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originally posted by: Buvvy
a reply to: the owlbear
Ok - gotta know.
Did you get elected mayor?
originally posted by: seaswine
originally posted by: Buvvy
a reply to: the owlbear
Ok - gotta know.
Did you get elected mayor?
Doubtful. I heard the squirrelgoat had a much more effective plan for the police/fire budget.
originally posted by: Buvvy
a reply to: TheLotLizard
Just so that you fully comprehend the situation.
In 2018 in order to enter a public elementary school a parent has to take a number of steps.
At the start of the school year we have to provide our drivers license and social security information to the school for a background check.
On the day we visit the school we press a buzzer on an external door. We announce ourselves and we are granted permission to enter. We are then in an inner vestibule. Another locked door is in front of us. To the side is the secretary’s office. We have to show the secretary our ID, sign in on the computer system (assuming we already did the background check) and then we have to get out ID badge printed just for that day showing exactly where we are permitted to go in the school. We put on the badge and we are buzzed into the inner portion of the school. This is what we go through just to have lunch with our child at school.
Tomorrow - none of these security steps will be in place. Both sets of doors (exterior doors and inner doors) will be open all school day. Nobody will be checking IDs prior to giving people access to the school. The general voting public will be walking in and out of the front door. There won’t be a metal detector or a “search” of voters prior to entering the building. I still have no idea what bathrooms the voters will be using (teacher’s bathrooms and student bathrooms are both located immediately outside the library). The library itself has multiple entrances/exits. It would be very easy to go in one door and out another and be in a dfferent part of the school.
The general voting public consists of a myriad of people with different backgrounds and different issues. In the general voting public you will see a portion of voters with mental health issues, anger issues, poverty/homelessness, criminal backgrounds, drug/alcohol abuse, and health issues. While everyone deserves the right to vote - I don’t think that having the voters casting their ballots 15 feet from my 7 year olds classroom is the ideal situation.
Also, the kids and teachers in the school are all required by state law to have their vaccinations. The general public is not. Whooping cough and TB are both airborne. Smallpox is making a comeback in the South. All it takes is one sick visitor to expose a large number of students to illness.
So yes - I am paranoid.
However, times have changed.
originally posted by: Buvvy
My son has asthma and he has to go to the school RN office for nebulizer treatments. That means he would have to walk solo across the path where the voters will be walking.
originally posted by: eriktheawful
Strange that your school will be in session on a voting day. Especially when districts know well in advance days a vote is going to be held, and here in my county (as it is in many counties across the US), there is no school on a voting day, so as to no disrupt the school.