WOW!!!! Talking about biting the hand that feed you. Barb Slaven whose contract was not renewed this year was sent a solicitation letter that must have been one of rubbing the salt in the wound. I wonder how the fund raising is going. Is this really another pay to play scheme?
Solicitation raises eyebrows
Pickerington schools' vendors urged to give $1,500 for levy effort
Sunday, September 16, 2007 4:01 AM
By Bill Bush
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
If the Pickerington schools' vendors didn't realize who butters their bread, a letter from the campaign supporting a 5-mill operating levy this November reminded them.
In ''kindly asking for a donation of at least $1,500 from each district vendor,'' the Sept. 6 campaign letter informs companies doing business with the district that a growing school district means ''higher sales for you.''
''Your business benefits greatly from the needs of our 10,000+ student school district. As our student population has grown, you most likely have also seen our orders from this district grow as well.''
''?…Therefore, PLEASE consider your donation with both a generous heart and head. And a stamped and addressed envelope has been provided for your convenience. Thank you in advance for your support.''
A former public-relations consultant for the district, Barb Slaven, objected to the letter.
''I took it as extortion,'' she said. ''I took it as, 'If I don't give, I'm not going to get a contract.' ''
That wasn't the message, said Cathy Olshefski, a parent who is the volunteer chairwoman for the levy campaign, Vote for Pick Kids.
''I don't think it says that at all,'' Olshefski said, noting that Ohio law requires a competitive process for most school-district purchases. ''We're not implying anything at all.''
The letter was meant only to inform vendors that what's good for the district is -- in the big picture -- good for them, the community, property values and students, she said.
''People interpret things differently, I guess,'' she said.
District spokeswoman Amanda Morris said the district doesn't control what the campaign does, and that the selection of vendors has nothing to do with campaign contributions. The campaign received the list of district vendors through a verbal public-records request, Morris said.
Olshefski couldn't immediately say Friday how many vendors received the letter.
Political causes are commonly financed by vendors with a potential financial stake in the outcome, said Joseph White, chairman of the Political Science Department at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland.
But putting a minimum donation amount in writing ''feels a little close to the line,'' he said.
''The setting of the amount is particularly off-putting and makes it look more like a shakedown. It sounds like a price. ?…
''It strikes me as a particularly poorly worded version of an expectation that probably exists in other types of (political) situations.''
For Slaven, the stamped return envelope was even more perplexing than the fact that she was asked for a donation because she used to do work for the district.
''So I save 41 cents to send $1,500,'' she said. ''I was touched by that maneuver.''
bbush@dispatch.com
By Henry
Solicitation raises eyebrows
Pickerington schools' vendors urged to give $1,500 for levy effort
Sunday, September 16, 2007 4:01 AM
By Bill Bush
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH
If the Pickerington schools' vendors didn't realize who butters their bread, a letter from the campaign supporting a 5-mill operating levy this November reminded them.
In ''kindly asking for a donation of at least $1,500 from each district vendor,'' the Sept. 6 campaign letter informs companies doing business with the district that a growing school district means ''higher sales for you.''
''Your business benefits greatly from the needs of our 10,000+ student school district. As our student population has grown, you most likely have also seen our orders from this district grow as well.''
''?…Therefore, PLEASE consider your donation with both a generous heart and head. And a stamped and addressed envelope has been provided for your convenience. Thank you in advance for your support.''
A former public-relations consultant for the district, Barb Slaven, objected to the letter.
''I took it as extortion,'' she said. ''I took it as, 'If I don't give, I'm not going to get a contract.' ''
That wasn't the message, said Cathy Olshefski, a parent who is the volunteer chairwoman for the levy campaign, Vote for Pick Kids.
''I don't think it says that at all,'' Olshefski said, noting that Ohio law requires a competitive process for most school-district purchases. ''We're not implying anything at all.''
The letter was meant only to inform vendors that what's good for the district is -- in the big picture -- good for them, the community, property values and students, she said.
''People interpret things differently, I guess,'' she said.
District spokeswoman Amanda Morris said the district doesn't control what the campaign does, and that the selection of vendors has nothing to do with campaign contributions. The campaign received the list of district vendors through a verbal public-records request, Morris said.
Olshefski couldn't immediately say Friday how many vendors received the letter.
Political causes are commonly financed by vendors with a potential financial stake in the outcome, said Joseph White, chairman of the Political Science Department at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland.
But putting a minimum donation amount in writing ''feels a little close to the line,'' he said.
''The setting of the amount is particularly off-putting and makes it look more like a shakedown. It sounds like a price. ?…
''It strikes me as a particularly poorly worded version of an expectation that probably exists in other types of (political) situations.''
For Slaven, the stamped return envelope was even more perplexing than the fact that she was asked for a donation because she used to do work for the district.
''So I save 41 cents to send $1,500,'' she said. ''I was touched by that maneuver.''
bbush@dispatch.com
By Henry