1 / 16

Recent Developments Affecting Non-Traditional Revenue Sources for Schools presented by Michael L. Dodd, Esq.

National School Boards Association. Recent Developments Affecting Non-Traditional Revenue Sources for Schools presented by Michael L. Dodd, Esq. Ferrara, Fiorenza, Larrison, Barrett & Reitz, P.C. East Syracuse, New York October 5, 2002. Overview.

doyle
Download Presentation

Recent Developments Affecting Non-Traditional Revenue Sources for Schools presented by Michael L. Dodd, Esq.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. National School Boards Association Recent Developments Affecting Non-Traditional Revenue Sources for Schools presented by Michael L. Dodd, Esq. Ferrara, Fiorenza, Larrison, Barrett & Reitz, P.C. East Syracuse, New York October 5, 2002

  2. Overview • How Exclusive Vending Contracts are Faring • Community/Parent Protests • Developments Related to Other Revenue Sources (Naming Rights, etc.) • Guidance 2

  3. Exclusive Vending Contracts • Legal Challenges in New York (Commissioner of Education) • Numerous challenges across the state • Parents and would-be contractors • 11 recently consolidated in 2 cases before Commissioner • Built upon earlier Citizens decision (Nov. 2000) • All contracts were upheld (with warnings) 3

  4. Exclusive Vending Contracts • Legal Claims Asserted • Board lacks enumerated authority to enter into an exclusive vending contract • Ed. Law grants specific authority • regulates when soft drinks can be sold • grants specific authority to provide cafeteria and restaurant services • Illegal gift of taxpayer property • Proper school purpose (Ed. Law authority) • Fair and adequate consideration (bidding procedures) 4

  5. Exclusive Vending Contracts • Legal Claims Asserted • Selling to non-student groups after school hours violates State Constitution (use of public property for private gain) • No standing but schools warned not to engage in this activity or distribution of free products • School personnel cannot participate in solicitation of orders, distribution of advertising materials or collection of charges for sale of products during school hours 5

  6. Exclusive Vending Contracts • Legal Claims Asserted • Cash advances constitute loans in violation of State Finance Law • No absolute requirement of repayment at time of signing • Board cannot bind future Boards • Annual review and 120-day notice sufficient flexibility • Large cash advances have a coercive effect on future Boards (to have to repay) • Spread out over 10 years = OK but exercise care 6

  7. Exclusive Vending Contracts • Legal Claims Asserted • Violated bidding requirements in New York General Municipal Law • No purchase of anything (much less $10,000) • But must negotiate “fair and reasonable” deal 7

  8. Exclusive Vending Contracts • Legal Claims Asserted BUT Undecided • Constitutional right to engage in free competition • Does an exclusive contract, procured through public competitive bidding process, create a limited public forum from the sale of products in school? • May competitors assert constitutional right to equal access to the rewards obtained by highest bidder? 8

  9. Exclusive Vending Contracts • Recent Trends in Vending Contracts Nationally • Revenue guarantees are lower • approx. $3-6/per student vs. approx. $10-12/per student • Commission rates are slightly higher • approx. 35-40% vs. approx. 25-30% • Willingness to share proceeds vs. fees for exclusivity • downturn in economy, protests, restrictions, etc. 9

  10. Exclusive Vending Contracts • Other developments • Districts looking into “District Vending Operations” as part of food service operations (distributor) • Expenses of district-sponsored operations are relatively low and profit margins are still high • Districts adopting “equal nutrition” policies • Coca-Cola appears to be discouraging use of consultants 10

  11. Community/Parent Protests • Center for Analysis of Commercialism in Education (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee) • Citizens’ Campaign for Commercial-Free Schools (Seattle) • Reclaim Democracy (Boulder) • Los Angeles protests resulted in vote to ban soft drinks in schools 11

  12. Other Revenue Sources • Sale of “Naming Rights” for School Properties • Rapid Increase • Vernon Hills High School (Ill. - Rust-Oleum) • $100,000 on $1.8M stadium • $80,000 scoreboard by computer company • Naperville - Under Armour = “Official Sponsor” of high school team (announced each game) in exchange for $7,580 worth of game towels, wrist bands, t-shirts and shorts • Colorado - $2M for stadium by telephone co. • New Jersey - $100,000 for elementary school gym 12

  13. Other Revenue Sources • Sale of “Naming Rights” for School Properties • Considerations • Policy - encourage donation, discourage abuse and embarrassment • Law - does your state allow it? • Protections • Adequate Consideration • Duration - right to cancel (bankruptcy, scandal) • Scope - signage, outside promotions • Assignability? 13

  14. Guidance • Endorsements by Schools - Guidance from Attorneys General Report (1999) • Consumer (Parents/Students) Perceptions • High level of trust in schools = preferred product • Belief that products marketed in association with schools are endorsed by schools • Belief that products endorsed by trusted entity are superior • Unaware of exclusive relationship 14

  15. Guidance • Endorsements by Schools - Guidance from Attorneys General Report (1999) • Common Sense Legal Guidance Principles • Reserve right to review use of name and logo • Make clear in promotional materials that: • there is no endorsement by school • corporate sponsor paid for use of name and logo • relationship with corporate sponsor is exclusive 15

  16. National School Boards Association Recent Developments Affecting Non-Traditional Revenue Sources for Schools presented by Michael L. Dodd, Esq. Ferrara, Fiorenza, Larrison, Barrett & Reitz, P.C. East Syracuse, New York October 5, 2002

More Related