A Mission Interrupted
From Isolation to Global Impact :
The Panama Project
How one Rotarian turned a pandemic lockdown into a blueprint for global change.
In early 2020, as the world braced for the COVID‑19 pandemic, Steve Bender — President of the Rotary Club of
Newport Beach — was in Panama preparing for another global outreach mission.
Bender, the CEO of Ayuda International, leads a team of volunteer dentists and dental students from the
University of Southern California (USC). Each year Ayuda provides more than a million dollars’ worth of free dental
services to underserved communities in Southern California and abroad.
As was his custom, Steve flew out two days ahead of his advance setup team to prepare equipment and supplies
and coordinate local logistics. But this time, everything changed overnight.
When Los Angeles International Airport (LAX) abruptly shut down due to global travel restrictions, Steve’s team
was stranded in California — and Steve himself was stranded on Isla Colón, a small Island in the Bocas del Toro
archipelago off Panama’s Caribbean coast.
Cut off from his team, from air travel, and from the rhythm of his humanitarian work, Bender faced an unthinkable
pause. But what might have been a period of helpless isolation soon transformed into something far more
powerful: a seed of innovation and community impact that grew far beyond the island



