I told my daughter's teacher's and the administration of her school flat out... Teach my daughter what she's supposed to learn like reading, writing, math and science or I will go after your surety bonds... Needles to say, the school doesn't like me very much... Kekekekek...
A surety bond is a legally binding contract between three parties:
Principal: The party that purchases the surety bond to guarantee its obligation. In this case, the private school is the principal. (“Principal” is a bond term and has nothing to do with the position of a school principal.)
Obligee: The party that requires the institution to buy a surety bond. In this case, the obligee is the state government agency that regulates private education.
Surety: The insurance company that writes the surety bond and provides a financial guarantee.
The bond guarantees that the educational institution will comply with the terms established therein. If the principal causes another party financial injury by breaking the terms of the bond, the surety will guarantee the principal’s obligation and pay the injured party if the principal will not or cannot. However, the principal must reimburse the surety fully for any claims that the surety pays out.
I cant remember now, been several years…but I heard an interview (Redpill78 ???) where some gals in AZ researched something like surety bonds. Might be called something different. They put together an information package for parents and were having great success in removing bad actors.
I told my daughter's teacher's and the administration of her school flat out... Teach my daughter what she's supposed to learn like reading, writing, math and science or I will go after your surety bonds... Needles to say, the school doesn't like me very much... Kekekekek...
What's a surety bond?
It's what teachers need in order to be able to teach... Kind of like malpractice insurance...
A surety bond is a legally binding contract between three parties:
Principal: The party that purchases the surety bond to guarantee its obligation. In this case, the private school is the principal. (“Principal” is a bond term and has nothing to do with the position of a school principal.)
Obligee: The party that requires the institution to buy a surety bond. In this case, the obligee is the state government agency that regulates private education.
Surety: The insurance company that writes the surety bond and provides a financial guarantee.
The bond guarantees that the educational institution will comply with the terms established therein. If the principal causes another party financial injury by breaking the terms of the bond, the surety will guarantee the principal’s obligation and pay the injured party if the principal will not or cannot. However, the principal must reimburse the surety fully for any claims that the surety pays out.
I like that idea. That should get some attention.
It definitely did... Cheers fren...
I didn't tell my kids' teachers anything like that, because they're homeschooled!
I envy you... My daughter doesn't want to be homeschooled... Cheers fren...
I appreciate that, but, you ARE the parent
Yes, I know kekekekek... However with my health issues, her grades would suffer... Cheers fren...
Bad thing is that some states do not required surety bonds as in AZ, so unfortunately, this may not work for some people.
I was unaware of that thank you... Here in MA they are required... Cheers fren...
I cant remember now, been several years…but I heard an interview (Redpill78 ???) where some gals in AZ researched something like surety bonds. Might be called something different. They put together an information package for parents and were having great success in removing bad actors.
Are you familiar or did I fall on my head?
That's where I got the idea to use it on the school's my daughter goes to...
Got it.
Have not heard that but will need to research more for loved ones stuck there
Bondsforthewin.com.
Will help for free.