Straight shooter
Rotary
International President Ron Burton
Ron Burton made his mark on his
alma mater, the University of Oklahoma, where he served as president of the
school’s foundation for nearly three decades. Photo by Monika
Lozinska/Rotary International
With his
congenial manner and his inclination to keep things simple, Ron Burton has a
natural ability to put people at ease. But don’t let the easygoing demeanor of
Rotary International’s new president lull you into thinking that he doesn’t get
serious when it’s time for business.
“If you
ask my opinion, you’re going to get it,” Burton says, his neighborly look
morphing into a solemn gaze. “When I feel strongly about something, I will
argue like crazy for my position. I suppose that’s sort of an ego thing, but if
I discern that someone has a vested interest or may be looking at a personal
economic benefit, I have a simple suggestion: Apply The Four-Way Test.”
An
uncompromising sense of ethics may be the only personal quality that the former
president of the University of Oklahoma Foundation Inc. is willing to wear on
his sleeve. “Like most people, I don’t like to be told I’m wrong,” he says.
“But I can be convinced that there’s another way to look at something, and
sometimes I’ll change my mind. If it’s an ethical issue, though, you’re not
going to tell me I’m wrong. It’s not going to happen. I’ve dealt with too many
people over the years who wanted to misuse funds. I’ve looked them in the eye
and said, ‘I’m not going to jail for you or anyone else.’”
Burton
says most of his career success came from being “in the right place at the
right time.” It started with growing up in a small town (Duncan, Okla., USA) in
the postwar era and having a chance to operate his own business at age 13.
“Delivering newspapers was a business back then,” he says, recalling his days
as a Duncan Banner carrier. “You had to buy your papers, buy
your rubber bands, buy your bag; you had to wait for the papers, roll them, and
deliver them; you had to collect, you had to pay your bill. Anything left over
was yours.”
A few
years later, as a student at the University of Oklahoma in the late ʼ60s,
Burton worked part time in the accounting office. Between graduation and law
school, he was hired to replace a close friend at the office who had been
drafted into the military. (Burton did his own military service through
advanced ROTC and the National Guard.)
“I ended
up being the No. 2 accountant for the University of Oklahoma a week after I got
out of school,” he says. He continued in the job during his first year in law
school, but soon was recommended to replace the outgoing treasurer of the
University of Oklahoma Foundation. “When I graduated, my boss, who was a past
governor of our Rotary district, asked me to stay on, with the idea that I
might be selected to succeed him when he retired. I took over his position as
president in 1978 and retired in 2007. That’s my career at Oklahoma –
storybook, really.”
When it
came to meeting his future wife, Jetta, Burton was initially in the right
place, but his timing was a bit off. Both charter members of the baby boom
generation, they were born in the same year and at the same overcrowded
hospital, where dresser drawers substituted for basinets. But he arrived three
months ahead of her. They had mutual friends growing up and finally met in high
school, where they were members of the band. He was a junior and played
trombone. She was a sophomore and played bassoon. Their first date was 18
September 1962. They tied the knot in college.
After 45
years of marriage, with a daughter, a son, and three grandchildren, Burton
emphasizes that their life together has been a partnership, especially when it
comes to Rotary.
“Jetta is
my best critic,” says Burton, a member of the Rotary Club of Norman. “She will
level with me, on whether I made a natural and believable presentation – on all
sorts of things. She’s been supportive all along the way, from presidents-elect
training seminars to district assemblies and conferences. If she had not
supported me in this, I wouldn’t be here today.”
The vital
role of the family in Rotary is at the core of Burton’s beliefs. “When we talk
about the family of Rotary, I know public relations is a part of that,” he
says. “But to me, it really is the family of Rotary. If you get your own family
involved in this, with your own heart, and it expands to the world, that’s the
family of Rotary – that’s community service.”
Throughout
his time in Rotary, especially during this past year of traveling and meeting
Rotarians from various countries, that perspective has helped Burton appreciate
the diversity and ever-growing potential of the organization. “Speaking to
Rotarians from around the world has made me more tolerant of different points
of view,” he says. “You learn that there is another way to do things, that
there are differences in cultures and differences in individuals. But the basic
tenets come through for all of us, no matter where we are. I’d like to think
there are no regional differences in the integrity aspect of the organization,
but I believe we may need to do a better job of working on that and
highlighting it.”
Burton is
firm in his view of the relationship between Rotary International and
Rotarians. “Rotary International is nothing more than an association of Rotary
clubs, and the Secretariat is here to serve those clubs,” he says. “Rotary
International’s job is to support the clubs, and Rotarians are the ones who do
things. We need to keep that in mind. The Secretariat is a sacred place, and it
should be respected, just like the office of the president. Our job is to
inspire people, to act as an inspirational pivot point to bring the senior
leadership in, to serve those clubs and districts so that we can make things
happen. But Rotary International is not an end in itself.”
Burton is
enthusiastic about the success of his “first class” campaign, which aims to
make the 2013-14 class of Rotary leaders the first in which every district
governor and club president contributes to The Rotary Foundation. “We’ve
already raised $3.6 million, and we’ve only got 8,128 club presidents so far,”
he says. “All the governors are in, for the first time in history.”
Success in
fundraising was a hallmark of Burton’s three decades of service at the
University of Oklahoma Foundation. During his tenure, he notes, the
foundation’s assets grew from $17.5 million to $890 million. But that
achievement is not on the short list of his proudest accomplishments.
“There are
two things I take great pride in,” he says. “One is that there was never a
penny out of place – every single cent was always accounted for. The other is
that, more than five years after I’ve left, except for subsequent retirements,
everyone who was working for me is still there. I think that’s a great
testament that I did something right.”
The
management style that led to that success is unlikely to change much, but
Burton, whose reading pleasure runs toward biographies of American presidents,
believes that his experience watching and working with past Rotary presidents
will help him hone an effective approach.
“I don’t
want to leave anyone out, but some of them do stick out in my mind,” he says.
“Bill Boyd had a big impact on me – he’s a great communicator. I learned a lot
about tolerance from Carlo Ravizza. Jim Lacy ran a great meeting and was
businesslike in his approach. Jon Majiyagbe is a great role model as a gentle
person with a steady manner. And then there’s Frank Devlyn. I’ll tell you what:
If you don’t like Frank Devlyn, I don’t like you. It’s that simple.”
Seeing and
expressing things in simple, straightforward terms is one of Burton’s most
apparent strengths. “If I had one wish for the American people,” he says, “it’s
that they could go to one of the impoverished countries that Rotarians do so
much work in and see how good we have it here.”
For
Burton, there’s no doubt about how good he’s had it. “I’ve had a blessed life,”
he says. “I had a great family life growing up, and I look at our kids and our
grandkids, and I think they’ve done pretty well too. You worry about things, of
course, and you want the best for your family. I think Rotary gives me an
opportunity to help make this world a little bit better and help give others a
better life – not only my grandkids but other people’s grandkids too.”
A year
from now, Burton will look back and measure his success by a standard that is
pure Oklahoma: “At the end of the day, I hope to leave the woodpile just a
little higher.”
Rotarian Magazine….July 2013
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