Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh it can be so much worse! A former friend had like ten people as her emergency contacts for her kid, and was an alcoholic so used them all liberally. This kid would just run up to any of her mom’s friends who were near her school and ask if they were there to pick her up that day. The school let her leave with anyone.
It's good the kid had that large safety net for otherwise terrible circumstances. There is nothing wrong with having 10 pick up options. The bad part is the alcoholic mom.
Anonymous wrote:Our school has an electronic system where everyone has a personal code they must input in the admin or teacher’s iPad to pick up a child. Seems a lot safer.
Anonymous wrote:Our school has an electronic system where everyone has a personal code they must input in the admin or teacher’s iPad to pick up a child. Seems a lot safer.
Anonymous wrote:I think that yes, you are overly sensitive due to what happened in your childhood. I’m sorry that you experienced that. That said, I don’t think most kindergartners are unsafe to go home with their own parent, and in your particular situation you were called to the school (clearly from the approved contact list) rather than showing up at random requesting to do an early dismissal. Assuming your kid didn’t announce “that’s not my mom, I don’t know that lady” it is reasonable to infer you were the mom they called. Also, it doesn’t sound like your child has a “do not release to” list or special circumstance.
They are much more concerned about scanning IDs before letting a parent wander into the building versus a parent just waiting in the office who will not have access to the rest of the school or other students.
Yes they should have had you sign the child out for record keeping purposes. But this is not a small baby or toddler who would just leave with anyone. They’re not checking IDs at the car rider line or at the bus stops when they release the kid. It’s a good idea to speak to your own child about who is safe to go home with so they are clear.
Anonymous wrote:I volunteered at a school office and asked for ids but also had to ask from people I knew very well which felt silly because I was told EVERY person must show ID. It is a little silly when you think about them all just walking out at release time.
There is only so much you can do but the MOST important thing to do is tell your kid not to leave with anyone except their parents/ grandparents/ your list. If someone in your orbit is an issue, tell the front office never to release your kid to them.
Anonymous wrote:Oh it can be so much worse! A former friend had like ten people as her emergency contacts for her kid, and was an alcoholic so used them all liberally. This kid would just run up to any of her mom’s friends who were near her school and ask if they were there to pick her up that day. The school let her leave with anyone.