Jesse Michener, a Washington State mom is steaming burning mad after her two daughters were so badly sunburned during a school field day, they had to be taken to hospital.
Michener says her daughters, Violet, 11, and Zoe, 9, came home from school last Tuesday with severe sunburns after being outside for five hours during a day of outdoor sports activities.
The girls were not allowed to bring sunscreen to school for the event because of a school-board-wide policy that bans the creams, over fears of allergic reactions.
But Michener says the policy resulted in agonizingly painful burns for her daughters. She says when the girls got home, she brought them to hospital to be looked over by doctors and kept them home the next day because of their chills and fever.
Michener was particularly outraged because her daughter Zoe has very fair skin from a form of albinism. She said the schoolâs staff are aware of her daughterâs condition, but couldnât make an exception.
The school board says it has to ban sunscreen because itâs state law.
As it turns out, all states except California do not allow kids to apply or bring sunscreens to school without a doctorâs note, ABC News reports, because the creams are considered an over-the-counter drug.
Michener admits she didnât apply any sunscreen to her girls in the morning, because it was raining. But even if she had, it would have needed re-applying after a few hours anyway.
âThey couldnât even reapply sunscreen without a doctorâs note. They couldnât carry that in their backpacks,â their mother Jesse told ABC.
She also couldnât try to protect her girls with sun hats because hats are not allowed at school, even on field days.
Tacoma Public School District spokesman Dan Voelpel said the districtâs policy forbids teachers from applying sunblock to their students for liability reasons.
âBecause so many additives in lotions and sunscreens cause allergic reaction in children, you have to really monitor that,â Voelpel said.
After Michener made her childrenâs story public, she got a call from the director of Elementary Education in Tacoma Public Schools.
âHe started by expressing his deep sympathy and regret that this had happened and stated clearly there had been a break in a system designed to protect kids,â Michener wrote on her blog. âHe understood and fully agreed with the restrictive and short-sided policy as it stands.â
The director told her that a new law was passed on June 7 that allows school districts to decide their own sunscreen policies. He hoped there would be a new policy revision by October.
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