Anonymous ID: bb40c7 Dec. 26, 2019, 12:29 p.m. No.7626493   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6563

Why are there so many freaks taking care of children, it’s time for the government to set up higher criteria for childcare companies and workers

 

Colorado daycare workers are charged after hiding 26 toddlers in basement behind a 'false wall' when police came to investigate overcrowding

 

Carla Faith from Colorado Springs has been charged with child abuse

In November, police visited the daycare she ran out of her home amid reports of overcrowding

She was uncooperative and did not want to let them inside

They heard children in the building so went in and discovered the 26 toddlers in the basement with two adults

 

A Colorado daycare owner has been charged for hiding 26 toddlers in a basement using a false wall after parents complained of overcrowding at her home.

 

Carla Faith, 58, had her daycare, Play Mountain Place, shut down in November after officers went to her property and discovered the children, all of whom were under three, being hidden inside.

 

She had been operating the daycare with a license for just six kids and, it is believed, when police arrived she hid the kids from view. Officers persevered because they could hear the children inside.

 

They shut down that property and another three that she was operating. Faith has now been charged with child abuse and charges relating to child abuse.

 

Her bond is $3,000. Authorities first visited the home in November amid reports of overcrowding. At first, Faith refused to let them in.

 

'The owner, identified as 58-year-old Carla Faith, refused to cooperate with officers; however, officers could hear the noises of children coming from her home,' Lt. James Sokolik with the Colorado Springs Police Department said at the time.

 

He added that when police got inside, they found a 'false wall' which led to the basement.

 

Once they got to the basement, they found the 26 children and two adults.

 

'Officers immediately began working with [The Colorado Department of Human Services] to release the children back to their parents,' he said.

 

Three daycare workers were initially arrested for misdemeanor child neglect but the charges against them were dropped.

 

Katelynne Nelson, 31, was later arrested for a felony drug charge and child abuse. It has since emerged that Faith was cited for other violations while running daycare homes in California in the 1990s.

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7828011/Colorado-daycare-owner-charged-hiding-toddlers-false-wall.html

Anonymous ID: bb40c7 Dec. 26, 2019, 12:36 p.m. No.7626543   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6562

So not only do they collect your DNA but also collect your habits! Yikes

 

Is this the 23andMe of haircare? New company analyzes strands of hair in a lab under a MICROSCOPE to create custom shampoo and conditioner

 

Strands Hair Care uses scientific analysis to create personalized hair products

Customers send a sample of hair and do an at-home sebum test

Scientists analyze several strands under a microscope and also do a chemical protein analysis

Their results are combined with answers from a questionnaire to create custom shampoo and conditioner formulas

In the past few years, quite a few companies have introduced customized haircare lines, allowing customers to take a quiz to get shampoo and conditioner made just for their needs.

 

But one new brand is taking it a step further: Strands Hair Care actually analyzes customers' hair under a microscope to determine the best bespoke formula for their hair type and condition.

 

The brand requires customers to send off a small hair sample, which is then examined in a lab before the pros mix up a perfect set of personalized products.

 

The company, which was created by a biologist, really focuses on what scientifically makes hair different.

 

Founder Eric Delapenha had tried other custom haircare companies and realized that he couldn't accurately answer some of the questions posed in the quizzes — so he decided to take the guesswork out of it.

 

Strands Hair Care still has a short quiz, but it's more about determining customer habits than having them describe the state of their hair

 

Here's how it works: Customers send away for a $60 kit, which will yield one shampoo and one conditioner.

 

First, they collect a sample of hair. There's no cutting or pulling required; the sample can be collected from a hairbrush or the shower. That's mailed off in a baggie.

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-7823215/Strands-Hair-Care-analyzes-hair-MICROSCOPE-create-custom-shampoo-conditioner.html