I agree-talk about overreacting. We see this all the time though-I remember one issue in NJ about a kid who drew a picture of a gun. They went crazy-suspensions, counseling, DYFS talking to the family...the kid drew a picture!!!
Zero tolerance is a joke.
Personally, I think both sides are corrupt and am not a fan of either, but would you kindly tell me when Bush has a vote on any legislation that comes before Congress? TIA
Edit: BTW, we're still selling candy bars for fund raisers in my district.
I read your entire post and bc I understand civics I know that one man no matter who he is cannot make any decision by himself.
Should I post the Schoolhose Rock video "Im just a Bill" for you![]()
Show me in that Bush policy (or the school policy) where it states the school can punish a student for selling candy to another student. Take your time...
I'm not a Bush lover, far from it but I think I can accurately call you a Bush hater who takes every opportunity to rail against him even when he has nothing to with the "Skittle Nazi's" at this school. Schools have become more and more power hungry an have implemented "zero tolerance" and wacky policies against students and parents just like this for years. Nothing to do with any president.
To my knowledge, it doesn't go into suggested punishments for violators.
Oh, and the money thing being a danger is just too much. What a kook. That principal should be removed.
How condescending!
I'm fully aware of "how a bill becomes a law". I'm also aware that the President has the power of the pen - the veto pen.
well than I dont know how you can blame one man, blame all the Congresspeople as well for putting it on his desk. The Congresspeople could have used their power too and they didnt.
I can't believe anyone would think equating a felony offense to a candy offense is one in the same. It's a damn good thing the kid was caught buying skittles instead of candy cigarettes.![]()
Can you say utterly ridiculous all the way around?![]()
As an update; he gets his position of VP back. I think he gets to go to his dinner, if it isn't over.
Nope, the boy and his mother were on Neil Cavotto, and his dinner was held this weekend.![]()
Why? If the policy was clear, the principal was simply following the rules, approved by the school board members, which are set to provide guidelines for proper student behavior.
Because of CT's stupid law, DD and her fellow students couldn't even carry home their fundraisers before the holidays because they would be transporting candy.![]()
No, a governor is in violation of federal and state laws; beginning with money laundering, the Mann Act and prostitution. What happened to the days when a teacher would have said, "Johnny, you know the rules, now hand over the candy!"
DS#3 was in third grade the day after Halloween, when he discovered himself on the school bus, sitting beside a candy wrapper on the seat next to him. When the bus driver got up to close the window of the bus, she noticed the vile piece of evidence. In a stern, firm and loud voice, she screamed; "NO CANDY ON THE BUS" and she firmly slapped DS#3 across the face in front of all to see. Unfortunately, it wasn't even his candy wrapper. It was left from the high schoolers who took the bus just a short time before.![]()
That's to bad, but as the mother of a kid that was publicly abused by a bus driver, the positive support outside of the school will balance that out, believe it or not.
Believe me, if it wasn't mandated by GWB, no one would have done it.
:
Update from www.wvit.com
Principal Erases Candy-Buying Student's Suspension
14-Year-Old Was Suspended, Stripped Of Class Title
POSTED: 8:54 am EDT March 12, 2008
UPDATED: 8:11 pm EDT March 12, 2008
NEW HAVEN, Conn. -- The principal of a New Haven school decided to wipe out the suspensions of students who were punished for the sale of a bag of candy, the school district announced Wednesday. Michael Sheridan, an eighth-grade honors student at Sheridan Magnet School, was suspended for one day for buying a bag of candy at school. He was also barred from attending an honors student dinner and stripped of his title as class vice president. A school district spokeswoman said Principal Eleanor Turner agreed to expunge the suspensions from Sheridan's record and allow him to resume his student leadership post after meeting with his family and the superintendent.
School officials said he was punished because he bought a bag of Skittles for $1 from another student. Sheridan, 14, said he didn't know buying candy was against school rules. But he said he realized something was strange based on the other student's behavior. "I didn't know it was really like against board policy, until he was all secretive," Sheridan said. "And it was really weird how secretive he was." He said he expected to get a warning about the candy, not a suspension.
"I thought I was going to just get like, 'No, that's bad to do. Don't do it again,' not like, suspended," Sheridan said.
The principal originally ordered an immediate three-day suspension, but Sheridan's mother, Shelli, fought to reduce the punishment to one day. "I'm thinking, you know, he was hungry," she said. "He wanted a piece of candy. So, OK, I didn't think it was such a big deal."
School spokeswoman Catherine Sullivan-DeCarlo said the New Haven school system banned candy sales and fundraisers in 2003 as part of the district-wide school wellness policy. No candy sales are allowed in schools, she said. In a statement, Turner said she should have reinforced the policy to parents in writing. She apologized, but said her intention was to maintain a safe and orderly environment. "Letting students carry large sums of money around, letting them buy and sell and eat candy in classrooms, disrupting the instructional day and the risks it poses to students with allergies, are truly hazards," she said.
The student who sold the candy also was suspended. His suspension will also be expunged from his record.