Giving Back 365 Donors Continue Impacting Community

Reposted with permission from the Watertown Public Opinion

Giving Back 365 donors have been impacting our community since the Watertown Area Community Foundation program began in 2012. The Giving Back 365 program has resulted in a total of more than $65,000 in grants to worthwhile services and organizations in our area.

 

Giving Back 365 members give $1 a day to make our community better. Half of the contribution is used for grants in the current year and half is placed in an endowed fund. The principal of the endowment fund is never spent so it can grow over time to generate an increasing stream of funding devoted to fulfilling the Giving Back 365 mission. The impact of Giving Back 365 gifts is maximized because donors’ dollars are pooled together.

 

At the end of each year, members are given grant applications and information from potential grantees. The members vote and the majority rules. For 2017, that meant more than $16,420 in grants to the following: 

  • $1,739 to purchase an Automated External Defibrillator to have onsite at the Beacon Center.
  • $1,400 to support a digital literacy program at the Boys & Girls Club which focuses on new skills as well as online safety.
  • $1,363 to Divine Providence of South Dakota to help fund start-up costs for its Pulpit Supply program which provides volunteer ecumenical lay preachers for area pastors and churches.
  • $1,390 to Habitat for Humanity Greater Watertown Region for laptop, printer, wireless phone and software.
  • $1,920 to Joy Ranch for materials to construct a wheelchair accessible lift for the horse riding area.
  • $1,363 to Lake Area Zoological Society to support the Wildlife Warriors boys’ Roots & Shoots program at Bramble Park Zoo. This is the fifth consecutive year for GB365 support of this program!
  • $1,000 to PACH for a cart for the packing area and totes for outgoing snacks.
  • $1,244 to REACH (Respond-Educate-Advocate-Counsel-Heal) to purchase a Bluetooth speaker which will enable team to monitor forensic interviews. Part of the grant will be used to also purchase educational books to give to families that are seen at the child advocacy center.
  • $2,000 to the Salvation Army to support a music program for youth.
  • $2,000 to Watertown Area Transit to update telephone system.
  • $1,000 to Watertown Artwalk to cover printing costs in 2018 which includes 4,000 brochures distributed to residents and visitors.

 

These grants will touch hundreds of lives. Thank you 2017 Giving Back 365 donors for making all of this possible.

 

A dollar a day does make a difference. The 2018 Giving Back 365 effort is just beginning. Join anytime during the year by giving $365. For more information on Giving Back 365, please contact us at 605-882-3731, 211 E. Kemp, or email: foundation@iw.net.

Pizza Maker Taking on the World

Reposted with permission from the Watertown Public Opinion

 

Pizza chef Sean Dempsey is prepping for one international competition and thinking about another.

 

The owner of Dempsey’s Brewery, Pub & Restaurant will be in Las Vegas next week for the International Pizza Challenge, the event that earned him fame last year. His traditional pizza was judged No. 1 from the country’s northwest region, and he placed 10th overall.

 

Dempsey is also planning for the World Pizza Championship April 9-11 in Parma, Italy, where he’ll be part of the 41-member United States Pizza Team.

“I’ll be in the Mecca of pizza,” Dempsey said about the Italy trip. “My mind’s blown even thinking about going to it.”

 

But first there’s Vegas and trying to repeat the 2017 success that happened in his first-ever competition. He admits that he was just excited last year not to finish in last place.

 

“Now I’m feeling a bit more confident about my surroundings and what I’m doing,” he said. “I’ve been here (Dempsey’s) pretty much every day, making different batches of dough, playing with different pies and working out my levels of hydration and making sure I have the perfect crust to compete with.

 

“I have to be ready. This is the Super Bowl of pizza making. It’s the biggest one in the States.”

 

Dempsey admits he didn’t have any grand plan in place that led to last year’s success. He took his own ingredients, including Watertown water, and his pizza turned out well.

 

“I think it was a lot of work I had put into it last year,” he said. “I didn’t know what was happening. I didn’t realize that all that hard work I had done in the past really paid off.”

 

This year he’ll be entered into the non-traditional category and assistant Michael Bacon will be competing in traditional.

 

There are five categories in which to enter, and the overall winner will receive a giant silver pizza pan and the title Pizza Maker of the Year.

 

The competition will be more stout in Italy at the site where Parmesan cheese was invented. Titles will be awarded for 11 different types of pizza. Dempsey will enter a reuben pizza into the Classic Pizza category.

 

“Italian pizza is all very crispy and light and one topping,” Dempsey explained. “I’m not going to make something that’s super heavy, but I’m going to make something that’s very memorable. Hopefully I won’t get hung for it.”

 

The U.S. team includes 23 Premiere members who compete regularly several times a year, and 18 Competing members, such as Dempsey, who are either new members or have yet to earn their “Black Coat” to become a Premiere member. The coat is only obtained by winning a sanctioned contest.

 

Dempsey will fly to Philadelphia in early April where the U.S. team is gathering before they fly together to Italy. After the contest Dempsey will travel by train to Austria and then to Germany to visit relatives.

 

He has no expectations about where he’ll finish in the contest. He’s just looking forward to discovering new ideas.

 

“I want to learn from all these people who’ll be there,” he said. “Meeting new people, looking for new ideas, seeing how somebody from Japan or Egypt makes their pizza. It will be fun just to experience the entire thing and learn from it and see how it goes.”

2018 Annual Report

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Creating a globally competitive community is the focus of our mission. When the Watertown Development Company launched in 1947, it was our vision that Watertown would be recognized as the leader in South Dakota where businesses and people prosper…