I guess I should have made this more clear--the woman quitting isn't just going to "help"--she still thinks she'll be directing the event chair to do things the way
they want rather than the way the board and members want it. The event chair seems to be doing whatever the fundraising chair wants rather than what the board and members want.
It's a ~~a-thon. Two reasons this is still going on: the fundraising chair is like a dog with a bone and refuses to let go. She just can't understand that even though she may feel strongly one way or another about something, that she is
not the final word in decision making. I don't even have that power--and I'm the president!! The second reason is that she is now apparently avoiding contact, so we've been having to hold off on a meeting to "clear the air," so to speak. Push is coming to shove, and I dread the inevitable fall-out. This woman lives for drama.
Hopefully the contract is a moot point--now it's about specific decisions she wants to make concerning the event that the executive board doesn't agree with--our biggest problems are: how committee members are chosen (she wants to choose just people her and the event chair know), how many get to help (goes hand in hand with choosing friends--the board feels this is a big event and we should welcome anyone who wants to help and that this is not a place for political "handouts"--there's enough room for everyone to play a part here) and a biggie is she wants to use per lap sponsorships (board and general members have stated strong disapproval-- too much work and too time consuming--want flat donations with prizes for most donors).
Believe me--we've been struggling to figure out the motivating factor here. This woman defies reason. The fundraising chair definitely has it in her head that it's some sort of power struggle between myself and her, and she doesn't seem to get it's really her against the board and regular members--not just me.
My gut feeling--she's normally anal retentive and hates anything which is not done "the way it's always been done" so she's unsure of herself and the person she picked. We've never done this type of event before, so she wanted the company to run the event so that they could take the blame should things go bad. Unfortunately she can't admit that she made a bad decision, and is looking for any sort of fight to distract us from the poor decisions she's made. The whole thing is ludicrous at this point, and the executive board has had it. We wanted this group to be fun and welcoming, and the fundraising chair and the event chair (who was hand-chosen by the fundraising chair before we were consulted--she's a crony of the fundraising chair)are making this into a polarized situation. It wouldn't be such a big deal except we have to meet with that ever-so-delightful principal of ours, and I want everyone to be on the same page before we go in. The last thing I want the principal to see is any infighting.
[ 02-14-2005, 01:14 AM: Message edited by: kmamom ]