
David E. Hillshafer is a major in the US Air Force. He received his commission through the University of Texas ROTC program in May 2006. At his first assignment at Edwards Air Force Base in the Mojave Desert of California, he served as a Flight Test Engineer on the B-52, B-1, and C-17 aircraft, testing new capabilities including targeting pods, alternative fuels, and new GPS precision airdrops. At his second assignment at the Space and Missile Center (SMC) in Los Angeles, CA, he managed technology development and review for the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) and the Space Based Infrared System (SBIRS). While deployed to Kabul, Afghanistan, he served as an Operations Officer for the Defense Contract Management Agency (DCMA), where he safely conducted over 100 combat convoy missions. In his current assignment at the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), in Charlottesville, VA, he is a Test Director where he tests all the new Defense Intelligence collection systems.
While at SBIRS, Major Hillshafer led the team that used missile warning satellites to improve weather updates over Afghanistan from hours to minutes. This unconventional and innovative approach allowed weather forecasters to warn deployed troops of fast-forming, severe weather events that had previously destroyed $20 million worth of valuable equipment every year, disrupted counter-terrorism operations, and put the lives of aircrew at risk. For his effort, Major Hillshafer was awarded the Rotary National Award for Space Achievement (RNASA) in the Early Career category in 2014. The award is sponsored by the Space Center Rotary Club of Houston, Texas, to recognize outstanding achievements in our nation’s space program
Dave will be introduced by his grandfather, our own Larry Jackson.
District 7620 and our own members having a great time at Rotary International Convention in Atlanta 2017
Karen Duffy is Division Director, Youth and Family Services, at Every Mind, Inc., a nonprofit organization in Rockville. The organization recognizes that investing in our children and youth now, will mean a more vibrant, productive workforce and community moving forward. Prevention and early intervention services help us to identify and address the needs of at-risk children and their families and then provide more intensive case management and counseling when needed. Every Mind realizes that mental health issues are not bound by economics or ethnicity and that’s why our services are in place for everyone– “Because every mind needs support, attention, and care.”