Anonymous wrote:I would put something in an email or text about leaving them alone and the bathroom incident to protect myself. On e of these days something terrible may happen and this will document her leaving them alone. CYA!
Anonymous wrote:A 3-year-old just killed 14 people in New York playing with the stove. There is a reason this is illegal. I would have a very hard time staying in this position. Anything could happen; I wouldn't feel responsible, since she's the one who left, but I would feel terribly sad.
What if you're in a fender-bender on your way there or something?
Unless the children were always sleeping during this time, I think it would make me increasingly uncomfortable, and I would have to quit.
Why not ask MB if she needs to move your start time up by 15 minutes?
Anonymous wrote:Parents, please don't leave your children alone unless they are at least 10 -12 years old (and reasonably mature) and have been drilled on what to do in an emergency like a fire. Even if you never leave kids alone, you need to do this as a safety precaution.
More here, but it's more than a legal issue, it's your family.
http://family.findlaw.com/parental-rights-and-liability/when-can-you-leave-a-child-home-alone-.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old exactly? Elem age is a bit vague.
FWIW I left my 5yo alone in the house this morning for 8-10 mins while I walked the dogs. She was comfortable with it, she wasnt eating or drinking and it was fine. I know that legally 5 is too young but sometimes we make decisions based on our kids comfort level, not what the law says.
7 and 3. I personally do not think it should be done. Anything could’ve happened, and to leave food on the stove at that. What if the child pulled the food off and burned his/herself, and the other child had no way of helping them or knowing what to do. It’s just unsafe.
Anonymous wrote:How old exactly? Elem age is a bit vague.
FWIW I left my 5yo alone in the house this morning for 8-10 mins while I walked the dogs. She was comfortable with it, she wasnt eating or drinking and it was fine. I know that legally 5 is too young but sometimes we make decisions based on our kids comfort level, not what the law says.
Anonymous wrote:How old are the children and was the teenager present when the younger ones were left alone? If the MB is not breaking any laws, I don't know what you can do except quit.