Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve never heard of parents doing this for a high school team. Most kids either one – bring their own food two – grab something local before warm-up start or three – their parents bring them something.
For our school, we have to feed team, coaches and managers and deal with food allergies.
That said, they need to eat and it’s a long night for all when they get back late from an away game.
I understand accommodating allergies, but not preferences.
So you wouldn’t accommodate a vegetarian? Sounds like you’re an AH.
You're the J/A. As a person who deals with a lot of middle management and team events. Once you start accommodating one person, you have to start making all kind of accommodations. For crying out loud, this is a TEAM SPORT people! And as a parent volunteer, Get with the program: vegetarians -pick off the deli meat. Vegans: Pick off the cheese and Deli meat. Gluten free: eat the other kids cheese and deli meat. If these kids are on a strict diet, they need to come up with real world solutions. Otherwise, just deal with it. It's nothing they haven't delt with before. No need for virtue signaling here on an anonymous message board.
Just order the sandwich platter, chips, fruit cup and drinks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve never heard of parents doing this for a high school team. Most kids either one – bring their own food two – grab something local before warm-up start or three – their parents bring them something.
For our school, we have to feed team, coaches and managers and deal with food allergies.
That said, they need to eat and it’s a long night for all when they get back late from an away game.
I understand accommodating allergies, but not preferences.
So you wouldn’t accommodate a vegetarian? Sounds like you’re an AH.
They can pick the meat off or pack their own meal. Not that hard.
No way I'd participate in that with you. Why should the vegetarian's parents feed your kid, but you cannot feed theirs?
Agree that the veggie family shouldn’t participate. Disagree that other families should care about food preferences. It’s the path you’ve chosen…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve never heard of parents doing this for a high school team. Most kids either one – bring their own food two – grab something local before warm-up start or three – their parents bring them something.
For our school, we have to feed team, coaches and managers and deal with food allergies.
That said, they need to eat and it’s a long night for all when they get back late from an away game.
I understand accommodating allergies, but not preferences.
So you wouldn’t accommodate a vegetarian? Sounds like you’re an AH.
Finding a veggie option (cheese pizza, veggie sub) is MUCH less of a hassle than going kosher or halal. And you know this.
Anonymous wrote:We’ve been given on a few perimeters, but to make sure it’s grab and go ready in case of traffic or time change for games so they can eat it on the bus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve never heard of parents doing this for a high school team. Most kids either one – bring their own food two – grab something local before warm-up start or three – their parents bring them something.
For our school, we have to feed team, coaches and managers and deal with food allergies.
That said, they need to eat and it’s a long night for all when they get back late from an away game.
I understand accommodating allergies, but not preferences.
So you wouldn’t accommodate a vegetarian? Sounds like you’re an AH.
You're the J/A. As a person who deals with a lot of middle management and team events. Once you start accommodating one person, you have to start making all kind of accommodations. For crying out loud, this is a TEAM SPORT people! And as a parent volunteer, Get with the program: vegetarians -pick off the deli meat. Vegans: Pick off the cheese and Deli meat. Gluten free: eat the other kids cheese and deli meat. If these kids are on a strict diet, they need to come up with real world solutions. Otherwise, just deal with it. It's nothing they haven't delt with before. No need for virtue signaling here on an anonymous message board.
Just order the sandwich platter, chips, fruit cup and drinks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve never heard of parents doing this for a high school team. Most kids either one – bring their own food two – grab something local before warm-up start or three – their parents bring them something.
For our school, we have to feed team, coaches and managers and deal with food allergies.
That said, they need to eat and it’s a long night for all when they get back late from an away game.
I understand accommodating allergies, but not preferences.
So you wouldn’t accommodate a vegetarian? Sounds like you’re an AH.
Anonymous wrote:I’ve seen lots of sub sandwiches. The families even send a simple sign up - him, turkey, or cheese.
Lasagna
Walking tacos
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve never heard of parents doing this for a high school team. Most kids either one – bring their own food two – grab something local before warm-up start or three – their parents bring them something.
For our school, we have to feed team, coaches and managers and deal with food allergies.
That said, they need to eat and it’s a long night for all when they get back late from an away game.
I understand accommodating allergies, but not preferences.
So you wouldn’t accommodate a vegetarian? Sounds like you’re an AH.
They can pick the meat off or pack their own meal. Not that hard.
No way I'd participate in that with you. Why should the vegetarian's parents feed your kid, but you cannot feed theirs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ve never heard of parents doing this for a high school team. Most kids either one – bring their own food two – grab something local before warm-up start or three – their parents bring them something.
For our school, we have to feed team, coaches and managers and deal with food allergies.
That said, they need to eat and it’s a long night for all when they get back late from an away game.
I understand accommodating allergies, but not preferences.
So you wouldn’t accommodate a vegetarian? Sounds like you’re an AH.
They can pick the meat off or pack their own meal. Not that hard.