Anonymous wrote:My daycare is like Fort Knox...a badge swiper to get your car through a gate, a badge reader to get you in the front door, an armed guard checking badges, and a badge to get you to the classroom.
If someone I see every day doesn't let me into one of the doors, I'm pretty put out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not letting anyone shadow into the building is a standard safety precaution and the parents should follow the rules.
I'd rather someone didn't let me in behind them - even if they just saw me let myself in yesterday. What if something changed in a day and you don't/couldn't/shouldn't know about it? This is why daycares and schools and office and apartment buildings spend so much money to set up systems - they can't work if they're not used properly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not letting anyone shadow into the building is a standard safety precaution and the parents should follow the rules.
I'd rather someone didn't let me in behind them - even if they just saw me let myself in yesterday. What if something changed in a day and you don't/couldn't/shouldn't know about it? This is why daycares and schools and office and apartment buildings spend so much money to set up systems - they can't work if they're not used properly.
Anonymous wrote:Not letting anyone shadow into the building is a standard safety precaution and the parents should follow the rules.
Anonymous wrote:Not letting anyone shadow into the building is a standard safety precaution and the parents should follow the rules.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I think this is where courtesy trumps safety, although parents should of course LOOK at the person they're holding the door for. A gunman will be easy to recognize. A crazy parent who wants to kidnap his own child will not be. Different risks, different dangers.
I disagree. I don't want to have to judge people, and I don't want them judging me. A gunman or kidnapper are not the only people who I don't want milling around. Strollers are easy theft targets, etc. I'm by no means a paranoid citizen and prefer to give everyone the benefit of the doubt, but I'd also just rather have a no offense policy for my kid's daycare.
Anonymous wrote:
I think this is where courtesy trumps safety, although parents should of course LOOK at the person they're holding the door for. A gunman will be easy to recognize. A crazy parent who wants to kidnap his own child will not be. Different risks, different dangers.