Quote from: kcw on November 20, 2013, 02:46:56 PM
My wife and I spent countless hours with the school system to ensure not only the safety of our own children, but also the safety of many others. Reaction after reaction and failures that would not be addressed was the reason for going the legal route. Immunity was tossed around. You couldn't pursue legal action. All I can say is that we were VERY pleased with the outcome and there are hundreds of students that are MUCH safer today prior to our involvement, and accountability was served.
Restaurants? They do have a legal responsibility and the failure to use reasonable care that results in harm is a problem. I'm only speaking of my own children with egg allergies, and not those who suffer from several allergens. I realize that is much more difficult. A restaurant must make reasonable accomodations without total disruption to their business. A kitchen employee used a cross contaminated spoon that had ice cream on it and used it on a dessert from the egg allergen menu. Legal recourse for our family is to recover the $4,500 that I had to pay for someone's negligence. Agree or not, I consider that accountability and may add that Applebee's will never be on our list of approved restaurants.
Quote from: Macabre on November 20, 2013, 09:20:22 AM
But if I get the sense that the server is not capable of passing my order to the kitchen as I need it to be given, there's no point in staying.
Dealing with DS' food allergies since 1999 and my own since 2005, we have indeed encountered rude waiters who obviously don't get it. It's just not been the majority of the time.
We've left several restaurants either because:
1) waitstaff did not understand our concerns either because of a language barrier or some other "getting it" barrier--they just didn't.
2) the manager didn't get it
3) given our allergies we could not dine safely there (usually because of mine)
4) snarky waitstaff
We were in a Cracker Barrel once and told the waitress about our allergies and what i avoid (the grill, fried things). She did a few eye rolls. That was enough, but when we mentioned DS is a vegetarian, she said, "well, I don't know why you came here."
I said, "Neither do I" and left.