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<blockquote data-quote="Hound dog" data-source="post: 357553" data-attributes="member: 84"><p>I dunno, I never liked the rule. Seems senseless. Just because a cookie is store bought does not mean said cookie is not going to cause an allergic reaction. Not when you take into consideration that any person at any given time can have an allergic reaction to anything. Even something they've been around/eaten thousands of times in the past.<img src="/community/styles/default/xenforo/smilies/emoticons/faint.gif" class="smilie" loading="lazy" alt=":faint:" title="faint :faint:" data-shortname=":faint:" /></p><p></p><p>With that philosophy, why are they bothering to serve school lunches? Now there is a liability for multiple reasons. ugh!</p><p></p><p>I understand having a kid with allergies is hard. I get that. I do. But there are ways around it so that all can still enjoy.</p><p></p><p>This just was getting started when Nichole was young. I'd been baking goodies for the school for Lord knows how long at that point. I did it every holiday, plus the kid's bdays. She had a child in her class that had some pretty severe allergies, one was peanuts. Teacher made everyone aware of this from day one. So I was careful that the stuff I prepared didn't contain things the child was allergic to. And if I couldn't get around it, I'd contact the parent and ask something the child enjoyed that they were able to eat and prepare that special something for them. Worked out fine. Nichole shared a class with this child for several years.</p><p></p><p>easy child ran up against the same thing with Darrin's pre-school. The store bought rule didn't stick. Instead parents got together and made sure holiday party menus contained nothing any child had a known allergy to......and the kids still got to have their homemade treats.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Hound dog, post: 357553, member: 84"] I dunno, I never liked the rule. Seems senseless. Just because a cookie is store bought does not mean said cookie is not going to cause an allergic reaction. Not when you take into consideration that any person at any given time can have an allergic reaction to anything. Even something they've been around/eaten thousands of times in the past.:knockedout: With that philosophy, why are they bothering to serve school lunches? Now there is a liability for multiple reasons. ugh! I understand having a kid with allergies is hard. I get that. I do. But there are ways around it so that all can still enjoy. This just was getting started when Nichole was young. I'd been baking goodies for the school for Lord knows how long at that point. I did it every holiday, plus the kid's bdays. She had a child in her class that had some pretty severe allergies, one was peanuts. Teacher made everyone aware of this from day one. So I was careful that the stuff I prepared didn't contain things the child was allergic to. And if I couldn't get around it, I'd contact the parent and ask something the child enjoyed that they were able to eat and prepare that special something for them. Worked out fine. Nichole shared a class with this child for several years. easy child ran up against the same thing with Darrin's pre-school. The store bought rule didn't stick. Instead parents got together and made sure holiday party menus contained nothing any child had a known allergy to......and the kids still got to have their homemade treats. [/QUOTE]
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