28 August 2009
Parents,
This is to inform you of an incident which occurred this morning at Franklin Middle School, which you may wish to discuss with your children.
I had just dropped off Haley and Harrison at the “Girls’ Entrance” and turned right to drive past the main entrance of the school, when a boy whose father had stopped in the no parking zone across the street tried to run around our van as it was driving past the school. Unfortunately, because he came from behind the van, I didn’t even see him approaching until he actually ran into the van. Luckily, I had my foot over the brake as we were coasting through a high traffic area, so the boy was not seriously injured. (He did get a nasty road rash on his ankle, but it didn’t look swollen or broken. His father drove him to an urgent care clinic to get it checked, and I haven’t heard anything further.)
I called 911 immediately after they took the boy to the school clinic, and they dispatched an officer who, after investigating, informed me the only way this accident could have been avoided would have been for the father to have dropped his son off in an appropriate area, and/or for the boy to have had the common sense not to run in front of a moving vehicle (but those of us who have kids know that an excited young person on his way to the fourth day at a new school has plenty else on his mind). The officer issued no traffic tickets, and repeatedly told me (I was a bit upset) that if anybody were to receive a citation, it would be the father who parked illegally and encouraged his son to jaywalk into traffic.
The boy and his father were very apologetic; the father gently admonished his son for running into traffic and not looking carefully, and the boy let me give him a hug and said he knew I did everything I could to avoid him.
That notwithstanding, I will forever be haunted by what could have happened. If I had been distracted or in a hurry, if the road had been saturated and thus my tires not had traction when I hit the brakes, if our sump pump had not kept our basement dry, and I’d been up all night vacuuming water out of our basement like last summer so I was tired and not as alert this morning…that child could have been seriously injured or killed. So many lives ruined in an instant because Dad was in a hurry to get to work.
I always make it a point to ensure that none of my daycare students EVER walk in traffic to get to or from their school buildings, even if I am walking with them. Furthermore, I lecture them constantly about being careful in parking lots, driveways, and along the street from our house to the pool – but particularly before and after school, when people more concerned with getting to work or home are not paying attention as they should. Please use this near-miss brush with disaster to emphasize traffic safety to your child, and please please please NEVER put your child in the situation of having to cross a busy street to get to school or other activities. It is so worth the extra 5 minutes to get them to a safe drop off point.
If you have any questions, I’ll be happy to discuss with you – but please give me a couple days so I’ll feel up to talking about this. I still get shaky when I think about what could have happened (hence this written communication – I don’t feel up to explaining to each parent individually just yet).
Monday, August 31, 2009
If My Sump Pump Weren't Working, You'd Be Dead
Friday, August 28, 2009
FLASHBACKS
Well, another seven or so inches of rain yesterday had us reliving the wonderful memories of last June. Our sump pump worked overtime, but kept the basement dry. Our neighbors didn't fare so well, especially since the water rose slightly higher than it did last summer.
water on its way up the street
this could be a picture from last June
volunteers appeared out of nowhere again
there goes the swingset/fort...again
the white pole marks the high point from 2008
eagle scout project: flood gauge
(interestingly we didn't see the
eagle scout at all yesterday)
currents stronger than last year
walking Zuki while the rain is stopped
playset not set in concrete - but tied to the shed
irritating sightseers made themselves
at home in our backyards -
I took this picture from our bay window
notice the dry feet and clean clothes -
she wasn't there to help, just gawk.
Harrison & Avery watch the water rise
water reached last year's peak during daylight
only slightly passed that mark at night
park by the pool across the street from
the park by the creek - those little poles
sticking out are the top of a public grill
greenery on the fence kept water out
of the pool area...almost
rain in the poolhouse may mean the pool
is closed for the rest of the season
pool itself full to overflowing
path to the pool flooded
house across the street and down
from ours - backyard flooded
backyard of the house directly across from ours
nightfall brought more volunteers from St. Pauls UMC
and the Cornell College football team
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
8/25 - First Day of Middle School
Starting the new year with a loud dash of self-expression
"Mom! Doesn't this just scream 'I love video games'?"
Julio left late for work so he could
see his new 6th grader off to school
The whole family excited for a new school year
Waiting with Jaycie for her bus
(the school bus stops right in front of our house)
traditional picture on Grammy & G-boy's porch
"sneak shot" by Mom
- don't let on that pictures are being taken!
8th Grader Emilee after school
"I gave Harrison a big hug when I saw him
- I hope he wasn't too embarrassed!" ~ Emilee
"I could get used to Emilee hugging me every day" ~ HD
6th Grader Bentlee (aka "Winthrop")
6th Graders Malcolm and HD after school
calling to invite Grammy & G-boy
to lunch at Ghengis Grill
HS Senior Emily (aka "Zaneeta") after school
After lunch, we picked up Keigon (daycare kid) and took a short break until 2:45, when all the other daycare kids plus Jaycie, Maddie and Avery came to help set up for the Kids Carnival that started at 5 and lasted until 7.
Jaycie and Madison were in charge of admission,
temporary tattoos, face painting, crafts, the claw machine,
the candy jar guess, and the whac-a-mole tower game.
Harrison was in charge of the dive challenge,
diving board dunk tank, and balloon animals.
Games not pictured include: Keigon running the duck pond and lollipop pull, Piper and Avery running the bean bag toss, teddy bear bowling and cups game, Justice running the tether-ball bowling game, and Haley running the cakewalk and subbing for other "carnies" so they could play the games, too.
We also had some "All Play" games, including this relay
race to fill a cup with water using a sponge and
water from a decorated bucket.
We also played "Six Corners" - kind of like the game played at rollerskating rinks, but here we did it by having the kids swim around the pool and go to a corner when the music stopped. Then we'd roll a die and whoever's corner number was rolled, was out (the diving board and basket ball hoop were our additional two "corners"). The last 3 kids still in the pool won prizes.
for prizes, each game had candy and pinata filler,
or tickets that kids could use to enter a drawing
for one of our larger door prizes.
Julio got home from work just in time to help load everything up and take it back to the house. He took us to the Outback Steakhouse for dinner, because we were exhausted and starving in spite of the hotdogs and chips served at the party. It was a really great day, and Harrison is absolutely thrilled about Middle School. Thanks to spending the summer going to music lessons there every day, he has no trouble navigating the halls, and he has a friend from Kenwood, soccer, or cub scouts in every single class.
2009-10 promises to be a wonderful school year!