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As long as you have a group of people interested in forming the PTO, they can form it as far in advance as they want. Around here, it's fairly typical for a new PTA to be in place at least 6 months before a school opens. They get started as soon as the school boundaries are determined and they know which schools the kids will be coming from.LadyMinx;129668 wrote: how can you form a pto for a school that doesn't have children in it yet?
I fear that this statement may have been made because of a post I recently made in another thread. YES, IF you file an information return with the IRS, you do need to file copies of changes to your governing documents. NO, the IRS does not need to (and, in fact, will not) approve them. My head hurts just thinking about the possibility of the IRS having to approve bylaws changes for companies and tax-exempt organizations throughout the country.LadyMinx;129668 wrote: I also found out that if you make changes to your bylaws, it the changes are in the crucial requirements for the federal 501 status you have to notify to Federal Goverment of these changes and they have to approve them.
Spoken like someone who has never had the privilege of opening a new school..... It is so much fun, and I've had the opportunity to help with two openings in the last few years, and might have another opportunity in a year. (Yeah, I live in a high growth area--it's not because I've moved.) But it is SO MUCH work. And it takes a long time to get ramped up.LadyMinx;129668 wrote: Nothing stops them from holding somekind of event to raise money to get the new PTO started after the new school opens.