Anonymous wrote:About 2/3 of my son's team can pay for costs outright like out of town meals, warm up sweats, etc. but 1/3 cannot. Before the money from fundraising comes in, the coaches pay for them since no one wants to make this public and humiliate the kids. Fundraising (where the parents who can pay contribute the most as you would hope) covers all the costs equally. I oversee the team's spending and get reimbursed from the athletic department. Please don't contribute if you don't want to. Just delete the email.
Anonymous wrote:What do you think of this? Our FCPS fundraisers for spring start in fall. Then some kids find out in spring they didn’t make the team. To me it is ballsy to ask/demand kids fundraise before roster is established.
Anonymous wrote:What do you think of this? Our FCPS fundraisers for spring start in fall. Then some kids find out in spring they didn’t make the team. To me it is ballsy to ask/demand kids fundraise before roster is established.
Anonymous wrote:In PG county Maryland, on Saturdays in spring or fall we often see sports team players washing cars to fundraise. I wish more businesses in NoVA would offer their parking lots and free water to help out teams!
And in my home town in Massachusetts, football players earn funds by raking leaves in fall. My dad picked up a fundraising flyer at the senior center. The team ended up so busy they turned away potential customers!
Anonymous wrote:I like the mulch sale our school does in early spring. The kids work hard and it brings the community together. I hate the social media campaigns. There are so many other ways to raise funds but people don't want to make any effort.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The band knocking on doors and begging for money is the worst! They should set up in the community and play for donations, not just knock on doors!
This^.
Anonymous wrote:The band knocking on doors and begging for money is the worst! They should set up in the community and play for donations, not just knock on doors!