What If The Labour Party Got Rid Of...
Politics1 min ago
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I recently picked up a safe parenting handbook and have just looked it up in there, here's what it says:
"The NSPCC have issued guidelines advising that children under the age of 13 should not be left alone. While this recommendation does not have the force of law, it is suggested as good practice. Children under this age do not have the maturity to manage the responsibility of being left alone."
I occasionally leave my very mature 11 1/2 year old at home. It is only ever when I go to pick up siblings from playschool which is about 5 minutes away. I'm there and back inside 15-20 minutes. I make her lock all the doors, I always leave the dog there, and I dial in the phone number for her dad, which is then on the redial so that if she has to, she can phone him, even if it is only becuase she is lonely. I never leave her with younger siblings, she is too young to be responisble for anyone bar herself. And she is forbidden to open the door, or answer the phone and I tell her to stay away from the windows, just in case. She knows what to do in an emergency and knows how to call for the emergency services.
The reasons that I have left her is because she is home schooled. Often she is right in the middle of something when it is time to go out for the 20 minutes to get her sisters. She has begged me to let her stay home to finish what she is doing. I view this as a bridge of compromise between her wanting a bit more independence and me learning how to give it to her.If she does not want to stay home, I never make her. It is difficult to say you can't stay home on your own for 20 minutes, when other kids her age are riding the train alone with their friends to school everyday...
I think legally speaking, it is ok to leave her, but I know that technically speaking, if she were to come to any harm then they would look into whether or not I had been neglectful.
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Am I missing something here?
Why is your mum dictating what happens concerning the care of your daughter (presumably her granddaughter)? Are you (or her father) not in charge of her care?
Why are you having to consider leaving your child alone because her grandmother goes to work? Any legal information you discover should be used to clarify your responsibilities, not those of your mother, surely.