An issue that had been bubbling for years finally boiled over earlier this month when the Chapel Hill – Carrboro City Schools PTA Council asked the local PTA Thrift Shop to drop “PTA” from its name.

The request came after more than a half-century of the thrift shop operating in a way that large portions of the revenue were directed to local school district PTAs.

Chair of the PTA Thrift Shop Board of Directors Dawn Edgerton said in a recent interview that the thrift shop was not operating in a sustainable form.

“We were giving away most of our net profits, and in some cases even our reserve fund, in order to maximize what we give to the PTAs,” Edgerton said. “That was a great thing, but it meant we were not reinvesting in our organization for the long-term.”

Investing in the long-term health of the thrift shop came in the form of a new facility being built in Carrboro. While the thrift shop still had zoning approval, the board decided to move forward with an additional building to house YouthWorx on Main – a new initiative aimed at providing space for youth-focused non-profits.

YouthWorx now rents space to those non-profits and to the Chapel Hill – Carrboro City School System, Edgerton said, at below-market rates.

That new construction has been expensive, and the debt service associated with that development, according to Edgerton, cut into the percentage of thrift shop profits that could go to PTAs.

Riza Redd recently finished her term as PTA president at Seawell Elementary School and now represents the school on the PTA Council. She said the council was aware the disbursements from the thrift shop would stop during construction, but she said the council was under the impression those distributions would have started back, and possibly increased, once the new facility was up and running.

“It’s been a huge blow for a lot of PTAs,” Redd said. “Some PTAs have been able to financially recover; some are still struggling. And at the end of the day, it’s not the PTAs who are impacted; it’s the schools; it’s our teachers; it’s our staff; it’s our children.”

The PTA Council wrote to the PTA Thrift Shop that they were requesting the organization drop “PTA” from its name because the council believed the thrift shop no longer lived up to the national PTA mission.

“The reality is this,” Redd said, “the Thrift Shop is no longer the PTA Thrift Shop. The name implies that the benefit is for the PTA, solely to the PTA.

“If there’s a broader mission, a broader scope, then change the name, and we’ll support the thrift shop like we as community members support all of the various other thrift shops and local agencies and things like that that we can choose to support.”

Redd said it was a tough decision for the council to make this request of the thrift shop.

Edgerton said the thrift shop expanded its mission statement but not its total mission. She said the YouthWorx operation expands revenue generation opportunities for the thrift shop, which Edgerton said would eventually allow for more money to be allocated back to individual PTAs.

“Those organizations are non-profits, and they are youth-serving,” Edgerton said of the YouthWorx occupants. “And we feel that is not a detriment to the community but an enhancement to our mission.”

Edgerton said the thrift shop acknowledged the frustration from the PTA Council, adding that she was a former PTA president herself. And she said the thrift shop was committed to increasing the disbursements back to the PTAs, but that it was important to take care of the viability of the thrift shop operations.

“We have not given money to any other organization other than PTAs,” Edgerton said.

Those funds are disbursed to PTAs through the traditional distributions and through grants, which are made up of money from the thrift shop revenue and teaming up with larger foundations in some cases.

Edgerton added that she felt the thrift shop was still fulfilling its mission through its work and still hopes to increase disbursements as the operation pays off debt from the recent construction.

Redd encouraged parents to get directly involved with local PTAs.

“I know they send out emails and letters and notifications about all the things that they’re doing,” Redd said. “I think from a community-member perspective about this issue itself, if you are concerned about this, please reach out and let the thrift shop know that this is concerning to you in terms of your understanding of how the funding is supposed to work.”

Edgerton said the thrift shop board would be discussing the council’s request to drop PTA from the name at its meeting later this month. She added the board may feel it needs more time to make such a large decision.

The council’s request to the thrift shop came with a July 15 deadline.