Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This story is horrifying and my reaction is THANK GOD that my DH and I can afford to live on one income (even though things are very tight) so that I can stay home while my kids are young.
Wow, you just are evil aren't you.
plus 1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This story is horrifying and my reaction is THANK GOD that my DH and I can afford to live on one income (even though things are very tight) so that I can stay home while my kids are young.
Wow, you just are evil aren't you.
Anonymous wrote:In a few weeks, someone should submit a Freedom of Information Act request to the DC government to find out if this incident was reported to the inspectors and what the District and the day care did in response. I'd also like to know if this is the first such incident for the particular day care.
VA has all of the day care inspection report results on-line so you can easily read about a day care and learn if it was ever reported (or self-reported) to have forgotten a child at the park. (Indeed some have!) Having that type of violation history is a deal breaker for me. Too bad the DC government is not as transparent in this area. That ought to change.
OMG, this is a parent's worst nightmare. So relieved the child was okay. What would have stopped someone from walking off from the park with the boy after the class left? If the child didn't protest to being carried off by a strange adult the nannies would have had no reason to think anything was amiss. And what was the park attendant doing that he or she didn't notice an abandoned toddler? I'd also like to kow if the District will investigate this aspect of the fiasco.
The nannies who were keeping watch over the boy are the heroines in this story.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While forgetting him is frightening I think it is even more concerning that they didn't realize he was missing when they got back to the daycare. Dad came for pick up and no kid and that is when they realized he wasn't there.
Yes, exactly. You would think that if the daycare providers made emotional connections with the kids, and truly cared about each individual kid, then they would notice when one of them was missing. This just reinforces my belief that daycares in general just aren't the best thing for kids. No matter how nice the teachers are, no matter how much they seem to care about the kids (when parents are around watching), the truth is that those kids aren't their flesh and blood, and they just don't care that much. Of course you can find true gems among the daycare worker population who DO care, but they are very few and far between, IMO.
Anonymous wrote:This story is horrifying and my reaction is THANK GOD that my DH and I can afford to live on one income (even though things are very tight) so that I can stay home while my kids are young.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious,
I have never heard such a thing as a daycare taking young children off property to places like public parks. It seems like a dangerous liability.
Is this a DC thing?
Very common when the day care does not have its own playground. Where are you from?
All over the country (military). Currently in NOVA. Never, ever heard of such a thing. Ridiculous and dangerous, given the ages of the kids.
Anonymous wrote:While forgetting him is frightening I think it is even more concerning that they didn't realize he was missing when they got back to the daycare. Dad came for pick up and no kid and that is when they realized he wasn't there.