Steps to Join the Fraternal Order of Eagles

To be eligible for membership in the Fraternal Order of Eagles, you must be a citizen of the United States or Canada over the age of 18 who believes in God.

You must be sponsored by two members of a Fraternal Order of Eagles’ aerie or auxiliary. The Eagle member who proposes you for membership must obtain a membership application from the aerie or auxiliary secretary. Fill out the application for membership and submit the completed application to the aerie or auxiliary secretary.

Your application will be read at a regular aerie/auxiliary meeting and you will be interviewed by the local membership committee. After the interview is concluded, the committee will report to the aerie/auxiliary concerning their recommendation of your membership.

When the vote is concluded, you will be notified and asked to present yourself for the Fraternal Order of Eagles Initiation Ritual. The Ritual is a set of rules by which Eagles are to conduct themselves not only in the confines of the aerie, but in life in general. It’s one of the most outstanding models for living a good and useful life. It was designed to teach candidates for membership the highest standards of human conduct expected of us.

After initiation as an Eagle, you can take part in all meetings and social functions of the aerie/auxiliary.

Tracy does not have an Aerie/Auxiliary. If you are interested in helping start one in our great community then sign up to the right. A meeting will be scheduled in  a few weeks or after the holidays with information about forming an Aerie here in Tracy.

Pull Pop Tabs for Kids

RMHClogo_001Why save pop tabs?

Saving pop tabs from aluminum cans is an easy and environmentally friendly way of supporting the Sacramento Ronald McDonald House. You can store them in containers to be transported to the House and they don’t take up alot of room. This program began in Minneapolis where the community collected One Million (1,000,000) pop tabs. It has since spread to Ronald McDonald Houses throughout the country! Last year the Sacramento Ronald McDonald House collected over $17,000.00!

What do they do with the pop tabs?

The pop tabs are turned in for their recycling value after being collected by student groups, auxiliaries, service clubs (like the Fraternal Order of Eagles) and children and their families. Ronald McDonald House Charities Northern California operates both the Sacramento Ronald McDonald House which is a “home away from home” for families of seriously ill and injured children who are being treated at Sacramento-area hospitals ad Camp Ronald McDonald at Eagle Lake, a camp for children with disabilities and/or disadvantages. The proceeds collected from recycling the pop tabs go into the Adopt-A-Family fund to help subsidize the cost of families staying at the Sacramento Ronald McDonald House.

What does it take to collect pop tabs?

If you drink Soda and want to help children, it is pretty easy to collect pop tabs. Please recycle your entire aluminum can, but save the pop tab for Ronald McDonald House. A simple sandwich bag on the side of your regridgerator is enough to get you and your faily started. As your bag fills, you can turn them in at the House. For larger groups, use containers with wide mouths such as oatmeal boxex, paper milk cartons or coffee cans.

From the Ronald McDonald House Charities Northern California Website

Pop Tabs

The Pop Tab Program began when a community in Minneapolis collected one million pop tabs to recycle as a fundraiser and the trend has since spread to hundreds of Ronald McDonald Houses across the country.

A pop tab is the small metal tab on the top of aluminum beverage cans. The Sacramento Ronald McDonald House collects these pop tabs to recycle and puts these proceeds towards the Adopt-A-Family Program. This fund helps subsidize the cost of families staying at the Sacramento Ronald McDonald House.

The House receives thousands of pop tabs each year collected by families, church groups, service clubs, auxiliaries, and student organizations.

Saving pop tabs from aluminum cans is an easy and environmentally-friendly way of supporting the Sacramento Ronald McDonald House. A simple plastic bag on the side of your refrigerator is an easy way to get started. As your bag fills, you can drop them off or mail them to the Sacramento Ronald McDonald House. For larger groups, use containers with wide mouths such as oatmeal boxes, paper milk cartons and coffee cans. You can event print out our label and attach it to the side of your container with clear tape.

Sacramento Ronald McDonald House Pop Tab Label

While we do not have the storage space to collect and recycle the entire aluminum can, we do also encourage supporters to cash in their own cans and send a check with the donation to the address listed below.

For more information contact Dawn Brown at 916.734.4230. Pop Tabs do not need to be counted and can be mailed or dropped off at the Sacramento Ronald McDonald House located at 2555 49th Street, Sacramento, CA 95817.

You can visit the Ronald McDonald House Charities Northern California website at www.rmhcnc.org.

Karaoke Rocks Among Eagle Members

From the Grand Aerie Website (http://foe.com/):

Everyone gets to be a star during karaoke. Bill Loffer, FOE membership chairman, says that star quality and the fun and camaraderie that go along with karaoke make this form of entertainment so popular among Eagle members.

“It doesn’t matter whether the performance is good or bad, karaoke is entertaining to both performers and listeners,” Loffer said. “Karaoke is simple and lacks the complexity and expense associated with a band. Anyone with a CD player can host a karaoke event.”

Stars among us

Karaoke in the U.S. dates back to the early 1960s when a karaoke-like series, Sing Along With Mitch, aired on NBC. This form of entertainment, however, did not get cranked up among the Eagles until the 1990s.

“Eagle members sing karaoke everywhere—from small aeries and auxiliaries in more remote locations within the U.S. and Canada to larger clubs in metropolitan areas,” Loffer described. “The Eagles have so many talented karaoke performers in our midst that we are considering showcasing some of these individuals at the International Convention instead of booking some of the celebrity entertainers.”

Songs Eagle karaoke performers sing run the gamut—from oldies and classics to rock & roll and country. Some aeries and auxiliaries use karaoke nights as fundraisers and to attract new members, while others plan karaoke sessions as social events and as ice breakers to become acquainted with individuals who are new to our organization.

Getting everyone involved

Karaoke DJs often have a considerable following and may bring 30 or 40 individuals with them, bringing new people into local aeries and auxiliaries. Karaoke also rocks the hallways at the International Convention where DJs like David “Hondo” Locke typically bring two sets of equipment with them so they perform for scheduled events and provide karaoke for the hospitality suites.

“Everyone should try karaoke—it’s a great way for Eagles members to show off their talents and enjoy the company of their fellow members,” Loffer said. “Karaoke is enjoyable for individuals of all ages, including the young people in our FOE Junior Order of Eagles clubs.

“Who knows, the next big singing sensation may be among us.”

Volunteers, city collaborate on local park improvements

From Columbus Ohio — Columbus Local News –  By KRISTIN CAMPBELL — Published: Wednesday, November 4, 2009 4:42 PM EST

With a three-season shelter house and an herbal grove approved for two local parks, improvements to both Fryer Park and Gantz Park are getting closer to completion.

Monday, Nov. 3, council set aside $25,000 for design costs related to the multi-season shelter at Fryer Park on Orders Road. The building will feature moveable walls along its exterior and a fireplace inside. The building would seat as many as 200 people, and a grill, benches and tables will be added in the vicinity of the shelter house.

The project will be completed through a continuing partnership with the Grove City Rotary Club and a new pairing with Grand Aerie Fraternal Order of Eagles, which has its headquarters in Grove City.

The FOE has pledged $100,000 over four years and Rotary has pledged $50,000 over five years to help pay for the project. The total cost is estimated at $300,000.

Council members have asked parks officials to look into the possibility of converting the building to a four-season shelter, but Councilman Larry Corbin urged fiscal conservatism.

“I think we ought to find out how much it would cost to open it four seasons,” he said.

Council members also approved a $20,710 appropriation for engineering costs related to the herbal grove that is planned for Gantz Park on Home Road.

The new addition would be located behind the Gantz Farmhouse to the west of the large red barn where recreation school classes are held.

Plans show a two-tiered, circular garden that takes visitors down one of two sloping, tree-lined path to the lower level, where a labyrinth surrounded by a walking path make up the center of the garden.

The project is being paid for in part by the Gardens at Gantz volunteers, a group of plant enthusiasts who tend the gardens, teach classes and offer tours at the Home Road park and historic farmhouse.

The group has formed a fundraising committee and pledged $15,000 toward the project. The fundraising committee plans to sell commemorative bricks to be installed in the park, and they are also planning to compile a cookbook next spring.

Also at their Monday meeting, city council members approved a switch of the city’s telecommunications services to AT&T. Currently, for all of the city’s phone services in all of their buildings, the bill runs about $4,800 per month. Officials said the new contract will lower the cost to about $3,000 per month.

“Our information services people did, in my opinion, a good job negotiating,” city Administrator Phil Honsey said.

Council members also approved a special use permit for True2Form Collision Repair Centers, which is planning renovations to a building at 3965 Brookham Drive. Representatives from the company showed plans and drawings to council members, outlining the improvements they intend to make.

Among those are functional improvements including the paving of a gravel lot and construction of a fence to hide damaged cars from view. The new occupants also plan to reconstruct the entryway and change the roofline to make it look more like an office building and less like a metal warehouse. Juniper bushes will also be planted at strategic points to camouflage parked cars and increase visual appeal, officials said.

The next regular council meeting will be held Nov. 16 at City Hall, 4035 Broadway. Council members meet in caucus at 7 p.m. and open the regular meeting at 8 p.m.

Fraternal Order of Eagles Did you Know

  • For more than a century, the Fraternal Order of Eagles has had a major positive influence on our region, nation, world… And most importantly on our communities.
  • It was the Eagles who pushed for the founding of Mother’s Day, who provided the impetus for Social Security and, who pushed to end job discrimination based on age. The Eagles have provided support for medical centers across the country to build and provide research for medical conditions — we raise millions of dollars every year to combat heart disease and cancer, help handicapped kids, uplift the aged and make life a little brighter for everyone.
  • The Fraternal Order of Eagles uphold and nourish the values of home, family and community that are so necessary and it seems so often get ignored and trampled in today’s society.
  • The Eagles are hometown builders. We support our police, firefighters, and others who protect and serve. We fund medical research in areas such as spinal cord injuries, kidney disease, diabetes and Alzheimer’s. We help raise money for our communities…we are the Eagles and we are “People Helping People.”

Fraternal Order of Eagles Facts

Who We Are

The Fraternal Order of Eagles is an international non-profit organization uniting fraternally in the spirit of liberty, truth, justice, and equality, to make human life more desirable by lessening its ills and promoting peace, prosperity, gladness and hope.

Our History

The F.O.E. was founded in February, 1898 by six theatre owners gathered in a Seattle shipyard to discuss a musician’s strike. After addressing the matter, they agreed to “bury the hatchet” and form “The Order of Good Things.” As numbers grew, members selected the Bald Eagle as the official emblem and changed the name to “The Fraternal Order of Eagles.” The women’s auxiliary traces its roots to 1927.

Our Membership

F.O.E. membership exceeds 1.1 million, with more than 1,700 local aeries (male groups) in the U.S. and Canada. Women’s auxiliaries total more than 1,500, with more than 335,000 members. Members are recruited by other members and must be sponsored by two members before the membership process begins.

Our Motto

People Helping People

Major Accomplishments

  • Founded Mother’s Day
  • Served as driving force in founding Social Security Program
  • Helped end job discrimination based on age with the “Jobs After 40″ Program
  • Distributed Ten Commandments monoliths and fought to keep the Commandments in public places

Donations

  • F.O.E. donates more than $100 million a year to local communities, fundraisers, charities and more. As part of its philosophy, the F.O.E. gives back 100 percent of monies raised in the form of grants.
  • Fundraisers are conducted for eight major charities, including kidney, heart, diabetes, cancer and spinal cord injury funds, a children’s fund, memorial foundation and the Golden Eagle Fund.

Noteworthy Members

  • Theodore R. Roosevelt, former U.S. president
  • Warren G. Harding, former U.S. president
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt, former U.S. president
  • Harry S. Truman, former U.S. president
  • John F. Kennedy, former U.S. president
  • Jimmy Carter, former U.S. president
  • Ronald Reagan, former U.S. president
  • Bob Hope, comedian, performer
  • Max Baer, boxer/heavyweight champion
  • Gordie Howe, Hockey Hall of Fame
  • William Allen Egan, Governor, Alaska
  • Tony Stewart, NASCAR driver
  • Sam Hornish, IRL and NASCAR driver
  • Billy Ray Cyrus, musical performer
  • Tony Orlando, musical performer

Women’s Auxiliary

  • Bess Truman, wife of former U.S. president
  • Eleanor Roosevelt, wife of former U.S. president
  • Virginia Graham, radio and TV personality
  • Susan Wagner, wife of New York Mayor Robert Wagner

Show of Interest

There is now a Show of Interest form on the Right Sidebar of the Tracy Eagles website. If you are interested in becoming a Charter Member of the new Tracy Fraternal Order of Eagles Aerie or Auxiliary then please sign up. The e-mails that will be sent through this mailing list will mostly be informational and the first one will ask for a response as to whether you want to join the Aerie or The Auxiliary.

Press Release

The Fraternal Order of Eagles would like to partner together with the Citizens of Tracy, California, with a vision of hope for the city of Tracy – To grow together to make the Tracy Community the best it can be through ideas, solutions, meeting challenges head on seizing opportunities, taking action and making things happen.

Teaching our citizens and young people the value of volunteerism and the power of concerned citizens pulling together and sharing our charitable nature together to raise funds and give support for people and agencies in need; in particular, helping young people in the Tracy Community, graduating High School Seniors with college scholarships. To build an inner spirit and character with young people.

Supporting and recognizing teachers, civic leaders, law enforcement, fire fighters and EMTs, people who make our community safe. Supporting and recognizing our young people in our community who are our leaders of tomorrow.

The Eagles will donate to the Tracy Community:

  • $1,000 Grant from one of our Eagles Charities
  • Up to a $500.00 Matching Community Grant after the first year of institution.
  • One Years free membership to Law Enforcement, Firefighters and EMTs.
    • The $20.00 Charter Fee will still need to be paid if they are a Charter Member.

Out of our Memorial Fund (if an Eagle member has a loss of life on the job or job related for any reason) each one of their children will receive $20,000 in medical benefits up to the age of 18 which will cover all medical bills. Also, from ages 18 to 25 years old, they will receive up to $30,000 per child in college scholarships.

So let us grow as our dreams grow in our life’s journey together!

WE WANT TO EMPOWER THE CITIZENS OF TRACY THROUGH GOOD DEEDS AND ACTION – HUMILITY AND SERVICE

OUR THEME

OUR VISION OF HOPE FOR THE CITY OF TRACY

Walmart charity man shown the door

This from  the Tracy Press:

For three years now, employees at Walmart in Tracy have helped raise tens of thousands of dollars that were donated to Tracy charities and other groups — over and above the roughly $16,000 the company typically gives away to the community each year.

People stepped forward this week to give much of the credit to store manager Jose Salas — who was abruptly fired recently, to the shock of his supporters in the community and at the store.

What stuns his friends, colleagues and others is the reason Salas thinks he was fired: That he violated store policy by raising extra money via in-store employee bake sales and potlucks and — perhaps the last straw — selling to Walmart workers, at a discount, damaged merchandise that would otherwise be thrown away.

Five months into Walmart’s fiscal year, local employees had already raised about $18,000, according to Dianne Timan, who retired from the store after 15 years and still has contacts and close friends inside the store.

Over the years, money was given to a virtual who’s who of charities and groups in town, such as the McHenry House Family Shelter, the Tracy Women’s Forum, Tracy Interfaith Ministries, local schools, the chamber of commerce and many others.

After Salas was let go, the slightly more than $10,000 left in the charity

kitty was given in one lump sum to Irene Rose of the Tracy Police Department, organizer of Shop with a Cop, an event at Walmart in which developmentally disabled kids are given gift cards and sent on a shopping spree in the store with police officers.

With Salas’ departure, however, friends fear all the extra money once doled out to local groups will evaporate.

“As far as what Jose did for the community, of all the other store managers, Jose was the one that did the most for the community,” said Virginia Taylor, 64, an employee with the Tracy store since it opened in 1993. “If somebody called, whether it be a church or an individual, he was always there trying to do what he could, no matter what the cause was.”

Salas declined to discuss with the Press why he was told he was fired, and phone calls to a Walmart spokesman went unreturned by press time.

But Salas has told Timan and others that he was let go immediately after he admitted to selling damaged merchandise at a discount to employees, despite the fact that much of the resulting money was donated to charity. Some was also saved for an employee Christmas party, Timan said.

Salas told friends that the company gave him no verbal warning and no written reprimand or other sanction before he was fired.

“He should have the same rights and privileges that we have, and that wasn’t given to him,” Taylor said. “As an employee, you have certain lines you go through before you’re terminated. He was never given that.”

Timan and others also say the discounted sale of damaged goods to employees for fundraising was a common practice at other stores. While she worked there, Timan said, district managers and other Walmart higher-ups visited the store and saw what was going on — and sometimes bought goods themselves — but never said anything was wrong with the practice.

“What he was doing was being done in every other store,” Taylor said. “I know this for a fact. And what he was doing was to raise funds for charity.”

Employee morale has sunk to lows Taylor has never seen since the local store opened, and she said raising money has come to a screeching halt since Salas left.

“We’re not doing any of that any more,” Taylor said. “He’s going to be a big, big loss for the community. The next store manager is going to be very hesitant to do anything.”

Salas, a married father of three who grew up in Lodi and now lives in French Camp, says he has made phone calls to managers in the days since he was let go in an effort to get his job back, without success.

On Tuesday, he said he has a phone call scheduled with one high-level executive, but he doesn’t have a whole lot of hope left.

“The company’s always been good to me,” Salas said, “’till now. I just don’t think they’re being fair, or consistent.”

I think people like Jose Salas would make a great Eagle. His heart is in the right pace. Jose, if you read this contact me so we can talk.

Eagles help Motherhouse

From Rockford 13, Rockford Illinos:

ROCKFORD (WREX) — A different kind of help for families gets a boost today.

The Fraternal Order of Eagles held a fundraiser for Motherhouse Crisis Nursery, which provides free childcare for families in crisis. There was a craft and vendor show, plus a bake sale, to bring in money.

“Some of them are abused,” Faye Knutson, secretary of the Eagles, said. “Some of them, they just need somebody to watch their children for a little while. They also have training to teach the young mothers how to take care of their children.”

Knutson says with the economy so bad there’s even a bigger need to help places like Motherhouse.

Eagles are a Social Group

From the website of Fredrick Maryland Aerie #1067:

Thousands of people are attracted to the Eagles by our social events. We are fun-loving individuals who enjoy spending time with family, friends and neighbors.

It is not uncommon to hear a long-time member say that a dance was the first Eagles function he or she attended. Others became acquainted with the Eagles when they helped out at a dinner, played bingo or tagged along on a camp-out. Some members joined a specific aerie or auxiliary in California so they could “soar like eagles” with other skydivers.

Eagles social activities are almost endless and range from bowling, golfing and playing horseshoes to holding cookouts, riding in parades and attending NASCAR races. We also offer many social opportunities at our regional and national conventions.

In 1904, the first Maryland Eagles chapter was founded, just six years after the national organization came to be.

There are a lot of different activities. I as a member of an Aerie in Alameda, get the newsletter from not only Alameda Aerie #1076, but also from other aerie’s throughout the state. I am also the Newsletter editor of the Sires/Arabellas Unit 8-District 3 Newsletter “Wings of Charity” I will post information from those newsletters to this site as well as links in the sidebar.