
University Interscholastic League
2002-03
Booster Club Guidelines

Be they music, fine arts, academic or athletic, booster
clubs should exist to enrich students' involvement in extracurricular
activities without endangering their eligibility.
GENERAL GUIDELINES
The role of competition
Participation teaches that it is a privilege and an honor to represent one's
school. Students learn to win without boasting and to lose without bitterness.
Self-motivation and intellectual curiosity are essential to the best
academic participants. Artistic commitment and a desire to excel are traits
found in music participants. Physical training and good health habits are
essential to the best athletes. Interscholastic competition is a fine way to
encourage youngsters to enrich their education and expand their horizons.
Leadership and citizenship experiences through school activities help
prepare students for a useful and wholesome life.
Plus, competition is fun!
ROLE OF THE SUPERINTENDENT
Member schools make UIL rules and determine policies regarding penalties to
schools, school district personnel and student participants. The superintendent
is solely responsible for the entire UIL program. All activities, events and
personnel are under the jurisdiction of the superintendent. Booster clubs must
recognize this authority and work within a framework prescribed by the school
administration.
ROLE OF BOOSTER CLUBS
School patrons form booster clubs to help enrich the school's participation
in extracurricular activities. The fund-raising role of booster clubs is particularly
crucial in today's economic climate.
WRITTEN POLICIES
Booster clubs should develop and annually review policies to cover:
- how to obtain administrative
approval before beginning projects;
- how to plan and publicize
meetings;
- bookkeeping and fund
administration including process to obtain superintendent's approval prior
to raising funds.
- election of officers
(suggestion: one president; one secretary; one treasurer; and three vice -
presidents; one vice president to oversee fall, winter and spring sports);
- taking, distributing and
filing minutes;
- public communication;
- proper interaction with fine
arts directors and academic and athletic coaches through the lines of
authority as established by the school board;
- a sportsmanship code
governing behavior of booster club members and fans at contests, treatment
of officials, guests, judges, etc.; and
- plans to support the school
regardless of success in competition, keeping the educational goals of
competition at the forefront of all policies.
CLUB FINANCES
RELATIONSHIP WITH THE SCHOOL
- The superintendent or a
designee who does not coach or direct a UIL contest has approval authority
over booster clubs and should be invited to all meetings. All meetings
should be open to the public.
- Booster clubs do not have
authority to direct the duties of a school district employee. The schedule
of contests, rules for participation, methods of earning letters and all
other criteria dealing with inter-school programs are under the
jurisdiction of the local school administration.
- Minutes should be taken at
each meeting and kept on file at the school.
- School administration should
apprise booster clubs of all school activities.
- Booster clubs should apprise
school administrators of all club activities.
- Periodic financial statements
itemizing all receipts and expenditures should be made to the general club
membership and kept on file at the school.
FUND RAISING/SPENDING/STIPENDS/GIFTS TO COACHES
- Money given to a school
cannot be earmarked for any particular expense. Booster clubs may make
recommendations, but cash or other valuable consideration must be given to
the school to use at its discretion.
- Fund raising projects are
subject to state law. Nonprofit or tax-exempt status may be obtained from
the Internal Revenue Service.
- Community-wide sales
campaigns should be coordinated through the school administration to
minimize simultaneous sales campaigns.
- Sales campaigns should be
planned carefully to insure that the projects provide dollar value for
items sold, and that most of the money raised stays at home. Otherwise
donations are often more rewarding than letting the major part of the
money go to outside promoters.
- Fund raising activities
should support the educational goals of the school and should not exploit
students. Activities and projects should be investigated carefully before
committing the school's support.
- Individuals who actively
coach or direct a UIL activity should serve in an advisory capacity to the
booster club and should not have control or signature authority over
booster club funds, including petty cash or miscellaneous discretionary
funds. Coaches wish-lists should have received prior approval from school
administration before submission to boosters.
- Coaches and directors of UIL
academics, athletics and fine arts may not accept more than $300 in money,
product or service from any source in recognition of or appreciation for
coaching, directing or sponsoring UIL activities. The $300 limit is
cumulative for a calendar year and is not specific to any one particular
gift.
- The district may pay a
stipend, fixed at the beginning of the year, as part of the annual
employment contract. The amount of the stipend can't depend on the success
of a team or individual. In other words, a coach can't receive more money
if a team or individual qualifies to region or state.
- Funds are to be used to
support school activities. To provide such funding for non-school
activities would violate UIL rules and the public trust through which
funds are earned.
ATHLETIC BOOSTERS
ATHLETIC BOOSTER CLUB RESTRICTIONS
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- Booster clubs cannot
give anything to students, including awards. Check with school
administrators before giving anything to a student, school sponsor or
coach. Schools must give prior approval for any banquet or get-together
given for students. All fans“not just members of the booster club“should
be aware of this rule. It affects the entire community.
- Unlike music and
academic booster clubs, athletic booster club funds shall not be used to
support athletic camps, clinics, private instruction or any activity
outside of the school.
- Booster groups or
individuals may donate money or merchandise to the school with prior
approval of the administration. These kinds of donations are often made
to cover the cost of commercial transportation and to cover costs for
out of town meals. It would be a violation for booster groups or
individuals to pay for such costs directly.
- Individuals should be
informed of the seriousness of violating the athletic amateur rule.
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The penalty to a student-athlete is forfeiture of varsity athletic
eligibility in the sport for which the violation occurred for one calendar year
from the date of the violation. Student athletes are prohibited from accepting
valuable consideration for participation in school athletics - anything that is
not given or offered to the entire student body on the same basis that it is
given or offered to an athlete. Valuable consideration is defined as tangible
or intangible property or service including anything that is usable, wearable,
salable or consumable. Salable food items or trinkets given to athletes by
student, cheerleaders, drill team members, little/big sister, school boosters,
parents of other students, teachers or others violate this rule.
- Homemade "spirit
signs" made from paper and normal supplies a student purchases for
school use may be placed on the students' lockers or in their yards.
Trinkets and food items cannot be attached. Yard signs should be made of
commercial quality wood, plastic, etc. If not purchased or made by the
individual player's parent, they must be returned after the season.
- The school may provide meals
for out-of-town trips only. If the school does not pay for meals, the
individual parents need to purchase their own child's food. Parents may
purchase anything they wish for their own child but may not provide food
or other items of valuable consideration for their child's teammates.
- The school may also provide
supplies for games and practices and transportation for school field
trips. Students should pay admission fees during school field trips.
- Parties for athletes are
governed by the following State Executive Committee interpretation of
Section 441: VALUABLE CONSIDERATION SCHOOL TEAMS AND ATHLETES MAY ACCEPT:
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1. Pre-season. School athletic teams may be given
no more than one pre-season meal, per sport, per school year such as a fish
fry, ice cream supper, etc. provided it is approved by the school and given
by a nonprofit organization, usually the booster club, before the team plays
in its first contest. It may be given after a scrimmage.
2. Post-season. School athletic teams are limited to no more than
one post-season meal or banquet per sport, per school year, and it must be
given by a nonprofit organization and approved by the school. Banquet favors
or gifts are considered valuable consideration and are a violation if they
are given to a student athlete at any time.
3. Other. School athletic teams and athletes may be invited to and
may attend functions where free admission is offered or where refreshments
and/or meals are served, provided all students from that high school are
invited to attend for the same fee and on the same basis as the athletes or
the athletic team. Athletes or athletic teams may be recognized at these
functions but may not accept anything that is not given to all other
students.
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VALUABLE CONSIDERATION THAT SCHOOL TEAMS AND ATHLETES MAY NOT
ACCEPT
Examples of items deemed to be valuable consideration and thus a violation
of this rule include but are not limited to:
- meals, snacks or snack foods
during or after practices;
- parties provided by parents
or other students strictly for an athletic team;
- anything that is not given or
offered to the entire student body on the same basis that it is given to
or offered to an athlete.
Local school district superintendents have the discretion to allow student
athletes to accept, from their fellow students, small "goodie bags"
that contain candy, cookies or other items that have no intrinsic value and are
not considered valuable consideration.
Gatherings of school athletic teams at parents' or patrons' homes require
each athlete to contribute equally to any food or refreshment. The burden of
proof will be on the athlete, his or her head coach and the school if these
occasions are questioned. No overnight lodging or sports instruction or practice
is permitted.