Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s really crummy that so many of you hope spectators are never allowed back. There are waaaaay fewer volunteer spots at most meets than there are swimmers. At one meet, I wanted to time, in part so my 7 yo wouldn’t have to find her way through some unfamiliar facility alone, but parents from other teams took our team’s desígnated volunteer slots before we even got the info.
Unless there’s a real reason like COVID, people should be allowed to watch their kids/grandkids/siblings swim. Our club always required everyone to volunteer a certain number of hours anyway.
Yes, yes, and yes!
(I also have a younger swimmer.)
No, no, and no. The activity is not entertainment for you. It is an experience for the children. How gross to want to watch. It's like the weirdos that want cameras in classrooms. Do you want an audience in you yoga class watching you learn a new skill. Voyeurs.
It's totally normal for parents to watch kids practice or compete. I feel bad when I DON'T watch practices. I was booted out of my kids' practices when Covid hit because no one wanted a nurse at the practice, when I could expose other peopel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is there such a things as spectator police? Will someone come physically remove you or ask you to leave or do folks go about their business? Lots of things are "prohibited" but folks do it anyway.
The refs at the moco eec basketball game called out some nuts parents this weekend. Patience for parent antics are at a all time low. I expect that enforcement will come as compliance with the rules dwindles.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s really crummy that so many of you hope spectators are never allowed back. There are waaaaay fewer volunteer spots at most meets than there are swimmers. At one meet, I wanted to time, in part so my 7 yo wouldn’t have to find her way through some unfamiliar facility alone, but parents from other teams took our team’s desígnated volunteer slots before we even got the info.
Unless there’s a real reason like COVID, people should be allowed to watch their kids/grandkids/siblings swim. Our club always required everyone to volunteer a certain number of hours anyway.
Yes, yes, and yes!
(I also have a younger swimmer.)
No, no, and no. The activity is not entertainment for you. It is an experience for the children. How gross to want to watch. It's like the weirdos that want cameras in classrooms. Do you want an audience in you yoga class watching you learn a new skill. Voyeurs.
You forget about all the abuse that goes on when there is no one watching. I'd much prefer other parents watching. No one monitors the locker rooms or makes sure the kids get to their parents.
You are thinking about this all wrong. You want vetted background checked staff and volunteers. Not random parents. You want a very controlled environment.
A vetted background check only helps for those actually caught. I am concerned with those who haven't been caught. I would hope a random parent would stop abuse if they saw it.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3772795/Police-Woman-working-lifeguard-raped-pool.html
https://wjla.com/news/local/woman-alleges-rape-assault-inside-wilson-aquatic-center-locker-room-97400
https://www.aquaticsintl.com/facilities/management-operators/whos-watching-the-children_o
We have 2-3 coaches for 60 kids, 8-10 kids in a lane. They don't know all the kids names, let alone monitor what happens when kids go to the locker room or just leave. My child has left early a few times and no one said anything or stopped them. (younger child, not teen) Child said they saw them leave and never said anything or checked with us to make sure it was ok. And, coaches don't return email/calls. So, yes, as a parent I want to be there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s really crummy that so many of you hope spectators are never allowed back. There are waaaaay fewer volunteer spots at most meets than there are swimmers. At one meet, I wanted to time, in part so my 7 yo wouldn’t have to find her way through some unfamiliar facility alone, but parents from other teams took our team’s desígnated volunteer slots before we even got the info.
Unless there’s a real reason like COVID, people should be allowed to watch their kids/grandkids/siblings swim. Our club always required everyone to volunteer a certain number of hours anyway.
Yes, yes, and yes!
(I also have a younger swimmer.)
No, no, and no. The activity is not entertainment for you. It is an experience for the children. How gross to want to watch. It's like the weirdos that want cameras in classrooms. Do you want an audience in you yoga class watching you learn a new skill. Voyeurs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s really crummy that so many of you hope spectators are never allowed back. There are waaaaay fewer volunteer spots at most meets than there are swimmers. At one meet, I wanted to time, in part so my 7 yo wouldn’t have to find her way through some unfamiliar facility alone, but parents from other teams took our team’s desígnated volunteer slots before we even got the info.
Unless there’s a real reason like COVID, people should be allowed to watch their kids/grandkids/siblings swim. Our club always required everyone to volunteer a certain number of hours anyway.
Yes, yes, and yes!
(I also have a younger swimmer.)
No, no, and no. The activity is not entertainment for you. It is an experience for the children. How gross to want to watch. It's like the weirdos that want cameras in classrooms. Do you want an audience in you yoga class watching you learn a new skill. Voyeurs.
It's totally normal for parents to watch kids practice or compete. I feel bad when I DON'T watch practices. I was booted out of my kids' practices when Covid hit because no one wanted a nurse at the practice, when I could expose other peopel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s really crummy that so many of you hope spectators are never allowed back. There are waaaaay fewer volunteer spots at most meets than there are swimmers. At one meet, I wanted to time, in part so my 7 yo wouldn’t have to find her way through some unfamiliar facility alone, but parents from other teams took our team’s desígnated volunteer slots before we even got the info.
Unless there’s a real reason like COVID, people should be allowed to watch their kids/grandkids/siblings swim. Our club always required everyone to volunteer a certain number of hours anyway.
Yes, yes, and yes!
(I also have a younger swimmer.)
No, no, and no. The activity is not entertainment for you. It is an experience for the children. How gross to want to watch. It's like the weirdos that want cameras in classrooms. Do you want an audience in you yoga class watching you learn a new skill. Voyeurs.
It's totally normal for parents to watch kids practice or compete. I feel bad when I DON'T watch practices. I was booted out of my kids' practices when Covid hit because no one wanted a nurse at the practice, when I could expose other peopel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s really crummy that so many of you hope spectators are never allowed back. There are waaaaay fewer volunteer spots at most meets than there are swimmers. At one meet, I wanted to time, in part so my 7 yo wouldn’t have to find her way through some unfamiliar facility alone, but parents from other teams took our team’s desígnated volunteer slots before we even got the info.
Unless there’s a real reason like COVID, people should be allowed to watch their kids/grandkids/siblings swim. Our club always required everyone to volunteer a certain number of hours anyway.
Yes, yes, and yes!
(I also have a younger swimmer.)
No, no, and no. The activity is not entertainment for you. It is an experience for the children. How gross to want to watch. It's like the weirdos that want cameras in classrooms. Do you want an audience in you yoga class watching you learn a new skill. Voyeurs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s really crummy that so many of you hope spectators are never allowed back. There are waaaaay fewer volunteer spots at most meets than there are swimmers. At one meet, I wanted to time, in part so my 7 yo wouldn’t have to find her way through some unfamiliar facility alone, but parents from other teams took our team’s desígnated volunteer slots before we even got the info.
Unless there’s a real reason like COVID, people should be allowed to watch their kids/grandkids/siblings swim. Our club always required everyone to volunteer a certain number of hours anyway.
Yes, yes, and yes!
(I also have a younger swimmer.)
Point taken but your are still missing the point. By adding unvetted adults you are adding exposure points. You have no idea who those other adults are and neither does the staff when it isn't controlled access. Anyone claiming to be a parent can get in the locker rooms with young kids? That's insane. People need to be identified. The program needs to know who is going in and out and when. Just allowing access to all parents is nuts. No way. They are more likely to be a perp and not yet caught than the staff.
No, no, and no. The activity is not entertainment for you. It is an experience for the children. How gross to want to watch. It's like the weirdos that want cameras in classrooms. Do you want an audience in you yoga class watching you learn a new skill. Voyeurs.
You forget about all the abuse that goes on when there is no one watching. I'd much prefer other parents watching. No one monitors the locker rooms or makes sure the kids get to their parents.
You are thinking about this all wrong. You want vetted background checked staff and volunteers. Not random parents. You want a very controlled environment.
A vetted background check only helps for those actually caught. I am concerned with those who haven't been caught. I would hope a random parent would stop abuse if they saw it.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3772795/Police-Woman-working-lifeguard-raped-pool.html
https://wjla.com/news/local/woman-alleges-rape-assault-inside-wilson-aquatic-center-locker-room-97400
https://www.aquaticsintl.com/facilities/management-operators/whos-watching-the-children_o
We have 2-3 coaches for 60 kids, 8-10 kids in a lane. They don't know all the kids names, let alone monitor what happens when kids go to the locker room or just leave. My child has left early a few times and no one said anything or stopped them. (younger child, not teen) Child said they saw them leave and never said anything or checked with us to make sure it was ok. And, coaches don't return email/calls. So, yes, as a parent I want to be there.
Then advocate for many background checked volunteers. You do not want just any adults wandering around. They could be anyone from anywhere having done anything in their past. Allowing random adults is a huge red flag security risk. I want parent volunteers involved but they need to be scrutinized first.
I agree with background checks but you are missing the point that a background check only shows someone who has been convicted. I am more concerned about those who are abusing/not caught yet. At some of the large public pools there needs to be much more security, especially for the little ones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s really crummy that so many of you hope spectators are never allowed back. There are waaaaay fewer volunteer spots at most meets than there are swimmers. At one meet, I wanted to time, in part so my 7 yo wouldn’t have to find her way through some unfamiliar facility alone, but parents from other teams took our team’s desígnated volunteer slots before we even got the info.
Unless there’s a real reason like COVID, people should be allowed to watch their kids/grandkids/siblings swim. Our club always required everyone to volunteer a certain number of hours anyway.
Yes, yes, and yes!
(I also have a younger swimmer.)
No, no, and no. The activity is not entertainment for you. It is an experience for the children. How gross to want to watch. It's like the weirdos that want cameras in classrooms. Do you want an audience in you yoga class watching you learn a new skill. Voyeurs.
You forget about all the abuse that goes on when there is no one watching. I'd much prefer other parents watching. No one monitors the locker rooms or makes sure the kids get to their parents.
You are thinking about this all wrong. You want vetted background checked staff and volunteers. Not random parents. You want a very controlled environment.
A vetted background check only helps for those actually caught. I am concerned with those who haven't been caught. I would hope a random parent would stop abuse if they saw it.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3772795/Police-Woman-working-lifeguard-raped-pool.html
https://wjla.com/news/local/woman-alleges-rape-assault-inside-wilson-aquatic-center-locker-room-97400
https://www.aquaticsintl.com/facilities/management-operators/whos-watching-the-children_o
We have 2-3 coaches for 60 kids, 8-10 kids in a lane. They don't know all the kids names, let alone monitor what happens when kids go to the locker room or just leave. My child has left early a few times and no one said anything or stopped them. (younger child, not teen) Child said they saw them leave and never said anything or checked with us to make sure it was ok. And, coaches don't return email/calls. So, yes, as a parent I want to be there.
Then advocate for many background checked volunteers. You do not want just any adults wandering around. They could be anyone from anywhere having done anything in their past. Allowing random adults is a huge red flag security risk. I want parent volunteers involved but they need to be scrutinized first.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s really crummy that so many of you hope spectators are never allowed back. There are waaaaay fewer volunteer spots at most meets than there are swimmers. At one meet, I wanted to time, in part so my 7 yo wouldn’t have to find her way through some unfamiliar facility alone, but parents from other teams took our team’s desígnated volunteer slots before we even got the info.
Unless there’s a real reason like COVID, people should be allowed to watch their kids/grandkids/siblings swim. Our club always required everyone to volunteer a certain number of hours anyway.
Yes, yes, and yes!
(I also have a younger swimmer.)
No, no, and no. The activity is not entertainment for you. It is an experience for the children. How gross to want to watch. It's like the weirdos that want cameras in classrooms. Do you want an audience in you yoga class watching you learn a new skill. Voyeurs.
You forget about all the abuse that goes on when there is no one watching. I'd much prefer other parents watching. No one monitors the locker rooms or makes sure the kids get to their parents.
You are thinking about this all wrong. You want vetted background checked staff and volunteers. Not random parents. You want a very controlled environment.
A vetted background check only helps for those actually caught. I am concerned with those who haven't been caught. I would hope a random parent would stop abuse if they saw it.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3772795/Police-Woman-working-lifeguard-raped-pool.html
https://wjla.com/news/local/woman-alleges-rape-assault-inside-wilson-aquatic-center-locker-room-97400
https://www.aquaticsintl.com/facilities/management-operators/whos-watching-the-children_o
We have 2-3 coaches for 60 kids, 8-10 kids in a lane. They don't know all the kids names, let alone monitor what happens when kids go to the locker room or just leave. My child has left early a few times and no one said anything or stopped them. (younger child, not teen) Child said they saw them leave and never said anything or checked with us to make sure it was ok. And, coaches don't return email/calls. So, yes, as a parent I want to be there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s really crummy that so many of you hope spectators are never allowed back. There are waaaaay fewer volunteer spots at most meets than there are swimmers. At one meet, I wanted to time, in part so my 7 yo wouldn’t have to find her way through some unfamiliar facility alone, but parents from other teams took our team’s desígnated volunteer slots before we even got the info.
Unless there’s a real reason like COVID, people should be allowed to watch their kids/grandkids/siblings swim. Our club always required everyone to volunteer a certain number of hours anyway.
Yes, yes, and yes!
(I also have a younger swimmer.)
No, no, and no. The activity is not entertainment for you. It is an experience for the children. How gross to want to watch. It's like the weirdos that want cameras in classrooms. Do you want an audience in you yoga class watching you learn a new skill. Voyeurs.
You forget about all the abuse that goes on when there is no one watching. I'd much prefer other parents watching. No one monitors the locker rooms or makes sure the kids get to their parents.
You are thinking about this all wrong. You want vetted background checked staff and volunteers. Not random parents. You want a very controlled environment.
A vetted background check only helps for those actually caught. I am concerned with those who haven't been caught. I would hope a random parent would stop abuse if they saw it.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3772795/Police-Woman-working-lifeguard-raped-pool.html
https://wjla.com/news/local/woman-alleges-rape-assault-inside-wilson-aquatic-center-locker-room-97400
https://www.aquaticsintl.com/facilities/management-operators/whos-watching-the-children_o
We have 2-3 coaches for 60 kids, 8-10 kids in a lane. They don't know all the kids names, let alone monitor what happens when kids go to the locker room or just leave. My child has left early a few times and no one said anything or stopped them. (younger child, not teen) Child said they saw them leave and never said anything or checked with us to make sure it was ok. And, coaches don't return email/calls. So, yes, as a parent I want to be there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s really crummy that so many of you hope spectators are never allowed back. There are waaaaay fewer volunteer spots at most meets than there are swimmers. At one meet, I wanted to time, in part so my 7 yo wouldn’t have to find her way through some unfamiliar facility alone, but parents from other teams took our team’s desígnated volunteer slots before we even got the info.
Unless there’s a real reason like COVID, people should be allowed to watch their kids/grandkids/siblings swim. Our club always required everyone to volunteer a certain number of hours anyway.
Yes, yes, and yes!
(I also have a younger swimmer.)
No, no, and no. The activity is not entertainment for you. It is an experience for the children. How gross to want to watch. It's like the weirdos that want cameras in classrooms. Do you want an audience in you yoga class watching you learn a new skill. Voyeurs.
You forget about all the abuse that goes on when there is no one watching. I'd much prefer other parents watching. No one monitors the locker rooms or makes sure the kids get to their parents.
You are thinking about this all wrong. You want vetted background checked staff and volunteers. Not random parents. You want a very controlled environment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s really crummy that so many of you hope spectators are never allowed back. There are waaaaay fewer volunteer spots at most meets than there are swimmers. At one meet, I wanted to time, in part so my 7 yo wouldn’t have to find her way through some unfamiliar facility alone, but parents from other teams took our team’s desígnated volunteer slots before we even got the info.
Unless there’s a real reason like COVID, people should be allowed to watch their kids/grandkids/siblings swim. Our club always required everyone to volunteer a certain number of hours anyway.
Yes, yes, and yes!
(I also have a younger swimmer.)
No, no, and no. The activity is not entertainment for you. It is an experience for the children. How gross to want to watch. It's like the weirdos that want cameras in classrooms. Do you want an audience in you yoga class watching you learn a new skill. Voyeurs.
You forget about all the abuse that goes on when there is no one watching. I'd much prefer other parents watching. No one monitors the locker rooms or makes sure the kids get to their parents.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s really crummy that so many of you hope spectators are never allowed back. There are waaaaay fewer volunteer spots at most meets than there are swimmers. At one meet, I wanted to time, in part so my 7 yo wouldn’t have to find her way through some unfamiliar facility alone, but parents from other teams took our team’s desígnated volunteer slots before we even got the info.
Unless there’s a real reason like COVID, people should be allowed to watch their kids/grandkids/siblings swim. Our club always required everyone to volunteer a certain number of hours anyway.
Yes, yes, and yes!
(I also have a younger swimmer.)
No, no, and no. The activity is not entertainment for you. It is an experience for the children. How gross to want to watch. It's like the weirdos that want cameras in classrooms. Do you want an audience in you yoga class watching you learn a new skill. Voyeurs.