Larry Bullis
Subscriber
It is the first time I've heard about PARENTS being forbidden to take pics at school, but for non parents, here in the US, photography of students is generally prohibited without making special arrangements in which the parents must sign on. The reason for this, as explained to me when a friend who was working for the school paper got busted for sneaking around with a camera, is that in case a non-custodial parent might see the image of a child, a kidnapping by a non-custodial parent could result.
Kids have been kidnapped, so there is a legitimate concern, deplorable as it is. Two concerns are involved: 1) fear of such incidents on the part of the school, and 2) fear that the school will become the target of litigation.
There's a question of managing risk. If I photograph my child or grandchild at school, other children will most likely be imaged as well. Possible publication excepted, distribution would likely be informal through interpersonal networks. What likelihood is there that the picture will somehow find its way to the attention of an angry non-custodial parent who will actually act upon the information? Likelihood is enhanced by the possibility that some of the other parents may have been friends, but disenhanced by the distance necessary for the non-custodial parent not to already know the whereabouts of the child.
I've been a photographer all my life, photographed my own children and their classmates at school when they were young, and would love to photograph my grandchildren as well, but I try to work within the rules which I also make an effort to understand. At least here in the US, as far as I know, parents are able to decide whether the children may be photographed rather than a blanket rule exclusion of everyone under any circumstances.
Kids have been kidnapped, so there is a legitimate concern, deplorable as it is. Two concerns are involved: 1) fear of such incidents on the part of the school, and 2) fear that the school will become the target of litigation.
There's a question of managing risk. If I photograph my child or grandchild at school, other children will most likely be imaged as well. Possible publication excepted, distribution would likely be informal through interpersonal networks. What likelihood is there that the picture will somehow find its way to the attention of an angry non-custodial parent who will actually act upon the information? Likelihood is enhanced by the possibility that some of the other parents may have been friends, but disenhanced by the distance necessary for the non-custodial parent not to already know the whereabouts of the child.
I've been a photographer all my life, photographed my own children and their classmates at school when they were young, and would love to photograph my grandchildren as well, but I try to work within the rules which I also make an effort to understand. At least here in the US, as far as I know, parents are able to decide whether the children may be photographed rather than a blanket rule exclusion of everyone under any circumstances.