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MisterChris wrote:Ole97 has had only one fundraiser for the last 29 years, Unfortunately it doesn't look like we'll make it to 30.
For the last 29 years we've had a food booth at the Mid south fair in Memphis. Started out in a 4x4 wooden snap-together box, selling cornbread.
Now we're in a 28' semi trailer with A/C and convection ovens and range tops, selling Fresh stoneground cornmeal, cornbread, red beans and rice, white bean soup, and a ton of other southern foods. Parents work 3 shifts in a 13-day fair to pay for the troop.
You can read about all that on the website.
Now it looks like the fair has sold the Amusement Parkwhich drew a lot of business, and there's been a steady rise in crime and police presence (to combat or deter the crime) and we've been steadily losing profits.
So we're looking at alternatives. Makes me sad that an era in the troop will be over.
616kayak wrote:weve had 3 this year each made over 1000. they were all car washes. we sell tickets the two sundays before at our church for $5 and then work the third sat.
we have a system where the cars drive in a loop and go to the rinse/wheels station then to the soap stations, then the rinse with pressure cleaners to get soap off and finaly drying.
ASM-142 wrote:If I remember correctly, scouts can not charge for a service (such as a car wash) and can only accept donations
Even when sales are confined to parents and friends, will they get their money’s worth from any product they purchase, function they attend, or services they receive from your unit?
Here again is the principle of value received—a sale standing on its own merit—so that the recipients are not in any way subsidizing either Scouting or the member. Youth members must learn to pay their own way and to honestly earn the money to do it. You cannot permit anyone to use the good name of Scouting to sell a product.
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