| No op is not me I am the poster of the original post and if anyone is interested I did call the transportation line and when the school mixed up and sent my kid home instead of leaving him on aftercare the bus driver remembered to bring him back to school |
| Op the policy in mcps is to bring the child back to school. Call transportation. There was an accident 10 minutes from my house the other day took me an hour to get home. This area is so unpredictable traffic wise a parent cannot have a contingency for every situation. |
If your area has a policy regarding parent pickup, the driver was wrong to release her and you should complain mightily. If there is no policy, then you should have had this discussion with her BEFORE school started, not 2 months into the year. Either way, lesson learned and all children should know a backup plan just in case. And please tell me she has memorized a phone number to reach you! |
And do the complaining somewhere other than DCUM. |
This must not be MCPS, then, because MCPS buses go the central depots, they do not park overnight at the schools. Once the buses leave our MCPS ES, we do not see them again until the following morning. They are on a tight schedule and immediately go from dropping off our kids to their second runs at the nearby ES that dismisses 25 minutes after us. So MCPS' policy about K students wouldn't apply. |
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this is still going on????
You know, who really cares if the bus driver was wrong? He is the bus driver and not the parent. Some lessons: Take care of your kid. Teach your kid safety. Don't be a primadona -- you are only the most important person in your own life. |
| DD accidentally got on the bus last year (in K) instead of going to aftercare. Bus driver dropped her off and she was wandering the neighborhood. I was at work. Aftercare program called me and by then a neighbor had taken her in. It was terrifying. |
| She's five. She can walk a block home. It's your job to be there on time, nobody else's. Besides that I find parents who pick up their elementary school kids at the bus stop to walk or even drive them home a block or less are ridiculous to no end. Let your kids be a teeny tiny bit independent and walk home for 5-10 minutes. It's going to do them nothing but good. Seriously...parents picking up their kids at the bus stop and driving them home to the end of the street?!?! Wow... |
| Kind of amazes me how 25 years ago 5 year olds could and did walk themselves home after being dropped off (I know I did) to now being considered in cable of doing so. |
| I can't believe how crappy people are being to OP. My child has once (under my watch) not had me at bus drop off to collect her and simply stayed on the bus and rolled on back to school. She had to sit through the whole next bus route from the next school, ("I had to ride with the wild kids from BLANK school!" no names included) but that is just how it goes. It is my understanding that in Arlington County no child 4th grade or below is allowed to get off the bus unaccompanied. I was appalled by this rule when I first learned it, but came to just deal. It is what it is. I was also late for her bus drop off by a minute or two and had to chase down the school bus to the next stop. This happened recently when I had an appointment a good distance away from home and unfortunately let the time get away from me. I was tuned in and on it one moment and then realizing I'd put myself in a time pinch the next. Schools absolutely are not in the babysitting business, but take a step back and get some perspective. They ARE in the business of all sorts of administrative things related to these kids, buses included. It just seems like common sense to not let a 5 year-old off the bus when the parent is not there to pick them up. Having the kid ride back to school hardly affects the driver. Also, the time I missed my daughter's pick-up, I was quick to sincerely apologize to EVERYONE involved. My daughter especially. |