We originally went to the PTA board to form a committee for a new playground, but were told by the PTA pres and VP that the PTA bylaws (I'm assuming national, from what I've seen) strongly discourage using PTA funds for "material goods that should be supplied by the BOE." In other words, the money we raise through the PTA is to maintain the running of the local PTA (mailing costs, paper, money to buy things for the Santa's Workshop, and non-fundraisers like Breakfast with Santa), and NOT for: textbooks, salaries of employees and the like(where I totally agree). Like I said either here or on another post, our PTA is fairly political, since the PTA President for our county is a resident of our town, and used to run our school's PTA, so the women on the board feel a particular sense of obeying by the rules. The board tends to be the self-made martyr type (partially to stay in control), and as a reult they're jaded and burned out (read "do NOT want to take on the work and aggravation of something untried and new). You are absolutely right, we are looking to be more supplemental, or more a non-profit association to handle the things the PTA can't. At first we had it in our heads to form an alternative to the PTA by forming a bona fide PTO, but after much thought we realize that the PTA has a very important role by doind what they do and offering some good programs to the children which aren't "material goods" but educational or aesthetic in nature. So rather than offer people an "us or them" situation, we hope to offer more "us in conjunction with them." The current PTA siutation in our school is dismal; and parent/student moral is low. It doesn't help that the board is quite cliquey, and refuses to hear new ideas unless one of them thinks of it, which isn't too often. Our PTA board members aren't nearly as well-adjusted as you are, and are incredibly[B/] threatened, and afraid of having to hear it from the county President. And even though they compete with about a thousand other fundraisers in our town(we're a "bedroom" of NYC, so the less affluent towns in our county tend to be crowded--our town is maybe 2 square miles and has four elementaries, 2 junior highs and a high school, each with a minimum[B/] of two classes/grade and each class has around 23-25 students) they see us as wanting to take the money from them. WOW. I DO tend to go on. Sorry!