Saturday, 11 August 2012

More PC Madness

Stupid "Rules"

What a bizarre world we live in.  Do-gooding and the drive to protect people from the consequences of their actions have led to a society where common sense has long since gone awol and acting "correctly" rules.  The idiocy of it all.  The administrative bureaucratic society run wild.

This from Stuff:



Driver who lifted boy suspended











Fred Rijbroek
FRED RIJBROEK: ‘‘Wind was taken straight out of my sails.’’
JOHN KIRK-ANDERSON/Fairfax NZ


A Canterbury bus driver has been stood down for lifting a disruptive 5-year-old schoolboy on to his seat.

Methven bus driver Fred Rijbroek, 63, said the "wind was taken straight out of my sails" when he heard he had been stood down on full pay for a week for picking a child up and placing him on a bus seat.

The incident happened two weeks ago when a primary school pupil with behavioural problems was being difficult on Rijbroek's bus.

"This little fella is very busy and always full of banter. I have to have him seated before I take off, and sometimes it is quite difficult," Rijbroek said.  While the Methven Travel driver was waiting for older pupils to board his bus on a Thursday afternoon, he said the 5-year-old was being "hyperactive and boisterous". When he told the boy to sit in his allocated window seat, he replied, "No; I want to play".

Rijbroek told the boy he would have to sit where he was told when the bus doors were shut. The boy then started kicking his school friends and upset a girl by taking her book.

Once all the pupils had boarded, Rijbroek took the book off the boy, picked him up by the middle and "firmly placed" him on the seat. He said the boy was "a little taken aback" by his actions and was "well behaved" for the rest of the journey.

The following day, Rijbroek was "shocked" when he was allocated a different bus route because parents had complained to the Methven Area Bus Group.  Four days later, after meetings between his employer and the group, Rijbroek was suspended.

The group, which is a subcommittee for the four local schools, said it was "standard procedure" to stand down a driver while an investigation was done. The schoolboy's mother told The Press she held "no grudges" against Rijbroek for picking up her son. The owner of Methven Travel said the incident had been "blown out of proportion" and that he felt for Rijbroek.

His employer, who did not want to be named, said he "definitely would not" have stood Rijbroek down if it had been his decision. He described Rijbroek as a "good worker who was 100 per cent reliable".  The company's complaints process was being reviewed and reporting procedures were being put in place since the incident, he said.

Rijbroek believed he "did the right thing" and said that looking back, it would have been very difficult to act differently.

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