Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Including water bottles.![]()
Only sealed drinks are now allowed in.
I understand that kids may try to bring alcohol into the school, but this rule seems like it will generate a lot of plastic waste. Carrying in an empty water bottle is impractical, there aren't enough fountains for kids to fill up their bottles before/between classes, especially in a larger school like Wilson or Deal. And using the tap water from the bathroom is iffy, some taps still are labeled "Not for drinking"
Is there no other solution?
Source, please? I have a hard time believing this.
Tis is n longer allowed, unless it s a sealed bottle. none of this anymoreAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does this apply to elementary school as well? I sure hope not. Especially with lead being found in some schools, I do not want my child drinking out of the water fountain. I will be vocal about this.
For real! And at the libraries.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/education/wp/2016/04/27/d-c-is-handing-out-bottled-water-to-students-at-one-school-after-brownish-water-discovered/
That link talks about one school and it's because the water supply is messed up. Not a ban on bringing water in a bottle from home.

Anonymous wrote:Including water bottles.![]()
Only sealed drinks are now allowed in.
I understand that kids may try to bring alcohol into the school, but this rule seems like it will generate a lot of plastic waste. Carrying in an empty water bottle is impractical, there aren't enough fountains for kids to fill up their bottles before/between classes, especially in a larger school like Wilson or Deal. And using the tap water from the bathroom is iffy, some taps still are labeled "Not for drinking"
Is there no other solution?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does this apply to elementary school as well? I sure hope not. Especially with lead being found in some schools, I do not want my child drinking out of the water fountain. I will be vocal about this.
For real! And at the libraries.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/education/wp/2016/04/27/d-c-is-handing-out-bottled-water-to-students-at-one-school-after-brownish-water-discovered/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does this apply to elementary school as well? I sure hope not. Especially with lead being found in some schools, I do not want my child drinking out of the water fountain. I will be vocal about this.
For real! And at the libraries.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/education/wp/2016/04/27/d-c-is-handing-out-bottled-water-to-students-at-one-school-after-brownish-water-discovered/
Anonymous wrote:This isn't in anticipation of a possible problem, it's in response to a real one (kids bringing in alcohol).
Support the school and don't keep alcohol in an unlocked cabinet in your home.
Anonymous wrote:
How can this possibly be enforced well? Rules are meaningless if they cannot be enforced. I can think of all sorts of ways to sneak in alcohol. I think responses to problems should be narrowly tailored to be effective. Such a broad swath seems pointless. What grades does this rule effect? I am assuming 6th on up?
Anonymous wrote:Does this apply to elementary school as well? I sure hope not. Especially with lead being found in some schools, I do not want my child drinking out of the water fountain. I will be vocal about this.
Anonymous wrote:This isn't in anticipation of a possible problem, it's in response to a real one (kids bringing in alcohol).
Support the school and don't keep alcohol in an unlocked cabinet in your home.
Only sealed drinks are now allowed in.