NHdisneylover
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2007
- Messages
- 18,122
Here in Pennsylvania all you need is the name of the person and the county. If you do get a hit the webpage shows you their birthday and where they lived at the time then you can figure out the age and guess from there.
As other posters pointed out--people MOVE. Heck, my 16 year old has lived in 5 US states plus Germany--and I have had well over 20 addresses. TO really have a good background check done you;d have to have a SS# or fingerprints. Even then, in the US would that bring up anything from when I lived in Spain or here in Germany if there were anything to bring up (there's not

I also agree that it is odd to try to get a background check on everyone like that. I think it also provides a false sense of security because just because someone has not been caught, or not hurt a child before, does not mean they won't in the future.
I always ask my wife "are you 100% sure, Or 90% sure" ....that nothing will happen.
Most things in this life require "pretty sure" everything will be fine...But when its something that you absolutely can not lose.....
Nothing in life is 100%. Realistically most ten year olds are put in more danger riding in the car to school or the store or whatnot in a typical week than the danger they are in spending some time alone at WDW.
Absolutely I would. In fact, I like the shooting arcade idea mentioned upthread - instead of having him sit on a bench with nothing to do but think (maybe about "what ifs" if he's a generally anxious child) leave him in a place with something fun to do and instructions not to leave for any reason. Not only will the time pass more quickly for him, it also won't be as obvious to a casual observer that he's alone.
I would NOT, on the other hand, recommend the chicken exit. It is after the stretching room, and if he is scared of the ride I can't imagine that it would put him in a good frame of mind to wait alone for the first time!
I don't get the comments that dismiss the idea as though it is crazy. At 10 my kids were walking to school and friends houses, biking to the ice cream shop, and playing pick-up ball at the park. Only on the DIS could something as simple as sitting on a bench waiting for the rest of the family generate 30 pages of mostly "OMG no way!" responses with that "how horrible that you'd even consider it" tone. Yes, there are bad people in the world. The good far outnumber them. Yes, bad things happen. Most of the time, however, life is business as usual. The whole trend of trying to protect against even one-in-millions dangers is doing far more harm than good; for every kid "saved" from a kidnapper or predator there are hundreds if not thousands "saved" from age-appropriate independence.
GREAT point about the stretching room being before the chicken exit. That was the part that bothered DD the most
