Outside of the window yes, but there is a window of the day they do their pep rally until the week after the run, that they are entitled to the same percentage (between 48-60%) EVEN if the check was made out to the actual PTA. Do your homework, read the contract before you say something is foolish.Anonymous wrote:Boosterthon has no ability to clawback donations made outside of the scope of the Boosterthon fundraiser. You are simply foolish if you believe that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Refusing to donate because you don't like the fundraiser? What a jerk. Why don't you just mail a check to the PTA directly? I guess you would be happy to have the benefits of a fundraiser without contributing. Great lesson.
You can't just send a check directly to the PTA, boosterathon takes it. It is in their contract. And I've donated plenty to the PTA already.
Anonymous wrote:That is not true, and I bet you haven't donated a cent.
Anonymous wrote:Refusing to donate because you don't like the fundraiser? What a jerk. Why don't you just mail a check to the PTA directly? I guess you would be happy to have the benefits of a fundraiser without contributing. Great lesson.
Anonymous wrote:Don't forget that they sell data about you and your child to other companies.
"If fun run participants or their parent/legal guardian (if child is less than 13 years old) opt to allow us to use or share Business Information and other data with trusted affiliates, independent contractors and other businesses for marketing and business purposes, we may choose to do so."
I cannot find how to opt out of this, so I am not completing the registration process for my kid.
Anonymous wrote:I hope the PP's that are boycotting Boosterthon will still make contributions to the school outside of the Boosterthon. Otherwise, your spite against Boosterthon just results in less money for your school. Unless, of course, you don't give a crap about your kids school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Will someone please think of the children???
we are. Plenty of parents on here said they don't mind doing a donate-for-nothing. we just don't want to give half our money to a for profit corporation; we don't want companies using the kids to raise money, and we also hate the whole giving a prize to the kid who managed to guilt the most people out of their money. Do you think the relatives and friends of the kids know that half the money goes straight to the company? My sibling sponsored my DC last year but I hadn't realized how much goes to the company. I feel guilty now. I am not going to do it this year.
Every company that sponsors fundraising at schools takes a cut - even scholastic - and it is usually far more than the 50% of boosterthon. Now, I agree, donate-for-nothing is my preferred fundraising technique, but let's not think that Boosterthon is an outlier on this.
Anonymous wrote:I hope the PP's that are boycotting Boosterthon will still make contributions to the school outside of the Boosterthon. Otherwise, your spite against Boosterthon just results in less money for your school. Unless, of course, you don't give a crap about your kids school.