"Obviously"? Yeah, in hindsight "obviously".DeletedUser wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2024 7:59 pmI'm not sure and I don't know. Smaller school district, and my wife is friends with several teachers and the school nurse, so my gut says we'd find out one way or another if something was ever deemed serious.KUTradition wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2024 7:26 pmdo you think the community would’ve been informed had the child actually had a gun?DeletedUser wrote: ↑Mon Sep 23, 2024 6:36 pm
A first grader at my kid's school told another first grader that he had a gun in his backpack. The kid he told came home and told his mom that his classmate said that. My wife is friends with the mom. The mom called the principal, who then called the boys parents. The boy, his parents, and the principal talked. Apparently the kid was very remorseful and his parents were supportive and involved in the process of making sure he knows how serious that is, and there was not actually a gun in his backpack. Hopefully a good learning moment for him. But slightly unnerving to realize that the only reason we even knew about it is because we know the boys mom who turned him in. Otherwise we'd have never known.
would the school/district have an obligation, legal or otherwise, to inform parents if there had been a gun (even without incident)?
This was obviously a 7 year old talking nonsense. And for the record, he didn't say he was going to shoot anyone, he just said he had one. It wasn't said as a threat, but rather he thought it sounded cool I guess.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nat ... 260508007/