Submitted by Rona_Gura on

Its a No Go At Legoland

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At first I thought it was a joke. A friend had posted a picture of her sixteen year old son, Jonah, clearly upset on Facebook. The caption below the photo read that the source of his anguish was the refusal of employees of Legoland in Yonkers to allow him admission into Legoland. When I asked her about it she told me that, Legoland, which bills itself as an indoor amusement venue, denied Jonah (who was accompanied by his parents and one of his friends) admission because they said their policy is not to let anyone in unless accompanied by someone thirteen or younger. Jonah, who is a Lego enthusiast, at sixteen, could not get into the venue with just his parents. He needed to be accompanied by his younger brother as well.

For a while I believed this to be an isolated incident. Then Jonah’s parents posted an article about a sixty-one year old self admitted “Lego Fanatic” who was also denied admission to Legoland in Canada because he did not have a child with him. Even though his daughter explained to the employees that she had traveled with him on the three-hour drive from their hometown to realize her father's long-time dream, that was not enough to get them through the door.

When asked about the policy, a Lego representative stated, “Legoland Discovery Center's primary objective is to provide a safe and fun attraction for families with children aged three to twelve years to enjoy together.” The stated purpose of the policy is to maintain a safe environment for the children. But does it? I just do not understand how refusing admission to my friends and their sixteen year old son ensures safety. Do you?

Comments

Fred Klein

Sounds like age discrimination. Plaintiff's lawyers come forward.....
Riva Schwartz

This policy could force a real fanatic into kidnapping a child to gain admission!

Submitted by NULL (not verified) on Sun, 07/14/2013 - 23:49

Permalink

To share how jaded my mind has become, I imagine
a rationale that this policy deters sexual
predators/ pedafiles etc. I am not agreeing
but sharing my thought.
Shelley Simpson

This is also the policy at the playgrounds in City Parks - no running through the sprinklers unattended by a kid. It's sad, but unfortunately understandable in areas where parents assume their kids are safe and really let them wander around with little supervision. Now if someone wanted to start a kid rental service ...

Submitted by Erik_Scheibe on Mon, 07/15/2013 - 04:58

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Erik Scheibe

In all deference to Jonah and the 60-year-old Lego fanatic, I absolutely can understand the logic behind this rule. Not only is it their absolute right to enact such a policy, I agree with it completely. Unfortunately we live in a society where we have to be careful and protect our children. We have a right to freedom and to pursue happiness, we don't always have a right to get whatever we want. If this rule helps kids be safer in this environment, then it is unfortunate that Jonah and the 60 year old Lego fanatic must fulfill their Lego fantasies on their own, but so be it.

A thought occurred to me while I was thinking about this and protecting kids. If Trayvon Martin was a child just like all of our children who was simply coming home from the store after getting Skittles before facing the greatest fear a child can experience, that of a stranger following them (this is how the media and the prosecution proffered it)...then why would his phone call be to his incoherent girlfriend and not to his father who's house he was staying at? If I ever got a call like that, my son would have had the proper advice and an adult there for him within 5 minutes. Perhaps this is the problem that should be addressed going forward if I priority is better protecting all of our kids.
Corey Bearak

Understand the policy but there remain times of days that the 12 and under crowd likely will not come and the venues can set aside those times for the older but young at heart.
Amparo Connors

Would really love a 'Like' button for past comments; agree with Corey's idea. Or should we explore a 'rent a kid' business? It's already being done for handicapped people being hired to bypass Disney lines :)

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