|
INSIDE
Center deemed
safe for pyjama parties
By Meg Olson
Point Roberts girl scouts got to wear their pyjamas for movie
night last month at the community center, but not without some
wrangling.
A dozen parents and girls scouts came to the October 8 meeting
of the Point Roberts parks board to ask for clarification of
the rules for using the building after a telephone conversation
with parks board member Irene Waters during which scout leader
Heather Good said she was told pyjamas would not be allowed for
movie night the following day.
“To these young girls the
pyjama prohibition seems arbitrary and punitive,” Good
told the parks board, especially when the library holds pyjama
reading events in the same building.“The
reason I said no was because it’s a public building, the
building will be open and it’s a Friday night,” Waters
said. “The library rents that space, has its own insurance
policy and each child comes with a parent.”
Anne Watson,
program specialist with the Totem Girl Scout Council, joined
Good in addressing the board. “Pyjama parties have
been a part of girl scouts forever,” she said. “This
is a bunch of little kids and their parents. It’s not
Fredericks of Hollywood, it’s little girls.”
Watson
added the ratio of adults to children was high, the leaders
carefully selected and trained and the event and its participants
covered by Girl Scouts of America insurance policies.
Several
board members worried about liability issues regarding the
children’s safety. “Our concern is if you have
little girls in the building there is an element of society
you may have hanging out there,’ said Shelley Damewood. “We’re
very conscious of the safety of these kids so we’re
very strict.”
“We
have a 100 year old reputation here and safety is paramount,” Watson
said, outlining the program’s safety rules, such
as a girl is not allowed to leave the room without a
parent or adult leader.
Lyn Vaughn
Jones, a girl scout parent, felt board members were being overbearing
regarding how community groups use the center. “Is
there a problem with pyjamas or with girl scouts being
in the building?” she asked. “As a parent
and a taxpayer I have a problem with the pyjama problem.
You can send them to school in pyjamas, to the library
in pyjamas. Is there a rule book I’ve not been
made aware of? Is there a dress code? Am I missing
something?”
“The
use of the building is at the discretion of the parks board,” Waters
said. Insurance and safety aside, she expressed a
concern about propriety. “I feel pyjama parties should
be in houses but maybe I’m old fashioned,” she
said.
Board member
Linda Hughes said she didn’t
see why a supervised event should be prohibited because
of dress. “I let my
kids attend events on the Point in pyjamas. I’m
for it,” she
said. She also agreed to be the liaison with the
girl scouts to help quickly resolve any other questions
regarding limitations on how they could use the community
center.
The board agreed to allow the pyjamas, as long
as adults supervising the event locked the door
to the room and girls were with an adult if they
needed to go out. “Go ahead with your event
and we’ll monitor it,” Waters said. “We’re
not being paranoid. We’re doing it because
of safety and we want to protect ourselves,” she
said.
Board member
Fred Dehaan suggested the board needed to think about being
less domineering when it comes to how the community uses the
community center. “We’re always battling
with the seniors, now we’re battling with
the girl scouts,” he
said. “These groups use the buildings. They
know the rules.”
|