Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you pulled up to the front of your apartment complex with a car full of groceries and twin infants in the car and had to walk down two flights of stairs to get to your front door, how would you get the groceries and the kids in the apartment safely without leaving the kids alone?
This is not a theoretical question, it's a real thing. Some might say you have to order groceries delivered or you have to have someone watch the kids when you go shopping. Those are obvious viable solutions, but assume neither is possible. What would you do?
You park, take kids inside. Pee. Go get groceries. Ask me how I know?
You left your kids at home unattended? The horror!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m sure nothing would happen but I wouldn’t on principle. Possibly because if I started doing it all I might inadvertently do it in other settings where I would be away from the car for longer.
This. Never leave your kids alone in a car. My kids are all elementary, oldest is 10yo and and I still don’t leave him in the car even when I’m running a quick errand just out of habit. My DCs have started complaining though!
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Seems like people are a bit divided on this but to clarify a few points: I don't go inside the building and drop-off takes about 30 seconds to 1 mins max. Unfortunately, I can't have a friend stay by the car because drop-off time is rather loose (anywhere from 7:30-8:30) so it is really rare another person is dropping off at the exact same time I am on a regular basis. I haven't made any daycare mom friends yet but once I do, maybe we can coordinate better

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you pulled up to the front of your apartment complex with a car full of groceries and twin infants in the car and had to walk down two flights of stairs to get to your front door, how would you get the groceries and the kids in the apartment safely without leaving the kids alone?
This is not a theoretical question, it's a real thing. Some might say you have to order groceries delivered or you have to have someone watch the kids when you go shopping. Those are obvious viable solutions, but assume neither is possible. What would you do?
I wouldn't get groceries with them unless another adult was present in car or apartment.
Anonymous wrote:If you pulled up to the front of your apartment complex with a car full of groceries and twin infants in the car and had to walk down two flights of stairs to get to your front door, how would you get the groceries and the kids in the apartment safely without leaving the kids alone?
This is not a theoretical question, it's a real thing. Some might say you have to order groceries delivered or you have to have someone watch the kids when you go shopping. Those are obvious viable solutions, but assume neither is possible. What would you do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you pulled up to the front of your apartment complex with a car full of groceries and twin infants in the car and had to walk down two flights of stairs to get to your front door, how would you get the groceries and the kids in the apartment safely without leaving the kids alone?
This is not a theoretical question, it's a real thing. Some might say you have to order groceries delivered or you have to have someone watch the kids when you go shopping. Those are obvious viable solutions, but assume neither is possible. What would you do?
You park, take kids inside. Pee. Go get groceries. Ask me how I know?
Anonymous wrote:It's crazy to me all the people on this thread who are like "I'd call the cops on you" when, if their main concern is the child's safety, they could instead offer to keep an eye on the baby while OP walked her toddler safely to the door. Look, problem solved without needing to open a CPS file on a perfectly decent parent.
That's how you know it's nothing to do with child safety and everything to do with judging and undermining moms for sport.
Anonymous wrote:If you pulled up to the front of your apartment complex with a car full of groceries and twin infants in the car and had to walk down two flights of stairs to get to your front door, how would you get the groceries and the kids in the apartment safely without leaving the kids alone?
This is not a theoretical question, it's a real thing. Some might say you have to order groceries delivered or you have to have someone watch the kids when you go shopping. Those are obvious viable solutions, but assume neither is possible. What would you do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, the LAW is:
§5-801 states that it is a CRIME to leave a child younger than 8 years old unattended, locked or confined to a home, car, building or other enclosure without proper supervision.
Within 30 feet, you can see the car and your kid so the baby is supervised. Please leave the baby and walk your toddler to the door.
The key is PROPER supervision. If your baby is in a car and you walking to school, how are you even taking care of the baby's needs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hello positional asphyxiation.
That…has nothing to do with OP being in the car or not.
Correct. However how would it feel to come back and gone baby had shifted while you’re away?
Anonymous wrote:Also, the LAW is:
§5-801 states that it is a CRIME to leave a child younger than 8 years old unattended, locked or confined to a home, car, building or other enclosure without proper supervision.
Within 30 feet, you can see the car and your kid so the baby is supervised. Please leave the baby and walk your toddler to the door.