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Broken arm in school ,age 5 yrs do you sue

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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,456 ✭✭✭fun loving criminal


    Dav010 wrote: »
    Exactly, that is why the supervisor is responsible for picking them up.

    There is time between leaving things and picking them up. They are human beings looking after small kids and you want them run off their feet, picking up toys all day long.


  • Registered Users Posts: 14,459 ✭✭✭✭Witcher


    Eh NOOOOOOO!!! The insurance companies in Ireland make billions in profit, but love to use claims as an excuse for their high premiums. Did you fall for their cock and bull story.


    Playschool has liability insurance, doesn't effect the playschool, so yes OP take the insurance company for all their worth.



    Thats what insurance is for, so put in a claim for SURE.

    Until their premium goes through the roof next year.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,456 ✭✭✭fun loving criminal


    So the OP needs to let the insurance company off the hook, and for her to foot all the bills related to this accident?

    Pretty sure she isn't footing the bill. It's not even her kid.


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 989 ✭✭✭ineedeuro


    Eh NOOOOOOO!!! The insurance companies in Ireland make billions in profit, but love to use claims as an excuse for their high premiums. Did you fall for their cock and bull story.


    Playschool has liability insurance, doesn't effect the playschool, so yes OP take the insurance company for all their worth.



    Thats what insurance is for, so put in a claim for SURE.

    That was some PR cr*p put out by Sinn Fein, who then put in a bill which would increase premiums not decrease them. So I wouldn't believe everything you hear.

    Fact is the courts and the legal system are more at fault than insurance companies but the biggest problem, well that is the lovely Irish people.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    It has a lot to do with everything. They are being dishonest, pretending to be a mother of said child. If you can't see dishonesty is part of the opening post you've a problem. It's compounded by the made up story.

    The OP won't even clarify.

    Let it go, translation..I haven't the ability to counter argue.

    Translation: meaning it's irrelevant to the advice requested, you're being pedantic, and you have nothing better to do on a nice Sunday afternoon.

    Honestly get out and for a walk.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,295 ✭✭✭External Association


    Translation: meaning it's irrelevant to the advice requested, you're being pedantic, and you have nothing better to do on a nice Sunday afternoon.

    Honestly get out and for a walk.

    I don't walk Loueze, it's for older people. I prefer something more active. Why don't you go for a walk? Have you nothing better to do except get ratty?

    Totally relevant, a 60 year old woman, given post history, looking for advice on a 5 year old who she claims is her daughter. And looking for advice on a claim! Everything is crooked.


  • Registered Users Posts: 30,842 ✭✭✭✭~Rebel~


    Dav010 wrote: »
    Exactly, that is why the supervisor is responsible for picking them up.

    How you seem to imagine the way creches should work sounds like a Benny Hill sketch - a team of minders standing eagle eyed just waiting for anything to leave a child’s grasp, and swooping in the second it does, with the child toddling after cause they weren’t done with it. Sounds a bit dangerous to be honest, all these frustrated kids toddling around into each other because the feckin’ minders keep moving everything every two seconds.

    The reality is that during playtime (which this was), things get moved, and dropped and picked right up, and moved again, because they’re kids. And part of why you send them to a creche is to get them used to all the jumbled interactions they need to learn. The only solutions to your issue are removing any shred of independence from the kid by having a dedicated adult per child follow them removing obstacles from their path (which no one could afford), or simply removing toys and obstacles from the equation, which is the direction we’re probably going - in the same way many schools have had to stop kids from simply being allowed to run because the chance of a fall and a lawsuit is too high.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,876 ✭✭✭micar


    Eh NOOOOOOO!!! The insurance companies in Ireland make billions in profit

    Can you provide evidence of this.

    I work for Aviva (albeit the life company) and have not seen any figures like this.


This discussion has been closed.
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