Anonymous wrote:No, $100 per child is the pay for voting in the PA. It goes to the PA which is getting it's own non-profit association status separate from the school. The PA donated all the new playground equipment from these fees and fundraisers so they are broke and need more funds.
The other $100? (it's more than that, I don't recall but $140? per child) is the school materials fees that parents pay to the school at the beginning of the year for materials. I don't think if it's the PA who gets the money and buys the materials but I could be wrong. Paying the school materials fee will not get you a vote in the PA. You have to pay the $100 poll tax.
Anonymous wrote:Anon 12:58: This school year, you can vote if you've turned in your supply donation.
For future years, I checked the bylaws and they read, "Annual dues will be set each year in an amount intended to cover the Association's basic operating expenses plus each student's supply fee." It may go up next year, I don't know.
It wasn't clear from the email but I only skimmed it.Anonymous wrote:No, $100 per child is the pay for voting in the PA. It goes to the PA which is getting it's own non-profit association status separate from the school. The PA donated all the new playground equipment from these fees and fundraisers so they are broke and need more funds.
The other $100? (it's more than that, I don't recall but $140? per child) is the school materials fees that parents pay to the school at the beginning of the year for materials. I don't think if it's the PA who gets the money and buys the materials but I could be wrong. Paying the school materials fee will not get you a vote in the PA. You have to pay the $100 poll tax.
Anonymous wrote:one view is that usually the PTA is voting on leadership, ie, people to oversee the budgeting out of the funds raised...if you haven't contributed any funds, why do you get to vote on the distribution of those fundsAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never voted on a PTA, but we would get requests for contributions each year, showing what the average per child expenditure was from parent fundraising. I happily paid the suggested donation, and more, as I know it was a fraction of what I had paid each WEEK for preschool.
I don't generally agree with paying dues to vote, but then there ARE ballots to be printed, and counted, and someone has to pay for the website on which the internet votes are recorded...
Can't they run a fundraiser (bake sale) to pay for this? I have no problem with contributing to the PA but asking me to pay to vote leaves a bad taste and makes me not want to have anything to do with them at all and that includes writing checks.? Being on the PTA or not being on the PTA doesn't affect your ability to have your child in school, or to participate in helping the school...
one view is that usually the PTA is voting on leadership, ie, people to oversee the budgeting out of the funds raised...if you haven't contributed any funds, why do you get to vote on the distribution of those fundsAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never voted on a PTA, but we would get requests for contributions each year, showing what the average per child expenditure was from parent fundraising. I happily paid the suggested donation, and more, as I know it was a fraction of what I had paid each WEEK for preschool.
I don't generally agree with paying dues to vote, but then there ARE ballots to be printed, and counted, and someone has to pay for the website on which the internet votes are recorded...
Can't they run a fundraiser (bake sale) to pay for this? I have no problem with contributing to the PA but asking me to pay to vote leaves a bad taste and makes me not want to have anything to do with them at all and that includes writing checks.
? Being on the PTA or not being on the PTA doesn't affect your ability to have your child in school, or to participate in helping the school...Anonymous wrote:I've never voted on a PTA, but we would get requests for contributions each year, showing what the average per child expenditure was from parent fundraising. I happily paid the suggested donation, and more, as I know it was a fraction of what I had paid each WEEK for preschool.
I don't generally agree with paying dues to vote, but then there ARE ballots to be printed, and counted, and someone has to pay for the website on which the internet votes are recorded...