- Posts: 133
- Thank you received: 0
Get advice, ideas, and support from other parent group leaders just like you—join our closed Facebook group for PTO and PTA Leaders & Volunteers .
Have we not all broken the law at one time or another= speeding, not stopping completely at a stop sign, not admitting when you're charged the wrong price at the store? The only difference is that this person was convicted. Without knowing the circumstances how can you make such a judgement? Perhaps this woman was paid too much through food stamps and spent it-this is a felony to which she can be convicted. Yes maybe she shouldn't have spent it but maybe she was laid off and did not have food for her children. We don't know the reason for her probation. And it is not for us to judge as to whether she can be trusted. We once had a wonderful volunteer who went through something like this and she proved to be a great asset to us. Perhaps this person accumulated too many parking tickets or wrote a bad check because her husband skipped out taking all the money? Know the facts before forming an opinion.Trusting a felon doesn't make sense
There is no fool proof way for any group or business to be 100% certain. I agree that if the woman is denying the charges that is a red flag however it may be beneficial to speak with her and let her know what the principal knows. It is human nature when backed against the wall to be defensive. Perhaps she was actually an innocent person caught in the crossfire of someone else's crime. Innocent people are convicted every day.As far as a second chance: at what risk are you willing to put your group? do you want to know nothing until it's already gone?