Re: Age-restricted access to common house? | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Kay Argyle (Kay.Argyle![]() |
|
Date: Thu, 15 Dec 2016 14:34:16 -0800 (PST) |
At Wasatch Commons in Salt Lake City, an adult-in-charge must be in the building, not necessarily in the same room, when kids are in the common house. The community defers to the parents' judgment on the rules, partly because the parents have sometimes been stricter than anyone else. There was discussion once about adding a lock on the interior door to the kids room, changing the outside lock, and letting kids have that key and come and go without supervision, but parents were leery even of that -- particularly given the climbing wall and loft in that room. Slumber parties have periodic parental checks if not an adult on the premises. Unsupervised access is granted case-by-case, on need, for instance to practice piano or do laundry. A teen gets their own key when they choose to participate in community work on a regular basis, the idea being that mature, responsible teens will self-select. (One fifteen-year-old had a key while her older sibling did not.) The mail room has an unlocked outside entrance and a deadbolted interior door. (We wheedled the mail carrier into putting packages inside the locked door with permission to use our restroom.) Kids get shooed out of the kitchen during cooking, and away from the dishwasher during cleanup (big heavy racks of breakables at scalding temperature). For a couple of years, we had a "double-digit" room (ten and older) upstairs of the workshop. I'm not sure if kids actually had a key, or if parents unlocked the door upon request, but they weren't expected to stick around. The agreement was that kids could go in a straight line, hands in pockets, to the stairs, and shouldn't go into the garage side at all (power tools, gasoline, solvents .... This may have been after the owner of the table saw and router moved away). Tentative discussions about remodeling a separate entrance for the stairs faded when the furniture got trashed; after the TV was destroyed and the kids wouldn't say who was responsible (except that it was a guest), the room was repurposed. Other issues include sex in the guest room; an unauthorized teen party that left broken furniture and holes in the dry wall (aside from her embarrassment that everyone knew, her parents required the hostess to pay for part of the repairs); and porn site surfing on the office computer (which came to light when the next user, an eight-year-old doing homework, got "you may be interested in -" suggestions). The office and the workshop now have a separate key from the common house entrances. The guest rooms already had a separate key, but started being kept locked. No alcohol gets left in the common house. We currently only have about three teens and three grade-schoolers. The youngsters who moved in eighteen years ago, a horde of seven and eight year olds and a scatter of other ages, have been returning to hold their wedding receptions in our common house. Kay
- Re: Age-restricted access to common house?, (continued)
- Re: Age-restricted access to common house? Beverly Jones Redekop, December 16 2016
- Re: Age-restricted access to common house? Sue STIGLEMAN, December 12 2016
- Re: Age-restricted access to common house? Carol Agate, December 12 2016
- Re: Age-restricted access to common house? Kay Argyle, December 15 2016
- Re: Age-restricted access to common house? Sharon Villines, December 16 2016
Results generated by Tiger Technologies Web hosting using MHonArc.