Controversial ‘free-range parenting’ is now legal in Utah — here’s what that means

Yahoo News

The state of Utah has legalized a controversial childrearing method called “free-range parenting.”

On Friday, Gov. Gary Herbert signed bill SB65 that would allow kids the freedom to walk to and from school, wait in parked cars (while their parents run errands in a store, for example), and visit playgrounds solo, according to a story published Monday by the Associated Press. The bill, which doesn’t specify an age limit for the above activities, will go into effect May 8.  

“I feel strongly about the issue because we have become so over-the-top when ‘protecting’ children that we are refusing to let them learn the lessons of self-reliance and problem-solving that they will need to be successful as adults,” Sen. Lincoln Fillmore, who sponsored the bill, tells Yahoo Lifestyle.

As outlined in the bill, the following situations would not qualify as neglect: traveling to and from school or recreational facilities by walking, running, or biking, playing outside, or sitting in a car unattended, provided the child is at least 9 years old and in reasonably safe conditions.

Free-range parenting allows children to grow up with limited parental supervision with the goal of instilling independence. It also utilizes a “common sense” approach to when kids should be left alone.

The phrase was popularized in 2008 when writer and mother of two Lenore Skenazy penned a story for the New York Sun about allowing her then 9-year-old son to ride the subway and bus alone after the boy begged for independence. The article went viral, with some readers labeling Skenzazy the “World’s Worst Mom” and others becoming fans of her blog Free-Range Kids, a resource for like-minded parents.

Several families have faced serious legal consequences for practicing free-range parenting.

In 2015, the Meitiv family of Silver Spring, Md., faced two Child Protective Services investigations after police spotted their children, ages 10 and 6, walking home from the park unsupervised on two separate occasions. In both cases, the family was cleared of neglect.

Other high-profile cases involved Debra Harrell, a mother in South Carolina who was charged with “unlawful conduct toward a child” for allowing her 9-year-old to play alone at a park while she worked at a local McDonald’s, and a Florida mother named Nicole Gainey who was arrested for child neglect after allowing her 7-year-old son to walk alone to a park.

Connor Boyack, president of the Libertas Institute of Utah, a think tank that proposed the law and advocated for its passage, tells Yahoo Lifestyle that it’s not explicitly unlawful for kids to play or walk alone outside; the bill, however, makes it harder to penalize parents for allowing their kids to do so.

“What typically happens is that police or child service workers will allege that abuse or neglect is occurring under a broad, subjective umbrella, and our bill clarifies that certain situations do not apply,” he says, adding that hearing from families that hesitated to give their children independence for fear of being arrested in part inspired the bill.

“We live in a fear-infused culture in which we’ve lost perspective on safety,” Skenazy tells Yahoo Lifestyle. “Common activities like leaving a child in a car are often presented as though they pose enormous threats to our safety.”

According to Skenazy, laws don’t allow good-intentioned parents to make common-sense judgment calls, and the consequences for raising independent kids often carry harsh consequences. “Unless there is real evidence of abuse, a simple decision like a parent leaving their kid in the car while they run into a store doesn’t give a concerned citizen the right to start legal proceedings against a family,” she says. “Often the thinking is, it’s better to place a child in foster care than allow her parent to let her sleep in a car.”

Adds Skenazy: “Yes, anything can happen. But I hate the idea that imagination becomes the basis of law.”

https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/controversial-free-range-parenting-now-legal-utah-heres-means-203114763.html?.tsrc=daily_mail&uh_test=1_08

7 thoughts on “Controversial ‘free-range parenting’ is now legal in Utah — here’s what that means

  1. ‘The state of Utah has legalized a controversial childrearing method called “free-range parenting.”
    controversial?????

    just watch out for those ‘free range pedophiles’

    1. Aesop’s fables, and Grimm’s fairy tales did a good job of teaching kids that adults can be evil, and they did it without mentioning sex.

      The free-range pedophiles will always be out there. I remember meeting one of them when I was a kid, and I had the good sense to run.

  2. “…..child service workers will allege that abuse or neglect is occurring under a broad, subjective umbrella…..” …..then they’ll snatch the kid for his “protection”, and sell him / her to pedophile foster parents.

    The government has no business in parenting, and since they can’t do anything else right, it’s the last place you want their incompetent, and perverted hands.

  3. How is “free range” controversial? It’s how my generation grew up!! Go out and play, come home when the street lights come on. Yes, there were pedophiles…I encountered them, too…and you knew enough to run. Kids in the neighborhood played ball together. We waited in the car while Mom went into a store for a few minutes. We went out to dinner and didn’t dare make a peep.
    This whole state-sponsored crap makes my skin crawl.

  4. “On Friday, Gov. Gary Herbert signed bill SB65 that would allow kids the freedom to walk to and from school, wait in parked cars (while their parents run errands in a store, for example), and visit playgrounds solo,…”

    In other words, all the normal, every day things that SLAVES aren’t ‘allowed’ to do.

    “We live in a fear-infused culture…”

    And what ‘tribe’ is behind THAT???

  5. If you ask me, they picked the wrong nomenclature for this one. “Free-Range Parenting!” Seems an insult, an attempt to reduce us to chickens. But maybe that will have a backfiring effect.

    Who you callin’ a chicken?!!

    Ha! It could make bravery surge, if only out of rebellion. The bird brigade in a poultry parade. Let their insults fall back on them in spades.

    .

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