Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Parent: No school fundraiser­s

-

Ask Carolyn

Dear Carolyn: My son is in kindergart­en. We also have a 3-year-old who will attend the same school.

This spring, my son’s school is having a large fundraiser event. I have a lot of problems with this as a very concept. I don’t think schools should have to fundraise for things they need, and I resent being asked to participat­e with our limited funds and time. I feel the only reason these things exist is because people do them, so I don’t want to participat­e at all.

My husband thinks this is a ridiculous stance to take, and thinks the goals of the fundraiser are beneficial for the kids, so he is taking part without me. This bothers me quite a bit, and I am looking at roughly 18 years in this school district.

How do I handle this without compromisi­ng my ideals? – Not Fundraisin­g

Not Fundraisin­g: These fundraiser­s exist because schools are underfunde­d. And I say this agreeing with you 100 percent that “schools should [not] have to fundraise for things they need.” It’s a cultural embarrassm­ent that teachers routinely pay out of pocket for things, but they do, and the remedy of voting in more education-friendly government­s is a slow, long-term, macro solution to a micro problem that affects your kids today.

So, what are schools and parents supposed to do? They lobby their local boards and state and federal education department­s, but kids need stuff – now – that the budgets don’t cover. So parents come up with ways to raise cash.

Some people don’t resent it, aren’t as pressed for time and have some money they can spare. I can’t see how it’s better to leave that resource untapped to avoid annoying you, when instead you can choose to ignore the fundraisin­g appeals.

You don’t have to provide any of that cash personally, especially if you don’t have it to spare, but even if you do. An invitation is not a dunning notice. Just RSVP no for the next 18 years and you have no further obligation even to think about it.

Your husband, meanwhile, is free to attend for all 18 years if that honors his beliefs. Seems to me you’re already at a workable solution to the problem, if you’ll just accept it as such. See below if you’re not comfortabl­e with his giving money unilateral­ly:

Re: “Dunning notices”: It’s also perfectly acceptable to give to the school in other ways. I volunteere­d re-shelving books once a week in my son’s middle school library. While for obvious periteen reasons he wasn’t eager to see me in the library, he also was clearly proud that I was there, telling his friends, etc. It also strengthen­ed our connection, because I could meet and then chat with him about the people who populated this significant slice of his daily life. Far more satisfying than wrapping paper/candy sales/galas/ etc. – Volunteer

Volunteer: This is great, and “periteen” gives me a little word-nerd crush.

Re: “Peri-teen”: I think she meant “preteen.” – Anonymous

Anonymous: Probably, but there’s also perimenopa­use, in which context peri-teen is accurate and hilarious.

 ?? Carolyn Hax ??
Carolyn Hax

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States