Anonymous wrote:Yes happens a ton at our pool.
Anonymous wrote:I'm comfortable watching my kid wearing a puddle jumper from outside the pool. If he was not wearing a puddle jumper I would be in there with him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a pool manager back in the day, and always required parents to be within arm’s length of their child, regardless of the floatation device.
I’ve seen kids somehow get stuck upside-down with poorly-inflated arm floaties, or had a styrofoam bubble slide up just enough to press a head down and panic the kid so they can’t right themselves.
In a perfect world, a lifeguard would get to them in time, of course. But if the parent is right there, the guard can blow the whistle and get their attention to grab the kid much faster than they can jump down and navigate a crowded pool to get to them.
But I can also tell you, I got a ton of pushback on this every year. Especially from parents with several small children, who didn’t want to force all of them to stay in one area. I was fortunate that our board always backed me up on this rule, because it wasn’t always fun to enforce.
I would never stay with a pool that always required me to be in arms length of my child! That’s over the top unless you are talking about like, toddler age.
That’s a pretty common rule. If your kid is not tall enough to stand on the bottom of the pool with their head above the water, you absolutely should be within reach of the child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a pool manager back in the day, and always required parents to be within arm’s length of their child, regardless of the floatation device.
I’ve seen kids somehow get stuck upside-down with poorly-inflated arm floaties, or had a styrofoam bubble slide up just enough to press a head down and panic the kid so they can’t right themselves.
In a perfect world, a lifeguard would get to them in time, of course. But if the parent is right there, the guard can blow the whistle and get their attention to grab the kid much faster than they can jump down and navigate a crowded pool to get to them.
But I can also tell you, I got a ton of pushback on this every year. Especially from parents with several small children, who didn’t want to force all of them to stay in one area. I was fortunate that our board always backed me up on this rule, because it wasn’t always fun to enforce.
I would never stay with a pool that always required me to be in arms length of my child! That’s over the top unless you are talking about like, toddler age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was a pool manager back in the day, and always required parents to be within arm’s length of their child, regardless of the floatation device.
I’ve seen kids somehow get stuck upside-down with poorly-inflated arm floaties, or had a styrofoam bubble slide up just enough to press a head down and panic the kid so they can’t right themselves.
In a perfect world, a lifeguard would get to them in time, of course. But if the parent is right there, the guard can blow the whistle and get their attention to grab the kid much faster than they can jump down and navigate a crowded pool to get to them.
But I can also tell you, I got a ton of pushback on this every year. Especially from parents with several small children, who didn’t want to force all of them to stay in one area. I was fortunate that our board always backed me up on this rule, because it wasn’t always fun to enforce.
I would never stay with a pool that always required me to be in arms length of my child! That’s over the top unless you are talking about like, toddler age.
Anonymous wrote:I was a pool manager back in the day, and always required parents to be within arm’s length of their child, regardless of the floatation device.
I’ve seen kids somehow get stuck upside-down with poorly-inflated arm floaties, or had a styrofoam bubble slide up just enough to press a head down and panic the kid so they can’t right themselves.
In a perfect world, a lifeguard would get to them in time, of course. But if the parent is right there, the guard can blow the whistle and get their attention to grab the kid much faster than they can jump down and navigate a crowded pool to get to them.
But I can also tell you, I got a ton of pushback on this every year. Especially from parents with several small children, who didn’t want to force all of them to stay in one area. I was fortunate that our board always backed me up on this rule, because it wasn’t always fun to enforce.
Anonymous wrote:I am the OP, I have no “issue” and as I said, would not say anything. I learned to swim in another country in the ocean growing up and I am amazed I survived ha. No, kids cannot stand up - the pool’s shallow end is too deep. Maybe a tall five year old can. Not a 3yo in a floatie. I know the kids’ ages bc they talk to me since I am right there.