Anonymous wrote:I think it was nice of you to check. I would have been concerned about leaving a child alone as well. I'm surprised that all of the staff left before all of the kids were picked up, but it sounds like there was school staff in the vicinity. However, if the child knows that their Mom was running late, I think a 7th grader is old enough to be left alone.
FWIW, my thoughts on this are colored by the fact that my Mom forgot me once, and I had to wait in a dark, scary place in the rain. This was in the time before cell phones, so I had no way to call. They finally sat down for dinner and realized I wasn't there and came and got me, but it was a frightening experience. It would have been nice if one of the other parents had asked if I was ok.
My Aunt left me in a bus station in NY when I was about 10. I had comic books with me and had been reading them quietly. She realized that they left me when they got to the final destination. The good news is I had a lot of comic books and I didn't realize that they were gone. Someone at the terminal did though and kept an eye on me because when my panicked Aunt emerged from the bus looking for me, said stranger told my Aunt I had been fine and just reading.
I think it is good to check on the kid and make sure they are ok. I might have stayed until his parent arrived but it sounds like he was old enough that wasn't necessary. I am a bit surprised that the program did not have a chaperone who rode with the kids and made sure everyone was picked up. My kids camps all require a drivers license be displayed before you can take your kid home. Granted, he is 7 so the rules are going to be a bit different.