While I have been a long time softball parent (dating back to eteamz) I don't really have much time to post on this forum. However, I have run into a situation I want some feedback on.
My daughter is a college junior who is having a decent college softball and academic career. She goes to school about 4 hours from our home.
Since DD was a junior in high school she has worked at a baseball academy in our city. (there are over a dozen of these in our Midwestern city) These are probably not common in SoCal but are here in the Midwest. They are monstrous facilities that take up entire large warehouses. The one she is at has a couple of fielding areas with regulation infields, about 8-10 pitching and hitting tunnels, a bank of coin operated batting cages, a weight lifting gym, a lounge, etc..
The co-owners are a father and son who have treated her very well. She makes a decent wage and they have pretty much let her set her own hours. If she is home for a month at Christmas and wants to work for three of those weeks then they put her down for those days. She is a good worker for them and they like the fact they have a college pitcher working the front desk for them. It helps to build the softball side of the business.
The father had a very brief NBA career back in the 70's, had a career as an administrator in government, and has coached travel baseball for thirty years. The son is about 30 and had a solid college career as a pitcher, knocked around in the traditional minors for several years, was given his release, and has spent the last three years in the independent leagues.
The facility caters to about 85% baseball boys and 15% fastpitch girls. There are other facilities in town that cater more to the softball crowd.
These facilities survive on team memberships although individuals sometimes buy them as well. This particular one has around 30 teams where every kid on the team "buys" a facility membership as part of their team fees.
The academy is a for profit enterprise where all the teams that purchase memberships are non profit.
Here is where the problem comes in. As part of the fund raising for some of these teams they hold these charity poker events. This Christmas holiday most of my daughter's time with the company has been spent organizing their next one in mid-January. She has dealt with everything from dealing with the gaming company, to table\chair rentals, to food, to working with a company that sets up bars for events, to holding parent meetings for the teams involved to organize parent volunteers for the event. (she is only 20 so I find it odd that she would be put in a position to organize having a liquor company to provide booze for an event even if she was not the one serving or consuming it)
The thing is I am pretty positive this whole thing is illegal no matter weather it is being done by a none profit or not. Especially in our state which is very Republican leaning. From what I can tell these type events are illegal but not prosecuted because police departments have better things to do than go after non-profit organizations trying to raise money.
The primary owner is going to be out of town when this event actually takes place. The son (less involved but still an owner) will be present. They have basically conscripted my kid to run this event for them.
I did tell my kid that I thought these things were illegal. I also saw the owner (while I was catching one of my daughter's workouts over the break) and mentioned it to him. He said since it was being done by a non-profit as a charity for that non-profit it was o.k.. I do not that to be the case but did not want to argue. I believe where there is a "buy in" and then they distribute cash payments depending on how you performed in the tournament then it is illegal gambling no matter how you cut it.
The poker tournament itself does not occur until the mid-January when my daughter will have already reported back for spring practices. However, they expect her to come back to help run that Saturday night event and have even asked her to bring a couple of college teammates that he will hire for the night to help run things.
It boils down to a "for profit' enterprise reliant on "non-profit" teams for it's existence. The "non profit" teams have built into their budget the revenue from this charity poker tournament and the "for profit" gets involved as they need these teams to be financially healthy. The "for profit" enterprise provides the facility, legwork, and professional staff to make it a success for these "non-profit" teams. The problem is that my daughter is the professional staff and what they are doing is probably illegal.
My daughter does feel a sense of responsibility to do what she can for this facility because she has worked there for four years and it is pretty important for the teams (and indirectly the facility since they are dependent on the teams) involved that this event is successful.
I am asking for help on a couple of angles-
What does the softball world think on these poker tourneys as a fundraiser? Are they pretty sure they are illegal (which I do) but do them anyway as it is not likely a local department would prosecute people doing something to raise money for kid's travel teams?
I have already mentioned to my daughter (twice) and the owner (once) that it is probably illegal. He contends that is not the case and I did not push it but I am pretty I am correct. I could go one step further and just flat out forbid my kid from being involved. That would hurt several boys travel baseball teams, hurt the facility, and likely cause termination of my daughter from a job that has worked well for both parties for four years. It is a direction I am considering but wanted more feedback before deciding.



























