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chrismarco
Bottom line to the issue at hand is that if a kid did not suffer an allergic reaction to the cheese than no harm no foul. We all make mistakes..
It's funny because a parent can knowingly drop off their sick kid to daycare to infect everyone else but that's ok and that has included head lice.
Wrabbit2000
reply to post by BritofTexas
The Daycare is accommodating any child with any food allergy. The only way to do this is to control what foodstuffs enter their premises. Nobody reasonably expects a two year old to do this, so the obligation is on the parents. The parent has the responsibility to make sure their child is not carrying contraband.
And that, right there, is the best example of the profound difference you and I have in world views. One view would have personal responsibility rule the day on matters of life and death concern (food allergy) and another would have the authority or state take full responsibility and dictate solutions to the masses for the care of the one.
The one should take responsibility and watch their own needs ...not demand the world alter their lives to redefine reality to their desires.
The problem really is....give it another 10-15 years and there won't be many to even remember how recently our nation wasn't obsessed with P.C. like this. We weren't regulating 2yr olds and what they had in their little brown lunch bags (almost EVERYONE brought their own lunch when I was in school and again..it wasn't THAT long ago) We're becoming a society where everyone needs to just be in a little plastic bubble and bounce each others bubbles to shake 'hands'....lest we take the foolish risk of exposure to infection of some sort. (rolls eyes)
It's just absurd.
Cheese sandwiches and 2yr olds.....what have we come to?
BritofTexas
Wrabbit2000
reply to post by BritofTexas
The Daycare is accommodating any child with any food allergy. The only way to do this is to control what foodstuffs enter their premises. Nobody reasonably expects a two year old to do this, so the obligation is on the parents. The parent has the responsibility to make sure their child is not carrying contraband.
And that, right there, is the best example of the profound difference you and I have in world views. One view would have personal responsibility rule the day on matters of life and death concern (food allergy) and another would have the authority or state take full responsibility and dictate solutions to the masses for the care of the one.
The one should take responsibility and watch their own needs ...not demand the world alter their lives to redefine reality to their desires.
The problem really is....give it another 10-15 years and there won't be many to even remember how recently our nation wasn't obsessed with P.C. like this. We weren't regulating 2yr olds and what they had in their little brown lunch bags (almost EVERYONE brought their own lunch when I was in school and again..it wasn't THAT long ago) We're becoming a society where everyone needs to just be in a little plastic bubble and bounce each others bubbles to shake 'hands'....lest we take the foolish risk of exposure to infection of some sort. (rolls eyes)
It's just absurd.
The parents of a child with Food Allergies have taken Personal Responsibility by enrolling their child in a Daycare with a such a stringent food policy.
They have not petitioned the Government or the Daycare for these rules. The Daycare chose them as their Business Model and by doing so, took personal responsibility over which customers they wished to attract.
This has nothing to do with being "PC". It has everything to do with the kind of Daycare the Father put his two year old in.
Cheese sandwiches and 2yr olds.....what have we come to?
For that you can blame the Father who took the "Personal Responsibility" to get his name in the press after taking no "Personal Responsibility" for what his child was carrying.
Lilroanie
I'm going to have to disagree on one thing in your statement. If I tried to open a private school or daycare that excluded kids with food allergies do you honestly think the doors would ever be opened? Hell no they wouldn't. That would be discrimination!
So no the parents of non allergic kids can't "go to another facility". Unless you can show me day cares and or schools that specifcally exclude children with food allergies so the rest of the kids can eat what they want on premises. This overall situation (not specifically this day care since it, as you said, chose that direction/model to take) is infringing on the majorities rights and freedoms.
I think I'll stick with Wrabbit and say this is the needs of the few completely outweighing the freedoms of the many and completely PC, until they make provisions for the other side of the coin legal.
Lil
DJW001
Why not just have the hypersensitive kid eat in a different room? If it makes him feel ostracized, it might actually help him overcome his allergy.
Lilroanie
reply to post by BritofTexas
You didn't even read what I wrote did you? I said that if I wanted to open a facility that excluded kids with food allergies it would never open it's doors because it would be discriminating against kids with food allergies. Also I asked you to show where, if any, other facilities are that do not have food restrictions. As far as I know even public schools follow these rules.
BritofTexas
They can go to any facility. There is no Law or Government mandate here.
Not to say I don't have sympathy for these kids, because I do. I just feel there needs to be a middle ground and at the moment if you tried to exclude allergic children you'd have the rulemakers on your ass in a heartbeat.
So where do families of kids with no food allergies go to be allowed to eat a cheese sandwich or god forbid peanut butter and jelly?
Lil
AlphaHawk
reply to post by AccessDenied
More like 2 year old girl suspended because parents ignored the terms outlined when they enrolled their child at that day care centre.
For a site that generally loathes the MSM, it sure has its fair share of MSM-like hyperbole.
edit on 6-3-2014 by AlphaHawk because: (no reason given)
Perhaps you should make sure of any Canadian law regarding the banning "Cheese Sandwiches" before claiming lost Rights.
The following eight foods account for 90% of all food allergies: milk, egg, peanut, tree nuts, fish, shellfish, soy and wheat.
Source
CranialSponge
reply to post by BritofTexas
Perhaps you should make sure of any Canadian law regarding the banning "Cheese Sandwiches" before claiming lost Rights.
Just about every school and daycare across Canada now has a "no peanut product" policy.
Good luck trying to find one where you can send a peanut butter sandwich, a granola bar, or a bakery bought carrot muffin in their lunch bag.
My daughter's school enacted this policy when she was in grade 9 several years ago... all because of one 14 year old kid who didn't know any better and ate someone's granola bar and ended up having a severe life-threatening reaction to it where the school nurse had to administer an emergency epi-pan. One kid. A 14 year old who should've known better.
So yes, it HAS become an impediment to the majority that do not have these allergies.
The following eight foods account for 90% of all food allergies: milk, egg, peanut, tree nuts, fish, shellfish, soy and wheat.
Source
I guess it's only a matter of time before the rest of those foods get banned from schools/daycares too.
In another 20 years from now, your kids will only be allowed to eat rice and drink water for lunch.
Liability issues have become the new fear in today's world because there seems to be less and less people taking personal responsibility for themselves and/or their kids, and more and more expecting the world to cater to them instead. (McDonald's coffee anyone ?)
We coddle, we nanny, we ban... because we fear lawsuits.
All under the guise of "what about the children ?!".
Smoke and mirrors.
When Randy Murray dropped off his two-year-old daughter at daycare, unbeknownst to him she had a cheese sandwich with her. Although Murray understood why the sandwich was confiscated, he was not expecting his daughter to be suspended for three days. On Monday, Randy Murray, 32, didn't have time to have breakfast with his two children, Faith and Michael, before taking them to daycare at the Centre de l'enfant aux 4 Vente. So Murray made cheese sandwiches so the kids could eat them in the car on the way to daycare.Instead of eating her sandwich, two-year-old Faith slipped the ziplock bag into her pocket. The contraband was spotted almost immediately after Faith entered the daycare and a staff member confiscated the sandwich. The sandwich was then handed back to Murray.
AccessDenied
You know I read through the responses to this thread, and Iam truly saddened and shocked. So many jumped on the bandwagon to point the finger of blame at the father in any way possible, despite facts or even common sense that might have led otherwise.