Moving the bus stop is a non-answer, it just moves the problem, it doesn't get rid of it.
You don't know what the problem is. In Winston-Salem, North Carolina, they reduced the numbers of bus stops this year due to cuts in educational funding aimed at cost to the bus transportation company. That means previous year, the boy as a Kindergartener may have been (assuming this is Winston-Salem which IT MIGHT BE) at a different bus stop where there was no conflict. Now, the property owner who now has to have more kids at his/her stop may be pissed off, especially at the black kid with ADHD and that could be for a number of reasons, including the kid running around a lot, or the fact that he's black, his socio-economic class, maybe the home owner thinks people down the street are trash. Who knows. No one knows. BUT somehow classifying the kid as the problem when it could be the home owner or just the changing situation that's the problem, is a biased assumption.
Loren Pechtel said:
And complaining about bad parents--think that's going to do anything?
You are far too dismissive and apparently ignorant of an entire subset of people. Complaints to social services about parents (if they are really bad parents as TomC implied) will result in an investigation. If they substantiate that the parents are bad parents, like abusive and/or neglectful, they can start applying warnings and giving extra services, like parenting classes, and possibly later remove the child from the home, if it is terrible. Within that middle ground, of the parent not really being that bad and instead needing help, social services can and does provide assistance, including possibly someone to help with the kid. But since we don't know the situation, even you claim to know absolutely everything about everything, we can't really say for sure if this is appropriate, BUT people closer to the situation with more knowledge would know if the parents needed help or if the home owner is a douchebag or some other thing.
Loren Pechtel said:
Small claims court? For what? That's not going to solve the problem and the parents are likely judgment-proof anyway.
IF the situation is of a particular type, whereby this is truly REPEATED like you and TomC made up, then there could be continual property damage to the lawn, garden, house, whatever. IF that is really true, then small claims court would be appropriate against the parents after trying to threaten them about it to get money for the property. There is of course NO EVIDENCE that there actually has been repeated incidents as the only one we are aware of is picking a fucking flower. Only one flower. Yet that doesn't stop you and TomC from imagining all sorts of eggregious property damage. So, IF that were really true, then the homeowner can be financially compensated for any ALLEGED repeat problems. No, the parents are not likely judgment proof. You are being a know-it-all again when you don't know. I am looking at possibilities that you and others are assuming and saying, this is what you can do, but it's likely just your imaginations.
Loren Pechtel said:
Contacting the school? What's that going to accomplish? The school has no meaningful enforcement ability.
This is probably your most irrational claim. School codes of conduct include what you do at the bus stop. IN-SCHOOL consequences are applied EVERY DAY ACROSS THE COUNTRY for students misbehaving at bus stops. That includes if students fight on the way to the bus stop, fight at the bus stop, vandalize property or the bus, swear at the bus driver. ALL OF such situations can have in-school consequences. Therefore, there is HUGE meaningful, enforcement ability.
Loren Pechtel said:
Social services? We don't have evidence that they are really bad, just that they don't control their kid adequately.
You don't have any evidence of ANYTHING. I wrote IF they are bad parents, then there can be an investigation following to substantiate such claims. Services or child neglect can be followed, assuming they could be bad parents in the first place--not my claim.
Loren Pechtel said:
The only entity that actually might solve the problem is the police--and the courts blew it off so we get the usual result: absolutely nothing meaningful gets done.
The police did not solve the problem. Therefore, you are wrong. The judge appropriately dismissed the case because a 6 year old picking a flower one time is not cause for a full-blown criminal case, arrest, and conviction. Your worship of the police makes you think otherwise, but you are 100% wrong. If anything, the homeowner may very well be put on notice for frivolously wasting the police's time and taxpayer money. Of course, we can't be sure of that, but it's an equal possibility to your claims. You just can't admit that you are working from pure assumptions.
Loren Pechtel said:
Instead of a consequence, the kid may need an intervention...also a possibility. Give him a fidget spinner or something he can play with at the bus stop that professionals say will work with him.
Getting a 6 year old arrested, though, for picking a flower is inappropriate, possibly traumatizing, and ineffective.
Getting the police involved should have resulted in an intervention, not going to court. It's pretty clear the parents just blew it off.
That is an extremely idiotic thing to write. Getting the police involved would not result in an intervention. That isn't how criminal court works. Social services or the school is what creates an intervention, not the police. As far as the parents "just blew it off," I notice you and TomC repeating that claim over and over without any evidence at all. The news article said the mother "COULD NOT" attend the court intake, not that she "BLEW IT OFF." Being incapable means she had to work or was sick or similar, not she didn't give a fuck because she was out partying. BUT again, SCHOOLS AND SOCIAL SERVICES DO INTERVENTIONS, not the police. Calling the police is ineffective and traumatic for a 6 year old. That's assuming that an intervention is even needed. All we can say is that this happened ONCE and it was a FUCKING FLOWER. Stop making wild assumptions and declaring them to be well-reasoned arguments. You don't know what you are talking about.