When it's raining and you have the choice, do you prefer to stand in the rain with your raincoat and umbrella, or do you prefer to stand under a roof? |
That's nice. It's not your roof. I don't like kids that much, especially when they're not mine. |
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This is so odd to me. My kids bs stop is on the corner with a house with a porch. There are like 15 kids at our stop. The house was recently for sale and bought. . I actually started reading this thinking it was out bus stop.
Then realized not one kid goes on that porch. Even in rain, snow last year, or any icliment weather. I've never seen one kid walk to that pitch. And it occrrued to me that no one even thinks of doing that. Just a different mindset, I suppose. We do have a few kids that run on the grass while waiting fprbus, but most parents tell their kids to try and stay off lawn. Just difficult T because space between lawn and road is small.. They are bound to be on lawn part way. |
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This is so weird to me. People really think it's ok to send their kid up to someone's porch they don't even know ? To avoid rain?
OP, I am trying to imagine if I went on my porch one morning in my robe and slippers and found some mother pointing her kid to my porch and being rude about it I mean , tornado eminent is one thing but for a couple sprinkles? Brings to mind the saying " a lack of planning on your part is not an emergency on mine" Umbrella and rain coat |
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Big difference between what that mother did and saying "I am so sorry , Larla lost her umbrella and I didn't know it was going to rain this hard . Would you mind if she stood on your porch for a minute ?"
And then prompted Effuse and multiple thank yous from Larla |
Right. I hope your kids are big and/or well liked |
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I would block off the porch, put up a sign and contact the school.
It's actually a huge liability issue. If she slips on your porch, her mother can sue you. And even if you didn't give her permission to be there, you'd still be liable. Your house isn't a public bus stop. If the mother doesn't want her child to wait in the rain, then she can wait with her kid and let the kid wait in the car. Or buy an umbrella. |
Well, that's the thing. I don't think much of somebody who would make a kid go stand out in the rain instead of letting the kid wait on the porch. But I also don't think much of somebody who would tell their kid to go stand on a porch without asking the resident if it's ok. |
What a reputation that will give OP in OP's new neighborhood. |
This. Let's just put the whole liability issue aside for a minute. It's your house, your property, and if you don't want random strangers just chillin' on your porch or in your yard, you are more than within your rights to tell them to buzz off, children or not. What I want to know is, who are these people who are encouraging their children to sit on a stranger's porch completely unsupervised? Not only rude, but doesn't sound very smart from a safety perspective. |
Adults making deliveries is different than unattended kids. |
yes, we have. I've seen it in my neighborhood. |
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That's a liability. One slip and you are sued.
Our houses is by a cut through to path to the ES, and kids would always play hide and seek on my front porch and bushes. Even if a mom was walking with them - no respect, just entitlement! |
i too live by the mantra, if i would never do that to someone else i dont like it when it's done to me. those kids should politely asking and not ever hanging out on your front door just for the heck of it. yuck. my kids would never do that! can you sit out there and see if they are respectful at all? then do the appropriate thing - tell school, put up stuff, allow it only in rainy days. if they are all a bunch of jerks then i wodnt trust them on my oorch with maill, packages, plants, furniture, etc. |
See, the problem is that it's not going to be just in the rain. If OP allows this in the rain, soon enough kids will be hanging out on her porch waiting for the bus in any weather, because they think it's fine, and it's more comfortable to sit on the steps or her furniture than stand on the sidewalk. I guess some people wouldn't mind, but I think (and this thread shows) that many do. To make OP's question about denying a poor child shelter from the rain is really missing the point of the issue, which is that likely she will have random kids on her porch frequently and regardless of weather. I think it is really unfair that someone should be seen as the "neighborhood ogre" for something that would surely bother many perfectly nice people. |