Well, your neighbor is one of the reasons that there is such a huge cry for tort reform.
What would you be saying if YOUR child were a biter? You wouldn't think much of your neighbor if that were the case.
Children fall into 2 categories where this is concerned - they are biters or they are the ones who are bitten. Some kids who stay home and don't go to daycare or spend time with other toddlers and don't have siblings never bite or get bitten. But it's the luck of the draw for parents, C.. Your next child might be the biter getting incident reports written up, and you'll be wringing your hands over it.
It's a child's personality, it has to do with frustration and ability to communicate, lots of factors. My kids were the ones that got bitten - I never had a biter. But I do understand about kids biting. That didn't make me feel any better as a parent, mind you.
The center has at least some protocol about it - they wrote a report and told you. Now go ask the director what the rest of their protocol is. They should be giving the child who was bitten lots of loving attention in front of the biter. They should put the biter in timeout and show NO attention to him. They should LEARN the signs (there ARE signs) and watch him like a hawk. The moment he shows the signs they should redirect him.
Also, for biters who seem to need to BITE something, a rubber tube attached to the shirt seems to help. One of my daycares did that. It was a last resort for a child that was going to be asked to leave if the biting didn't stop. They would look for the signs and then tell the child to bite his tube. It did help, and as he learned to talk more, and bit the tube, biting children stopped.
The parents of the biter need to talk to their child. They need to CARE that their child is hurting others. It won't stop the child from biting, but it will help the child START to learn not to.
These are all things that need to be done. So talk to the director about what I have said here. All these were employed by fine daycares.
And for heavens sake, you should distance yourself from your neighbor. When she "accidentally" falls on your property and scratches her knee, she's going to serve you with a lawsuit. Save the police and lawyer for something like what we read earlier - a middle school boy accosting a girl on the school bus and demanding that she give him oral sex. Now THAT'S something to call the police about and have a lawyer threaten the parents over. Not toddlers biting each other.
Dawn