Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unfortunately for some children they would not be able to stay even if they wanted. If you are a homeless child and couch surfing with your parents then that search for a spot takes all of the time you have after school. Similarly some kids at our school are living in 1 or 2 bedroom apartments with 15-25 other people. Those kids literally race out the door when the bell rings because they want to get to the apartment so they can lay out their space. Once they get their space they stay in it for the rest of the afternoon/evening except to go tot he bathroom (with someone trusted to guard the space). Getting home before others means the difference between being able to sleep lying down or sitting up Indian style or in a chair. We may not have much child labor exploitation anymore where children are forced to work from dawn to dusk but we still have children living some very harsh realities.
If you have kids like that in your school, you should report the sitution to child protection agency. Not providing a reasonable living space is a form of child abuse.
No, actually it is not. CPS cannot do anything about it if a child does not have a bed but does have a roof over his/her head, there is heat and there is no physical abuse or neglect. Some of you really don't understand what it means to be poor in the DMV.
Puts the children at risk for sexual assault
How did you manage to jump to THAT conclusion? Wow. That's a pretty strong prejudice.
You might be interested to know that poverty has no material affect on incidences of reported sexual assault or incest. Statistics of reported incest show that a child is as likely to be sexually assaulted by a family member in a rich family, where presumably everyone has beds, as in a poor family, where perhaps everyone doesn't have a bed.
You really need to get out of your shell and learn a little more about our community. Volunteer at a food bank or a shelter or something.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unfortunately for some children they would not be able to stay even if they wanted. If you are a homeless child and couch surfing with your parents then that search for a spot takes all of the time you have after school. Similarly some kids at our school are living in 1 or 2 bedroom apartments with 15-25 other people. Those kids literally race out the door when the bell rings because they want to get to the apartment so they can lay out their space. Once they get their space they stay in it for the rest of the afternoon/evening except to go tot he bathroom (with someone trusted to guard the space). Getting home before others means the difference between being able to sleep lying down or sitting up Indian style or in a chair. We may not have much child labor exploitation anymore where children are forced to work from dawn to dusk but we still have children living some very harsh realities.
If you have kids like that in your school, you should report the sitution to child protection agency. Not providing a reasonable living space is a form of child abuse.
No, actually it is not. CPS cannot do anything about it if a child does not have a bed but does have a roof over his/her head, there is heat and there is no physical abuse or neglect. Some of you really don't understand what it means to be poor in the DMV.
Puts the children at risk for sexual assault
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unfortunately for some children they would not be able to stay even if they wanted. If you are a homeless child and couch surfing with your parents then that search for a spot takes all of the time you have after school. Similarly some kids at our school are living in 1 or 2 bedroom apartments with 15-25 other people. Those kids literally race out the door when the bell rings because they want to get to the apartment so they can lay out their space. Once they get their space they stay in it for the rest of the afternoon/evening except to go tot he bathroom (with someone trusted to guard the space). Getting home before others means the difference between being able to sleep lying down or sitting up Indian style or in a chair. We may not have much child labor exploitation anymore where children are forced to work from dawn to dusk but we still have children living some very harsh realities.
If you have kids like that in your school, you should report the sitution to child protection agency. Not providing a reasonable living space is a form of child abuse.
No, actually it is not. CPS cannot do anything about it if a child does not have a bed but does have a roof over his/her head, there is heat and there is no physical abuse or neglect. Some of you really don't understand what it means to be poor in the DMV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unfortunately for some children they would not be able to stay even if they wanted. If you are a homeless child and couch surfing with your parents then that search for a spot takes all of the time you have after school. Similarly some kids at our school are living in 1 or 2 bedroom apartments with 15-25 other people. Those kids literally race out the door when the bell rings because they want to get to the apartment so they can lay out their space. Once they get their space they stay in it for the rest of the afternoon/evening except to go tot he bathroom (with someone trusted to guard the space). Getting home before others means the difference between being able to sleep lying down or sitting up Indian style or in a chair. We may not have much child labor exploitation anymore where children are forced to work from dawn to dusk but we still have children living some very harsh realities.
If you have kids like that in your school, you should report the sitution to child protection agency. Not providing a reasonable living space is a form of child abuse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unfortunately for some children they would not be able to stay even if they wanted. If you are a homeless child and couch surfing with your parents then that search for a spot takes all of the time you have after school. Similarly some kids at our school are living in 1 or 2 bedroom apartments with 15-25 other people. Those kids literally race out the door when the bell rings because they want to get to the apartment so they can lay out their space. Once they get their space they stay in it for the rest of the afternoon/evening except to go tot he bathroom (with someone trusted to guard the space). Getting home before others means the difference between being able to sleep lying down or sitting up Indian style or in a chair. We may not have much child labor exploitation anymore where children are forced to work from dawn to dusk but we still have children living some very harsh realities.
If you have kids like that in your school, you should report the sitution to child protection agency. Not providing a reasonable living space is a form of child abuse.