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originally posted by: TheRedneck
a reply to: intrptr
Very possible, but then I ask:
Why are insurance executives making medical decisions for our kids?
TheRedneck
originally posted by: ketsuko
originally posted by: intrptr
originally posted by: ketsuko
a reply to: intrptr
Interesting ... then how did the preschool/daycare our son went to get away with it?
And if you read, you'll note I was talking about special circumstances, not everyday occurrence.
Is your school in that district? I don't know how widespread it is either. They never tell the truth about these things. If its deemed a danger its probably for 'insurance reasons', most likely. Like they aren't turning schools into prisons to protect the children for every conceivable possible threat.
Mine isn't, but I'd like to know what they do when a kid comes home blistered raw after a day long field trip to the zoo and they get sued over that one.
originally posted by: TheRedneck
a reply to: intrptr
I had that hanging above my desk for 10 years.
I know why the insurers want to pull dumb over-regulation like this... but why do we allow their profit to override child safety?
TheRedneck
originally posted by: TheRedneck
a reply to: LadyGreenEyes
We didn't demand the school replace all the chairs; we simply sent a towel for him to sit on, which resolved the problem.
*gasp* Common sense? How dare you!
Maybe I'm just not 'hip' (or whatever it's called now), but in my day we didn't worry about stuff like this. Heck, I remember when one particularly attractive girl was diagnosed with mononucleosis... the 'kissing disease' as it was called. Quite a few of us boys volunteered to contract it in support of her.
Today, there would be CDC guys in hazmat suits scouring the halls while everyone else huddled in terror, it seems.
TheRedneck