I understand what you are saying, Seeker, but unless that is specifically in the Bylaws, it won't matter in a battle of wills so to speak. I also think that it brings up the question of who gets to be a volunteer at all. Principals with children in the same school they work at, often times (not always...don't jump on me here...lol) are an intimidating force even without meaning to be (just ask any teacher who bought fundraising stuff from the Principal's kid even though they would not have bought something otherwise). So, I don't think that is a factor. The Principal should be an 'advisor' or even a 'problem solver' in personality disputes, but otherwise respect the fact that there are conflict of interest problems by virtue of their job. The Principal's spouse might be the only way to solve that, providing the spouse is there as a parental representative. Staff spouses can be, and most times are, not just spouses. They too are parents of children within the school. The President most likely has a child in the school and it would be very sexist at the least to say that they are not as much a stakeholder as any other parent.
<blockquote>quote:</font><hr> Spouses of staff are not stakeholders in the same way the parents and teachers are. <hr></blockquote>
There is no easy answer as to who is more important or who should carry equal, more or less weight. The argument you present
<blockquote>quote:</font><hr> Does the principal have a child enrolled in your school? If so, I would think the parental right to be involved would outweigh the relationship to the principal. <hr></blockquote>
is the only one that makes me cringe. I have seen far too many times where the Principal's kid won first place, got the prize, extra priviledges, etc. by virtue of being the 'Boss's Kid', without having earned it. My own child was the victim of this problem, whether intended or not. So, in a case where the choice comes down to what outweighs what, <blockquote>quote:</font><hr> I would think the parental right to be involved would outweigh the relationship to the principal. <hr></blockquote>, I think the Principal should be held to a higher standard of 'What Does This Look Like'. To give the appearance, whether it is true or not, of any conflict of interest problems, they must take the Principal before Parent road. Their child could be at a different school, but they cannot be the Principal of a different school.
All in all, I must say again, make sure that the restructuring of the Bylaws includes this. And as I said in my earlier post, it has to have a majority vote to ammend any rules anyway. So even where the Principal won't care for the ruling, the membership body will make the call, effectively removing the problem from any one person or persons hands.