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* A child under eight left alone or in the care of a person who is not reliable or who is under 13. Maryland Child Protective Services Procedures (SSA95-13) define an “unattended child” as: Oh, and by the way, it is GOOD for kids to go find their friends outside and play. If there isn’t a law - and I certainly think you could ask the local precinct to actually show it to you - then you have to remind law enforcement that we live in a free society where parents are allowed to determine the way they want to raise their kids. If there really IS a law, you and your neighbors must protest. My husband and I have been looking for the law online and found nothing.  All I know is: it’s not fair for us to have to keep our kids inside or in our backyards for the entire summer. Any insights? - Maryland Momĭear MM: This requires a fight - for the sake of your family and for the sake of the neighborhood. I don’t know who reported our kids. The officer was very kind and said he understood, but still said that if there were more reports they would have to take more aggressive action than just a warning. I have no idea what to do about this.
A YEAR WALK LETS PLAY FULL
It’s true - there were 10 or 12 “vagrant” children sledding in full snow attire with NO PARENTS present for hours, with some stops to run home for bathroom breaks and hot cocoa. The officer said that kids under ten, by law, are not allowed outside, unsupervised except in their parents’ yard. The officer did not come to our house, but visited the mom of two of my son’s good friends. The people who called reported that all the way back in the winter, a “whole bunch of unsupervised kids were sled riding down the hill” that is across from our townhouse units.
A YEAR WALK LETS PLAY PATCH
Here’s what’s happening out by her:ĭear Free-Range Kids:  Our kids have always been “Free -Range.” Unfortunately, today, someone called the police because of the “unsupervised children” running around the neighborhood. My son is six (seven in September), and we allow him to ride his bike to friend’s houses up the street (we live in a small, three-street neighborhood far from any major roads), rollerblade down the road, play with friends in the little patch of woods across the street from our houses, play in sprinklers with the neighbors, etc. There are constantly kids running around our neighborhood, playing with their friends - kids of all ages. The writer of the note below, from Western Maryland, also pens this blog. The creeping idea that anytime our kids are outside without us they are in DANGER, thus it is CRIME to take our eyes off them.