J
JVL1018
Guest
My point was, schools should stay out of the restaurant business and worry about getting kids to school. You can provide the healthiest school lunches in the world but it doesn't mean squat if parents can't get their kids to school to eat them.
I know in my area, there is a neighborhood school for every elementary student. We are about 3 square miles and have 5 elementary schools.
The middle school and the high school are centrally located.
There are no highways in town, no roads busier than your regular 2 lane roads, and there are crossing guards available at every major intersection(and some minor ones).
In the winter it usually doesn't get insanely cold(temps in the teens and 20s are rare during the day), there are packs and packs or middle school and high school kids walking every day(safety in numbers), so I don't even thnk twice about my child walking a mile to school.
The only busing that is done in town is for the special ed students and the bilingual students.
I am sure a lot of people, especially in the northeast where towns are smaller and compact don't live far enough from school to make busing necessary, so yes there are other things we are concerned about besides getting the kids to school.
I am way more concerned about school lunches since that's what my daughter chooses to eat every day..and in our town's case, I'm concerned about the lack of air conditioning in 100 year old schools where classrooms get to 95 degrees on late June days..