tinkerbellandeeyor
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Aug 4, 2011
- Messages
- 10,045
If it is such a big issue then why r they still selling peanut butter jelly sandwiches at school and why are they still allowing kids to pack it
If it is such a big issue then why r they still selling peanut butter jelly sandwiches at school and why are they still allowing kids to pack it
And no student may bring in a fast food lunch--i.e. if a child goes to an appointment he/she can not come back with a McDonald's or other fast food lunch. That also has me
.There is no nut policy at my kids' 3 schools that I am aware of.
My kids have brought pb and j as they have wanted to for at least 13 years without any issue or question.
From what I have read on the Dis, I am actually a bit surprised that there is not a policy at least for our elementary school. There is now a policy in the elementary that all items for school parties must be prepackaged store bought with the ingredient label--no more homemade treats of unknown ingredients.And no student may bring in a fast food lunch--i.e. if a child goes to an appointment he/she can not come back with a McDonald's or other fast food lunch. That also has me
.
I've had kids in public school for over 10 years now, and have never heard of anyone being able to buy a pp&j. There is a nut free table in the cafeteria, and no nut products are allowed in the classrooms.
There is no nut policy at my kids' 3 schools that I am aware of.
My kids have brought pb and j as they have wanted to for at least 13 years without any issue or question.
From what I have read on the Dis, I am actually a bit surprised that there is not a policy at least for our elementary school. There is now a policy in the elementary that all items for school parties must be prepackaged store bought with the ingredient label--no more homemade treats of unknown ingredients.And no student may bring in a fast food lunch--i.e. if a child goes to an appointment he/she can not come back with a McDonald's or other fast food lunch. That also has me
.
And no student may bring in a fast food lunch--i.e. if a child goes to an appointment he/she can not come back with a McDonald's or other fast food lunch. That also has me.
There is no nut policy at my kids' 3 schools that I am aware of.
My kids have brought pb and j as they have wanted to for at least 13 years without any issue or question.
From what I have read on the Dis, I am actually a bit surprised that there is not a policy at least for our elementary school. There is now a policy in the elementary that all items for school parties must be prepackaged store bought with the ingredient label--no more homemade treats of unknown ingredients.And no student may bring in a fast food lunch--i.e. if a child goes to an appointment he/she can not come back with a McDonald's or other fast food lunch. That also has me
.
Yes, this is what we do.LOL--that is nuts. When I have to take my daughter out for an appointment and bring her back we always go through the drive through on the way back- I guess I would just have her sit in the car in front of the school eating her lunch and then send her back to school!
Yuck! The OCD mom in me sort of agrees with this for these reasons, but knowing my kitchen and how meticulous I am, it's a shame that DD and I can't bake homemade cupcakes/cookies for her to share at school for her bday and Christmas parties.The bold is very common and it isn't generally so much unknown ingredients but hygiene/food safety as well. The school does not want to be held liable when Susie's Mom brings in a batch of cupcakes and everyone gets sick. Pre packed items technically have to be created/packed following food safety standards while they have no control over random homes. It also provides the benefit of an ingredient list on the package to eliminate the risk of hidden allergens.
I fully and completely support pre packaged foods..after my experience with the non handwashing co worker (her belief is that it isn't necessary and only for "paranoid people" I ran into her years later working in a preschool setting and could only shudder) and realizing how really lax many are in regards to food handling/safety I prefer my kid not eat food made by people I don't know well. Most schools here have had those policies in place for 10 or more years now (at least the districts/schools I am familiar with).
DD's school has no peanut policies - she is in a middle school with about 400 kids and can bring whatever she wants, also home made treats can be brought to all functions where food is an option.
Her prior charter school also had no policies and we could bring home made goodies as well.
The elem. she attended until 4 years ago offered a cheese or PB sandwich to kids who forgot their lunches and offered a PB free table.
The banning of a fast food meal would be way overstepping boundaries. I should be able to feed my kid whatever it is I want and if their classmates are envious or whatever, so what.
Unless the school bans all meal deliveries by parents including the often forgotten lunch, IMO they have no right to tell me I can't drop of McD's if that is my choice.
While it's a huge issue for the kids who are affected, those affected are few in number. I'm a teacher, and I personally know only one kid who has a peanut allergy, and he's fine with the kid next to him eating a PB&J sandwich -- it's just that he himself can't eat it. I two decades of teaching, I've taught kids with all sorts of medical issues, but I've never personally taught a student with a peanut allergy.
The school could never "ban" peanut products brought from home. It'd be an uninforceable rule. Who'd search lunches? What'd be the penalty for a peanut-infested lunch? What about foods that appear to be in violation but aren't, or foods that are in violation but appear to be healthy? It'd be a huge time-drain on already overworked teachers and administrators -- and in the end it would be ineffective.
While it's a huge issue for the kids who are affected, those affected are few in number. I'm a teacher, and I personally know only one kid who has a peanut allergy, and he's fine with the kid next to him eating a PB&J sandwich -- it's just that he himself can't eat it. I two decades of teaching, I've taught kids with all sorts of medical issues, but I've never personally taught a student with a peanut allergy.
The school could never "ban" peanut products brought from home. It'd be an uninforceable rule. Who'd search lunches? What'd be the penalty for a peanut-infested lunch? What about foods that appear to be in violation but aren't, or foods that are in violation but appear to be healthy? It'd be a huge time-drain on already overworked teachers and administrators -- and in the end it would be ineffective.
It can be that serious for another child. I have seen so many parents act like lunatics over their "right" to send peanut butter for their kid and I seriously can't understand it. If you know you are putting another child at risk and do it anyway you are just an idiot and a cruel selfish one at that.