André Hazes jr. receives support from Guido den Aantractor after his fine for ignoring the compulsory education law. Story’s boss pukes on school attendance officers. “Is that a job?!”
Parents who are extremely disadvantaged if they travel with their children during the regular school holidays can apply for an exemption to board the plane during school hours. André Hazes Jr. was free all year last year, but still wanted to claim that arrangement. The request was denied, but the family trip continued.
foot soldiers
André and blinker-Monique were therefore sentenced yesterday to a fine of a total of 900 euros and then they get away with it: even if you are a celebrity, your child just has to go to school properly. Parents who flout the rules are harshly whistled back by the attendance officer.
Story boss Guido den Aantractor is now completely puking the profession of the attendance officer. He has a very intimate relationship with the Hazesjes – André once even asked him to become his stepfather – and thinks that André’s family should be able to go on holiday during school hours. He puts down such a school attendance officer as foot soldiers.
‘With all due respect’
Guido points in it Show news note that the school board initially approved the family holiday verbally. “Shortly before that holiday, which had already been booked, it suddenly became known that another kind of attendance officer – I really think it’s terrible that jobs like that exist, with all due respect, guys – had to put a stamp on it.”
That gentleman or madam, of course, disapproved of the family holiday; there was no need for it. Guido finds it disgusting that the Public Prosecution Service has now summoned them. “To me it looks a bit like the OM wants to hang a famous Dutchman to show: ‘Guys, don’t do this, this will happen to you.’”
“Do you like that job?!”
Very clever, says colleague Frits Huffnagel. “We succeeded. That’s a good warning to everyone! You can’t just keep your kids out of school.”
Guido: “If a board approves that in the first instance, you will book it and it will take three days…”
Frits: “No, I understand that, but you were being a bit of a jerk about school attendance officers: those people are just doing their job.”
Guido: “Yes, but Frits, with all due respect: do you like that job?”
Frits: “People who start with ‘with all due respect’ usually say something that is not respectful afterwards.”
Guido: “Well, that’s right.”
‘Stop it!’
René Mioch thinks that the Hazesjes have the idea that they live above the law. “I find it really strange that parents keep children from school because they have to go on vacation. Dutch celebrities in particular have a tendency to do this because they have such an ‘enormously time-consuming profession’. That is really terrible within that education.”
Then to Guido: “What I wonder, you know them well: as a family you should actually get together at some point: we’ve seen enough judges, paid lawyers. Stop, dude, crossing the border every time!”
Dust jacket
Guido then shouts that the compulsory education case was not initiated by André. Frits: “But they deliberately took that child out of school, knowing that the child had to go to school!”
Then Guido continues with his derogatory statements about the attendance officer: “Yes, when that attendance officer, your great friend, the stamper, the dust coat, suddenly came.”
Frits retorts: “Yes, but your great friend could have just booked a holiday within the holidays that apply in the Netherlands.”
Guido: “But apparently they didn’t know that.”
“Shut up!”
Ah, how annoying, André didn’t know. Did not receive the holiday schedule. Frits: “Why didn’t they know that? Do they know when those holidays are? Stop it, Guido!”
Guido can’t get out and shouts: “Guys, with all due respect: this is not a discussion. You are really slacking off.”
Iris van Lunenburg supports her colleagues Frits and René: “That’s not true.”
Guido concludes: “The school board has approved it, but the stamper has put a stop to it!”