Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here-- thanks everyone. Very helpful insights. I think it's a great idea to let kids draw from the bank if their uniform gets messy during the day-- and maybe also make it more of a normal thing to use the free uniforms.
For privacy, I agree it is great to have a school staff person determine who needs what. Would this be an appropriate responsibility for the school social worker?
PP here on privacy - it was our school social worker who did it with one of the aides from the PK3 class who knew EVERYONE.
Anonymous wrote:OP here-- thanks everyone. Very helpful insights. I think it's a great idea to let kids draw from the bank if their uniform gets messy during the day-- and maybe also make it more of a normal thing to use the free uniforms.
For privacy, I agree it is great to have a school staff person determine who needs what. Would this be an appropriate responsibility for the school social worker?
Anonymous wrote:OP here-- thanks everyone. Very helpful insights. I think it's a great idea to let kids draw from the bank if their uniform gets messy during the day-- and maybe also make it more of a normal thing to use the free uniforms.
For privacy, I agree it is great to have a school staff person determine who needs what. Would this be an appropriate responsibility for the school social worker?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it depends on need. A low income family will need way more than four outfits. I would either do it for everyone as a trade in program or start with lower income (without asking) and if there is extra offer it to all with limits
Thanks. I know it's nowhere near enough, but as we're starting the uniform bank from scratch I just don't think it will be possible to supply what people actually need. I was going to do lower income people can pick X number of things, and then after everyone has had a few weeks to make their requests, let people take more from what's left. I thought it would be better to give a few things to many people, rather than a lot to the first few who ask.
Anonymous wrote:I think it depends on need. A low income family will need way more than four outfits. I would either do it for everyone as a trade in program or start with lower income (without asking) and if there is extra offer it to all with limits
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our uniform bank uniforms were donated by one of our community partners. If your school has community partners (usually corporations - ours is a law firm), they can usually get good bulk deals right before school starts. Old Navy, Children's Place, Gap, etc. will all have them.
The policy is that if kids come out of uniform, they have to go get one from the uniform bank. If families need assistance getting uniforms, they can speak to the front office and get some out of the bank. I don't know how many times either of those things have happened this year.
OP here-- that is genius! How are the bulk deals obtained? Through Gap Foundation or something similar?

Anonymous wrote:Our uniform bank uniforms were donated by one of our community partners. If your school has community partners (usually corporations - ours is a law firm), they can usually get good bulk deals right before school starts. Old Navy, Children's Place, Gap, etc. will all have them.
The policy is that if kids come out of uniform, they have to go get one from the uniform bank. If families need assistance getting uniforms, they can speak to the front office and get some out of the bank. I don't know how many times either of those things have happened this year.