| The YMCA staff shouldn't be eating any of the pizza, that's part of the program for children. You don't see school cafeteria staff eating the lunches. |
| Send lunch. The quantity clearly isn’t enough but I also wouldn’t trust them to fix it. |
Yes, they should but someone needs to order more pizza. Cafeteria staff can buy lunches. |
| If there was not enough for seconds for all kids, its makes sense that the staff did not give it out. Someone failed with how much they ordered. |
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In these one-off day programs, always send your kid with a packed lunch. Summer programs are also notorious for horrible , mediocre food options.
Also your kid will have the food that they like, versus relying on the free food provided. Sorry that happened to them. |
But it sounds like they didn’t even one full piece. |
| Half a slice of pizza wouldn't even feed my toddler, let alone my school age kids. I can see starting with a small amount to prevent food waste but that shouldn't have been all they were allowed. Even if someone did make a mistake and order the wrong amount at first, they could have ordered more as soon as they realized. |
+1 Just send a lunch, for sure. When oldest was 11-12yo I sent him to a sports camp at a racquet club where lunch was included- and the portion size was toddler sized (something absurd- like 2 chicken tenders + a few apple slices and a juice box or similar). Learned my lesson after that. |
Well, I’m sure the YMCA doesn’t have designated pizza scissors. I cut pizza with scissors at home too- but they are kitchen shears and go into the dishwasher with each use. Not the same as the Y using some Fiskers on the desk- which is probably what happened |
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I wouldn’t expect to be able to bring kids to. Professional Development day. That is unprofessional…
Nice that they provide partially paid childcare, but I guess it doesn’t include lunch, not really. Maybe the Y didn’t know teachers’ kids were coming too. Now you know the food provided isn’t enough, so pack a lunch next time. |
| Why are scissors easier? My pizza cutter does a much better job than scissors would. |
While I can’t speak for the Y.. I have kitchen shears and they work great on pizza, and serve multiple purposes around the kitchen for food prep. So why get a pizza cutter? |
I have both so it’s not an either or. I would rather not hold and touch all the pizza to cut it with scissors. |
NP My kids are underweight. My 50 lb 10 year old eats 2-4 pieces of pizza. My 105 lb 14 year old eats about 3 - every time. I think limiting it to 2 slices on their first round is reasonable, then offer seconds first come first served as long as they finished their first pieces. Half a slice? Yeah, I'd complain. Then, I wouldn't trust them a second time - if I used them again (I probably wouldn't), then I'd pack lunch, snacks, and drinks. |
| People are obtuse on this thread. She said she did not bring her kids to school on a professional development day and put them in child care partially paid for by the county. That is fair and professional and not a problem. Why are people being nasty on here to her? Are you saying that teachers are not professionals and should not expect to bring their kids along as it is a pink collared career? Is this what upsets you? She literally said she did not take her kids to work with her but to day care. |