WFS;129373 wrote: Also, if you are working under their TAX ID, you may fall under the PTA, not PTO classification. There is a difference. PTO works as a partner with the board of education, but PTA is an association and connected more.
You're too polite, Tim. wfs is confused. That's not how to define the difference between PTO and PTA. Tax id really doesn't have anything to do with it. PTA refers to membership in a national organization with dues, rules and policies of their own, which apply to their school-level chapters. A parent group can't call itself a PTA unless it is formally affiliated with National PTA. PTA groups would not have their money held under a school's tax id.
"PTO" is a generic term that applies to any parent school group the is NOT formally affiliated with National PTA. There is no "official" definition of a PTO. Some groups that use the PTO label are committees of the school and thus run all the finances thru the school. But I think most PTOs are independent of the school (at least financially) and have their own tax id #. Maybe some PTOs "partner with the board of education", but I haven't personally seen that relationship. It's definately not a given simply because a group uses the PTO label.
Back to Lynnfield's original question...you're a preschool, right? So kids are there for maybe 2 years, right? So parent turnover is pretty quick, right? In that case, I'd be inclined to set up the parent group as a committee of the preschool and raise the funds under the school's tax id number. This is a long-term project that I assume is a priority for the school as well as the parents. I'd feel secure that the money would stay earmarked for playground improvement in the preschool's budget. I remember reading here once that a specified fundraiser like a playground project is an implied contract with your donors, and you just can't arbitrarilly redirect the money later to some other project. (I'm not an attorney, though, so I don't know if that's true,)
Setting up a formal independent parent group might not be practical for a school with short parent involvement.