;
• When you educate a woman, you educate a family;
• Girls with 7-8 years of schooling have fewer, more literate
children and are 4 times more likely to delay marriage.
Women are vulnerable:
• 80% of human trafficking victims are female;
• Half of all sexual assaults are on girls under 15;
• One quarter of all female children are born into poverty;
• The #1 cause of death in girls 15-18 is childbirth.
Women are under-represented:
• Politicians seek women’s votes -- but do not create policies that
address women’s needs;
• Women are more than half the population and control less
than half of the resources;
• Women make up almost half of the workforce and earn
more college degrees than men, yet men still fill the majority of
leadership positions in business, government, and education.
Attend Zonta-sponsored events in the community
Patronize businesses that support Zonta (featured in this program)
and tell them why
Donate time, money and goods to women in need through our
service organizations
Supply materials for service & advocacy projects
Watch for newspaper articles telling you how and when you can
support Zonta
Volunteer your home for the Peek, or tell us about unique houses
Give financial support: don’t wait for the Peek, be a “friend of
Zonta” any time by making a donation by clicking DONATE on our
website www.zontasancap.com.
Join and/or support “Zonta Says No” (late November) and other
advocacy projects
If we ask for your opinion via surveys, answer them
Become educated on women’s issues
Read this program carefully and share it with friends
Participate in Habitat for Humanity’s 2016 “Women Build”
Women have the potential
to change the world.
Join us and
do your part in empowering women!
pa g e 6
Zonta women are forming a Women Build team, donating time,
energy and money to help build a home in Lee County for a woman
and her children -- see page 83 for how to support Team Zonta
And tonight you can: Register as a 2-minute activist to support
legislation that empowers women: Google “two-minute activist” or
check page 82 for more instructions.
pa g e 7
Friends of Zonta
pa g e 8
Friends of Zonta
pa g e 9
Where do Peek $$ go
Foundation Grantees
Each January, the previous year’s proceeds are awarded in grants,
through the Zonta Foundation of Southwest Florida, Inc., a 501(c)(3)
to organizations that share Zonta’s mission of empowering women.
Abuse Counseling & Treatment (ACT):
This year, Zonta expanded the grants process to attract new applications -- a total of 31 were received and 15 organizations qualified
through a rigorous selection process. Total requests were $129,998
and final awards totaled $87,600. Also, $29,190 was pledged to
Zonta International.
You can see from this list that Zonta works hard to ensure that your
donations do the greatest possible good on the islands and throughout Lee County. But a shortfall of $42,398 presented a huge challenge this year!
Please consider an additional donation, through our website,
www.zontasancap.com, or by purchasing more raffle tickets, to help
shrink shortfalls in the future and do even more to help women and
girls succeed. Thank you!
Pictured: Representatives from grantee organizations, Zonta Foundation Champions, Grants
Committee Chairs and the current President of the Club and Foundation.
Partial salary of a bilingual counselor
*Children’s Service Network:
Outreach program for teen mothers
Community Housing & Resources (CHR):
Down payment on an LEO home and educational fund
*Disabled Veterans Insurance Careers:
Partial training for one female disabled vet
*Dress for Success/Fort Myers:
Equip a new career center
*FGCU GEMS Project:
Introduce STEM subjects to middle-school girls
FISH of Sanibel-Captiva:
Mammography and related medical costs
*Habitat for Humanity Lee County:
Women Build 2016
Human Trafficking Awareness Partnerships (HTAP):
ArtReach, eductation for middle-school students
Organizacion Internacional de Latinos en el Exterior for-
Guatemalan Adult & Children’s education (GRACE):
Sewing classes for immigrant women
PACE Center for Girls Lee County:
Partial salary of a volunteer coordinator
Parent University at Head Start:
Literacy classes for immigrant women
*Partners for Breast Cancer Care:
Mammograms in at-risk communities
SalusCare:
Ongoing education for women in recovery
*Sanibel Shell Museum:
Attendance of one female staff member at a national conference
*New applicant for 2015-2016
pa g e 1 0
pa g e 1 1
Sponsor of House #1
Spanish Revival
Evelyn and Jonathan
Silverman have been
remodeling houses
for nearly thirty years.
This 2014 Spanish
revival remodel of a
1981 wood exterior
and asphalt roof house
shows the influence of
that experience, plus
Evelyn’s inspiration
from “four Peeks in a row.” The project took a full year. One
major challenge was removing parts of
the original wrap-around porch while
retaining the effect of what Evelyn calls
her “indoor outdoor house.” Every
interior space still leads outside.
The courtyard gives the pleasurable
feeling of entering a different world.
Nineteenth century Sienese gryphon
benches, among the many antiques
handed down within Jonathan’s family,
are surrounded by giant Australian tree
ferns and red
leather palms.
At the end of the courtyard, the house
is entered through the turret, where a
mahogany and wrought iron staircase leads
to a formal living/dining room filled with
fin de siècle furnishings. Noteworthy are
the inlaid wood dining table, vitrine and
two sideboards.
pa g e 1 2
pa g e 1 3
Spanish Revival
Mahogany extends through
the kitchen and family room
and ends in the sun room,
where island style prevails
with whimsical painted
furniture complemented by
the Silvermans’ collections of
Colombian hats and mochila
bags.
Spanish Revival
Don’t miss:
The master and guest
bedrooms add their own
delight: brightly painted fish
swim on a turquoise wall in the
guestroom; an 18th century
French armoire graces the master
bedroom; European, Haitian, and
local art share wall space throughout.
Every turn evokes the rich synthesis
of traditions central to this family
home.
• The entry courtyard where “Secret Garden
meets Jurassic Park.”
• An antique Spanish telephone booth in the
turret entryway.
• Two rabbi portraits and a George Alvarez
portrait of Jesus on the dining room wall.
• Inlaid wood dining table, vitrine, and two
sideboards from Jonathan’s parents’ collection,
in the living/dining room, a perfect blend of
intricate art nouveau designs with the cleaner
lines of art deco.
• Evelyn’s collection, in the sun room,
of mochila bags reflecting her Colombian
heritage.
• Dueling bathrooms: the master bath in
earth tones,
designed by
Evelyn, and
the guest
bath in dark
blues and
purples,
designed by
Jonathan and
inspired by his childhood home in
Miami Beach.
Photos are not allowed in this
house and shoe coverings are
required and will be provided.
pa g e 1 4
pa g e 1 5
Sponsor of House #2
Bromeliad Haven
In its lush setting of
rare and unusual
plants, this 40-yearold beach cottage has
withstood the tests
of time and weather.
Across from the Gulf
of Mexico is the longtime home of Judy
Hicks, the Bromeliad
Lady, who fills the
property -- indoors and out
-- with her prize collection
of showy plants.
A former commercial artist
and fashion illustrator in
Cincinnati, Judy purchased
the modest cottage in 1985.
Shortly thereafter, she
met Bill Hicks, her second
husband, and they added
the garage, pool, and tiled
floors.
After Bill died
in 2009, Judy
focused on
her business,
Bromeliads by
Appointment,
which flourished.
pa g e 1 6
pa g e 1 7
Bromeliad Haven
Like most
small homes,
every inch is
important.
The original
vaulted ceiling
provides
spaciousness to
the living area,
which opens to
the pool, with
its hundreds of bromeliads and orchids.
The cedar accent wall is a backdrop for
Judy’s art collection, including paintings
of her own. The wrap-around screened
porch, with colorful furniture and
whimsical objects, hosts more plants and
pottery.
Judy Hicks favors Native American
and South American art and objects
-- carvings, fabrics and pottery. She
decorates with an artist’s eye: rich colors
bring vibrant
life to the home.
The bedrooms
radiate color and
more art is also
featured in the
bathrooms and
the kitchen.
pa g e 1 8
Bromeliad Haven
Don’t miss !
• Orchids hanging
in trees over the front
walkway;
• Tiled welcome sign:
Bienvenidos!
• “The Fabled
Garden,” in fabric by
Calman Shemi, in the
master bedroom;
• Fabric pieces from Guatemala in the
hallway;
• Painting of a beach in the master
bedroom by Judy’s father, an architect;
• Rabbit print on the dining room wall,
from a work
by German
Renaissance artist
Albrecht Durer;
• Judy and Bill’s collection of masks
mounted on the wall of the screened
lanai;
• Ceramic pottery lizards and toads;
• Judy’s planting area on the north side
of the house.
pa g e 1 9
Sponsor of House #3
Water Life
When Nancy and Bob
Brooks moved into their
new house on March
6, 2015, it already felt
like home. This is their
third experience of
building a house -- their
first on Sanibel -- and
their knowledge, when
combined with the
talents of Hahn Custom
Builders, produced
both some fascinating
design elements and a
comfortable, alreadylived-in feel.
Bob describes the Brooks’
furnishings and artwork
as “eclectic.” Some items
traveled from their barrier
island homes in New
Jersey; others are newly purchased. In the living room, the warm
russet couches and distressed coffee table that saw their two boys
(and two dogs) grow up
are now watched over
by a Kue King abstract
wire sculpture above the
mantelpiece on their
Marya Teets designed
fireplace.
pa g e 2 0
pa g e 2 1
Water Life
Don’t Miss:
Throughout the
house, open views
of the canal and
artwork depicting
birds (some stitched
on Shanghai silk)
and fish (purchased
annually at the Red
Bone Tournament)
reflect the Brooks’
love of life on the
water. The careful
• A “dead tree” in the
young garden.
• Exterior double
staircase.
• Cypress ceiling and
corbels on the front
verandah.
• The kitchen island:
attention to detail,
from the choices of
flooring (honey oak
engineered wood
and travertine tile) to
the knobs and pulls
on the kitchen and
bathroom cabinets,
is a testimony to the
creative power of
collaboration.
This is “fine design” with
beautiful materials, on a
budget, and with a heart.
“It’s where we live,” says
Bob. Visitors, too, will
feel they could move right
in.
pa g e 2 2
Water Life
while the top appears to be leather or
petrified wood, it is actually leatherfinish, vein-cut Sandulus granite.
• “Yellow Crowned Night Heron” by
Ikki Matsumoto in the entryway.
• An “accidental pantry” behind the
kitchen.
• Picture frames made from fishing
poles, by longtime family friend New
Jersey builder John Van Duyne.
• A framed collection of Margate, NJ,
beach tags.
• Coffee table made of reclaimed
wood from Hurricane
Katrina, in the master
bedroom.
• Lamps handed down
by both the Brooks’
mothers, in the master
bedroom.
pa g e 2 3
Sponsor of House #4
Shorehaven Redux
Stunning. Magnificent. Breathtaking. Big, sweeping words spring to
mind as you step into
this simply modern
bayfront home,
designed to blend
seamlessly into the
blue expanse of San
Carlos Bay. This is
also a Peek “first”: a
return to a former,
beloved location.
In 2009, Toronto
residents Brenda and
Terrance Cassaday
welcomed Peekers to
Shorehaven, a 1920s
Sears kit home. Today,
they share the vision
that replaced it.
Built by The Wolter Group, the
home reflects Brenda Cassaday’s
love of style, comfort and Sanibel’s
natural beauty. With her friend,
Toronto architect Dee Taylor,
Brenda created a modern, livable
space for her family, making it
personal with wall-sized photos
of her five children; handcrafted,
Turkish silk carpets re-dyed in
non-traditional colors; and tiles
and fixtures that echo the home’s
waterfront location.
pa g e 2 4
pa g e 2 5
Shorehaven Redux
The entire back of the house features towering, retractable glass
doors which purposefully open to the elements, bringing the outdoors
in. The color palette of sand, shells and
seaglass blue complements this bayside
tableau, taking nothing away from the
spectacular views.
And Shorehaven?
Rather than demolish it, the Cassadays donated it in 2012 to the
Sanibel Historical Museum
and Village, working with
the City of Sanibel to have it
moved to the village, where
it stands today.
Above: Shorehaven being
moved down Periwinkle
Way. At right a copy of the
original Sears ad for the kit
home.
pa g e 2 6
Shorehaven Redux
Don’t Miss:
• Bird prints in the TV room gifted by their friend, Sanibel resident
Paul Schiller.
• Artwork by Toronto artist Joshua Jensen-Nagle over the kitchen
table. (Ask the docents to explain the unique process used by the
artist.)
• Near the quartz fireplace, works by renowned American
photographer Slim Aarons.
• A Henna Heals photograph in the
library of the Cassadays’ youngest
daughter, a cancer survivor. (Henna Heals
is a global project that empowers women in
cancer treatment by painting their crowns
with henna designs).
• The massive, tempered glass, kitchen
countertop that looks like water – and took
10 men to carry it in.
• Smooth, flip-up kitchen cabinet doors.
• In the hallway, a shell-filled
container designed by Brenda,
doubles as a collection of vases.
• Porches that
can be enclosed by
roll-down, electric
screens.
pa g e 2 7
Sponsors
pa g e 2 8
Sponsors
pa g e 2 9
Sponsors
pa g e 3 0
Sponsors
pa g e 3 1
Sponsors
C
Sponsors
elebrating
30 years in 2016
Captiva Cruises
Island Hopping • Shelling • Dolphin Watching
• Sunset and Sailing Cruises • Private Charters
Call 239-472-5300
www.captivacruises.com
pa g e 3 2
pa g e 3 3
Sponsors
pa g e 3 4
Sponsors
pa g e 3 5
Sponsors
pa g e 3 6
Sponsors
pa g e 3 7
Sponsors
Sponsors
Voted Best of the Islands
2012, 2013, 2015
Sanibel Resident Since 1997
Power Washing
Wallpaper Hanging
Faux Finishing
Interior & Exterior
Dependable & Reliable
Licensed & Insured
Free Estimates
239.395.3928
239.841.4302
[email protected]
pa g e 3 8
pa g e 3 9
Sponsors
pa g e 4 0
Sponsors
pa g e 4 1
Sponsors
pa g e 4 2
Sponsors
pa g e 4 3
Sponsors
pa g e 4 4
Sponsors
pa g e 4 5
Sponsors
pa g e 4 6
Sponsors
pa g e 4 7
Sponsors
pa g e 4 8
Sponsors
pa g e 4 9
Sponsors
pa g e 5 0
Sponsors
pa g e 5 1
Sponsors
pa g e 5 2
Sponsors
pa g e 5 3
Sponsors
Sponsors
NANCY GORDON
Charter Member of
Sanibel-Captiva Zonta Club
and also
Founding Co-Owner of
Serving the Islands
with Dedication
1101-104 Periwinkle Way • Sanibel, FL 33957
TREETOP CENTER (239) 472-2121 • Fax (239) 472-5344
pa g e 5 4
pa g e 5 5
Sponsors
pa g e 5 6
Sponsors
pa g e 5 7
Sponsors
pa g e 5 8
Sponsors
pa g e 5 9
Sponsors
pa g e 6 0
Sponsors
pa g e 6 1
Sponsors
pa g e 6 2
Sponsors
pa g e 6 3
Sponsors
pa g e 6 4
Sponsors
pa g e 6 5
Sponsors
pa g e 6 6
Sponsors
pa g e 6 7
Sponsors
pa g e 6 8
Pets
pa g e 6 9
In Memoriam
by Kris Ritts remembering Roy
near Gigondas, France in 2012.
In Memoriam
by Nori Ann Reed & Wila missing
her mother Jean Mary Reed.
In Loving Memory: Valorie Skogen Babb (1943-2015)
An extraordinary woman, a cherished friend and colleague,
the heart of her family. Our friend and fellow Zontian, Val Babb,
passed away October 20, 2015, after a long battle with cancer.
She was known for commitment to every cause she championed,
and for her dedication to both our club and foundation.
by Ruth Woodham missing her
son, Eric 7/20/1969 - 3/20/2013.
by Virginia Jones missing her
sister, Miriam Murdoch 20 years.
by Maddy Mayor remembering
her daughter Marjorie Danziger Mayor.
pa g e 7 0
We are all fortunate to carry Val in our hearts as we strive to
emulate her high standards and gifts to the world. Her fellow
Zontians are proud to honor her with memorial donations to the
2016 Peek.
pa g e 7 1
Loved ones
pa g e 7 2
Past Presidents
pa g e 7 3
Service & Advocacy
Service
Members of the Zonta Club of Sanibel-Captiva are involved in service projects on the island and throughout Lee County. Our mission is
to empower women and girls and this is accomplished by focusing on
health, education, safety and self-sufficiency. Every member is asked to
commit to one or more service activity.
The PACE Center for Girls Lee County serves at-risk teenaged girls
in a year-round, non-residential alternative school in Fort Myers.
The girls arrive with backgrounds of poor academic performance,
truancy, legal issues, substance abuse and domestic violence. Zonta
members interact with the girls by assisting in the lunch period, and
help with PACE fund-raisers.
We help women acquire the tools to achieve personal and professional
growth, self-determination and self-worth. We promote understanding
of women’s legal rights and provide an atmosphere of encouragement
and accomplishment.
We also engage in activities where we can advocate for improvements
such as laws that protect women, proper access to health and educational services, freedom from violence, and better nutrition.
On the following pages, take a look at Zonta members at work in
service and advocacy.
We offer education and emotional support:
Zonta annually organizes “Night of Beauty” with residents from ACT
(Abuse Counseling & Treatment of Fort Myers). During the year, we
also provide educational seminars to help empower those who seek the
services of ACT.
pa g e 74
We offer safety from violence:
HTAP (Human Trafficking Awareness
Partnerships) enjoys help from Zonta
volunteers, who work with ARTREACH
and TIPS, programs that guide youngsters
in high-risk areas, through art, to learn
about
human
trafficking
and how
to
identify
predators.
pa g e 7 5
Service
Service
We offer integration into American society:
Zontians tutor weekly at two
sites in Fort Myers, teaching
English to Hispanic women.
One is at the Lee County
School District’s “Parent
University” with mothers of
children registered at Head
Start. The other is at the
Heights Center in Harlem
Heights.
We offer women’s health education:
GRACE (Guatemalan Rural And Children’s Education), a long-time
Zonta service organization, has added, with Zonta’s help, WISE
(Working to Improve through Self-Employment) in which immigrant
women are taught
sewing, alterations
and business practices
-- turning these skills
into self-employment
in North Fort Myers
and on Pine Island.
pa g e 7 6
In November, Zonta
initiated a Women’s Health
Forum, held at Lexington
Country Club and cosponsored by Lee Memorial
Health System Foundation,
Shell Point Retirement
Community and Right At
Home. Topics included
integrative medicine, the
heart, and living with the
aging process, with speakers from the Lee Physicians Group.
Attended by over 100 women, the Forum is likely to become an
annual event.
pa g e 7 7
Service
Service
We offer support during recovery:
For over ten years, Zonta has worked with the Transitional Living
Center (TLC) at SalusCare in Fort Myers. Zonta volunteers provide
monthly programs on health & fitness, education, job seeking, and
more, designed to enhance personal growth and confidence.
Women from the TLC also visit Sanibel for activities such as beach
clean-ups and visits to the Ding Darling Wildlife Preserve, allowing
them to experience life outside their structured program.
Holidays can be a difficult
time so we bring Santa,
Simon, line dancing and a
gift.
We offer community service on island:
Finally, in addition to service projects that directly focus on empowering women, Zontians can be found engaged in many island causes,
helping other organizations to raise funds, providing muscle and
offering cheerful support.
On the course of
the F.I.S.H. 10 K,
spreading mulch at
CHR housing and
joining in the July
4th parade.
.
Some TLC women give
back by helping at the
“Peek!”
pa g e 7 8
pa g e 7 9
Advocacy
www.ZontaSaysNo.com
We engage in Advocacy: Against Violence
Advocacy
We engage in Advocacy: For Breast Cancer
Awareness:
Zontians also participated in making a record making Big Pink
Ribbon, an event in Fort Myers sponsored by Partners for Breast
Cancer Care, Inc.
The major advocacy event of the year is the Zonta International
initiative, “Zonta Says No.” Violence against women is a worldwide
epidemic that happens everywhere. Under the heading “Take a
Stand in the Sand,” Zontians and friends from around the area,
wearing orange and holding signs demanding an end to violence,
again lined the Sanibel Causeway on the first Tuesday in December.
Earlier, Zonta representatives received a proclamation from Mayor
Kevin Ruane on behalf of the City of Sanibel and from Lee County
from the Board of Commissioners.
We engage in Advocacy: By walking for
organizations that are on the front line.
Walking to advocate: A Zonta team participated in the annual
Sanibel HeartWalk in January and others put on their walking
shoes for the Harry Chapin Walk, also in January, raising funds and
collecting food for F.I.S.H. of Sanibel-Captiva.
pa g e 8 0
pa g e 8 1
Join the effort
Coming this April
Two Minute Activist
Join us in making your voice heard to Congress, as they
discuss important legislation affecting women’s lives. There is a
section on the website for the American Association of University
Women (www.aauw.org) where you can do this.
Get there by googling Two Minute Activist, and you will
find a section labelled Make Your Voice Heard, with a listing of
topics under the headings of Education, Economic Security and
Civil Rights. Click on any one of these to read more about the issue.
After you fill in your zip code, the site will send letters directly to the
appropriate senators and representative. Some members of congress
ask for additional information, such as clicking on your title and the
general topic of concern. This is a fast, effective way of sending
support for important issues related to women’s lives.
Collections
In order to help in our service projects we will be collecting
paint, sewing machines and materials, school supplies, childrens’
books, new pillows, suitcases and business clothes. Watch for an
announcement of the collection day.
Habitat for Humanity’s 2016 “Women Build”
Zonta women are forming a Women Build team, donating
time, energy and money to help renovate a home in Lee County for a
woman and her children.
Contribute financially to our team by going to;
habitat4humanity.donorpages.com
select: Women Build
select: Donate to a team
select: Find My Friend
Scroll down to ZontaSanibelCaptiva
Want to know more? Visit our website
www.zontasancap.com
or email us at [email protected]
pa g e 8 2
If you would like to work with us on the construction site, let us know
at [email protected].
pa g e 8 3
Sponsors
pa g e 8 4
Sponsors
pa g e 8 5
Sponsors
Sponsors
Periwinkle Place Shopping Center
2075 Periwinkle Way • Suite 24 • Sanibel
239.395.2220 • 877.695.1588
SanibelDaySpa.com
COME FOR
SUN & FUN
Vacation
Rentals
Condos &
Homes
239-472-7277
1-888-451-7277
1101
1101Periwinkle
PeriwinkleWay
Way
pa g e 8 6
SanibelIslandVacations.com
pa g e 8 7
Sponsors
pa g e 8 8
Sponsors
pa g e 8 9
Sponsors
pa g e 9 0
Sponsors
pa g e 9 1
Sponsors
Sponsors
Custom Home Builders specializing in
Old Florida & Caribbean
style homes
239.332.0377
www.SeacoastCottageCompany.com
pa g e 9 2
pa g e 9 3
Sponsors
pa g e 9 4
Sponsors
pa g e 9 5
Sponsors
Sponsors
Trust.
Your financial future should rest in the hands
of a company with the integrity and experience
to preserve and grow your assets.
The Sanibel Captiva Trust Company
is proud to support Zonta of Sanibel-Captiva.
Offices in Tampa Bay, Sanibel/Captiva, Naples and Winter Haven
Robin L. Cook
Executive Vice President
239.472.8300 | 800.262.7137
sancaptrustco.com
pa g e 9 6
pa g e 9 7
Sponsor
pa g e 9 8
Sponsor
pa g e 9 9