Gun raffles and school fundraising — have we crossed the line?

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Gun raffles and school fundraising — have we crossed the line?

Letter to the Editor,

The Second Amendment guarantees us the right to bear arms. Plain and simple. I am a gun owner. I’ve taken training in gun safety. I have a CCW. I am not anti-gun.

OK, now that I’ve made that clear, let’s talk about guns, schools and fundraising. Is it tone deaf and improper for schools to benefit from the sale or raffling off of guns? According to the K-12 School Shooting Database, there have been over 1,100 school shootings since 2021 in the United States. Yet more and more schools are using raffles for guns as fundraisers. The No. 1 killer of children age 1-17 in the United States is firearms. Not car wrecks. Not disease. Firearms. We are looking to profit from our kids biggest killer.

Recently, my alma mater Tuscarawas Central Catholic has announced their first annual 30 Gun Raffle to benefit the football team. In all fairness the group holding the raffle is, according to the school and the Diocese of Columbus, not affiliated with the school. The group, started by a current TCC coach, is named The Art Teynor Memorial Fund.

Art Teynor was the longtime Hall of Fame coach who dedicated his coaching career to Dover St. Joseph’s and then to Tuscarawas Central Catholic, a man who molded and taught many of the young men who passed through TCC, also a man who family members have stated would never have had his name associated with such a fundraiser.

According to the Art Teynor Memorial Fund Facebook page, their sole purpose is to support TCC football and all things Saints athletics. Yet the school and the diocese insist the group doing the raffle is not associated with TCC. Of course, the school and the diocese could refuse to accept the money.

I know raising money for schools, especially private schools, is difficult. As a Catholic school, we have relied on gambling and the sale of alcohol to raise money for decades — a sore subject for many but also seen as necessary. But now we are willing to accept money from the sale of the No. 1 killer of our students. Is this crossing the line?

I would ask that if you believe this crosses the line of acceptable ways to raise money, please contact the school or the diocese. If your school is resorting to the same type of fundraiser, voice your concern. This really is crossing the line.

Ed Mason

Dover

TCC Class of 1987

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