Here is the economic case that every donor, sponsor, and city official needs to understand.
Williamson County Schools already has something most districts only dream about: an extraordinary volunteer infrastructure. Our PTOs and booster clubs are not passive fundraising committees. They are organized, motivated, mission-driven nonprofit cash engines — staffed entirely by parents who show up, who know how to run events, and who are already funneling private money back into our schools every single year.
They are not the problem. They never have been.
The problem is that without the right facilities, their ceiling is artificially low. You cannot run a summer wrestling camp without a wrestling facility. You cannot host a regional cheer competition without a performance floor. You cannot rent out a field house for weekend training clinics if you do not have one. So instead of generating $200,000 a year for their school’s programs, a booster club runs a car wash and hopes for the best.
AAA’s job is to remove that ceiling. Permanently.
A multipurpose indoor facility costs approximately $5 million to build. That is a one-time expenditure — not annual, not recurring, not a line item that comes back to the county budget every year. Build it once. It is there for 30, 40, 50 years.
And then the people who have been waiting to use it — the coaches, the parents, the booster club volunteers who already know how to run events — step in and start generating income. Weekly training sessions. Summer camps. Coaching clinics. Tournaments that draw families from across Middle Tennessee. Facility rentals. Promotional events. Every dollar generated stays in the school community, funneled through a nonprofit structure that has one purpose: strengthening the programs and reducing the financial pressure on every family in that school.
That is not charity. That is infrastructure investment with a measurable return.
The volunteer staff already exists. The organizational structure already exists. The community demand already exists. The only thing missing has been the facility. AAA builds the facility. The community takes it from there — and never needs to be funded again.
This is how you close a $110 million gap without raising taxes. Not by asking taxpayers to pay for it annually. By making a one-time investment in permanent infrastructure that turns Williamson County’s greatest asset — its people — into a self-sustaining engine that funds our schools for generations.