Question:

Should cheerleading coaches dictate a booster club?

by Guest11837499  |  2 years, 7 month(s) ago

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brand new high school. cheer coach "runs" booster"club and dictates all. There was not even an election of officers

 Tags: booster, CHEERLEADING, club, Coaches, dictate

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1 ANSWERS

  1. Ali Abdullah
    HI, High Schools can charge fees for extracurricular activities so they may require participants in the cheer leaders to pay certain fees (or, in the alternative get funds, if the student wishes, from fundraising activities). However, your situation is different because the school itself is not fund-raising or requiring the $50 -- it is the booster club that is making such requirement. So, the school should not put a student on probation from school if that student does not raise such funds. Also the school should allow a student to participate in cheer leading no matter how that student relates to the booster club or complies with booster clubs requirements. Let me know if you have any follow up on this. You may be interested in reading that the booster club may be running afoul of Internal Revenue Service regulations by making such requirements as it has done. http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-tege/eotopica93.pdf especially about 90% of the way down in the article: ---------------- Based on our experience with applications we receive in the National Office, the most common type of parent-supported booster club is one that supports a public school band and music program. Similar to the band boosters, are the school math team boosters and sports program boosters. The key fact that distinguishes these organizations from the ones previously discussed is that the teams and programs supported are taking place in public facilities rather than in privately owned facilities. Participants in the programs are selected based on the objective and nondiscriminatory criteria set by the schools. The funds raised by the booster clubs are often turned over to the public facility which then exercises discretion over expenditures to benefit all participants. Where the booster clubs maintain control over the funds, they are often limited in the type of expenditures they may make on behalf of the participants. This element of public control removes much of the discretion evident in these types of private booster clubs. This often negates the elements of private benefit and inurement that frequently occur in the private arena.

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