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JHB;126816 wrote: As I said before, I'm not opposed to this - but we have experienced issues having an officer who was also an employee. I'm not at all discouraging you. However, you need to think through the possible issues and be prepared for them. Most of this comes to bear because as president you work closely with the Principal. In a nutshell:
Both Mommytic and the principal sounds like sensible people who can make this work and negotiate any problems. But from a policy point of view, where some of you are considering where this should be allowed in theory - replay the scenario casting the overbearing principal who wants a puppet to control or the flaky president who somehow got the office but wreaks havoc as she goes.
- A PTO president often spends enormous amounts of time at school. Now, as an employee, you have to be very aware of when you are "on the clock" for school and shouldn't be conducting PTO business. The bigger problem may be getting others to understand you can't do XYZ right now because you have your PTO Pres/Employee (whichever) hat on.
- The PTO president is the single most important advocate for the PTO and it's activities. No matter how great your relationship with the principal, you may not always agree. Having him be your boss can make this uncomfortable.
- You controll funds, assets, and resources that your principal may want to use.
- You are in a position to spend extra time/to have a unique relationship with the principal. Other staff members can be jealous of this. It's easy to forget that a school is basically a big office with the Principal as the top manager. They have all the personnel issues of every other business.
- Any problems that do surface in one role can spill over into the other role.
It can work well for some, but it can be a recipe for disaster in other situations.