Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here
Our school has a PTO. But a teacher wants to spend money differently and on their own terms so solicited donations from the parent community for their own use without PTO oversight. They asked to give cash or check written to the “Student Activity Fund”.
We were told the “Student Activity Fund” was used to hold left over field trip money (I.e the school says the cost of a field trip is $25 when it’s really only $23 and then the school keeps the left over $2 for kids who can’t pay).
My question is - can an individual teacher or support staff solicit funds to use as they please. Who would have oversight?
Of course they can. The PTO has NO authority on this kind of thing.
Guys - I’m talking about general solicitations for no specific purpose.
This is not a power-play question. It is simply about the purpose of the solicitation. I.e. it’s different if somebody’s asking for a field trip fund amount versus just give us some money. There’s all sorts of rules around how organizations use money who has say have the money is used if it’s collected by the school? There’s a reason schools don’t do this and they use parent organizations.
“ But a teacher wants to spend money differently and on their own terms”
Pick a story and stick to it. Is a teacher soliciting donations for no purpose and you don’t want more money for your school? Or the teacher is doing something the “no power play” PTO doesn’t want to fund and you’re trying to get them in trouble?
Just email the principal for goodness sakes.
Shut up. You’re the reason DCUM sucks. Because you’re an anonymous keyboard warrior who likes to giggle when you type as if your anonymous stupidity will bring down some other anonymous person. I’m guessing you don’t volunteer much with DCPS.
I’m sorry I’m calling you out on your hypocrisy. You clearly think a teacher is soliciting funds for an
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here
Our school has a PTO. But a teacher wants to spend money differently and on their own terms so solicited donations from the parent community for their own use without PTO oversight. They asked to give cash or check written to the “Student Activity Fund”.
We were told the “Student Activity Fund” was used to hold left over field trip money (I.e the school says the cost of a field trip is $25 when it’s really only $23 and then the school keeps the left over $2 for kids who can’t pay).
My question is - can an individual teacher or support staff solicit funds to use as they please. Who would have oversight?
Of course they can. The PTO has NO authority on this kind of thing.
Guys - I’m talking about general solicitations for no specific purpose.
This is not a power-play question. It is simply about the purpose of the solicitation. I.e. it’s different if somebody’s asking for a field trip fund amount versus just give us some money. There’s all sorts of rules around how organizations use money who has say have the money is used if it’s collected by the school? There’s a reason schools don’t do this and they use parent organizations.
“ But a teacher wants to spend money differently and on their own terms”
Pick a story and stick to it. Is a teacher soliciting donations for no purpose and you don’t want more money for your school? Or the teacher is doing something the “no power play” PTO doesn’t want to fund and you’re trying to get them in trouble?
Just email the principal for goodness sakes.
Shut up. You’re the reason DCUM sucks. Because you’re an anonymous keyboard warrior who likes to giggle when you type as if your anonymous stupidity will bring down some other anonymous person. I’m guessing you don’t volunteer much with DCPS.
Anonymous wrote:Here is a link generally discussing donations to DCPS and how to do it:
https://dcps.dc.gov/page/make-donation-dcps
Direct payments to each school's SAF can be made online; however, this will not generate a receipt sufficient to prove that your payment was a donation and not a payment for service; but if you don't care about that, then this is the easiest way to build up your school's SAF.
https://dcps.dc.gov/page/paying-student-activities
While a government entity like a public school does not qualify for tax exempt status, donations to them generally are tax decuctible if the funds are used for a public purpose.
https://www.irs.gov/publications/p526
To make a donation to the SAF tax deductible, you could do it by check/cash with a letter to the principal identifying the purpose and let them deposit the donation. Or you could have your PTA arrange a SAF fundraiser, make the tax deductible donation to the 501c3 HSA, and the HSA can deposit the money in the SAF. As always, check with you tax advisor.