Old Dad wrote:I'm totally in line with Drew's - and others' - line of thinking on this one and *completely* against the British police's stance. As long as it's a private arrangement between a couple of friends or families, big deal ! People have been helping each other like that since the beginning of time. All the publicans (tax collectors) can just go butt out!!!
As Drew said, one it crosses over into soliciting 'business' from strangers then, indeed, it HAS become a business and that changes the picture entirely.
Moral of this whole story: Keep a sharp lookout for your government in action - they will attempt to jump into your private business with every change in the wind.
First - sorry for the horrible spelling in my previous post

It was typed quickly while I was busy with other items.
Now, just to play the devils advocate.
The school I used to have my kids in had a parents group. The parents group started a babysitting time service. Some of these people were indeed friends. But others only knew each other in passing from the school, and if not for the parents group, would never have met. Where does this situation fall.
Here is another one. I used to have to pay the school $50 at the start of the year. Then throughout the year I had to work 5 lunch periods as a lunchtime playground monitor - each lunch I worked, I got $10 back. If I did not work, then some other parent would, and if they wanted they could get an extra $10. Should I be taxed for working the lunch period. If no, then how is that different than if they tacked an extra $50 on the tution instead of carving it out as a seperate line item?
This whole thing only serves to solidify my distaste for income tax in the first place.
-dave